To Love and To Protect

Fiction & Literature, Cultural Heritage, Contemporary Women
Cover of the book To Love and To Protect by M. A. McRae, M. A. McRae
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Author: M. A. McRae ISBN: 9781301833948
Publisher: M. A. McRae Publication: March 9, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: M. A. McRae
ISBN: 9781301833948
Publisher: M. A. McRae
Publication: March 9, 2013
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Shuki is home, and enjoying being home. He loves his wives, he loves his children, and he loves Elei.

To the Daouds, he is someone special, theirs to love and to protect, as their father, the Old Master Hassanel, laid down in his will.
To Shuki, the Daouds’ home is his home, though he does not regard himself as belonging to anyone - or maybe to Elei, as Elei belongs to him.

He is fond of Hasquitri’s children, the girls and the boys. The girls, at fourteen, are of marriageable age, and are closely chaperoned. They are still permitted to ride their horses when suitably escorted, and Shuki makes a point of riding with them. Alone among the men, he knows what it is to suffer under too much protection.

The boys have a full life, learning about their father’s businesses, travelling, enjoying the hunting and the shooting and the riding. Fifteen-year-old Zahu, in particular, has become a close companion. But when Zahu finds just what Shuki is, the relationship becomes a lot more complicated.

This is a story of life and of love.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Shuki is home, and enjoying being home. He loves his wives, he loves his children, and he loves Elei.

To the Daouds, he is someone special, theirs to love and to protect, as their father, the Old Master Hassanel, laid down in his will.
To Shuki, the Daouds’ home is his home, though he does not regard himself as belonging to anyone - or maybe to Elei, as Elei belongs to him.

He is fond of Hasquitri’s children, the girls and the boys. The girls, at fourteen, are of marriageable age, and are closely chaperoned. They are still permitted to ride their horses when suitably escorted, and Shuki makes a point of riding with them. Alone among the men, he knows what it is to suffer under too much protection.

The boys have a full life, learning about their father’s businesses, travelling, enjoying the hunting and the shooting and the riding. Fifteen-year-old Zahu, in particular, has become a close companion. But when Zahu finds just what Shuki is, the relationship becomes a lot more complicated.

This is a story of life and of love.

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