This is a historical romance of a little different story line. An assassin is hired to kill a young woman, who has had two husbands die while married to her.
Orlando Holt is the assassin; Susanna is the young woman who is just trying to keep her family farm going. In fact, she is trying to keep a small grove of orange trees alive so that her marmalade and succades will help add to the farm's revitalization. Sounds easy enough, but she, her father, and several servants live in England (hardly the typical environment for growing oranges).
As winter is nearing, she must figure out a way to prepare the trees for survival. This is when Orlando shows up. Before he will assassinate her, he wants to research the deaths of her husbands. Could she have killed them? If so, why? To get closer to her, he asks for a job. He claims he is a gardener, but he certainly doesn't act like one.
The servants don't quite trust him; Susanna certainly doesn't quite trust him; and her ailing father is hardly in a position to question his motives. The neighbors aren't particularly helpful, either. Yet, he gets the job, works hard, and finds only that someone wants her dead.
Who wants her death? Will Orlando figure it out and kill her despite a growing desire for her? Will she marry again? Her neighbor Walter asks repeatedly, but she doesn't wish to marry again. Can a woman run an estate considering the time this novel is set?
The chemistry between pair (Susanna and Orlando) heats up, but what will happen to them? She doesn't wish to ever be married again; he works for the Assassins Guild and can't be married.
A few What-the-tuck trends, but very few.