Soldier of Fortune: The King's Courtesan (Rakes and Rogues of the Retoration Book 2) (2 page)

BOOK: Soldier of Fortune: The King's Courtesan (Rakes and Rogues of the Retoration Book 2)
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It was him! The man she’d watched but moments before. The man from her daydreams. He was real. He had come to her rescue. She had never been at a loss for words before, but now, when she desperately wanted to say something witty, charming, and memorable, she was tongue-tied. “I…I…”

“There now, lass. Take a deep breath and don’t worry. You’ve had a scare and need some time to gather your wits.”

She almost moaned in frustration. He thought her a witless fool!

“You’re shivering. Sit close now, and share my warmth.” She
was
cold and she had nearly died. She sank against him, her arms wrapped tight around his waist, enjoying the feeling of comfort and safety, the strength she felt in his arms and chest, and the sound of another heart beating, just inches from her own. As he tucked his cloak around she heard cheering from the crowd. She’d had no idea anyone was aware of her plight or cared what happened to her if they were. Now she beamed and waved to them and they roared their approval.

Her companion chuckled. “I think we’ve brought some entertainment to an otherwise dull event. I’m afraid you’ll have to ride it out with me the rest of the way. There’s no place to put you down safely until we reach the palace gates. Will that suit?”

She nodded—shy for the first time in her life.

“Excellent! You’re safe now, lass. And you’ve the best seat in the house. Relax and enjoy the view.”

She felt like a princess in his arms and as unlikely as it seemed, she decided he was her prince. Why else had he passed her way this day? Why had she noticed him right away? How was it she had fallen just as he was passing and what made him save her when no one else had even tried? It didn’t matter if she found nothing to say at this moment, for fate had brought him to her and he was destined to be hers.

Even so, she still wasn’t sure what he looked like. His hat was pulled low, keeping his face in shadow. She could tell he was young. She could tell he was handsome from his strong chin, firm mouth, and bright smile, but she couldn’t see his eyes.

When they reached the courtyard outside the palace gates, he used his horse as a bulwark against the crowd, making a little island in a corner by the wall. He dismounted first, and then lifted her from the saddle as if she were light as air. He grinned and wiped a speck of dirt from her nose. Her face blazed with embarrassment but his smile was kind and amused. “You’re hard to see, lass, under all of this.” He rubbed a dab of mud from her cheek with one finger. “But if you’re half as lovely as those eyes, you must be a vision.” He took her hand and bowed as though she were a great lady, and then slipped half a crown in her palm. “To replace your shoes.”

Her heart was pounding so loud it was a wonder he didn’t hear it. “Thank you, my lord. For saving my life.” They were the only words that she could find.

“No lord I, lass. Just a humble soldier who stumbled upon a pixie on the way home. To catch one must mean luck of some kind. Stay safe, girl, and wish me well.”

She watched as he rode away. She didn’t know his eyes, she didn’t know his name, but she knew he was hers and she’d see him again. She caught one last glimpse of him as he passed through the palace gates. As if sensing her gaze upon him he looked back at her and waved.

She started home with frozen toes, the feeling she was walking on air, and a smile she was sure would never go away. When she wasn’t humming to herself, she broke into laughter or sudden bursts of song. Halfway there, she met two of her mother’s ladies accompanied by a burly doorman. They hurried over, breathless. They had been searching for her all morning. Her mother needed her at once.

 

~

 

Though it was just afternoon, the brothel was busy, enjoying an increase in customers since the parade. There’d be plenty of work waiting in the kitchen and laundry now that she’d failed to escape for the day.

The brothel was always humming with energy. It rang with the sound of song and laughter, though the singing was drunken and and the laughter often shrill. Silks and petticoats rustled up and down stairs or in and out of secret exits, and well-dressed gentlemen and partly-clothed ladies were always wandering its halls.

On occasion, some of the gentlemen took an interest in her. Sometimes they teased her, offering her sweets. They would place bets amongst themselves as to the color of her eyes, claiming that at one moment they were violet and at another blue. She listened to their stories and helped them with their errands, but when the business of the evening began she stayed out of sight—visiting in the kitchen, racing with her friends, or playing games of make believe in the safety of her room.

Some of her mother’s ladies told her stories, too, as they taught her how to mix perfume from oils and flowers and how to paint her face and fix her hair. She wasn’t terribly interested in those lessons, but many of them were country girls, full of other tales. She loved their stories of princes and princesses, magical folk who granted wishes and careless girls who got lost in the wild.
And now I have a story all my own.

They’d told her other things, too, over the years. Things about men. How to soothe them, how to excite them, and how to give them pleasure. How to use a beeswax cap or silk-covered sponge to prevent an unwanted baby, and a sheath to protect against a man who appeared diseased. Between their frank talk and what she’d witnessed through open doors, around corners and in supposedly quiet corridors—she’d seen enough of naked husbands and great lords, callow young men and randy soldiers, to feel she didn’t need or want to learn anymore.

That’s not love.
Love was what
she
wanted. And she’d found her true love today.

 

~

 

She was surprised when instead of the kitchen she was hurried to her room with a great deal of fussing and clucking—only to find her mother waiting with a cup of hot chocolate inside. She eyed her warily and reached for her kitten, clutching it defensively. Her mother was not one for kind gestures or maternal concern.

“Ah! Here you are, lovey. And just in time. Today will be a special day for you indeed.”

Hope blinked, confused. “I don’t understand. How do you mean?”

“You’ve grown up within these walls, girl. You understand. Today you take up your duties as a woman. You’ve had a roof over your head all these years and plenty to eat, too. That’s more than many a poor lamb in London can say. But you
are
a woman now. Your courses started last month. Your greatest possession besides beauty is your maidenhead. A jewel that is. A thing of great value. Something a woman can give only once, despite what certain lying sluts might say or do. But it needs proper management. Just like arranging a good marriage. Don’t look so shocked, child.”

She reached out a gnarled hand to pat her shoulder in an awkward and unconvincing display of motherly concern.

“You’re a whore, my dear. Born into it right and proper, though I was married to your father for all that. You’d best get used to the idea because you can never be aught else. You’ve no breeding, no property, and there’s no chance any decent man will have you. A girl like you won’t ever be married and who would want it? Your own father was a useless bastard. But for all that, you’re a rare beauty, with his raven hair and very fine eyes indeed. And you’ve charm and a quick wit. Such gifts are wasted on a wife. She’s no need of them to catch a man, provided she has money, and she’s nay allowed to make use of them once she is married. Property she is. Broodmare and slave.”

Hope was too shocked to speak. It was the longest conversation she’d ever had with this stranger who’d once been her mother, and it was not the awkward declaration of love she’d both dreaded and longed for. She blinked back tears, feeling like the world’s biggest fool
. She didn’t keep me safe to protect me, but to add to my value.
She wanted to feel contempt and hatred but she couldn’t move past a soul killing pain.
I should have known. I should have known.

Her mother stroked her hair as she spoke, taking no notice of how it made her flinch.
Is this how she recruits new girls? Stroking and cooing like a beady-eyed pigeon? Is this all I am to her?

“Now look here, at the pretty dress his lordship has sent you!”

The dress, with its white satin underskirt and sleeves shot through with silver braid looked like a wedding dress, but for the indecently low cut bodice. She knew what it meant. There would be no prince for her. No choice. No happy ending.

“Which lord?” Her voice was barely a whisper.

“Let’s leave that as a surprise for now. It will add authenticity to the undertaking.”

Taking her silence for acceptance, her mother rubbed her hands together and nodded briskly. “Good girl! The anticipation is building, child. We’re to have an auction tonight and you are the prize. There’s naught to fear. You’ve seen enough of what happens here to know that, and only my best gentlemen will take part. Remember what all the other girls have taught you and use it well. You’ll fetch a fine price, my dear. Half to you and half to the house. You’ll be off to a grand start in life. No daughter of mine will be a common whore. You’ll be a rich man’s mistress. You’re a lovely girl. Sharp and lively too. You’ll climb higher than I ever dreamed or dared.”

There must have been something—a flash in her eyes, the stubborn tilt of her chin, that hinted at rebellion—because when her mother left, she stationed a doorman in the corridor and locked the door behind her.

They bathed and perfumed her, and then they tamed and combed her unruly hair so it fell like a dark silken river to her waist. They ushered her into a paneled room where her mother and two of her ‘ladies’ sat in attendance, as if she were a bride. There were at least five gentlemen present, though all she could see were their boots. She kept her eyes on the floor, willing them all to disappear, imagining if she but closed her eyes and opened them again the day would start anew.

But it didn’t, and she stood red-faced and mute as they joked and murmured, waiting for the bidding to begin. There was no doubt as to the outcome. Sir Charles Edgemont would have her. ’Twas he who’d provided the dress. Nevertheless, her mother knew an auction would raise the price he paid for her ‘dowry’ and had refused to spare her the humiliation when several hundred pounds might be at stake. Two of the ladies stripped her of her bodice and overskirt as the bidding heated up, leaving her tear stained and trembling, standing in her shift.

Inflamed by the sight of her and determined no other man should see naked what was meant to be his, Edgemont rose and bid two thousand pounds raising howls of protest from the other gentlemen, but effectively quelling the game. Hope looked at him then, from under her lashes. His hair was dark and close cropped, interspersed here and there with flecks of grey. His eyes were cold, his face harsh, and his jaw was square.

Furious at being duped when he’d expected a private negotiation, but too proud to back out in front of his friends, Sir Charles took her wrist in a cruel grip and jerked her toward the door, stopping before he left to toss a heavy purse on the table. “This will have to do for now, Madam. I had not expected the price to soar so high. My man will bring you the rest tomorrow.”

“But of course, my lord. You are known throughout London as a man who pays his debts. I shall await your pleasure. In the meantime, take the girl and enjoy her.”

It was clear the auction had raised far more than even she had anticipated, and the poorly concealed smirk on her face and hard-edged gleam of avarice in her eyes almost made Hope retch. Instead, she placed a delicate hand on Sir Charles’ chest and leaned into him, shivering, tucking her head against his shoulder. His lips twisted in annoyance, but he released his grip on her wrist and removed his coat, wrapping it around her. She spoke for the first time since entering the room.

“You must only give her one half of it, my lord. For the rest was promised to me.”

“You’re as greedy and canny as your mother, girl,” he growled. “If you’re a virgin, than I’m the Archbishop of Canterbury. But I’ll have my money’s worth from you nonetheless.”

“Of course, Most Reverend Sir,” she said with a curtsey, as if he
were
the archbishop. Amidst her mother’s furious squawking and the laughter of the other men, a grimfaced Sir Charles shook his head ruefully, bit back a reluctant chuckle, and bundled her out the door and into his waiting coach. As she watched the only home she’d ever known recede into the distance, her thoughts weren’t of her mother, or fairytales, or what was to come, but of what would become of her kitten.

 

~

 

The day Hope met her own true love was the day her mother sold her. It was the day she lost all hope of him. The day her childhood ended. She never saw him again. She never spoke to her mother again, and she stopped believing in happy ever after. Her mother had named her Hope. It seemed a cruel jest but she did the only thing she could do. She took the name and made it a talisman. She did what she needed to do to keep her own hopes alive. The day she left her mother’s doorstep she stopped dreaming about what couldn’t be, and started planning for what might. The only thing she couldn’t stop was asking herself one question.
What kind of parent puts a price on innocence and sells their child like a slave?
It still had the power to steal her breath.

Nevertheless, Edgemont wasn’t a vicious man and he had proven to be a good teacher. What had started as a cruel betrayal was the first step of a journey that transformed her from a barefoot ragamuffin into a well-spoken, fashionably dressed, well-educated young woman with a smattering of French and the attention of a monarch.
How dramatic and shortsighted we are as children
. Along the way, she had let go of her fantasies of true love and imaginary princes and found herself a real one, with all his flaws and imperfections. If from time to time her heart ached for something more, for someone else, no one knew it but her.

 

 

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