Angel's Flight by Juliet Waldron.

 Ms Waldron begins her epic romance, Angel’s Flight, during the American War of Independence at a ball in the Governor’s mansion in New York City, which twenty-four-year-old Angelica Ten Broeck attends. There, the intelligent, outspoken Dutch heiress, meets Jack Carter, who strides in wearing a black suit that stands out among a parade of officers in red uniforms and crisp, white wigs. When she meets this loyalist, of good breeding, who came from England to escape the consequences of a duel, they gaze at each other. ‘Tingling all over she watched his expression of pure masculine delight and, unaccountably, recognition’. Angelica, who supports George Washington, does not have a crystal ball in which she can foresee the important future she will share with Jack, a loyalist, whose self-confidence, and easy manner intrigues her. Preyed on by English Major Armstead, who she loathes and refuses to marry, during her journey on and along the Hudson to her home near Kingston, she accepts Jack’s escort. Throughout her journey through dangers that threaten her person and her life from New York onward, she collects materials for a patchwork quilt. It will be a triumphant record of her journey home and attacks during it by the redcoats. Angel’s Flight breathes life into the era in which Angelica and Jack lived and introduces the reader to ‘the good, the bad and the ugly.’ I strongly recommend it. 

 

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