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Authors: The Rogues of Regent Street
Oh, she understood all right. Understood so clearly that she almost laughed out loud at the absurd impossibility of it. “As I said. You will have your five thousand pounds,” she said with false confidence, and jerked the door open, walking through with her head held high as if she had some notion of how she might produce the bloody miracle of five thousand pounds.
T
HOMAS WAS FIT
to be tied when Kerry announced her decision to go to Dundee and meet with an agent from the Bank of Scotland. “Waste of bloody time, that is. No point in it,” he had said again and again, arguing that the bank wouldn’t loan her any money for any purpose. But as he didn’t have a better idea, Kerry was determined. She was
not
going to let Moncrieffe win, not until she had drawn her last breath. So she had donned her black bombazine, packed a small, worn red satchel—complete with the gun Thomas made her take—and slipped a beautiful, triple strand of pearls into a small pocket sewn on her petticoat.
When May protested her intention to use the pearls as collateral against the debts, Kerry had lost her patience with the lot of them. Could they offer a better solution? No. She had no idea what she was doing, was frightened unto death with what she was about to do, and did not need their doubts at this moment.
What would the bank say to it? The pearls had belonged to her great-grandmother, then her grandmother. Her father had given them to her as a wedding present. The memory of her wedding did not improve her black mood, nor the memory of the summer ball at Moncrieffe House, the only other time in her twenty-seven years she
had worn the pearls. The good Lord above knew it pained her to risk losing them—the pearls were the only things from her childhood that held any meaning for her—but unfortunately, they also were the only things she had worth more than a few farthings. And she was not going to lose her land, not to Moncrieffe she wasn’t, and on that point, she was absolutely, unequivocally determined.
Her shock, indignation, and choking despair upon leaving Moncrieffe House had slowly turned into a ravenous anger. There had been moments in the last twenty-four hours that she was actually
glad
Fraser was dead, because if he were living, she might very well have strangled the last breath from him. It was impossible to fathom that he could have defamed his own cousin then bartered her away like that—and to Charles Moncrieffe of all people! Mother of God!
Fraser had done worse than betray her horribly; he had destroyed every feeling she had ever had for him, and the worst of it was that she couldn’t demand an explanation from him, couldn’t ask him
why
he had done this to her. She had nursed Fraser until he had finally succumbed to his illness, had kept their land with what little she had—she had been a
good
wife to him! The depth of betrayal scored her, and she believed, as the coach thundered through the serene countryside, that she had lost everything because of him.
The anger had, however, compelled her into action. It seemed as if all doors of escape were slamming shut, but she was not ready to give up. There simply
had
to be a way, and at the moment, that “way” seemed to be in Dundee.
So to Dundee she had come, using a portion of their dwindling funds to buy passage on a public coach departing from Loch Eigg before the sun was even up. Kerry traveled a full day and a half sandwiched between a woman with arms that looked like roasting turkeys and a man who smelled to high heaven. In Dundee, she
had waited patiently for four hours before the bank’s agent, Mr. Abernathy, could see her. He had apparently just returned to Dundee that very day from a lengthy absence. Although he was quite flustered, Mr. Abernathy was a kind old man, a grandfatherly sort, who patted her hand frequently as he explained that the value of the pearls was simply not enough to cover even the interest on the loan. Apparently, Kerry possessed a very pretty triple strand of mediocre pearls. Mr. Abernathy did, however,
keep
the pearls. Not that he hadn’t been terribly sympathetic about her plight—he had generously offered her until the end of the month to come up with something else of value she might use to make a payment of some sort.
Any
sort.
It seemed as if the whole world was waiting to collapse at the end of the month.
Even after that disheartening interview with Mr. Abernathy, Kerry still would not admit defeat. She spent two of her last twenty-five pounds on a small room in a boarding house, where she paced until the early hours of the morning and it was time to board a public coach bound for Loch Eigg by way of Perth.
The public coach almost emptied in Perth when the road turned north, save Kerry and two men. She hardly saw the heath-covered hills roll by between towering hedgerows and pines and maples that cast long shadows on the road. She responded coolly to the efforts of the two male passengers to engage her in conversation. How could she converse with them? If she opened her mouth, she was certain the fear and frustration would produce enough tears to drown them all. She could not recall ever feeling so abandoned and alone.
Or so angry!
It was over. She would lose all she ever had, all she ever wanted. Fraser had once promised her a rich life filled with children, family, and a comfortable hearth. That faded memory seemed almost a figment of her imagination now.
With a soft groan, she closed her eyes, wishing for mind-numbing sleep, just a few moments away from the hell that was suddenly her life. And she might have found it, too, had the coach not suddenly swerved sharply to the right in a screech of metal, tossing her onto the floor. The two men cursed as the coach righted and came to a very bumpy halt.
Fabulous. Just when she thought there was nothing left to possibly go wrong.
“Here now, lassie, are you quite all right?” one of the men asked her.
“I am fine.” She was lodged awkwardly between the seats, halfway on the bench and on the floorboards, and clumsily managed to fumble her way back up on the bench.
“What in thunder?” the other one demanded, and swung the door open, almost hitting the driver.
“Very sorry, lads. Seems the axle threw a bolt,” the driver said apologetically. Kerry had no idea what that meant, but the two men immediately groaned and rolled their eyes at one another. The news obviously wasn’t good. Kerry looked to the driver, who lifted his shoulders in a sort of half-shrug. “Sorry, lass. We’ll have to turn back to Perth, we will.”
“Perth!” Oh
no!
This was disastrous! She could not afford to spend another two pounds on a boarding room and she had to get home—her time was running short. “Can’t you drive on?” she asked, aware of the desperation in her voice. “Surely there is a village close by—”
The driver shook his head. “Too far. Perth’s closer. Ah, lassie, doona look at me like that!” he exclaimed, wincing. “If we drive on, we could ruin the whole axle! The parts, aye, they rub together without that bolt—”
“But I’m expected home, sir! I canna go back to Perth! Is there no village nearby where I might hire another coach?” she insisted.
The driver absently pushed his hat forward so that he could better scratch the back of his head as he
pondered that. “Well … I suppose you could wait at the crossroads here. There’s a coach from Crieff that comes through regular, headed north for Dunkeld and Pitlochry.” He paused, consulting his pocket watch. “Aye, an hour, no more than two, I’d wager. You could wait.”
“I beg your pardon,” one of the gentlemen quickly interrupted. “I wouldna advise it, lass. We are far from civilization and the public coaches are wholly unreliable—”
“Beggin’ your pardon, sir, but
this
service arrives in Perth every evening at eight o’clock on the button and leaves promptly at six o’clock every morning, arriving at Blairgowrie precisely at—”
“Beggin’
your
pardon,” the second man snapped, “but are we or are we not about to turn
back
to Perth?”
“Well now, you expect a bit of mechanical trouble now and again, you do!”
“Are you certain about the Crieff coach?” Kerry interrupted.
The driver glowered at the men before answering. “I am indeed, lass. You’ll do right well to wait here for it.”
She extended her hand, ready to climb down. The smaller of the two men tried to stop her with a hand on her arm. “Madam! There’s naught but wilderness about you now! If you wait for that coach, you do so at your own peril!” he pleaded.
As if anything else could happen to her—Lord, even
Job
had not suffered so many trials! Kerry smiled at the two gentlemen as she shook off the one man’s hand, then fairly leapt from the coach. “Gentlemen, I thank you for your kind concern, but I am rather determined to reach Pitlochry by nightfall.” And she continued smiling as the driver fetched her satchel from the back running boards.
The larger of the two men threw up his hands in a gesture of defeat. The driver, however, seemed rather pleased with her decision. “Our service willna fail you, lass,” he said cheerfully, and grinning broadly, tipped his hat to the men before slamming the coach door shut. He
showed Kerry to a spot where the road from the east curved into another road running north. “Wait here, and he’ll be along in an hour or so, mark me. You’ll be right safe, doona you worry,” he added, placing her satchel at her feet.
“Thank you.” She inclined her head to his jaunty wave good-bye, then watched him and another driver turn the coach around and roll slowly in the direction from which they had come.
As the coach disappeared from sight, Kerry glanced around at the unfamiliar and very deserted surroundings. The shadows were already lengthening; it wouldn’t be long before the mist would roll in, shrouding everything. She peered into the dark forest behind her, unable to see past the dark greenery of the first line of trees. The foliage was thick and deep, seeming almost impassable from where she stood. And as she peered into the dark shadows, she was struck with the memory of Mary Blain, a schoolmate of hers years ago who had a penchant for telling the most ghoulish stories.
Kerry scoffed, turned away, and looked up the road. She was not going to stand here like a child and think of beasties and fairies and trolls living under bridges. How absurd! Nor would she allow Thomas’s dire warnings of robbers and generally unsavory characters bother her. This was a minor inconvenience, nothing more. That sound that kept coming from the woods behind her was just a squirrel. The Crieff coach would be along in no time at all.
She had nothing to worry about.
Just like the driver said.
But the coach was not there in an hour. Or two. Or even four.
Arthur was rapidly coming to the conclusion that he was not overly fond of Scotland—or perhaps it was just
Scots
he took issue with. The country was beautiful, he could not deny that. Deep, swift running rivers cutting through dark green rolling hills, tall stately trees. But the
people
, well … he had learned that they were a stubborn lot and not exactly enamored of the English. One of them even had the audacity to call him a Sassenach.
No, he was not overly fond of the Scots, a conclusion he firmly reached standing in the paddock of a stable just outside Perth. Absently slapping his gloves against the palm of his hand, he waited for the impudent stable master to bring him the mount he had purchased at a swindler’s rate. Not that he’d had any choice. It had taken him a full day just to
find
a stable where he might purchase a mount, as the Scots apparently didn’t have the same need of horses as the English. He routinely received a blank stare when he inquired as to where he might locate a stable for the purpose of purchasing a mount.
“How’d you get here, then?” one man had asked, apparently puzzled that a man might have need to actually
purchase
a horse.
“I hired a private coach.”
“Won’t that do for ye now, milord?” the man replied, scratching the top of his balding head.
Good God.
In all honesty, Arthur had rather enjoyed Edinburgh and certainly the journey to Glasgow and up the River Clyde. One particular ship builder was ecstatic when, after showing Arthur about his shipyard and onto a new clipper, Arthur had arranged to purchase one for the Christian Brothers’ fleet. So ecstatic that he threw a fete in Arthur’s honor that entailed excellent lobster, Spanish wine, and a pretty wench who was happy to warm Arthur’s bed that night. Ah yes, he had rather enjoyed the River Clyde.
But not Perth.
He slapped his gloves against his palm again and
glowered at the stable entrance. What could possibly be taking the man so long? This entire ordeal just confirmed that he was quite mad for continuing on to Dundee on horseback. But when he had returned from his review of the new Scottish clippers, a letter from that funny little Regis had been waiting for him at the Sherbrooke, requesting a meeting in Dundee to discuss the final disposition of Phillip’s land—in
three
weeks—precisely four longer than previously set. That did not set well with Arthur. He was quite certain he had told the hapless solicitor that he fully intended to be on board a ship bound for England by then.
Frustrated and restless, Arthur had gone on to Perth, where he had arranged to meet Mr. Abernathy of the Bank of Scotland, and thereby save him the unnecessary journey to Dundee. It did not help his disposition to learn that Mr. Abernathy had been called away to Inverness and was not expected in the area for some time. When he had asked exactly how long that might be, the banker’s assistant had responded with the very definitive and very helpful, “Couldna rightly say, milord.”
Faced with a wait of an indeterminate amount of time, Arthur had then made the uncomfortable discovery that there was absolutely nothing for him to do in Perth and found himself hopelessly bored. A few jaunts beyond the town proper had revealed a glimpse of a beautiful wet and green wilderness, steeped in history, replete with an occasional castle ruin and Celtic cross. Arthur was curious enough to want to see more of it. So curious that he came up with the notion of having a look at Phillip’s land for himself while he waited.