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Regency: Rakes & Reputations (Mills & Boon M&B)

Page 13

by Gail Ranstrom


  Charlie was waiting for him at the Crown and Bear. He’d already claimed a back table and had a bottle of Devlin’s private stock and two glasses. And God knew, Jamie needed a drink.

  “Still no trace of the Gibbons brothers,” he reported as Jamie sat down.

  “Blast! Where can they have gotten to?”

  “Just know where they’re not. Not at the Cat’s Paw, and not finagling free ale here,” Charlie stated the obvious.

  “I need to talk to them. I’d swear Henley killed Metcalfe and stole his costume to assault Miss O’Rourke, but there is always the possibility that he paid to have it done. Old Cox is dead and there’s been an attempt on my life. I’d wager a fortune that there will be others. If anyone knows anything about it, I’d guess it would be Dick Gibbons.”

  “Aye,” Charlie agreed. “If he’s not behind it, he’ll know who is. But I’m of a mind that we should simply put that vermin out of the way.”

  “Kill them?”

  “Assassinate,” Charlie corrected. “Though exterminate might be more fit for the Gibbons clan. Some men are in need of dying. They tried to kill you, and tonight after I put you and Bella in the coach, someone took a shot at me. Two someones, by the sound of the footsteps. It’s a coward’s method, and neither Gibbons would risk a direct attack on anyone remotely their size.”

  Jamie quickly looked Charlie over, reassuring himself of his brother’s well being. “One shot?”

  “Cowards. Had they stopped to reload, I’d have been on them.”

  There’d only been one shot the night he’d been attacked. Had he pursued the shooter, likely the brothers would have been waiting at the end of the blind alley armed to the teeth.

  He suspected the idea to eliminate the Gibbons brothers had come from Marcus Wycliffe, but he knew his brother was not above such a thing. “The flaw in your plan to improve London by eliminating Dick and Artie is that we’d never get the truth from them then. But I must say I admire that you are not hindered by such lofty principles as proof. If you know in your gut that someone has tried to kill you, that is enough for you.”

  Charlie laughed. “Aye, well, we cannot all fit on that small patch of high moral ground you stand on, Jamie.”

  “Not so high, Charlie. I’d kill Henley if I could lay hands on him,” he admitted.

  Charlie sighed and sat back in his chair. “I am sick to death of that subject. Just for a moment, could we talk about more pleasant things? Miss O’Rourke, for instance?”

  “She is safely home, if that is what you are asking.”

  “Only half of what I am asking. The other half is what the hell she was doing in a cesspit like the Cat’s Paw.”

  “Looking for Henley, or for information about him.”

  “Good God,” Charlie muttered under his breath. Then, “You put an end to that, did you not?”

  “I thought I’d put an end to it a week ago. Since then, we’d reached a compromise. I’d keep an eye on her, and she’d confine her inquiries to the ton—mothers, sisters, friends of the bastard. Then I’d escort her home to be certain she was safely tucked up for the night.

  “Now she had found herself a guide to London’s underbelly. She thinks I did not see that boy waiting for her in the shadows, but I simply did not have time to deal with him tonight. But I will. Believe me, I will. Meantime, you can see how well our agreement worked?”

  “Exceedingly.” Grinning, Charlie leaned forward and placed his forearms on the table in an attitude of confidentiality. “Which confirms my suspicion.”

  Certain he’d regret it, he asked anyway. “What suspicion?”

  “That Miss Eugenia is a match for you. Though you have most of the eligible heiresses of the ton eating from your hand, she resists your charms and you cannot abide that. I collect it is more than a matter of pride. More than a matter of protecting our brother’s sister-in-law. You care for her, do you not? “

  “Charlie, do not tweak me with this. I am not in a mood to indulge you.”

  “I would not mention it now but that she is part of our family. You would not dally with her, would you? “

  Dally? No. He suspected it was rather more than that. “If you are asking if I am trying to seduce Eugenia, I am not.”

  “You’ve always kept your dalliances within the demimonde. Very discreet of you. Very safe. But I thought I saw something different happening with Miss Eugenia. Something a bit more dangerous.”

  “Dangerous? What the hell are you talking about, Charlie. How could she be a danger to me?”

  “You’ve only been with women you could never love, Jamie. The demimonde, courtesans, mistresses. The moment some likely miss gets close, you back away. Our little Suzette is an excellent example. Did she ask too much? Surely she did not suggest marriage?”

  He shook his head. “Suzette is too wise for that. But I sensed that she was growing rather fonder of me than she should. In her profession—and mine—close attachments are not a good idea.”

  “Your profession has nothing to do with it.”

  Jamie tossed down the rest of his drink and started to stand. His bed was calling. The last thing he needed on a night like this was a lecture from his younger brother.

  “You need a good woman, Jamie.”

  “I’ve had a good woman. Several, in fact. Some were good. Some were very good. And some were…well, downright—”

  “Enough, then. But be warned—Eugenia is different than your usual interests. She is not adept at the little games that so amuse our set. Despite her foolhardiness tonight, she is too vulnerable to trifle with.”

  He settled back in his chair. There was nothing trifling about Eugenia, and he suspected Charlie was right—Jamie was acutely aware of her vulnerability. He felt differently about her than he had any other woman. Stronger. More…possessive? And he had more than a passing desire for her.

  Charlie downed the remainder of his glass and lowered his voice as he continued. “I’ve watched you my whole life, Jamie. You’ve always kept yourself removed from close attachments and safe from disappointments and rejection. For whatever reason, you set your course for bachelorhood long ago. If you cannot offer her more, leave Miss Eugenia alone. She deserves better.”

  She did. He’d known that from the beginning, but he’d returned time and time again, craving her smile, the softness of her voice, the feel of her in his arms. He wished, now, that he’d left Charlie or Devlin to sweep her from that altar. Had he never known the feel of her in his arms, her sweet smell, her sighs, it wouldn’t trouble him so much now.

  A few more days. Surely he could endure a few more days.

  “She should be safe enough from me. They will be leaving London quite soon anyway. Her mother has crates already packed. And, with a bit of luck, we shall find Henley and deal with him, hence there will be nothing left to throw us together.”

  Charlie nodded his understanding. “I think that is best for our families. An unfortunate affair would make gatherings quite awkward.”

  Jamie reached for the bottle. On his way home moments ago, he now felt like getting quietly, blissfully drunk.

  Sitting between Hortense and Harriett, Gina trained her eyes on the stage where actors were posturing as they said their lines, but her mind whirled with the events of last night. If she were to be honest, she was relieved James had found her at that tawdry little gin house. She’d felt conspicuous and terrified. And she wouldn’t have known what to do if someone had talked to her. Had Ned really thought she’d hear something about Mr. Henley there?

  By their very presence at the same establishment, James and Charles Hunter had confirmed that they were on the same track, so she hadn’t really been needed there. She shivered.

  “Are you cold, Gina?” Harriett whispered, leaning closer.

  “I just felt a little breeze on the back of my neck.” As if the Devil had walked across her grave.

  “Shh,” Hortense warned them.

  Standing behind them near the curtain of their box, Jame
s stirred and crossed his arms, as if impatient and ready to leave. He’d fetched the Thayer girls before he’d come for her, obviously not wishing to be alone with her. The twins were enjoying the attention of being squired about town by the elusive James Hunter, and Gina had kept the real reason to herself. It was much more flattering to think he craved their company than that he wanted to keep Gina out of trouble.

  Ironically, the gravest danger to Gina was James himself. Her virtue would be forfeit with very little fuss if he but crooked his finger. Heat washed through her as she recalled the way she’d pleaded with him not to stop in the coach last night. And, just for a moment, she had thought that if she made love to James, it would wash away whatever Mr. Henley had done to her. As the moment had drawn out, she realized she’d been foolish to expose herself, her deepest fears, to him. And her only excuse was that, if he had made love to her, at least she would know, for better or worse, if she’d been defiled.

  She’d do anything—anything—for the answer to that question. She’d ask questions, put herself in danger, pose as a lightskirt in a Whitechapel gin house, and more. And she suspected that the key to the answers to all her questions dangled at the end of her corset strings—if only she could find what it opened.

  The music rose to a crescendo and Gina blinked. She’d been so lost in her own thoughts that she had missed the entire first act of the play. If pressed, she would not have been able to say what it was about. She clapped with the audience as the lights came up, guttering as the wicks were raised.

  Charlie pushed the curtain aside and entered their box. “I say, did you notice that all eyes were upon this particular box? The excess of beauty here has charmed the audience. I would not be surprised if the actors ask you to leave so they may get their fair share of attention.”

  Hortense laughed and waved her fan furiously. Harriett and Gina merely smiled at his ridiculous flattery while James lifted an eyebrow in amusement.

  “What accounts for your interest in the theatre this evening, Charlie?” he asked.

  Charlie grinned and shot a glance at the ladies.

  Gina wondered what James had told him about her presence in the Cat’s Paw last night. The truth, no doubt, but how much of it?

  “Oranges!” came a cry from below.

  She looked down and saw a girl with a basket of fruit, holding one perfect orange aloft for all to see.

  “Mary!” Charlie tossed the girl a sixpence and laughed when she snatched it out of the air.

  “She did not throw you the orange, Mr. Hunter,” Harriett said.

  He turned to them and explained. “Mary supports her mother and crippled brother. I always throw her a coin but never take the orange.”

  Harriett glanced at the pretty girl again, and back at Charlie. “That is very kind of you, Mr. Hunter. Not many are as charitable.”

  Charles looked embarrassed and shrugged. “‘Tis little enough—a shilling here, a sixpence there.”

  Gina looked back at the girl in time to see her blow Charles a kiss. The incident spoke well for a man whose modesty prevented him from speaking well of himself. Mary turned away and began crying her goods again.

  As Gina watched the girl weave a path through the audience, she noted a man approach her and say something in her ear. Mary appeared to shrink in size and began walking with the man toward the stage. Before they disappeared behind the curtain, he turned and looked directly at their box. Mr. Henley!

  James had seen him, too. “Charlie, will you see the ladies home, please. I have sudden business to attend.”

  ‘E’s one fer the ladies…. Ned’s words rang in Gina’s ears. Would Mr. Henley harm Mary in any way? Surely he would not dare with every charley and runner in London looking for him. The Brotherhood was disbanded. There were no more followers.

  And yet her desperation for answers and the shortness of time overshadowed the lingering fear. So much so that she had once again dressed in the rough woolen dress and shawl, and had gone out to meet Ned. All she had now was the little key clutched in her hand and an idea nagging at the back of her mind.

  Knowing, now, where she was and that she was not far from home, she’d dismissed Ned and stood in the shadows of a tree across the street from an abandoned estate on the outskirts of Mayfair. The gate stood open to an overgrown lawn and the house was partially obscured by trees that stirred in a chilling breeze. Behind the house, the spire of a small chapel rose above the trees—the place that had changed her life forever.

  Gina shivered and drew her shawl closer. What secrets did this eerie estate hold? What had happened there that night, and all the nights before? Teasing dancing flicks of memory appeared and disappeared before her, leaving her with only vague impressions. Mr. Henley forcing bitter wine down her throat. Being carried somewhere and unable to fight. Hands plucking at her clothing. Then…then nothing.

  The wind soughed through the trees, moaning like a lost child, and Gina sank deeper into the shadows, frozen in time—at that very moment in the catacombs beneath the chapel. Locked in an eternal cold. She wanted to feel again, to reclaim whatever remained of herself. And the only way she could do that was to find out, to finally know, what had happened to her during those lost hours.

  She fingered the little key stashed in the slash pocket of her dress. Would it open a door here? Which door? And what would she find? Answers? More questions? Peace?

  She reached into her mind, almost as if she could grasp and pluck out the memories that escaped her. And again the elusive memories teased her as if they were near, then flitted away, afraid to expose themselves to her scrutiny.

  Her back straightened as she screwed her courage up to the sticking-place and her hand fisted around the key. She would not shirk, no matter how frightened she was. She took one determined step forward, then another.

  A hand clamped over her mouth and an arm slipped around her to drag her backward, once more into the darkness.

  Chapter Twelve

  Gina twisted and fought like a dervish, trying to loosen herself from the unforgiving hold and clawing at the hand over her mouth. Dear Lord! Not again.

  “Are you mad?” a familiar voice whispered.

  She went limp with relief.

  “Dare I release you?”

  She nodded and breathed deep as he eased his hold on her. He still held her to steady her and she turned in the circle of his arms. “You nearly scared me to death,” she whispered.

  “No less a fright than you gave me,” James said, a sardonic smile twisting the corners of his mouth.

  “How did you find me?”

  His mouth was mere inches from hers. “Coincidence.”

  “But—”

  “It was a trap. Henley drew me away deliberately. He had cast Mary off by the time I got backstage. I gave chase, but he had already disappeared. He has set traps for me before, and I suspected he had done so again when a coach nearly ran me down. A clumsy attempt, to be sure, but one that put me on my guard. ‘Twould appear half of London is looking to collect the bounty on my head. I will be lunging from runaway coaches, watching for falling objects and dodging bullets until this thing is over. All unnecessary since you will be the death of me.”

  Gina sighed. Though she’d listened to him carefully, her mind was overwhelmed with other things—the clean, spicy scent of his cologne, the way a faint dimple appeared in one cheek when he grinned, the warmth of his arms around her. She found she could only nod her understanding.

  “I had a report earlier tonight that someone had seen a light in one of the upper windows here, so I came to investigate. I found nothing. But that still doesn’t explain your presence here, Eugenia.”

  “A light?” She looked over her shoulder at the eerie deserted house.

  “You’re going nowhere but home, Miss O’Rourke.”

  “Directly after we search the house.”

  He looked astonished and angry at the same time. “I already have. You have sorely underestimated me. When I took you home afte
r your ill-conceived foray into Whitechapel last night, I thought you would know enough to abandon such foolish tricks. If you do not, you leave me no recourse but to act as your missing conscience. I am taking you home, Eugenia, and we shall waken Drew and tell him what you are about.”

  Panic sent gooseflesh up her spine. “You would not dare!”

  “Convince me not to, Eugenia. Give me a reason—just one—to hold my tongue. But be warned, it had better be good.”

  In her heart, she knew he was right. She knew she’d been foolhardy even though Mayfair was not Whitechapel, and that desperation had driven her to absurd lengths. She knew, too, that she’d put herself in danger akin to the sort that had landed her in trouble in the first place. She was ill at ease all the time, but she couldn’t help herself.

  Lacking a sane reason to convince him, she rose on her tiptoes and placed her lips against his. She felt him stiffen in shock, then soften to her insistence. His arms tightened around her as he deepened the kiss, invading her mouth with his tongue, testing her resolve. Did he think she’d relent? Beg off? Run home?

  Oh, he’d sorely underestimated her.

  Eugenia’s sweet persistence took Jamie by surprise, though his body responded in the most primitive way. For the briefest of moments he’d been angry at her ploy, but then he’d understood her desperation. Understood it and knew he could never use it to take what he’d wanted for so long.

  Ah, but what could a kiss or two hurt? Something to carry with him after she’d gone back to Ireland. Something to warm him in the long, cold days to come.

  He lifted her slightly to fit her against him, to feel the hollow of her femininity. She moaned and clung tighter as he pressed her back against the tree that had sheltered them from vision. She tangled her fingers through his hair and held him close, as if she were afraid he’d withdraw. Oh, but not in this life.

  She was breathing hard, her chest rising and falling rapidly. Giving her time to catch her breath, he lifted her a few inches more and trailed kisses down her throat to the little dip at the base. The scent of ambergris and moss rose to him as he ran his tongue over the vulnerable spot.

 

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