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Untamed Heart: In Her Night Red Lace
Indigo
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Untamed Heart: In Her Night Red Lace
By None
Current price: $27.99


By None
Untamed Heart: In Her Night Red Lace
Current price: $27.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
For years, Hera Eleanor Valdez kept her secret folded like fine silk—untouched, unsaid, buried in the quiet corners of her life. A memory wrapped in silence. A name never spoken aloud.
Julian Domingo.
Once, he had been a man she could never claim. The kind of man who walked through rooms with his hands in his pockets and his gaze fixed on nothing. The kind who rarely looked twice. And yet—he had looked at her. Just once. Long enough.
It had been years since that night. A single, stolen evening when the world blurred and rules slipped away. When her heart had drowned in something reckless and warm. But he had belonged to someone else even then, and she had never expected more than the hour they shared. They never spoke of it again. She married another. Built a life. Smiled in photographs.
And now… she was a widow.
Mourning, yes—but not broken. Not really. Her grief was quiet. Clean. Her husband had been kind, gentle, proper. She had played her part. She had been the dutiful wife, the dignified widow.
But some nights, alone in her room, she would slip open the drawer where it waited: the red lace nightgown. The one she had worn only once.
The night she became something more than proper. The night she became his.
For years, Hera Eleanor Valdez kept her secret folded like fine silk—untouched, unsaid, buried in the quiet corners of her life. A memory wrapped in silence. A name never spoken aloud.
Julian Domingo.
Once, he had been a man she could never claim. The kind of man who walked through rooms with his hands in his pockets and his gaze fixed on nothing. The kind who rarely looked twice. And yet—he had looked at her. Just once. Long enough.
It had been years since that night. A single, stolen evening when the world blurred and rules slipped away. When her heart had drowned in something reckless and warm. But he had belonged to someone else even then, and she had never expected more than the hour they shared. They never spoke of it again. She married another. Built a life. Smiled in photographs.
And now… she was a widow.
Mourning, yes—but not broken. Not really. Her grief was quiet. Clean. Her husband had been kind, gentle, proper. She had played her part. She had been the dutiful wife, the dignified widow.
But some nights, alone in her room, she would slip open the drawer where it waited: the red lace nightgown. The one she had worn only once.
The night she became something more than proper. The night she became his.


















