Hoyt, Elizabeth - The Leopard Prince2.txt

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by The Leopard Prince


  this woman was his employer and he her servant. How could he forget that

  fact? Irritated with himself, he faced forward again.

  She didn’t seem to notice his pause. “Do you have the eggs still? I’d

  like to see them.”

  They’d rounded a bend in the road, and Harry saw that a tangle of

  branches blocked the way. A tree had fallen across the lane.

  “Whoa!” He frowned. The lane was hardly wide enough for the gig as it

  was. It would be a devil’s job to turn the carriage around. What—?

  Four men suddenly appeared from behind the tangled branches. They were

  big, they looked mean, and they each held a knife in their hand.

  /Shit./

  /Chapter Six/

  George screamed as Harry Pye made a heroic attempt to pull the horse

  around. The lane was too narrow, and the men were upon him in seconds.

  Mr. Pye kicked the first in the chest with a booted foot. The second and

  third overwhelmed and dragged him from the carriage. The fourth dealt

  him a horrendous blow to the jaw.

  /Oh, my sweet Lord!/ They were going to kill him. George felt a second

  scream clog her throat. The gig jolted as the horse half-reared. It was

  frightened and trying to run, stupid animal, even though it had nowhere

  to go. George frantically scrabbled for the reins on the floor of the

  gig, cursing under her breath and banging her head against the seat.

  “Watch it! He’s got a knife!”

  That wasn’t Mr. Pye’s voice. George chanced raising her head and saw to

  her relief that Harry Pye did indeed have a knife. He held a thin,

  gleaming blade in his left hand. Even from this distance it looked

  rather nasty. He was in a strangely graceful fighter’s crouch in the

  road, both hands in front of him. He appeared to know what he was doing,

  too. One of the villains was bleeding from his cheek. But the other

  three were circling, trying to flank him, and the odds didn’t look good.

  The gig lurched again. She lost sight of the action as she fell and

  cracked her shoulder against the seat.

  “Will you hold still, you silly beast?” she muttered.

  The reins were sliding toward the front, and if she lost them, she’d

  never get control of the gig. Shouts and grunts came from the fighters,

  interspersed with the awful sound of fists hitting flesh. She daren’t

  risk looking up again. She held on to the seat with one hand to steady

  herself and strained with the other toward the slithering reins.

  /Almost./ Her fingertips grazed the leather, but the horse jolted,

  sending her back against the seat. She just kept her footing. If the

  horse would only hold still.

  One.

  More.

  Second.

  She dived and triumphantly came up with the reins. Quickly she sawed

  them, little minding the horse’s mouth, and tied them to the seat. She

  chanced a glance. Harry Pye was bleeding from his forehead. As she

  watched, an attacker lunged at him from his right. Mr. Pye whirled in a

  powerful move and kicked at the other man’s legs. A second thug clawed

  at his left arm. Mr. Pye twisted and performed some sort of maneuver,

  too fast for her to see. The man screamed and staggered back with a

  bloody hand. But the first man took advantage of the distraction. He hit

  Mr. Pye again and again in the middle. Harry Pye grunted with each blow,

  doubling over, valiantly trying to swing his knife.

  George set the carriage brake.

  The third and fourth men advanced. The first man punched Mr. Pye once

  more, and he fell to his knees, retching.

  Mr. Pye was going to die.

  /Ohmygodohmygodohmygod!/ George scrambled under the seat and brought up

  a sackcloth-wrapped bundle. Shaking the cloth free, she clutched one of

  the dueling pistols in her right hand, raised it with a straight arm,

  aimed at the man standing over Mr. Pye, and fired.

  /Bang!/

  The explosion nearly deafened her. She squinted through the smoke and

  saw the man reel away, clutching his side. Got the bastard! She felt a

  thrill of bloodthirsty glee. The remaining men, including Harry Pye, had

  turned in her direction with varying degrees of shock and horror. She

  raised the second pistol and took aim at another man.

  The man flinched and ducked. “Gorblimey! She’s got a pistol!”

  Apparently the thought that she might be dangerous had never crossed

  their minds.

  Harry Pye rose, pivoted silently, and slashed at the man nearest him.

  “Jaysus!” the man screamed, holding a hand to his bloody face. “Let’s

  go, lads!” The thugs turned and dashed back the way they’d come.

  The lane was suddenly quiet.

  George heard the blood rushing in her veins. She carefully set the

  pistols down on the seat.

  Mr. Pye still looked in the direction the men had disappeared. He seemed

  to decide that they were gone, for he lowered the hand holding the

  knife. Bending, he slipped it inside his boot. Then he turned to her.

  The blood from the wound on his forehead had mixed with sweat and

  smeared down the side of his face. Stray hairs from his queue stuck to

  the gore. He breathed deeply, his nostrils flaring as he tried to catch

  his breath.

  George felt strange, almost angry.

  He walked toward her, his boots scraping against the rocks in the road.

  “Why didn’t you tell me you’d brought pistols?” His voice was raspy and

  deep. It demanded apology, concession, even submission.

  George didn’t feel like giving any.

  “I—” she began firmly, strongly, even haughtily.

  She didn’t have a chance to finish because he was in front of her. He

  grabbed her about the waist and yanked her from the carriage. She

  half-fell against him. She put her hands on his shoulders to keep from

  toppling over. He pulled her against him until her breasts were quite

  squashed into his chest, which, strangely, felt very nice. She lifted

  her head to ask him what, exactly, he thought he was about—

  /And he kissed her!/

  Luscious, firm lips that tasted of the wine they’d drunk at luncheon.

  They moved over hers in an insistent rhythm. She could feel the prickle

  of his stubble and his tongue, running over the crease of her lips until

  she opened them and then . . . /Ohm./ Someone was moaning, and it might

  very well be her because she had never, never, /never/ been kissed like

  this before in her whole life. His tongue was actually inside her mouth,

  stroking and teasing hers. She was about to melt—maybe she already was

  melting, she felt absolutely drenched. And then he lured her tongue into

  his mouth and suckled it, and she lost all control and wrapped her arms

  about his neck and suckled him back.

  The horse—stupid, /stupid/ animal—chose that moment to whicker.

  Mr. Pye jerked his head away. He glanced around. “I can’t believe I did

  that.”

  “Nor I,” George said. She tried to pull his head back down so he would

  do it again.

  But suddenly he picked her up and deposited her on the carriage seat.

  While she was still blinking, he crossed to the other side and jumped in.
<
br />   Mr. Pye placed the still-loaded pistol in her lap. “It’s dangerous here.

  They may decide to come back.”

  “Oh.”

  All her life she’d been warned that men were slaves to their desires,

  that they held their impulses in barely controlled check. A woman—a

  lady—must be very, very careful of her actions so she did not put spark

  to the gunpowder that was a man’s libido. The consequences of a lady’s

  carelessness were never fully explained, but the hints were dire indeed.

  George sighed. How deflating now to find Harry Pye was the exception to

  the rule of male instability.

  He maneuvered the gig around, alternately cursing and cajoling the

  horse. Finally he got it turned back the way they’d come and urged the

  gelding into a brisk trot. George watched him. His face was grimly set.

  There was no evidence of the passion with which he’d kissed her only

  moments ago.

  Well, if he could be sophisticated, then so could she. “Do you think

  Lord Granville had those men attack us, Mr. Pye?”

  “They attacked only me. So, yes, it could be Lord Granville. He’s the

  most likely.” He looked thoughtful. “But Thomas Granville rode up the

  lane only minutes before we did. He could’ve warned the toughs if they

  were in his pay.”

  “You think he is in league with his father, despite his apology?”

  Mr. Pye pulled a handkerchief out of an inside pocket and gently wiped

  her cheek with one hand. The handkerchief came away with blood on it. He

  must have rubbed his blood on her when they’d kissed. “I don’t know. But

  there’s one thing I’m sure of.”

  George cleared her throat. “What is that, Mr. Pye?”

  He tucked away his handkerchief. “You can call me Harry now.”

  HARRY PUSHED OPEN THE DOOR to the Cock and Worm and was immediately

  smothered in smoke. West Dikey, the village closest to Woldsly Manor,

  was just large enough to boast two taverns. The first, the White Mare,

  was a half-timbered building with a few rooms and could be called an

  /inn./ Because of this, it offered meals and drew the more respectable

  business: passing travelers, local merchants, and even gentry.

  The Cock and Worm was where everyone else went.

  A series of dingy rooms with exposed beams that had caught more than one

  customer a nasty knock on the head, the Cock and Worm had windows

  permanently blackened from pipe smoke. A man could sit in peace here and

  not be recognized by his own brother.

  Harry made his way through the crowd to the bar, passing a table of

  workmen and farmers. One of the men—a farmer named Mallow—looked up and

  nodded in greeting as he passed. Harry nodded back, surprised but

  pleased. Mallow had asked Harry for help back in June about an argument

  he was having over his neighbor’s cow. The cow kept escaping its

  enclosure and had twice trampled the lettuce in the Mallow’s kitchen

  garden. Harry had settled the difficulty by helping the elderly neighbor

  build a new wall for his cow. But Mallow was a taciturn man and had

  never thanked Harry for his trouble. Harry had assumed Mallow was

  ungrateful. Obviously, he’d been wrong.

  The thought warmed him as he reached the bar. Janie was working tonight.

  She was sister to Dick Crumb, the owner of the Cock and Worm, and

  sometimes helped at the counter.

  “Yeah?” she mumbled. Janie spoke to the air over his right shoulder. Her

  fingernails drummed an uneven beat on the counter.

  “Pint of bitter.”

  She set the ale down in front of him, and he slid a few coppers across

  the scarred counter.

  “Dick in tonight?” Harry asked quietly.

  Janie was close enough to hear, but her face was blank. She’d gone back

  to the drumming.

  “Janie?”

  “Aye.” She stared now at his left elbow.

  “Is Dick in?”

  She turned and walked into the back.

  Harry sighed and found an empty table near a wall. With Janie it was

  hard to tell if she’d gone to tell Dick he was here, went to fetch more

  ale, or simply tired of his question. In any case, he could wait.

  He’d gone stark, raving mad. Harry took a sip of his beer and wiped the

  foam from his mouth. It was the only explanation for kissing Lady

  Georgina this afternoon. He’d walked toward her, his head bleeding and

  his gut aching from the beating. He hadn’t been thinking of kissing her

  at all. Then somehow she was in his arms, and there was nothing in the

  world that was going to stop him from tasting her. Not the possibility

  of being attacked again. Not the pain in his limbs. Not even the fact

  that she was aristocracy, for pity’s sake, and all that meant to him and

  his ghosts.

  Lunacy. Plain and simple. Next he’d be running through the high street,

  naked and waving his John Thomas. He took another glum sip. And what a

  fine sight that would be, the state his cock had been in lately.

  He was a normal man. He’d felt lust for a woman before. But at those

  times he’d either bedded the woman, if she was free, or made do with his

  hand. Over and done with. He’d never had this aching, restless feeling,

  a longing for something he knew damn well he couldn’t have. Harry

  scowled into his mug. Maybe it was time for another ale.

  “Hope that look isn’t for me, lad.” Two mugs were slammed down in front

  of him, foam sloshing over their tops. “Have one on the house.”

  Dick Crumb slid his belly, covered in a stained apron, under the table

  and took a swig from his mug. Small, piggy eyes closed in ecstasy as the

  beer slid down his throat. He took out a flannel cloth and mopped his

  mouth, his face, and his bald pate. Dick was a large man, and he sweated

  all the time, the bare dome of his head shining greasy red. He sported a

  tiny gray pigtail, scraped together from the oily strands of hair still

  clinging to the sides and back of his head.

  “Janie told me you were out here,” Dick said. “Been a while since you

  stopped by.”

  “I was set on by four men today. On Granville land. Do you know anything

  about it?” Harry raised his mug and watched Dick over the rim. Something

  flickered in the piggy eyes. Relief?

  “Four men, you say?” Dick traced a wet spot on the table. “Lucky you’re

  alive.”

  “Lady Georgina had a pair of pistols.”

  Dick’s eyebrows flew up to where his hairline should have been. “That

  so? You were with the lady, then.”

  “Aye.”

  “Well.” Dick sat back and tipped his face to the ceiling. He took out

  the flannel and began wiping his head.

  Harry was silent. Dick was thinking, and there was no point in hurrying

  him. He sipped his ale.

  “See here.” Dick sat forward. “The Timmons brothers usually stop in at

  night, Ben and Hubert. But tonight only Ben’s been by, and he was

  limping a bit. Said he was kicked by a horse, but that don’t seem

  likely, do it, seeing as how the Timmons haven’t got a horse.” He nodded

  triumphantly and upended his mug again.

  “Who do the Timmons work for, d’you know?”
r />   “We-ell.” Dick stretched the word out as he scratched his head. “They’re

  jacks-of-all-trades, see. But they mostly help out Hitchcock, who

  tenants for Granville.”

  Harry nodded, unsurprised. “Granville was behind it.”

  “Now I didn’t say that.”

  “No, but you didn’t have to.”

  Dick shrugged and raised his mug.

  “So,” Harry said softly, “who do you think killed Granville’s sheep?”

  Dick, caught as he swallowed, choked. Out came the flannel again. “As to

  that,” he gasped when he could speak again, “I figured like everyone

  else in these parts that it was you.”

  Harry narrowed his eyes. “Did you?”

  “Made sense, what Granville did to you, did to your father.”

  Harry was silent.

  Which must’ve made Dick uneasy. He patted the air. “But after I’d mulled

  on it a bit, it didn’t seem right. I knew your da, and John Pye wouldn’t

  never hurt another man’s bread and butter.”

  “Even after Granville?”

  “Your da was the salt of the earth, lad. He wouldn’t have harmed a fly.”

  Dick raised his mug as if in toast. “The salt of the earth.”

 

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