An Unlikely Alliance

Home > Other > An Unlikely Alliance > Page 17
An Unlikely Alliance Page 17

by Patricia Bray


  “You were too clever for them,” she said. She needed to keep him talking. Her wrists burned with fire, but her right one seemed marginally looser than it had before. She continued twisting her wrists slowly, careful to make no sudden movement to draw his attention.

  “Of course I was.” Sir Charles continued to pace, seeming oblivious to her efforts. “But somehow you twisted my luck. Every bet I placed has gone wrong since then. I am deeper in debt than I was before I fixed that race. And there is only one way to recoup my losses.”

  “By kidnapping me?” Was this merely an attempt to extort a ransom from Alexander?

  Sir Charles swung to face her, astonishment on his features. “Hmm, there’s some merit to that. I suppose Lord Kerrigan would pay handsomely for your return. Of course, now that you have seen me, I can hardly let you run and tell all to your protector. No, the reason why I brought you here was to do another reading. I need another winner to bring my luck back.”

  “A reading? You kidnapped me so I could predict a stupid race?”

  Her incredulous tone angered Sir Charles. “Yes, a race,” he said, sticking out his jaw. “And you’ll do it for me, missy, or by God I’ll teach you a lesson you’ll never forget.”

  It was no use saying that she couldn’t predict a race. Not when her continued existence depended on his believing that she could. “Why should I help you?”

  “You do this for me and I will reward you well.”

  Did he really think she was foolish enough to believe him when he had just implied that he had no intention of setting her free? He seemed such a stupid man, more a buffoon than a threat. It was tempting to underestimate him. But in his own way he was dangerous, for he had managed to avoid any suspicion and outwit them all.

  “I will need a deck of cards and a list of the runners for the next race day,” she said.

  Sir Charles bent down to pick up a satchel on the floor. “Of course. I have them here with me,” he said.

  His attention on the satchel. It was time. She held her left arm steady and pulled her right wrist up with all the force she could muster. The rope stuck, then slid over her hand. She was free. Still keeping her hands behind her, she wrapped her right hand around the back leg of the stool.

  “Here they are,” Sir Charles said. He began to straighten up. There was no time for thought. Rising swiftly, she swung the wooden stool and hit Sir Charles in the shoulder. It was a glancing blow, but sufficient to knock him over. He groaned, then began to rise. She took hold of the stool with both hands and swung it again. This time it made a satisfying thunk as it connected with his skull. He fell and did not rise.

  Magda stood there, still holding the stool in one hand, but he did not stir. Had she killed him? Looking closely, she could see the rise and fall of his chest that said he was still breathing. She did not know whether she was relieved or disappointed.

  She finally set the stool down, surrendering her unlikely weapon. She undid the ropes still tied to her left hand and they fell to the floor. She considered tying Sir Charles up, but discarded the notion. There was no time. Sir Charles might awaken at any moment, or one of his cohorts could return.

  Her right wrist was raw and bleeding from the rope burns, but there was nothing she could do about that now. Picking up the lantern with her left hand, she made her way cautiously up the stairs.

  She paused as her head drew level with the top of the stairs. A quick glance revealed there was no one to be seen. A large room, it was dimly lit by small windows high up on the far wall. It might have been a busy warehouse at one time, but now the weak sunlight revealed only dust and the broken remnants of a barrel strewn on the floor.

  Setting down the lantern, Magda cautiously made her way across the floor and out through the main door. She was surprised to see that it was only late afternoon, judging by the sunlight and the busy activity. Had so little time passed since she’d been kidnapped from the park? Or had she lost an entire day, a prisoner in a drug-induced haze?

  The wharf was busy, with merchants and clerks weaving their way among the sailors and laborers loading cargo onto the waiting ships. But everyone seemed intent on their own errands, and no one tried to stop her as she slipped into the crowd.

  Once she made her way free of the docks, she hailed a passing hack. The driver looked at her askance, but finally agreed to take her up.

  The carriage drew to a halt outside Alexander’s townhouse. “Wait here, and I will send out a footman with the fare,” she said, opening the door and climbing out.

  The driver started complaining but she ignored him. Just seeing Alexander’s residence drove away some of the fear that had lingered since her escape. As if her presence was a signal, the front door opened and suddenly there he was.

  His face was that of a man who was afraid to hope. “Magda?” he said, and then his eyes met hers. “Magda!”

  He came down the stairs at breakneck speed and then embraced her, holding her tightly as if to convince himself that she was real. “Where have you been?” he demanded. “We’ve been out everywhere looking for you.”

  It felt good to be held in his arms, as if she was a cherished possession. “I came as soon as I could,” she said. “If I had known you were worried I would have tried to escape sooner.”

  “Of course I was worried. I was frantic when I heard you’d been abducted. I must have combed half of London since you were kidnapped yesterday, and Luke and his search parties have been through the other half. I was just setting out again. But how did you get here?” he murmured into her hair.

  There was a loud cough. “Nice to see you so happy, but what about my fare?” the coachman demanded. “A bloke has a right to be paid for his work.”

  Alexander laughed and released her from his tight grasp. “Paid you shall be,” he promised. With one arm around her for support, he led Magda inside. He paused for a moment to speak with Dugan and then turned back to her.

  “It was Sir Charles, wasn’t it?” he asked.

  “Yes, but how did you know?”

  He helped her remove her cloak, and grimaced at the sight of her bloody and swollen wrists.

  “It looks worse than it is,” she hastened to assure him.

  “Sir Charles had been one of those we suspected in connection with the race until the trail seemed to lead us to John Blackwell. But then you were abducted, and the witnesses’ description reminded me of that first attempt. After that, it was just a matter of digging till I found proof of how badly in debt he was and how he had been heard to blame you for his troubles. I’ve had men watching his house, but there was no trace of him or of you.”

  Magda shivered. “He was a very desperate man. He told me he’d lost everything and wanted me to bring his luck back.”

  “Was?”

  He must think that Sir Charles was dead. “No, I didn’t kill him,” she hastened to say. “But I did hit him over the head with a stool.”

  Alexander laughed. “I wish I had been there to see it. You must have been quite the surprise for him.”

  “I surprised myself,” she said.

  She followed him into the front parlor, where she recounted the rest of her adventures as he bandaged her wrists. His touch was gentle, and she couldn’t help remembering that this was the second time he had bandaged her up in this room. It seemed like he was always rescuing her. All his praise for her cleverness in making her own escape couldn’t outweigh the fact that once again she was here, in need of his protection.

  “And then I found a hackney, and the rest you know. Sir Charles may still be in the warehouse. If we go back there I am sure I could find it again.”

  “No need,” Alexander said. “I told Dugan to ask the coachman where he found you. We’ll send word to the searchers and have them scour the area, looking for the warehouse you described. If Sir Charles is still there we’ll find him, and if not he won’t get far.”

  So he didn’t need her help. He was probably afraid that she would find herself in trouble agai
n the moment she stepped outdoors.

  He tied off the last of the bandages. “Is this all he did?”

  “Yes.” She pulled her wrists free with an impatient jerk. She didn’t want to talk about her injuries.

  “Then why are you so angry?”

  “You must think I am a weak creature, unable to care for myself. No wonder you think yourself honor bound to marry me. You are afraid that without you nearby I will always be falling into some scrape or another.”

  There. She hadn’t meant to say it, but she was glad that she had.

  Alexander looked at her incredulously. “You? Weak? How many women do you think would have had the presence of mind, not to mention the courage, to free themselves and disable Sir Charles?”

  “But there was nothing else I could do.” She hadn’t been heroic, merely frightened and desperate enough to do anything.

  He took her bandaged hand gently between his. “Magda, you are the strongest woman I know. You survived unimaginable hardships and still you stayed true to yourself and your sense of honor. Any other woman would have leapt at the chance to marry a wealthy earl. But you refused me, because I offered everything except my heart.”

  “I could never marry without love.”

  “And that is what I want to give you. I love you, Magda. When you disappeared it was as if someone had reached inside and stolen my heart. I knew nothing would ever be right again until I found you.”

  For the first time in their acquaintance he looked unsure of himself, the hope and love she saw in his eyes mingled with a touch of fear lest she reject him.

  “Are you certain this is what you want?”

  “I want you,” he said. “I love you, and I want to be with you for as long as time allows.”

  She wound her arms around his neck, and somehow she found herself sitting in his lap. “I have loved you these long weeks,” she confessed. “And I would like nothing better than to stay with you.”

  He bent his head and his lips found her. It started as a simple kiss, but the sweetness of his lips teased at hers until her pulses raced and she found herself yearning for more. His hand traced the contours of her face.

  A door slammed, followed by the sound of shuffling feet. “I see you found her,” Magda heard Luke say.

  Alexander lifted his head from hers. “Don’t you ever knock?”

  “I did. Twice,” Luke explained. “I hate to interrupt, but Dugan said you had news for me?”

  Magda used the opportunity to remove herself from Alexander’s lap, moving to sit beside him instead.

  “It was Sir Charles. He had Magda kidnapped, but luckily she managed to knock him unconscious and escape. She left him in a deserted warehouse by the docks. Dugan should have the location. I want you to go there and find him.”

  “And then?”

  “And then I have a score to settle with him,” Alexander said grimly.

  Luke nodded. “I see.” He flicked his wrist, and a knife appeared in his hand as if by magic. “I’d be happy to take care of this myself. A clean death is more than he deserves after what he’s done.”

  Magda’s blood ran cold as she realized he was discussing murder. “Alexander, please don’t let him do this,” she said. “I hate Sir Charles for what he’s done, but that doesn’t give us the right to murder him. Hasn’t there been enough killing already?”

  Alexander frowned, but after a moment’s thought his brow cleared and she knew she had won. “If that’s what you want, then that is what we will do. Luke, when you find him turn him over to the magistrates.”

  The knife disappeared back into Luke’s sleeve. “Very well,” he said, not bothering to hide his disappointment. “Do you want to come along for the fun?”

  “No, I have wasted enough of my time on Sir Charles,” Alexander said. “I have better things to do.”

  “Indeed?”

  “Yes. We have a wedding to plan,” Alexander said.

  Luke smiled. “Congratulations,” he said, coming forward and grasping Alexander’s hand before he gave Magda a kiss on the cheek. “I know you will be very happy together.” Then he left, thoughtfully closing the door behind him.

  “Now, where were we?” Alexander asked.

  Epilogue

  The wedding of Magda Katerina Elena Beaumont and Alexander James Maxwell, seventh Earl of Kerrigan, was widely declared to be the crowning event of the season. By now all of London had heard of their fairy-tale romance, and members of society had vied with each other to secure the coveted invitations.

  “This isn’t a wedding, it’s a damn circus,” Alexander had taken to muttering in the days leading up to the great event.

  Magda sympathized with his impatience. They had wanted a quiet ceremony, but Lady Stanthorpe had begged to be allowed to plan the wedding, and despite their misgivings they had eventually given in. Alexander had stood firm on one issue, insisting that an engagement of two months was long enough to satisfy propriety. And whenever Lady Stanthorpe’s plans got too outrageous, he brought her back down to earth by casually mentioning that he had already procured a special license, and it would be no trouble at all to fill it out.

  But the day finally arrived. Magda stood at the back of the church, Lord Stanthorpe at her side, ready to lead her down the long aisle of St. George’s.

  Are you ready, my dear?” he asked.

  “Yes,” she said.

  She began the walk down the aisle, her eyes scanning the church for faces she recognized. Many of those present were unknown to her, but there were a few she recognized.

  Standing in front was Lady Stanthorpe, taking the place of Alexander’s family. Friends of his from India and his business partners warily eyed those members of the gentry who had wangled an invitation. Over on the left Magda spotted Mrs. Brightwell, the plumes on her headdress bobbing as she chatted with the gentleman seated near her. In the row behind her was a delegation from the Russian embassy, and Magda felt a warm glow as she recalled the letter which she had received only the day before. Count Grazinsky had been overjoyed to hear from her, and even now he was on his way to London.

  All eyes were on her, and in a moment of nervousness she wished they had used the special license as Alexander had so often threatened to do. But then she saw him, and the pride on his face was worth all the endless waiting. At his side there appeared to be an Indian Rajah standing in as groomsman, and Magda giggled as she recognized Luke’s features. Trust him to do the unexpected. Lady Stanthorpe must be having palpitations.

  But then Magda reached Alexander’s side, and she had eyes for no one else. She could feel the happiness rising in her as Lord Stanthorpe placed her hand in Alexander’s.

  “I trust you will take good care of her,” Lord Stanthorpe said.

  “I will,” Alexander replied.

  “And I will take proper care of you as well, my Lord Kerrigan,” Magda added.

  He smiled at her pronouncement, and in his eyes she could see their future together, and it was filled with the promise of happiness.

  More from Patricia Bray

  The Irish Earl

  Rich and beautiful, Lady Felicity Winterbourne has traveled the world, seeking only a home of her own. While there are many gentlemen eager to oblige her, she knows that their ardor has more to do with her lavish dowry than true affection. When she meets Gerald FitzDesmond, Earl of Kilgarvan, his tales of his ramshackle Irish estate seize her imagination. Felicity abandons decorum and proposes a marriage of convenience—with the proviso, lest Gerald prove a fortune-hunter, that she hold the purse strings! His dark looks and roguish charm, however, soon complicate her most practical action with the dizziest of desires.

  Lord Freddie's First Love

  Despite having proposed to more than a dozen women, Viscount Frederick remains one of London’s most eligible bachelors. His pride stinging from his latest rejection, Freddie leaves London for his country estate.

  After six years abroad, Anne Webster returned to New Biddeford with a child at her
side—a child whose unruly red hair and mischievous green eyes left society no doubt as to the identity of his mother! Though five-year-old Ian is really Anne's nephew, nothing could erase the stigma with which she had been branded. Anne's girlhood companion, Viscount Frederick, was the only person to offer friendship—and then, a rapturous love. And yet, how could Anne allow Freddie to destroy his life by marrying a woman with a tarnished reputation such as hers?

  A Most Suitable Duchess

  Marcus Heywood, the new Duke of Torringford, must take a wife in three weeks or lose the country estate he's unexpectedly inherited. His brother, Reginald, suggests an advertisement in the papers, something Marcus refuses to consider—until a wine-fueled evening when he pens one in jest. Now, in a horrible mix-up, the ad has been printed and Marcus is mortified.

  At all of twenty-one years, Penelope's spinsterhood seems confirmed; she'll never find a man she can marry. But her half-brother thinks otherwise, and without her knowledge, he answers the Duke of Torringford's advertisement for a wife and signs her name to it. When an announcement of her upcoming wedding to the Duke appears in the papers, Penelope knows she must take her place as his wife, or her honor will be ruined. But it will be a marriage in name only, that she's sure of; until the handsome good looks and warm smile of her new husband make her heart pound in a most unsettling way...

  The Wrong Mr. Wright

  Diana Somerville never imagined that her first London season would end so disastrously or ruin her reputation so completely. When George Wright, the rakehell who compromised her, refuses to come up to scratch at the altar, Stephen Wright, Viscount of Endicott—said rakehell’s older half-brother—proposes to do the honorable thing and marry her himself.

  Their engagement is announced, and Diana returns to London, and is soon swept up in the gaiety of the London season. To her surprise she finds herself drawn to the reserved Lord Endicott, who is so unlike his dashing brother. But her newfound happiness is threatened when George returns to London, and begins courting her in earnest, trying to win her back.

 

‹ Prev