The Locket
Prologue
January 27, 1821,
Whitechapel, London
“Wake up ya little street
rat!”
The guard’s boot struck
swift and true.
Mare awakened with a gasp.
Pain lanced through her, and her small body constricted
into a tight ball.
The icy crust of the snow crunched
beneath his boot. Clutching her side, she braced for the
inevitable next strike. All at once, the rags she
huddled beneath were yanked aside. Through the haze of
falling snow, his big hand reached out, jerked her to
her feet, then flung her from the shelter of the doorway
and into the alley.
A
loose cobblestone caught the toe of her shoe and sent
her sprawling. She hit the ground hard. Cinders hidden
beneath the snow sliced into the soft heels of her
palms, forcing a small sound of anguish from her lips.
His mocking laughter rose and echoed off the walls
around her.
The red specks of blood that stained the snow blurred as
tears suddenly welled in her eyes. She bit down on her
lower lip to still its trembling, inhaled a shallow
breath, and slowly regained her feet, refusing to
acknowledge the sharp pain that shot through her ribs
with every movement. Then, brushing the cinders from her
hands, she turned to face the man who towered over her.
“You got somethin’ to say, street rat?” he growled, his
grin taunting.
She was too small to fight him, but she would
deny him the satisfaction of seeing her humbled, of
seeing her cry, she thought defiantly, blinking back the
sting of defeat. Forcing herself to look directly into
his hard eyes, she wrapped the tattered cloths around
her, squared her shoulders and stood tall, in defiance
of the new injury inflicted by the guard’s boot. Then,
without a word, she lifted her chin, turned and made her
way to the bottom of the alley.
“Don’t you be letting me
find you here again, or I’ll throw you in the
roundhouse, you dirty little beggar!” he shouted after
her.
A solitary tear finally
broke free and traced a path down her dirt-smudged
cheek. “I’m no beggar,” she muttered angrily, walking
against the bluster.
Warm thoughts.
Shuddering, she clutched the
rags tighter.
Eliza…
“Oh, I miss you sorely,
Eliza,” she whispered, making her way around the corner
and out into the barren street, brushing away another
tear.
This bitter season had been hard on
everyone in
London,
especially the homeless and outcast. One stale heel of
bread or discarded bone to clean off in the space of an
entire day was getting more and more difficult to find.
To eat meant to fight the others, and at twelve years,
she was no match for the likes of those who waited in
the alleys for cast off scraps of food.
But she wasn’t very hungry
anymore anyway.
The snow swirled around her
feet, so cold it seemed to burn her legs through the
frayed old stockings. Keep walking, she told
herself. She rubbed her hands together briskly until she
felt the sting of the blood flowing to her numbed
fingertips. Threading her fingers through the cloth
again, she gathered it around her neck.
The faintest hint of
glimmering red appeared through the curtain of white,
drawing her gaze to a whorehouse—the house where Fiona
worked now. Her step faltered and she found herself
turning toward the house, making her way up the walk.
She paused to stare into the window where the red lamp
hung and gazed longingly at the fire that blazed within.
Pushing the cloth back from around her
face, Mare stepped onto the stoop and raised her hand.
But before her knuckles struck the wooden door, the wind
seemed to whisper Eliza’s words.
“Never forget you’re a lady.”
Her hand fell limply to her
side.
Five years of boarding
school at Cornwall had taken Eliza’s cockney from her
inflection, and she’d mastered the finer points of
propriety. But learning to hold a delicate teacup
properly and sweep gracefully into a ballroom did not
make her a lady.
Nor had her mother ever been
a lady; she’d worked for Eliza—just as Fiona had worked
for Eliza, before that night barely four months ago,
when smoke and flames raged through the old house,
taking Eliza and changing Mare’s life forever.
Swiping her sleeve across
her tear-streaked cheeks, Mare turned and walked back
into the piercing fury of the wind, back out into the
street and along the row of old houses and buildings
that lined the square. She would never sip tea with the
elegant peeresses or enter a grand ballroom and waltz
with a fine gentleman. The fluent French and beautiful
dresses had merely disguised the truth.
But Mare would not trade
herself for the warmth of a fire today—or any other day.
A harsh bout of shivering
wracked her weary body, forcing Mare to her knees just
past the gate of a rusted black iron fence.
Warm thoughts…
But this time, she could not
find the strength to rise again.
With a quiet sigh, she let
herself rest against the cold iron rail. Her hand rose,
and drawing her mother’s locket from beneath her
tattered dress, she enveloped it in her fingers. Closing
her eyes, she imagined herself wrapped in the warmth of
her mother’s arms again. And if she listened closely,
she could almost hear her mother’s sweet voice singing
softly.
Warm thoughts…
She rested her head in her
hands.
Yes, she was getting warmer
now.
It won’t be long, Mama and Eliza…
The guard’s boot wouldn’t
hurt the next time he tried to awaken her.
#
“Twila, my father was just
buried. It is not the appropriate time to discuss this.”
Aidan turned away from the woman who sat beside him and
stared out the carriage window as the team plodded
through the snow. The gray sky and barren streets only
added to the dreariness of the day. With a heavy sigh,
he leaned his head against his hand, hoping she would at
last allow him some peace.
Of course she would not.
Twila never let anything rest until she got her way, and
not even today would there be an exception.
“Aidan, I am well into my
eighteenth year.”
He did not move, even though
every muscle in his body cringed at the sound of her
whine. He heard a shuffle, and imagined her resituating
the elaborate black velvet hat upon her head of flaxen,
perfectly groomed curls, with a pinch to her cheeks in
the event he might look her way.
“You are three and twenty.
Why should we delay our marriage any longer?” She leaned
closer, and he could feel that all too familiar covetous
sparkle in her eyes as she purred, “After all, Chatham
is yours now. Imagine the many things a wife might do to
take your mind from caskets and corpses.”
Anguish tightened his chest
and begged to lash out as a raging storm of anger
against the woman. Stiffening in the leather seat, he
turned on her, barely restraining his fury. The warning
in his glare was enough to quiet her—at least for the
time being.
Aidan Penuel,
lieutenant-commander in the Royal Navy, and now Marquess
of Wellsley, took a deep breath, faced the window once
more and willed Twila from his thoughts.
He’d ordered his driver to
take the most direct route to Tamen Hall, the Earl of
Everest’s home in London’s West End, where he would
deposit the earl’s daughter and her maid in short order.
Unfortunately, this required passing through the seedy
streets of Whitechapel—the remains of an old theater
that had burned to the ground the year prior, Rag Fair,
whorehouses, peasant beggars, thieves and drunks. He
loathed this area of London, but on this day, the
streets were empty; the homeless had taken shelter from
the cold and snow somewhere, the Hebrew street merchants
had packed up their wares, the thieves had no pockets to
pick, and the prostitutes were safe within the confines
of their houses.
The carriage turned to pass
through the square, and even here, the riffraff were
hidden and the dirtiness was covered in a blanket of
cleansing white. There was nothing at all that would
give this part of Whitechapel away for the slum it was,
except…
He lurched forward in his
seat, grabbing the door. “Bostley! Stay the coach!”
The wheels locked as the
team came to an abrupt halt, and Twila tumbled to the
carriage floor. Her maid scrambled to help her regain
herself, and Aidan flew from the carriage and ran out
onto the street.
Had it not been for the drab
reddish-gold that contrasted the stark white, he would
have thought the heap merely a small mound of drifted
snow. But as he approached, his worst suspicions were
confirmed.
Kneeling before the still
form bundled in snow-covered rags, he lifted a portion
of the cloth around the stray, dirty golden-red locks. A
little girl crouched beneath the ragged material, her
knees drawn to her chest. Gently, he lifted her face
from her hands. Her pallid complexion, the dark circles
beneath her eyes, and the bluish cast to her lips
assured him the child was dead. But a faint glimmer of
hope found him reaching for his pocket watch. He held it
to her nose.
The sign was barely visible;
a faint fog spread over the gold watch cover.
The coachman leaned close,
gripping Aidan’s shoulder. “My God, she is still
breathing, my lord!”
“We must get her inside at
once,” he said, carefully lifting the child into his
arms.
“Oh, Aidan!” Twila groaned
from behind them with her maid in tow. “What is the loss
of one more pauper? London’s all the better for it, I
say!”
“I have seen enough of death
this day.” Then, without another word, he headed for a
boarding house across the way, cradling the child closer
to his breast while making his way up the steps.
Bostley stood beside him and
rapped the iron knocker.
“Who’s there?” came a gruff
female voice from behind the door.
“Madam, I beg you, allow me
entrance!” he called out against the harsh howl of the
wind.
Slowly, the heavy carved
mahogany door creaked open, and a short, plump woman
peeked out warily. “I’m sorry, I am, sir,” she said upon
realizing he was an officer, flinging the door wide,
“but this bitter weather ‘as all the rabble on my
stoop.”
Still shielding the bundle
in his arms, he hastened inside. “I assure you madam, I
will make this worth your while.”
“Aidan!”
He threw a warning glance in
Twila’s direction. “May I lay this child before your
fire?”
She motioned for the small
band to follow her, scurrying into a large sitting room.
“Lay ‘er down there,” she said, pointing to a raggedy
davenport.
Aidan carefully laid the
child down and peeled the dirty rags from around her.
Horrified by what he saw, he looked to his driver.
“Bostley, have Mrs…”
“Maesterfield,” she finished
for him.
“Have Mrs. Maesterfield
instruct you on where to find a physician and bring him
to me posthaste.”
“As you say, Lord Wellsley.”
Mrs. Maesterfield’s eyes
widened.
“Bring blankets, Mrs.
Maesterfield,” he said, ignoring her curious stare,
before turning his attention back to the girl.
Kneeling, he finished
unwrapping the soiled and wet cloth. Beneath the
tattered dress, it was evident there was little more
than skin and bones. Taking one thin and bruised little
hand in his own, he tenderly rubbed the warmth back into
it. But as he opened the other fragile, tightly fisted
hand, he found a delicate golden locket clasped there.
He marveled at the intricate detail carved in the gold
and knew it could not possibly belong to the child. No
doubt she lifted it from some unsuspecting peeress.
Aidan tucked the child’s precious treasure beneath the
ragged collar of her dress before gently closing his
fingers around hers to warm them.
The
ton will not falter with one less
trinket, he said to himself, managing a fleeting
grin.
His gaze finally rested upon
her face; ghostly pale and gaunt and smudged by dirt,
but delicate and beautiful. Her hair lay in damp
ringlets and tangled curls around her face and down her
back. Even as sick as she was, she looked more like
royalty than a street urchin, with her straight nose,
high cheek bones and full lips.
Long dark eyelashes
fluttered, and all at once, her eyes opened and stared
into his. “Are y-you an angel?” she whispered.
“No, child. But you are safe
now,” he reassured, gently brushing the hair from her
face.
The greenest eyes he’d ever
witnessed pierced his soul, then drifted closed. A
slight smile remained on her face as she lost
consciousness again.
She will live,
he thought, allowing himself a small
sigh. But she would never live on the streets again.
One of London’s many
overwhelmed orphan asylums was out of the question, but
he could hardly take her to Chatham. The last thing he
needed—or wanted—was the responsibility of a
child.
For a moment he thought of
delivering her to his Aunt Emalie. After all, she’d had
a hand in raising him after his mother’s death. But
Uncle Albert was not in the best of health, and the
burden of a foundling would be more than he could place
upon his beloved duchess.
With no other alternative,
Aidan stood and turned to Mrs. Maesterfield. “This girl
is to remain in your care.”
“My lord?”
“This is a boarding house,
is it not?”
“Well, yes, b-but…”
“I will pay you handsomely,
Mrs. Maesterfield.” He reached into an inside pocket and
withdrew his purse. From it, he counted fifty pounds and
placed it in her hands. “You and the physician that my
man brings are to nurse this child back to health,
whatever the cost. And then the girl is to have a roof
over her head, her own room, and as much to eat as she
wishes.”
Unable to tear her eyes away
from the money, the woman nodded.
“You are to find out her
age, if she knows it, and each month until she turns
nineteen, I will have another ten pounds sent to you. By
then she’ll be old enough to marry or find employment.
In the meantime, the money I provide is to be used for
her room and board, wardrobe and schooling. Then,
whatever remains belongs to you as payment for your
care. Is that understood?”
She nodded again, clearly at
a loss for words.
“Care for her well and I
will award you an additional twenty pounds for your
services when the girl turns nineteen and can leave your
care to make a life for herself.”
The promise of such a
generous income for years to come rendered Mrs.
Maesterfield breathless. “You can count on me, yer
lordship! I will take fine care of the child!”
“Well and good. My solicitor
will come daily until she is well to see that she is
receiving the appropriate care, and then again the first
of each month with your payment and to assess the girl’s
well being. I see no need to complicate matters by
telling her from whence the payment comes,” he added,
feeling Twila’s glare.
Chapter One
Whitechapel, March 9, 1827
The candle crackled and its flame flickered,
throwing dancing shadows across the dark, stone room, as
Mare counted the distant chimes of the mantel clock on the
ground floor above her. “Nine… ten… eleven… twelve…”
Midnight.
Knowing she didn’t have long
until the melted wax swallowed the flame completely, she
hurriedly stretched the ivory linen shirt across the board,
and sprinkled water over the material. Then, taking the iron
from the stove, she pressed it to the shirt. Steam hissed as
she slowly slid the iron across the fabric, smoothing the
creases left from the laundering.
When she was finished, Mare set
the iron to the shelf and once the material cooled, she
carefully folded the shirt, and set it gently in the open
burlap sack, atop the rest of the newly cleaned and pressed
garments she would deliver to Mrs. Praddle in the morning.
Mrs. Praddle earned her living
laundering for some of the more affluent London merchants
who were not quite wealthy enough to afford a full household
staff. Several years earlier, her work began to exceed what
she could manage alone, and she’d sought out Mrs.
Maesterfield, her brother’s widow, for help.
Though Mrs. Maesterfield
received the wage, the responsibility fell to Mare. And as
Mrs. Praddle’s patrons steadily increased, so did Mare’s
workload.
Every day was the same. She rose
at four o’clock each morning to make the first meal for Mrs.
Maesterfield’s boarders. Then, before the sun rose fully,
she began the nearly two hour walk, pulling her small cart
behind, and made her way to Stahling Street, where she’d
deliver her work from the day before and collect a new cart
load of dirty laundry, that, upon returning to the boarding
house, she would wash and press in between her regular
chores.
Truth be told, Mare enjoyed the
long walks, even with the heavy load, because it meant time
to herself. And she did not mind the extra work, because
Mrs. Maesterfield usually kept her distance when there was
work to be done.
It had been seven years since
Mrs. Maesterfield found her that long ago day and brought
her in from the cold. Under the old woman’s rule, Mare
scoured the floors and walls, washed and cooked for the
boarders, and waited on Mrs. Maesterfield hand and foot.
It was soon after she turned
seventeen that Fionna showed up at Mrs. Maesterfield’s door
with an offer of employment—a respectable position as a
maid, in an unrespectable establishment. A notorious busy
body, Mrs. Maesterfield had been eavesdropping, and before
Mare could refuse Fionna—for she had no intention of working
in a whorehouse, even as a maid—the old woman interrupted
and pleaded with Mare to stay on at the boarding house, in
exchange for her room, board and a shilling each week.
At the time, she’d reasoned she
owed Maesterfield a great debt for saving her life that long
ago day.
And so Mare had lived for more
than two years, as she had the nearly five years prior, and
she saved all of her wages, plus the shiny penny Mrs.
Praddle tucked into her hand each week and the five pence
twice each year—one on the occasion of her own birthday, and
another on the occasion of the Lord’s—except for the
ha’pence she placed in the alms box on Sundays.
Until recently she’d believed
her life, as it was, was better than living on the
streets—and a far better fate than her mother had known. But
of late Mrs. Maesterfield’s disposition had grown so
contemptuous, Mare concluded any debt she owed had long ago
been paid, and it was time to make her own way in the world.
But the little more than three
pounds she’d managed to hoard away wouldn’t last long in
London. So for the past two weeks, she’d taken the
opportunity provided by her journeys through London to stop
at one merchant each day along the way and inquire if there
were any open positions, whether it was as a seamstress’s
apprentice, labor in a factory or even gutting fish in the
market—anything that would provide an income so she
could at last leave the boarding house and Mrs. Maesterfield
far behind.
As Mare picked up the candle,
her empty stomach growled, reminding her that this had been
the second day in a row she’d gone without supper.
Yesterday, it had been because she forgot to fill the coal
bin, and today it was for the fish stew she’d scalded when
she’d made the mistake of sitting in a chair and leaning her
head against the wall, while waiting for the stew to come to
a simmer. The next thing she remembered was being awakened
by a harsh slap across the cheek, accompanied by Mrs.
Maesterfield’s shrieking.
The stew had scalded beyond
salvation, and the old woman stood over Mare while she
cleaned enough dried beans to fill the kettle, and then set
the kettle on the stove to cook. And when Mrs. Maesterfield
sat down at the table to eat the beans and bread with the
five men who occupied the house, Mare was sent back to the
first floor without any supper, after being reminded for the
hundredth time what a burden her stupidity was to the
woman’s purse.
Shielding the fragile flame with
her hand, Mare walked quietly to the pantry, in search of
anything she could take to her little room on the third
floor. At last she found a block of old cheese in the
cupboard. Cutting a piece off the block, she sliced the top
layer to remove the mold, and then squirreled it away in her
apron pocket, along with a crust of the leftover bread.
The wick sputtered and the flame
finally died, forcing Mare to make her way in the dark. She
tread softly through the pantry and up the staircase, lest
she make any noise that might awaken Mrs. Maesterfield
before she and the forbidden bread and cheese were safely
locked within her chamber.
Just as she reached the final
stair, Mrs. Maesterfield’s “Mare!” made her leap from
her skin. Believing she’d been found out, she quickly turned
to retrace her steps, but halted in place when the old woman
continued. “Why her?”
Another woman laughed.
Allowing herself to breathe
again, Mare turned back and tiptoed down the corridor.
Peering around the archway of the dining room, she saw Mrs.
Maesterfield sitting at the table, drinking her honey-laced
whiskey. Across from her sat Margaret Cocker, the bawd of
the square’s most notorious brothel.
“A virgin whore,” Margaret
eagerly explained, “calls a high price, and I’ve an earl
with particularly odd lusts willin’ to pay it and then some.
I’m not a greedy woman. I’ll give ya three pounds for the
girl, full half of what he’s givin’ me.”
Muffling her gasp with her hand,
Mare pressed her back to the wall. Maesterfield had never
made it a secret that she disliked Mare, but surely she
would not deliver her into Margaret’s cruel hands! The
seconds dragged on into eternity, and just as she braved
peeking into the dining room once more, she witnessed the
twisting of Mrs. Maesterfield’s fat jowls into a vile grin.
“On the condition you wait two
weeks.”
The proposal left Margaret
aghast. “Two weeks?”
“Aye, Maggie. You know I’ve got
me twenty pounds, a damn sight better than your three,
comin’ from his lordship for all the lovin’ care I been
givin’ her all these years, the day she turns twenty.”
“I thought you got that when she
turned nineteen?”
Mrs. Maesterfield crooked her
finger and thumped Margaret on the forehead with a scowl.
“Ah,” she said, rubbing her
forehead with a grimace, “so you lied to ‘em.”
Mrs. Maesterfield shrugged. “He
told me to find out her age, but who can fault an old widow
for not hearin’ her rightly? My hearin’ ain’t what it used
to be, ya know .”
Margaret snickered, then
frowned. “I don’t know that I can be holdin’ the earl off
that long.”
“I’m certain you ‘ave ways to
persuade him that she’ll be worth the wait. After all, it
ain’t often a gentleman finds honest-to-God virgin flesh in
a whorehouse.”
“But no longer?”
She shook her head emphatically.
“With all I’ve tucked away over the years from his
lordship’s payments, along with ‘is final payment, I won’t
need to be takin’ in no more laundry, so the girl’s no use
to me. I can hire a house girl with the money I make lettin’
out Mare’s room. You can ‘ave her then and good riddance,”
she assured with a clap of her hands. Then she added, “For
the three pound you promised, of course.”
“God rot your tightfisted soul,”
Margaret chuckled, pouring some whiskey into her cup.
Dripping honey from the jar,
Mrs. Maesterfield laughed along with her. “And yours,
Maggie.”
They lifted their cups to toast
a bargain struck, and with the clink of the glass, panic
settled in a tight knot in the pit of Mare’s stomach. In her
mind, she tried to make sense of all Mrs. Maesterfield had
said, but nothing was making sense at the moment.
Who was this man who would pay a
sum as high as twenty pounds for her care? And why?
There was only one his lordship the old woman had
ever spoken of, she thought, stealing cautiously up the
staircase; her cousin, whose only contact with Mrs.
Maesterfield seemed to be through the plump little man with
the spectacles and snow-white hair and beard.
It was on his lordship’s
account the otherwise miserly Mrs. Maesterfield always made
certain Mare had one fancy dress, forbidden to be worn on
any day but the first day of each month when his
lordship’s man made his call.
At precisely ten minutes before three o’clock
on that day, Mare would be summoned to the sitting room just
beyond the entrance. It was always the same: “The burden
of carin’ for you is more than an old widow can manage
alone,” she’d complain, handing Mare a book. Then she’d
brush her skirt and pat her hair into place.
“Out of the goodness of his heart, his
lordship, my cousin, is sendin’ a few quid to keep me from
the poorhouse. I’ll not ‘ave you shamin’ me, so not a peep,
understand?”
Upon his arrival, the two would
whisper in the doorway for but a few moments, the little man
would cast a quick glance into the sitting room, and then
hand over a small pouch before making his exit.
Obviously his lordship
was no relative of the old woman. But who was this
mysterious benefactor who would pay for her all these years,
and then reward Mrs. Maesterfield a full twenty pounds upon
Mare’s nineteenth birthday?
Twentieth,
she reminded herself, at last reaching her tiny room.
Did it matter when, at this very
moment, Mrs. Maesterfield and Margaret were sorting out the
details to hand her over to the earl with particularly
odd lusts?
“To the devil with them both,”
she murmured, shedding her apron. Mrs. Maesterfield would
not be collecting her pay from his lordship and
Margaret would not see a ha’pence from the depraved earl.
Lifting the pretty light blue
muslin dress from the hook on the wall, she stepped into it.
Then, after donning her stockings and shoes, she pried the
floorboard loose, lifted it, and reached for the cloth sack
full of coins and tied it securely around her waist.
Then Mare sat on her bed,
eating her bread and cheese while she waited. At last she
heard Mrs. Maesterfield’s heavy footfalls in the corridor
below, and then heard the thud of the old woman’s chamber
door close fast.
#
With no notion as to where she
was bound, Mare made her way through the dark, cold
Whitechapel streets. Shivering, she hugged her coat tighter
to her body and quickened her step to put as much distance
as possible between herself and the boarding house.
The odor of coal and horses
lingered heavily in the hazy yellow fog that rose from the
damp street. The sounds of the square surrounded her—men
shouting from the Blue Boar down the lane and a stray
barking dog, an argument between a man and a woman, and the
cries of a hungry baby. And if it wasn’t enough she had to
steal through the shadows to avoid the vagrants and
drunkards that roamed the streets this time of night, there
was also the fear gnawing deep inside that Mrs. Maesterfield
would find her and drag her back to the boarding house in
chains.
Footsteps against cobblestone
sounded from somewhere behind her. Mare darted into an alley
and quickly ducked into a dark corner. The footsteps
followed, echoing off the buildings. Crouching down, she
listened, her heart thrashing madly against her chest,
certain Mrs. Maesterfield had found her out.
As the footsteps approached, she
shrunk herself up, inching as far into the shadows as
possible. The unsteady footsteps faltered. Glass shattered.
A slurred curse.
A drunk,
she realized, exhaling shakily as he began to move on.
Tiny claws scurried over her
shoes and beneath her skirt. Startled, she leaped to her
feet, brushing frantically at her dress. A rat dropped to
the ground with a shriek and scurried off.
The drunk staggered around just
as the wind pushed the clouds away from the moon. A patch
covered one eye, but even half-blind and half-dazed he made
her out amidst the shadows. With a low, sinister laugh he
stumbled toward her. “Been waitin’ for me, have you,
darlin’?”
Desperately Mare searched for an
escape, but she was surrounded by walls, and the giant man
blocked her only way out.
“Yer a pretty one,” he growled,
grabbing her arm, then leaning closer, assaulting Mare with
the stench of stale whiskey and filth. “I just might take my
time with you.”
The very thought of him touching
her made her stomach wretch. “I-I’m not that kind of
w-woman,” she stammered, jerking out of his grasp.
“Yer exactly the kind of woman
who’ll make Blade and his friend feel welcome
tonight.” He yanked at his trousers.
Knowing it was her only hope,
Mare ducked and attempted a mad dash, but he caught her
roughly by the arm and slammed her against the brick wall of
the building, his huge, filthy hand silencing her scream.
Struggling for air, she fought
to break free. Then all at once, she heard metal scrape
against metal, and felt the cold broadside of a blade
pressed firmly to her throat.
“Fightin’ will only make it
hurt,” he hissed, pushing his weight against her.
She couldn’t breathe. The world
around her grew dark as consciousness began to slip away.
She saw a vision of herself lying in a pool of blood in the
alley, raped and murdered, and heard the faint sound of the
knife being thrust back into its sheath.
She was not ready to die—not
before she’d had a chance to live. And not this way.
Mare reached out and groped
frantically.
“Ah, that’s it,” he growled,
mistaking her desperate grasps.
Precious air suddenly filled her
lungs with a gasp when he pulled his hand away. Then all at
once, her fingers wound around the knife handle and she
ripped it from its holster, drawing on all the strength she
possessed, and plunged it to the hilt in Blade’s thigh.
Tightening her grip on the
knife, the blade tore through his flesh. He stared at her,
stunned, and then howled in pain as he fell against her
before staggering back a few steps and crumpling to the
ground, blood flowing heavily from the gaping wound.
The knife fell to the ground at
her feet and Mare stared in horror at the blood-covered
weapon.
“You’ll pay fer this, ya fuckin’
whore!” he shouted suddenly, ripping her out of her daze.
She spun away and ran, but he
lunged and caught her by the hair, bringing her back around.
His fist rose and she closed her
eyes, unable to bear witness to the coming of her own
demise. “I swear I’ll make you—” Blade’s threat ended with
a dull thud. His cruel hand released her. He groaned.
Mare opened her eyes just in
time to leap back as his body jerked and then collapsed into
a heap on the street.
A man stepped forward through
the thin haze and into the dim moonlight that filtered
through the mist. Cloaked all in black, like some sort of
mysterious rogue highwayman, he knelt and held his lantern
above Blade.
Tossing the brick to the ground,
he reached a black-gloved hand into Blade’s coat.
Withdrawing a piece of paper from an inside pocket, he
unfolded it and held it up to the lantern.
“I-is he… dead?” she
whispered, taking an uncertain step back, away from him and
the motionless body that lay on the ground.
Shaking his head, he returned
the paper to Blade’s coat. “He lives,” he said quietly,
rising to his full height, “and you have nothing to fear
from me.”
Holding the lantern high between
them, he pushed his hood down and at last she saw his face.
Deep, icy hatred glinted in his black eyes when they met
hers. Clenching his teeth, he glanced again at the
unconscious man at his feet. Then, drawing a breath, he let
his gaze rise, and those dark eyes took her captive once
more.
“Come with me,” he said, a
sudden urgency in his voice, extinguishing his lantern and
reaching for her hand. “There are others who may have heard
his bellowing, and you won’t be safe here.”
There was no reason to trust
this man, but the prospect of encountering more men like the
monster who lay bloody on the ground at her feet gave her
little choice, and Mare found her hand within his waiting
palm. Together they raced up the alley.
The moment they ran out onto the
street, the man pulled her to him and the next thing she
knew, she was pressed against the wall of a building,
beneath a flickering lamp post. Her scream was muffled when
his mouth came down over hers. He turned her face away from
the light, and easily rendered her struggle to break free
futile, commanding her body with the weight of his own.
Then she heard them—the men he’d
warned her about, the drum of hooves against the ground, as
they rounded the corner onto the street and bore down upon
them. She knew then that the man was not accosting her, but
protecting her.
Mare tried to breathe, but his
tongue slipped between her lips, and the breath she drew
into her body was his. Her heart pounded to the fast rhythm
of the horses’ hooves, louder and louder until the
thump-thump of her heart was the only sound.
The oncoming riders seemed to
fade into the fog that surrounded them, and Mare yielded to
his tender kiss, the gentle movement of his lips, the light
pressure of his tongue as it explored then met hers. His
arms came around her, and embraced her, even as his scent,
masculine and sensual, enveloped her, and the sweet taste of
him intoxicated her like wine.
She felt his body tense,
bringing her back to the moment and the danger, just as the
riders went speeding past them.
“Wait!” one of them called out.
“Don’t move,” he whispered
against her mouth as both riders halted their mounts. One
arm moved from about her and then between them. Both horses
retraced their steps. She heard a soft click, and knew then
that the man who embraced her, who kissed her, even now,
held a gun, and he was preparing to use it.
“Bleedin’ bastard’s piss drunk!”
one of the men exclaimed pulling his reins and heading down
the alley.
The other followed.
The man twisted slightly and
slowly removed his mouth from hers.
Her knees buckled, and if he
hadn’t still been holding her, she would have collapsed,
though she wasn’t certain if it was because of the threat of
the riders, or the kiss of the man who now peered around the
corner of the building and down the alley.
Mare willed her racing heart to
slow.
“Are you all right?” he asked,
staring intently at whatever was taking place in the alley,
while tucking his gun into the waist of his trousers.
Bracing herself against the
building, she took a deep breath and steadied herself.
“Yes.”
He turned to her. Something
gentle had replaced the anger in his eyes, and the ice had
become a glittering fire, sending an unsettling heat
quivering down Mare’s spine.
It was only a moment, but it
seemed an eternity passed between them before the voices
from the alley broke the spell.
His arm loosened from around her
waist, then suddenly she found herself pulled back to him,
and for the space of a heartbeat, his lips claimed hers once
more, before his arm fell away.
Bringing her fingertips to her
lips, she stared up at him, confused.
The strange man grinned briefly,
and then his expression went staid. “You must go,” he said
in a low voice, nodding his head toward the square. “While
there’s still time.”
#
Aidan stood rapt, watching the
fleeing figure of the woman until at last she disappeared
into the blanket of mist. Regaining his wit, he peered
around the corner of the old brick building once more, and
watched the two men struggle to get the wounded and
unconscious Blade to his feet. Under Blade’s immense weight,
it was all they could do to lift and throw him, face down,
across the back of one of the horses and secure him, before
they both mounted the remaining horse.
Bringing the hood of his cloak
over his head, Aidan moved swiftly out of the lamppost light
and ducked into a doorway, pressing back into the darkness,
just as the clip-clop of horses’ hooves sounded on
the street.
Shrouded by the veil of shadows,
he watched until they rode out of sight, and then made his
way on foot in the other direction to the outskirts of
Whitechapel.
He thanked fortune for the
convenient twist of fate. It had been almost too easy to get
his hands on the missive from Jean-Luc Monteau, a general
under the French assassin Raphael DuBois.
For weeks he had followed Blade,
convinced he’d finally found the Englishman who’d betrayed
his country by assisting DuBois and his band of renegades in
escaping him for more than a year. Meanwhile, DuBois, who’d
been rutted out of hiding in Ireland and captured by the
king’s troops there, had been locked away in a location
known only to a special force of English soldiers.
King George IV, anxious to rid
himself of the burden of the threat of DuBois, commanded
Aidan to not only bring DuBois to justice and flush out the
traitorous Englishman, but to also capture all in league
with the notorious Frenchman.
Since then, Aidan had hand-selected a handful
of
England’s
finest to accompany him on his mission; men whose allegiance
to the crown was unquestionable, men trained to fight—and
kill. And he had, at last, discovered the Judas who
would trade his honor and country for a few pieces of
silver.
A week past, he had announced to
his crew that they were to take supplies to the troops in
Ireland, and along the way, bring aboard Raphael DuBois, so
he could be escorted to England for trial.
All that had been left to do
then was follow Blade.
On this night, Aidan witnessed
his meeting with Monteau in the Blue Boar. Though
unable to hear most of their conversation over the
boisterous shouting and cursing of the inn’s rowdy patrons,
he’d heard enough; Blade had supplied the word Monteau
sought, and Monteau had given Blade instructions to be
delivered to the others.
The attempt to rescue DuBois,
and the attack upon Aidan’s ship, would take place between
Dublin and Cork
He turned from the street and
walked quickly into the park. Putting his thumb and finger
to his mouth, he let go a sharp whistle.
Leaves rustled and the soft
light of a lantern shone through the darkness. “Did you get
what you was after, Captain?” his first mate asked
expectantly, stepping from behind a cluster of trees,
leading two horses.
“We now have the wax to seal the
assassins’ fate, Randy.”
The old seaman grinned a wide,
toothless grin and ran his hand over his knit cap. “So the
poxy bastard gave ‘em the bait, just as you expected?”
Nodding, Aidan took the reins of
his black mount and lifted himself into the saddle.
“Daybreak is almost upon us.” Pulling his purse from the
inside of his cloak, he handed Randy a fistful of notes. “In
a few hours, the port will come alive. I want you to
purchase a supply of rum from one of the West Indies
merchants—be sure to sample it to assure it is of good
quality—and then bring it on to the ship.”
“What about you, Captain?”
“I must deliver this news to
Wakefield so he can make the appropriate arrangements for
our return. If you board the ship before I do, tell the
others our mission will proceed as planned.”
“Aye, Captain.” Randy hoisted
himself up onto the back of his tan mare and with another
grin and a nod, rode off.
Aidan allowed himself a slight
smile as he watched his first mate ride away. It had been a
long night, but one well spent. Now it was only a matter of
allowing this little game he’d set in motion to play out to
its conclusion. In the end, England and her monarch would
remain secure, and he would have his long-awaited revenge
against the man who had eluded him so long, he thought, his
countenance darkening.
Randy’s mare disappeared into
the mist, and DuBois and the game were abruptly forgotten as
Aidan was reminded of the woman fleeing the Whitechapel
square. Under his breath he cursed Blade; first a traitor,
and tonight, had it not been for the woman’s determination
and then Aidan’s intervention, he would have committed
rape—and possibly murder.
Hoping merely to overhear
anything of the conversation he would have with those he was
to meet with Monteau’s missive, Aidan had followed. At
first, he’d thought it an inconvenience that Blade was
diverted from his task by the lure of one of the square’s
many prostitutes. He’d kept his distance, just beyond the
alley, waiting impatiently for Blade’s drunken lust to be
sated. Then he heard the woman cry out, telling Aidan she
was no eager or willing whore. And he knew he could not
leave her to Blade’s mercy, for the man had none. But before
he could reach them, he witnessed the woman plunge Blade’s
own dagger into his thigh, crippling her attacker.
In less than the space of a
heartbeat, Blade fell, the woman turned to run, only to be
caught again by the beast. Just as he raised his fist to
strike her, Aidan seized a fallen brick and with all his
force, drove it against the back of Blade’s skull.
At that moment, he wasn’t
certain which had provided him the greater pleasure;
retrieving Monteau’s message, or rendering the bastard
bloody and unconscious.
He’d thought to lead the woman
to safety before setting out to see the king, but DuBois’
men had been upon them, and in order to avoid recognition,
he’d drawn the woman into his arms and kissed her. The act
had done the trick; the riders had obviously assumed them
lovers and ignored them. But Aidan had found himself
enjoying the kiss a good deal—so much in fact, that it had
been all he could do to stay focused on his mission with her
thighs pressed to his and her bosom rising and falling
against his chest.
Her reaction to his kiss had
told him in no uncertain terms that this woman was no whore;
whores did not tremble from a mere kiss. Indeed, his kiss
had left her blushing and breathless!
He had watched them take
Monteau’s orders from Blade’s coat, and while DuBois’
henchmen were occupied with Blade, Aidan could not resist
pulling her to him for one more taste of her sweet lips,
before sending her off into the night.
His hand unconsciously rose to
his mouth. The night had been bountiful in more ways than
the one intended. Pity he hadn’t even had an opportunity to
get her name or find out what she’d been doing on the
streets of Whitechapel in the wee hours of the morning.
Aidan shook his head and smiled
to himself. Then, putting a sharp heel to Devil’s flank, he
took off in the direction of St. James palace, with the
first rays of sun seeping over the horizon.