Jackal (Regency Refuge 2) (14 page)

Read Jackal (Regency Refuge 2) Online

Authors: Heather Gray

Tags: #Fiction - Historical, #Christianity, #Romance & Love Stories

Spinning toward the door, Rupert said, "I must go out. I'll return anon." Then he circled back around, too much energy humming through his body for him to be able to move in a straight line. "On second thought, I'll send a messenger."

Poking his head out of the dining room door, he bellowed. "Barrows!"

"Rupert, what does the name mean?"

He stared at her but saw nothing. Barrows' arrival jarred him back into the present. With a quick nod of acknowledgment, he answered Juliana's question. "Jaeger is a German word for hunter."

The hiss in his ear told him Barrows understood the import. Puzzlement painted itself across the shadows of Juliana's face. He had to ask her. "Does that mean anything to you?"

"Uncle Fitz rambled a lot toward the end. He talked about hunting and hunters some, but it never made sense. I dismissed them as the ramblings of his madness. Should I have given it more import?"

"You did fine, my jewel."

Then he pivoted on his heel and marched into his study, Barrows close behind him.

****

Juliana watched after Rupert. She'd never seen him behave with such peculiarity before. That name, Jaeger, it had gotten to him. Something about it struck a bone-chilling cord in Rupert. He'd tried to mask it, but she'd seen his reaction this time. She was getting better at hearing what he wasn't saying.

And he'd called her
my jewel
. He never would have let those words slip past his lips if he hadn't been completely undone. Of course, Rupert undone was still more put together than most of the men of the
ton
she'd met and danced with over the previous week.

She pondered the book Rupert had given her to read their first night in London.
Letters Writ by a Turkish Spy
. It was fiction, of course. Rupert had said so himself.

Juliana took herself off to the library. She planned to spend some time at the writing desk making note of everything she remembered Uncle Fitz saying about hunters. Perhaps it would be of use to Rupert, even if he was determined to evade telling her what it meant.

Both Eleanor and Eudora gave her odd looks as she passed them on her way to the library. She couldn't blame them. Upon passing a looking glass, she stopped briefly to see what her sisters had been about. Was something stuck in her teeth? She sported a nonsensical grin, and nothing she did to school her features into an appropriately mature expression worked.

My jewel. Did he even realize he said it?

As she sat at the writing desk, she noticed a footman slip into the room and stand near the door. "You can go about your duties. I don't need anything."

He didn't move. "My lord's orders, I'm afraid, Miss. You and your sisters are to be accompanied at all times."

Oh dear.
"Something's wrong, isn't it?"

"I'm sure I wouldn't know. Following orders, I am."

She should have noticed it sooner. The footman's eyes were too keen for his accent. His physique was too muscular for standing in service at mealtime.

"Her grace hired you, did she not?"

He nodded. She stared, and he didn't flinch.

Juliana spun back toward the desk. Pulling out paper and quill, she began making the list of Uncle Fitz's references to a hunter, the hunted, and anything else she could think of. Once she was done, she pulled out another sheet and started writing down the questions she had for Rupert. There was much more going on than the feckless Stanwich brothers, and whatever it was, she wondered if she and her sisters had reason to be afraid.

She wrote for some time, abbreviating when possible so she could get it onto a single sheet of paper. After all, she was the only one who needed to know what the words meant. More than once, she caught herself staring off into the distance, biting her bottom lip, worry ebbing and flowing with each beat of her heart. "I'm not doing a very good job of protecting my sisters."

"Pardon me, Miss Clairmont. Did you say something?"

She hadn't meant to mutter those words out loud. "No, no, everything's fine. I need to speak to my lord. Is he still in his study?"

Before she had a chance to stand, Rupert entered the library and dismissed her guardian with a nod.

The footman slipped out, and Rupert shut the door behind him. Juliana drew in a surprised breath. Their conversation was going to be a serious one if the look on his face was any indication. She eyed the closed door. They shouldn't be alone together, and she shouldn't be so distracted with his presence that she couldn't recall a single one of the questions she'd written down.

Yet they were, and she was, too.

 

Chapter Twenty-Four

 

Juliana watched him with wide eyes. He would have been content to sit and gaze into their grey depths indefinitely. Rupert bit back his impatience. Why did life have to intrude in such an ugly manner on one as beautiful as she?

He took a seat in a high-backed chair near the writing desk. "May I have a word with you?"

She didn't acknowledge him, not even with a nod, but her eyes never left his face. He had the feeling she wanted to see deep down into his soul, and it both comforted and left him disconcerted.

"There is much I need to say to you, but for the safety of the girls, I think it's wise they not be included in the conversation. Can you keep what I tell you between the two of us?"

Juliana tilted her head to the side as she scrutinized him. Then suddenly, as if she willed it to be so, the tight lines of her face softened, and she nodded. " I don't understand what's going on, but I trust you with it. It pleases me to know you trust me as well."

Don't make me regret it.
The words echoed inside Rupert's head. She hadn't said them. If her expression was anything to go by, she hadn't even thought them. His conscience had spoken up on her behalf. Could she be putting her faith in him so completely? Without reservation? Rupert's heart thumped out an erratic beat.

"I dare say I muddied everything a bit. Despite my compulsion to do so, I should never have suggested that book."

"The Turkish Spy?"

He nodded.

"Are you a Turkish spy?"

He didn't smile at her jest, and her eyes again grew wide. Was it shock? Disbelief? Revulsion? Fear? No, not fear. In the whole myriad of emotions swirling through the grey pools that were her eyes, he didn't see any hint of fear.

Before she could ask the next question, he began his tale.

"Many years ago a sultan's son did a favor for a prince of England. The sultan's son overheard some men from another country speaking and shared the information he learned with the young prince. There was to be an assassination attempt against the King. The sultan's son helped the young prince thwart the attack and save the king. It was all quite fantastical."

Juliana's hands were folded primly in her lap as she listened, her eyes keen.

"You have to understand, this was the younger son of a sultan. Not the youngest – but one of the many younger sons. He had no future in Turkey. He would never be able to take his place in his father's government. Most of his brothers were already married and producing heirs of their own. The court was overcrowded to the point where no son's life was safe."

Rupert paused and contemplated the window, lost in the memory of a tale told to him from the time he'd been in the nursery. Back then it was nothing more than a story. Later in life, he learned the truth of it.

"The prince and the sultan's son came to an understanding. The prince's father would never confer a title to a foreigner, but the prince made a promise – land, castle, title – and the sultan's son decided to stay in England. He served the prince, listened closely to what went on around him, and informed the prince whenever he heard of unrest or injustice among the people."

Rupert smiled as he remembered the many times he'd listened to this story. "After the prince's coronation, he quietly provided an estate and title to the sultan's son. Now that he was king, their relationship needed to be pushed away into the shadows. The new king couldn't be open about their close friendship, not with the sultan's son having such strong ties to an exotic and little-understood foreign land."

Juliana leaned forward. "But they remained friends, didn't they?"

Rupert nodded. "They continued to be the best of friends, and the two learned to communicate with each other through covert means. Coded messages, secret names, that sort of thing. The sultan's son continued to inform the king of nefarious plots whenever he became aware of them."

"What were their secret names?"

Rupert smiled at the eager curiosity in Juliana's voice. He remembered asking the same question as a child, awaiting the answer with anticipation, even after he knew the names. "The king's name is a carefully guarded secret that I cannot share."

"And the sultan's son?"

"He became known as Jackal. Nobody who knew him would have ever suspected that he led a double life. In fact, the sultan's son fell in love with an English beauty. Her father would have forbade the match, except his coffers were bone dry, and the sultan's son offered a large incentive."

Anticipation in everything from the glimmer in her eyes to the taut line of her shoulders, Juliana asked, "Did she love him, too?"

He nodded. "Aye. They had a glorious splendid marriage filled with love and children. The sultan's son saw to it that his daughters were raised to be proper English misses, but his sons were brought up to serve the crown, which they did faithfully for many years, even after another king sat on the throne. From that time forward, the sons were always raised to live their lives in service to the crown, and the daughters were kept in the dark about the family's secret livelihood."

"Are you a son of this family?"

He nodded.

"And Uncle Fitz?"

He nodded again.

"Do you answer to the king?"

Rupert shook his head. "Policy in England has changed over the years. The story of the young prince and the sultan's son has been forgotten. We still serve king and country, but we no longer report directly to the reigning monarch."

"Was Uncle Fitz still…? Is that why he died?"

A shake of the head was again her answer. "Uncle Fitz retired when William was born. He had lost his father at a young age and didn't want the same for his son."

"Did he train William? Was William a… what exactly do you call yourself?"

"William was not as involved as I, but he was good at being unobtrusive enough to be able to listen in on all sorts of conversation without notice. He reported back to the War Department whenever he heard something amiss. After his military commission, he would have made the choice about whether he wanted to commit his life to serving the crown or to marrying and raising a family. There are not as many of us in this world as there once were."

"You live a dangerous life." Juliana, her hand fisted in her lap, asked again, "Is that why Uncle Fitz died?"

Rupert combed his fingers through his hair. "I suspect he was poisoned. Mercury. It makes a person act in the strangest ways, and it affects the skin, too. You and your sisters have mentioned Fitz's mental unbalance, as well as flushed skin and profuse sweating. Those are all hallmarks of mercury. As for the night he died, I'm not sure we'll ever know exactly what happened, but the fault of his death lies with whoever poisoned him."

"And you know who that is?"

He nodded. "There is a mercenary who gathers intelligence for foreign governments. He works for the highest bidder and often plays one government against another. It's been a few years since he was last active, but he's known as The Hunter. Can it be a coincidence that Jaeger served at Chakal Manor, then disappeared immediately after Uncle Fitz's death?"

Juliana's distress showed in her trembling lips and blinking eyes. "He was killing Uncle Fitz the entire time he worked there? And we didn't know it? We could have saved him! He didn't need to die!" A cloud of grief passed over her face, and tears began to fall.

Rupert moved from his seat and pulled Juliana into his arms. He took his place on a settee and settled her into his lap, as one would hold a distraught child. Her sobs echoed in the room as he drew his hand up and down her back, soothing her.

Juliana's tears slowed to a stop, but she remained in Rupert's arms. He felt the exact moment she realized her position. Her body stiffened, though she didn't pull away. "I'm sorry. I don't typically forget myself so."

He traced his fingers along the side of her neck, toying with a stray strand of hair that dangled there much to his delight. "Aye. Loving someone enough to grieve for them is such a shameful thing."

She sighed, and her shoulders again relaxed. "Are you sure you didn't go to butler school?"

With the slightest pressure, he turned Juliana to face him. He bent down and brushed his lips against hers, capturing a kiss he'd not been given permission to take yet had been unable to resist. Rupert pulled back before he gave in to the urge to deepen the intimacy of the kiss.

Juliana remained where she was, a faraway look on her face. Then she shook her head, and her expression cleared. "Do they teach that in butler school, too?"

Before he could answer, she gasped. "Chakal Manor! Chakal means Jackal. What's
your
secret name?"

He acknowledged her acumen with a slight nod. "I'm not the first Jackal, and I won't be the last."

Juliana looked like she was ready to say more, but instead of speaking, she scrambled from his lap, rushed to the desk, and tore a piece of paper from its surface. Shoving the paper at him as if it had somehow offended her, she said, "Here! It's everything Uncle Fitz told me about hunting, hunters, or being hunted. Everything I recall, in any event. It means nothing to me, but I thought you might find it of use."

Rupert took the paper and treasured it for the gift it was. Even before he'd taken the time to tell her the story, she'd made the choice to trust him and be a helpmate. And she hadn't jumped out of his lap because he'd kissed her. That helped, too.

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