About the Book
Members of Hanger’s Horsemen, Mark Wallace and Jonah Brooks arrive in Llano County, Texas, to deliver a steed, never expecting they’d deliver a baby as well. Left with an infant to care for, they head to a nearby foundling home, where Mark encounters the woman he’d nearly married a decade ago.
After failing at love, Katherine Palmer dedicated her life to caring for children, teaming up with Eliza Southerland to start Harmony House. From mixed ancestry, illegitimate, and female, Eliza understands the pain of not fitting society’s mold. Yet those are the very attributes that lead her to minister to outcast children. The taciturn Jonah intrigues her with his courage and kindness, but there are secrets behind his eyes–ghosts from wars past and others still being waged.
However, when a handful of urchin children from the area go missing, a pair of Horsemen are exactly what the women need. Working together to find the children, will these two couples find love as well?
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Now it’s your turn! Grab the book nearest you and drop the first line in the comments. Then head over to Hoarding Books and discover what others are sharing this week!
Great book, I just finished The Heart’s Charge!
My first line is from Come Back To Me by Jody Hedlund:
“Your father is in a coma.”
Happy readin
I started reading Heart’s Charge last night. It’s so good!! My First Line Friday post is from Jewel of the Nile by Tessa Afshar: https://wp.me/po307-1VK Happy Friday!
Happy Friday!
Today on my blog I’m sharing the first line from The Shell Collector by Nancy Naigle: https://christianfictiongirl.blog/2021/05/28/first-line-friday-184/. I’m just starting chapter 19, so I’ll share a line from there:
“The next morning, Amanda read another passage from the book Ginny had given her.”
I hope you have a lovely and relaxing weekend! ❤
Happy Friday! My first line is from “Crazy for You” by Susan May Warren and Michelle Sass Aleckson:
“The plan was easy. Bring Oreos, kiss his mother, and skedaddle.”
Sounds like a great book!
My first line is from “Bridge of Gold” by Kimberley Woodhouse. “Certain moments in life define a person. Moments that invoke physical feelings that can’t be described.”