Amy de Lacy and her brothers and sisters face poverty - but it's Amy's face that could rescue them from that. A beautiful woman, Amy rarely lacks for suitors - only she knows that in order to rescue her family from penury she needs to find a rich suitor. She has the face for it, but does she have the stomach for it?
Amy's plans go awry right from the beginning when she bumps into Harry Crisp, a handsome and charming young stranger. Unfortunately Harry won't really do as he's not rich enough and Amy has to reject him. Harry, bruised and angry, can't quite get Amy out of his mind - and when she arrives in London for a season it's up to both of them to decide whether love is more important than duty.
This was a good story although Amy wasn't always a sympathetic character and some of her choices seemed rather suspect, even when we were given her reasoning behind them. The setting is interesting, including details of a Season in London and of the Melton hunting world, but somehow the story seemed to lack a little of the depth more apparent in Beverley's later novels.