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Kitabı oku: «Regency Affairs Part 1: Books 1-6 Of 12», sayfa 44

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Kendall Carlisle grabbed Greer’s arm and raised it high, declaring him the winner amid applause, but that only delayed the inevitable.

‘What the hell do you think you’re doing?’ Greer seized her none too gently and guided her to a private room the moment they could escape. ‘Have you forgotten I’ve seen that shot before? You forfeited that game.’

‘Have you forgotten you promised to trust me?’ Mercedes answered. ‘You are the one who has to advance.’ The words rushed out. ‘Please listen, Greer.’ She gripped his lapels. She’d known he would be mad, but the reality was far worse than the theory. ‘You promised you’d play for me. I am holding you to it. I need you to play for me now.’

Greer paused, his eyes past her in his anger. ‘You’re the one, Greer, who has the best chance to beat Cahill. I’ve already secured my reputation by making it this far, but you need that money and you need your reputation.’ Mercedes held his gaze, willing him to believe her.

‘And what do you need?’ Greer asked gruffly.

‘I need you, Greer.’ She kissed him hard on the mouth, then. ‘And I need to go pick up my winnings.’

He arched his eyebrows. ‘What winnings would those be?’

‘The money I placed on you.’ She smiled mischievously. ‘The odds were more lucrative on you to win.’

Suspicion crossed his face. ‘How much did you wager, Mercedes?’

‘How much do you think? Enough to make sure you won’t miss that inheritance you’re giving up,’ she said softly. ‘I couldn’t let you give it all up, Greer. I promised myself I’d make it back for you. But now is not the time to get emotional about money. Lesson number one, remember? Don’t get emotional about money. Yours or anyone else’s.’

Greer protested, ‘At least you should have told me.’

‘And risk having you throw the game first?’ She shook her head. ‘I know you, Greer Barrington, and you would have meddled if you thought for a second it wasn’t my best game. Besides, tonight I wasn’t betting on you, I was betting on us. Go out there and win this, Greer.’

‘You’ve taken an enormous risk, Mercedes,’ he began.

‘Of course I have. But you’re worth it.’ She twined her arms around his neck and drew him down to her. ‘For better or for worse, isn’t that how it goes?’

‘I thought a good gambler knew when it was time to quit?’ Greer quizzed sternly.

‘If there is such a time, I haven’t found it.’ She kissed Greer hard. She’d learned her lessons well and knew that sometimes it paid more to lose than it did to win. Just look at what she’d gained when she’d lost her heart.

Three days later, Mercedes Lockhart married the newly crowned All England Billiards Champion at St Peter’s Church, the closest thing to a cathedral Brighton had. The church was filled with flowers and friends, and even strangers who’d been caught up in the drama of the tournament. Mercedes had very little attention to spare for those details, though. All of her focus was spent on the man at the altar. Was there ever a more handsome man than the one waiting for her or did every bride think that on her wedding day? No, surely not.

She concentrated on every detail of him: how the filtered sunlight hit his hair, firing it to a platinum sheen; the clean-shaven strength of his jaw and the piercing quality of his blue eyes as they found her; the square set of his shoulders in the red coat of his uniform, every last button and brass polished; his legs long and lean in the pristine white trousers, a ceremonial sword hanging at his side. It would be one of the last times he wore it before giving up his commission. But the uniform had been chosen to send a message, perhaps for her as much as for the crowd, Mercedes thought. Here stood a man who knew and did his duty—his honour was not in question nor should be his choice of bride. She would have his protection and his devotion all his days and let no man gainsay him—not his father, not his brother.

He took her hand, giving her father a short bow. ‘Thank you, sir.’

She could feel the covert squeeze of his hand as they turned to face the vicar, a happy round-faced man. He began the service and she let the words flow around her, aware that they were nothing more than a pleasant sound. She was riveted on Greer, on this man who’d pledged himself to her, who stirred her to a passion so great she’d defied her father.

Greer bent close to her during a prayer. ‘Your father spoke to me this morning. He has given his blessing.’ Her father had been slow to forgive Greer for deserting him in Birmingham.

‘I know. I played him for it.’ She kept her eyes straight ahead, fixed on the cross above the altar.

Greer chuckled, drawing a moment of censure from the vicar who shot him a reproving look over the prayer book. ‘Of course you did. You know, you can’t settle everything with a billiards game, Mercedes.’

‘Not everything,’ she agreed. ‘But those things that can be, should be.’ She elbowed him. ‘Look reverent. It’s a prayer, after all.’

‘I should have guessed sooner. He said you’d talked to him last night. I couldn’t imagine what you might have said.’

Mercedes shot him a quick look as the vicar closed the last prayer. ‘I did talk to him. I told him I loved you.’

‘Was that before or after you ran the table?’

‘After, of course.’

The vicar intoned the closing words of the ceremony, pronouncing them man and wife.

‘It just so happens,’ Greer whispered, his mouth hovering above her lips ever so briefly, ‘that I love you too.’ Then he kissed her so as to leave no doubt that all parties approved of this match, no one more heartily than the groom himself, and her heart sang with the knowledge that Greer Barrington loved her even though he’d promised not to.

There was a wedding breakfast hosted at her father’s club to accommodate the many guests. By the time they could decently take their leave, Mercedes was exhausted, her mind riddled with names and faces. Who would have guessed weddings could be so tiring?

She was more than eager to slide into the closed carriage that would take them across town to their property. They would live above the subscription room for now. Greer joined her with a firm slam of the door and sank into the seat.

‘Alone at last! Are you as hungry or as tired as I am?’ His blue eyes sparkled. ‘I never realised how little time the bride and groom have to actually eat at their own wedding breakfast.’ He laughed and reached under the seat. ‘Fortunately, the cook packed a few extra victuals for us.’

Her stomach rumbled and she smiled. ‘Fortunately. We have to keep your strength up, after all.’

Greer uncorked a bottle of champagne, slopping a bit on his trousers when the carriage hit a bump. ‘I must apologise—it’s not your father’s carriage.’

‘I don’t care.’ They were on their own now, wanting to build their life from the ground up. She took the glass, more bubbles than wine in it. She sipped carefully. ‘I don’t think I’ve ever drunk champagne in a carriage before.’

Greer gave her a most wicked grin that warmed her to her toes. ‘What else haven’t you done in a carriage, Lady Barrington?’ He slid onto the seat beside her. ‘Have you done this?’ He blew gently in her ear, nipping the tender flesh of her lobe. ‘Or this?’ His hand cupped her jaw, turning her face towards him for a soft kiss on the mouth. She sank into it, revelling in his touch. She had missed this!

‘How about you, good sir? Have you done this?’ Mercedes reached for him, finding him hard and ready. He laughed into her mouth, tasting faintly of champagne, letting her unfasten his trousers.

‘You are most shocking, madam. I do not think I’ve ever been undressed in a carriage before.’

‘Ha, and you said nothing I did surprised you.’ She shot him a flirtatiously sly look. ‘I bet I could “surprise” you a little more.’ With that her hand began to move. ‘Maybe after this, you could “surprise” me.’ But, in truth, he already had.

A Lady Dares

Chapter One

Blackwell Docks, Sutton Shipyard, London—mid-March 1839

She was screwed! Absolutely royally screwed in the literal sense of the word; the word in question being ‘royally’, of course. Elise Sutton crumpled the letter in her hand and stared blindly at the office wall. Like the other investors, the royal family had finally withdrawn their patronage. And like the other investors, they’d politely waited a ‘decent’ interval to tell her. They were very sorry to hear of her father’s death, but the result was the same. The Sutton Yacht Company was on the brink of bankruptcy, brought to its knees by the sudden and tragic death of its founder, Sir Richard Sutton, six months earlier.

In truth, the idea the company had survived its owner by six months was something of an illusion. It had likely died with her father, only no one had bothered to tell her that. Apparently, courtesy demanded she be allowed to rise at dawn every morning and spend the next sixteen hours a day poring over account books, cataloguing inventory and lobbying investors who had no intentions of staying. She’d worn herself out all for naught and what passed for courtesy let her do it.

Well, courtesy be damned! It wasn’t a very ladylike thought, but according to the ton, she hadn’t been a lady for quite some time. By their exalted standards, ladies didn’t work side by side with their fathers in the family business. Ladies didn’t design yachts, didn’t spend their days adding up columns of numbers and most certainly didn’t set aside mourning half a year early to try to save sinking businesses. ladies meekly accepted the inevitable with hands folded in their laps and backs held rigid.

If that’s what ladies did, she most definitely wasn’t one. She’d spent the last seven years working with her father. The yacht company was as much hers as it had been his. It was part of her and she would not let it go, not without a fight.

At the moment she had admittedly few tools to fight with. The investors had gone, unconvinced the company could produce a worthy product without her father at the helm. The craftsmen and master builder had gone next. The presence of females had long been anathema in the nautical world and no reassurance on her part could induce them to stay. Even her mother was gone. Playing the devastated widow to the hilt, Olivia Sutton had retreated to the country after the funeral and simply disappeared.

Elise had told enquiring souls that her mother was taking her father’s death very poorly. Secretly, Elise thought her mother was managing quite well, too well for her personal tastes. In the months since the funeral, her mother’s letters from the country had become increasingly upbeat. There were quiet card parties and dinners to attend and everyone was so kind, now there was no longer an often absent husband to consider.

Her mother had loved Richard Sutton’s title; Sir Richard Sutton had been knighted two years prior for services to the Royal Thames Yacht Club, but Olivia Sutton hadn’t loved the work that had driven and absorbed him, taking him away from her. The marriage had been a convenient arrangement for years. Olivia had been more than happy to leave her daughter and son to manage the business of coping with solicitors, creditors and the other sundry visitors who hovered over a death like vultures.

The pencil in Elise’s hand snapped, the fifth one today. The sound drew her brother’s attention from the window overlooking the shipyard. ‘Is it as bad as all that?’

Elise pushed the pieces into the little pile on the corner of her desk with the remains of their fellow brethren. ‘It’s worse.’ She rose and joined William at the window. The normally bustling shipyard below them was silent and empty, a sight she was still having a hard time adjusting to. ‘I’ve sold anything of value associated with the business.’

There hadn’t been that much to sell, but that was only partially true. The shipyard itself was a valuable piece of property for its location on the Thames. She wasn’t sure she could face the prospect of giving up the business entirely. This had been her life. What would she do every day if she didn’t design yachts? Where would she go if she didn’t come here? Giving up the yard would be akin to giving up a piece of her soul. In society’s eyes she’d already done that once when she’d chosen to follow her father and not the pathway trod by other gently reared girls with means.

William sighed, pushing a hand through his blond hair, the gesture so much like their father it made her heart ache. At nineteen, William was a taller, lankier version of him, a living memory of the man they’d lost. ‘How much are we short?’

‘Twelve thousand pounds.’ Just saying the words hurt. No one had that kind of money except noblemen. Elise thought of the crumpled letter. She’d been counting on that. Royal patronage would have sustained them.

William whistled. ‘That’s not exactly pocket change.’

‘You could always marry an heiress.’ Elise elbowed him and tried for levity. William didn’t love the business as she did, but he’d loved Father and he’d been her supporter these past months, taking time away from his beloved studies to visit.

‘I could leave my studies.’ William said seriously. He was starting his third term at Oxford and thriving in the academic atmosphere. They’d been over this before. She wouldn’t hear of it.

‘No, Father wanted his son educated,’ Elise argued firmly. ‘Besides, it wouldn’t be enough.’ She didn’t want to be cruel, she appreciated her brother’s offer, but the money would hardly make a difference. Since it didn’t, it seemed unfair for William to make a useless sacrifice even if it was a noble offer.

‘What about the investors—perhaps they would advance funds?’ William suggested. The last time he’d been home, there’d still been a few remaining who had not yet discreetly weaned themselves from the company, still hoping there might be a way yet to continue with the latest project.

Elise shook her head. ‘They’ve all pulled out. No one wants to invest in a company that can’t produce a product.’ They’d more than pulled out. It was largely the investors’ faults she was in such a pickle. Her father had not been debt ridden, but neither had he been wallowing in assets. The investors had withdrawn their support and asked for their money returned, unconvinced the latest project they’d financed would see completion.

Said project lay below them in the quiet yard—the half-completed shell of her father’s latest design for a racing yacht, planned with new innovations in mind, lay dormant. For the last several weeks, the investors were proven right. Supplies purchased with the investors’ money from the outset lined the lonely perimeter, tarp covered and forgotten. ‘A pity the investors didn’t want to be paid in timber and pitch,’ Elise muttered. ‘I’ve got plenty of that.’

William’s eyes settled on her, brown and thoughtful. ‘All the supplies have been purchased?’

‘Yes. Father buys—bought,’ Elise corrected herself, ‘everything up front, it makes production faster and we don’t have to worry about running out at a crucial point.’

William nodded absently, his mind racing behind his eyes. ‘How much would the yacht have brought?’

She smiled wryly. ‘Enough. It would have been plenty.’ It wouldn’t have been just about the yacht. There would have been other orders, too. This yacht was meant to be a prototype. Rich men would have seen it and wanted one for themselves. But it was no use now counting hypothetical pounds.

‘You could finish the boat,’ William suggested.

Elise furrowed her brow and studied her brother carefully. Was that a joke? Had he been listening to anything she’d said? Her temper snapped. ‘I can’t finish the boat, William. I don’t know the first thing about actually using hammer and nails. And in case you haven’t noticed, there are no men down there, no master builder.’

She regretted the sarcasm immediately. William looked hurt. It wasn’t fair to take her agitation out on him. He was suffering, too. He knew what people had said about him behind their hands at the funeral. ‘There’s the son, but he’s too young to take over the company. If only he was a couple years older, then things might have come out all right.’ That was usually followed up by the other unfriendly speculation. ‘Too bad the daughter doesn’t have a husband. A husband would know what to do.’ Husbands solved everything in their little worlds.

‘I’m sorry, William.’ Elise laid a conciliatory hand on his sleeve. ‘It’s a nice theory. Even if I had the men, I couldn’t finish that yacht. The innovations require the knowledge of a master builder. More than that, I’d need the best.’ They would have managed without a master builder if her father had been there to oversee the project, as he so often had been, but no workers were going to take orders from a woman even if she had been instrumental in the boat’s design.

She needed a master builder more than anything else to finish that boat. Beyond her father, she didn’t have a clue who the best was when it came to ship design. Her own talent notwithstanding, she was female and thus excluded from that circle. It had not bothered her unduly in the past. She’d had her father and he’d given her every opportunity she’d desired to advance her skill even if it was often anonymously. She’d never thought further than that. Why should she have? Her father had been in his late forties, in excellent health and at the top of his game. She’d not appreciated by how slim a thread the privilege to indulge her passion had hung until it had been destroyed in one precarious accident.

‘What if I could get you the best?’ William persisted in earnest.

Finish the yacht? He was absolutely serious. It was crazy. The idea started to take hold along with the most dangerous of games, what if? If she had a master builder, workmen would come. If those men came, she could pay them with the proceeds from the sale of the yacht. It could be done. There was less than a month’s worth of work to finish. It was March now, the yacht would be ready by the time society came to town for the Season. Elise’s mind was whirring. Most of all, if they finished the boat the investors would come back. If that happened, the possibilities were as endless as her imagination.

‘I’d say we were back in business,’ Elise said slowly, reining her thoughts back to the present. Finishing the boat had suddenly become the gateway to the future, a future where the company was saved, where she was saved. But there was still this crucial step to accomplish. Everything hinged on the master builder. ‘How soon can we meet?’

William flipped open his pocket watch and studied the face. ‘I’d say right about now, but you’d better bring Father’s pistol from the safe.’

‘His pistol? Whatever for?’ Warning bells went off in her head. What sort of master builder had to be met with a gun? The shipyard was relatively protected. The docks were surrounded by high walls with guards posted to discourage intruders. Inside the walls, a person was fairly secure. Outside those fortressed walls was a different story for the unwary, but not for her. The docks were her territory. She’d walked them with her father, much to her mother’s complete and regular dismay.

If her brother wanted to be protective, she’d let him. Elise checked the gun to see that it was primed. ‘Again, why do I need to bring the gun? I’ve never needed one before.’

William merely grinned at her objection. ‘Well, this time, you might.’

Elise took the pistol more to humour him than out of any genuine belief that she’d actually need it.

She was, however, seriously rethinking that position half an hour later when their carriage pulled up in front of a tavern on Cold Harbour Lane ominously named The Gun. Like most streets in London’s East End, this one was crowded and busy, full of the dock and industrial workers that generated so much of the city’s wealth through the strength of their backs.

The crush and smell of the crowd did not daunt Elise, but what happened next nearly did. They’d barely stepped down from the carriage when the door of The Gun flew open in a violent motion. A man crashed into the street, his careening form barrelling straight into her. She might have fallen entirely if the carriage hadn’t been at her back, a rather hard bulwark against the assault. It stopped her from falling, but certainly didn’t cushion the blow. As it was, the force of the man’s exit bore her against the carriage, his arms braced on either side of her to stop his own flight, his body pressed hard and indecently to hers, his blue eyes taking a moment to register he was quite obviously staring at her bosom as they both struggled to find their equilibrium. He found his first and let out a whoop that nearly shattered her eardrums for its closeness. ‘What a day! You’re the prettiest pillow I’ve yet to lay my head on.’

‘You’ll be laying nothing of the sort,’ Elise replied coolly, bringing the pistol up and holding his eyes with an unflinching stare. It was a deep-blue gaze, dark midnight like the sea itself, and the press of his body was not entirely unpleasant. There was muscle and strength beneath his rough clothes and the hint of morning soap mingled with the faint whiff of whisky. All very manly scents when presented in the right proportions. Still, she could not stand there and ponder his masculine aesthetics. Propriety demanded his removal from her person. Immediately.

‘Please step away.’ Where was her brother? Hadn’t he been right beside her?

‘That’s not who you want to shoot.’ Was that laughter she heard in her brother’s voice? If he wanted to be protective, he was a bit late.

‘Maybe I should shoot you instead, William,’ Elise said through gritted teeth, tossing him a sideways glance over the man’s notably broad shoulder. She shoved at the blue-eyed stranger, who’d made no move to distance himself. Her hands met with the steely resistance of a muscled chest. ‘Are you going to get off?’

‘Probably at some point. Most women don’t like a man who gets off too early, though, if you know what I mean.’ He finally moved away, laughter crinkling his eyes as he studied her. She knew exactly what he meant and she would not give him the satisfaction of blushing over his crass remark. Years on the docks had immured her from taking offence at such colourful references. To be sure, such remarks weren’t allowed in her father’s shipyard when she was in earshot. Her father had been protective in that way, but the language and innuendo of the docks were hard to escape altogether.

‘Elise—’ William stepped in ‘—allow me to make the introductions. This is Dorian Rowland,’ he said with a flourish as if the name alone explained it all.

She eyed the man speculatively, taking in the tanned skin, the long tawny hair loosely held back by a strip of leather and streaked from the sun of faraway climes—England never had enough sun to achieve such a look. She was momentarily envious of such artless beauty until the import of her brother’s words sunk in. This was the man who was supposed to save her business?

The door to the tavern opened again, ejecting three tough-looking men with clubs. Her stranger shot a look over his shoulder. ‘Could we finish introductions in your carriage?’

The three men were momentarily dazzled by the sunlight as they searched the area for something. Someone, she realised too late. Their eyes lit on her stranger. ‘There he is! You’re not getting away from us! Halsey wants his money.’

‘Come on, Elise, let’s go.’ William hustled them into the carriage, giving a shout to the driver before the door was shut behind him and they were off, navigating the traffic with as much speed as possible.

‘Who are those men?’ Elise hazarded a glance out the window, recoiling when a rock hit the carriage as they pulled away. They were going to ruin the paint, yet another expense she could ill afford.

‘Suffice it to say, they don’t like me very much.’ Dorian Rowland, whoever he was, smiled as if he hadn’t a care in the world. Then again, it wasn’t his carriage being chipped.

She threw an accusing glare at her newly acquired companion. William had clearly made a mistake. ‘Well, that makes four of us.’

He laughed, a loud, clear sound that filled the carriage. ‘Don’t worry, Princess, I’ll grow on you.’

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Yaş sınırı:
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Hacim:
3011 s. 3 illüstrasyon
ISBN:
9781474049535
Telif hakkı:
HarperCollins
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