Lords Of Night Street Collection: Books 1-4

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Lords Of Night Street Collection: Books 1-4 Page 27

by Wendy Vella


  “Why do you want to?”

  He didn't know how to answer that, because in all honesty he'd never behaved as he was right now.

  “Is it so wrong that because I have so much I want to help someone who has fallen on hard times?”

  Her footsteps faltered, and then with a sigh she stopped to face him.

  “My lord, you have to understand that to someone such as I, your intentions are unusual, and to be questioned. Why would a man such as you want to help a woman such as I?”

  Why indeed.

  “Can it not be goodwill? Can I not help you in the name of a charitable act?” Jacob realized the minute he said the word charitable that it had been the wrong choice. Her shoulders snapped back, chin raised higher. If it elevated any further, she'd be looking skyward.

  “I have no need of your charity.” Her words were scathing, and any society matron would have been proud of the delivery.

  “Yes,” he said softly, “you do. Now please be quiet and come along. You are shivering, and your lips are turning blue.” Jacob didn't want to talk about this anymore, as it was unsettling how much he needed to help her.

  “Unhand me!”

  “Stop being dramatic, Poppy. It's bloody freezing out here, and I have no wish to spend a moment longer outside than is necessary.”

  Jacob kept his fingers around her arm and gently propelled her forward. Her hand, he noticed, was cradled against her stomach.

  “Your fingers probably need straightening; did you think of that? Do you want them to be crooked for the remainder of your life?”

  “They have no need of attention, only time to heal.”

  “Oh, so you're a doctor now, are you?”

  She huffed out a breath, which even on short acquaintance he knew was her annoyed sound.

  They arrived at his front path in time to see one of the other Lords of Night Street arriving with his wife. They had been seen, so Jacob could do nothing but keep walking with the angry woman at his side. There would be questions, he knew, but given that he'd decided she would be working for them, he supposed he'd best face them now.

  “Jacob.”

  “Marcus.” He shook the hand of his friend.

  “Hello, Jacob.” Charlotte kissed his cheek. She had been born the bastard daughter of a duke, and spent most of her life fighting that fact. She was a woman who had chosen a different path in her life, and it was during the course of an investigation that Marcus had met her, and they had since fallen in love and married.

  “Allow me to introduce you to Miss March. Miss March, this is Lord and Lady Needly.”

  Poppy curtseyed, sinking deep.

  “Tea, I think,” Charlotte said, shooting him a look. Obviously Marcus had furnished his wife with the details of Jacob's encounters with Poppy.

  “Oh no, I really need to go home,” Poppy said, attempting to escape. However, she did not manage it, and soon Charlotte had taken Poppy in hand and was walking beside her and into Jacob's house.

  “So.” Marcus walked beside Jacob. “This is Miss March. Care to tell me why she is alone with you, because I see no maid or companion.”

  “She does not have a maid, Marcus.”

  “Of course, I should have realized that. Tell me then why she is here alone with you, about to enter your house?”

  “I went to inform her about what we had discovered about Lady Revel, and offer her the position at Night Street, only to find her hurt. I said I would help her to a doctor. There is no more to it than that. She had no maid, Marcus, and lives alone.”

  “Hmmmm.”

  “I have no idea what that noise means, but I'm sure I don't like it.”

  They followed the ladies into his house. Jacob was not one for clutter, and as he had lived alone for many years, he had only his sister as an influence, and had fought off her advances to decorate his home, so it stayed exactly as he wanted it to be.

  “This place is cold and sterile, Jacob. You should put more stuff on the walls.”

  “You're only saying that because you're married and have to live with whatever Charlotte chooses to do to your home. I, however, can live exactly as I wish.”

  “Charlotte has excellent taste.”

  “If she asked you to wear mud brown and pomade your hair into a chicken cone on your head, you'd do it. You're smitten, Marcus.”

  His friend smiled, and it was a secretive one, the kind he'd noticed happily married people often had on their faces. A knowing look that spoke of love and intimacies.

  “I am.”

  “I am happy for you, but don't bring your happily married tendencies into my bachelor establishment, if you please.”

  “How did Miss March come to hurt herself?”

  “Someone attempted to abduct her, but she escaped.” Anger clipped his words.

  Marcus whistled. “She can certainly look after herself.”

  “But for how long?”

  “That I don’t know,” Marcus said. “But the sooner we find who is responsible, the better it will be for her.”

  They arrived in the parlor, where the fire was roaring. His furniture matched the brown rugs on his floor, and was comfortable, which suited him perfectly.

  “You need some color in here, Jacob.”

  “Thank you, Charlotte, your husband has just enlightened me on the state of my interior.”

  Poppy had been put in the seat closest to the fire and was attempting to not warm herself, but doing just that. She was so close, he feared she may catch alight.

  “Take off your coat, Miss March.”

  “I am quite comfortable with it on, thank you, my lord.”

  “But when you leave you will not get the benefit.”

  “As I will be leaving shortly, I'm sure I shall be fine, thank you.”

  “You will not be leaving shortly, and when you do eventually leave, you will not be walking.”

  Her mouth pursed.

  “I will be leaving soon,” she said, shooting a look at Marcus and Charlotte, who were watching them closely. “And I am quite all right to walk about London as I am. In fact, I shall call a hackney.”

  She thought she had him there.

  “You have no money.”

  “Jacob, that's not very nice,” Marcus said.

  “He's not very nice,” Poppy said, her eyes still focused on him. “He's bossy, and... and—”

  “Come now, I'm sure you can do better than bossy, Poppy,” Jacob said in a pleasant voice. “After all, what have I done? No wait, I know. I have said I would look into your concern for Lady Revel. Attempted to get you medical help. Oh, and then there was the job offer, and the tea and scones I purchased for you.”

  “Why does she need medical help?”

  “I'm sure Poppy will enlighten you as to why she needs medical help, Charlotte.”

  Mulish was the only description for her expression. He just bet she was the stubbornest of her siblings, and had led her parents on a merry dance through her childhood.

  “I had a slight accident.”

  Jacob snorted. “Someone attempted to abduct her, she fought back, and fell. Her fingers were twisted and are now quite swollen, and I would guess, extremely painful. She also has a nasty lump on the back of her head.”

  Charlotte got to her feet and moved to where Poppy stood.

  “Do let me see them, Miss March. I have had some practice at looking after sick people.”

  “That does not make you an expert, my love,” her husband drawled.

  Charlotte ignored him and trapped Poppy in her seat.

  “Show me the hand, please.”

  “I... oh—”

  “Don't fight it, Miss March. My wife will win, believe me.”

  Jacob watched Charlotte lift Poppy's hand and study the fingers. As he'd seen them, Jacob kept his distance. Looking at them made him angry, and that made him uncomfortable.

  “Oh, my dear Miss March, these must be giving you considerable pain.”

  “They are not too bad.”
<
br />   “She has been going to work with them also. Miss March is cleaning in a brothel at the present time, Charlotte,” Jacob said, watching Poppy. She looked horrified that he'd told his friends. “I have offered her temporary employment with us, helping Perkins. She lost her position with Lady Revel, and was dismissed without a reference.”

  “Oh dear, that cannot have been fun. I have been in a few brothels, and I can assure you they are no place for a lady such as yourself.”

  Jacob snorted as Poppy's mouth fell open.

  “I-I…. You have been into a brothel, my lady?”

  “My wife ran a house for prostitutes in need of support. She would go into brothels to collect woman if they needed help.”

  Poppy snapped her mouth shut at Marcus's words, then hissed as Charlotte prodded a sore finger.

  “I don't believe they are broken, just badly bruised, Miss March. But it would pay you to try not to use them. Perhaps a sling will help there.”

  “Of course, I shall do that at once, and thank you, my lady.”

  She wouldn't use a sling; Jacob would stake his fortune on that.

  “Jacob, ring for a maid. We shall get something soft to wrap around the fingers, and a sling.”

  He rose to do as he was bid, and ordered tea at the same time. When he returned, Charlotte was standing behind Poppy studying her lump.

  “’Tis quite swollen, and I will have something sent to your address to ease the pain, Miss March, as soon as I return home.”

  “Oh no... really there is no need. It is improving daily.”

  Charlotte would do it, Jacob knew, and he felt relieved that Poppy was receiving care.

  “You simply must take the position with the Lords of Night Street, Miss March, and then you can tell me all you learn, as they will not, and Perkins is terribly closemouthed,” Charlotte added after she had returned to her seat.

  “I-I don't think I would—”

  “Miss March,” Marcus interrupted her. “I am not entirely sure why you are not taking the position, even if it is only temporary until you can find another as a companion. The money will be good, the building is warm and quiet, and Perkins is a pleasant enough fellow, if a little dour. Added to that is the fact you will see little of us.”

  Jacob kept quiet and let Marcus persuade her.

  “Surely it is a better prospect to start work in daylight hours, Miss March? And not have to be exposed to what I'm sure you have been, working in the brothel?”

  “Have you been propositioned, Miss March?”

  She nodded at Charlotte's question, as Jacob had known she would. She was too pretty, too innocent and untarnished, not to have had men attempting to coerce her to lie with them. It wasn't a pleasing thought.

  “Then take the offer of employment and leave the brothel, before the propositions become more forceful, as you know, given time, they will.”

  Her eyes went from Charlotte to Marcus and then Jacob.

  “I am independent.”

  “Which is I'm sure an admirable trait,” Marcus added. “However, you are not stupid, and we all need help at some stage in our life.”

  She found a small smile and it made her look younger, and so sweet Jacob wanted to look away.

  “You make it hard for me to refuse.”

  “Then don't,” Jacob said. This time she looked at him and smiled. It was the first real one he’d seen her give, and had his friends not been in the room, he had a bad feeling he’d simply have snatched her up and kissed her senseless. Looking away, Jacob knew this had to stop. There would never be anything between them.

  “Very well, and thank you. I would be extremely grateful if you would allow me to work for you until I have found another position.”

  Jacob didn't show his relief, but it was there. She would be safe now, and where he could keep an eye on her.

  Chapter Seven

  Poppy had risen early, bathed, and pulled on her best dress. She was pleased to be going to work at such a hospitable hour. Pleased that she would no longer have to fend off men with lecherous intentions, especially that horrid Lord Kinsale. But she was nervous about what was expected of her, and if she could fulfil those expectations. There was also the matter of Lord Hatherton. Lady Needly had told Poppy his name, and she could no longer deny he intrigued her. He had taken up residence inside her head and now seemed lodged there. She’d even dreamed of him last night.

  Men did not intrigue Poppy. In fact, most often she thought them fools, but Lord Hatherton made her heart thud hard in her chest—which was why she was rude to him. Poppy didn’t know how to cope with this attraction, so she did so by being awkward. But last night she’d realized that had to stop. After all, because of him, she was about to go to work in an office that in all likelihood would be warm. He had also agreed to investigate this business with Lady Revel, and then there were the carriage rides and tea.

  “You, Poppy March, are ungrateful,” she muttered, turning into Night Street. Her parents would be ashamed of her behavior.

  He'd taken her home after Lord and Lady Needly had left, and dropped her on her doorstep. This time he had not attempted to kiss her, and for that she was thankful... no, really, Poppy, you were. She now wore a bandage on her fingers, and her arm was in a sling, which was extremely annoying, but she could hardly quibble with his direction that she do so, considering they had stopped aching.

  Reaching the building Lord Hatherton had given her directions to, Poppy opened the door and entered. From the outside it did not look like the place several affluent lords would frequent, as it was actually rather bland and unappealing. But perhaps that was why. Hadn't Lord Hatherton told her that anonymity was important to them?

  Inside was no less inviting, and actually quite plain. Perhaps she could bring some flowers tomorrow? Surely they would not upset anyone. She found a desk with a man who was scratching away over a ledger. He looked up as she approached. Tall and thin, he wore small round spectacles and had a head of gray hair ruthlessly cropped short.

  “Good morning, Miss March. My name is Mr. Perkins.”

  “Good morning to you, Mr. Perkins.” Poppy smiled.

  “I am unsure how much use you will be to me with your arm in that sling, but please place your belongings over there,” he waved to a small cupboard, “then take a seat here beside me, and I shall attempt to teach you what the Lords believe you need to assist me with.”

  Poppy's smile fell at the man's words. “It is not my writing hand, and I assure you it will not hinder me at all. I'm sorry if you did not want me here, Mr. Perkins. I would definitely not have accepted the position if I had known I would not be welcomed.”

  Surprise showed on his face as she talked, but Poppy rushed on.

  “I did not ask for this position, and it was only offered to me as I am at present between positions and in need of work. But I will leave if you would rather I did so, as I do have a position I can go to.” Poppy had her pride, and she would not stay where she was not wanted.

  Mr. Perkins sighed. Taking off his glasses, he rubbed the lenses with a cloth he pulled from his top pocket.

  “No, it is I who should be sorry, Miss March. Forgive me, I did not mean to make you uncomfortable. I am merely a grumpy old dog attempting to protect his patch of grass. Please, take off your coat and sit.”

  “You don't seem old, Mr. Perkins.” Poppy hurried to do as he bid. “And I should very much like to learn from you, even if my position here is only temporary. Lord Hatherton spoke very highly of you, and one day I may find work in this field, if I cannot find work as a companion again.”

  “And you shall, and I will ask you to forgive me now for any rudeness you encounter at my hands. I tend to be curt without realizing it.”

  “I am one of nine children, Mr. Perkins, you shall have to get up early to insult me.”

  His laugh was dry but genuine, and Poppy thought that perhaps they would get along just fine after that. Straight talking, her mother always said, sorted out most things and st
opped misunderstandings.

  Jacob and Leo arrived at Lady Revel's house at eleven two mornings later. He'd wanted to check on Poppy, but decided to stay away from Night Street to let her settle into her position with Perkins.

  “We stay until we are admitted, Leo.”

  “I hate this popinjay,” his friend snarled. “Struts about the place thinking he's a great deal more than he is. I will not need much provocation to put him in his place, Jacob.”

  “I feel no differently, but our purpose here is Lady Revel, so hold your spleen.”

  His friend grunted, but remained silent as they walked up the front path.

  “Bloody chilly.” Leo stomped his large booted feet as they stopped by the door.

  This time Jacob wanted to question Lord Revel, and was prepared to wait him out. Something was afoot here; he no longer had any doubts about that.

  Lifting the large brass knocker, he rapped it loudly three times, and then stood back to wait. The butler who had opened it last time once again stood before him. He did not look any more at ease seeing Jacob.

  “Good morning, I am Lord Hatherton, and this is Lord Vereton. We have called to see Lady Revel.”

  “I-I'm afraid Lady Revel is not taking callers at this time.”

  “She is still unwell?”

  The butler nodded, his eyes flitting from Leo to Jacob.

  “Then we shall see Lord Revel.”

  “He, ah, he is not to be disturbed.”

  “You will please tell him that Viscount Hatherton and the Marquis of Vereton have an important matter to discuss with him, and will not leave until we do so.”

  “At once, my lord.”

  Jacob and Leo were shown into the same room he occupied last time.

  “I forget how menacing that polite, cold tone of yours can be, Jacob.”

  His friend was prowling around the room, studying paintings.

  “It comes in handy.”

  “I met your Miss March yesterday.”

  Jacob refused to acknowledge that his heart beat harder hearing Poppy’s name. He was merely concerned for her, nothing more.

  “Perkins smiled at me when I entered. I nearly stumbled, I tell you. It wasn't that closed-mouth version we usually get. This was teeth and flashing eyes, and he looked happy.”

 

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