The Other Miss Bridgerton
He reached out and stabbed a fritter with his fork.
“Are we not meant to use our fingers?”
“Just being careful in case they’re—”
“Not too hot!” Senhor Farias called out.
Andrew looked up and grinned. “Fingers it is.”
Poppy took one and bit into it, drawing back in surprise as she tasted it. “I thought it would be sweet!”
He laughed, only then realizing that neither he nor Senhor Farias had told her—in English—what they were. “Salted cod,” he told her. “It is a huge favorite here, and it is said that the Portuguese have as many recipes using it as days of the year. This is one of the most common preparations.”
“It’s a bit like—” Poppy smacked her lips a few times, half a fritter still pinched daintily between her fingers. “Never mind, I’m not exactly sure what it’s like. But—oh, look!” She waved her free hand toward the door. “There is Billy!”
She smiled and beckoned him over.
“Miss Poppy! The captain let you out!” Billy’s eyes went wide with horror when he realized he’d blurted this out in front of his employer. “Begging your pardon, sir. I didn’t— That is to say . . .”
Billy swallowed, his small Adam’s apple bobbing in his throat. “I’ve been telling her you’re not so bad, sir. In fact, I told her you’re the best of men. I promise.”
Andrew looked over at Poppy, raising one eyebrow and then the other in an exaggerated attempt to pretend that he was judging Billy’s statement. “What do you say, Miss Bridgerton? Is Master Suggs telling the truth?”
“Is that your surname?” Poppy asked the boy. “I don’t think I ever knew it.”
Billy nodded nervously, and Andrew decided to take pity on him. “There is no need to apologize, Billy. I did indeed ‘let her out.’”
Poppy leaned forward with a conspiratorial air. “And you can rest assured he’s going to ‘put me back in’ for the voyage home.”
Billy’s chin drew back, and his eyes went comically wide.
“It’s a joke, Billy,” Poppy said. “Well, it’s not a joke, I suppose, since it’s true, but I was joking about it.”
“Ehrm . . .” Billy looked to Andrew for help, but he only shrugged. Best that the boy learn early that women could be deuced hard to follow in conversation.
“Did you come here alone?” Poppy asked. “I was just praising Captain James for his requirement that you be accompanied by an adult.”
Billy shook his head with vehemence. “Brown brought me on his way into town. Said he’d come to collect me in a bit.”
Poppy looked perplexed. “You wished to spend time by yourself here ?”
“Senhor Farias lets me feed his cat,” Billy explained with a grin. “His name is Whiskers. Well, that’s what I call him. He’s got a name in Portuguese, but I can’t pronounce it. He’s awful friendly, though. Lets me rub his belly and everything.”
As Billy dashed out the side door, Andrew turned to Poppy and said, “He comes here every time we’re in Lisbon. Spends hours with that creature.”
“He really is a little boy at heart,” she murmured. “I forget sometimes—I suspect he’s had to grow up faster than I did.”
Andrew nodded in agreement. When he was Billy’s age, he was still running wild with his siblings and neighbors. His biggest concern was how cold the lake would be if his brother pushed him in.
“Don’t you have a cat on the ship?” Poppy asked.
He looked up, about to explain that the ship’s cat was a wretched, unpleasant beast, when a sudden movement to his left caught his attention. He glanced discreetly over his shoulder, but all he saw was Senhor Farias. Except . . .
That was odd.
The jovial tavernkeeper was standing still. Too still.
Senhor Farias never stood still. He greeted customers, he poured wine, but he never stood still. Certainly not as he now was: shoulders pressed stiffly against the wall, eyes twitching back and forth.
Something was not right.
“Poppy,” he said in a quiet voice, “we need to go.”
“What? No. I haven’t fin—”
He kicked her under the table. “Now .”
Her eyes went wide, and she gave a tiny nod.
Andrew made eye contact with Senhor Farias. Andrew then looked to the door, signaling his intention to leave. Senhor Farias flicked his eyes to a rough-looking trio of men by the far window, signaling the source of the problem.
Andrew stood, but not so quickly as to appear in a rush. “Obrigado ,” he said in a hearty voice, reaching out and grabbing Poppy firmly by the hand. “I will see you next time I am in Lisbon, yes?”
He hauled Poppy to her feet as Senhor Farias nodded and said, “Sim, sim ” with perhaps a little too much enthusiasm.
“Thank you, senhor,” Poppy said as she hurried to match Andrew’s pace.
Senhor Farias smiled tightly, and they almost made it. They really did. But when they were just a few feet from the door, Poppy suddenly jerked her hand free of Andrew’s and exclaimed, “Oh, but Billy!”
Andrew lunged forward to grab her hand again, but she was already hurrying toward the side door. “Poppy,” he called out, taking care not to sound panicked. “We can get him later.”
She shook her head, clearly unwilling to leave the young boy in a place of danger. She said something—probably about Billy being right outside; Andrew couldn’t hear clearly—and poked her head out the back.
Damn it all. Billy was far safer where he was. Whatever—or whomever—these men wanted, it wasn’t a thirteen-year-old boy from Portsmouth. But that didn’t mean he was safe. If Billy got in their way, they would cut him down without a moment’s thought.
Andrew stalked after Poppy. They could leave out the back. It would take longer to reach the relative safety of the busy street, but it would have to do.
“Oh!” he heard Poppy exclaim. “Pardon me.”
But her voice was off, and when Andrew he reached the door, his blood ran cold. Two more men stood in the alley. One had his hand on Billy’s shoulder.
The other had his hand on Poppy.
For the rest of his days, Andrew would remember that moment as if it had unfolded in quarter time. Yet even though every moment felt impossibly slowed down, he could not recall actually thinking . Words, language . . . they were gone, replaced by a world washed red with rage.
He lunged forward, and Poppy was knocked to the side as he wrapped his hands around the brigand’s throat. But within seconds, he was surrounded, and he only managed to get in two kicks before he found himself pinned against the tavern wall, each arm immobilized by members of the rough-looking gang he’d spotted inside the tavern.
He looked urgently about, trying to assess the situation. It was clear that the three men he’d seen earlier were but a few of a larger group. Andrew could not be sure how many there were in total. He counted four in the alley, but from the noises coming through the open doorway, there were at least that many inside as well.
The four men exchanged words in Portuguese too rapid for Andrew to follow, and then the one who’d had his hand wrapped tightly around Poppy’s arm adjusted his position and hauled her back against him, his beefy arm making a pointed elbow around her throat.
“Get your hands off her,” Andrew roared, but the foul cretin only laughed, and Poppy let out a strangled cry as she was pulled even more tightly against his chest.
“You son of a—” But Andrew’s growl was choked off when he was slammed back against the stone wall of the tavern.
The man holding Poppy laughed anew, and he wrapped a lock of her hair around his finger before tickling the underside of her chin.
He would be the first to die.
Andrew had no idea how he would do it, but as God was his witness, he was going to disembowel him.
“Let her go!”
Billy. Dear God, he’d forgotten about the boy. And apparently everyone else had as well, because no one was restraining him when he ran forward and kicked Poppy’s captor in the shin.