Authors: Gaelen Foley
’s jaw dropped. “She said that about my brother?”
“Indeed, she did, dearie,” Peg declared. “And when I heard her speaking ill of our poor, dear Master Phillip, I could not hold my tongue. I spoke right out and told them both that Lord Glenwood was a brave man and a hero who died for his country, and I’m afraid, well, then I told the baroness what I thought of her.”
Nellie nodded in satisfaction at Peg’s words. “You surely did, Mrs. Tate.”
“We had quite a row, Lady G and I. That’s when she dismissed me. She took Harry to
Barely able to absorb it all,
“I couldn’t leave,” Peg said with sudden tears rising in her eyes. “I am an old woman. I’ve nowhere else to go—”
“Hush, dearest Nanny Peg.”
With that, she gave Peg another hug, shutting her eyes tightly against a suffocating wave of guilt. While she had been at
Lucien had warned her of danger if she went to
knew
she had been at his house. This was a risk she was willing to take. In addition to getting Peg’s job back, every maternal instinct in her body cried out for her to go to Harry. The poor thing, she thought in desperation. He must be so frightened and alone there in the city without his Nanny Peg or his Aunt Alice to see him through his chicken pox, just strange Town doctors and the cold comfort of the unfeeling baroness. Spanking him for crying! she thought with a shudder.
“She is a fool in her treatment of that boy, but who am I to tell her so?” Peg said with a sniffle.
“Only someone who has been raising up children since before she was born, that’s who!”
“Bless you for saying so, child,” Peg whispered, dabbing at her eyes with the corner of her apron. “I should hate not to be needed anymore. Oh, bother!” She quickly sniffled and brushed her hands down her apron, as though sorting herself out. “Tea, then.”
“I’ll get it,” Nellie chimed in.
“Forget the tea. I say we all could do with a brandy,”
“I’m sure I couldn’t.”
“Medicinal—I insist.”
“Thank you, Miss Alice,” Nellie said shyly.
gave her a bolstering look and clinked her glass against hers. Servants or no, they were the only family she had. “We shall have to send out some supper to Lord Lucien’s servants. Do we have any ale for them?”
“Not ale, but we have wine.”
“Good,”
The braw McLeish and his fellows would have a very deep and restful night’s sleep.
The thick
He had parted ways with Marc and the other young rogues upon entering the city. They had retired to their bachelor lodgings. For his part, Lucien turned right onto St. James’s Street presently, bound for Knight House. The stately Palladian mansion on
He sighed, his breath misting in the cold. He had been so eager to show
If she will
take
you back
. His head hurt too badly to consider the possibility that she might not. A short distance down the fashionable avenue, he turned left onto St. James’s Court, where Knight House stood in all its haughty grandeur behind its tall, wrought-iron fence. Lord, he needed a bed. No doubt his wound required fresh dressing, as well. He fully expected to find his bandages soaked through with blood. His side felt like it was on fire. The impact of the stallion’s every galloping stride over the day-long ride had strained his twenty stitches, but Lucien had pressed both himself and his horse to the limit; time was of the essence. Unable to eat because of his distress over
Lucien dismounted stiffly and let himself in at the gates, annoyed to find them unlocked.
Bloody Alec,
he thought. His youngest brother was a careless, fashionable rake with a passion for high-stakes gambling. He scowled at the house, seeing the light streaming through the first-floor windows. Already he could hear the noise of some rowdy party in progress. Straitlaced Robert would be most perturbed, he thought as he locked the gate behind him with his copy of the key.
The creaking of the iron gates drew a groom from inside the stable. Lucien handed over the reins to the man and gave his equally exhausted steed a grateful pat on the neck, then dragged himself wearily up the front steps and went in, holding his side in pain under his damp greatcoat. He narrowed his eyes against the sudden brightness of the chandelier as he stepped into the gleaming white marble entrance hall, with its magnificent curved staircase that seemed to float on thin air.
“Good evening, Lord Lucien,” Mr. Walsh, the supremely capable butler of Knight House, greeted him, but his polite smile promptly turned into a frown. He passed a worried look over him. “Is there something you require, sir?”
Lucien realized he must look like hell. He dragged his hand wearily through his hair. “Supper, headache powder, hot water for a bath, bandages, and any ointment for cuts that Mrs. Laverty may have stowed away in the medicine box. I have a bit of a scratch.”
“I am sorry to hear it, sir. Right away.”
“Is that Alec and his friends playing cards?” he asked with a nod toward the dining room as he handed over his greatcoat. In his dull spirits, he could have admittedly used a bit of his little brother’s wicked wit and deviltry to cheer him up.
“No, sir, it is Lord Damien and a few officers from the Guards’ Club.”
“Ah, the heroes of
As he climbed the stairs, each raucous burst of laughter from the dining room made him feel more alone. He went into his room and walked over to the bed without bothering to light a candle. He sat down and rested his throbbing head in his hands. Strange, the past week with
Though his emotions were in chaos, hunger had sharpened his mind. Throughout the day’s long ride, he had mulled over his plans for how he would go about catching Bardou. There was much to be done, but the hour was late. It would start in the morning.
He lay back in exhaustion and waited in the darkness for the servants to bring his food and the other things he had asked for, and he wondered if right now, somewhere in Hampshire,
“Why, Miss Montague!” Mr. Hattersley exclaimed, welcoming her and Peg into the Montague family’s elegant
“Thank you, Mr. Hattersley. It’s good to see you, too,”
This morning at dawn, she, Peg, and Nellie had set out for Town, with Mitchell driving the coach—and Lucien’s hulking guards sleeping dreamlessly, drugged with laudanum.
“Mrs. Tate,” the butler greeted Peg. The two faithful old servants exchanged a look that spoke volumes of mutual commiseration.
“I have come to straighten out all of this nonsense,”
“Indeed, miss. In the morning room.”
“And how is our little patient?”
He smiled. “I am relieved to say Master Harry’s spots have begun clearing up.”
glanced down the hallway and saw a little blond head peeping around the corner at her. Her eyes lit up. “Harry?” she asked, taking off her wide-brimmed hat.
He sidled into the doorway, sucking his finger. To her surprise, he was dressed in little boy’s clothes rather than the loose, simple gowns in which children of both sexes were customarily dressed until the age of about four years old. He wore miniature trousers, a tiny waistcoat, even a little starched cravat. She had never seen anything so adorable in her life; still, he really was too young for such confining clothes. He hung back.
“Oh, my goodness! Who is that handsome young gentleman?”
He ran to them.
“We were both sick,” he told her, making