The Traitor's Club: Caleb
Page 8
Caleb wanted to shift his gaze to Eleanor and assure her she was right, but he couldn’t. He knew what kind of blackguard Blackboot was, as he knew there wasn’t anything Blackboot wouldn’t do to protect his area as well as his source of income. And his income came from selling innocent children into a hellish existence.
“How will you do it?” Caleb asked Sophie.
“Can we talk in private?” Sophie asked.
“Yes.”
Caleb leaned his head out the carriage window. “Willie, take us someplace where we’ll be safe.”
“Right-o, Captain.”
The carriage turned, and about ten minutes later it slowed and turned into a small park.
“You’ll be safe here, Captain.”
Caleb opened the carriage door and dismounted, then helped Sophie to the ground. “Drive around for a while, then come back for us.”
“You sure, Captain?”
“He’s sure, Willie,” Sophie said. “Now go.”
The carriage left them, and Sophie turned to face him. “This is how it’s gonna be, Cap’n Parker . . .”
And she explained her plan.
Caleb wanted to refuse her offer. Yes, it was clever. Yes, it should work. And yes, it put Sophie in more danger than he would have preferred.
“So what’s it to be, Cap’n?”
Caleb considered her offer for several moments, then nodded. “I’ll do my best to keep you safe, Sophie, but—”
“I don’t need you to keep me safe, Cap’n. I can take care of myself. All I need you to do is lock Blackboot up so he can never hurt anyone again.”
“I promise I’ll take care of Blackboot.” Caleb took a deep breath. “When can you have everything set up?”
“Night after tomorrow night. Just afore dusk.”
Caleb nodded.
“One more thing, Cap’n.”
“Yes?”
“You said the authorities would let anyone who helped get Blackboot go free. Does that include me?”
“Are you wanted by the authorities?”
Sophie scuffed her feet in the grass. “I might be.”
“For what?”
Sophie continued to stare at the ground as she scuffed her feet. “Could be maybe I killed someone.”
Caleb swallowed hard. It wasn’t often that the authorities would overlook murder. “Who?”
“Blackboot’s brother. I killed him after he raped me.”
Her words lingered in his head as he watched the woman-child clamber back into the carriage. Lady Eleanor had no idea who she was taking under her wing this time.
Chapter 11
Eleanor had waited all day to speak with Caleb, but he wasn’t about. Willie told her he’d gone to London and would be back later. She’d kept watch for him, but he didn’t return until nearly dark.
After dinner, she went out onto the terrace to wait for him. It wasn’t long before she recognized his footfall coming toward her.
“Willie said you were looking for me.” Caleb walked across the terrace toward her. With each familiar step, she felt her concentration slithering away.
“I was,” she answered. “I wanted to . . . to . . .”
“You want to know where I was. What I found out. What Sophie told me last night. And what’s going to happen tomorrow night.”
“Am I that obvious?”
He smiled, and the fluttering that had overtaken her stomach escalated. He affected her unlike any man had since her husband had died. He caused an eruption of sensations that confused her beyond reason. She didn’t want what stirred inside her, but no matter how much she tried, she couldn’t quell the riot of emotions that consumed her.
“Would you care to walk with me?” he asked.
He didn’t wait for an answer but held out his hand. She placed her fingers in his palm and rose, allowing him to lead her across the terrace and through the garden.
This was her special place, the place where clarity ruled her thoughts. The place where she birthed the ideas that would save more children. Where she mentally prepared herself for the duties she had chosen to shoulder.
Thankfully, money wasn’t an issue. She had more income than she would ever require, but there was always the concern of providing enough staff to see to the children’s emotional needs. Of helping them past the losses they’d suffered, whether it be the loss of their homes or their parents.
Eleanor walked at Caleb’s side as they made their way through the garden. Wisteria vines that trailed along the rock wall were shedding their late spring abundance, creating a fragrant path that led to a small summerhouse. They stepped inside.
The open-air structure was Eleanor’s favorite place within the garden. She walked to a cushioned bench and sat. Caleb sat next to her.
“What question do you want answered first?” he asked, leaning back against the low wall that shaped the shelter.
“What did Sophie tell you last night?”
“She has a plan to take down Blackboot.”
“Does her plan involve as much danger as your reaction tells me it does?”
“What reaction is that?”
“You barely said a word all the way back to Southern Oaks. And you clenched and released your right hand as you have a habit of doing when you’re thinking.”
He laughed. “I didn’t realize I did that.”
“You do. Just as you tap your index finger on your thigh when you’re impatient with something. Or someone.”
“I’m impressed. You’re quite observant, my lady.”
Eleanor lowered her gaze. She didn’t want him to know there wasn’t much about him that she hadn’t noticed. There wasn’t much about him that didn’t fascinate her. “What is Sophie’s plan? And do you think it will work?”
“Yes, I think it will work.” He leaned forward and braced his forearms on his thighs and locked his fingers. “But instinct tells me I can’t guarantee I can keep her safe.”
“Then don’t let her do it.”
“She says she’s willing to take the risk. She wants Blackboot arrested. She knows it’s the only way the children will be safe. It’s the only way she’ll ever be safe.”
Caleb rose and walked to the other side of the summerhouse and stared out one of the screened windows. “Blackboot wants Sophie.”
“Wants her? Why? Because she rescues the children he’s after?”
Caleb shook his head. “He wants to make her pay for something she did.”
“What?”
“She killed his brother.”
Eleanor leaped from the bench in shock at what she’d just heard. She was stunned, horrified at the girl’s dire predicament. When she didn’t speak, Caleb turned to her.
“Blackboot’s brother raped Sophie.”
“No.” Eleanor gasped and sank back onto the bench.
“And she killed him. Blackboot’s been after her ever since.”
“He wants her dead.” Eleanor whispered, her eyes glistening in her pale face.
“He doesn’t just want her dead. He wants her to pay for what she did. And when he’s finished, killing her would have been kinder.”
Caleb watched her wrestle with what he’d just revealed, the onslaught of emotions passing visibly across her features.
“So she’s going to be the bait to draw Blackboot out, and when he gets her, you’re going to step in to rescue her.”
“Yes. If we can get to her in time.”
A lump lodged in Eleanor’s throat. “Are you sure the authorities will arrest him?”
He was silent a moment, then turned toward Eleanor with a heavy sigh.
“Yes. That’s where I was today. I spoke with Inspector Jeffers, and he’s more than eager to arrest Blackboot. It seems that every time he gets close enough to capture the brute, he escapes as if he knows the authorities are coming. He has enough charges against Blackboot to get him exiled, if not hanged.”
“Is there another way to get Blackboot without using Sophie?”
The captain shook h
is head.
“I’ll have as many men as possible there to protect her, but there are so many things that can go wrong.” He stepped to the bench and sat beside her, his hands pressed hard against his knees.
“Oh, Caleb,” she said. She could see the pressure he felt. Knew the risk Sophie was taking. Believed that Caleb would blame himself if something went wrong.
It seemed the most natural thing to place her hand over his. She wanted him to know that she understood the conflict that must be raging inside him. He was the protector. He was the defender of her dear ones. And he could not guarantee that Sophie would return from this unscathed.
She studied his downcast profile and knew that it was tearing him apart not to be able to reassure her.
But she understood, and reaching out to him was the most natural way to show it.
He lowered his gaze to where their hands touched, then lifted his head and held her eyes with his own. A heartfelt understanding connected them.
Without shifting his gaze from hers, he lowered his head and pressed his mouth to hers.
At the touch of his lips, Eleanor felt a seemingly ancient ache suddenly vanish. For days she had longed to be kissed by him again. She had longed for the emotions that surged through her when he pressed his lips to hers.
He opened his mouth and demanded she follow his lead. Not to comply was an impossibility.
He stood and pulled her up with him, drawing her close and deepening his kiss.
She wrapped her arms around his neck and rose to the tips of her toes. Pressed as close to him as one could possibly be, she still felt a desperate need to be even closer. When he wrapped his arms around her and nestled her against him, her heart shifted in her breast.
She should turn out of his arms. She knew she should. But the thought of stepping away left Eleanor feeling so bereft that she clung to him fiercely. She cared for him too much. He’d found a way into her heart, and she couldn’t turn him away.
She met his kisses with an ardor that astonished her and in the same breath thrilled her, and he exceeded every requirement she made of him.
Their breaths meshed, then came as one. Eleanor felt as though she were a part of him. That they were one and the same.
As wild abandon crept perilously close, Caleb lifted his mouth from hers.
“You’re going to be the death of me,” he told her in a ragged whisper. “You know that, don’t you, duchess?”
“Yes,” Eleanor answered.
She stayed in his arms for several more wonderful minutes. “You know how impossible this is, don’t you?”
“I know. I have nothing to offer you.”
Eleanor heard his words, but their implication was swept away on a tide of contentment until she realized what he meant. He thought he had nothing to offer her because of the difference in their stations. As if it mattered to her that he was the son of a commoner and she was the granddaughter of a duke. Love crossed all barriers, especially manmade barriers. Surely he knew that.
What prevented them from being together had nothing to do with him. It was her. She was the one who had nothing to offer. She was the one who was lacking. She could never give him the one thing every man wanted. A child. A son. Someone to carry on his name.
Tears filled her eyes. She saw how much he enjoyed the children. Saw how sweetly he held tiny Molly. Knew that if anyone deserved to have children of his own, it was Caleb.
And that was the one thing she could never give him.
Chapter 12
“That would be impossible, duchess.”
Caleb couldn’t believe Lady Eleanor thought he’d even consider permitting her to go with them. He wouldn’t risk her safety by allowing her anywhere near where they intended to apprehend Blackboot.
He looped her arm through his and walked with her through the meadow where the children were playing. His hand lingered atop hers, rubbing lazy circles along her delicate fingers.
“Captain,” one of the boys yelled as they neared them. “Would you throw the ball?”
“Toss it here,” Caleb said, then caught it when it was lobbed to him. “Back up. Way back.”
The boys ran back.
“Farther,” Caleb yelled.
The boys squealed in delight and backed up farther.
Caleb threw the ball, and eight or nine boys ran to catch it.
A mighty cheer went up when one of the boys dove to snatch up the ball just before it hit the ground. “Great catch, Colin!” Caleb yelled, and then he patted the boy on the back when he brought the ball to him so he could throw it again.
Caleb threw the ball a half dozen more times, then turned around when a little girl named Lizzy ran up to Eleanor.
“I know a secret, Lady Eleanor,” she said.
“You do?” Eleanor asked, feigning surprise.
“Yes, but you can’t tell Mr. Captain. You promise?”
Eleanor nodded as she lifted her gaze and winked at Caleb. Then Eleanor leaned down to let Lizzy whisper in her ear. When Lizzy finished, Eleanor clasped her hands to her cheeks and pretended to be surprised. “Are you sure you don’t want me to tell the captain? I think he really needs to know.”
“Oh no,” Lizzy said jumping up and down. “I want it to be a surprise.”
“Oh, it will be,” Eleanor said.
Little Lizzy bobbed a polite curtsy to Eleanor and Caleb, then ran back to her friends.
“What is it you think I need to know?” he asked, taking her arm and leading her away from the children.
“That you’re getting married.”
Caleb stopped. “And who is my lucky bride?”
“Why Lizzy, of course.”
Caleb started to laugh, and Eleanor punched him in the arm. “Don’t you dare. Lizzy might be watching. She’ll be crushed if she thinks you’re laughing at her.”
Caleb stifled his laugh and continued to the edge of the meadow, then down a path where they couldn’t be seen. When they were out of sight, she stopped and turned toward him.
“I’m afraid, Caleb.”
Caleb wrapped his arm around Eleanor’s shoulders and brought her to him. “I know you are,” he said.
“Blackboot is evil. He won’t think twice about killing Sophie.”
“I won’t let that happen.”
“I know you’ll do everything in your power, but—”
Caleb placed his finger over her lips, then leaned down and kissed her forehead. “Trust me.”
Eleanor lifted her head, and her gaze focused on his. “I do. I trust you. It’s Blackboot I don’t trust.”
“I doubt even his own men trust him. Not completely, anyway.”
Eleanor looped her arm through his, and together they walked back to the manor house. “What time will you leave?”
“I’m to meet Inspector Jeffers just after four. Sophie’s made arrangements to meet one of Blackboot’s men at an abandoned warehouse to give Blackboot a message. She claims Blackboot won’t pass up an opportunity to get his hands on her and will come himself. When he comes for her, Inspector Jeffers will arrest him.”
“I don’t know,” Eleanor said, the worry in her voice plain to hear.
“I’ll return as soon as it’s over. And I’ll bring Sophie with me if she’ll come. Some of Blackboot’s men might want to take their revenge on her when they realize their chief is going to hang.”
“Of course. She can stay here as long as she likes. It’s the least I can do for helping to get rid of that devil.”
They walked in silence until they’d entered the manor house. Caleb took Eleanor to the salon where he found her most often. “Try not to worry, duchess,” he said. He kissed her on the forehead, although what he really wanted was to kiss her on the lips. “I’ll return as soon as I can.”
He gathered her in his arms and held her for a few moments, then released her and walked toward the door.
“Caleb?”
He turned to face her.
“Promise you’ll come back to me.”
Caleb smiled. His heart swelled as the realization that he loved her crystallized in his mind. He’d been falling for some days. He knew that now. Perhaps it was the day he’d arrived and walked in on her as she stood up to Blackboot’s man. Perhaps it was the first night he’d accompanied her to London. Perhaps it was the night she couldn’t stop the tears from flowing over the babe who died before its young life had started.
All uncertainty had fled, and he knew he loved her. And always would.
He looked at her, and his smile broadened.
“I promise.”
. . .
“Any sign of her yet?”
The bleak twilight haze was stifling, trapping the harsh smells of the murky alley where Caleb and Inspector Jeffers hid.
Jeffers whispered his answer from his post opposite Caleb. “Not yet.”
Caleb looked down the street in the direction from which Sophie intended to arrive but didn’t see her. It would be soon. She’d made arrangements to meet with Blackboot’s man before it turned dark. It would only have aroused suspicion if she’d suggested a meeting in the dark of night. Besides, she wanted to make certain the authorities could see well enough to capture him when he came after her.
And she wanted to be sure Blackboot knew it was her.
Sophie’s plan was a good one. She intended to tell Blackboot that she was tired of running from him, that she’d discovered a plan the authorities had for trapping him, and that in exchange for telling him what she knew, he must agree to free her from his harassment.
Caleb turned toward the sound of a sassy female voice and saw Sophie. She walked to the warehouse and stopped outside the open door.
“Are ya there?” she said, not too loud, yet loud enough to be heard.
A brutish grunt came from inside the warehouse.
Caleb reached for his pistol. The warehouse door groaned on rusted hinges as a towering figure stepped out and into the light.
He was a large man dressed all in black, with just a bit of white shirt showing above his dark brocade vest. He wore a black hat and high black leather boots.
It was Blackfoot. And he looked exactly as Caleb expected him to.
What he didn’t expect was the figure trapped in Blackboot’s arms.