True Platinum Ebook + Paperback Bundle
True Platinum Ebook + Paperback Bundle
Own the Ultimate True Platinum Bundle: 7 Paperbacks + 9 eBooks
Love rock star romances? This Paperback + eBook Bundle is for you. The paperbacks include all 7 full-length novels, packed with bonus material like the moment Dan proposes to Mel and a hilarious game of trick-or-treat.
The eBook bundle completes the experience with all 9 stories, including two novellas (Charming Daphne and Needing Emily) you won’t find in print.
Start reading the eBooks right away while you wait for the gorgeous paperbacks to arrive.
This offer is NOT available on any other book retailer.
You’re late for a date with a rockstar! If you love captivating rock star romances filled with British cinnamon roll heroes, second chances, secret babies, hookups gone wrong, and take-no-nonsense heroines, then you’ll be swept off your feet by the True Platinum Series.
🎸 Excerpt from Enticing Mel 🎸
I've kept my daughter a secret from her rock star father for five years. But now he's back in town... and I can't hide anymore.
“You haven’t been avoiding me, have you?” he asked, his tone light and teasing. He didn’t believe it. Probably couldn’t fathom why I wouldn’t want him, despite his piecemeal offerings.
Staring into his gorgeous green eyes was too much. I shouldn’t have come. I should have stayed home, just in case. I didn’t need to be here, my friend would have understood. No one would have missed me.
And I definitely wouldn’t be staring at the man who broke my heart… over and over and over again.
The man I thought I’d grow old with.
The only one to light me up and uncover truths I didn’t know existed.
The one who gave me my hyperactive little munchkin.
God, one look at her and no one would argue that she was his. She had his eyes, his hair colour. Her nose and poker-straight hair were all me, but that was where our resemblance ended. In appearances, one could argue that she was more his kid than mine.
No, if I’d just kept playing it safe this wouldn’t be happening. He definitely wouldn’t be standing there, his eyes eating me up. I steeled my shoulders against the shiver trying to overtake me.
Gah, why did he have to get hotter with age? How was that even fair? Couldn’t he have gained some weight or have one of those irritatingly long beards?
It was too soon. I wasn’t ready.
There was a security door right next to me. One quick shove, and I’d be in the car park. I’d be free.
I wasn’t a coward.
I could do this.
I needed to get it over with.
He reached for a hug, his arms wide but his movements slow, like he thought I’d disappear in a puff of smoke.
Screw being brave.
I turned tail and ran.
Continue reading Enticing Mel if you like:
- Secret Baby Romance
- Forced Proximity
- Second Chance
- Childhood Sweethearts
- Angsty Reads
- He Falls First
What’s in the Bundle?
- 7 Paperbacks: The full-length novels in the True Platinum series, featuring all available bonus material in print for the first time, digital signatures, and elegant chapter headers.
- 9 eBooks: The complete True Platinum collection, including the novellas. Perfect for reading on the go or bingeing while waiting for your paperbacks.
Books in the Bundle
Paperbacks and eBooks (7 Full-Length Novels):
- Chasing Alys: A sweet drummer and a heroine who keeps him on his toes.
- Winning Nia: A band manager who’s not afraid to play for keeps.
- Enticing Mel: A secret baby, second chances, and all the heartache in between.
- Defying Ella: When forced proximity turns into something more.
- Braving Lily: A best friend’s brother turns into the one.
- Daring Ceri: Fake dating meets real feelings.
- Marrying Olivia: A marriage of convenience that’s anything but simple.
eBooks Only (2 Novellas):
- Charming Daphne: A sizzling second-chance romance.
- Needing Emily: A bodyguard romance with undeniable chemistry.
Why Readers Love This Bundle
- Start Reading Instantly: The eBooks are delivered immediately with Bookfunnel, so you can dive into the True Platinum world while your paperbacks ship.
- A Beautiful Paperback Edition: The paperbacks come with digital signatures, elegant chapter headers, and bonus scenes you’ll love, like Dan proposing to Mel and a hilarious game of trick-or-treat.
- Flexibility to Read Your Way: Enjoy the convenience of eBooks and the tactile joy of paperbacks.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ "Mel is one of the best single parent depictions that I've read so far. She's fiercely protective of her family and puts her daughter above all else. When she's confronted with the secret that could blow up her life and the lives of those around her she doesn't shy away from the issues instead choosing to face them head on. I loved how much she stood on her beliefs, the belief that she was owed more from life and wouldn't settle no matter what someone else tried to tell her. It was honestly beautiful and touching in a way I don't think I've read in a single parent romance so far." - Reader
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ "Enticing Mel was not what I expected. I had images of this book being an erotic romance because of the cover. Instead, I got a real look at what it must be like to love a rockstar. The glimpse into the worry and choices made seemed realistic." - Reader
“What I loved about Chasing Alys was that it did not follow the stereotypical rock star romance trope. Ryan is sweet, kind, and wholesome. He genuinely cares about Alys, is forthcoming with his feelings and intentions, and respects her boundaries." - Reader
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ "While she was the one with understandable commitment issues, what I adore about Alys is that she is smart, loyal, and tough. Two books in, I find that this seems to be a consistent theme in Morgan Bevan's heroines, and I love it." - Reader
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ "When I say I am obsessed with this book I am obsessed! I could not put it down. The way that their story unfolds through the chapters was one that I enjoyed reading. I enjoyed reading this book. I cannot wait to read more books by this author!!” - Reader
Order your Paperback + eBook Bundle today and fall in love with the British rock stars and the heroines who make them work for it. Start reading now with the eBooks, and enjoy the full-length novels in print when they arrive!
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Enticing Mel - Chapter 1
CONFIRMED — ROCK BAND RHIANNON RETURNS TO WALES PERMANENTLY.
“What the fu — duck!” I muttered to myself. My gaze jumped to Phoebe splashing happily in the bath. My shoulders relaxed marginally when she didn’t react to my almost slip.
She held out a rubber duck, her head tilting as she smiled at me. “Duckie?”
“Thank you, honey.” I took it from her and placed it on the side, my phone still gripped tightly in my other hand.
Surely, it was wrong? Dan had always said he’d never come back to Wales.
My eyes were drawn to the screen. I couldn’t stop scanning the article. My hands shook as I scrolled, searching for proof that it was nothing but a rumour. Alt Rock Daily had it wrong. They must have. Glasgow and Cardiff were two entirely different music scenes, and Rhiannon were taking off. I’d expected their next move to be LA. Not home.
“No Duckie?” Phoebe asked, dragging my focus back.
She frowned up at me, her copper locks plastered to her head, the foam almost turning her short hair white, and her smart green eyes narrowed as she studied me. She looks more like him every day. My breath caught painfully.
“Time to get out, Phoebs.” I cleared my throat and forced myself to lock the phone and place it on the counter.
“No!” my toddler screamed. She backed herself into the furthest corner of the bath and pouted at me.
“It’s bedtime, Phoebs.”
“No,” she growled.
If I wasn’t exhausted and shaken, I’d laugh. If it wouldn’t destroy all my serious parent leverage that is.
“Which would you rather, more bath time or a bedtime story?”
She pursed her lips, clutching her soaking wet doll to her chest.
Sometimes reasoning with my nearly four-year-old was harder than soothing the ruffled feathers of our biggest social influencers. One day, she’d make an excellent hostage negotiator.
But right now, I needed to beat her at her own game, and I wasn’t above bribery.
“If you come out now, you can have potato waffles for breakfast.”
Her green eyes widened. She flung herself at me with very little warning, trusting I’d catch her tiny body. My t-shirt soaked through instantly, and water dripped down my back.
My lips twitched and I bit my cheek. Do not laugh, Mel.
“How about standing back while I grab the towel?”
She stepped back. Her doll was still clutched in her hands. She took it everywhere, and no matter how many new toys I bought, she refused to get rid of it. The plastic was scratched, and her hair had been sheared off.
Phoebe stared at me, her face set in serious lines as she considered my see-through t-shirt.
“Sorry, Mammy.”
I held out the forest green towel – the colour had absolutely not been influenced by how much I’d loved Dan’s eyes – smiling, despite my reminders to be stern. I could never hold strong when she looked at me with that guilty look.
Getting her dry and into her pyjamas went by with the usual chatter, only tonight, concentrating was hard. There was a hand wrapped around my heart, squeezing until I could barely breathe. I needed a minute. I couldn’t have a minute, so instead, I plastered a smile on my lips and pretended everything was fine.
Phoebe chattered obliviously as I dried her off and ushered her to bed. She’d had a full day at nursery but you’d swear she hadn’t left the house or seen a soul. Her energy levels were off the charts, and if I let her, she’d make me read an entire book of fairy tales and still have the energy to run around the house. This kid did not like going to sleep.
Neither did I, but I’m pretty sure our reasons were very different.
She had a fear of missing out. I just feared dreaming. My subconscious liked to torture me with every what-if scenario.
What would happen if my ex knocked on my door tomorrow? Caught me at a cafe or park with Phoebe? Every time, I stood there, blinking, frozen with indecision and fear. The proverbial deer in headlights in the face of all my life choices and mistakes coming back to bite me in the ass.
It was like my subconscious was mocking me for the coward I was.
Maybe it was better than the first year of nightly reminders.
But then I’d traded dreams about our peaceful and heated past for guilt trips. I’m not sure it was a better development.
Despite all the dreams, I didn’t know what I’d do if Dan Lloyd knocked on my door tomorrow. Would I get the words out, explain it all, or would I hide behind the anger? He was back in town, seemingly for good, so the chances of running into him had increased exponentially.
I’d made it my life’s mission to avoid him for nearly five years but that luck wasn’t going to hold up.
The time was coming, and I needed to prepare myself.
My dad had given me a front-row seat to the kind of relationship musicians wanted, and I wasn’t capable of it. I didn’t want to be someone’s second choice, and Dan had made it abundantly clear that I was. In school, he’d left me with no warning. One day he was going to Cardiff uni, and the next, he was on a plane to Scotland. No explanation, no discussion.
I sighed as I sat on Phoebe’s bed. She glanced up at me sharply. Her tiny brows pulled tight as she stared up at me.
“What wrong, mammy?” Her tiny, soft baby hands settled on my cheeks. “Don’t be sad.”
Despite the uncertainty turning me inside out, I smiled at the sweet girl before me. At least he gave me her.
“Do you want to do my work for me?” I asked, grinning conspiratorially. “It’ll be fun.”
She pursed her lips, unconvinced. Smart kid.
If that had been the end of it, ten years ago, I might have recovered, might have gotten over him. Instead, he kept dropping in, reappearing with no warning. One random text, and he was outside my flat, and I couldn’t for the life of me push him away. I wanted that loveable asshole too much.
I smoothed a brush through Phoebe’s rapidly drying hair. My hands followed in its wake.
Every time he’d disappear just as fast as he appeared, no warning, no texts, just poof. Each time I’d promise myself that would be the last time. Next time, I’d be stronger. I never was…
Until I got pregnant with her.
The week the band signed, he danced in again and just as quickly danced out. A flying visit. But it was enough. Two months later, I’d called him.
I have no idea what I wanted from that call. For him to tell me it would be alright. He’d always had a way of putting me at ease, even when it felt like life was spiralling out of control.
Instead, he picked up the phone, heard my voice, and handed me off.
I didn’t tell him. I didn’t tell anyone for so long.
And now it was all going to come back to bite me. Staring into Phoebe’s softening features, fear gripped my heart too tightly.
What if he walked back into our lives and then vanished again?
He was a musician. A good deal of his job involved travelling. He would leave me again. Only this time, he wouldn’t just be leaving me.
He’d be abandoning Phoebe.
How do you explain to a toddler that her dad cares more about his job than her?
The thought of her looking at Dan the way I’d looked at my dad – with distrust and resignation – it would break my heart.
No, I’d protect her, as long as I could.
“Story,” she demanded, dropping a large, hard book in my lap and freeing me from my thoughts.
I chuckled. “Which one would you like tonight?”
She clambered into her little bed, tucking herself in while I settled back against the headboard.
“Gretel.”
I glanced at her sharply. It was one of her favourites, so I shouldn’t have been surprised. Did she understand that Hansel and Gretel’s father abandoned them? I’d never been courageous enough to ask.
Instead, I cracked open the book and read.
She knew who her dad was. There were enough omissions in my life, I wasn’t going to outright lie to my daughter. The day would come when she’d go searching for him, but at least by then she wouldn’t be the trusting innocent she was now. She’d go to him with an open mind, rather than with a defenceless heart.
The witch was just inviting the kids into her house when Phoebe’s breathing evened out. I placed the book on her bedside table and edged away.
It was still early—the sun shone outside the wall of windows taking up one of the living room walls. The waters of Cardiff Bay glistened, and in the distance, I could just make out the people spilling onto the pavement, enjoying the bars. The rest of their night stretched out before them.
I’d given all of that up when I found out I was pregnant. Sometimes I missed it, being carefree with my entire future laid out before me. This mystical thing that could branch off in so many directions.
Regret wasn’t a thing I allowed myself. I couldn’t regret Phoebe, but sometimes on nights like this, when the flat was quiet and the world outside so vibrant, I wondered. Wondered what it would be like if I’d been stronger, if I’d said no to Dan the first time? Had I shut the door firmly on him when he left me for Glasgow with no warning, my life would have ended up so differently.
I shook myself, breaking the endless cycles of what ifs and turning my back on the window.
It was inevitable. Cardiff might be a city, but it had a way of drawing lost friends back to each other. If the article was right, my time was running out.
* * *
One Month later
I was dressed up for my first Friday night out in years. The nature reserve had been crucial to Nia’s happiness over the years, and I wanted to support her. She was involved in a local community auction trying to raise funds for a visitor centre at a coastal nature reserve. She adored the place, and when she asked me and Sophie to go to the event, we couldn’t say no.
Especially not when her dickhead of a boyfriend had up and disappeared on her with no warning. He’d spent a month trying to work his way back into her good graces after a ten-year absence, and then pulled something as stupid as getting on a plane to the other side of the world, without a word, on their anniversary, because a producer said jump.
Spoiler, she was going to forgive him, but I couldn’t see why.
Once my mother left with Phoebe, I shimmied into my dress and heels. It was a little more flash than a local town auction called for, but Sophie and I had decided that we might as well enjoy the occasion and maybe hit up a bar afterwards. If I was going to feel guilty for having a night out, then I might as well make it a night to remember.
People were milling about when I arrived. The car park was packed, and the old social club filled with row upon row of chairs. The noise level was like a wall of sound, distant from the entry, but once you stepped through it, it embraced you, driving you to shout at your friends to be heard over the conversation happening next to you.
I needn’t have worried about being overdressed. This was an event for the local town and everyone present had pulled out their good clothes. Teenagers loitered in the corner while their parents looked on with frowns and their grandparents smirked at their discomfort. It was a regular family affair.
Spotting Nia and Sophie off to the side, I weaved my way through the densely packed crowd. The sooner people took their seats, the better. Sophie hugged me when I stopped at her side.
As well as being my best friend since we were toddlers, Sophie also happened to be the sister of Nia’s boyfriend, and oh how she hated that.
“Nia’s gone a bit doolally,” Sophie whispered close to my ear so our best friend wouldn’t hear. “She almost forgot her camera and nearly shut her fingers in the car. Watch her.”
She pulled back and threw Nia a sunny smile. Nia glowered at her with suspicion clouding her icy blue eyes.
“What’s with that face?” Nia asked, circling her finger in front of Sophie’s face.
“Nothing.” Sophie glanced around the room. “Is that frame on a slant?”
I bit my lip, trying not to laugh at Sophie’s distraction attempts. Nia didn’t even look; her eyes just narrowed on Sophie.
“Okay, so you’re being a bit…” Sophie waved her hands. “Intense. Maybe you should just call James.”
Nia’s mouth dropped open.
“Is that what you want to do?” I asked before Nia could launch herself at Sophie, because I would, in her shoes.
“No. I had to wait ten years, he can wait until he’s in the bloody country,” Nia said, a hard bite in her tone. “I just don’t understand what’s taking them so long. Record the damn thing and come home.”
“They’re perfectionists.” I shrugged, feigning a nonchalance that I would never feel when faced with Dan’s return.
Nia hummed in agreement.
They always were.
Some days, I didn’t begrudge Dan his success. He’d gotten what he wanted—his dreams were coming true.
The fire drained from Nia and her shoulders slumped. “What if I’ve got it wrong, Mel?” she whispered, uncertainty shaking her words. “What if he’s changed his mind again, and he’s decided there’s no point in telling me?”
It was a very real concern. One we both shared.
We’d learnt early on that musicians were a fickle lot. Thanks to my dad, Dan, and James. My dad was hardly ever home growing up, always on the road, missing birthdays and milestone moments he always promised to stick around for. In the end, the music always called louder.
He loved it more than he loved me.
That’s how things were with Dan.
And with James.
In the last month, James had come to his senses and fought for Nia. He’d messed up again, but this time, he wasn’t giving up without a fight.
“I don’t think that’ll happen, Nia.” There was a conviction in my voice that I envied. I wished I could be so certain about my own life. “This time is different. Hold onto that, and if you can’t wait, you can always call him.”
She huffed. “Not happening. I’m not the easy girl I was in uni. This time he’ll come to me on his knees or not at all.”
I laughed. It came out strained, muddled with the conflicting wants warring in my head. I wish I had her strength. Instead, I’d spent the last month hiding like a coward from Dan Lloyd. Technically, I’d gone on holiday, but it was directly influenced by his supposedly permanent reappearance in my city. I’d managed to avoid running into him thus far, but it was only by sheer force of will. And the girls giving me the heads up. My luck was going to run out.
What if I was going about this all wrong? What if sharing the secret wouldn’t be as bad as I imagined?
“Everything alright, Mel?” Nia asked, reading me like a fortune cookie.
“What if I made a mistake, not telling Dan in the first place?” I whispered, the words barely a wisp of sound.
Sophie and Nia shared a look, each of them daring the other to ask the hard question.
“Do you think you made a mistake?” Sophie asked.
“I don’t know, but I’m still scared.”
“Scared that he’ll find out, or scared that he’ll leave?” Nia whispered, her gaze dancing around our quiet corner.
It was just the girls—I could say anything to them, and they wouldn’t repeat it or force me to follow through. Talking didn’t mean I had to take action.
“Scared that he’ll stay, out of some sense of obligation and either resent me for it or break Phoebe’s heart when he realises we’re not enough.” They were just words. Just letters strung together. And yet, they had the power to make my eyes burn and stab a knife through my chest.
“I don’t know the answer,” Nia said, her words measured but thick with emotion. She understood better than anyone else. She’d nearly pushed James out of her life again through fear too. “Our situations are alike, but you have more to protect than me. But if you’re thinking about this now, maybe you should consider whether you’re willing to take the risk. If you are, do something, and if you’re not…”
Then life was going to get extra painful.
The city hadn’t been big enough for Nia to avoid James. If Dan was here to stay, we would run into each other eventually, and then I’d be faced with a choice.
Lie, or let him in.
The auction got underway and Nia circled the room, photographing the event, while Sophie and I hung out at the side with a plate of appetisers.
It wasn’t all that exciting, but still, it was nice to be somewhere different. Usually, we spent our time together in one of our flats or at our favourite pub on a Saturday afternoon. This was a refreshing change of scenery, and I enjoyed watching the people around us. Some furiously threw their paddles in the air, glaring at their opponents like they’d personally insulted them by daring to get in their way. Others were more leisurely in their movements, too busy chatting to their neighbours to really pay attention to the fact they were about to bid £500 on a photograph of the lighthouse. The look of shock on their faces when Phil, the white-haired warden acting as auctioneer, declared them the winner was priceless.
Things were starting to wrap up when the doors opened. A hush descended on the room; heads craned to catch a glimpse of the latecomers.
My heart stopped.
James stood in the doorway, grinning and surrounded by his stone-faced bandmates. His gaze fixed on Nia next to me, but I couldn’t keep my eyes from Dan. His stoic features warmed as they roamed my face, causing my pulse to flutter in my throat.
Alys and Lily pushed past the guys, tutting as they waltzed into the room. They wrapped their arms around Nia, whispering in her ear.
I couldn’t focus on their words. My ears were ringing. I was frozen, just like in my dreams.
Distantly, I noticed Alys returning to Ryan, and Lily approaching the stage, but it might as well have been happening in another room.
“You alright?” I asked Nia, hooking my arm through hers, trying with all my might to be normal.
She side-eyed me, noting what was probably panic in my eyes.
He couldn’t be here. I wasn’t ready for this.
Why couldn’t they have waited for a less public event to make their return? Or better yet, no event at all? A random day when I’d be tucked away in my flat with Phoebe.
“Finally,” Dan seemed to say.
Rats.
She patted my hand. “You can leave if you want.”
I studied her, trying to assess whether she meant it. She couldn’t possibly. If I were in her shoes, I’d be a bag of nerves and want my friends around me.
“It was going to happen one day,” I whispered.
“You’re not going to tell him now?”
“No, but I will.” Determination broke through some of the panic, infiltrating my voice and helping me put up a much-needed front. My grip still tightened on her arm.
“Ladies and gentlemen.” Phil’s excited voice boomed around the room and I jumped. “We have some new entries to the auction.”
More lots were announced and a bidding war ensued but I couldn’t focus on any of it. James approached slowly, Dan edging along behind him. The closer he got, the tighter my grip on Nia’s arm grew.
“Sold for ten thousand pounds.” Phil slammed his gavel down, the noise ricochet through the huge open room and I flinched.
On the lots went, and still I couldn’t tear my gaze from his. Thankfully, he hung back, clearly trying not to overshadow James’s moment. I’m not sure if that was worse or better. The longer they took, the stiffer I grew. I couldn’t feel my toes from lack of movement, and my shoulders positively ached.
“Hey,” James said, finally stopping in front of Nia. I could barely take in his nerves, my gaze fixed on the red-haired giant at his back.
As James’s speech wound on and the tension drained from Nia, my tolerance hit the bottom of the barrel. Staring into his gorgeous green eyes was too much. I shouldn’t have come. I should have stayed home, just in case. I didn’t need to be here, Nia would have understood. No one would have missed me.
And I definitely wouldn’t be staring at the man who broke my heart… over and over and over again.
The man I thought I’d grow old with.
The only one to light me up and uncover truths I didn’t know existed.
The one who gave me my hyperactive little munchkin.
God, one look at her and no one would argue that she was his. She had his eyes, his hair colour. Her nose and poker straight hair were all me, but that was where our resemblance ended. In appearances, one could argue that she’s more his kid than mine.
No, if I’d just kept playing it safe this wouldn’t be happening. He definitely wouldn’t be stood there, his eyes eating me up. I steeled my shoulders against the shiver trying to overtake me.
Gah, why did he have to get hotter with age? How was that even fair? Couldn’t he have gained some weight or have one of those irritatingly long beards?
It was too soon. I wasn’t ready.
James was apologising to Nia and I couldn’t focus on a word of it. Whether I’d have heard him over the pounding of my heart was questionable but still, Dan was making me be a shit friend and miss a very important moment.
There was a security door right next to me. One quick shove, and I’d be in the car park. I’d be free.
I wasn’t a coward.
I could do this.
I needed to get it over with.
Dan stopped before me, wearing the biggest grin. My stomach flipped as it lit up his eyes.
“You haven’t been avoiding me, have you?” he asked, his tone light and teasing. He didn’t believe it. Probably couldn’t fathom why I wouldn’t want him, despite his piecemeal offerings.
He reached for a hug, his arms wide but his movements slow, like he thought I’d disappear in a puff of smoke.
Screw being brave.
I turned tail and ran.
Tropes
1 - Chasing Alys
Up and Coming Rockstar
Cinnamon roll hero
Jaded/love resistant TV Production Coordinator
A Ride-Or-Die Best Friend
She has no idea who he is and doesn’t care that he’s famous
Slow burn
He falls first
Hookup Gone Wrong
Set in the UK
British hero
2 - Winning Nia
Tattooed British rock star
Band photographer
Second chance
Forced proximity
He falls first
Fast burn
Ride-or-Die BFFs
Set in the UK
British hero
3 - Enticing Mel
Cinnamon roll, bearded bassist
Working single mother
Secret baby
He falls first
Ride-or-Die BFFs
Forced proximity
Second chance romance
Set in the UK
British hero
4 - Defying Ella
Bad boy drummer
New Adult
Grumpy x sunshine
Enemies to lovers
Trapped
Snowed in
One bed
One night stand gone wrong (before the book starts)
Forced proximity
Angsty romance
British hero
Best friend’s sister (in law)
Secret relationship
5 - Braving Lily
A female rock star (Taylor Swift level famous)
The nerd gets the girl
He doesn’t care who she is
Auction date
He stands her up
Second chance at love (for him)
Opposites attract
He falls first
Set in the UK
British hero
6 - Daring Ceri
Surprise marriage
Second chance at love
Playboy rockstar
Ex-dancer
Forced proximity on tour
He falls first
Childhood sweethearts
British hero
Shipping Times
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Estimated shipping times alongside choices of shipping methods are shown at checkout, but can be estimated as follows:
To USA 5 to 7 working days
To UK 1 to 3 working days
To Europe 3 to 5 working days
To Australia xxx working days