Free Read Novels Online Home

The Duchess and the Highwayman by Beverley Oakley (3)

3

Dazed, Phoebe lay in the soft mulch, staring at the star-studded sky for a critical couple of seconds before she heard shouting from the first floor. She was alive.

However, she’d not take much comfort in that if Wentworth caught up with her. Scrambling to her feet, she had the presence of mind to cast about for her shawl, which had caught on a tree branch, before spying Wentworth’s carriage on the driveway. To her surprise, the coachman was on the box with, she saw, Jimmy, one of the grooms. She could hear them discussing the merits of the handsome equipage.

Dashing across the stretch of damp grass, she hauled open the door and climbed in, rapping on the roof as she shouted. “It’s a mercy you’re here. Make haste for we must fetch the doctor! His Lordship’s condition is critical.”

Thank the Lord the coachman was an unquestioning servant and had not caught sight of her blood-stained chemise, for he obediently and with all due haste, dismissed his appreciative audience and cracked the whip over the horses.

The carriage rolled over the ruts and headed onto the drive through the park with an impressive show of speed, though Phoebe knew it wouldn’t be too long before Wentworth saddled up a horse and overtook her.

For the moment, however, this was her best chance. If they could reach an obscure turn-off about half a mile distant she might lose him.

“Take the left!” she shouted when they were nearly upon it. She leaned out of the window to add, “The doctor’s attending Mrs Proctor.”

Mrs Proctor was a widow who lived another mile down the rutted road. If Phoebe could slip away when the coachman halted and make for another cottage down the slope whose occupants may be sympathetic, it was the best she could hope for.

Obediently, the coachman eased the horses into the narrow laneway while Phoebe put her head out of the window, straining for sight or sound of anyone following. In the far distance, twinkling through the trees, she could see Blinley Manor, but the coach was going at such a speed it was quickly obscured by the rise of the wooded hill. She allowed hope to blossom just a little more. Wentworth might disregard this road and continue on the main thoroughfare toward the town. He’d think she’d make for her closest friend, Ellen Cosgrove, who lived in the village.

It was not a road well suited to a sprung carriage. Frustrated, Phoebe watched her surroundings pass by at a snail’s pace as the coachman carefully navigated the ruts.

The large, waxing moon did not favor her for it lit up the small valley with its sweeping vistas, making them a clear target to anyone in pursuit. If they could only make it to the thick woods on the other side of the clearing where the road was swallowed up by overhanging trees, she may yet have a chance. The widow lived just on the other side.

They were nearly there when she heard the harsh, guttural command terrifyingly close to her window before the carriage lurched to a halt, and the horses whinnied in terror.

“Stop, or I’ll shoot!”

Phoebe was flung forward, covering her face with her hands as she hunched in fright. Dear Lord, Wentworth must have come up the back way and cornered her, realizing all along this was what she had intended.

Though her breath came hard and fast, she knew there was only one thing she could do. And that was run.

Tugging open the door, she leaped to the ground, dragging her shawl behind her. Perhaps it was that which held her up for the crucial second, for suddenly his voice was only a yard away.

“Stop! I swear I’ll shoot!”

She had no doubt that he would. It was worth it to Wentworth to see her dead. He had to see her dead after what she’d witnessed. Oh God, and for all that she’d resisted, the truth was that she’d been a party to it.

She covered the wide, open expanse as fast as her bare legs could carry her, but mercifully made it to the thicker part of the woods before she heard him galloping hard, just behind her. Hurling herself into the sanctuary of a copse of trees, she began her scramble toward a dip through which ran a small stream. The terrain would be too rough and difficult for a horse.

Self-preservation was one thing, but there was also her dignity to safeguard. She’d spent long enough being the servant or plaything to men she did not love. Or respect. She’d not be slave or worse now, even if her only survival were to eke out the most pitiful existence. Life beat strongly in her. She wanted to live. She’d do whatever was required to live—as long as she could do so without being subjugated by a tyrant. Not Wentworth, and not in a prison cell waiting for the noose.

“Stop, I say!” Clearly, Wentworth had too much to gain by her death, but Phoebe did not intend giving up now. He’d dismounted and got a bearing on her, leaping through the undergrowth in pursuit a short distance behind her. She could hear the crackle of small snapping twigs, his labored breath, the squelch of mud under boots. “Stop!”

Only then did she realize the voice was not Wentworth’s. The realization provided a measure of relief, though not for long.

Another villain who would do her harm? So he really was a highwayman, holding up Wentworth’s fine carriage in the hopes of rich booty.

Well, that was just as much reason to flee.

Her lack of clothing made her surprisingly agile. She couldn’t imagine achieving such speed in all the layers she was required to wear in her daily life, even though the fashions of the day offered so much more freedom than those worn by the previous generation.

But to be wearing only a chemise was to be all but naked. If her pursuer saw her as a serving girl so scantily dressed he’d think he could do anything he liked with her. A highwayman was beyond the law, a desperate man without honor, who’d capitalize on such an opportunity since the jewels of the carriage occupant he’d expected were not forthcoming.

Holding her aching side, Phoebe clung to an overhanging branch as she tried to gauge how far away he was. She couldn’t see him, but his labored breathing was audible; and then she glimpsed his bulk just a few yards behind her, clambering over a large fallen log.

His head was bent, the lower part of his face obscured by a black handkerchief; a low-crowned felt hat pulled down over his brow. She could see the bulge of a pistol tucked into his waistband, and suspected he’d have no compunction either in killing or raping her. Well, she’d rather be dead in both instances—although how different was rape considering how she’d submitted with such reluctance so many nights since her forced marriage?

Her assailant had just navigated the log, and locking eyes with her as she turned, lunged forward. Phoebe screamed as she leaped over the stream before losing her balance on an unstable, mossy rock on the other side. For a moment, she flailed helplessly before she was plunged into the icy water.

Then, strong hands gripped her upper arm to drag her to her feet, though not for a moment did she give in to the inevitability of being a prisoner.

She lashed out, kicking him in the shins, though this proved an ineffectual act as he laughed, remarking that he was still a great deal cleaner than she was, and certainly not as wet. To her surprise, his voice was cultured in contrast with the rough tones and style he’d used earlier.

“I’ve no money an’ I’ll not yield without a fight, yer great villain,” she snarled, breathing heavily and adopting the accents of a peasant. Tonight she could not be Lady Cavanaugh to anyone. “Don’t ye dare touch me, sir, or I’ll bite it off! Ye see if I don’t.”

His expression betrayed a flicker of incomprehension followed by an easing of his facial muscles, and when he laughed again, he looked quite pleasant she noted with the benefit of the pale moonlight that filtered through the interlaced branches above them.

“I have no intention of hurting you. I’m just after your master. The man whose carriage you are inexplicably occupying dressed in nothing but your….” His expression turned to one of disbelief as he took in her garments, and as Phoebe looked down, she saw she was covered in more blood than she’d thought.

“Oh my, a murder, eh? Well, I hope you’ve done away with your Master Wentworth and saved me the trouble. No, don’t try to kick me again. You’ll only bruise your toe and you look already to be in quite a good deal of discomfort. This isn’t the way you usually deport yourself, is it? Who are you?”

Phoebe tossed her head, then quickly adjusted her posture. No need to advertise that she was lady of the manor. Clearly, in the dark with her wild hair and mud-streaked face, he’d not recognize her. Not that she recognized him. His accent was not of these parts and she’d not seen him before.

She stayed the haughty rejoinder that came naturally, working to broaden her vowels. The lady’s maid. Yes, that would do for now. It could be helpful to her cause, in fact, especially if this man had a bone to pick with Wentworth; and now she really could show the fear and terror that she’d bottled up, and use it to her advantage. Covering her face with her hands, she collapsed upon the fallen log as she wept, “Might yer really be ‘ere to save us from that madman? M’lady were set upon by the villainous Wentworth after ‘e’d done away with ‘is lordship. I were on me way ter bed when I ‘eard the screamin’ an’ I dashed inter the room as he ‘ad the knife raised ter do ‘er in.”

“Good God!” The villain, who now didn’t seem nearly so villainous, steadied himself against the trunk of a large tree while he regarded her with an expression of compassionate horror. “Was her ladyship injured? Is this her blood?”

“No, ‘tis Lord Ulrick’s, sir. Lord Cavanaugh’s, I mean. He ain’t never comin’ back what with so much lifeblood spattered upon me.” She began to tremble. “Now Wentworth’s after me.”

“Wentworth? After you?”

She nodded fiercely. “I seen too much, I ’ave, and now I ain’t got no one ter protect me.” She sent him an appealing look.

Dubiously he looked her up and down. “I daresay I should get you indoors and warm and dry. You’ll catch your death. But Wentworth is after you?”

She was astonished this man believed her story. She had no idea who he could be or why he had a bone to pick though, but suddenly he offered her salvation.

His mouth was set in a grim line. “First we must rescue the duchess!” He gazed out through the trees while Phoebe shook her head, alarmed.

“No, no, she’s fled already. Yer don’t want ter go back ter Blinley Manor where there’s just Lord Ulrick, dead in ‘is chair. Mr Wentworth will kill ye too. ‘E’s a murderer.”

The man angled a glance down at Phoebe, who found her legs were not doing a very good job at holding her up. She gripped the tree branch by her head to haul herself up as the man muttered, “It’s true I want Wentworth—away from Blinley Manor where it’s just him and me, man to man. But are you telling me the truth? You saw him commit a murder?”

“’E…‘e murdered Lord Cavanaugh right in front of me. That’s why I ‘ave so much blood on me.” Phoebe couldn’t bear to look down at the crimson testament to the horror she’d more than just witnessed.

The man appeared to deliberate. He took a step toward her. “I’m sorry we met at the point of a pistol. I’m more gentleman than highwayman, though I’ve been spoiling to have it out with that blackguard, Wentworth.” A shadow crossed his face. “That will have to wait for another night. I daresay I have no choice but to do as you suggest: take you home with me. I’m new to these parts, but we’ll have to find the magistrate.”

“No!” Phoebe shook her head wildly. “I mean, of course, if the magistrate were in town we would ‘ave to see ’im….”

The man raised one eyebrow. “You’re happy to come home with me but not to see the magistrate?” He inclined his head. “Mr Redding is my name. Where’s your family, lass? Surely I should deposit you with them?”

“There’s none in these parts, sir. I ‘ave an aunt in the north, ‘bout a day’s travelin’. No one else.” She spoke the truth. Ulrick had brought her far from home and the few friends she’d had since childhood. He’d distanced her from everything familiar as he’d poured his energies into ensuring she fulfill the one important duty for which he’d traded her—her ability to provide him an heir.

She touched her belly and felt again the now familiar spasm of fear. If she were with child, would that save her, or sacrifice her to a life of endless misery, her life in danger until the cargo was birthed—if she managed to live that long? Yet if she were not with child, she’d still be in danger from the man she thought once had harbored feelings for her. She’d seen too much.

She looked over Mr Redding’s shoulder and glimpsed through the dense forest the patchwork of fields that stretched endlessly to places she’d never been.

If he left her here, she’d have her freedom but not much else. With Ulrick dead and with no heir, she was penniless and homeless. The terms of her marriage contract were not favorable to her in widowhood. They’d hinged upon providing Ulrick with the son whom he desired more than anything else.

To her surprise, she gulped on a sob. She was not inclined to easy tears, but the shock of her stark situation was suddenly more than she could bear. If he didn’t take her, where could she go? Tonight? Tomorrow? For the rest of her life?

“Are those tears real?” Mr Redding cleared his throat. “You really were fleeing Wentworth and nothing else? You weren’t caught stealing the sugar?”

“I seen ‘im kill ‘is lordship!” Phoebe repeated with some heat.

Mr Redding sighed again. “I suppose I’ll have to take you home with me if you really are as friendless as you say. Don’t worry; I won’t hurt you,” he reassured her when she flinched away from him. “I’ll have to find you clean clothes, of course. And then I’ll have to feed and protect you from Wentworth…but I will do so only on one condition.”

She slanted a narrow-eyed look up at him and he gave a laugh. “No, I’m not in the habit of taking advantage of serving wenches. You’ll be safe with me.”

“I am not a servin’ wench, sir.”

“A lady’s maid. I beg your pardon. Yes, I can hear your tones are far more refined when you put the effort into it. And no, my condition is quite simple and one that is clearly in your interests.” He regarded her again with that strangely unsettling stare of his, and in the moonlight, she thought that the eyes that bored into her from above the handkerchief he now removed were bright with intelligence. “I want you to give me all the information you have that would ensure justice for Wentworth. You know already that my mission tonight was to extract my own form of justice upon the man I despise above all others, but now you have the means to help me see him face a far more robust accounting.”

Phoebe nodded, more than ready to have him lead her out of the woods and to his own dwelling. She couldn’t imagine being anywhere safer right now, though of course she knew she was too trusting for her own good. Hadn’t she believed Wentworth when he’d professed to love her? Just for now, though, she needed to believe there was kindness in the world and a single human being who would protect her.

She took the arm he offered her, as if she were the fine lady she was by birth and not the blood-spattered, undressed servant she pretended for her own safety. “I swear that justice fer evil, wicked Wentworth is me greatest goal also,” she whispered.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Bella Forrest, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Penny Wylder, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

The Royal Mistake: A Billionaire Prince Romance by Erin Hayes

Barefoot Bay: Flying High (Kindle Worlds Novella) (The Omega Team Book 6) by Desiree Holt

The Single Girl’s Calendar by Erin Green

The Storm: Irin Chronicles Book Six by Elizabeth Hunter

Tyrant by T.M. Frazier

Unchained Beauty (Deadly Beauties Live On Book 5) by C.M. Owens

Gifted Thief (Highland Magic Book 1) by Helen Harper

Obsessed: A Contemporary Gay Romance by Peter Styles

Tempting Gabe (The Hawke Fortune) by Victoria Pinder

Serving My Sheikh by Lynn, Sophia

Undercover Hacker (White Hat Security Book 4) by Linzi Baxter

Married by Moonlight by Heather Boyd

Yearning: Enchanting the Shifter (Legacy: A Paranormal Series Book 3) by Ciana Stone

OUR SECRET BABY: War Riders MC by Paula Cox

Not What You Seem by Lena Maye

The Knave of Hearts (Rhymes With Love #5) by Elizabeth Boyle

Cold Heart: Absolutely gripping serial-killer fiction by Stephen Edger

by Joy Penny

Tell Me Now: Show and Tell Duet Book 1 by S. Moose

Omega Matured: M/M Shifter M/Preg Romance (Northern Lodge Pack Book 5) by Susi Hawke