Beauty and the Rake

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Beauty and the Rake Page 1

by Erica Monroe




  Beauty and the Rake

  Erica Monroe

  Contents

  Blurb

  A Thank You Gift

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Epilogue

  Author’s note

  Acknowledgments

  Thank You for Reading

  The Rookery Rogues

  An Excerpt from Erica Monroe’s Secrets in Scarlet

  Books by Erica Monroe

  About the Author

  Blurb

  Once she was beautiful…

  * * *

  Abigail Vautille grew up in a London rookery, toiling as a weaver in a factory until one tragic night left her disfigured and penniless. To save her family from debtor’s prison, she strikes a deal with the rogue who owns her father’s gambling vowels–if he excuses the debt, for two weeks, she’ll give him her body, but not her heart.

  * * *

  Once he was charming…

  * * *

  Inspector Michael Strickland of the Metropolitan Police has always had a way with women. Success comes easily to him, and he glides through life on his good looks and family name. But Abigail lights a passion within him he never knew existed. As he gets to know her, he realizes two weeks with her won’t be enough. He sees the beauty within her, not the beast she believes herself to be.

  * * *

  Together their love is beyond a fairy tale.

  * * *

  After a dangerous figure from Abigail’s past resurfaces vowing vengeance, things take a sinister turn. But now that she’s in his life, Michael will stop at nothing to keep the woman he loves safe. When the stakes are high and the scars are more than skin deep, passion might be the key to a happily ever after.

  A Thank You Gift

  Subscribe to Erica Monroe's newsletter and receive a free short story! Also, join Erica Monroe's free Daring Dames Reader Group!

  * * *

  SERIES BY ERICA MONROE

  * * *

  The Rookery Rogues:

  Romantic Era working class romantic suspense

  Gothic Brides:

  Regency Era Gothic romance

  Covert Heiresses:

  Regency Era Spies

  FOLLOW ERICA MONROE

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously.

  * * *

  BEAUTY AND THE RAKE

  Copyright © 2015 by Erica Monroe

  Excerpt from A Dangerous Invitation copyright © 2013 by Erica Monroe

  Cover design by Teresa Spreckelmeyer/Designs by BMB

  Cover photo by Kim Killion/Hot Damn Stock

  Quillfire Publishing

  * * *

  All rights reserved. The author has provided this book for personal use only. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  * * *

  ISBN: 978-0-990-02297-8

  For information, address Erica Monroe at http://www.ericamonroe.com.

  Created with Vellum

  To every girl who has ever felt lesser

  You are very much more.

  * * *

  And to my grandmother

  Who makes me believe I can catch the stars.

  1

  Whitechapel, London

  October 1832

  Red was everywhere.

  Abigail Vautille shouldn’t have been surprised. Since that fateful day when her left hand was forcibly rammed into a working loom, the color red had haunted her. Deep red scars from the punch card of the jacquard crisscrossed her skin. Pockets of exposed flesh remained, mangled red bubbles now crusted black. The bones had been reset to give her a range of movement, but she couldn’t feel the brace of a cold wind on her flesh or the touch of a man’s fingers against her skin.

  If only she could staunch her emotions so effectively.

  But no, she was fated to face crimson. Scarlet was even the color of her once-friend Poppy Knight’s hair. Poppy’s investigation into their past employer had led to Abigail’s torture.

  Her stomach clenched at the shellacked ruby door of Cruikshank’s gaming hell. A battered wreath hung in the center, the previously garnet holly berries shriveled and dead. No one bothered to use the carmine-rusted iron doorknocker. This was no longer a place that required a doorman.

  Scoundrels came and went, invited by the new proprietor, Arthur Cruikshank. He was in league with Joaquin Mason, who ruled the rookeries from the back room of his main property in Shadwell, the King of Spades. With Mason’s support, Cruikshank had turned this dank hole into a profitable gambling house.

  Abigail knew the men here, their tells and their compulsions. Each battled a demon that only a hand of cards seemed to sate.

  But familiarity didn’t breed ease. The hollers of foxed men drifted from Cruikshank’s, an unsettling cacophony. The building itself provided no comfort, constructed of crumbling gray stone, gray like her constant mood. Auburn brick made up the top floor, added after the original foundation.

  Shivering in the frigid night air, Abigail drew her black cloak tighter around her to brace against the cold wind. With a glance upstairs, she brought the gloved fingers of her good hand to her lips to kiss for luck. She’d need all the help she could get in this godforsaken place.

  After entering, she refused to give her cloak to the man who waited in the foyer. Cruikshank didn’t employ him. When unsuspecting people presented him with their garments, he fled to sell them in the rag and bone shops. She couldn’t help but admire his ingenuity.

  Since she couldn’t hold down honest employment any longer, she’d do best to follow his example.

  Her eyes narrowed as she surveyed the crowd mingling in the lower rooms. Conversations drifted in and out, an indistinct hum. A sweet, pungent scent caught her attention from the open door to her right. Men reclined on dilapidated chaises in sleep or stupor, while two women blew into pipes, kindling the opium in their bowls until it glowed red.

  “Mystery lady!” a man called, his unfixed gaze settling on her cloak. “Come back, mystery lady. Come play with me.”

  A lump formed in her throat. All these people drowning their sorrows. Little she could do for them now. The longer she stayed the greater chance she had of being a potential target for Cruikshank’s less principled patrons.

  She kept going, ignoring his summons, her skirts swishing against the dusty floor. Two staircases flanked the vast entrance hall. While the left staircase ended on a landing, the right staircase would take her up to the top floor where the faro and hazard tables were. The play was deep there.

  She’d find her father at the back table. Inevitably, he’d be in the third chair, his hands shaking as he grasped his cards. There’d be a wrinkle where his thumb gripped too hard.

  She reached down into the pocket in her cloak. No blunt. Not that she could pay the rest of her father’s debts with a few coins. Settling the vowels for his last visit to Cruikshank’s had taken the last of her savings. Years
of hard shifts, aching knees and pricked fingers gone in an instant to the tables.

  Now that she couldn’t work in the factory, she had no way to earn back that money.

  Three prostitutes lingered at the stairs, clothed in gaudy dresses with chemises peeking out of their stomachers. They roamed the halls in between their shifts in the cellar, which Cruikshank had converted into a whorehouse. He was always looking for willing lightskirts to fill the beds.

  Abigail gulped as a flamboyant redhead with a gap-toothed grin caught her eye and waggled a brow.

  Soon, she’d be one of them.

  She mounted the stairs carefully, her uninjured hand grasping the railing for support. The hood of her cloak remained over her head, and she pretended it gave her a modicum of security. A shroud to hide behind, when it seemed everyone in Whitechapel knew her name and face.

  People moved around her, passing her on the staircase and cursing her slowness. One foot in front of the other was never easy. Even before she’d lost the use of her hand, her unsteady gait had marked her as a cripple. As a child, she’d worked as a scavenger, sliding underneath the machinery to collect the broken bits of silk for reuse. The labor had distorted her body, and years of standing on her feet for fourteen hours, six days a week had worsened her knock-knees.

  Each step higher made her joints scream for relief. Her lungs, weak from the poorly ventilated conditions in the factories, burned with the effort.

  But she persevered, for life had given her no other choice. Everyone she used to consider a friend had abandoned her. The sole kindness she’d known in the last six months was the whisper of a stranger when she’d been in the hospital.

  Finally, she arrived at the top floor. A throng of people waited outside the faro room. Falling in line, Abigail peeked inside. Candles shimmered throughout, casting a golden glow. At least it was warmer than outside.

  She’d already pawned the last of her books to pay for coal so that her little sister, Bess, wouldn’t freeze in their flat. Her heart panged at the memory. Those books had been more precious to her than any other possession, but Bess had to be her first priority.

  Come tomorrow when the coal ran out again, there’d be nothing left to sell.

  Nothing except for herself.

  She couldn’t think of that now. If she did, her knees would sway, and her steps would falter. That would make her an easy mark. Already, she felt as though her movements were evaluated for signs of weakness. A chill skittered down her back. She shoved her battered hand into the pocket of her cloak and continued, trying to ignore the disconcerting sensation of being watched.

  She was strong. She could survive anything.

  The group behind her advanced, shoving her forward. She stumbled but managed to right herself in time before colliding with the man in front of her. The herd dispersed at the door, ambling to the various gaming tables. Abigail made her way toward the far corner of the room, pausing for a moment to lean against a post and catch her breath.

  She scanned the crowd for her father, expecting to find him flanked on either side by intent players. Tonight, all the chairs were empty, except for three: the banker and two punters. A crowd of people watched the game proceed. The cards had split; the dealer took half of the bets on that rank. The onlookers let out a whoop of approval.

  The mechanics of the game held little interest to her, for it’d always end the same: even if her father won, they’d still owe. Their debts were so high; they’d never dig out of this hole. She recognized her father: grizzly gray hair, the stoop of his shoulders, his threadbare green coat Bess had patched the week prior.

  Across from him and facing her was a man Abigail did not recognize. As he purchased another check from the dealer, she swallowed back the dread that threatened to consume her. An unknown competitor meant her father might not receive leniency. Cruikshank had already told Papa that if he didn’t start paying his vowels, he’d need to find a new place to gamble or he’d have to face Cyrus. Known as an unhinged pugilist with a taste for blood, Cyrus Mason could make the injuries she’d incurred from the loom seem like papercuts.

  And so, the cycle would begin again: another gaming hell and another night like this one. It didn’t matter that she’d cut her meals in half for the past few months to ensure Bess had enough to eat. Or that they were three months behind on rent, and if they didn’t pay up soon, they’d all be out on the bloody street.

  Nothing mattered to her father except the game.

  Abigail slowly steered her way through the crowd, minding her steps until she’d made it to the back table.

  “’Ey now,” one man complained as she accidentally bumped him. He turned, catching her eye. Even in the cloak, he recognized her. So much for anonymity.

  He motioned for a few of his friends to step to the side to make room for her. “Move, mates.”

  Abigail nodded her gratitude, sliding into the vacated space. Her father hadn’t noticed her arrival, so focused was he on the game layout.

  “Come, Papa,” she quietly bid. “Settle up your accounts and hope to God this man lets you by with incremental payments.”

  She hated having to say those words. She hated the humiliation of having to stand there, while all the men leered at her as if she was the choicest bit of flesh they’d get all night. But if she was going to be a harlot, she might as well start expecting this treatment.

  The unknown punter across from her father coughed. A cough meant to distract, to clear the air. She looked up to see who would be so polite in this den of iniquity. She focused in on his features and her stomach did a flip. A purely physical reaction, for what woman wouldn’t have felt a surge of fancy for the way his linen shirt stretched over his broad shoulders. His oval face was classically handsome, chiseled with an impossibly straight nose.

  The man’s blue eyes narrowed. “He owes me two hundred pounds. You can’t expect me to excuse so large a debt.”

  Two hundred pounds.

  His voice rang in her ears, like the steady drum that signals a firing squad. Two hundred pounds. Each breath was harder. Her throat closed. Two hundred pounds.

  The mob erupted with cheers at the announcement, eager for a potential conflict. Their hoots barely registered when her heart pounded so hard, she feared it might burst free of her chest. The world spun around her, and she prayed the floor might swallow her up.

  Yet nothing changed.

  Around her, the horde grew impatient for a response. Whatever leniency they’d shown in allowing her into their midst had disappeared. Now she was a part of the spectacle. Her pain on display for their enjoyment.

  “’E don’t got two hundred,” one man jeered. “’E won’t even pay me the two crowns ’e owes me.”

  “And ’e owes me twenty pounds!” another fellow added.

  Oh, God. Her father had killed them all with the fifty-one cards of a faro game.

  They were doomed. With vowels that large, surely her father would be sent to debtor’s prison. Hell, maybe they’d all be sent to Marshalsea. The thought of her little sister living in such squalor made Abigail’s heart tighten. How would Bess survive?

  “I can’t pay you,” her father mumbled, as if he was just now realizing how much he’d lost. “Ain’t got that.”

  “Then something will have to be done,” his opponent announced.

  Thoughts sped through her mind. Bess couldn’t go to Marshalsea. It’d ruin her in a way Abigail couldn’t countenance. Sorrow had seeped deep into Abigail’s life, ripping apart all her hopes and dreams, but Bess deserved better.

  What could Abigail offer this man? Their coffers were as empty as their cabinets. The little blunt Bess brought in at the new textile factory already wasn’t enough for the rent.

  Abigail glanced down, taking in the plump curves of her breasts, her wide hips reputed to be perfect for grasping onto as a man tupped her hard. She was all the family had.

  And if it were the last damn thing she did, she’d save Bess. This man knew Mason—perhap
s a deal could be brokered to keep her father away from the hells too.

  Abigail pushed back the hood to her cloak, revealing her blonde curls. Before her disfigurement, the factory boys had made it quite clear she stirred their attentions. But what was the price of her soul? Was she worth such an exorbitant sum?

  “We can’t pay you,” she said, repeating her father’s words. “But if you excuse my father’s debts, I’ll—”

  The words wouldn’t form. She gulped for air. A vision of Bess huddled in the corner of a filthy cell danced before her eyes. So, this was how her degradation would begin, not in a brothel but in a hell. How could she actually go through with this? She’d be signing her soul away to the devil.

  She couldn’t think of another choice.

  She needed to entice him. He wouldn’t accept a single night for two hundred pounds—even as a virgin, she was not worth it. A man as good-looking as he was wouldn’t pay that much for one lay with a working-class girl.

  One month with her. She dismissed that idea immediately. A month away from Bess was too much. Two weeks instead. She’d start there.

 

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