A Lady at Last. Brenda Joyce
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Название: A Lady at Last

Автор: Brenda Joyce

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Исторические любовные романы

Серия:

isbn: 9781472053626

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ days.

      “What is amiss?” Cliff left the edge of the terrace.

      “There is a….” He coughed. “There is a…caller…sir, if you will…downstairs.”

      Cliff was amused. “It must be the Grim Reaper,” he said. “Does he or she have a card?” Suddenly he recalled the beauty from the Spanishtown square. He was almost certain she had come to have her lust assuaged, and in that instant, he imagined La Sauvage in his bed.

      What the hell was wrong with him? Never mind that the wild child-woman was far more beautiful than any woman he had thus far beheld. She was eighteen, if he were fortunate, sixteen if not.

      “The caller—” Fitzwilliam swallowed, clearly finding something distasteful “—is in the red room, awaiting you, if you wish to see her.”

      So it was the woman from the square. He was oddly disappointed and annoyed. “I am not receiving today,” he decided flatly. “Boot her.”

      Fitzwilliam blinked, as he had never been so curt or so rude before. Cliff flushed. “I mean, please take her card and send her on her way.”

      “She has no card, sir.”

      An inkling began; he turned. All ladies had calling cards. “I beg your pardon?”

      Fitzwilliam wet his lips. “She insists upon seeing you, sir, and she has a dagger—which she pointed at me!”

      La Sauvage. Then he was striding into the house and across the gleaming oak floors, down the wide central staircase with its dark red runner and into the hall below. It was a huge room with high ceilings, a crystal chandelier the size of a grand piano, the floors gray-and-white marble imported from Spain. The red room was at the farthest end.

      Carre’s daughter stood there, staring toward him.

      His heart lurched, unsettling him. He quickly approached, noting that she was very pale, in spite of her golden coloring, and that her eyes were wild, like those of a warhorse in the midst of frenzied battle. He made a mental note to proceed with caution, as he hardly trusted her. He didn’t realize his tone was sharp and abrupt until after he had spoken. “Did you go back to King’s House?”

      She shook her head. “No.”

      God, he was relieved! He began to recover his composure. “Miss Carre, forgive me. Please, do sit down. Can I offer you refreshment? Tea? Biscuits?”

      She was staring at him as if he’d grown a second head. “I’m to forgive you?”

      He was reminded of how he must appear—demented, actually, to be asking such a wild, untutored child for forgiveness. Did she even understand that his manners had been utterly lacking? He somehow smiled at her. “My greeting was sorely deficient. A gentleman always bows to a lady. He might say, good afternoon or good morning, or inquire after her welfare.”

      She gaped. “I am not a lady. You are babbling.”

      He drew up. “Would you like some tea?”

      “A spot?” She mimicked the highborn, upper-class British accent perfectly. “I think not,” she continued her mime. “I’d take a grog,” she drawled like a sailor. “If you got it.”

      He wondered if she drank, or merely hoped to provoke him. “Your mimicry is very well done,” he said idly. He wandered past her, eyeing her as he did so. She hadn’t moved or blinked since he entered the room. She stood defensively, yet also aggressively. That dagger was probably in the waistband of her breeches, beneath the tuniclike shirt. Why had she come? He thought he knew, and it wasn’t to jump into his bed.

      She flushed. “You know I can’t read—you heard me say so. I don’t know big words, either.”

      He felt his chest go soft. “I apologize. Mimicry means imitation. You have a very fine ear.”

      She shrugged. “Like I care.”

      He had been trying to put her at ease, but it was a ploy that was failing. He could easily assume that she was undone by his home, which was as grand as King’s House and far more majestically furnished, except that she had not taken her huge green gaze from his face, not once since he’d entered the great hall. “What may I do for you?”

      She stiffened. “Free my father.”

      He had been right. He tried to smile kindly at her. “Please, do sit down.”

      She shook her head. “I’ll stand.”

      “How can I possibly free your father?”

      “Woods is your friend. Make him let him go.” Desperation flickered in her overly bright eyes.

      He stared at her. “Woods and I are not feeling very friendly toward one another at the moment, and even if we were, this has gone too far. There are laws on this island. A jury has tried your father and found him guilty. I am sorry,” he added, meaning it.

      Tears welled. “Then help me bust him out.”

      He had misheard—hadn’t he?

      “We can do it. You can do it—you’ve got a crew, cannon, guns!”

      He was aghast. “You wish for me to assault the courthouse prison?”

      She nodded, but even as she did, she started to back away, tears tracking down her cheeks. Clearly she knew her demands were wishful thinking at best.

      “Miss Carre, I am sorry your father was convicted. I wish that were not the case. But I am not a pirate. I am not a brigand. Every commission I have accepted has been given by the British authorities—I do not work against them. I only persecute Britain’s enemies.”

      “You are my only hope,” she whispered.

      In that moment, he wanted nothing more than to help her. But he could not assault the British prison and seize the convicted pirate.

      Her shoulders slumped. “Then he will die.”

      “Miss Carre,” he began, wanting to comfort her but having no idea how to go about it. Had she been a lady of any sort, he would have taken her to the couch and kissed her senseless, until she forgot her terrible dilemma. He would have pleasured her time and again, holding reality at bay. But she was not a lady of any kind, much less one of experience. In that moment, she seemed pitifully young.

      She shook her head and ran out of the room.

      This time, he was prepared. He caught her in two strides, preventing her from entering the hall. “Wait! Where will you go? What will you do?”

      She met his gaze. “Then I’ll do it alone,” she said. The tears fell but she swatted at them, leaving bright red marks on her own cheeks.

      He clasped her by both shoulders. “Miss Carre, do you wish to have criminal charges brought against you? Do you wish to hang?”

      She was belligerent. “They won’t hang me—not if I say I’m carrying.”

      He froze. “Are you with child?”

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