Mary Balogh Quote

He gazed at her without answering, and his fingers drummed a light tattoo on the table. I need my sketch pad, he said. You should do that more often, Camille.Do what? She could feel her cheeks grow warm at the intentness of his gaze.Smile, he said. With a certain degree of mischief in your eyes. The expression transforms you. Or perhaps it is just another facet of your character I have not seen before. I left my sketchbook at the orphanage, alas, though I do have others in the studio.Of course you are not doing it any longer, he said. I ought not to have drawn your attention to it.

Mary Balogh

He gazed at her without answering, and his fingers drummed a light tattoo on the table. I need my sketch pad, he said. You should do that more often, Camille.Do what? She could feel her cheeks grow warm at the intentness of his gaze.Smile, he said. With a certain degree of mischief in your eyes. The expression transforms you. Or perhaps it is just another facet of your character I have not seen before. I left my sketchbook at the orphanage, alas, though I do have others in the studio.Of course you are not doing it any longer, he said. I ought not to have drawn your attention to it.

Related Quotes

About Mary Balogh

Mary Balogh (born Mary Jenkins on 24 March 1944) is a Welsh-Canadian novelist writing historical romance, born and raised in Swansea. In 1967, she moved to Canada to start a teaching career, married a local coroner and settled in Kipling, Saskatchewan, where she eventually became a school principal. Her debut novel appeared in 1985. Her historical fiction is set in the Regency era (1811–1820) or the wider Georgian era (1714–1830).