Wild Pen Carrington

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Wild Pen Carrington Page 4

by Sophie Angmering


  Hugo was holding the crown of the road more by luck than by judgement. He was almost standing in his effort to control the horses, and whereas usually he would have feather-edged a corner, the best he could do at present was to stand half on his feet and use his full weight to haul on the mouths of the mismatched bays in a desperate attempt to get the animals fully under his control once more.

  “Do you want to know how close he is?” Pen shouted at Hugo.

  “Do you think it is going to help me?” Hugo bellowed back in response.

  “No,” Pen admitted, her voice hoarse. ”But he is close. For God’s sake, try and steady them!”

  Pen could see it was a sharp one, even through the thick curtain of rain, the width of the ditch making it perilously narrow. If only Hugo could manage to slow his horses before the next bend in the road.

  There was a positive side, however, to the danger posed by such a treacherous thoroughfare. Surely there was no way that Arden would consider breaking his neck in order to pass them at this point.

  Then, to Pen’s absolute horror, a short blast on the horn announced Lord Arden’s intention to overtake them within the next few yards. Hugo glanced round, his lips set in a hard line of obstinacy and pride as he registered the arrival of his adversary. But there was not much he could do to delay the inevitable. The bolting horses were blowing badly, and their pace was really starting to slow. Their previously rich, brown flanks were now almost black, drenched as they were by the rain. Clouds of steam rose from their hot backs and sides as they were driven on.

  Another short, compelling blast from a horn sounded from Arden’s curricle, and the impatience at Hugo’s tardiness in making way, despite his slowing horses, was clear. Then the road widened and straightened briefly, allowing Pen to see a little further ahead—ahead as far as a red gig being pulled by a small, grey horse.

  Pen looked back wildly towards the thundering hooves of Arden’s rig, only to see the heads of his horses pull level with her position as they were urged past at full gallop to take the lead.

  Arden only just made it through the gap between Hugo and the oncoming gig, with mere inches to spare. Most certainly the face on the driver of the red gig seemed to reflect this, the horror clear to see, as both carriages flashed past him at speed.

  Pen was quick to realise that it was only Arden’s consummate horsemanship that meant he had avoided the gig and she only understood the full extent of his skill as Arden started to check his team’s headlong pace. Until that point she had remained convinced that Arden’s team had also bolted and that someone was almost certainly going to end up dead in that ditch at the side of the road. But as she watched, the viscount’s horses slowed from a gallop to a canter, as Arden consolidated his lead over them, and was either confident or arrogant enough to slow his pace with them still so close behind.

  “Come on!” growled Hugo loudly, but his team were exhausted and no match for Arden’s prime cattle, which were easily increasing the gap between the two carriages despite their exertions and the weather conditions.

  Pen pushed a dripping lock of hair from her forehead and took advantage of the slightly slower progress to rub her eyes and wipe her face. She felt exhausted, soaked to the skin and starving. Of course, the last sustenance she’d had was the cheese and ale at The Red Lion the day before, so it was little wonder that she was so preoccupied with the thought of food.

  The mismatched bays laboured on, but it was by now obvious that any challenge posed by Hugo had been met, and overcome, as Lord Arden had long since disappeared from their line of sight and would be soon, no doubt, almost within striking distance of Purley .

  Hugo drove on in angry silence. Pen knew him well enough to know that she should not attempt to say anything unless it was information directly useful to the task in hand, or in answer to a query from Hugo, should he open his mouth. But given the grim set to his jaw and the expression on his face, Pen chose to sit silently on her perch and watch for the next turnpike.

  Gradually darkness fell and their progress slowed more and more. The conditions of the road worsened due to the incessant rainfall and Hugo allowed the team to slow to a gentle trot and then a walk as night fell about them.

  Hugo looked upwards as they made their way slowly along Croydon High Street, releasing a burst of humourless laughter on reaching The Greyhound, with its gallows sign.

  “Better late than never,” he observed, turning the horses into the posting house courtyard, the team now capable of no more than a plodding walk. It was late, yet still ostlers and postboys came to attend the arriving vehicle, Hugo throwing them no instruction, only the reins, climbing down from the carriage as he did so.

  He turned to Pen as she endeavoured to follow after him, her body chilled to the bone from the drenching she had received. She was tired beyond sensation, due to not only the physical exertion of hanging on like grim death during the race, but also the fact she not eaten in over a day.

  “If I were you, I would run now,” Hugo said coolly, his eyes scanning the activity in the darkened yard. “Our mutual disgrace would be complete if Arden so much as gets a whiff of who you are.”

  Pen’s heart sank at the prospect of spending even one minute more in her sodden, borrowed clothes.

  But she knew Hugo was right.

  Hugo reached into the pocket of his similarly soaked coat and pulled out a handful of silver and pushed it into her hand.

  “Go now,” he snarled. “The other main posting house is the King’s Head in Market Street. There will be something from there to take you into town. Now just go, and for God’s sake forget that any of this ever happened. I consider all obligations towards you discharged.”

  “Hugo.”

  Pen made to catch his arm, to at least thank him for his help, as ungracious and as hellish as it had become. But he evaded her fingers with an angry grimace.

  “Go away, Pen. You’ve brought me nothing but the foulest luck since you embroiled me in your ridiculous schemes. Go before I end up with a challenge and a bullet from your brother-in-law in me for my trouble.”

  Burrows turned his back on Pen and stalked off towards the taproom, leaving her staring after him.

  Pen took one faltering step as if to go after Hugo, but then felt the coins in her hand. There would be time enough in the future to resolve her differences with Hugo, but first she had to return to the mess that was her life as Penelope Carrington. So, spinning on her heel, she marched purposefully from The Greyhound’s yard, her eyes set firmly on the High Street ahead

  She almost didn’t see the figure in the shadows. That of a tall man shrouded in a many caped great coat.

  A man who only caught her attention when he seized her arm in a vice-like grip and asked, “Going somewhere…Pen?”

  Chapter Three

  The Greyhound, Croydon, Surrey

  A fire roared in the grate. It was a handsome, large fire that gave out a lot of heat. But it did not warm Pen. She felt cold, chilled to her bones and beyond. She clung to the sodden jacket, concerned that if she removed it, her sex would be all the more apparent.

  The only way to stop her teeth chattering was for her to clamp her jaw shut, then try and hold it there. But all that seemed to do was to make her whole head shake.

  No one asked her to sit. So she had not, aware of the fact that in her disguise as a very wet, young boy, the landlord’s upholstery might be given more consideration than her tired and aching body, although Pen had been given a pint of warmed mead when she had first arrived. As she shivered, she wondered if she dared ask for another. The only other person in the room was a very stern-faced agent of Arden, who sat in a chair by the fire and stared at her in such a way that it didn’t even seem worth trying to. So Pen stood, shivering and waiting.

  She dragged her hands through her damp hair again and again, trying to comb her wild locks into some order that would make her look more like Mrs Pen Carrington than a mad woman.

  Finally, the door to the pri
vate parlour burst open, and Arden walked in, accompanied by a very familiar gentleman—a gentleman who dealt Pen a hard stare as he followed Lord Arden into the salon.

  Oh God, the expression on Sebastian’s face was all that she had expected it to be and more.

  He is quite obviously furious

  Pen peered past them, half expecting Hugo Burrows to walk through the doorway after them to complete her humiliation. He did not. Hugo Burrows was nowhere to be seen.

  “So then…Pen.” Arden strode across the room and sat down. “Or, should I more properly address you as Mrs Penelope Carrington. Sit!”

  Like a well-trained poodle, Pen dropped into the nearest chair with a nasty squelch, finding the tremors a little easier to control once she was off her feet.

  “Take off your jacket.”

  Arden regarded her steadily for some time, his face showing no trace of emotion. His hard eyes looked her up and down, once, twice as she struggled to peel the sodden material from her arms.

  The silent figure of Sebastian Carrington moved to the chair that had been occupied by Arden’s man, who had been dismissed upon their arrival. Without a word, Sebastian sat, the expression on his face stormy.

  Pen raised her chin in a natural reaction to their intimidating presence. How dare they attempt to browbeat her by humiliating her in this way!

  Surely Sebastian would be better to pass judgement on my behaviour in private?

  Now Pen found herself to be the subject of both men’s scrutiny. Whether due to lack of food or just sheer tiredness, Pen’s head was feeling decidedly light.

  “Has Mr Burrows left?” she asked eventually.

  “Yes. Mr Burrows has left,” Arden stated quietly. “I believe he departed over an hour ago, bound for his rooms in London. No escape there, Pen.”

  So it would seem that Hugo had indeed pushed a handful of change into her palm, then had considered his obligation at an end.

  Pen snorted in disgusted half amusement.

  “Sorry?” Arden asked. “Did you speak?”

  She shut her eyes, attempting to quell the thundering sensation behind her eyes and to get some thoughts straight on how to extricate herself from this outrageous muddle. There were really only two options. The first was to tell Lord Arden the whole, rather involved, truth and to throw herself on his rather doubtful mercy. Pen grimaced. The second would be to throw herself at her brother-in-law’s feet, beg his forgiveness and hope that he would simply return her to the London house directly.

  Pen shuddered.

  The second option was never going to happen. But it was Arden who finally spoke, addressing the man sitting opposite him.

  “So? Are my suspicions correct, then, do you think, Carrington?”

  Sebastian Carrington was studying her. He was a slightly bigger man than Arden, but both of them had the athletic build typical of those gentlemen who participated in sporting pursuits as well as betting on them. Pen glanced at him only briefly. She knew the appearance of Carrington better than she knew herself, for she had spent a lot of their time together studying every line of his body, every lock of his hair, and for just such an occasion as this. The time when he decided to send her away for good.

  Pen glanced from Arden, to Carrington, and back again. Arden had a slight frown on his face but looked remarkably fresh and composed for the man whose challenge had haunted her every waking moment since that fateful meeting in the yard of the Red Lion Inn. It seemed impossible that it was only yesterday that she had first encountered this man’s hard gaze, she realised, but nothing warm or pliable. No, a hard metallic grey, almost steel, maybe.

  “So…”

  Arden’s voice brought her back to her senses.

  “Tell me, was that affecting little scene outside Hugo Burrows attempting to undermine his wager with me, or was it him giving his current mistress her conge?”

  Pen’s mouth fell open. Even her tremors had stopped with the shock of Arden’s question. Words would not come as she absorbed the full import of what he had said. She just gulped for air like a stranded fish.

  “No answer for me, Pen?” His voice carried cruelly on. Silky, seductive. The pale, grey eyes had become as hard as steel sharp as needles, acute.

  “I… I do not know what you mean?” was all she could finally manage. She was shocked that anyone would even consider such a thing.

  Indignant anger rose to swamp any previous thoughts of being intimidated.

  “How could you even think that?” She could not stop the half laugh of disbelief that escaped her lips.

  Be sexually intimate with Hugo? What a thought. It was enough to make her want to laugh them out of the room.

  Had they no idea the temptation the two of them posed to a damp, tired widow?

  “Oh, come now!” Arden moved slowly to his feet, his frame, though well-muscled, lean and hard. He looked dangerous and he sounded angry. “Please do not insult me by thinking you can play the fool with me, Mrs Carrington!”

  “I mean no disrespect, but that is a ridiculous suggestion. I mean, really, would you be indiscreet with Hugo Burrows?”

  Sebastian swore, and Pen paled.

  She hadn’t meant it like that, but now she’d said it she was more than prepared to stand by it.

  Would you? She made sure she stared at Sebastian with just that question in her eyes.

  At her reaction, Arden’s eyebrows winged their way upwards, and he cast a glance at Carrington that could only be described as quelling.

  “Pen, Pen, Pen.” Arden span on his heel, and went to examine the candlesticks sitting upon the mantel above the fire, which had now burned a little way down. “Have you ever thought about what the consequences of being such a wild hoyden might be?”

  Pen gave in to the urge to toss her straggly hair and say rather petulantly, “You are now starting to sound like Carrington, and we all know what a bore he is.”

  Or appeared to be.

  “A bore? You are talking about Sebastian Carrington?”

  For the first time, Arden’s face melted into the most divine smile Penelope Carrington had ever seen. She felt her insides soften and her skin prickle at the flash of white teeth and lean dimples.

  “But, madam, we digress.”

  “We do, how?” Pen asked the viscount, pertly.

  “You are here, in this situation because you insist on running away to London without my approval, regardless of the consequences to either your own social standing or the Carrington name.” Sebastian’s rich tones flowed over her as he answered her.

  She shut her eyes briefly, all the better to absorb his intoxicating presence.

  Pen had come to terms with the fact very early on in their relationship that she was addicted to all forms of interaction with Sebastian Carrington. Approval, disapproval, she didn’t care, just as long as he noticed her.

  She had also always been very honest with herself about why she had accepted the younger brother’s offer of marriage. Mark had liked the idea of being married, and Pen’s family had been attracted by the old Carrington family name.

  It had been obvious even then that Sebastian Carrington would never offer for her.

  As with all things Mark wanted, once he had wed he soon grew bored of his married state and had abandoned Pen to do much of what she wanted.

  Pen was left with the fiery charge of attraction that she felt towards his elder brother and no real outlet for it. She had always harboured a grudging admiration for the older Carrington’s ability to ignore her often blatant lures.

  Now, thanks to the countess, everything was much clearer.

  “I was returning to Half Moon Street, I was not running away, Sebastian,” she protested.

  “You have quite deliberately disobeyed my instructions to stay at Hatchlands until you had seen some sense,” Sebastian bit out.

  “Pish,” Pen retorted airily. “You must have known I would never stay put once you had gone.”

  “So, you have neatly sidestepped the punishme
nt I decided on for subjecting the Carrington name to public ridicule.” Sebastian was warming to his theme. “And then have made it worse by setting off to London disguised as a man, unchaperoned, unprotected, subject to…”

  “An excess of civility?” she suggested gently, a little shocked at what seemed like real concern. “Nothing bad happened, Sebastian…”

  They stared at each other for a brief, silent moment.

  “But it could have happened!” he finally roared. “Something terrible could have happened and I would never have known!”

  Carrington sucked in a deep breath and obviously took a moment to master himself before saying softly, “Come here, Penelope.”

  Pen felt the hairs on her arms prickle at the tone of his voice.

  Firm, commanding.

  “Why?” she asked.

  “Because he has instructed you to do so,” Arden supplied helpfully, taking her arm and moving her over to where Sebastian was sitting. “And you need to appreciate that the time for Carrington asking you to do things nicely appears to have passed.”

  The head of the Carrington family was sitting on the edge of his chair, his knees set squarely before him.

  “Over my knee,” Sebastian instructed her hoarsely. “Over my knee, madam.”

  Pen did not need to ask why this time. It was obvious that Sebastian had decided to settle on a more immediate form of punishment. She gingerly set herself across Sebastian’s knees. His thighs were solid, muscular and supported her easily.

  The most shocking fact of all was that Sebastian’s cock was rock hard!

  Pen could feel it digging into the softness of her stomach as she gave an experimental wiggle. Oh, to be so close to Sebastian Carrington’s—

  Smack!

  “Ow!” She tried to rear up in indignation and pain but found her shoulders pushed firmly down as his hand descended once more across the damp cloth on her buttocks.

  Smack.

  “Ow, that hurts!” Pen yelled, her backside smarting painfully despite the apparent protection of the coarse cloth of her breeches.

 

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