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Little White Doves of Love

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Demure and self-deprecating the beautiful young Nolita Walford has been left all but penniless after the tragic death of both her parents in a coach crash and, envious of Nolita’s unassuming beauty, her unsympathetic aunt, Lady Katherine, despatches her to work as Governess to Bettine, the eleven year old daughter of the Marquis of Sarle.

Feeling frightened and apprehensive, Nolita says a tearful farewell to her favourite horse, Eros, and her beloved home where she has been so happy and sets off for an unknown and uncertain future.  

Nolita is dismayed to find that young Bettine is not only a Lady and heiress to her American grandfather’s vast fortune but also a spoilt little madam who is almost uncontrollable.

Miraculously, Nolita’s love of horses and gentle humble approach wins over her pupil, to the astonishment of the Marquis, who regards Nolita with new respect and admiration.

But just as Nolita has taken Bettine to her heart and lost her own to the handsome Marquis, a ruthless American gang kidnaps her and Bettine, threatening to kill them unless they receive a ransom of one million dollars.

Now all hope of life – and of love – seems lost as Nolita sends out little white doves of prayer to the one man who can save them from a dreadful fate.

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Author’s Note
Author’s NoteDoves have always been connected with religion and mythology in one way or another. The Athenians had a Temple of Aphrodite Pandemos (‘of all the people’) whose Temple was purified by the sacrifice of a dove. When I was in Haiti, I saw a Voodoo ceremony and there a sacrifice was made by the Mother Priestess of two white doves. The dove also stands, of course, for purity, for love and in this book for prayer. Kidnapping, a word originally coined about 1680, described the then prevalent practice of stealing children and sending them to servitude on British plantations in America and the Caribbean. In European countries one of the most prevalent forms of kidnapping was the impressment of soldiers or sailors into Military Service. Kidnapping or shanghaiing, as it is sometimes known, of Merchant seamen, flourished in Port towns throughout the world where owners of waterfront boarding houses, brothels and taverns victimised their own clientele. It was actually in the late 1920s and 30s that it became commonplace in the United States of America for wealthy persons or their children to be ‘snatched’ in the argot of the underworld and held for heavy ransoms, but there were many cases of it happening at the end of the previous century.

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