Julia London 4 Book Bundle

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by The Rogues of Regent Street


  It was amazing and humbling, really, this miracle that had come to him by the grace of God.

  Beside him, Honorine flopped onto her back on the blanket they had spread and folded her arms behind her head as she gazed up at the sky. “This day, it is très joli,” she sighed.

  Will nodded, munched his bread. “Not as p-pretty as you, l-love,” he said.

  Honorine laughed, ran her hand seductively along his leg, which instantly stirred all the passion he felt for her. “You speak this English better than me!”

  He grabbed her hand and squeezed it. She was a true godsend; he had not adored someone so completely since Caleb’s mother more than thirty years ago.

  He adored her so completely that he put her hand to his groin, let her feel the hardness there. Her blue eyes sparkled; she came up on one elbow, shaping her hand to the rigid length of him. “Umm … but this love, is it better than me?” she asked low, and suddenly pushed him on his back, coming over him with a gleeful laugh, her smiling face blocking the clouds from his sight.

  Chapter Nineteen

  LUCIE COWPLAIN DID not divulge the information he needed until he pressed ten pounds into her palm.

  After that, it had been easy to find Sophie’s trail. Caleb was making good time, given that she had almost a full day’s head start on him.

  The village of Stevenage had been the most productive so far. The tavern at which he devoured an unremarkable luncheon was immediately adjacent to the coach station. That station, he had guessed, supplied a steady stream of travelers in and out of the Hawk and Dove on a daily basis. This notion was confirmed by the woman who served the common room patrons, and fortunately for Caleb, she had an excellent memory.

  “Oh me, aye, we seen ’em, we did,” she said when asked about Madame Fortier and his father, bobbing her head so eagerly that thin wisps of her hair seemed to float about her face. “Thought it rather odd that the lady was driving. She gave the hostler five crowns to care for the horse, and the gent didn’t seem to mind a’tall.”

  “Did anyone happen to notice their direction?”

  “Oh, north, sir. They all go north from here.” She nodded, started to walk away, but Caleb put his hand on her arm.

  “I beg your pardon, madam, but I am also in search of two other people. A gentleman, about my height, perhaps a notch or two shorter, a bit of silver at the temples? A wealthy gentleman—”

  The woman grinned with all three of her teeth and wiped her palm on the dirty apron she wore. “Oh aye, I remarked him, I did—not many gent through here; a handsome one he was, too. And that coach, Lord! Never seen a coach so fine, not ’ere. Ask Mr. Litton—”

  “Yes, I’ve seen the coach,” Caleb interjected wryly. “Headed north I suppose?”

  She nodded. “ ’E’ll have a time of it, that fancy coach on these roads!” she added with a delighted cackle.

  “And lastly,” Caleb said, withdrawing five crowns from his pocket and placing them on the table. “Have you perhaps noticed a woman traveling alone today? She’s quite attractive, perhaps a head shorter than me.” He paused—how exactly did one describe Sophie? How did he capture the spirit within her?

  “Aye?” the serving woman prodded as she slipped the five crowns into her pocket.

  Caleb cleared his throat, drummed his fingers on the edge of the table. “A woman of slender frame …”—so slender that she fit perfectly within his embrace … and beneath him—“… and dark brown hair. And her eyes …”—bottomless wells of passion—“… her eyes are dark brown, like chocolate. And … and she has a certain essence about her, a sort of radiance if you will.” He glanced up at the woman. “Do you perhaps recall her?”

  Grinning, the woman chuckled low. “Luv, had I seen a woman as you describe, I’d not forget her, I promise you that. But no, I ain’t seen her, not ’ere. She sounds too fine for the likes of this,” she said, gesturing to the common room around her. “Another ale, then?”

  “No, thank you.”

  She shrugged, adjusted the tray at her hip and wandered off.

  At the dry goods shop, Caleb had better luck. He bought a sack of oats for his mount and some hardtack, then inquired after Sophie. The proprietor there remembered her, remarking that she seemed rather prim in selecting two hard candies and some bread and cheese for her journey north. He had thought it odd, he told Caleb as he polished an empty jar, that a woman of her obvious stature was traveling alone, to Nottinghamshire, on a public coach.

  To Hamilton House, then.

  They were all headed for his father’s estate, to the place where Caleb had once longed to live, longed to be accepted. His father and Madame Fortier may have already reached it, or would in a matter of one or two days. As for Trevor—assuming he knew where they had gone—he could conceivably arrive within twenty-four hours of his father with the viscount’s coach and team of four grays.

  Sophie, however, was another matter, particularly given that Caleb wasn’t entirely certain she knew where she was going. Moreover, having availed himself of the public coach system on more than one occasion, he rather thought Sophie would be lucky to reach Hamilton House by the end of the week, and in one piece.

  At least there was only one viable road going north, only one that the public coaches would take, and if he rode hard enough, he could conceivably catch her by nightfall.

  As he rode out of town, Caleb marveled that he could not recall a time he had been of such single-minded purpose. Even the construction of his house had not consumed him so, in spite of the many hours he had devoted himself to it. That was, he had come to realize, only a diversion, something to occupy his hands and his thoughts, a monument to his success in the rail industry, a symbol to show the world that he was worthy.

  But since Sophie had refused him the night of the Fortier ball, the house had left him feeling curiously empty. After two days of brooding over it, he had finally understood why that was so. For all his hard work, it was nothing more than a house. It was not a home, nor would it ever be, not without Sophie, not without her laughter and warmth to fill every room, every corridor. By chance, she had sat across the pond one day, and his life had been changed forevermore. He had begun to believe in life again, had begun to believe that love was possible for a man like him. He had begun to see her in every room of his home, of their home.

  Now, he would never be able to look at the house in the same way. He rather doubted he’d even be able to live in it. Sophie had scored him deeply with her refusal, had lacerated feelings so old and so deep that he had wondered in the last two days if he might ever recover from it. The rejection had left him feeling heavy and old. Alone. Forsaken.

  Yet here he was, chasing like a dog across the English countryside after her. Why he felt compelled to do so, he wasn’t entirely certain, other than he vaguely understood, on some remote level, why she had refused him. It did not lessen the sting, did not ease his suffering in the least, and he thought that perhaps he had convinced himself he understood so that it might somehow deaden the pain. Yet the pain remained, nibbling away at the corners of his heart.

  So why, then, was he chasing after her?

  Because he loved her, adored her so completely that in spite of her rejection, he could not bear to see any harm come to her. It was that simple, that primal.

  It wasn’t hard for Sophie to learn where “home” was. Naturally, Lucie Cowplain knew everything about Hamilton House, right down to the fact that Millicent’s cousin’s sister was a maid there and found it excruciatingly tiresome, as there was hardly anything with which to occupy one’s time. Somehow, that did not surprise Sophie in the least.

  Having secured herself passage on a public coach, Sophie made herself as comfortable as she could on one hard wooden bench, directly across from an elderly couple who proudly informed her they were on their way to visit their son, a solicitor in Birmingham.

  But in Biggleswade, the coach collected a woman and two children, which forced Sophie to squeeze onto the bench with the
elderly couple. The two children began bickering immediately, and continued on for the entire journey, seemingly without so much as taking a breath. Their mother attempted, in her near shouting, to silence the two, but she only managed to make them louder. Sophie exchanged more than one look with the elderly couple beside her, who looked as appalled as she felt.

  When it became apparent that the two children were determined to make their journey miserable, Sophie settled herself in as best she could and tried diligently to block them, and everything around her, out of her mind. Unfortunately, all her attempts met with dismal failure—if she wasn’t feeling the throbbing at her temples, she could not stop thinking of Caleb. Or her argument with Ann.

  She was exhausted beyond reason; her journey had begun on the heels of a terrible row with Fabrice and Roland, who did not want to be left alone in the middle of a hostile ton. They wanted to accompany Sophie, but she could not afford the time it would take the three of them to travel. She had finally convinced them to return to France if they must, leave the house to Lucie Cowplain. If and when she found Honorine, she would send word and arrange to meet them in Burgundy, at Château de Segries, the Fortier estate.

  Her suggestion had caused Fabrice and Roland to howl with dissent; they all but clung to one another like frightened children, but Sophie had held firm, much to the amusement of Lucie Cowplain. “Ah, go and do what ye must then. I’ll keep an eye on the lassies,” she said with a sardonic smile.

  As if that ordeal weren’t enough to send her straight over the edge, she next had a terrible argument with Ann, who discovered her stuffing sundries into a portmanteau, and demanded an explanation.

  “I am determined to find Honorine before something horrid happens,” Sophie had flatly informed her older sister.

  Ann’s eyes rounded. “I beg your pardon, you mean to do what?”

  “You heard me. I intend to find Honorine.”

  Surprise caused Ann to fall into an armchair. She gaped at Sophie, then at her bag. “It is unseemly,” she began, gesturing wildly at the portmanteau. “This will not do. All of London will think you have run off with Trevor Hamilton. God, Sophie, can you not see how improper it all will seem? Have you considered what Trevor will think?”

  What Trevor would think? That was, without a doubt, the final straw. How had they all come to care so much for appearances at the expense of all else? She returned Ann’s glare. “I am sick unto death of caring how everything appears to everyone else, Ann! I could not possibly give a whit what Trevor Hamilton will think, much less high society! And I cannot abide another untoward remark on Honorine Fortier’s character—she has done nothing but show her kindness and support to Lord Hamilton when his own son considers him too infirm, and her thanks for that is to be denounced a criminal by all of England!”

  “Her behavior has brought this on her! She has taken an ill man from his family without permission—”

  “He is not so infirm—”

  “He is hardly capable of making his choices, you cannot disagree! But be that as it may, you have your own reputation to think of, an offer from a gentleman—”

  “I couldn’t possibly care less about my reputation! And you mustn’t worry about any offer, either, for as I have tried to tell you, I have no intention of marrying Trevor, not now, not ever!”

  “Sophie!” Ann had cried with alarm. “You cannot mean that!”

  “I can and I do!” she responded sharply, slapping the portmanteau closed. “I do not care for Trevor Hamilton; I think him a pompous, boring ass!” she continued, ignoring Ann’s gasp. “If you want to know the truth, I am in love with his brother, Caleb. Completely! Thoroughly besotted with him! I have been such a bloody fool about it all—he is a far better man than Trevor, and were it not for the circumstance of his birth, you would think so, too!”

  Her admission had shocked Ann into momentary silence. She stood slowly, her gaze unwavering. “No,” she said low. “You cannot possibly mean what you say.”

  “I bloody well do.”

  “You foolish chit! Have you lost your mind? Do you think these affections are returned, or has the Imposter duped you into believing he loves you so that he might have a chance at your fortune?”

  The implications of her question stung so deeply that Sophie felt it all the way to her toes. She stared down at the portmanteau, her heart and mind reeling with the hurtful and overwhelming sense of inadequacy and failure in her family’s eyes. Slowly, she lifted her gaze to her sister, saw the genuine concern there, and felt betrayed by it.

  “He is not a blackguard.”

  “You didn’t think so of William Stanwood, either.”

  Sophie struggled not to dissolve into tears, swallowing hard. “I am not a child, Ann. I am a grown woman. Granted, I have made mistakes—but you could at least do me the small courtesy of believing that I have perhaps learned from them instead of treating me like a simpleton. Caleb Hamilton is an honorable man and I love him. And I am so very tired of everyone believing they know what is best for me, because they don’t! You don’t! You haven’t the faintest idea who I am, Ann! But I am through pretending, I am quite through trying to be part of the ton with all its disingenuous hyperbole and hypocrisy! I cannot remain true to myself, not like this, not in London, and most certainly not with Trevor Hamilton!”

  “Oh Sophie, how can you do this to us again? To Julian?”

  That was the moment Sophie had picked up her portmanteau and walked purposefully to the door. “I did not do it to you the first time, Ann. I did it to me. This is not Julian’s life, it is not your life, it is mine. When will you accept that?”

  Ann opened her mouth to speak, but Sophie quickly threw up her hand. “Please save your breath. And please don’t worry overmuch—I refused Caleb’s offer for the sake of propriety, just as you would want me to do. Surely that should please you, and by God, I hope it pleases you for years to come, as I have no intention of returning to London or marrying again!”

  The declaration had spurred her onward, made her more determined than ever. Ann had, of course, tried to stop her, but Sophie had pushed her sister’s hand from her arm and marched down the stairs. With Ann fast on her heels, she marched past a fretting Fabrice and Roland in the foyer, past a smirking Lucie Cowplain who held the door open for her, and onto Bedford Square, leaving behind Ann’s frantic threats to find Julian before she left.

  The public coach came along before Ann could have possibly reached Julian. Sophie was bound for Nottinghamshire and Lord Hamilton’s country estate long before Julian could have learned that she had left everything behind. She regretted that she did not have the opportunity to take her leave of Julian, but she had to go. She could not live the lie that had become her life even one more day.

  It was over the course of several hours and an excruciating drive from London that she realized exactly what she had become. She regretted the argument with Ann—not what she had said, exactly, but perhaps the way she had said it. Her family had always wanted what was best for her and she could hardly fault them for that. It was just that somewhere along the way, she had allowed herself to lose her voice, to let them bang out the rhythm of her life, out of step with her own wants and desires. All her life she had tried to please her brother and sisters, and anyone else who happened to enter her world. She had to please herself now, and she hoped desperately that they would understand, but could not ignore the rather desperate feeling that they never would.

  When the coach stopped for the night, she took a room at a public inn. Unable to eat, she retired immediately, tossing and turning on the very thin mattress. The next morning, she filed out into the courtyard with the other passengers at dawn. The elderly couple did not board, leaving Sophie, the mother and two children, and a rather large fellow with hands that looked like beefsteaks to sit beside her. He took up as much room as the elderly couple had, and Sophie sat squished between him and the small window.

  That day of travel was doubly miserable. Sophie had reconciled h
erself to her argument with Ann, knowing in her heart that she was justified in what she had said.

  Which left her with the image of Caleb to haunt her.

  The more miles between her and London she traveled, the more imperative it became that she accept the fact she would never see him again. The despair that welled in her was enough to drown her; it filled the emptiness, the dull ache that would not go away, would not let her sleep. How she had managed to let propriety and protocol and all the little rules of the ton guide her heart was now unfathomable to her. It seemed so shallow … but it had been so easy to do.

  She could have learned from Caleb instead of hurting him—he had accepted who she was, and had shown more regard for the person she was than her family ever had. Her gift in return was an outright rejection of his love because of who he was. She missed him. Missed him so much that she felt she was dissolving under the weight of it.

  By the time the coach pulled into the tiny courtyard of the Ravenfield Inn in the hamlet of St. Neots that evening, Sophie thought she was on the verge of being ill. The throbbing pain in her head was enough to drive her to her knees. The children were pouting and restless, and the man sitting next to her had fallen asleep, his arm a dead weight on her leg.

  “All out for the night. We resume the drive to Petersborough at precisely seven o’clock on the morrow,” the driver called up as he opened the door.

  That announcement caused one of the children to whine. Their mother—who looked as exhausted as Sophie felt—pushed first one, then the other, through the door, wiggling out behind them. The man went next, slowly and carefully, causing the coach to tilt dangerously to one side. When Sophie finally disembarked, it felt as if she were standing on hundreds of needles, her legs and feet were so numb.

  She wandered about the courtyard for a few minutes, trying to circulate her blood. The sound of laughter and cheerful voices filtered out into the courtyard through an open window—the inn was obviously very crowded. Curious, Sophie walked to the window and peered inside. The place was filled to almost overflowing; the entire village of St. Neots had come for a tankard of ale.

 

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