Damn her. What did she want him to do? Profess undying love? Ask for her hand in marriage? She was a duchess, for God’s sake. She acted as though he’d forgotten what she was, what he was. He hadn’t. All the money in the world wouldn’t cleanse his origins from him, wouldn’t make it acceptable for him to marry her.
Not that he’d ever consider marriage.
Still, he couldn’t imagine his house without her in it. Couldn’t imagine not hearing the echo of her sharp steps as she strode through the hallways to confront him about one matter or another. Couldn’t imagine the scent of her perfume not wafting from her bedchamber into his via the dressing room, couldn’t imagine it not being on the pillow next to his. Couldn’t imagine silence at meals, laughter unheard, smiles unseen.
He, who had always longed for the next coin, now yearned for something more. A woman. He thought he’d give up every coin he possessed if she would bestow upon him just one more smile.
The knock on his office door made him glower. He didn’t want company, but before he could tell whoever it was that he wasn’t at home—what a silly bit of nonsense that was—the door opened and Swindler stepped in.
“Frannie said I’d find you here.”
No doubt after he’d spent considerable time talking with her. Jack didn’t know why the man didn’t just profess his love for her, ask for her hand in marriage, and be done with it.
On the other hand, maybe he should ask the same of himself regarding Olivia. What was the worst that would happen? She’d say no and he’d send her to the country.
“You all right?” Swindler asked.
“Of course.” Jack reached back and grabbed a glass. He filled it with whiskey, set it in front of Swindler as he took his seat, and then refilled his own glass. “You’re a bit late in informing me that Briarwood is spreading rumors about me.”
“I’m sorry, but I’ve had several things I’ve been investigating of late, and you’re not the one who pays my salary.”
“Quit your job and come work for me exclusively. I’ll pay you more than Scotland Yard does.”
“I like my job, thank you very much.”
Jack shrugged. “So what do you have? Did you find out anything about my mother?”
“I’m not hopeful there of ever finding anything. But the other matter you asked me about—Lovingdon engaging in any perversions…”
A hint of something in Swindler’s voice had Jack sitting up straighter. “Yes?”
“I found nothing where he was concerned, but his cousin gives me pause.”
“Briarwood?”
“Rupert Stanford. He’s very much a recluse. According to his maid-of-all-work, the only servant he had until he let her go two days ago, he nearly worked her into the ground keeping everything clean. She was with him for nearly twenty years. He took in maybe a dozen boys during that time. One at a time. Apparently with the intent of finding each boy a proper home. One day she would come into work and find the boy no longer there. She always assumed he’d carried through on his promise, found them someplace else to live.”
“Which he might have,” Jack said, but he wasn’t feeling good about this.
“He well might have. I have nothing conclusive, but I find it troubling in light of your earlier concerns.”
“Perhaps we should visit him.”
The house was not particularly grand, but it was vaguely familiar. Could this be the dwelling he’d been searching for when he aimlessly walked the streets? He remembered the man’s house as being larger, but then to a child of the rookeries—the child that Jack had been—a residence such as this would have taken on the mystique of a palace. Swindler banged the knocker.
“Doesn’t appear anyone’s home,” Swindler said.
“I want to see inside.”
The light from a nearby streetlamp cast a faint glow over Swindler’s face as he arched a brow and gave Jack a stare. Jack stared back until Swindler sighed. “Did you want to do the honors, or shall I?”
Jack felt the slightest of tremors in his hand. “You.”
“Your coachman and footman—”
“Are discreet.”
“They’d better be.”
Swindler reached into his pocket for his tools. Jack angled his body to form some cover for the illegal action. He heard the click and the door swung open with an ominous creak.
He walked in and was greeted with the fragrance of too much soap and furniture wax. A match flared to life. Swindler located an oil lamp and lit it.
“What exactly are we looking for?” Swindler asked.
“A bedchamber.” His voice rasped along his nerve endings.
“Upstairs, I’d say.”
With a nod, Jack bounded up the stairs. Swindler followed. The lamp Swindler carried cast an eerie glow, chasing back shadows, revealing things bit by bit. Nothing looked particularly familiar.
Then they reached the upstairs hallway. There were only four doors. Jack opened the second on the right.
And he was five years old again. Missing his mother, but excited at the prospect of having a bed to sleep in. It was winter. There was a fire in the hearth and it was so nice and toasty. His mother had begun to talk a lot about going to a place called heaven. He decided this had to be it.
“Let’s take a bath, shall we?”
Jack squeezed his eyes closed against the memories. Had Stanford met his mother when she was a servant in the Lovingdon household? He fought to remember—
“Miss Dawkins?”
She was holding Jack’s hand, late at night in the rookeries—
She turned, curtsied. “Mr. Stanford.”
“What have you here?”
“My son, Jack.”
“Jack? Jack? Are you all right?”
Jack opened his eyes at Swindler’s urging and walked farther into the room. “They talked. I couldn’t hear the words. We went to a tavern, ate this wonderful pie with meat in it. They kept talking. All the while he held her hand.”
“What are you talking about?” Swindler asked.
Jack shook his head. He couldn’t explain the unexplainable, but he remembered that when they left, Stanford gave Jack’s mother the coin purse and she’d given Jack the locket. Then Stanford had brought him here.
Jack walked to the fireplace, bent down, and looked up the flue that had served as his escape tunnel. He’d worked to get the coals off the hearth, burned his feet and hands going up. That had been his first lesson in what a person would do if he wanted something badly enough. He’d been willing to suffer anything to get out.
He spun around and looked back at the bed with the four posts decorated with elaborate vines carved into them. His stomach roiled with memories of what had happened there.
Walking back to Swindler, Jack took the lamp from him and tossed it onto the bed. Flames erupted over the counterpane.
“Good God, have you gone mad?” Swindler asked.
Jack was already on his way through the door. “We have to find Stanford.”
They returned to the club—not as quickly as Jack would have preferred since Swindler insisted on alerting the fire brigade so they had an opportunity to prevent the flames from spreading beyond Stanford’s residence. Jack took some comfort in knowing at least the bed was destroyed.
“You do realize that I can’t arrest him,” Swindler said now as they sat in Jack’s office.
“Sodomy is against the law.”
“But I have no one to testify.”
“I’ll testify.”
Swindler looked away as though suddenly very uncomfortable. Jack supposed it was one thing to have suspicions, another to have confirmation.
“We should probably just handle it ourselves,” Swindler said quietly. “It’s not as though we haven’t done that before. I’m sure there’s someone scheduled for a hanging who doesn’t deserve it.”
“You’d switch prisoners? You don’t think anyone would notice?”
“You could beat him until he was unrecognizable. I’m certain you’d find some satisfaction in that.”
Jack nodded. “I would indeed.”
The door suddenly opened and Thomas Lark, one of the older boys who helped out in the gaming room, rushed in.
“Thomas, you’re supposed to knock,” Jack said.
“Yes, sir, I know, but this was just delivered by a gent who said it was of the utmost importance.”
Jack snatched the envelope Thomas extended. Inside he found a message that caused his heart to thunder.
Mr. Dodger,
Please return to the residence immediately. A dire situation has arisen and you’re desperately needed.
Your faithful servant,
Brittles
“Thank God you’ve arrived sir,” Brittles said in a rush as soon as Jack walked into the residence, Swindler at his side.
“What’s the trouble, man?”
“It’s the duchess, sir. She’s gone missing.”
“Is that all? She was going to take Henry to the country. I’m assuming she couldn’t wait until the morning to be rid of me—”
“No, sir, Henry’s here.”
Everything in Jack stilled. “She’d not leave Henry.”
“Exactly, sir. She and her son were walking in the garden when someone apparently came out of the shadows, according to the young duke. He escaped, but by the time we realized what he was trying to tell us—he was stammering something fierce, sir—the duchess was gone.”
“Where’s Henry now?”
“In the day nursery, sir.”
Jack bounded up the stairs, aware of Swindler and Brittles following behind him. For the first time, Brittles’s steps were not silent. Jack took no comfort in that.
He barged into the day nursery. Ida was sitting in a rocker, Henry in her lap holding his dog. Henry scrambled out of Ida’s lap, Pippin leaping to the floor. Before Jack could react, Henry had rushed across the short distance separating them and wound his arms tightly around Jack’s legs.
“I d-did wh-what you t-taught me, sir. I d-dodged away,” Henry said, his words muffled, his face pressed against Jack’s thigh.
Jack crouched, hugging Henry tightly. “You were a good boy, Henry.”
“I think h-he t-took Mummy.” Henry leaned back, tears coursing down his cheeks. “You should have t-taught Mummy how to dodge.”
“Yes, I should have. Do you know who took her?”
Henry bobbed his head quickly. “Cousin Rupert. Father told me t-to n-never go any-anywhere with Cousin R-Rupert.”
Had Lovingdon known what Jack now did? Was Rupert Stanford the one Jack was supposed to protect Henry against? It all made sense, if Lovingdon had seen how Jack protected the boys who worked for him. Couldn’t he have left a bloody message?
“Did he hurt you?” Jack asked.
Henry shook his head emphatically. “But when I ran off, I heard Mummy scream. I think he might have hit her. I shouldn’t have r-run.”
“No, you did the right thing, because now I only have to worry about your mum and not you.”
“You’ll save her?”
“Absolutely.” Although he hadn’t a bloody clue where to start. Thank goodness, Swindler was there.
“Sir, I don’t mean to interrupt,” Brittles said, holding out an envelope with Jack’s name on it. “This was delivered a short while ago.”
Jack snatched it from him and tore into the envelope. The missive was short and to the point.
I have the duchess. Bring me one hundred thousand pounds by dawn or she dies. We’ll be waiting at the top floor, far corner.
Jack knew the address written at the bottom of the note. It was in the rookeries.
“Where are we?” Olivia asked.
She was sitting on the floor in a shadowed corner, her hands tied behind her. She was fighting not to be terrified. She’d taken a blow to the head and woken up here. Her mouth tasted of laudanum and her thoughts were fuzzy. She wanted to go to sleep but she knew there was a reason she shouldn’t.
“The rookeries.” The hoarse whisper came from another dark corner, near the window, the man’s silhouette swallowed by the gloom. A solitary lantern was no help against it. It served to illuminate her more than him. “It’s easier to handle improper things here. I’ve instructed Mr. Dodger to bring me a hundred thousand pounds or you’ll die.”
Olivia heard in his voice that he was deadly serious. A fissure of dread threatened to overwhelm her.
“If he doesn’t deliver, I’ll carry out my promise, then I’ll return for your son.”
“Not Henry.” She remembered Henry had been with her. “Where is he?”
“The little bugger eluded me.”
Relief swamped her. She had a vague recollection of him darting away. Jack wouldn’t part with his precious money for Olivia, but she had no doubt that he would protect Henry.
“Dodger won’t come,” she said.
“He’ll come.”
She released a bitter laugh, fighting to control it so she didn’t sound hysterical. “You’ve asked him for money. It’s the one thing with which he will not part.”
“Then that will be most unfortunate for you.”
Suddenly he moved quickly, crouching before her. She felt something eerily cold against the underside of her chin. “Is that a pistol?” she whispered.
“It is indeed, and I’m very accurate. I’ve given him until dawn.”
Then, to her astonishment, she recognized him. “Stanford? Rupert Stanford?”
“I’m surprised you remember me. Your husband did not welcome me in his home very often.”
“Why are you doing this?”
“Because your son’s guardian has been making inquiries about me and things are coming to light that I wished to remain in the dark. I need to make a hasty departure and I haven’t the funds needed to do so.”
“So you kidnapped me?”
“I saw the way he looked at you when he brought you to Dodger’s. You see, I, too, was in the shadows. He has some lovely boys working for him, but he and his staff watch them as though they were the Crown Jewels. And they all have so much confidence that they aren’t easily swayed. But I’m certain wherever I go that I can find what I need.”
“Dear God, you’re a monster.”
“Yes, yes, I am.”
He moved away. She swung out her legs as best she could, hoping to trip him up but he easily sidestepped. “Careful, Duchess. I’m not in the habit of hurting ladies, but I can always make an exception.”
Jack knew the rookeries like the back of his hand. A lot of evil men lived there. A lot of good men too. With the satchel filled with a hundred thousand pounds gripped tightly in one hand, a lantern in the other, he walked among the detritus of society, fearing no evil because he carried a knife in his boot, a pistol in his pocket, and—in the hand holding the satchel—a walking stick that came apart to reveal a sword.
The abductor had said to come alone. He’d said nothing about coming unarmed—which made Jack think Rupert Stanford was only marginally familiar with the rookeries. Obviously he knew it well enough to identify a meeting place, but not well enough to know that many of the people there were armed. Or maybe he knew little of Jack, thought he wouldn’t have a clue regarding the destination to which he was walking.
Jack wasn’t a fool. He thought it unlikely Stanford would let Olivia or Jack live once he had his money.
There was just enough light that Jack could see the shadows keeping pace with him if he turned his head just so. Shadows had always served as his friends.
Tonight was no exception.
They effectively hid Luke and Swindler as they followed at a discreet distance. Graves and Frannie walked in the open, giving the impression they were a couple looking for a place for an illicit rendezvous. When Jack desperately needed them, Feagan’s brood had come through for him.
He reached the abandoned building, which looked as though a strong wind might blow it down. In foul weather people would take refuge here, but on a clear night it wasn’t worth the risk. It would be very difficult to go up to the third floor without being heard. He supposed that was the point.
He made his way carefully inside, the rats scurrying away. He knew they’d return. They always returned. Holding the lantern high, he glanced around. Even though he’d never been here before, everything was familiar. Little difference existed between one building and another there.
He started up the stairs. They creaked beneath his weight. No point in treading lightly. He hurried up them, his heart pounding.
“Livy!”
He heard nothing. She could be gagged, she could be dead, she—
“Jack!”
He staggered, the relief so great his legs nearly gave out on him when at the same time a surge of energy shot through him. He rushed up the stairs, barely stopping at the landing, simply charging down the hallway. He could see pale light easing out of one room. It could be a trick, so he slowed his step, angling the lantern to give him the best light.
“Livy!”
“We’re here!”
She and Rupert Stanford. He could barely stand the thought of that bastard touching her, but he fought back the fury because he had to keep a clear head.
Jack walked slowly, cautiously. He peered into the room—
Livy was standing beside Stanford in the corner, near the window, and Jack wondered if he’d been looking out, watching for his approach. It didn’t matter. He’d have not seen anything.
As Jack stepped into the room he was hit with an odor. Anyone else probably would have considered it a fragrance. It was a rich scent, undoubtedly masculine, but it caused his stomach to roil as memories assaulted him. That scent crawling into bed with him when he was a boy, offering comfort before it hurt him.
He raised the lantern higher and saw the unholy gleam in the eyes that glittered at him—like those of a rat coming up out of the sewer. Everything in Jack went cold. He thought he’d prepared himself for this encounter, but suddenly he was five years old again, terrified, hurting, ashamed.
He fought to focus on the here and now. “Rupert Stanford.”
“You say that as though I know you.”
“We’ve met before. My mother was Emily Dawkins.”
“You’re Jack Dawkins?” Stanford released a bark of laughter. “It is a small world. You changed your name…how clever. I’ll do the same, now that my meddling cousin and your suspicious inspector have been uncovering my business.”
“Business? Taking advantage of young boys?”
He heard Livy’s sharp intake of breath at the revelation.
“My cousin has told me all about you, about the boys you keep. I think we’re very much alike—”
“I’m nothing like you,” Jack ground out. “I protect them.”
“As I did you. Your mother was dying, poor thing. I gave her a few coins to ease the way and took you in so she wasn’t burdened with worry. But then you had the audacity to escape. The only one ever to escape.”
Something in the man’s voice…Jack knew the longer he kept him talking the greater his advantage. He needed to give the others time to position themselves.
“The only one? Do the boys still live with you?” He’d seen no evidence of it.
“In my garden,” Stanford said wistfully.
“You killed them?”
“I’d love to stay and chat, but I really must be off.”
“You’re not taking Livy with you.”
“She’s my insurance. Set the satchel down and move across the room.”
Jack took two steps and released a shrill whistle. A crash sounded as the window was smashed.
Stanford glanced back, giving Jack the narrow space he was looking for, just enough that he could shoulder his way in, shove Livy aside, and take Stanford to the floor. He fought to wrench the pistol free of Stanford’s grasp, but the man, while older, was surprisingly strong and agile. They struggled, rolling over the floor. Jack tried to leverage himself—
An explosion rent the night as the pistol went off, and Jack felt the fire of its report burning his chest as warm blood seeped through his favorite red waistcoat.
Olivia had barely hit the floor before the pistol thundered and both men went completely still.
“Oh, God, oh, God. Jack.”
Suddenly someone came in through the window. Before she could scream, she heard, “It’s all right, it’s Swindler.”
The thud of heavy footsteps sounded outside in the hallway and two more large shadows burst into the room, followed by a smaller one. Frannie crossed over and took Olivia in her arms. “Are you all right?”
Olivia nodded and whispered. “Jack?”
Frannie began working on the knots in the rope securing Olivia’s hands.
“Jack,” Swindler said sternly.
Olivia watched as a man rose up. She recognized the form, would forever recognize that shape. “Jack?”
“I’m all right,” he said, his voice hard as he crouched beside her husband’s cousin.
She heard harsh breathing, a gurgling sound—
“Jack, I need to see to him,” Dr. Graves said, and Olivia realized he was one of the men who’d come inside. The other was Claybourne.
“No,” Jack said.
Stanford coughed and gagged.
“The boys? How many were there?” Jack demanded.
“You…the first.”
“And after me? How many, damn you?”
“Don’t…know.”
“You killed them? Buried them in your garden? Is that what you were saying with all your cryptic words?”
But Rupert Stanford made no sound.
“Answer me, you bastard.”
“He’s dead,” Dr. Graves said somberly.
Jack slowly unfolded his body. Suddenly his arms were around Olivia, holding her tightly until she could barely breathe. “I didn’t think you’d come.”
“Of course I’d come,” he growled.
“He said he was asking for a hundred thousand pounds.”
“I’d have given him everything, Livy. Everything to have you back safely.”
Jack and Olivia returned home immediately while Swindler and the others saw to the matter of Rupert Stanford and reporting tonight’s incident to Scotland Yard. The first thing Olivia did was dash up the stairs to the nursery and hold Henry close.
“I knew he’d save you,” Henry said.
It humbled her that Henry had possessed so much unquestionable faith in Jack, while she’d had so little. Never again would she make that mistake. Tonight she’d made many, and she intended to correct them all.
She considered how to go about that while she took a wonderful hot bath to get the grime of the rookeries off her. After that night’s experiences, she thought she’d probably take a full bath every day in the future. She’d hoped Jack would join her that night, would come in to see how she was doing, but when he didn’t, she put on her nightgown and went in search of him.
She found him in the library, sitting in a chair, his elbows on his thighs, his hands wrapped around a glass, the bottle nearby waiting to do its duty, to numb what had been a traumatizing night.
She padded across the carpet, knelt before him and wrapped a hand around each of his wrists. “I can’t imagine what you’re feeling.”
“No, you probably can’t. Before tonight I had no name for the man who took me, but he was Stanford. I don’t know if I never knew his name or simply forgot it. It’s been nearly thirty years. I think he must have known my mother. She knew him, trusted him. They must have met when she worked here. She gave me into his keeping, thinking I’d be safe. The first night”—she heard him swallow hard—“he bathed me, put me to bed, then he crawled in with me. He touched me in ways a man shouldn’t touch a boy…he did things that not only ravaged my body but my soul.”
“Dear God, Jack.” She touched his cheek, tried to offer him comfort, but he wasn’t looking at her. He was peering into his past.
“He wept afterward, promised to never do it again. The next night, I learned he was a liar. The third night I ran away.”
Scalding tears welled in her eyes. “You can’t blame yourself for any of that. You were an innocent child. I’m glad he’s dead.”
He shook his head. “There’s more, Livy. I told you that Luke and I were arrested. When you’re convicted, you serve your time in a boys’ prison. But before that, before your trial, you’re kept in gaol with men. There were three, a nasty lot. They set their sights on Luke, but he fought them. God, he was only eight, but he wouldn’t stop fighting. His face was a bloodied mess. I thought they were going to kill him. I knew what they wanted, had survived it before.”
Dear God, no, she thought. Please no.
“I offered myself to them.” The words came out on a strangle.
“Oh, Jack.” She squeezed his hands, pressed her lips to them while the tears coursed down her face and pooled at the corner of her mouth.
“It was worse than I remembered. Or maybe they were just meaner. They broke something in me that night, Livy. I stopped caring about anything except for surviving, and I became convinced that if I had enough money I would always be safe. But inside, I stayed broken. Until you.
“You made me start to feel again. You and Henry. You brought joy into my life. Laughter and smiles. But there is pain in that, too. Caring for someone makes you vulnerable. What I was feeling whenever I was with you terrified the bloody hell out of me, Livy. I didn’t want it. I fought it with everything I could, but tonight I realized if something happened to you, if you died, I’d break again and this time I would remain broken. It’s a safer way to live, but it’s also a life not worth living.
“I love you, Livy. I know I’m not worthy of any affection you might hold for me—”
“Not worthy? I know of no man more worthy.”
“I live in the gutter.”
“You live in St. James. You may have begun your life in the gutter, but I know of no other man who has achieved what you’ve achieved. You are a man of means, who owes nothing to anyone. You have a generous heart. I know you don’t want to hear that, but it’s true. Henry adores you. And damn it, so do I.
“I love you, Jack, with all my heart and soul. I was wrong to listen to Briarwood. I realized it as I was waiting in that dwelling, or whatever it was. I thought of all the moments I had with you, and with Henry. And I prayed I would have a thousand more.”
“You’re wrong there, Livy. Briarwood was right.”
“No—”
He put his finger to her lips. “Shh. He was right. I have corrupted you. Did you not hear what you just said? You used profanity.”
She gave a brittle laugh. “And the roof didn’t fall in on me.”
He cradled her cheek. “I told you that first night there isn’t anything a person won’t do if he wants something badly enough.” He released a deep, painful moan. “I want you—and Henry—to be mine for all eternity. Marry me, Livy.”
“Oh.” She wasn’t expecting that. She was prepared to live the remainder of her life as his mistress, but as his wife? “Oh.”
“Is that a yes or a no?”
She laughed from the joy of it. “I think you’re supposed to be on your knees and I’m supposed to be sitting.”
“You and your damned etiquette,” he said, shaking his head as a teasing smile formed on his lips.
She placed her hands on either side of his face. “Yes, I’ll gladly marry you.”
“We’ll mark the calendar. One day after your mourning period ends—”
“Don’t be silly. I’ll marry you tomorrow.”
“You think the London ladies will forgive you for that breach of etiquette?”
“Of course. I shall have firsthand accounts to share over tea, so they’ll promptly forgive me because they’ll want to know everything I know about the deliciously wicked Jack Dodger.”
“Deliciously wicked?”
“It was how we referred to you.”
“I don’t know that I’m in the mood to be deliciously wicked tonight, but I would like very much to sleep with you in my arms.”
As she lay with Jack that night, she didn’t know if it had been Lovingdon’s intent, but in his passing, he’d given her in death what he’d been unable to grant her in life: joy, passion, and love.