A Hellion in Her Bed (11 page)

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Authors: Sabrina Jeffries

Tags: #American Light Romantic Fiction, #Romance - Historical, #Fiction, #Romance, #Romance: Historical, #Historical, #American Historical Fiction, #General, #Fiction - Romance

BOOK: A Hellion in Her Bed
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Still, he noticed that Masters hadn’t responded to his admonition. He hadn’t laughed it off or agreed to stay away or said anything to reassure Jarret that there was nothing between him and Minerva. And that worried Jarret.

“So you’re traveling to Burton tomorrow, are you?” Pinter said conversationally.

Jarret forced his attention to the task at hand. “Yes. To take a look at Lake Ale Brewery.”

“The young lady seemed surprised to hear of your plans.”

“Yes, she did.” And not just surprised, but panicked. She’d even tried to talk him out of it. Something was going on there, something she wasn’t telling him.

He took a long pull on his tankard. Whatever it was, he would uncover it. Wager or no, he meant to go into this enterprise with his eyes fully open. Too much was at stake.

But that wasn’t a matter for the runner. “Pinter, I want to hire you.”

“To do what?”

He outlined his concerns about Oliver’s version of their parents’ deaths, which was that his quarrel with Mother had sent her off in a rage to kill Father. Oliver had said that Pinter knew everything about that night except why Oliver and Mother had quarreled, so Jarret kept that part to himself.

“So you see,” Jarret finished, “I need you to track down the grooms who were there that night.”

“None of them are in service at Halstead Hall any longer?”

“No. Gran took us to live with her in London after the … accident.” He refused to call it murder. Mother would never have shot Father purposely, no matter what Oliver claimed. “Gran let most of the staff go when she closed the estate.”

“But I understand that Lord Stoneville hired them back after he reached his majority and moved into your family’s house in Acton.”

“Not the grooms. They’d already found positions. I imagine they’re scattered across England by now.”

Pinter looked pensive. “Perhaps not. Servants tend to stay in the areas they’re accustomed to. I doubt I’ll have to look far.”

“If you go out to the estate tomorrow, you can get a list of their names from Oliver’s steward. He’d have the records.”

Pinter squared his shoulders. “Is the family in residence at present?”

Jarret stifled a smile, knowing full well why Pinter asked. “No. The girls returned to the town house to help care for Gran after she became ill, and Gabe and I have been staying at our bachelor quarters.” Jarret grinned. “So you won’t have to worry about Celia and her sharp tongue.”

The runner’s gray eyes showed nothing. “Lady Celia is entitled to her opinions.”

“Even when they concern you and your ‘rigid adherence to stupid rules’?” Jarret asked, determined to get some reaction out of the impossibly stoic Pinter.

If Jarret hadn’t been watching for it, he wouldn’t have seen the faint tic in the man’s jaw. “Lady Celia is entitled to her opinions, whatever they are,” Pinter said with a deceptive nonchalance. “So, should I send my report to Burton? Will you be there long?”

Jarret took pity on the man, allowing him to change the subject. “I’m not sure. I hope not. But just in case, send a copy to me at Lake Ale Brewery. If I miss it, I can get it from you here.”

“Very well.” Pinter started to rise.

“One more thing.” A suspicion had nagged at him ever since Oliver had made his confession. Perhaps it was time he cleared up that little matter as well, if only to ease his own mind. “I have another job for you, if you can afford the time.”

Pinter sat back down. “If you can afford to pay me, I can afford the time.”

As one of the most celebrated of London’s Bow Street Runners, Pinter made his own hours, his own rules. He was one of the few to have an office he paid for himself, since he was
widely sought after for private investigations when he wasn’t working for the public good.

“Excellent. Here’s what I’d like you to do …”

H
ETTY
P
LUMTREE WAS
beginning to regret she’d ever made that cursed bargain with her grandson. Jarret would shave ten years off her life before the year was out. Entertain a proposal from some tiny brewery in Burton? Even speak to Mr. Harper about it? That boded ill.

She stared at Mr. Croft, who sat stiffly erect at her bedside, having just given her his dawn report. “You’re sure he was speaking of the India market? Not the West Indies market, perchance?”

“Why would he speak of the West Indies? It’s in an entirely different part of the world. I can’t imagine his confusing the two. Eton’s lessons in geography might be lacking, but his lordship isn’t so devoid of knowledge of the world as to be—”

“Mr. Croft!” Sometimes getting information from him was like unraveling a carpet one strand at a time.

“Oh. Beg pardon. I was rambling again, wasn’t I? In any case, it was definitely the India market, because I distinctly remembered your saying that you didn’t intend to enter that particular area, and he told the woman something to that effect. Indeed, he seemed to agree with your assessment.”

Ah, well, at least Jarret had
some
sense. The East India Company was unpredictable. Look at how its captains had turned on Hodgson’s after the man had raised his prices.

“Tell me about this brewster you mentioned.” She already knew that Miss Lake must be pretty, since whenever Mr. Croft mentioned her, he blushed. Mr. Croft turned into a
blithering idiot around pretty women, which is probably why the female had managed to get past him.

“What do you wish to know?”

She coughed violently a moment, alarming Mr. Croft. A pox on this blasted cough of hers. When was it going to end? “How old was the woman?”

Hetty had not given up on marrying Jarret off, despite their bargain. But she wanted great-grandchildren, and the older the woman, the less likely she was as a prospect.

“Young, I would guess.”

She sighed. Mr. Croft made an excellent spy in some ways, but he was not adept at judging age. “You said she pushed her way into the office. Was she a gentlewoman?”

“Most assuredly. I thought her quite genteel until she dashed around my desk.”

“And my grandson did not throw her out right away?”

“No. He tasted her ale and talked with her for some time. Then he promised to speak to you last night about her proposal.”

Thank God Mr. Croft excelled at listening at keyholes. “Instead he went off to play cards and drink with that scapegrace Masters.” Another fit of coughing ensued, which made her even crankier. “One of these days I shall pin that lad’s ears back.”

“His lordship’s?”

“Masters’s.”

A new voice sounded from the doorway. “I’ll hold him down for you while you do.”

She glanced up, startled. Good Lord, Jarret was here. He never came in the morning, and certainly not this early. How much had he heard?

He cast Mr. Croft a long, considering look. “Mr. Croft,
if you wish to continue in the brewery’s employ, this will be your last dawn meeting with my grandmother. I won’t tolerate spies.”

Mr. Croft jumped to his feet. “My lord … I did not—”

“It’s all right, Mr. Croft,” Hetty put in. “You may go.”

The poor man backed toward the door, keeping a wary eye on Jarret as if he thought the lad might throw a punch at him. Then he made a swift exit.

Jarret took Mr. Croft’s seat, stretching his long legs out and folding his hands over his belly. “You can’t trust me to run the place on my own, can you?”

She stared at him, unrepentant. “Would
you
, if you were me?”

“I suppose not.” His expression hardened. “But I swear, I’ll dismiss the little weasel if he ever again—”

“You will not. He supports a mother and five sisters. And he knows every inch of Plumtree Brewery from the ground up.”

Jarret leaned forward. “Well then, I’ll dismiss myself. Our agreement was that you would keep your hands off, and if you can’t even hold to that stricture, I see no point in continuing.”

“Oh, all right,” she grumbled. “I will tell Mr. Croft not to come here anymore.” She coughed into her handkerchief. “If you kept me informed the way you promised, I would not have to resort to such measures.”

“I keep you informed well enough.”

“Then why did I have to hear about this Lake Ale woman from Mr. Croft?” She erupted into another fit of coughing.

“Careful, Gran. Dr. Wright says you’re not supposed to excite yourself.” His unemotional tone would have hurt her feelings if not for the worry she’d seen flash across his face.

“Dr. Wright can go to hell,” she retorted.

“If you don’t listen to him, you’ll beat him there.” Now worry had filtered into his voice as well.

She shot him a sharp glance. “Are you saying I am destined for hell?”

He gave a rueful smile. “Perhaps.” When she glared at him, his smile faded. “I’m saying you need to watch your health. And you’re not going to do so by fretting over every little tale Mr. Croft lays at your feet.”

The impudent whelp had no idea how hard it was to step back and hand over the reins at her age. “What are you doing here at this hour, anyway? I thought you played cards last night with your rascal friends.”

A mild annoyance flickered in his eyes. “I see that Mr. Croft’s reports are very thorough.”

“They had better be. I pay him well for them.” She sharpened her gaze on him. “So? What has made you rise with the chickens?”

“I’m traveling to Burton today.”

She stared at him, instantly wary. “Why?”

He shrugged. “To speak to the owner of Lake Ale about our selling their October brew for them.”

“To the East India Company?”

“Among others.”

So the pretty Miss Lake had convinced him to consider her proposal, had she? Interesting. Now Hetty had to decide how to play this.

On the one hand, she did not wish to lose the company due to Jarret following his cock. On the other hand, Plumtree Brewery was ailing and she wasn’t sure she had the strength for the battle to save it.

Jarret could do it, though. She had no intention of watching him hand the place back to her at the end of the year. She
wanted him well and truly hooked. And you only hooked a fish by giving him a little line.

But could the brewery withstand such an experiment in these hard times?

It didn’t matter. If she put her foot down now, she would never get Jarret near it again, and Plumtree Brewery needed someone with his intelligence to run it. She had to risk giving him his head, for the future good of the company.

Besides, this woman brewer might be the key to shifting his interest from gambling to brewing. Jarret had only the most shallow relations with women. He’d been much like his older brother in that respect. Miss Lake could change that, especially if she’d managed to interest him in a project enough to get him hieing off to Burton.

Brewing was in his blood. She had ignored that to her peril, when she had sent him off to Eton against his wishes. He had been punishing her for it ever since. So he must continue to think he was punishing her.

What he must not guess is that he was playing into her hands. And of all her grandchildren, Jarret was the most suspicious.

“I do not want Plumtree Brewery to get into the India trade,” she said, feeling her way along.

With a black scowl, he sat up in his chair. “You don’t have a say in it.”

Ah, that’s the spirit.
“But Jarret—”

“It could bolster our profits considerably.”

“It could sink us, too. It has damned near sunk Hodgson’s.”

He conceded that with a nod. “But Allsopp’s in Burton is profiting from it. Why shouldn’t we?”

“What if I forbid you from involving us?”

That stubborn look he sometimes got passed across his
face. “What if I hand you back your brewery?” He rose and headed for the door.

“Wait!”
Well played, Jarret, well played.
He would make a fine captain of industry one day. She must have been mad to think he should be a barrister.

Now came the difficult part—giving in without making it look too easy. “What am I to do about Plumtree Brewery while you are gone?”

He halted at the door to shoot her a wary glance. “Harper and Croft can handle matters for a few days. I’ll make sure they know what needs to be done. I shouldn’t be away long.”

She scowled. “I am not giving you my blessing in this.”

“Then it’s a good thing I don’t need your blessing.” He crossed his arms over his chest. “I didn’t come here to gain permission or approval. I came to keep you informed. Since I’ve done what I came for, I’m leaving. Is that clear?”

Insolent rascal. She managed a stiff nod.

“Good.” He surprised her by coming over to kiss her on the forehead. “Listen to Dr. Wright, will you? And for God’s sake, take care of yourself.”

Then he was gone.

She waited until she heard the door close downstairs before calling for her slyest footman.

“Follow my grandson,” she ordered him, “but do it discreetly. Eventually, he’ll go to an inn. There should be a guest there named Miss Lake, whom Lord Jarret is accompanying out of town. Once he and the woman leave, find out everything you can about her from the innkeeper and report back.”

With a nod, the footman hurried off to do her bidding.

Hetty collapsed against the pillow with a smile. It was already looking to be a very good day.

Chapter Seven

A
nnabel watched as Sissy nervously paced the inn’s common room the next morning, then halted in front of her.

“How do I look?” Sissy was wearing her best day gown of purple velvet, adorned with the amethysts she donned only for special occasions. Her cheeks were flushed, and her blue eyes bright.

“You look lovely, as usual,” Annabel answered.

“And you look like a washerwoman.” Sissy made a face. “I can’t believe you chose to wear that brown thing. We’re riding with a marquess’s son, for heaven’s sake!”

“We’ll be traipsing in and out of inns, and it looks like rain. I’m
not
going to wear my Sunday best just because Lord Jarret happens to be a lord.” And certainly not just because he’d kissed her senseless in the hall. Or made her feel things, want things …

She must stop thinking about that! Today he’d probably probe more into why Lake Ale was in trouble, and she had to be ready. Becoming a dreamy-eyed romantic every time he flashed his dimpled smile would not help.

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