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The Love Pirate

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Arriving home from school, Bertilla is sad to find her home unprepared for her and her widowed mother is far from pleased to see her. Even worse, Lady Alvinston, a celebrated Society beauty, makes it clear that she has no intention of allowing her pretty eighteen-year-old daughter anywhere near the glittering London social scene she enjoys so much herself.

As her mother continues her scheming to snare a wealthy husband before her looks fade, the last thing she needs is Bertilla making it obvious that she is old enough to have a grown up daughter.

So when handsome Lord Saire, the prize amongst all of the eligible bachelors, happens upon Bertilla at a railway station, Lady Alvinston determines that their paths shall never cross again.

Hastily packed up and sent to live with her mean-spirited Aunt Agatha, a Missionary in Sarawak, Bertilla is reconciled to the fact that she will never see England again.

Feeling rejected, unloved and facing the deprivations of a Second Class ticket on her long sea voyage to Malaya, she is astounded to meet Lord Saire once more. Cut off from everything she knows and thrown into the elegant world of the steamship Saloon, Bertilla clutches at the kindness offered by Lord Saire, the man the Society matron’s call, ‘the Love Pirate’.

Dashing, independent and a well-known heartbreaker, Lord Saire is cast in the unusual role of rescuer as they travel towards the beauty and mystery of the Far East.

Acting as guardian and protector to Bertilla is very different to the passionate but brief relationships with Society beauties he normally enjoys and demonstrates the caring side of his nature.

But is this a role he relishes or are his eyes really on the sophisticated married women he usually spends time with? As a man who has shunned love and marriage is he really the ideal protector for Bertilla as she dreams of freedom, romance and true love?

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Authors Note
Authors NoteDuring the reign of Sir Charles Vyner Brooke, the third and last White Rajah of Sarawak, the much-feared practice of headhunting was made almost extinct in Borneo. This is largely attributed to the mass conversions of the Dyak tribe to Christianity and later Islam, as well as anti-headhunting legislation passed by the Colonial powers. However, during World War II, when the Japanese occupied Sarawak, headhunting was revived and over one thousand five hundred Japanese soldiers were killed and their heads preserved. Although this ancient ritual seems shocking, Japanese massacres of the Dyak people are well documented and the resultant headhunting was part of the guerilla warfare, instigated by the allied forces that recruited and trained them. After the war, when the Rajah and Ranee returned to the island from exile in Australia, the Dyaks showed them a large collection of Japanese heads, all smoked, stuffed and displayed in the traditional way. It is said that the warriors related gleefully how they had sent their prettiest daughters down to a pool in the jungle to bathe. As soon as the Japanese crept up to stare at them, the Dyaks had captured and then killed them. In 1946 the Rajah ceded Sarawak to the British government as a Crown Colony, thus ending White Rajah rule in Sarawak. Today headhunting is illegal.

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