“Do you know how much interest accumulates in two years?”
said the man she knew as Cockfosters. Of course, that could not be his name, but some babies didn’t have the fortune to be baptised.
He could call himself what he liked, he’d always be an evil bastard.
Robinson struggled in the restraining hold of another ruffian, his hand clamped over her mouth, his other around her waist, clamping to him with insulting ease. Fury and terror coursed through her, driving her to move, to run, but she couldn’t leave her maid behind. Besides, someone else stood in front of the small enclosed space, picking his teeth with a knife, effectively deterring curious visitors.
“You can’t dun me for the debts of a dead man,” she said.
“Yes we can,” he said gently. “You’re a countess now. We ‘eard about that.” She remembered the occasional dropped ‘h’ and the flat, London accent too, although the last time they’d met was in Belgium. They’d been scum then and they were scum now.
“Try it.”
“Let ‘em know what you did, what your ‘usband did? By the way, when did you marry this one?” He moved closer, the single step a menace she worked hard not to retreat from. If she did, she’d back herself against a wall, and never have a chance to run. “Because we saw your husband alive and well the night before Waterloo. Did you marry this one after? Because look at this.” He dug a hand in the capacious pocket of his greatcoat and dragged out a single sheet of paper. “They’re talking about you already. Look ‘ere.” He could read, and he did so now, quoting from the paper. “The sad deaths of the fifth Earl of Graywood and his brother at sea have left us with a new earl, and countess. His lordship has taken up residence in the London house in Grosvenor Square. He recently returned from abroad. Word says he had no previous memory of a wife, but he surely remembers her now. ” He put on a false upper-tier accent, sneering the words nasally. “Her la’ship has lived in London since the victory at Waterloo, believing herself a widow. She received a severe shock on her husband’s return from abroad, but maybe it was a welcome one. It is said that the current earl was on board ship with his cousins when the tragedy occurred. We wonder why the earl and his two heirs would choose to travel on the same vessel. But perhaps that can be explained in ways less suspicious than the ones currently circulating around the city. ”
“That’s libel!” she gasped but pamphlets and news-sheets appeared every day, untraceable, so the lies they perpetrated could not be denied or their creators punished.
“It’s not libel if it’s not a lie.”
“He never wanted to become an earl!” She closed her mouth with a snap, appalled she’d let that much out.
Cockfosters sneered, his full mouth curling in a way that someone else might find sensual. She found it deeply sinister. She put up her chin, her invariable habit when scared out of her mind.
What could she do now? She’d prayed they’d given up the hunt.
That was why she’d run so hard and so fast when her husband had died. Because they’d come back.
“You owe me, missy, and now you can pay. And pay and pay.”
He thrust the paper in her face. It smelled of him. He stank worse, but she stood her ground, ready to fight.
She put up her chin. “Or what?”
“I’ll make you listen. I can make the world listen. You’re not the only nob I’ve got in my pocket, you know, and I worked something out about you. You ain’t married to that man, are you? Fuck knows why ‘e’d take you in. Maybe ‘e likes your company.” He winked, lascivious and hateful. “Maybe he knows and he’s using you before he throws you out, but ‘e wouldn’t want the world to find out, would he? Or maybe you’re taking him in. I reckon it’s the last one.
You’re no better than us. If you want to stay in ‘is lordship’s bed, you’ll share what you’re getting’ with your old friends.”
“You’re wrong,” she said, protesting desperately. “And I owe you nothing.”
The bully holding Robinson moved and although she couldn’t follow his movements, he had a knife in his hand. He touched it to the maid’s cheek and a bead of blood appeared. Robinson squeaked as she stifled her scream, and stared at the knife, her eyes. Bulging as she strained to keep them in focus.
“We ‘ave a special way of decorating our women when they don’t please us,” said Cockfosters, his tone low and menacing.
“Want to know what it is?” He didn’t take his gaze off her, stared at her as though he was Mesmer himself and she one of his hapless victims. “We stick it in the fleshy part of the cheek and just—scoop out the soft bit. Never looks nice. Leaves a nasty scar, like the face
‘as fallen in. Wouldn’t want that to happen, would we?”
Terror had her in its grip, however she fought internally to break free. She couldn’t think straight, not beyond this hateful beast and what he meant to her. He’d menaced her husband, and he’d come back for her. He’d done that before, and once was enough to persuade her not to linger. She’d left some of her most precious possessions behind, including the twenty guineas she’d saved up for a rainy day.
“What do you want?”
“Money. At first. Nothing you can’t afford, now you’re a countess. Diddle that pretty husband of yours, milk a few more golden boys out of him.” He shifted on to his other foot, bringing him closer. “Oh yes, I know who he is, too. Remember ‘im. But couldn’t get a handle on him, not then. I can now.”
“I doubt that,” said a new voice, drenching the scene in the cold water of rationality and reason.
After one, solitary cry, she clapped her hand to her mouth and gulped for breath. Her heart drummed as if released from a thrall and trying to compensate for lost time. How could he put himself in danger this way, why hadn’t he called the authorities? They’d kill him, or threaten him too, and then he’d get drawn in and—
She forced herself to stop thinking, her mind a rat-trap of horrific scenarios. The only way she could call a halt to her rising panic was to shut it down.
John stood on the half-landing where the stairs led down to the small area. How he’d achieved that without making the boards creak she didn’t know. Nor did she care. That he’d done it was enough. He held a pistol in one hand, primed and ready, and he’d shoved another into his waistband. He held the pistol trained on Cockfosters with the steady hand and eye of the professional soldier. Nobody would have any doubt that he would fire if it became necessary. A man waited behind him, the shadows not concealing the distinctive livery of the Graywoods or the flintlock he held. “Let the maid go and leave.”
Cockfosters eyed them, then glanced at his compatriot, who still gripped Robinson tightly. “What’ll you do? Kill me?”
“Without a second thought. As you’ve already charmingly pointed out, I’m an earl now. Whose word do you think the authorities will take?”
Cockfosters swivelled to face John, thrusting out his chest defiantly. “Glad you’re ‘ere, saves me saying it twice. You pay or I talk. Clear?”
“Pay? Not a chance.”
“Doesn’t ‘ave to be money. We ‘ave a few interests in common, my lord. ” He said the words contemptuously, finishing with a noxious gob of spit, which landed on the stones at his feet.
“F’r’instance, some dockers down where you’ve been this morning
‘elp me sometimes. I could have little accidents happening. Falls from the riggin’, maybe, or some crushed ‘ands and legs.” His implication was obvious. “I can provide protection to stop that.”
He paused, and lowered his voice. “Sometimes people get lost overboard.”
Faith gasped. Could John have done it? The answer returned as fast. No. She refused to believe it.
John’s attention turned to her for a split second, and in that moment, several things happened. Someone shoved her forward, so she sprawled over the floor, then something soft and heavy slammed on top of her, robbing her of breath. A scurry of footsteps followed and a yell. “Help the lady!”
With difficulty, Faith rolled over, the inert body of her maid slumping to the floor beside her.
Oh God, was Robinson dead? Anxious to find out, Faith sat up but her head swam and she lost her balance, falling back.
A pair of strong arms were there to catch her. She didn’t have to look to know who the arms belonged to. Already familiar, she relaxed into them, relieved when Robinson groaned and tried to turn over. The footman sprang forward from his place behind John to examine her. “A cut on her face, not deep, apart from that, shock,” he said in matter-of-fact tones.
Faith cuddled in to John, pressed her cheek against his chest. She shook uncontrollably. Irritated that she’d lost control in such a humiliating way, she said nothing. He held her closer. “Did he hurt you?”
Menace laced his tones. She believed that if Cockfosters had done more than threaten her, John would have killed him. He cradled her gently but firmly, before he loosened one hand to run it over her body, checking, she presumed, for damage. “Not even a bruise,” she murmured, not daring to raise her voice above a whisper for fear the trembling would betray exactly how shaken she felt.
“Hush, sweetheart, let me care for you. Do you think you can stand, or shall I carry you?”
She had no doubt he could lift her easily, but the thought of being carried through the busy Exchange made her cringe internally. “I can stand,” she said as determinedly as she could manage, although in reality she had no such certainty.
However, with his arm around her waist, she managed to get on her feet creditably. Only a stumble or two. He waited until she could balance on her own and then offered his arm as support.
“Lean as hard as you need to. I won’t falter.”
She already knew that.
Most of the occupants of the Exchange remained oblivious when the new Earl and Countess of Graywood crossed the cobbled floor on the way to their carriage. He tenderly assisted her to climb in before following her and the vehicle set off as soon as the earl closed the door. Nobody noticed that the footman and maid who accompanied them were no longer present. John had given swift instructions to take them to Grosvenor Square by a different route, the better to avoid gossip.
Once in the carriage John put an arm around Faith and held her tightly against him. “No words, not yet. Wait until we get home.”
Glancing down, she saw a rip in her new gown and that proved enough to trigger the tears she’d tried so hard to hold back. He let her cry until they left the confines of the City. Then he took his own handkerchief and mopped up the worst of it. When they arrived at their destination, she was merely damp and tousled.
He alighted before her. As soon as they were indoors, he swept her into his arms and headed up the stairs, barking orders for hot water and tea. He didn’t stop until they arrived in her room, and he’d laid her carefully on the bed. He stripped off his coat and sat next to her, brushing away her hands when she tried to undo her bonnet ribbons. “I’ll do that. We’ll say, if you please, that you had a fall. The floors of the Exchange can be uneven, and you took a tumble.”
Relieved that he didn’t intend to announce her predicament to all and sundry, Faith let out a shaken breath. Her tears had gone.
She felt calmer for the explosion, although she doubted it had helped her looks. After she’d worked so hard to appear the proper countess this morning.
The thought nearly made her burst into fresh torrents, but she forced herself to desist and lay still while he undressed her. Which he did, right down to her shift, before drawing back the covers and tucking her underneath. He examined her as he did so, cursing when he saw the bruise darkening on her thigh. “I should kill him for that alone.” He took her hands in his, and waited until she lifted her head to meet his eyes. “Now tell me the truth. All of it. Don’t keep anything back. We’re partners, remember?”
“W-what did you hear?”
His mouth hardened. “That somehow the man knows that we aren’t married. Talk to me, Faith.” He pressed her fingers, his eyes willing her to tell him everything.
She had to. He’d seen it for himself. “They—they won’t leave me alone, now they’ve found me.” Her world had come crashing down around her with the reappearance of the man who had terrified her for so long. The ruffian she’d successfully eluded for two years. Or maybe she hadn’t been worth his while seeking out before now. “Let me leave, John. I’ll go and you’ll never hear from me again.”
"Counterfeit Countess" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "Counterfeit Countess". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "Counterfeit Countess" друзьям в соцсетях.