Chapter Twelve

Gabriel waited until all but one light in the hallway was quenched. Grateful for the fog creeping in from the river, he waited until it enveloped the street, making even the outline of Stanhope’s town house difficult to see.

Under a gaslight he looked at his pocket watch. Past one. He probably had an hour to get in and out.

The street was quiet with the exception of an occasional lone carriage. Stanhope and his friends had left the house an hour ago. Long enough for the servants to have retired.

He moved along the street until he reached the gate into Stanhope’s property. As before, it wasn’t locked. He opened it and entered. He didn’t even need to slink into the shadows thanks to the fog enveloping him. At the back door, he took out his picks. In seconds he had the lock picked, and he slid inside the house.

He closed the door and waited until his eyes adjusted to the darkness. Only the slightest glow from the oil lamp in the hall gave a hint of light. But he knew the house. He had memorized every hall, every turn.

Still, he listened for several seconds for the laugh or grumble of a servant, for a valet preparing for his master’s return. Nothing. His heart beat loudly. It was one thing to invade an empty house, another to invade one occupied by living humans.

He made out vague forms. A table. An umbrella stand. The stairs. He walked on the outside edge of each step in shoes designed for such nefarious purposes. Still, he heard a creak and stopped. Listened again. Then he took another step.

He reached the landing of the second floor and went down the hall to Stanhope’s suite, looking for a trace of light. What if the valet was preparing the next day’s clothes …?

Nothing. He opened the door and slipped inside, then headed for the safe. He knelt beside it, placed his ear against the lock, then let his fingers find the tumblers. He knew the numbers now, and it took less time than before.

He needed a light, but he didn’t want to take the time to use tinder and flint, and he didn’t want any light to filter through the drawn curtains. Instead, he had to remember the contents he’d seen before. The banknotes were toward the back.

He reached in and found them. He took a stack of them, tucked them inside his coat, and closed the safe.

He heard someone ascending the stairs, saw a light moving upward in the hall. He crouched behind a large chest and waited.

The light and footsteps faded. Whoever it was had turned in the opposite direction. He peered out and saw young Pamela enter a room down the hall. She closed the door, and he was encased in darkness again.

He allowed himself to breathe. God help him if she’d turned around.

Remembering the creak of the steps, he remained still for another few minutes. Hopefully, she had gone to bed and would not venture outside her room again. Hopefully she had not asked a maid for something to be brought to her.

His plan could tumble down from a foundation he already knew was weak.

He took his first few steps, paused, then continued. Down the stairs, down the hall. Out the door.

He quickly sped out of the garden and down the street, pulling off the wig and tucking it inside the coat. He walked swiftly toward the waterfront.

The tavern would still be open. He would go through the back entrance, up to his room and change clothes, then share a brandy downstairs. He needed to smell like liquor.

Smythe would be waiting for him. His valet would wonder if he returned home without the smell of brandy about him.

Poor Smythe. He must really be wondering about a master who was in residence only a few hours of the day. The poor man’s frustration mounted daily in his inability to better serve the man who employed him.

He reached the tavern and his room, removed the notes from his clothes, and counted.

Twenty thousand pounds.

Enough for a partial payment on a partnership. Enough to send Stanhope into a rage and make him wonder about the honesty of his partners.

He changed clothes quickly. Back into the too tight breeches of a gentleman. The cravat was askew. After all, he had indulged in a night of debauchery.

The tavern was full. The owner served as barkeep and welcomed his new resident. Without asking, he poured a cup of what Gabriel had ordered before.

No one else paid him any attention, apparently considering him no more than a nuisance.

He pretended drunkenness and listened to the waterfront gossip around him. Most of the patrons were sailors looking for and talking about possible berths. The Bristol Star was looking for a cook. The Mary Ann needed a second mate. Five ships had anchored today. There would be available berths after they were unloaded, then provisioned.

He knew every ship owned by The Group.

Three of them were anchored in the Thames. Five were at sea. There were rumors of another purchase.

His ship. His intended investment.

It was—in every one’s estimation—a ship lucky not to be at the bottom of the ocean.

He rose and staggered drunkenly to the door.

It had been a profitable evening.

This was Stanhope’s night.

Monique did not look forward to it. Yet she had no excuse to refuse his invitation to a private ball. The theater was closed this evening.

She had taken great care with her appearance. She’d visited a modiste days ago and offered a large sum to have a gown readied in three days. The modiste had also read about the wager. She was obviously hopeful that her name would be mentioned.

The dress was a deep violet muslin in contrast to the pastel colors she knew the other ladies would be wearing. Pastel was in fashion.

But she was not a lady.

Dani dressed her hair. “I do not like that you go alone with this man,” she said.

“It is a ball, and everyone will know that Stanhope brought me. His daughter is coming with us. I will be perfectly safe.”

Dani looked skeptical.

“Everything goes according to plan.”

“I understand, but … I fear him.”

“I do, too.” She stared at herself in the mirror. What part of Stanhope had passed on to her? Was she wrong for doing this? She’d always considered it a matter of justice, but …

He was her father. Everything dark and evil. Did evil lurk in her as well?

That terrified her more than anything else. Was that why she was endangering Dani? Playing God herself? But if she didn’t, who would?

Her purpose was fueled by the lack of even a glimmer of recognition on his part. But, of course not. Her mother had meant nothing to him. The seduction of a young girl. An attempted murder when there was a child. And the terror that had always followed her, broken her.

Stanhope would never do that again.

So now she would go to a ball with a man who had no idea he was escorting his daughter. A daughter who hated him.

She applied a bit of rouge to her cheeks, then coloring on her lips.

Monique Fremont stared back at herself in the mirror. She didn’t recognize herself. Merry Anders was lurking in there someplace, needing to be free again.

Someone who wanted to love rather than hate.

She wondered whether it was too late, whether the decent part of her had been consumed by the other.

She heard the authoritative rap on the door downstairs and her housekeeper opening the door.

Then she gave Dani a forced smile and went to the door. She was not going to be fashionably late.

Pamela looked impossibly young as she entered the ballroom of one of London’s most fashionable residences, accompanied by the Earl of Stanhope and Monique Fremont.

Their names were loudly announced by a butler, just as his had been announced moments earlier upon his arrival. Since this was Gabriel’s first formal ball in England, he’d been somewhat bemused by having his name announced and everyone turning to stare.

He’d been invited four days earlier. Conspicuously tardy for such an invitation. Then he’d received a personal note from Stanhope, asking him to attend.

Since Gabriel had not been welcomed by the ton, he wondered what Stanhope held over the head of his host. Upon his arrival in the glittering ballroom of one of the finest homes in London, he’d been regarded curiously by the other guests.

It was, Gabriel knew, part of the courtship ritual of English society.

He had appeared as ordered, dressed in his best formal clothes. His cravat was a little too grand. He felt his neck was being stretched several inches, and he wondered if that was how a condemned man felt. His pantaloons were of the newest style and covered the full length of his legs. They were as tight as his skin and damned uncomfortable. He felt he couldn’t move without them splitting.

Still, he noticed clusters of older women eying him with speculation and whispering excitedly to their daughters.

Apparently even a wastrel American marquess was better than no marquess at all.

Most of the gentlemen, however, gave him the cut direct.

The whole event amused him. The mothers, the daughters, the men, the marriage mart.

And then he’d seen Pamela, dressed in a light blue gown that shimmered in the light of hundreds of candles. Her brown hair had been pulled back and tied, a profusion of curly tendrils tumbling artfully around her face. She turned toward him, her eyes widening as she saw him, then she gave him the slightest tentative smile.

But what made him really straighten was the woman who walked behind her. Dressed in a violet gown that contrasted with creamy shoulders and arms, Monique Fremont made every other woman in the room look inconsequential. Every head turned to stare at her.

Her gaze met his, and he thought he saw a slight shiver move through her. But then she turned to look up at her escort, and he wondered whether he’d imagined it.

In seconds half the men in the room were moving in her direction.

He approached Pamela, instead, and gave her a brief bow.

“I am delighted to see you, Lady Pamela. I hoped you would be here.”

She gazed up at him, and he was reminded of the innocence in her eyes, despite being the daughter of Stanhope. There was also apprehension.

“Thank you, my lord.”

Then Stanhope turned toward him and nodded. “I am most pleased you could join us this evening.”

But even while his words were cordial, Gabriel saw anger glowing in the man’s eyes.

Gabriel didn’t doubt that he had discovered the theft. And probably recently. Stanhope simmered with barely controlled rage, which made him a very dangerous man.

Gabriel wondered whether either woman sensed it as he did. Or perhaps only he did, because he knew that the earl might well have had a very unpleasant surprise in the last few days.

“How could I possibly miss an opportunity to see your lovely daughter?” He turned toward Monique. “And it is delightful to see Mademoiselle Fremont again.” He bowed slightly. “You look”—he searched for the right word—“magnificent.”

And she did. The dress made her eyes smokier, deeper, more mysterious. Her face was alive with that vitality that made her more striking than her features. Unwanted desire twisted his stomach.

“My lord,” she said courteously, though he detected a slight edge in the words.

His gaze turned to Pamela and he smiled. “I hope you both will honor me with a dance this evening.”

Pamela looked downward, and he wondered if she knew how to dance.

Monique’s eyes, on the other hand, sparkled as if at a challenge. “I will look forward to it.”

Stanhope frowned. “I intend to reserve your time, my dear,” he said.

“Oh la, my lord. Surely you need time to speak to your friends.” She fluttered her fan. “And Lord Manchester is an acquaintance.”

Stanhope was trapped. Gabriel glanced quickly at Monique. Was she really that expert a manipulator or was it, as her guileless smile would indicate, merely graciousness trapping the graceless?

He would wager his captaincy on the former.

She was manipulating a manipulator. For riches? If so, it was a damned dangerous way of doing it.

They were interrupted by the host, who expressed pleasure at the arrival of the earl and his guests. Gabriel exchanged extravagant greetings with the host, then watched as the man’s wife escorted Pamela to a chair where she sat with other young ladies.

Stanhope looked at him steadily. “I would like to talk to you later about what we discussed at my home. Perhaps in the game room?”

“My pleasure,” he said. “Are your friends here tonight?”

Stanhope’s face darkened. “No.”

“I had hoped to talk with them again,” Gabriel persisted.

“I imagine you will find them in the clubs,” Stanhope replied shortly. “And now I would like this dance with Miss Fremont.”

Gabriel bowed. “If you do not object—I will ask your lovely daughter to dance with me.”

A brief, curt nod answered him, and Gabriel went over to Pamela. “Do you have room on your dance card for me?”

A look of gratitude crossed her face. “Yes, my lord.”

He leaned down and whispered in her ear. “I am an oaf of a dancer.”

Her eyes lit. “I have had little practice,” she confided in a whisper.

“Then may I accompany you for food and drink?”

“Oh yes, my lord.”

He offered her his arm, and they walked to the large central table in the dining room, where guests were selecting tidbits from the lavish board. He picked up two plates. “What do you like, Lady Pamela?”

“Anything,” she said as the crowd at the table stared at them with curious glances. He could feel her discomfort.

“Would you like me to choose?”

“Please,” she said.

“Why do you not find us two seats,” he said, “while I fill our plates?”

He watched as she retreated to an out-of-the-way corner and claimed one of two seats. He quickly filled the two plates, his brimming, hers not quite so full, and joined her. A servant offered champagne and punch. Pamela took the punch, he took the champagne.

“Thank you,” she said shyly.

“You are welcome. I am not fond of dancing, myself,” he said. “But did you not have lessons?”

“My aunt taught me,” she said, “but I have never attended a dance before. And all these people …”

She ate small bites, casting quick glances around the room. He, too, was aware of all the stares. He even heard some of the comments. He knew she did, too.

“It’s the American imposter.”

“Stanhope’s daughter. Never even been presented at court.”

“She’s been hidden away. There must be a scandal.”

“And Manchester. An imposter. A buffoon.”

All the words drifted back to them and her face grew paler. “They are looking at us because you are lovely,” he said, refusing to acknowledge the group cruelty.

She put her fork down and looked at him. “You are a kind man, my lord.”

He couldn’t remember when anyone had called him kind. He’d been a hard taskmaster both as a sailor and as an American naval officer. He’d plotted a long laborious path of revenge. He’d never been kind.

“Please do not convey that sentiment,” he said.

“Why?”

“I am a businessman, Lady Pamela. I am also a gambler. Weaknesses are deadly.”

“Is being kind a weakness?”

“In some eyes.”

“Then I shall keep that observation to myself,” she said. “But I do not understand how Miss Fremont can prefer my …” She cut herself off and looked down at her plate. Her face was flushed.

“Thank you,” he said.

She ate slowly, and he realized she did not want to go back to the chair where she’d first been seated. He’d understood immediately the social etiquette that had placed young, unmarried women in chairs to wait for the young lords to request a dance. It must be excruciating for someone like Pamela, who was already terrified of her father and obviously in love with someone she couldn’t—or shouldn’t—be in love with, to have to sit in the midst of a crowd and yet be so very alone.

But they could linger no longer or she would be ostracized.

A quadrille was being announced. “Will you give me this dance?” he asked. “I warn you though that I will require your help,” he said.

That was quite untrue. The shipbuilder who had hired him as a lad and promoted him had also insisted he learn the niceties of society. “It will be important if you wish to progress,” he’d told a much younger man.

However, he could fake being awkward easily enough. She nodded and accompanied him to the floor. Her face was stiff, her smile false.

He bowed and whispered, “Look in the corner. Doesn’t he look like a turnip?”

Her glance went to a gentleman dressed in a purple waistcoat. He was nearly as round as he was tall.

She giggled, and then the music began. He made a point of watching other dancers, even stumbled a step or two, and allowed an embarrassed smile. He leaned down. “I warned you,” he said, and he saw her visibly relax as she coached him. She was the teacher, and he saw that she warmed to the role.

Through a sideward glance he saw Stanhope and Monique dancing, and he admired their grace together. He would not have suspected Stanhope of being a fine dancer, but he should have. Stanhope was a man to whom mastery meant everything. He watched as Stanhope leaned over and said something to her. She responded with a quick smile that made his heart sink.

He turned back to Pamela. She too had seen her father, and he could feel the tension returning.

“Do not look at him,” he said. “Look at me.”

She gave him a fleeting smile, and then the music stopped.

He knew the rules. Pickwick had informed him when Gabriel had mentioned he had been invited to the ball. He could not dance twice with the same young lady without declaring his intentions. And Pamela was new to the ton, new to society. Even if she cared nothing about it now, she might someday.

He reluctantly took her back to the chair.

Then he saw Monique detach herself from a group of men and make her way to the ladies’ retiring room. Minutes later he watched her slip out unobserved by the group of men who were arguing as to who had the next dance with her. She slipped behind the backs of guests, then made her way out the French doors to the veranda.

Damning himself for recklessness and stupidity, he followed her. She stood alone, obviously lost in her own world. He saw her take a deep breath, then gaze upward at the cloud-filled sky. A cool wind and a slight mist evidently kept everyone else inside, but it seemed not to bother her. Instead she seemed to welcome it.

He moved toward her, reached out, and touched her shoulder. “Your dress will get wet.”

She spun around. “You appear at the oddest times, my lord.”

“I might say the same of you,” he replied.

“I see that you find Lady Pamela quite attractive.”

“She’s a very pleasant young lady. You seem to find her father so.”

She tossed him a challenging glance. “Do you really believe so?”

He could easily lose himself in those eyes. He would sell his soul to know what she was thinking at the moment.

From inside came the first strains of a waltz. Her body swayed in motion to the music.

“May I have the pleasure?” he asked, knowing full well that she might refuse.

“Yes,” she said simply, taking his arm.

She was as graceful and light as he had imagined. Her smoky gray eyes were barely visible through the light that filtered outside from the room’s candles. He could see them in his mind’s eye—sultry and mysterious—as he whirled her around the veranda.

His gloved hand felt the tight clutch of her corset but even then he thought he could feel the flesh beneath it.

She moved with him in perfect synchrony, as if they were made to dance together, the actress and the rogue marquess. As if they were the only two people in the world as they spun and whirled.

Then the music stopped and so did the enchantment.

He looked down at her flushed face. Bloody hell, but she was lovely.

“Thank you,” she said breathlessly. “You dance well,” she added in a low voice.

“For an American?”

“For the man I just saw stumbling in the ballroom.”

“You inspire me.”

Her eyes widened as she looked beyond him. He turned and saw Stanhope coming out the door. “I will tell Lord Stanhope that I was giving you a lesson in the dance, and you are an apt pupil.”

He grinned. “You are an exceptional teacher.” She gave him a sideways glance just as Stanhope reached them. His eyes looked even angrier, if that was possible, and Gabriel wondered whether he’d noticed the energy that hummed between Monique Fremont and himself.

He had. His glance swept both of them. “Mademoiselle,” he said in a stiff voice. “I believe it is time to go.”

She nodded.

Stanhope turned to him. “Do not play with my daughter, Manchester. I am warning you.”

But Gabriel knew he didn’t give a damn about his daughter. He was warning him about Monique.

“Rest assured, Lord Stanhope,” he said. “I think your daughter is charming. I was simply keeping Miss Fremont safe for you, and in turn she offered me a dance lesson.” He stopped. “Oh, and I thought you would like to know that the funds are on the way.”

He bowed and turned away.

Monique could feel Stanhope’s fury. It was taking every bit of his willpower not to show it. But it did show in the carriage—in the way his hand clutched the handle of his cane.

She wasn’t sure where it was aimed. Possibly at her and Manchester, but she had felt it earlier as well. He’d been a powder keg ever since he arrived at her town house. Something had happened today.

She knew her half sister felt it, too. Her face was carved in stone, her eyes were full of apprehension.

Stanhope had originally planned to take them to two balls. The second, he indicated, was at the home of an important investor who had wanted to meet the acclaimed Miss Fremont.

“I think we should take your daughter home,” she said.

She saw him evaluate that proposal.

“Yes, Father,” Pamela said. “I am tired.”

He turned on her. “I do not care what you are. I asked you to keep Manchester interested and you …”

Pamela bit her lips. “Lord Manchester danced with me and escorted me to supper. You know any more would be …”

Stanhope turned on Monique, his face twisted with fury. “And you, madam, you made a spectacle of yourself with Manchester.”

Monique lifted her chin to do battle. “You do not own me, my lord. You left me to go off to your friends.”

“You had no right to …”

“To what?”

“What exactly is he to you?”

“He is nothing,” she replied. And that was what he was. Nothing. She remembered the way he had leaned over and whispered something in Pamela’s ear, the way she had looked back at him with something akin to worship. Moments later he’d done the same blasted thing to her.

He was a scoundrel and a womanizer, and she couldn’t understand why she still felt warm inside whenever his image invaded her mind.

Stanhope rapped his cane on the back of the carriage. It came to a stop and a small door opened. “Your lordship?”

“Stop at my house,” he said.

In minutes the carriage rolled up to the Stanhope residence. He stayed in his seat as the driver stepped down, opened the carriage door, and helped Pamela alight.

Pamela soundlessly thanked Monique with her eyes.

Then the carriage moved again.

She looked at Stanhope. “Where do we go now?”

“The Lancaster ball,” he said.

She watched his face. “Something is disturbing you. Surely it can’t be that one dance?”

“No …”

She waited for him to continue. She’d discovered long ago that a wide-eyed glance was more effective than spoken questions. Patience had its rewards.

But not tonight. Not with Stanhope. “It has nothing to do with you, mademoiselle.” His lips turned into what she supposed was to be a charming smile. “I am sorry I was abrupt. Some business matters.”

“I understand,” she said.

“We shall enjoy the rest of the evening,” he said. “It should be a sad crush.”

“Sad crush?”

“A crowded affair,” he explained. “Your English is so exceptional I tend to forget that you are French.”

Merci, my lord. It is my training as an actress.”

“Of course.” He was all charm now, though she still felt the tension in him. “Now let me tell you about our host and hostess. The marquess is so looking forward to meeting you.”

“Will the Earl of Daven or Lord Stammell be present?”

He frowned. “They do not often attend such functions. I imagine they are gambling at White’s or some other establishment.”

She fanned herself.

“I understand you had supper with Stammell.”

“He is an interesting man.”

“Strange. I never thought so.”

“I thought he was your friend.”

“He is my business associate.”

“Tell me about your businesses.”

“It’s much too complicated and boring for you, my dear. Why don’t you tell me instead about your impressions of London? How does it compare to Paris?”

Gabriel left the ball. He had other plans tonight.

Even at one in the morning the city was humming. Boston went to bed at night. London was coming alive.

He wondered how anyone accomplished anything when a night of revelry ended at dawn.

Gabriel had caught a few hours of sleep earlier, knowing it would be a late evening.

His objective tonight was to find Stammel or Daven and relieve them of their money. He wanted Stanhope to believe they had reason to steal from him. A few large losses would suit his plan just fine.

He realized it was a balancing act. He had made a reputation as a bumbler, and now he intended to be a card shark. It had to be dumb luck.

He could do that.

He made his way from one club to another. He missed Daven by a matter of minutes at one establishment. Then he found Stammel.

The man looked up at him through squinting eyes as Gabriel reached his table. “Room for another?”

“Ah, Manchester, is it?” Stammel said with a gleam in his eyes. The other men at the Stable looked at him curiously. “Marsh is just leaving.”

One man looked surprised at the news, then nodded. He swept up some notes and obediently stood.

Gabriel sat down. “What are we playing?”

“Whist.”

“Cannot say I know the game well, but …”

Several hours later he leaned back, a cigar in his hand. A pile of notes and paper lay in front of him.

“A bloody good game,” he said with satisfaction. “Never won so much before. Hardly won at all, in fact. Fancy that!”

“You have to give us the opportunity to win it back,” Stammel said.

“I jolly will, but not tonight, gentlemen. I can barely see the cards for the champagne.”

“Tomorrow night?” Stammel persisted.

Gabriel shifted positions and gave him a shrug and eyed one of the pieces of paper in front of him. “Perhaps. In the meantime, when can I expect you to settle with me?”

Stammel’s face reddened. “A gentleman would …”

Gabriel stood. “I have other affairs,” he said. “Other business.” His glance returned to Stammel. “One does not gamble what one does not have. I will expect your funds at my lodgings tomorrow.” He gave the address, turned, and bowed to the others. “A fine pleasure, gentlemen.”

He found his cane, stuck his quizzing glass in his eye, and made his departure. Once outside, he looked for a carriage. He had several hundred pounds in his pocket and a five-thousand-pound note from Stammel.