Read The Devil You Know Online
Authors: Victoria Vane
“And if you lose?” DeVere observed his guest’s agitation with
smug satisfaction. At times like these, wielding his power was a
heady sensation.
“Then I suppose I shall have to appeal to you for some agree-
able terms of repayment.”
DeVere offered him an icy smile. “You take much for granted,
sir. My generosity is not without bounds. We are not kinsmen.
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We are not even friends, and your debt has already increased by
twelve percent, though O’Kelly surely would have charged you
twenty, his reputation for usury exceeding that of the Westmin-
ster Jews. If you are not able to settle your debt with me by the
end of the day tomorrow, the only terms I will accept will be your
property.” His lips curved at what remained unspoken.
And that
includes your wife.
Agitated and restless,
***
Diana paced her room until she thought
she would burst from anticipation. At half past three, while An-
nalee napped, she and Edward followed the same path she had
taken that morning to the stables where two of DeVere’s junior
grooms met them with a pair of saddled horses.
“My lord ordered it so,” the groom said. “The lady will have
a much better view of the field astride.”
“But what of my mare, Cartimandua?” she asked.
“My lord has already taken her to the down.”
“His jockey, you mean?”
“No, my lady, his lordship hisself rides the mare.”
“Does he?” After the groom assisted her to mount, Diana
turned to Edward with skepticism. “I thought it was
Hewett
De-
Vere who was such a noted horseman.”
Ned laughed. “Who do you think taught
him
? DeVere is the
devil on horseback. Though he is sadly lacking in discipline,
Ludovic is actually a man of many talents, Diana. When he ap-
plies himself to a thing, he’s a formidable force. Thus it’s fortunate
for the world around him that his passions quickly fade.”
“I see,” said Diana in bemusement. “He is a rather unusual
man.”
“Unusual? I might suggest
ungovernable.
”
“You mean a rogue.” Diana settled her skirts and took up the
reins.“It’s not that he’s without honor, Diana, but you must un-
derstand DeVere only follows his
own
code.” Ned gave her a
meaningful look and hoisted himself gracefully into the saddle.
“I hope you’ll take extreme care in any dealings with him. He is
ruthless and calculating when he chooses to be and has a strong
predilection to manipulate and exploit the vulnerabilities of oth-
ers—when it suits his purpose. He just can’t help himself. It’s not
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The Devil You Know
that he’s evil incarnate, or anything like that. It’s just he has low
tolerance for weakness, incompetence, or buffoonery.”
Diana lifted her brow. “You know I am no fool, dear Edward.
I take full responsibility for my actions and have already made
clear what I am willing and
not
willing to sacrifice. You are truly
like night and day, you and he,” she remarked. “I marvel that
you’ve maintained such a close friendship all these years.”
Edward shrugged. “We are enough alike in matters of import.
Though I may not approve of all his actions, how he chooses to
live is his business. I shall never meddle.” He inclined his head
to the verdant landscape in the near distance. “Shall we go and
watch the trials?”
“But of course!” Diana laughed and urged her horse into an
easy canter.
The afternoon had prov
***
en a glorious diversion. During that
brief period of watching the horses gallop across the down, Di-
ana’s spirits had risen, and her mind had cleared of any worry.
Hew had ridden DeVere’s stallion against DeVere on Cartiman-
dua, and the lithe little chestnut mare had certainly held her own,
keeping pace with the larger horse until the very last furlong
when he began to gain ground. Although Prometheus won by a
length, the horses were carrying unequal weight for size, which
had placed the mare at a disadvantage. Aware of this, DeVere was
suitably impressed with her.
“You were right. She’s got both speed and bottom,” he re-
marked upon dismounting and handed the horse off for hot-
walking.
“She was bred to run, my lord, and moreover, to produce
winners. If she wins tomorrow, you must help to ensure that I get
the prize money to clear Reggie’s debts, less what I owe you for
the entry fee, of course.”
“Perhaps I should remind you that your win is not assured,”
DeVere said.
“I know, my lord, but she has a good chance. You said so
yourself.”
“I’ll allow you that,” he agreed with a smile.
“I have one concern now,” she said. “Who will ride her?”
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“I have a very good man in Pratt,” he said. “He’s one of my
best grooms. I willingly place him at your disposal.”
“Then we are agreed, my lord?”
“Aye. Your mare will run.”
Diana unclasped her pearls and handed them to DeVere with
a satisfied smile. “Then mine was not such a ridiculous proposi-
tion after all.”
“Mayhap not, but mine was far better,” he added sotto voce
,
with a dark look that made her insides quiver.
The smile froze on Diana’s face. “There is something you
clearly do not yet understand, my lord. My virtue is neither for
sale, nor for barter—under any circumstances.”
DeVere answered with a cynical laugh. “My dear, there is
something
you
have yet to learn. In this world, everything and
everyone
has a price.”
Insufferable man!
***
Diana’s pulse pounded a furious drumbeat
in her head. She had never known anyone who could inflame her
to such a passion of pique as Ludovic DeVere. His arrogance was
intolerable, yet all of her senses seemed to spring to life in his
presence. He both taunted and tempted with his sardonic gaze of
the deepest blue, and the mocking twist to his sensuous mouth.
Wish as she might, she found him impossible to ignore, espe-
cially the fact that he wanted her. This knowledge and the visions
of him in her dreams incessantly plagued her thoughts. What
would it be like
just once
to be his lover? She knew she could never
act upon such a thing. She could never live with herself if she did,
yet he still preoccupied her mind.
After the mare’s cooling, Diana accompanied the groom and
Cartimandua back to the stables where he led her into her box and
then returned to the others on the down. Diana remained with her
mare. While she and Reggie employed a number of boys in their
stables, Diana had always enjoyed caring for her own mounts. It
was an old and well-loved habit. The smells of fresh hay, oiled
leather, and equine were a concoction that always soothed her
soul.Taking up a brush, she began stroking the sleek, chestnut
coat. While the horse contentedly munched her oats, Diana re-
mained enthralled with her thoughts of DeVere—until Reggie’s
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The Devil You Know
voice jarred into her ruminations, and the boar’s hair brush al-
most dropped from her hand. Her first impulse was to confront
him, but his peculiar speech gave her pause.
“We were so close,” Reggie said, clawing a hand through his
thinning hair. “So damnably close to our plans coming to fruition.
I was up at least a thousand at the Hazard table, but then my luck
suddenly turned south. Cogged dice, it was! The bloody sharps!
Half a dozen throws, and it was all gone. All we had hoped for
dashed away!”
We? Our plans?
Diana frowned. He was talking to his head
groom, James Johnson, and while she was obscured from their
view by her mare, she could clearly distinguish the two of them
through the iron bars of the box stall.
“But we still have the race,” answered Johnson. “While the
prize money won’t be as much as we’d hoped to gain, surely it
will suffice for a time. Were you successful with O’Kelly’s man?”
“Aye. The avaricious bastard. There was at least one hundred
pounds in gold coin and bejeweled baubles in that purse.”
Her purse! Her jewels!
“O’Kelly’s man will need to disappear to the north,” Johnson
said. “The Colonel is
not
a man to cross.”
“Precisely why we have taken particular care in our arrange-
ments, but the matter is settled,” Reggie said with a dismissive
wave. “What now of DeVere’s jockey groom? Have you made
contact with him yet?”
“Aye. Pratt seems a pliable sort. Given a bit of grease, he’ll
throw the race sure enough,” said Johnson.
“How much?” Reggie asked.
“Fifty quid should suffice.”
“’Tis near enough to keep him in the style of a gentleman for a
year. Tell him he gets half now and the rest after we win. You are
as sure of him as we are of the other?”
“Aye. More so. He risks nothing as his lordship’s horse is un-
tried and a long shot at best. ‘Twill be no surprise if they lose, and
the groom needn’t fear getting the boot.”
“Then that takes care of our two main competitors.”
“But there be six running. What if we don’t win?”
“There you go again! Don’t even think such negative thoughts.
You know our entire fate rests between your hands and that stal-
lion’s legs. Win that race for us and you win our freedom.”
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“You are certain about this, Reggie?” Johnson said. “You are
still willing to make the sacrifice?”
Their nefarious plan to fix the race had become clear, but Di-
ana found her bewilderment only increasing.
Sacrifice?
What on
earth were they talking about?
A pause followed. “Have I ever given you reason to doubt me
before, my dear?”
My dear?
She shook her head, disbelieving her ears. Why
would Reggie be on such terms of affection with his groom?
“Never,” Johnson answered.
“Good then. Don’t start now,” said Reggie.
“But you have so much more to lose than I.”
“No dearest,
we’ve
so much to gain,” said Reggie. His tone
had softened. He smiled tenderly and reached out a hand to John-
son’s shoulder.
“But your position, your estate—”
“Mean nothing to me, while
you
are everything. You must
always remember that, Jemmie. Win us the three thousand, and
we’ll be on the first packet to France and then on to Italy. Devil
take the hindmost.”
“Italy,” Johnson murmured, a note of wistfulness in his voice.
“Is it really so different there?”
“I have never been, but I have it straight from Thomas Patch
who makes his livelihood painting portraits of English gentlemen
on the grand tour, that none in Florence have ever looked askance
at he and Horace. In Italy, we’ll have no need to hide our love in
shame.”
Reggie cast a glance down the aisle in both directions. His
voice lowered and grew almost unrecognizably thick. “As to that,
are you quite certain we’re alone here?”
“Aye, but they’ll be readying the next lot of horses within the
hour to take to the down.”
“Will they, indeed? Then let us steal what time we may.”
They proceeded toward the empty boxes farther down and Diana
heard the door of one of them slide open and close again, thereby
muffling the voices. In a daze of incredulity, she exited her horse’s
box. Hugging the wall, she moved stealthily down the wide-cob-
bled aisle until she heard the low murmurs accompanied now by
panting breaths.
63
Rising onto her toes, she peered over the top of the wall, and
her stomach lurched. For between the iron bars, the truth of her
fraudulent marriage flashed before her eyes. Reggie had Johnson
in an impassioned embrace with their mouths melded in a lov-
ers’ kiss. The quivers of shock resonated through her in rivulets
that fast became a raging torrent when the latter released her hus-
band’s erect penis from his breeches and went down on his knees.
Stifling her gasp with her fist, Diana fled the stables before her
own legs buckled beneath her. She ran blindly back up the gravel
path. What a bloody fool she’d been! How could she not have re-
alized? She’d already known of Reggie’s unnatural preference in
the bedchamber, yet in her naiveté, she’d never fathomed that he
might secretly be a sodomite. It was a whispered abomination, a
crime against God and nature, a deadly sin preached from every
pulpit that warranted the Old Testament penalty of death. It was
nothing she ever could have foreseen touching her own life.
She reached the house, darting past the bewildered servants
and scurrying up the staircase to the sanctuary of her own cham-
bers. She only managed to close the door behind her when her
tremulous body gave way. Closing her eyes in shock and mortifi-
cation, she slid against the door into a crumpled heap, face buried