Claiming the Courtesan

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Claiming the Courtesan Page 4

by Anna Campbell


  Mr. Benjamin Ashton, too, seemed a good enough chap, clearly from local stock, as he, unlike his sister, hadn’t lost his accent. In fact, it was soon bruited about that Mr. Ashton sought a suitable property where he could establish a sheep farm.

  As she climbed the steps to her house at the top of the ridge, Verity considered whether she’d stay in Whitby. She loved the sea and the old town and the brooding ruins of the ancient abbey on the hill. The place was far from the eyes of society and conveniently close to the moors, where her brother had always wanted to settle.

  Ben had hated London. She found it an immense satisfaction to witness his transparent happiness at resuming his true identity. At last, he followed his own ambitions after playing her silent bodyguard for so long. Helping him fulfill his dreams was the very least she owed him.

  Not for the first time, she wished she could remove her sister from the school near Winchester where she’d boarded since she was five years old. How wonderful to reunite the entire Ashton family. But the risk was too great that Soraya’s notoriety would taint Maria’s future.

  Wherever Verity went, Soraya would always cast a shadow. That sobering thought accompanied her up the last of the steep rise to her lodgings.

  She let herself into the house and paused in the confined hallway to remove her bonnet and gloves. Her brother’s voice was raised in anger somewhere at the back.

  This was strange enough to make her hurry toward the sound. But as she neared the kitchen, it was the second voice she heard—soft but clear, and as cutting as a saber through flesh—that made her stop.

  The Duke of Kylemore had found her.

  Chapter 3

  How long did Verity stand in that dim corridor while her foolish sense of security leached away to nothing? Later, common sense told her it must only have been seconds. Dread held her immobile. She had a prescience of doom as relentless as those pounding waves upon the beach, where she’d been so stupidly sure of herself.

  When awareness returned, she was halfway back to the door. If she ran far enough and fast enough, surely Kylemore wouldn’t follow. Britain held a thousand places to hide. Or she could go abroad. He’d never trace her in America. Or New South Wales. Or wildest Borneo, if it came to that.

  With shaking hands, she reached out for her bonnet, then realized just what she was doing. She couldn’t flee with merely the clothes she stood up in and the few coins in her reticule. The sound of a crash, probably a chair smashing on the flagstones in the kitchen, made up her mind for her.

  The duke had no legal claim on her. She’d held her own against him as Soraya. Verity Ashton was no lesser creature. She took a deep breath, turned and headed toward the kitchen.

  The duke pinned Ben to one wall, his cane across her brother’s throat. The sight of her lover after so long made Verity’s breath hitch with fear as she paused in the doorway.

  “Come on, you lying bastard. Hit me! You know you want to,” Kylemore taunted in a low, jeering voice. “Hit me, for Christ’s sake.”

  “You’d like that, wouldn’t you?” Ben, thank God, kept his fists by his sides. “But magistrates don’t encourage the lower orders to beat up the bloody nobility. I won’t hang for the sake of your sodding pretty face, Your Grace.” This last with utter contempt.

  A jerk of the stick against Ben’s Adam’s apple made him gag. “If you don’t hang for that, Lord knows, you’ll hang for something else.”

  “Stop it,” Verity said firmly. Her apparent calmness hid trembling terror. “For pity’s sake, there’s no need for this!”

  Neither looked at her.

  The duke continued, still in that same soft, teasingly threatening tone. “How does it feel to know she gave it all to me for so long? To know you begged for another man’s leavings? Did you listen at the door to hear every sweet little moan and sigh she made as I did exactly what I wanted to her?”

  “I said stop it!” Verity insisted more sharply. The duke had discovered most of their secrets—how else had he found them? And he was clearly mistaken, and fuming, about her relationship with her former manservant.

  Ben’s smile was scornful. “You’re nowt to her but a nice fat fortune. Every moan and sigh meant gold. Gold for her and gold for me. So, my lord, still feel so bloody high and mighty?”

  Verity glanced across to where her maid-of-all-work watched from the corner with a mixture of avidity and horror. Whatever else resulted from this afternoon, her chances of remaining in Whitby as a respectable widow had just disintegrated. But before she worried about that, she somehow had to stop her lover from murdering her brother.

  Kylemore smiled back at Ben with a distinctly vulpine curve to his lips. “Perhaps it was you she gulled. While your filthy hands defiled that perfect white flesh, she lay there wishing for a real man.”

  Ben’s face twisted with revulsion. “You? A real man? You’re nowt but spleen and vanity tricked out in fancy rags. When the lass wanted a real man, she knew where to turn.”

  Dear heaven, if she didn’t do something quickly, there would be bloodshed. The scent of impending violence rose another notch. While Ben might outweigh the duke, Kylemore’s lean body was lithe and strong, as she was intimately aware.

  “Listen, you idiots!” With unsteady hands, she grabbed a large blue-and-white platter from the dresser near the door.

  “I’ll kill you.” Unbelievably, Kylemore’s voice didn’t rise, although Ben, she saw, struggled to contain his thirst to fight back. She knew if her brother made the slightest retaliation, the duke would set out with utter mercilessness to destroy him. That cane concealed a sword. He’d shown her the mechanism one afternoon in Kensington.

  “Then who will hang, Your Grace?” Ben asked snidely.

  This had gone more than far enough. “You’re both acting like schoolboys!” She lifted the platter and deliberately dashed it against the flagstones.

  The sound of smashing crockery echoed in the suddenly silent room.

  Her gesture finally captured their attention. The duke turned toward her, his blue eyes blind with anger. Ben, too, looked in her direction, although the duke’s stick kept him trapped. She realized that through all their squabbling over her, neither had actually known she’d been in the room with them.

  She drew herself up and spoke with all the authority the woman who had once been the great Soraya could muster. “Benjamin Ashton, stop baiting him. We’re in enough trouble.” She turned to the duke. “And you, Your Grace, let him go.”

  Kylemore’s lip lifted in a sneer. “Pleading for your lover, madam?”

  She resisted an urge to hurl more crockery. “He’s not my lover.” Then, momentarily forgetting the respect due to his exalted rank, she spat, “He’s my brother, you damned fool.”

  “Your brother.” Strangely, Kylemore didn’t even consider questioning the truth of her assertion.

  He stared at the woman he’d at last found, then around the stark little kitchen. He hadn’t noticed much about it when he’d stormed in to find the abhorred Ben Ahbood showing every sign of being at home. All he’d wanted then had been to kill. The incongruity of this adequate, but hardly luxurious, house as a setting for his jewel of a Soraya hadn’t registered.

  But it registered now as he took in the details of his surroundings.

  “Yes, my brother.” She moved forward and righted the chair he’d knocked over when he’d lunged at his rival.

  Except his rival was apparently no rival at all. He’d tormented himself night and day over a chimera.

  “Let him go. Your quarrel is with me,” Soraya said. In spite of all the hatred he’d expended on her since her disappearance, that husky voice fell on his tortured, lonely soul like rain on parched earth.

  He lowered his stick, and Ben Ahbood—Ben Ashton, he supposed—slumped gasping against the wall. The hostile black eyes, familiar now as they had been in the Arabian manservant, focused on him.

  “Get out,” the younger man rasped.

  “Oh, be quiet, Ben,” Soraya
said wearily. She looked across at the maid. “Marjorie, please clean up this mess.” She turned on her heel. “If Your Grace would follow me? Ben, stay here. I wish to speak to the duke alone.”

  Kylemore almost laughed. She did a damn fine job of turning a drama of Shakespearean proportions into a domestic comedy. He even found himself following that straight, black-clad back down the hallway and into a neat parlor. Discovering his exotic mistress ensconced in bourgeois—and apparently chaste—respectability was the last thing he’d pictured.

  She turned to face him, her chin up. He could have told her she was wasting her time trying to blend in with her lackluster environment. No one—no man, in particular—would ever believe she was born for anything but sin.

  The howling beast that had taken up residence in his heart since she’d gone quietened as she leveled her cool gray eyes on him. “I owe you an apology, Your Grace.”

  That was the very least she owed him, the unscrupulous baggage. He’d prefer her on her knees, begging forgiveness. But that wasn’t Soraya’s style, as he should have known.

  She went on in the same dispassionate voice. “I wanted to tell you it was over, but my brother insisted you’d make trouble and I allowed him to persuade me against my better judgment.”

  Her brother had been right, Kylemore thought grimly. “Rich protectors are deuced thin on the ground in this backwater, I’d have thought.”

  A spark of annoyance lit her eyes. “That is of no consequence, Your Grace. I don’t seek a rich protector. I have retired. My life will be one of blameless propriety and good works from now on.”

  He did laugh out loud at that. He couldn’t help himself. “What a charmingly nonsensical notion, my dear Soraya.” He paused. “Except you call yourself Verity Symonds, don’t you? Am I permitted to know your real name after our long and…close acquaintance?”

  She looked uncomfortable, although he couldn’t tell if it was at the implication of deception or his reference to their liaison. “It’s Verity Ashton. And I don’t see why my ideas are nonsensical. Although your stoush in the kitchen has destroyed any future I might have had in Whitby. I can’t imagine Marjorie keeping her mouth shut about a duke brawling with Mrs. Symonds’s brother.”

  “I found you once, I can find you again,” he said evenly.

  She looked unconcerned at his threat, blast her. “Why would you bother? A man like you has no trouble getting someone to warm his bed. There’s nothing special about me.”

  Amazingly, she wasn’t being coy or eliciting flattery—she’d always been remarkably free of the usual female wiles. But surely she knew she was a woman beyond the common calling. She was the incomparable Soraya, whatever damned name she chose to call herself now.

  With difficulty, he kept his voice neutral. “So after the deal of trouble I expended to find you, I’m to go on my way without a murmur of protest?”

  “You were angry. You thought I’d deceived you. Now you realize that isn’t the case. I haven’t taken another lover and have no intention of doing so.” She moved forward to the door, clearly trying to end the interview. “So you see, there’s nothing here for Your Grace. Soraya no longer exists. Verity Ashton and her brother can be of no interest to you. You’ve satisfied your curiosity about what became of your mistress.”

  “Yes,” he said, although, of course, he lied. His curiosity, if anything, was more consuming than ever. “This new life will pall. You weren’t born for obscurity.”

  “After my years of public notoriety, obscurity will be a blessing,” she said. He could see that she was sincere, deluded creature that she was. “I don’t expect you to understand.”

  “Oh, I understand,” he said. “More than you can know.”

  Hadn’t he wasted his childhood yearning to be just an ordinary boy from an ordinary family? But maturity had brought the knowledge that some burdens were never to be laid down, no matter how unwilling, how unfit, how resentful the bearer.

  His spectacular mistress still needed to learn this lesson.

  “I believe we have nothing more to say to each other. You were a generous and kind lover, Your Grace. Please don’t make me remember you otherwise.” The presumptuous slut even had the gall to smile at him when she opened the door, as if dismissing an inconvenient caller. “Good day.”

  He bent his head in a show of acknowledgment, although in reality he did it to hide a surge of ferocious need. “At least do me the courtesy of accompanying me to my carriage.”

  With predatory avidity from under his lashes, he saw her glance nervously around the room, as if seeking an excuse to refuse. She wasn’t quite as self-possessed as she wished to appear, but her compulsion to speed him on his way superseded sensible caution. “As you wish.”

  With false decorum, he presented his arm. After a tiny, telling hesitation, she took it. The light, irritatingly reluctant contact burned. Her touch had the same effect on him it always had. If anything, his hunger had only become fiercer after so long without feasting on its desire.

  Soon, he soothed his rioting appetites. Soon all you want will be yours.

  As they moved out into the mean little hall, her scent surrounded him. Fleetingly, it disoriented him. It made her Soraya and not Soraya.

  His worldly mistress had always floated in a cloud of musk and ambergris. The woman at his side smelled of violet soap. Although far from unpleasant, it was vaguely unsettling, as though he’d somehow set his revenge on the wrong target. But beneath the fresh scent of flowers lingered the haunting essence of the woman he craved so endlessly.

  Her brother waited outside the parlor. He clearly, and rightly, suspected Kylemore’s intentions. A canny laddie, Benjamin Ashton, Kylemore admitted to himself.

  “His Grace is leaving,” Soraya—Verity—said.

  Ashton looked unimpressed. “Just like that?”

  “I’ve found out what I wanted.” Kylemore looked around the poor dwelling with unconcealed derision. Good God, Soraya belonged in a palace, not in this hovel.

  “You won’t be coming back, then,” the young man said flatly. It wasn’t a question.

  “No,” Kylemore said and meant it.

  “I’ll just see His Grace to his conveyance.” She looked troubled. He couldn’t blame her. The atmosphere of loathing and mistrust was thicker than the impenetrable sea fogs that regularly swept in along the Kylemore coast.

  “I’ll come with you,” the fellow said.

  Silently, they left the house and climbed the short distance to the peak of the hill. Kylemore had left his carriage near the abbey, not wanting to risk either his fine vehicle or expensive horseflesh on the precipitous streets.

  “Well, here we are,” Verity said.

  He found it damned hard getting used to her new name. But whatever she called herself, nothing changed the fact that she was his. He glanced down at her perfect face and read the relief there. She must have expected the worst when she’d found him in her kitchen. Now she’d congratulate herself on bringing events to such a favorable conclusion.

  Favorable to her anyway, the manipulative jade.

  Kylemore nodded to his two brawny footmen before he shifted his hold on her arm so that she couldn’t escape. “You can’t think I’ll let our association end this way, my dear. Or has changing your name chased away all your wits indeed?”

  She tried to pull free. “It ends this way because I say it does, Your Grace,” she said sharply.

  He smiled, admiring her nerve. Unluckily for her, nerve would do her no good where he meant to take her. “I’m afraid the wishes of a self-serving demirep are of no consequence.”

  He was delighted to see her assurance evaporate as she registered his implacable tone. Frantically, she looked past him to her brother. “Ben, do something!”

  Kylemore snapped out a command in Gaelic, and the stalwart Ben Ahbood found himself restrained by two even more stalwart Highlanders, brought precisely for this purpose.

  “Let her go, you bastard!” Ashton shouted. “I’l
l bloody kill you for this!”

  The girl tugged and wriggled to break free, but her strength was no match for his. “Don’t hurt him! None of this is his fault.”

  Kylemore tightened his grip and focused a blazing glare on her distraught features. “No, it’s yours. And you will pay. Now, if you stop fighting me and get into the carriage, I promise your brother won’t be harmed.”

  “Don’t do it, Verity lass!” A few feet away, Ashton made a creditable job of defending himself, even against such odds.

  Kylemore inclined his head toward the coachman, who hadn’t left his perch. “Pray turn your attention to my man, madam. I’m sure you’ll agree cooperation is preferable.”

  The gray eyes darted upward and widened as she observed the gun the driver pointed directly at her captive brother. Immediately, she stilled in Kylemore’s hold.

  “I will come,” she said calmly. All trace of emotion left her voice. “You can let Ben go.”

  “Not just yet,” he said, preparing to hand her into the carriage and not even pretending to conceal his exultation. He’d caught her, and this time, nothing in heaven or on earth would stop him keeping her. He spoke in rapid Gaelic over his shoulder. “Hold him in the abbey until nightfall. On a stormy day like this, there shouldn’t be many people about to wonder what you’re doing. Knock him out if you have to.”

  “Verity, don’t go with him!” Ashton struggled uselessly to shake off his captors and lunge to his sister’s aid.

  The sister merely shook her head and gave him a sad smile. “I’ll be all right, Ben.”

  “Get in,” Kylemore growled, refusing to be moved by her courage. She’d brought this disaster on herself when she’d betrayed him. Anything he did to her was more than deserved.

  She cast a disdainful glance up at the leveled pistol and then at the duke. “As Your Grace desires.” She made no attempt to hide the irony in her words.

 

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