Read Geek Girls Don't Date Dukes Online
Authors: Gina Lamm
Tags: #Romance, #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Regency, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Time Travel
how much worse things could be if he were to cast his
lot with her. His presence caused more problems than
it corrected, and poor Miss. Ramsey had more than
enough trouble of her own.
Avery sighed regretfully as he left the now- empty
table. He should know by now that nothing ever came
of wishing things different. He had his lot, and now Miss
Ramsey had hers. They would both manage as they
could and leave the rest to the whims of Fate.
No matter how his heart ached with every pain she
was forced to endure.
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 92
4/11/13 11:26 AM
Geek Girls Don’t Date Dukes
93
i
The rest of the day passed in a blur of normal duties
and preparation for the dowager’s rout at Tunstall
Place across the square. With the large crowd that was
expected, Avery would serve as footman with the others
from His Grace’s employ, and even Miss Ramsey was
expected to assist. Cornering her to ensure her proper
service was becoming more troublesome than he’d
expected, but he persevered through the afternoon.
Until he was summoned by Cook.
“Mr. Russell,” the old woman hissed as he made his
way through the kitchens with a pile of freshly pressed
cravats. “Meet me in the larder.”
He nodded subtly and went on his way. He knew
without her speaking what the summons meant. It was a
play that they’d enacted many, many times before.
Once the cravats were put into their proper place,
Avery descended the stairs again, winding around the
corner of the kitchen to duck into the larder, unseen.
Cook waited for him there, her sausage- curls wispy and
haphazard from the heat of the kitchens, her cheeks
flushed and eyes bright.
“The apothecary’s boy came this morning.” A small
brown bottle was produced from Cook’s apron pocket.
“He said to thank you for your custom. I gave him your
coin for it.”
Avery took the bottle with a grateful nod. “I thank
you, Mrs. Dearborn. My aunt sorely needs this. Her
illness is getting worse.”
Cook sniffed and dashed away a tear with the corner
of her apron. “Millie was always a sweet girl. It’s one
of my greatest regrets that she took ill so sudden. She
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 93
4/11/13 11:26 AM
94
Gina Lamm
Geek Girls Don’t Date Dukes
could have made a cook in some great house, for an earl
or even a duke after my own time.” She looked into
Avery’s face, sincerity thick in her words. “She was the
best kitchen maid I ever had, and that’s the honest truth.
You tell her Mrs. Dearborn sends her love, and you take
care of her, boy.”
Avery gripped the bottle tightly, bowing deeply.
“You may be assured of that. My mother would have
wished for me to care for her youngest sister, and I’ve no
intention of shirking that duty.”
Cook straightened her apron and patted her curls.
“Now, I’ve a goose to see to. I take it that you’ll be off
to St. Giles this afternoon?”
Hesitation sprang to his mind. He’d not yet spoken to
Miss Ramsey, and it might be impossible to do so before
the dowager’s rout if he spent the evening away. But
what choice did he have? His aunt could not do without
this medicine. He nodded.
“I’ll inform Smythe that you were called away.” Cook
shooed him. “Now, be off with you. I’ve a basket made
up for Millie. It’s by the door.”
“You have my thanks, Mrs. Dearborn.”
She left him in the larder with the bottle of medi-
cine in his hand. Lifting the bottle to catch the beam
of sunlight streaming through the crack in the larder
door, he watched as the milky medicine bent the light,
diffusing it through clouds of liquid. Strange that such
a small amount of medicine could cost so much. And
strange that such an odd woman as Miss Leah Ramsey
had upset his normal balance.
Making up his mind, he shoved the bottle into his
waistcoat pocket and headed up the back stairs to find
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 94
4/11/13 11:26 AM
Geek Girls Don’t Date Dukes
95
Miss Ramsey. He couldn’t leave her to face the dowager
without warning.
But he must be quiet about it. If anyone were to
see him…
No. He’d not dwell on that.
Rounding the corner of the landing, he waited for
Henrietta and Sarah to pass by.
“She won’t last out the week,” Henrietta’s snide
remark caught his ear. “Mrs. Harper should never have
hired her on. I could have taken Fannie’s position, and
that’s the truth. This girl cannot possibly do the job.”
“What can Mrs. Harper be thinking, allowing her to
serve at the dowager’s rout?” Sarah followed Henrietta,
the coal scuttle banging softly against the older maid’s
skirts. Avery stood aside and allowed them to pass. They
did not acknowledge his presence at all. It was as if he
was simply a stick of furniture. Don’t trip on it, mind
you, but certainly don’t bother making conversation
with it.
The cut had long ago ceased to bother him.
Continuing on his way, Avery mounted the stairs
slowly so as to hear Henrietta’s reply.
“I am glad that she shall serve. The stupid girl will anger
the dowager, we’ll make sure of that. This afternoon I am
to instruct her how to go on. What a job I shall make of
it!” Henrietta’s giggles echoed in the stairwell.
Avery’s stomach dropped. Damn and blast. Redoubling
his speed, he mounted the stairs two at a time. He must
keep Henrietta from ruining Miss Ramsey’s chances of
succeeding on the morrow. It really was too bad that
he could think of but one way to keep her from her
sabotaged lessons.
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 95
4/11/13 11:26 AM
96
Gina Lamm
Geek Girls Don’t Date Dukes
i
“Are you sure it’s okay for me to come with you?”
Miss Ramsey’s voice floated over his shoulder as he
led her through streets. They’d left the fine parts of the
West End many minutes ago and were now nearing
St. Giles.
“There was no choice,” he said patiently, holding an arm
out to stop her from crossing in front of a hack. “The dowa-
ger’s rout is tomorrow evening, and if you’re to know how
to go on, I must instruct you. Do not worry. Mrs. Harper
has been told you’ve been sent on an errand for Cook.”
They continued across the street, and Avery tried not to
notice the growing concern on Miss Ramsey’s face as she
took in their surroundings. The fine homes had given way
to crowded hovels, filth and garbage littering the streets.
The warmth of Miss Ramsey’s body emanated into him as
she pressed close to his side. He repressed his desire at her proximity, though it was a damned difficult thing to do.
“Mrs. Harper said she’d have somebody tell me what
to do. God, what a stink. Where did you say we were
going again?” Miss Ramsey’s gloved hand pressed over
her mouth and nose, and her forehead wrinkled in
distaste. How strange that such a repugnant expression
could look so lovely.
“We are going to my aunt. She is ill.” He stopped to
allow a tradesman’s cart to pass before continuing. “But as
for the rout, Mrs. Harper intended for Henrietta to show
you how to go on. Henrietta wanted Fannie’s position for
herself. She made it quite well known that she’d be most
happy if the dowager found you unsatisfactory.” He bit
back the part about prison. No reason to frighten the girl.
Their footsteps squished through the muddy streets
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 96
4/11/13 11:26 AM
Geek Girls Don’t Date Dukes
97
as they entered St. Giles. To distract her from the wors-
ening conditions in the streets, he began reciting a litany
of advice for the morrow.
“The dowager is His Grace’s mother. You will need
to be most careful while in her presence. Mind how you
go there.” He steered her away from a pile of filth in the
street. “She does not tolerate mistakes from her servants.
You’ve one chance to impress her, and once lost, you
shall never have another.”
“So, no pressure,” Miss Ramsey said dryly, tucking an
errant blond lock behind her ear. “Not only is my future
mother- in- law a former duchess, she’s also a terrifying
dragon lady. Good thing I brushed up on my dragon-
slaying etiquette.”
She fell silent, and Avery let her take in the scene of
the square.
It was familiar to him. After all, once his mother had
passed on, he and his father had come to live here, in one
of the shanties by the church. The foul odors, the calling
curses loud in the air, the crowded conditions were all
as native to him as breathing. He turned, and his throat
closed at the shock on Miss Ramsey’s face.
“Your sick aunt doesn’t live
here
, does she?” Her
words were thick with horror.
An odd mixture of shame and offended pride filled
him. “It’s not such a bad place. There’s a roof over her
and enough food to fill her belly. If I had the means, she
would make her home in a more comfortable situation.”
She turned to him, biting her lip before speaking.
“Avery, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean…”
He dismissed her apology with a wave. “No matter.”
“You used to live here, didn’t you?”
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 97
4/11/13 11:26 AM
98
Gina Lamm
Her insight nearly felled him. He drew himself up
higher. “Yes, I did.”
Her small hand curled around his arm. “No wonder
you’re so tough. You had to be, growing up here.”
He cast a glance over to her. She was looking into his
face, without pity, without any sign of condescension.
She simply stated fact, but there was a light behind her
eyes, one that made him wonder if she esteemed him for
overcoming his former hardships.
Though he longed to reach out, bathe himself in that
light, he cleared his throat and continued. “Follow me,
if you please.”
Despite his longing at having her so near, he made
sure to remain as close as her shadow as they wound their
way through St. Giles toward his aunt’s one- room hovel.
Guiding her toward the next corner, he pulled down his
hat and prayed as he passed The Wolf and Dove public
house that no one would notice him. The first time he’d
gone to a mill, which had been against his will, was at the
insistence of the proprietor, Benedict Turpin. He’d won
half a crown, as promised, but had made the acquain-
tance of the Thomas Prachett in the bargain.
“Quickly now,” he said in a low voice to Miss
Ramsey, hustling her past the door.
“Russell, as I live and breathe,” a cackle came from
the door of the pub. The man leaning against the door
spat into the street, then smiled with a mouthful of
rotten teeth at Avery. It was Turpin, of course. One of
Prachett’s men. The one who’d introduced them.
Avery’s stomach, having changed into a sack of lead,
plummeted.
Then again, luck never had been much on his side.
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 98
4/11/13 11:26 AM
Eleven
“Fancy meeting you here, you old devil.” The man’s
accent was thick, making it hard to understand him.
Leah turned toward the voice, curiosity momentarily
overtaking the nerves that had been ruling her brain. She’d
been to some scary places in her day. Hell, once she’d
had an overnight layover in Detroit. But even that hadn’t
prepared her for the harsh reality of the London slums.
Avery’s shoulders, lined with tension before, tight-
ened even further as he turned to face the one who’d
addressed him.
“Turpin,” he nodded coolly. “No time to waste I’m
afraid. I’ve an appointment.”
The man stood half a foot taller than Avery, his
brownish- white shirt splattered with stains across the
front. His jacket was threadbare, the cheap fabric
thinning in many places. “Come in for a pint, my lad,
and tell us about the fine house you serve in. Fancy
a bruiser like you polishing buttons and wiping a
lordship’s arse!” He tossed back his head and laughed,
and Leah turned her head away quickly from the sight
and smell of his open mouth. Ugh, she should have
GeekGirlsDontDateDukes.indd 99
4/11/13 11:26 AM
100
Gina Lamm
Geek Girls Don’t Date Dukes
brought a sack of toothbrushes with her through that
damn mirror.
“Another time.” Avery turned on his heel and Leah
stumbled in shock as he gripped her arm to steer her forward.
“At the Houndstooth tourney? You’ll be there, won’t
you, lad?”
Avery didn’t slow, apparently pretending not to hear
the question.
Leah moved on her toes, driven by Avery’s strong but
gentle grip.
Shut
up,
she inwardly hissed to her fluttering heart.
Anyone would think she’d been kissed passionately at the