![]() ![]() ![]() On the whole, barring a subplot that shows up later in the story, this one is a quiet tale that focuses more on the characters’ developing relationship. Okay, on a more serious note, The Rogue and the Gentleman may remind you of a gay version of a story by Mary Balogh, but I suspect that fans of Mary Balogh will never find such explicit love scenes in her books. While he hesitates at first to sleep with this young man, Jem is excitement and Jem is adventure, so poor Alan is never going to be the same again. Since his return from abroad, he has been brooding in his home and letting himself go out of shape. ![]() For Alan, he is looking for a way to escape the memories of his wartime antics by picking up this kid. In a twist of fate that Mary Balogh would surely approve, Jem engages his client, Sir Alan Watleigh in sexual congress, only to touch the man so deep in places locked away in his tormented heart, sigh, that Alan offers to hire Jem as his valet. On one cold evening in 1813, the young street hustler Jem decides to get into a carriage of a gentry cove. The Gentleman and the Rogue by Bonnie Dee and Summer Devon ![]()
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