by Lisa Kleypas
He surveyed her with unnerving intensity. "The more I learned about you, the more curious I became. I wanted to see what kind of girl had the courage to create a new life for herself, with no help from anyone."
"Courage," she repeated dubiously. "Strange, that you should call it that, when I've always considered it cowardice."
He was about to reply when the carriage made a sharp turn and traveled along a well-paved street. It was sided by a landscaped green with trees and garden walks. Tidy three-story homes of mellow brick lined the secluded lane, which featured a surprisingly pastoral atmosphere in the midst of the bustling city. "Betterton," Gentry said, identifying the street. "The Bow Street office is located to our south, and Covent Garden just beyond that."
"Is the market within walking distance?" Lottie asked, anticipating the prospect of exploring her new surroundings. Although Maidstone's was established in west London, the students had never been allowed to go anywhere.
"Yes, but you won't be walking anywhere without me."
"I am in the habit of going out every morning," she said, wondering if that small but necessary pleasure was going to be withheld from her.
"I'll walk with you, then. Or a footman will accompany you. But I won't have my wife wandering outside unprotected."
My wife.The casual phrase seemed to knock the breath from Lottie's lungs. Suddenly the idea of marrying him...accepting his authority, submitting to his wishes...seemed entirely real, whereas it had only been an abstract notion before. It seemed that Gentry had surprised himself as well, for he clamped his mouth shut and stared out the window with a frown. Lottie wondered if the prospect of marriage had also just become real to him...or, God help her, if he was having second thoughts.
The carriage stopped before a house designed in the symmetrical early Georgian style, with white Doric columns and folding glazed doors that opened to a domed entrance hall. The small but elegant residence went so far beyond Lottie's expectations that she stared at it in wordless amazement.
Exiting the carriage first, Gentry helped her descend, while a footman hastened up the front steps to alert the servants to the master's arrival.
Grimacing at her cramped leg muscles, Lottie relied on the support of Gentry's arm as they approached the door. A middle-aged housekeeper greeted them. She was a plump woman with warm eyes and smooth silver hair.
"Mrs. Trench," Gentry said with sudden mischief dancing in his eyes, "as you can see, I've brought a guest with me. Her name is Miss Howard. I will counsel you to treat her well, as she has just convinced me to marry her."
Catching the implication thatshe was the one who had pressed for marriage, Lottie gave him a speaking glance, and he grinned.
Mrs. Trench could not hide her astonishment. Clearly it was difficult to twist one's brain around the concept of a man like Nick Gentry getting married. "Yes, sir." She curtsied to Lottie. "Welcome, Miss Howard. Congratulations, and much joy to you."
"Thank you," Lottie returned with a smile, then looked cautiously at Gentry. No mention had been made of how he expected them to behave in front of the servants. For heaven's sake, she hadn't even known that hehad servants. She supposed that the household would know quite soon that theirs was a marriage of convenience, so there was little sense in pretending any kind of affection for him.
"Have a room readied, and tell the cook to prepare something for Miss Howard," he said to Mrs. Trench.
"Will you require a plate as well, sir?"
Gentry shook his head. "I intend to leave soon, to make some arrangements."
"Yes, sir." The housekeeper hurried to follow his wishes.
Glancing down at Lottie, Gentry tucked a loose tendril of hair behind her ear. "I will be gone for only a short time. You're safe here, and the servants will do exactly as you tell them."
Did he think she might be distressed by his absence? Surprised by his concern, Lottie nodded. "Of course."
"Tell Mrs. Trench to show you the house in my absence." He hesitated briefly. "Naturally I will have no objection if you wish to change anything that is not to your liking."
"I'm certain that I shall find it acceptable." Their surroundings were tasteful and elegant-the entranceway, with its marble floor patterned in geometric designs, the little staircase hall beyond, and a set of paneled mahogany doors opening to reveal a low-ceilinged drawing room. The walls were tinted a pale shade of green and hung with a few simple groupings of paintings, while the furniture had clearly been chosen for ease and comfort in lieu of formality. It was a handsome, elegant house, far superior to the one she had grown up in. "Who decorated the house? Not you, surely."
He smiled at that. "My sister Sophia. I told her it wasn't necessary, but she seemed to be of the opinion that my judgment is lacking in such matters."
"Didn't it cause gossip, for her to visit your home?"
"She always brought Sir Ross with her." The twist of his mouth conveyed how little he had enjoyed those visits. "The two of them also undertook to choose a household staff for me, as they weren't especially fond of my hirelings from the flash house. They particularly didn't like Blueskin or Wapping Bess."
"Wapping? What does that mean?"
He looked both amused and perturbed by her ignorance of the word. "It means swiving. Frigging." At her continuing puzzlement, he shook his head ruefully. "Having sexual relations."
Her confusion rapidly transformed into disapproval. "What in heaven's name would you have employed her for in this house? No, don't tell me, I'm sure I should be sorry to know." She frowned at his amusement. "How many servants do you have?"
"Eight, including Mrs. Trench."
"You led me to believe that you were a man of limited means."
"I am, compared to Lord Westcliff. But I can keep you in a comfortable style."
"Do the other runners live in this manner?"
That made him laugh. "Some do. In addition to the assignments from Bow Street, most of us take private commissions. It would be impossible to live exclusively on the salary the government allots."
"Commissions such as the one from Lord Radnor?" The thought of him made Lottie's stomach twist with anxiety. Now that she was in London, easily within Radnor's reach, she felt like a rabbit that had been flushed from its burrow. "Has he already paid you for finding me? What will you do with the money?"
"I'll return it to him."
"What about my family?" she whispered apologetically. "Might something be done for them? Lord Radnor will withdraw his patronage..."
Gentry nodded. "I had already considered that. Of course I will take care of them."
Lottie hardly dared to believe her ears. It was asking a great deal of any man to support his wife's entire family, and yet Gentry seemed to accept the burden without apparent resentment. "Thank you," she said, nearly breathless with sudden relief. "That is kind of you."
"I can be very kind," he replied softly, "given the right incentive."
Lottie stood still as he fingered her earlobe and stroked the hollow just behind it. A rush of heat spread over her face...such a small, almost innocuous caress, and yet he had found a place so susceptible that she gasped at the brush of his fingertip. He bent his head to kiss her, but she turned her face away. He could have anything he wanted of her, except that. To her, a kiss held a meaning beyond the physical, and she did not want to give that part of herself to him.
His lips touched her cheek instead, and she felt the warm curve of his smile. Once again, he showed an uncanny ability to read her thoughts. "What can I do to earn a kiss from you?"
"Nothing."
His mouth slid lightly over the edge of her cheekbone. "We'll see about that."
To most people, the dingy, well-worn Bow Street public office, smelling of sweat, brass polish, and charge-books, was not an inviting place. But during the past three years, Nick had become so familiar with every inch of the office that it felt like home. An outside visitor would be hard-pressed to believe that the small, unassuming buildings-Bow Street Nos. 3 and 4-were t
he center of criminal investigation in England. Here was where Sir Grant Morgan held court and directed the force of eight runners under his command.
Wearing a relaxed smile, Nick returned the greetings of clerks and constables as he made his way through No. 3 Bow Street. It had not taken long for the force at Bow Street to appreciate his finer points, most particularly his willingness to go to the rookeries and flash houses that no one else dared to venture into. He didn't mind taking the most dangerous assignments, as he had no family of his own to consider, and he wasn't particular in any case. In fact, through some quirk of his character that even Nick didn't understand, he required a frequent amount of risk, as if danger were an addictive drug that he had no hope of renouncing. The past two months of tame investigative work had filled him with a raw energy that he could barely contain.
Reaching Morgan's office, Nick looked askance at the main court clerk, Vickery, who gave him an encouraging nod. "Sir Grant has not yet gone to morning sessions, Mr. Gentry. I am certain that he will wish to see you."
Nick knocked on the door and heard Morgan's rumbling voice. "Come in."
As massive as the battered mahogany desk was, it appeared like a piece of children's furniture compared to the size of the man who sat behind it. Sir Grant Morgan was a spectacularly large man, at least five inches taller than Nick's own height of six feet. Although Morgan was fast approaching the age of forty, no hint of silver had yet appeared in his short black hair, and his distinctive vitality had not faded since the days that he himself had served as a Bow Street runner. As well as having been the most accomplished runner of his day, Morgan was easily the most popular, as he had once been the subject of a string of best-selling ha'penny novels. Before Morgan, the government and the public had regarded the entire Bow Street force with the innate British suspicion toward any form of organized law enforcement.
Nick had been relieved by Sir Ross's decision to appoint Morgan as his successor. An intelligent and self-educated man, Morgan had worked his way through the ranks, beginning in the foot patrol and working his way to the exalted position of chief magistrate. Nick respected that. He also liked Morgan's characteristic blunt honesty and the fact that he seldom bothered with splitting ethical hairs when a job needed to be done.
Morgan guided the runners with an iron hand, and they respected him for his toughness. His only apparent vulnerability was his wife, a small but lovely woman whose mere presence could make her husband start purring like a cat. One could always tell when Lady Morgan had visited the offices at Bow Street, leaving a bewitching trace of perfume in the air and a happily bemused expression on her husband's face. Nick was amused by Sir Grant's obvious weakness where his wife was concerned, and he was determined to avoid such a trap. No female was ever going to lead him around by the nose. Let Morgan and Sir Ross make fools of themselves over their wives-he was much smarter than they.
"Welcome back," the magistrate said, leaning back in his chair to regard him with sharp green eyes. "Have a seat. I assume your return means that you have concluded your business with Lord Radnor?"
Nick took the chair across the desk. "Yes. I found Miss Howard in Hampshire, working as a lady's companion to the dowager countess of Westcliff."
"I am acquainted with Lord Westcliff," Morgan remarked. "A man of honor and good sense-and perhaps the only peer in England who doesn't equate modernity with coarseness."
For Morgan, the comments were akin to wildly effusive praise. Nick made a noncommittal grunt, having little desire to discuss the many virtues of Westcliff. "After tomorrow, I will be ready for new assignments," he said. "I just have one last matter to clear away."
Although Nick had expected that Morgan would be pleased by the information-after all, he had been absent for two months-the magistrate received his words in a surprisingly distant manner. "I'll see if I can find something for you to do. In the meantime-"
"What?" Nick stared at him with open suspicion. The magistrate had never displayed such diffidence before. There wasalways something to be done...unless the entire London underworld had elected to go on leave at the same time Nick had.
Looking as though he wanted to discuss some volatile matter but had not been given permission to do so, Morgan frowned. "You need to visit Sir Ross," he said abruptly. "There is something that he wants to communicate with you."
Nick didn't like the sound of that at all. His suspicious gaze met with Morgan's. "What the hell does he want?" As one of the few people who knew about Nick's secret past, Morgan was well aware of the agreement Nick had made three years earlier and the difficulties between him and his esteemed brother-in-law.
"You'll have to learn that from Sir Ross," Morgan replied. "And until you do, you will receive no assignments from me."
"What have I done now?" Nick asked, suspecting that some kind of punishment was being inflicted on him. Swiftly he mulled over his actions of the past few months. There had been the usual minor infractions, but nothing out of the ordinary. He found it infuriating that Sir Ross, despite his so-called retirement, still had the ability to manipulate him. And Morgan, damn his eyes, would never go against Sir Ross's wishes.
Amusement flickered in Morgan's eyes. "To my knowledge, you've done nothing wrong, Gentry. I suspect that Sir Ross wishes to discuss your actions at the Barthas house fire."
Nick scowled. Two months earlier, just before taking the commission from Lord Radnor, he had received an on-duty summons to run to the fashionable quarter near Covent Garden. A fire had started in a private house belonging to Nathaniel Barthas, a rich wine merchant. Being the first constable to arrive on the scene, Nick had been informed by onlookers that no one in the family had been seen to exit the burning building.
Without stopping to think, Nick had dashed inside the inferno. He had found Barthas and his wife on the second floor, overcome by smoke, and their three children crying in another room. After managing to rouse the couple, Nick had ushered them from the home while carrying the three screaming imps beneath his arms and on his back. In what seemed a matter of seconds afterward, the house had exploded into flames, and the roof had caved in.
To Nick's chagrin, theTimes had published an extravagant account of the incident, making him out to be some grand, heroic figure. There had been no end of friendly needling from the other runners, who had adopted expressions of mock worship and exclaimed adoringly whenever he'd entered the public office. To escape the situation, Nick had requested a temporary leave from Bow Street, and Morgan had given it to him without hesitation. Thankfully, the public was possessed of a short memory. During the past eight weeks of Nick's absence, the story had disappeared, and things had finally returned to normal.
"The damned fire is irrelevant now," he said brusquely.
"Sir Ross is not of that opinion."
Nick shook his head in annoyance. "I should have had the sense to stay out of the place."
"But you didn't," Morgan returned. "You went inside, at great peril to yourself. And because of your efforts, five lives were saved. Tell me, Gentry, would you have reacted the same way three years ago?"
Nick kept his face smooth, although the question startled him. He knew the answer at once...no. He would not have seen the value in taking such a risk, when there would have been no material benefit in saving the lives of ordinary people who were of no use to him. He would have let them die, and although it might have bothered him temporarily, he would have found a way to put it out of his mind. He had changed in some inexplicable way. The realization made him ill at ease.
"Who knows," he muttered with an insouciant shrug. "And why should it matter to Sir Ross? If I am being summoned so that he can give me a pat on the head for a job well done-"
"It's more than that."
Nick scowled. "If you're not going to explain or give me some work, I'm not going to waste my time sitting here."
"I will not keep you, then," the magistrate said equably. "Good day, Gentry."
Nick headed for the door, paused as he reme
mbered something, and turned back to Morgan. "Before I go, I need to ask a favor. Will you use your influence with the registrar to get a civil license by tomorrow?"
"A marriage license?" The only sign of Morgan's puzzlement was the subtle narrowing of his eyes. "Doing errands for Lord Radnor, are you? Why does he wish to marry the girl with such haste? And why would he condescend to wed in the registrar's office, rather than have a church ceremony? Furthermore-"
"The license isn't for Radnor," Nick interrupted. The words suddenly stuck in his throat like a handful of thistles. "It's for me."
An interminable silence followed as the magistrate worked things out for himself. Finally recovering from an attack of jaw-dropping astonishment, Morgan fastened his intent gaze on Nick's reddened face. "Justwhom are you marrying, Gentry?"
"Miss Howard," Nick muttered.
A snort of disbelieving laughter escaped the chief magistrate. "Lord Radnor's bride?" He regarded Nick with mingled amusement and wonder. "My God. She must be an unusual young woman."
Nick shrugged. "Not really. I've just decided that having a wife will be convenient."
"In some ways, yes," Morgan said dryly. "In other ways, no. You might have done better to give her to Radnor and find some other woman for yourself. You've made a considerable enemy, Gentry."
"I can handle Radnor."
Morgan smiled with an amused resignation that annoyed Nick profoundly. "Well, allow me to offer my sincere felicitations. I will notify the superintendent-registrar, and the license will be waiting at his office tomorrow morning. And I urge you to speak to Sir Ross soon thereafter, as his plans will be all the more relevant in light of your marriage."
"I can hardly wait to hear them," Nick said sarcastically, making the chief magistrate grin.
Grimly wondering what kind of scheme his manipulative brother-in-law was devising, Nick took his leave of the Bow Street office. The sunny April day had rapidly become overcast, the air turning cool and damp. Maneuvering nimbly through the mass of carriages, wagons, carts, and animals that clogged the streets, Nick rode away from the river, toward the west. Abruptly Knightsbridge quickly gave way to open country, and enormous stone mansions on large tracts of land replaced the rows of terrace-houses built on neat squares.