The Earl and the Highwayman's Daughter Page 2
“It is your groom you should thank, my lord.”
“Where is Neal?”
“Mr. Pollitt left for Lilac Court during the night to fetch another carriage to take you home.”
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. Through a door he spied another cot. “Have I put someone out of their bed?”
“No.” She put down the fine linen shirt and he saw it was his she was mending.
“Then who’s bed is this?”
“My father’s.”
“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 thigh 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 pushed a wisp of golden hair off her brow. “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 while 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 kin. Such delicate looks were not often found in these parts, especially not slightly tip-tilted eyes of a deep, fascinating green-blue.
“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 wants to marry me off to a friend of his. I dislike the fellow and won’t agree.” She pushed away a golden curl from her forehead, and her sleeve fell back, exposing a dark bruise on her arm. Had someone held her in a cruel grip? Her father?
He took hold of her hand and turned her wrist to examine the purple discoloration on her tender skin. “Who did this to you?”
She pulled her hand away and drew down her sleeve. “’Tis nothing. A pig knocked me over in the pen.”
He doubted her story. He couldn’t dismiss so lightly that some brute had manhandled her in such a manner. But he knew she wouldn’t tell him more, because she frowned as she took up a pot of nasty-looking paste and applied it to his wound.
Brendan 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 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 scarcely 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, she broke eggs into the pan and beat them with a fork with a deft touch. 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 with relish. “This is the best meal I’ve had in an age.”
“’Tis only bacon and eggs,” she said with a smile, toying with her smaller portion.
He watched her as she ate. She was like an exotic flower in a weed patch, this girl. Her golden 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 shrugged. “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 up on his elbow. “I’m Brendan Fanshaw, Earl of Trentham, sir. Your daughter took me in when I was attacked by highwaymen in the wood yonder.”
“Highwaymen you say?” The man grunted. “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 yourself, 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 the deep throb in his shoulder, Brendan grew interested. Very interested indeed.
***
Eugenia returned to the cottage, chewing her bottom lip. Awareness of what her father was capable of worried at her. His lordship would be helpless as a rabbit in a trap when her father 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, her father tossed down his fork. “Now as I se
es it….” He leaned back in his chair and narrowed his eyes.
His lordship 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 men’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 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 hair. When he moved in the bed with a grimace, 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. Just 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, which rasped beneath his fingers. “I believe the best 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 for a better position.”
Silence fell. Eugenia held her breath. Her father was as red in the face as his neck cloth. He leapt to his feet. “Eugenia is the daughter of a duke I’ll have ye know.”
She had heard this story many times before when her father was drunk. She’d never believed it. His lordship’s eyes held their steady gaze. What would he make of this revelation?
“And which duke might that be, Mr. Hawthorne?”
“Don’t believe me, milord? My poor deceased wife was seduced by the Duke of Mortland. She was with child when I met her.”
“Can you prove this wild accusation?”
Her father hurried to a drawer and rummaged through it. He came back with the miniature in his hand that he’d shown Eugenia many times. “Found this after me wife died.” He thrust it at his lordship. “Have a squint at the duke’s visage.”
“I suppose it’s possible.”
Her father’s jaw dropped again. “You’re willing to consider it to be true?”
“It’s hardly evidence. Your wife might have stolen it. The young lady’s father could be anyone.” He studied the likeness. “There’s a vague similarity to your daughter. Still, what does it matter?” He shrugged. “Even if it is so, I imagine there are others.”
Her father changed his tone. “So, what will you offer me now? You’ve done me a great disservice, milord,” he said in a cajoling voice. “You’ve dishonored the daughter of a duke. I am a reasonable man, but you can’t put her to work in your kitchens.”
“I agree,” his lordship said with cool authority.
Eugenia, arms akimbo, glared at them both. “I am not a prize pig to be haggled over at market.”
Lord Trentham’s mouth stretched in an attractive smile. “Indeed you are not.”
Growing impatient, her father glared. “What say you, milord?”
“I agree to take your daughter under my protection as my ward, Mr. Hawthorne.”
Her father’s eyes became owlish. She almost laughed. He hadn’t expected that. He stalked around the room before whirling around to face his lordship. “That won’t do! Who will look after me house then, I ask you?”
“I will settle an annuity on you.”
A whoosh of air escaped her father’s lips. He sat down hard on the stool.
“On certain conditions,” his lordship continued in his beautiful, mellow voice. “You must sign away any future rights to your daughter.” He held up a hand as her father began to protest. “And make no further mention of her in connection with yourself. If you do, the money will cease.”
The earl’s steady blue gaze regarded her. Her heart thudded. He was clever, this man. Why did he want to take her with him? “I won’t be your mistress, milord.” She’d rather take her chances in the world than that. She’d heard too much that shocked her when she worked in the kitchens in Canterbury.
“Be quiet, daughter! How much do you have in mind, milord?” her father asked, having gained his breath along with his understanding of the matter in hand.
“Enough to make you comfortable for the rest of your days. You can hire more than one servant to care for you.”
“And so you should. Just look at her. She’s a beauty, is she not?” Her father sniggered. “Your ward you say? Her mother taught her to speak proper. And she can read and write too. I could have married her off many times these last few years. I refused—wanted something special for ’er.”
She glared at him. Something special for him more like.
“My ward, Mr. Hawthorne.”
“Done!” Papa jumped up and brushed his hands together. “Don’t stand there gawking, girl. Pour us an ale. This is a celebration.”
Sold to the highest bidder, she thought. She was so tired of her wretched existence and her father’s unpredictable nature that she’d go almost anywhere. But was his lordship a good or a bad man? She wasn’t to work in his kitchen but what did he intend for her? A shiver passed through her as she poured the ale into tankards. She glanced around the humble cottage that had been her home since her mother and father brought her here years ago. She would miss her garden—and what about Molly? She firmed her lips. She would not leave without her goose. Five minutes after she left, Molly would be in the pot.
Chapter Three
A VEHICLE RATTLED up to the house. Miss Hawthorne rushed to open the window. “It’s Mr. Pollitt come in a yellow post chaise with four horses.” She turned around.
“Good.” Brendan winced as he struggled onto his elbows.
“Do take care, your lordship,” Miss Hawthorne said. “You don’t want to open that wound. Wait for Mr. Pollitt to aid you.”
“Don’t fuss, Eugenia, get the door,” her father said with a slight slur. He wiped froth from his mouth and remained at the table where he’d downed another couple of celebratory tankards of ale in quick succession.
“Do you have a garden at Lilac Court?” Miss Hawthorne asked as she opened the door.
“A splendid one,” Brendan replied with an amused smile.
“Then can I take Molly?”
Brendan raised his brows. “That depends on who Molly is.” He didn’t intend to take some other young miss home with him.
“Molly is my goose.”
Brendan widened his eyes. “Your goose?”
Neil came into the room and smiled to see Brendan laughing. “What say you, Neil? Can we accommodate a goose in the carriage?”
“Now that’s a challenge, milord,” Neil said with a grin as he advanced into the room. “I’m mighty pleased to find you in good spirits.”
Brendan’s smile faded. “Did you see to the coachman’s body?”
“I did, my lord. Been sent home to relatives.”
“What of Jim, the coachman’s young nephew?”
“Picked him up on the road. He’s on his way home too.”
&
nbsp; “Some good news at least. Get your things together, Miss Hawthorne, and fetch your goose. Neil, Miss Hawthorne is traveling with us.”
Neil cast him a look of surprise. “I’ve brought you fresh clothes, milord.” He came to help Brendan up from the bed. Brendan gritted his teeth and leaned on Neal as they crossed the room.
“You can change in my chamber yonder,” the girl said. “I’ll fashion a sling for you.”
It was little more than a storeroom although neat as a pin. Moments later, after struggling in the confined space, he emerged with the sleeve of his coat hanging empty at his side.
Miss Hawthorne was tying a strip of material to support his arm when Hawthorne suddenly came awake. He leapt up. “You can’t go until you sign a letter making it plain we have an agreement, milord.”
“Quite so.” Brendan sighed. “Do you have writing paper?”
“That I do,” Hawthorne said with a scowl. “I’m not a beggar on the streets, I’ll have you know. We have our standards.” He went back to the chest, returning with an inkpot, a piece of crumpled paper and a quill. He took ash from the fire, added ale to the pot, and stirred the ink with the quill.
Brendan sat and scrawled across the page, glad that it was his left shoulder that was wounded. “Here.” He handed it to Hawthorne.
Hawthorne thrust the paper at his daughter. “Read it. Is it as his lordship says?”
She scanned it and nodded.
He snatched it back, his eyes shiny and blew on it. “I shall expect the first payment at the end of the week, milord.”
Brendan sighed. “You shall have it.” He stood, and Neil placed his greatcoat over his shoulders.
***
While his lordship settled in the carriage, Eugenia packed her few possessions into a roomy cloth bag she’d made. She donned her pelisse and bonnet. “Won’t you miss me, Papa?”
His bleary eyes regarded her, as he refilled his tankard a third time. “I’ll miss you, girl. But you’ll do nicely with his lordship.”