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Authors: Loretta Chase

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BOOK: The Last Hellion
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"Nell, Tom—all of you—help the girls," Lydia snapped, then went for Coralie, who was headed in the same direction and, furious, was far more dangerous than Mick.

"Give it up, Corrie," she shouted. "You're outnumbered."

The bawd paused and turned toward the sound of Lydia's voice. She hesitated but an instant, then swore and changed direction, this time running toward the decrepit wharf.

Lydia followed, but more slowly, keeping her distance. "The boat's gone," she called out. "No way out, Corrie."

Coralie kept on running, down the littered pathway, then down the slippery rocks. Then, "You bitch!" she screamed, and that was the mildest of the epithets she screeched out as she clambered down.

Above the earsplitting obscenities, Lydia heard in the distance the unmistakable roar of a mastiff in hunting mode.

"Thank God," she breathed. She was not at all eager to go down to tangle with Coralie Brees on slippery rocks. Her knife would do little good if she stumbled and cracked her skull. She remained on the path above.

"Drop the bottle, Corrie," she said. "You hear the dog. It's no use fighting. She'll tear you to pieces."

Coralie moved then, but not upward toward the path. She scrambled over the Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

rocks, under the wharf, and on.

She was heading toward the overturned boat Lydia had hidden behind earlier.

The barking was growing closer, but Susan was still minutes away. In minutes, Coralie could right the boat and push it into the river. She'd get away, and tonight's frustrations would only make her more dangerous, wherever she turned up next.

Lydia went after her.

Vere and his companions had heard the screaming from streets away and instantly raced toward it. As they neared the river's edge, he saw a big brute bearing down on a girl, and several smaller figures bearing down on him.

"Lizzy! Em!" he roared. "This way!"

He had to shout several times to make himself heard above the furiously barking Susan, who was straining at the leash, primed for murder.

But finally the command penetrated, and the whole group froze briefly, then scattered. Two slender forms stumbled toward him. Mick stood alone, looking wildly about.

"Get him!" Vere ordered the dog, and released the lead.

Susan charged after Mick, who charged toward the river. The dog caught him by the leg, and down he went into the slime. Susan kept her jaws fastened on his leg.

Trent and Jaynes dashed into the scene then, and Vere left Mick to them while he hurried to his wards, who'd stopped to watch Susan capture Mick.

"Are you all right?" he asked the girls.

In the gloom, he could barely make out their faces, near as they stood. But he could hear them gasping for breath, trying to talk.

Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

He reached out and wrapped an arm around each of them and drew them close.

They sagged against him, and upward wafted an aroma reminiscent of low tide.

"By gad, you do reek," he said, his throat tight. "When was the last time you had a bath?"

He didn't hear their reply, because Susan, having relinquished her prisoner to Jaynes and Bertie, was barking again, frantically.

Vere looked about. He saw several figures in the darkening haze, and none bore the smallest resemblance to his wife.

"Lydia!" he shouted.

"Woof!" Susan said. Then she darted westward.

Vere abruptly released his wards and raced after her.

Vere pushed through the darkness, through a chill fog rank with decay. He couldn't see the pathway, but blindly followed the dog's barking.

"Lydia!" he roared again and again, but the only answer was Susan's barking, growing sharper, more frantic.

He tripped over a rock, clawed for balance, righted himself, and ran on. The images tore at his brain: of Charlie, Robin, of cold tombs, of living faces—all those he'd ever loved—dissolving into the mist, dissolving into shadows, and vanishing.

NO! Not this time. Not her, please God, not her.

"I'm coming!" he shouted, his lungs burning.

A dark form loomed ahead. He noticed the overturned boat a moment too late and tripped, falling face down into the muck. He stumbled up onto his feet and started on, only to stop short an instant later when he saw them.

Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

Not three yards from him was a tangle of shapes, writhing in the dirt and refuse at the river's edge.

Susan darted toward them, then away, again and again, barking wildly.

She didn't know what to do.

Neither did Vere. He saw the flash of a blade, and couldn't tell who held it, or if both were armed. One wrong move on his part could end with a knife in the woman he loved.

He cleared his dry throat. "Stop playing, Grenville," he said as calmly as he could. "If you don't finish her off in ten seconds, I'll do it and spoil your fun."

There was a sudden movement—an arm shot up, the blade gleaming—then a shriek of triumph that made his heart stop cold, because it wasn't his wife's. Then another shriek and frantic movement.

He saw the tangle of bodies go still in the same pulse-beat he heard the hoarse, gasping voice. "Move so much as an eyelash, and I'll slice you from ear to ear."

His wife's voice.

He approached. "Need any help, Grenville?" he asked, his voice shaking.

"Yes. Please." Gasps between words. "Be careful. She. Fights. Dirty."

Vere was glad of the warning. The bawd seemed half dead to him, but as soon as he'd separated the pair, Corrie got her second wind and tried to resume the battle.

Vere dragged her—kicking, clawing, and shrieking fit to wake all of Rotherhithe, on the opposite shore—out of reach of his exhausted wife.

"Knock her out," Grenville gasped, for the fiend showed no signs of tiring, but fought like the madwoman she was.

"I can't hit a woman."

Grenville trudged forward, ducked a swinging fist, and swung her own, straight Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

into Madam's jaw.

Coralie sagged.

Vere let her inert body drop to the ground. Susan leapt forward eagerly, growling. "Guard," he told the dog. Susan straddled her and remained, snarling, her enormous, dripping jaws inches from the bawd's face.

Vere was already moving toward his wife, who was bent over, clutching her side. He pushed her hand away, felt the wetness, felt his heart drop into a hole that had no bottom.

"Sorry," she said, her voice so weak he could barely hear it. "I think the witch stuck me."

He caught hold of her, and this time, when she turned into a dead weight in his arms, he knew she wasn't pretending.

Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

Chapter Eighteen

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Francis Beaumont stood in the crowd of onlookers near the Bell and Anchor watching the Duke of Ainswood carry his wife's motionless form into his carriage. Within minutes, the place was abuzz with the news that a Drury Lane bawd had murdered the duchess.

Francis Beaumont was very unhappy.

It was not the duchess he grieved for, but himself. Coralie Brees would hang for sure, and doubtless she knew it, which meant she would make certain she had plenty of company dangling alongside her on the scaffold. She would tell her tale, and she had a fine and long one to tell, with Francis Beaumont as star performer.

He was sorry he hadn't killed her last spring in Paris, instead of helping her flee.

But he had not been thinking very clearly then. Along with everything else, he'd had domestic problems, as well as a case of unrequited lust.

He'd set out to kill Coralie today, as soon as he'd heard, at Pearkes's oyster house, what the stupid bitch had done. It hadn't taken him long to figure out where she'd be, because an artist for the
Police Gazette
had told him about the old woman who'd been cut up and garroted. From the artist's description, Beaumont had no trouble figuring out who the woman was or who the killer was.

Unfortunately, the Duchess of Ainswood had tracked the bawd down before he did. He wasn't twenty yards from the house when all hell broke loose. As soon as Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

he'd heard her tell Corrie she was outnumbered, he'd backed off. All Corrie had to do was spot him and call out his name, and he'd be numbered among the criminals. Had he realized the duchess had only a trio of scrawny boys and a pair of toothless, consumptive whores to help her, he might have been less cautious.

But there was no way he could tell in the fog and confusion.

Now there was nothing he could do. The constables had arrived within minutes of Ainswood and his men. The entire debacle, start to finish, could not have taken more than a quarter hour. In a very short time, Corrie would be locked up, and screeching out everything she knew to everyone who could hear her—and that would be most of the parish.

He would have to go away. Now. He dared not return home for clothes or money. Everyone knew where Francis Beaumont lived. His wife was a famous artist.

She
wouldn't miss him. There would be a line of men ten miles long waiting to take his place. And at the very front of the line would be a fair-haired French count.

That prospect was nearly as painful as the gallows.

But painful or not, Francis Beaumont must bear it.

He had enough money to hire a post chaise, and if he started immediately, he'd reach the coast long before anyone was aware he'd fled.

He was making his way through the crowd, careful not to appear in the least hurried, when the constables approached, bearing Coralie on a makeshift litter.

"I hope the bitch is dead!" a whore near him cried out.

"She ain't," someone else yelled. "More's the pity. The duchess only broke her jaw."

Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

This news, confirmed by a constable, brought nearly universal disappointment.

It dawned on Beaumont then that Grenville of the
Argus
had more friends than enemies in this quarter. Two prostitutes, half dead as they were, had tried to help her rescue Ainswood's wards. He looked about him, saw hardened whores sobbing, cursing Coralie Brees.

Even the street arabs were blubbering.

It took him but a moment to discern this, and but another to make use of it. He knew how to exploit grief, how to poison minds, how to stir simpler hearts to bitterness and rage. And so he let a few careless remarks drop as he made his way through the crowd.

In a matter of minutes, the crowd of sailors, whores, pimps, beggar boys, and other riverside scum turned into a murderous mob.

Its roar drowned out the rattles, warnings, and threats to read the Riot Act.

In minutes, the mob had overturned the cart that was to bear Coralie Brees to the Shadwell magistrate, knocked the constables out of the way, and attacked the prisoners.

Moments later, Coralie Brees, battered beyond recognition, lay dead upon the cobblestones. Mick finished bleeding to death not long thereafter.

By then the mob had melted away… and Francis Beaumont was already on his way home.

Some hours later, Vere sat as he'd done so many times before—for Uncle, for Charlie, for Robin—holding a too-cold hand.

His wife's.

"I'll never forgive you, Grenville," he said, his voice choked. "You were Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

supposed to stay home and be the general. You were not supposed to go charging out on your own. I can't trust you out of my sight for a minute. I vow, I must have died months ago and gone direct to hell—which is why I haven't hanged myself, because it would be redundant."

"Lud, what a fuss you make." Grenville treated him to one of her mocking half-smiles. "It's the merest nick she gave me."

It had not been the "merest nick." If not for layers of underwear, a sturdy corset, and Great Uncle Ste's pocket watch, the Duchess of Ainswood would not be alive. The watch had deflected the blade, which had cut clumsily rather than fatally.

The doctor, having treated the wound and bandaged up Her Grace, had left the room a moment ago with Lord Dain.

"As soon as you get well," Vere said, "I'm going to give you a good beating."

"You don't hit women."

"I'll make an exception in your case." He glowered at the hand he held. "Your hand's as cold as ice."

"That's because you're stopping the circulation."

He eased his death grip.

"That's better," she murmured.

"Sorry." He started to let go.

"No, don't," she said. "Your hand is so big and warm. I love your wicked hands, Ainswood."

"We'll see how much you like them when I turn you over my knee and give you the spanking you deserve."

She smiled. "I was never so glad of anything as I was of your arrival tonight.

Loretta Chase - The Last Hellion

Coralie fights as dirty as I do. And it was hard to concentrate, because I was worried about the girls. I wasn't at all sure I'd be in any condition to help them once I was done with her. The rage. The madness. When they're truly worked up, such people have superhuman strength. I knew it. I didn't want to tangle with her. I knew what I'd be up against. But I had no choice. I couldn't let her get away."

"I know."

"I did send a boy from the Bell and Bottle for help," she went on. "But I couldn't risk waiting for help to come. As it was—"

"Lizzie and Em would have been dead if you'd waited," he cut in. "She went in to kill them." He told Lydia about the rat they'd caught and thrown at Coralie.

"Still, their ploy only gained them a few minutes," he went on. "Luckily for them you arrived during those minutes. You saved their lives, Grenville. You and your rag-tag army." He bent and kissed her hand.

"Don't be absurd," she said. "We should never have succeeded without reinforcements. Even if I'd managed to subdue Coralie—and I'll tell you straight, it was no easy battle—I still would have had Mick to contend with. By the time I got to him, he might have done your wards considerable damage."

"I know. Tom hit him in the head with a rock. The brute didn't even feel it. He presented no problem for Susan, though." He frowned. "Gad, I didn't do a damned thing. Let the dog take care of Mick. Looked on while you battled the bawd, as though it were a prize fight."

BOOK: The Last Hellion
9.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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