Not Always a Saint

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Authors: Mary Jo Putney

BOOK: Not Always a Saint
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“YOU'RE A GOOD MAN, LORD ROMAYNE, AND I'M A WICKED WOMAN!”
“I should be wearing scarlet, not widow's weeds, to warn men away from me!”
His gaze was searching. “Are you cruel? I've seen no signs of that. Are you a liar or profoundly selfish? I've not observed that, either. How are you wicked?”
She wanted to spit at him. “I have no desire to reveal my sordid past, my lord! I have done what I must to survive, and that includes deeds that the world would condemn.” Not to mention the deed that could get her hanged. “I don't belong with a man who is almost a saint!”
His eyes flashed with real anger. “I am no saint!” He closed the distance between them in two steps, wrapped his arms around Jessie, and kissed her with a passion that seared her bones....
Books by Mary Jo Putney
The Lost Lords series
 
Loving a Lost Lord
Never Less Than a Lady
Nowhere Near Respectable
No Longer a Gentleman
Sometimes a Rogue
Not Quite a Wife
Not Always a Saint
 
 
Other Titles
 
One Perfect Rose
The Bargain
The Rake
Mischief and Mistletoe
Dangerous Gifts
M
ARY
J
O
P
UTNEY
N
OT
A
LWAYS
A
S
AINT
ZEBRA BOOKS
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
To Marianne and Katy.
Just because.
Prologue
Bristol, Autumn 1806
 
T
he fleet was in, the moon was full, and business was booming at the Herbert free infirmary. Daniel Herbert didn't mind. He loved mending broken bodies and he loved the infirmary, which he'd designed with the able assistance of his sister, Laurel, who was his partner and best friend.
Nonetheless, by midnight he'd had enough of patching up drunken sailors injured in tavern brawls. The last one limped into the examination room dripping blood from a crudely bandaged left arm. Spotting the gin Daniel used for cleaning wounds, he lunged toward the bottle.
“Sit!” Daniel said firmly as he applied a nerve grip to the grizzled sailor's shoulder and forced him into a chair. “I need to get you fixed up so I can close the infirmary and get some sleep.”
The sailor squawked and rubbed at the numbed arm. “Jus' want a li'l drink!” he said reproachfully.
“You won't find it here.” With the skill of long practice, Daniel removed the filthy bandage to find a knife slash that was messy but shallow.
He deftly cleaned the slash, finishing with enough gin to make the sailor squawk. “Why'd you do that?” the sailor asked.
“I've found that gin helps wounds heal better so your arm is less likely to fall off,” Daniel explained. “Now, off with you, and prepare for a terrible headache tomorrow.”
“Not even one li'l sip from the bottle?”
“Go!” As the sailor thanked him and shuffled out, Daniel dropped his used surgical instruments into a basin of soapy water. As with the gin, he'd found that keeping instruments clean made for better results.
The door to his examination room swung open so hard that it banged the wall. He looked up to see his sister, who'd shoved the door open with one hand while her other arm was wrapped around the waist of a battered and bleeding young woman on the verge of collapse.
Imperturbable as always, Laurel said, “Don't put those instruments away yet, Daniel. We have a new customer.” She helped the girl onto the examination table.
He hated seeing women who had been beaten, usually by the men who were supposed to protect them. As he studied the new patient, his fatigue vanished. She was hunched over, her face obscured by a tangle of dark hair that was matted with blood on the right side. She clutched a cloak tightly around her shoulders, and she was shaking from shock.
Voice gentle, he said, “I'm Dr. Herbert. What's your name?”
“J-J-J . . .”
She spoke clumsily, as if her mouth was having trouble forming words, so he prompted, “Jane?”
After a long moment, she whispered raggedly, “Yes, J-Jane.”
“I'm going to examine you to find what needs fixing.” He moistened a clean cloth. “Raise your head so I can clean the blood from your face.”
She complied, revealing a face with one eye swollen shut and such massive bruising that her own mother wouldn't recognize her. Under the bruises she was very young, and he guessed that under normal circumstances she might be pretty. How could any man hurt a vulnerable young girl like this?
He buried his anger for later. What mattered now was patching her up. She winced several times as he washed the blood from her face, despite his being as gentle as possible. He was particularly careful around her eyes. “You're in luck,” he said conversationally. “You'll have black eyes like a bare-knuckle boxer, but there's no serious damage.”
As he cleaned the gash on her head, he asked, “Who beat you?”
She made a choked sound and cringed away from him. Noticing the glint of a wedding ring on her left hand, he asked, “Was it your husband?”
Jane stared down at her hand as if she'd forgotten the ring she wore. Then she wrenched off the narrow circlet of gold and hurled it across the examination room. The ring bounced from the wall and rattled across the floor.
“Sell it. Help . . . infirmary,” she whispered hoarsely. Her uplifted face revealed her bruised throat. The brute had tried to strangle her.
Jane's movements caused her cloak to slide from her shoulders, revealing a bloody slash down her back. The jagged laceration ran from her left shoulder almost to her waist. She must have been stabbed as she tried to escape. The tip of the blade had skittered to the left when it hit the edge of her stays, then continued downward through the padded garment.
Keeping his voice calm, Daniel reached for his heavy scissors and cut away the stays. Her gown and corset were good quality, but the bodice was ruined and her thin shift was stuck to the laceration by dried blood. Dampening the shift allowed him to pull it gently from the wound, though Jane gasped as he peeled it away.
“Luckily this isn't deep, though I imagine it hurts like Hades.” Particularly since he was now cleaning the wound with gin. Jane would probably carry the scars of this night for the rest of her life, but at least this one would be concealed.
He continued his soft stream of commentary to soothe her. Laurel assisted him, preserving Jane's modesty as much as possible.
When Daniel finished cleaning the wound, Laurel said, “You'll need new clothing, Jane. Daniel, could you bring some garments from our supply?”
Daniel might not be as adept at choosing female clothing as Laurel, but they had a standing rule that a woman who had just been battered wouldn't be left alone with a man, even him. He nodded and got to his feet, feeling the weight of the long day. “Do you have a place to go tonight? Family? Friends?”
Gaze still downcast, Jane whispered, “A . . . a friend will take me in.”
“That's enough for tonight, but this can't be allowed to happen again,” Laurel said firmly. “We'll summon the magistrate and you can bring charges against the man who beat you.”
“No!” Jane clutched her ruined clothing close, her voice frantic. “The only way I can be safe is by leaving Bristol. A magistrate cannot help.”
Daniel frowned. Jane seemed determined not to return to the brute, but too often women went back to the men who had injured them because they had no other choice. While he was out of the room, Laurel would counsel the girl.
Jane was not the first patient in need of clothing, so Laurel had filled two large wardrobes with garments for both sexes and all ages. Some were donated by local churches, others she'd found in rag shops. After patching and washing, the clothing was clean and respectable, if not fashionable.
The girl needed a loose smock that wouldn't hurt her injured back. Shoes? No, she was wearing sturdy, well-made half boots. Swiftly he collected what she needed and tucked everything into a simple canvas bag that she could carry easily. Lastly, he chose a deep bonnet and a cloak that would cover up her injuries and bandages.
After he delivered the garments, Laurel shooed him from the examination room so she could help Jane dress. He frowned as he closed the door behind him. He and Laurel offered services, not money. Almost all of the generous allowance provided by Laurel's estranged husband was spent running the infirmary, and cash was tight.
But sometimes exceptions must be made. His office was only a few steps away, so he unlocked the door and opened the hidden desk drawer where he kept money. Jane didn't look as if she had a penny to bless herself with. How much would it cost for her to run away and keep herself until she healed?
He couldn't bear to think of her returning to her violent husband. He collected twenty pounds' worth of coins and small bills, and tucked them into a cloth purse. It was a substantial sum, enough to get her away from Bristol and keep her for two or three months if she was careful. Then he returned to the examination room, reminding himself that he couldn't save everyone. Not even close.
Jane was bundled warmly in the old cloak, her bruised face and bandaged head concealed by the brim of the bonnet. Laurel was frowning. “You're sure you'll be all right? You can spend the rest of the night here in the infirmary.”
“I can't,” the girl said, her voice stronger now. “I will be fine, truly. I don't have to go far.”
Daniel suspected she wouldn't stay because she feared she might be followed. He hoped she was telling the truth about having a friend who would take her in for the night. She might be planning to hide in a stable or church. That would do for one night if she was planning on leaving the next day. “You have some place to go if you leave Bristol? Family, by preference.”
“There is no one, but I shall manage. I'm not afraid to work.” She gave a brittle laugh. “Or to walk.”
Daniel held out the purse. “Take this. It should be enough to keep you until you can establish yourself elsewhere.”
She gasped and tried to hand the money back. “I can't take this! You've already done so much for me.”
He caught her hand, speaking slowly to emphasize his words. “We don't want to think of you leaving here and falling into a situation that's even worse.”
Jane stared up into his face. The eye that wasn't swollen shut was a light, clear blue, and it held shadows that no young girl should have.
She bent and kissed his hand with her bruised lips. “Thank you,” she said in a raw, husky voice.
She released his hand and tucked the purse inside her cloak, then turned to Laurel. “Thank you both so much. I shall never forget your kindness. If there is ever anything I can do to repay you . . .”
Daniel said firmly, “Make wise decisions. Be kind to others. That will suffice.”
She ducked her head again, then turned and left the room. Daniel and Laurel followed her to the door, watching silently as the girl descended the few steps to the street and turned left. There was something heartbreakingly gallant about her slim figure as she disappeared into the night.
“The house behind us is for sale,” Laurel said. “I want to buy it and create a sanctuary for women and children who need shelter from brutal men.”
“I think that's an excellent idea,” Daniel said immediately. A shelter for women like Jane would be a true godsend. “Do we have the money?”
“I'll
find
the money!” Laurel said with rare fierceness.
“Then we'll do it.” Daniel put his arm around his sister's shoulders and gave a comforting squeeze. “At the moment, though, we both need food and strong tea.”
Laurel exhaled, relaxing under his arm. “What good advice, Doctor. There's a nice bean soup on the hob.”
“Perfect.” But before Daniel closed the door, he gazed at the shadows where Jane had vanished. As the back of his neck prickled, he had the uncanny feeling that he would someday see her again.

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