Never Judge a Lady By Her Cover: Number 4 in series (The Rules of Scoundrels series) (40 page)

BOOK: Never Judge a Lady By Her Cover: Number 4 in series (The Rules of Scoundrels series)
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… As this year’s Season finds itself fully underway, this author has discovered, without question, that it is the ladies of London who rule…
The gossip pages of
The Weekly Britannia
, May 13, 1833

That night, Lady Tremley arrived at The Other Side battered and bruised and asking for Anna.

Georgiana – dressed as Anna – met the countess in one of the small rooms reserved for the female members of the club, where she pulled the door closed behind her and began immediately helping the lady dispense with her clothing. It was important that they quickly assess the damage the earl had done.

“I’ve summoned a doctor,” she said quietly as she unlaced the bodice of Lady Tremley’s dress. “And if you’ll allow it, I’d like to send a man around to fetch your things from Tremley House.”

“There is nothing there that I need,” the lady said, sucking in a breath as her loosening corset returned feeling to bruises that might have best been left without it.

“I am sorry, Imogen,” Georgiana said, guilt and anger making the words bitter on her tongue. She’d sent the woman home knowing that this might happen.

“Why?” The lady sucked in a breath as Georgiana ran fingers over her ribs. “You didn’t do it.”

“I invited you here. I should have stopped you from returning to him.” She lifted her hand. “You’ve a broken rib. Perhaps more than one.”

“You couldn’t have stopped me,” Lady Tremley said. “He is my husband. It is the proverbial bed in which I lie.”

“You shan’t go back to him.” Georgiana would stand nude on St. James if it would help to stop the woman from returning to her demon of a husband.

“Not after this, no,” the lady said, the words nasal and strained through a swelling nose and lip. “But I haven’t any idea where I will go instead.”

“I told you, there are rooms here. We can provide you sanctuary.”

The lady smiled. “I cannot live in a casino in Mayfair.”

Georgiana rather thought that a casino in Mayfair was far safer for the girls who lived and worked there than Tremley House was for its countess. Than dozens of aristocratic homes were for the women who lived in them. But she did not say so. Instead, she said, “I don’t see why not.”

The countess paused at the words, then allowed the wildness of the moment to wash over her. She chuckled, clearly not knowing how else to behave, before wincing in pain. “Life is mad sometimes, is it not?”

Georgiana nodded. “Life is mad all the time. Our task is to not let it make us mad in the process.”

They were silent together for long minutes while Georgiana dipped a cloth in a basin of water and cleared the blood from Imogen’s cheek and neck. Tremley had beaten his wife well. Guilt flared again as she rinsed the cloth and lifted it again to the woman’s face. “We should not have involved you.”

Imogen shook her head, reaching up to stay Georgiana’s touch. When she spoke, she was as regal as any queen. “I shall only say this once: I was grateful for the invitation. It gave me a way to fight him. To punish him. I do not regret it.”

“If he was a member, I…” Georgiana paused, remembering herself. Tried again. “If he was a member, Chase would ruin him.”

Imogen nodded. “As he is not a member, you can imagine that he will do his best to bring down this place. He had me followed. He knew I was a member.”

Georgiana met the woman’s blue eyes. “He knew you had to give up information for membership.”

“As I did not have anything of mine…” The countess looked away. Whispered, “I am weak. He told me he would stop if I confessed it.”

“No.” Georgiana came to her knees at the other woman’s feet. “You are so very strong.”

“I’ve put this place in danger. My husband is a powerful man. He knows what I gave you. What Chase has.”

What Duncan had.
 

Duncan, who had been to Tremley House earlier that day. Who had met with Tremley at two balls, she’d noticed. Who had the information to destroy the man, and had not yet used it.

“You must warn Mr. Chase,” Imogen said. “When my husb —” She stopped. Rethought. “When the earl arrives, he will do anything to demolish this place and anyone involved with the building of it. He will do whatever it takes to keep you quiet.”

“You think you are our first member with a bastard of a husband? It will take more than that to destroy us,” Georgiana said with more bluster than she felt. She dipped Imogen’s hands in the warm water, hating the way the woman hissed her pain at the sensation. “He is not the first to threaten us, and he will not be the last.”

“What did you do with the information?” the countess asked. “What will become of it? When will it be used against him?”

“Soon, I hope,” Georgiana said. “If it does not appear in the
News of London
within the week, I shall release it myself.”

Imogen froze at the words. “The
News of London
. West’s newspaper.”

Georgiana nodded. “We passed the information to Duncan West for release.” The countess stood, wavering on her feet. Georgiana stood with her. “My lady, please, you should sit until the doctor arrives.”

“Not West.”

The words, filled with shock and something dangerously, disturbingly close to fear, struck deep. Georgiana shook her head. “My lady?”

“West has been in his pocket for years.”

Georgiana froze. Hating the way the words struck. Hating the fact that she knew, without question, without hesitation, that the countess told the truth.

Bourne’s report earlier in the day.

West at the Worthington Ball, at the Beaufetheringstone Ball, on the sidelines because he could not dance – speaking to the earl.

She should have known it. Should have seen it… that Tremley and West were partners in some strange, perverse play.

It could not be true.
 

Why not? It would not be the first time she’d thought she knew a man. It would not be the first time she thought she loved a man.

Except she did not think it this time.

She knew it.

And so the betrayal hurt infinitely more.

Memory flashed, the night he came to the club and revealed her as Anna. The threat she’d goaded him into issuing.

I shall tell the world your secrets.
 

She didn’t want to believe he would do it, but suddenly, she did not know him.

Who was he?

She crossed her arms tight over her chest, resisting the urge to grab the lady by the shoulders. Resisting the pain that flared high and tight. “Do you have proof?”

Imogen laughed, the sound high-pitched and wild. “I don’t need it. The earl has boasted about it for years. Since before our marriage. He tells anyone who will listen that West is his lapdog.”

Georgiana pulled back from the word.
Lapdog.

It did not sound like Duncan. She could not imagine him lying down for anyone, let alone such a monster as Tremley. Collusion with the earl would mean that Duncan knew everything – Tremley’s treasonous activities, his penchant for hitting his wife, his black soul.

It did not seem right.

But here the countess sat, bloody and bruised, more than one part of her broken, Georgiana had no doubt, and she told the tale of Tremley and Duncan as cohorts.

She was transported to the night she’d met him as Georgiana, on the balcony, when he’d removed a feather from her hair and painted it down her arm, across the skin of her elbow, making her wish she was bare to the tickling touch. To him.

Wouldn’t you rather know precisely with whom you are dealing?
 

The question had been so forthright, and she’d given herself over to it. To him. Telling herself that she knew fact and fiction, truth and lies.

She knew good men, and bad.

And then he’d come to her club. Followed her there.

On purpose?
Dread came with the thought. Was it possible he’d followed her? Was it possible he’d known from the beginning that she was two instead of one? That she was both Anna and Georgiana?

Was it possible he’d always intended to use her to get whatever Chase might be able to find on Tremley? Was it possible that he would use this woman? Collateral damage in whatever battles the earl fought?

Christ.
 

He’d kissed her. He’d touched her. He’d come a heartbeat from promising her a future.

But he hadn’t promised her any kind of future.
 

In fact, even as he’d lain her bare and made love to her, he’d told her they had no future together.
As I am… we are impossible.

She went cold at the memory.

Christ. Who was he? How had he teased and tempted and lied his way into her heart? She, who wielded such control over the wide world… how had he come to control her so well?

What is your relationship with Tremley?
 

What is your relationship with Chase?
 

Their secrets matched.

Something broke in her… something she had not realized had ever been repaired from when she was a child. Something that was utterly, completely different from when she was a child.

She had not loved Jonathan. She knew that now.

Because she knew, beyond question, that she loved Duncan West. And that such love – powerful beyond reason – would destroy her.

She met the countess’s gaze. “I did this,” she confessed. “I brought you here and put you at risk.” She shook her head. “He —”

A knock sounded at the door and she was saved from finishing the thought aloud. But as she crossed the room, she finished it a dozen times in her head.

He lied to me.
 

But why?

She turned back to the countess, standing, fists clenched, as though she might have to do battle. “It is the surgeon – nothing else.”

Lady Tremley nodded once, and Georgiana opened the door to find Bruno, serious and sentinel. She tilted her head in question, and his gaze flickered over her shoulder, lingering on the countess behind. “Tremley is here,” he said, quietly.

Georgiana met his gaze, all Chase. “As he is not a member, he is not our concern.”

“He says he knows his wife is here, and he is willing to bring the royal guard with him the next time if we do not let him in now.”

“Tell the others.”

“He wants you.”

She looked over her shoulder to ensure that the countess was far enough away not to overhear, then leaned toward the massive man. “Well, he can’t very well have Chase.”

Bruno shook his head. “You misunderstand. He wants Anna.”

Fear shot through her at the words, strange and unfamiliar. “Anna,” she replied.

“He says that you are the only person to whom he will speak.”

“Well, then me he shall have,” she said.

“You and a security detail,” Bruno said, all protection.

She did not disagree with the plan. She turned back to the lady. “I have been summoned by your husband, it seems.”

Imogen’s eyes went wide. “You cannot face him. He will force you to tell him everything.”

Georgiana smiled, hoping to give the countess hope. “I am not a woman who is easily forced.”

“He is not a man who is easily defeated.”

That much, she knew. But he was a man who understood power and sway. And she was not afraid to use it to do battle with him.

“All will be well,” she assured the other woman, her gaze sliding over cuts and bruises that no woman deserved, anger flaring deep within her. For Imogen. For Duncan.

For the truth.
 

The words whispered through her on a thread of faith – faith that he had not lied to her. Hope that he was what he seemed, and nothing less.

Was it possible for the man to be all he seemed?

Because he seemed a great deal.

She put the thoughts out of her mind as the surgeon arrived to assist Lady Tremley. Confident that the newest resident of The Fallen Angel was in capable hands, Georgiana navigated her way through a vast network of passageways and corridors to a small room on the men’s side of the club, reserved for its worst offenders.

Among the staff, the room was called Prometheus, a reference to the overlarge oil painting within – Zeus in the form of an eagle, punishing Prometheus with slow, excruciating disembowelment for stealing fire from the gods. The painting was designed to intimidate and to terrify, and she had little doubt that it helped to ensure that when she entered the room, flanked by Bruno and Asriel, to face Lord Tremley, the earl’s heart skipped a beat or two.

He stood at the far end of the windowless room, a wide oak table between them. Georgiana did not hesitate to begin the conversation. “May I help you?”

The earl smiled at her, and it occurred to her that at a different time, as a different woman, she might have found him attractive. He was empirically handsome, with dark hair and deep blue eyes and a line of straight white teeth that made her wonder if perhaps he’d been born with more than the usual amount.

But his eyes did not smile, and she had seen enough evil in the world to know that it lurked in him.

“I am here for my wife.”

Her head tilted to one side with practiced innocence. “There are no women at the club, my lord. It is men only. In fact, I was rather surprised you would ask for me.”

His gaze narrowed. “I hear you speak for Chase.”

She played coy. “You flatter me. No one speaks for Chase.”

He leaned forward, his hands forming fists on the oak table. “Then perhaps you can fetch him for me.”

She met his eyes. “I am sorry, my lord. Chase is unavailable.”

Something flashed in his gaze. “I grow tired of this conversation.”

“I am sorry we have wasted your time.” She smoothed her skirts and made to turn away. “One of these fine gentlemen will be happy to escort you out of the building.”

“I would rather these…” He trailed off, his disdainful gaze flickering over first Asriel and then Bruno. “Well, I’m not about to call a pair of moors gentlemen.” She stiffened at the disgust in his tone. “But why not have them leave altogether, and we can discuss my concerns with this establishment one-on-one.”

BOOK: Never Judge a Lady By Her Cover: Number 4 in series (The Rules of Scoundrels series)
7.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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