Pollitt stood by his master’s side. “We should cauterize the wound.”
“Yes. I’ll do it if you hold him down.”
Pollitt nodded at her, admiration in his gaze.
Eugenia fetched gun powder and tapped a little into the wound. She held up the taper. “Ready?”
The groom took a firm hold of his lordship’s arms. “Do it.”
Eugenia lit the taper from the fire and touched it quickly to the gunpowder. As it ignited and flared, the injured man groaned deeply and struggled against Pollitt’s firm hold. The acrid smell of burnt flesh filled the air.
Eugenia winced. “Poor devil. Soothing herbs will aid him.”
She poured hot water into a bowl and added lavender. Taking a cloth, she dipped it in the bowl and wrung it out, then wiped the worst of the blood and gunpowder away gently. She continued until the wound was clean. It now bled a good deal less.
“You are close to the forest here, Miss…”
“Hawthorne.”
“Might be that the robbers will return, Miss Hawthorne. I should stay and keep guard.”
She shook her head. They wouldn’t come to her father’s house. “Are you sure they weren’t specters? My father swears blind he saw one there. That wood is said to be haunted. A highwayman was strung up there almost a hundred years ago.”
“Ghosts don’t shoot people do they? Anyway, his lordship shot one.”
She swung around and studied his face. “Was he killed?”
“Yes. Stone dead.”
She frowned. “What did he look like this highwayman?”
“I didn’t stop to see. He wore a kerchief over his face. He was young. Might you know him?”
“No,” she said with relief. Where does his lordship hail from?”
“His country seat, Lilac Park, some miles from here. Over in Surrey.”
She nodded. “I’ve heard some mention of it. The place sounds pretty. Is it?”
“Indeed it is.”
“What are you doing so far from home?”
“We were on our way home from a visit to Chatterton Hall.”
“’Tis a long way from Surrey.”
“Tis the home of his lordship’s father-in-law.”
She gazed at the big man crumpled on her settle. “His lordship’s married then?”
Pollitt shook his head. “A widower, these two years past.”
“Sad if his children are orphaned.”
“He doesn’t have children.” He stepped closer to peer at his master. “He breathes well. You don’t think he’ll die do you?”
She held his lordship’s sturdy wrist in her hand. “Gun shots are tricky, but his pulse is strong. He has a good chance I’d say.”
“You’ve never heard of Lord Trentham? He married Lord Chatterton’s daughter, Lady Anne.”
Eugenia shook her head. She didn’t listen to village gossip it was usually overblown and unreliable. She’d seen Chatterton’s daughter ride past once on a handsome chestnut, with two well-dressed men and another woman. They’d stopped at the village inn for luncheon. Lady Anne’s hair was dark beneath her hat, and she wore an exquisite habit of emerald green velvet. Eugenia had suffered a bout of envy. Not for those people and their privileged lives exactly, but just for that green velvet. The color would suit her. One day she would have a gown like that.
She ground herbs in a bowl with a mortar and pestle. When would her father see fit to return? A chill of unease snaked up her spine. She made a poultice and placed it against the man’s wound, then bound it with cloth. “There’s boysenberry wine in that jug on the shelf. Help yourself, before you brave the cold.”
“Don’t mind if I do. I’ll ride to Lilac Court and return with the carriage to take his lordship home. He’ll do better there with the family doctor.”
She shrugged. “Maybe he will. Although doctors…” She shook her head. “They’re as likely to kill you as not.”
Eugenia frowned. She was anxious to get rid of his lordship and the sooner the better, but he did look poorly. “He should not be moved tonight,” she said with some reluctance. What would her father say when he came home and found him here? She didn’t trust her father an inch.
The groom put down the tankard. “’Tis a good drop, miss. Anything more I can do before I go?”
“You can lift his lordship onto my father’s bed. He’s too tall for the settle.”
“Right you are.”
Pollitt was stronger than he looked. He heaved the unconscious man up and laid him on the bed. Lord Trentham groaned but didn’t wake. “I’ll pull off his boots, shall I?”
She nodded, caught by the earl’s handsome face. Dark lashes feathered his cheeks, his thick dark brown hair disheveled. Long powerful legs stretched over the cot. A fine figure of a man.
Pollitt pulled off a boot. “I hope he’ll be safe here if I leave. Looks like the highwayman has given up.”
“He will be,” Eugenia said firmly, determined to make it so.
When the other gleaming Hessian dropped to the floor, Pollitt headed for the door. “I’ll be off then. But I won’t return until after noon.”
“The longer he has to rest the better.”
Pollitt nodded with one last glance at his master. “I’ll return as soon as I can. And thank ’e, Miss Hawthorne.”
When the door closed behind him, Eugenia turned to her patient. She sprinkled lavender over the pillow and covered him with a blanket. He was deeply asleep. Her fingers itched to trace his brow, his fine straight nose and well-formed lips. But he was so far above her the only thing he’d want from her she’d never be prepared to give. She rose quickly and fetched her mending to keep herself busy. She would not sleep; she would listen to his breathing. He must live. Despite the differences in their station, their futures were linked in some way. She felt it in her bones.
Chapter Two
Brendan could smell lavender. Had he been left in a garden? He opened his eyes and gazed around. Through the small window above him, the soft slate-blue sky was tinged with the pink of early dawn. He closed his eyes for a few minutes and listened to the birds begin to wake. Then, concerned about his lethargy, he raised his head. The room spun. A pain so fierce that it brought an oath to his lips, racked through his shoulder. With a groan, he lowered his head to the pillow. He lay in a strange bed in a room he’d never seen before. Was he in one of his tenant’s houses? He had no recollection of how he’d got here.
“There’s no need for foul language,” a pleasant voice said behind him.
He carefully moved onto his good side. A young woman sat on a settle beside the fire. He admired the graceful moments of her delicate fingers as she darned a stocking. “I beg your pardon, Miss?”
“Hawthorne. I forgive you in the circumstances.” She put down her sewing and crossed the floor to sit on a stool at his side. “I must check your wound.”
Unequal to questioning her further, he lay still as she gently unwound the bandage that bound his shoulder.
“Good, it’s stopped bleeding.”
His gaze took in his bloodied coat, shirt and ruined neck cloth on a chair. “I seem to remember being shot. Highwaymen attacked us in the woods.” He ran a hand over his bare chest and gazed up into her startlingly green eyes. “I must thank you for your kindness. But where am I?”
When he tried, painfully, to raise himself, she placed a hand on his good shoulder and pushed him gently down. “Lie still.”
She seemed unconcerned about touching his bare skin. Had Neil left him with a whore? He dismissed the idea for she looked far too innocent and fresh faced to be one.
“You’re at Woodland Farm. It’s my father’s farm. Your groom brought you here.”
He tensed his jaw. “I lost my coachman. I’m not sure about my box boy.” He tried to galvanize himself to think clearly. “I must make arrangements to have the carriage mended. And take my coachman’s body home.” He tried to conjure up a smile. “I believe you’ve saved my life, Miss Hawthorn
e. I’m most grateful.”
“It is your groom you should thank, my lord.”
“Where is Mr. Pollitt?”
“He left for Lilac Court during the night to fetch another carriage to take you there.”
She rose, went to the dresser, and returning with two mugs, held one out. “Drink this first.”
He eyed it doubtfully. “What is it?”
“A mixture of herbs.”
Brendan painfully raised his head and drank the bitter mixture. He grimaced, and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. She handed him the other mug which contained water, and he drank thirstily. He lay back with a soft moan. If this young lady had wanted to harm him, she would have done so before this. He couldn’t make himself care either way. Weak as a kitten, he closed his eyes.
“Best you rest awhile.” Her voice sounded far away.
He must have slept, for when he woke again, it was bright daylight. Miss Hawthorne sat in a rocking chair still at her mending. A man’s shirt this time. Whose? he wondered. He glanced around the tidy room. There was another narrow bed in the corner. “Have I put someone out of their bed?”
“No. I live here with my father.”
“Was he here during the night?”
“He’s away on business.”
He frowned. “Then we’ve been alone together–all night?”
She cut the thread with her pearly even teeth and smiled at him. Brendan almost gasped at the beauty of her smile. I must be feeling better, he thought, bemused. This ministering angel was lovely indeed.
“Do not worry about my reputation, my lord. Villagers won’t concern themselves about me tending to an injured man in my care. We leave that sort of fuss to the gentry.” She folded the shirt. “I don’t envy you your fancy manners and morals. All a sorry lot of pretense, that is.”
“Is it?” Why was she so cynical about life? She couldn’t be more than twenty at most. Drawn to her slender white throat his gaze drifted down to the curve of her waist beneath the modest gown. Aware he was staring, he looked away. “What has caused you to think like that?”
“I worked for a while as a kitchen maid in a big house in Canterbury,” she said. “The lady’s maid told me her ladyship was miserable most of the time. She had nothing to do but embroider.” She shook her head. “Hardly a useful pastime. His lordship left her alone for weeks on end when he went up to London to visit his mistress and his clubs.”
“We are not all like that,” Brendan said, acknowledging that some men of his acquaintance were. Arranged marriages were commonplace amongst the ton, and there was often little love between a husband and wife.
He wondered about Miss Hawthorne’s family. Such delicate looks were not often found in these parts; especially not slightly tip-tilted eyes of a deep, fascinating green-blue like fine emeralds.
“Don’t you have a betrothed or a beau?”
She came to examine his wound, untying the bandage with gentle fingers. “No one around here I’d consider. My father plans to marry me off to a friend of his. I hate him and I won’t agree.” She pushed away a fair curl from her forehead and her sleeve fell back exposing dark bruises around her wrist. Someone had held her in a cruel grip. Her father?
He took hold of her hand and turned her wrist to examine the imprint of fingers on her tender skin. “Who did this to you?”
She pulled her hand away and drew down her sleeve. “’Tis nothing. I’d prefer you didn’t mention it.”
He couldn’t dismiss so lightly that some brute had manhandled her in such a manner. “Hardly nothing. Someone has hurt you. Was it your father?”
She frowned as she took up a pot of nasty-looking paste and applied it to his wound.
Brandan clamped down on his jaw. “Lord! What is that stuff? It stings like the devil!”
“Healing herbs.” She retied the bandage. “You shall be gone from here at noon when your groom returns. If you make a fuss, I’ll be in a worse place. Father will be home soon.”
He grimaced as he considered this bit of information, his throat dry and scratchy. He was hardly in any condition to take on a bully. “May I have some water?”
“I’ve made a potion from the bark and leaves of a willow. It will ease the pain.” She took down a jar from the dresser and mixed it with water in a mug then handed it to him. While he drank it, she added coal to the fire.
“You must eat.” She tied the strings of an apron around her trim waist. Taking down an iron pan from its hook, she greased the pan with bacon fat and added wafer thin slices of bacon, which sizzled as they cooked. Then removing the bacon deftly, she broke eggs into the pan and beat them with a fork. Keeping a careful eye on the eggs as she worked, she made coffee.
Brendan realized he was hungry; he hadn’t eaten since luncheon yesterday. The smell of frying bacon and the coffee made his stomach growl.
When it was cooked, he ate the tasty food quickly. “This is the best meal I’ve had in an age.”
“’Tis only bacon and eggs,” she said with a smile, then continued eating her smaller portion more slowly than he.
He watched her as she ate. She was like an exotic flower in a weed patch, this girl. Her fair hair was tied up with a yellow ribbon, her faded cotton gown a bluish hue that had seen better days. Nothing could diminish her natural beauty. In the right clothes, she would be a diamond of the first water. She reminded him of someone. Those eyes…. “Were you born hereabouts?”
She shook her head. “I don’t know where I was born.”
“Cannot your father tell you?”
Before she could answer, the door creaked open and a swarthy, dark-haired man came in and hung his coat on a hook. “I smell bacon. You ain’t eating before you’ve fed the hogs, are you, Eugenia?”
Miss Hawthorne jumped up. “I did the chickens at sunup. I am just about to feed the pigs, Papa.”
“Cook me breakfast first girl and be quick about it.”
The man’s hard dark gaze settled on Brendan and his brows rose. “And who be this then?”
Conscious of propriety even if Miss Hawthorne wasn’t, Brendan struggled awkwardly up on his pillows. “I’m Brendan Fanshaw, Earl of Trentham, sir. Your daughter took me in when I was attacked by highwaymen in the wood yonder.”
“Highwaymen?” The man grunted, not looking too surprised. “They’re busy enough catching the unsuspected on Shooter’s Hill on the Dover Road. Not Olverston Wood. Never known ’em to be there. That place is haunted.”
Brendan didn’t believe in ghosts. Only those conjured up in the minds of the guilty. “These were red-blooded men. I shot one of them dead.”
Mr. Hawthorne’s gaze widened. He pulled out a wooden chair and sat down at the table. “Killed one of them did yer? Best I take a look presently.” He glanced at his daughter who was stoking the fire.
While the bacon fat spat in the pan, he loosened the red scarf around his thick neck and took out a clay pipe. He lit a taper and drew on the pipe, then edged his boots closer to the fire. “Hurry up girl. Then go and feed the pigs. His lordship and I have much to discuss.”
Miss Hawthorne swung around to face her father, a worried expression in her eyes. She didn’t trust her father it seemed. She handed him his meal, wrapped a shawl around her shoulders and darted outside.
Brendan looked at the man’s crafty face. A touch of gypsy in him perhaps. Romanies were good at turning a situation to their advantage. But such a man would never have called his daughter Eugenia. Despite his pain, Brendan grew interested. Very interested indeed.
♥♥♥
Eugenia returned to the cottage, chewing her bottom lip. Aware of what her father was capable of worried at her. His lordship would be helpless as a fox in a trap when he got his hooks into him. Once inside, she cast her father a speaking glance but he merely scowled at her.
When he’d finished the last piece of bacon, he tossed down his fork. “Now as I sees it….” He leaned back in his chair and narrowed his eyes.
His lords
hip waited politely for her father to continue.
“You’ve compromised my lass by spending the night alone with her. And heaven knows what you got up to in my absence. You aristocrats take what you want from us without a whisker of conscience to trouble ye.”
“But Papa, his lordship has been wounded…”
He held up a hand. “Be quiet lass. This is man’s business.”
Her father didn’t give a fig for such things, she knew. He planned to marry her to his widowed friend, Len Smyth. He was fat and gone forty, but he’d pay good money for her. She’d run away before that happened. She knew her father well. He was settling in to bargain.
His lordship didn’t interrupt, but he watched with a keen eye. Sure enough, her father began to speak of his surprise and distress to discover his daughter so ill used. She waited for the word “compensated” to pass her father’s lips. The request for money to set things to rights hovered in the air.
Lord Trentham frowned and raked a hand through his dark hair. When he moved painfully in the bed, she suspected he would have liked to leap up and take a jab at her father. She couldn’t blame him for that. “Your daughter has been kind, and tended my wound very capably. I’m deeply grateful to her—”
Her father swatted the air with his hand. “It will be all around the village by now. Eugenia’s reputation is besmirched. The good marriage I was about to arrange for her will no longer come about.”
“I see.” Lord Trentham’s gaze swung around to contemplate her.
Papa shrugged. “I’m a reasonable man, milord. Only want enough to allow us to settle somewhere anew.”
“I could hardly uproot you from your home,” his lordship said. He ran a hand over the dark shadow on his chin. “I believe the only thing to do is to take your daughter into my household.”
Flummoxed, her father gaped. “You’d take ’er in….?”
Lord Trentham settled the pillow behind his head. “Miss Hawthorne can work in the kitchens. I believe she has done this sort of work before. Later, she can be trained to have a better position.”
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