Read Regency Rogues Omnibus Online
Authors: Shirl Anders
“Christ, strong, attractive, and wise ... Ah!”
“Oh!” Orelan mewled as she continued the rapid clenching and unclenching of her inner pussy. She had never tried this before, but she was building herself to a climax with it. Now if she could just get Wyndham to come too. “Very wise,” she panted.
“Where did you learn to do this,” he asked with a groan? Then, he lost the battle as he rose upward and began thrusting rapidly.
Christ, his wife was a vexing and sassy minx. She never stopped astounding him, and he fucked her hard, bouncing her buttocks with each thrust. He took them both over the edge with Orelan’s cries of ecstasy loudly echoing throughout the room, and surely carrying down into the ballroom below.
Chapter Eight
Kit felt incompetent. She realized that she had accomplished nothing, only wasted time. Clay could have little time left. The Paris police, for all their patronizing words, were uninterested in missing people. They had more important matters to attend to ... thefts, assaults, murders, and the list went on. Her father would have known that. Blast, Kit thought, even her condescending husband would know that. They would have realized immediately this was a cause to be taken on personally or to hire an expert to investigate. It stung twice as badly that she’d been unable to persuade the records keeper to let her see the records as that Scot’s charmer had been able to do. She hated feeling useless. Somewhere in her mind, she knew that she really was not. However, that was not the way it felt. She was Clay’s only hope. She had to be better than this.
“I will be,” she said with determination, as she stared, unseeing out the hired carriage that was taking her from the Commissionaire de Police building to the address for Marco Remior. She would hire someone. Paris must have someone like the Bow Street Runners of London that her father talked about. Perhaps, if she started with a lawyer, they could recommend someone. She needed to contact a lawyer about severing her marriage to Nick, but her marriage felt like such a trivial concern at the moment. Everything seemed wrong except moving forward to find Clay. Yes, it would be wiser to take the time to hire help.
Then, with the thought of help, her mind turned to Duneagan and she wondered why? Just as easily though, she passed it off as a silly woman’s reaction to needing a strong man. She could do this on her own. Besides, she had no clue as to Duneagan’s allegiance. She would do well to have the investigator that she hired tomorrow, also look into the Scotsman, instead of having fanciful notions, wishing he was some miracle champion sent to help her find her brother.
The carriage came to a halt, and thankfully changed her contemplations to action. Once she paid the driver and stood before the entrance to Marco Remior’s presumed home, she saw that the entrance was not too dissimilar in appearance from Clay’s own apartment across town. However, Marco Remior’s address appeared much wealthier than Clay’s, with a doorman instead of an iron bell pull.
Kit went along with the doorman’s assumption that she belonged there or was expected by someone within. Inside, she saw at once that each of the five or so floors in the building were individually very large apartments. The number on the address meant Marco Remior’s was the entire second floor. Kit took the stairs up two steep flights into a narrow hallway. Ten steps later and a right turn put her at Marco Remior’s door, but not in view of the stairway. As she approached the door, she noticed an odd shadow along it, and it was not until she reached the actual dark door that she realized why.
The door was open, maybe an inch, as though someone had stepped outside it with the intent of returning quickly, and without the need to latch it. That feeling had Kit glancing around, even though there was nothing to see. She supposed the resident could have gone upstairs to see someone or simply left absent-mindedly, not pulling the door closed, or gone back inside for something they forgot and suddenly remembered.
That thought spurred Kit’s gloved hand upward to knock on the ajar door. “Mister Remior?” she called, after four raps.
What happened next completely shocked her as the door flew inward, making her gaze dumbfounded at her hand, knowing that she had not used that much force to rap on the door. But then, a large blur clouded her vision and someone grabbed her raised wrist. The wrist grabber tugged forcefully, and a man’s voice asked harshly. “So, where is that cunt, Remior?”
Kit fell forward with the tug propelling her inside, as she squawked, “Remior?” As though she were testing to see if the brute pulling her inside could be Remior.
“Grab her, Baco! Don’t let da bitch scream!”
Oh my lord.
Kit finally realized that she was in danger as another hulking presence grabbed her from one side, quickly moving behind her with a huge sweaty-pawed hand clamped over her veiled mouth and nose. She screeched too late against the sour smelling hand so the only sound was furious muffled squeaking. She immediately wrestled against the arm clamped around her waist, damning her heavy skirts. She could not manage a proper kick of the other burly assailant in front of her.
Her movements were strong and violent, not dainty and helpless as she thrashed against the two assailants trying to win her freedom from them. Her twisting gaze had already told her that the room they were wrestling her through was in a shambles.
“Hold her, Baco! Damn, she’s da wild one. Take her to da bedroom, we’ll tie her.”
Tie! Kit screamed beneath the hand and lunged to and fro with enough strength to wobble both men, but not enough to stop them. She could barely catch sight of the men through her veil and her struggles. She only knew that they were both stocky, strong, and had thick accents like she’d never heard before. When they reached the bedchamber, one grasped her legs, lifting them off the ground to put her on the bed as she screeched and thrashed wildly.
“Bloody
hell,
” Brynmore swore. He had followed Miss Montoya and watched as she entered a residence on an upper class street of Paris. It was a large building, and he had no clue into which residence she’d gone. He should have stopped her from going in. She would tip their hand and alert Marco Remior that people were looking for him, when it would be better to identify Remior, and then follow him.
She put herself in danger. If Remior was connected to the cult and Miss Montoya’s brother was kidnapped and used ill by them, the cult was not going to like anyone who cared showing up. Brynmore’s indecision had to do with whether Miss Montoya was a player or a victim. He had enough evidence to say that she was the latter, and his gut intuition told him the same.
If he wanted the best chance for this to lead him to the cult, perhaps he should wait outside and not tip his hand. But that would leave him without a look at Remior and he needed to identify the man for future surveillance. That was why he decided to move in closer to see if he could get a look at Remior without being seen. His motives were to see Remior and definitely not any tugs of worry over a woman he did not know.
Brynmore saw the doorman. However, he’d seen Miss Montoya’s encounter, and he knew the doorman was unlikely to ask his direction. The pitfall to this was where to go once inside and he did not want the doorman to remember him by asking. So he only nodded curtly to the doorman, and then he turned directly to the stairs as though he knew exactly where he was going.
It was bloody well idiotic, because it was getting him nowhere, Brynmore thought moments later. She could be on the first floor, he reflected, climbing the stairs further, considering knocking on any door and just asking for Remior. He had about a five to one chance of not knocking on Remior’s door. Nevertheless, all his speculation and developing plans snapped to a halt when he reached the second floor and turned the corner to the only apartment door. He’d learned a long time ago, all the planning in the world was fine, but when it was time for action a man just had to trust his gut and leap right in.
When he saw the door was open, he did not knock, but he pushed it open the rest of the way. Then, he saw that the first room he entered was in shambles, and he threw all caution and stealth aside. He was dealing with murders, if this was the right direction, and he could not take the chance that it was not. He knew of perils well, and the split-seconds between life, death, injury, or averting them.
He hastily bellowed, “Miss Montoya!” If she were here in danger, his arrival, his bellow, might avert disaster.
Brynmore heard it then, the crash, then struggle deeper in the bowels of the apartment. He rushed forward, continuing to bellow Miss Montoya’s name. His fingers were at his boot top, pulling free the knife he carried by hardened instinct. He did not carry a pistol as it was too bulky and obvious for the delicate searching and surveillance work he was at, however, his knife was always with him.
When Brynmore slammed open the door to the bedchamber he saw her. Miss Montoya was tied with her wrists behind her and her ankles tied together, and then pulled up behind her with a lead binding her wrists to her ankles. She was partially naked with her voluminous gown and underskirts torn around her pale body as she lay on her side on top of the bed.
He caught a glimpse of one man already out the window, and the back of a stocky man halfway through the open window. His swift survey of the room told him that no other attackers were still in the room as he rushed to the bed. Bloody hell! The brutes had cut away the lady’s under drawers, leaving her buttocks and between her thighs exposed.
He saw no blood as he lurched onto the bed behind her, lowering his knife to cut the ropes. “Tell me you live, lass,” he hissed.
“Yes,” she gasped and he heard the sob behind it as he cut away her bonds.
He was torn, if he did not move now, the bastards would get away. He told himself when all was said and done that Miss Montoya would want him after them for herself or surely for her brother. But he was a wretched and cold-hearted man more times than he cared to admit, or had to be, to get the nasty jobs done that he’d been involved in. He felt regret, but he moved to the window instead.
“Lass, get
out
of here as quick as you can,” he called as he leaped through the window, cursing the foolery fouling his tongue. He did not know if they had raped her.
Kit’s entire body shuddered. Her veil was wrapped around her head like a web and for some reason, why that seemed the most important thing for her to untangle and break loose from, escaped her. But she went about it painstakingly, with jerky movements, while tears burned her cheeks because her wrists were free and she could.
They might have raped her had not the Scotsman, Duneagan arrived, bellowing into the room. The two perverted men were readying to rape her, terrifying her with their lewd words and horrible groping hands, while they kept asking harshly where Remior was.
A tremor wracked her body, as though someone had punched her. The sobs she was trying to hold back strained against her throat muscles and the pressure sounded like little squeaks. Her hat and veil finally let loose from her head and fell from her fingers. Then, her hand lurched down her body with frantic and haphazard movements trying to tug the pieces of her gown over the nakedness of her lower body as she curled inward on herself.
This was reality. This was danger. The full force of the implications hit her. “Clay,” she sobbed. “Oh lord, Clay.”
After too long lying like a victim on the bed, Kit finally tried to rise upward and gather herself. Her crying had released her terror and fears and she felt stronger. More in control. Duneagan had told her to leave quickly and she wanted to. However, she could not leave in the torn gown she wore, she thought, clutching the tattered edges over her bare breasts. She realized that she hurt everywhere, when she finally rid herself of the rest of the bindings around her ankles, and she moved to get off the bed.
“You are made of sterner stuff than this, Kit,” she muttered, reminding herself of the rough ranch work that she was used to on the high plains. The more she moved, the more her courage and strength returned.
“I will carry pistols after this,” she muttered, going to Remior’s closet to find something to wear. She was an accurate shot with a rifle or a pistol. “And, no more yards of petticoats and skirts, just to impress patronizing police officials.”
To that end, although she was surprised to find a large collection of gowns in Mr. Remior’s closet, she went for the stacks of britches. She noticed that it appeared Remior was affluent by the amount and variety of clothes he had. He was also a man of thinner stature, because the britches and shirt she put on were not overly large on her.
She grabbed one of his dark cloaks and put it on, pulling its edges around her. Surprisingly, she found herself very angry as she looked about the closet. Angry at herself for being afraid and not stronger. Furiously angry at the brutes for trying to take her free choices away. Like now, they were still assaulting her, making her run, when she should stay and search Remior’s residence for any information that she could glean. She no longer had any illusions about Clay being in danger. Extreme danger! So, even though she wanted to run from the danger, she did not. From now forward, everything had changed. She’d just gotten a taste of the reality that she was throwing herself into.
Still, she chose to continue, and she would until Clay was found. That did not mean she needed to be naive about it though, this attack left her forewarned, and she could certainly approach things better prepared for danger. With this thought in mind, she did not immediately start to search the residence, but instead went to lock the door and latch all windows. She also found a weapon in the heft and sharpness of a pantry knife. She knew how to wield knives and throw them accurately. She bolstered herself with the reasoning that life on a large ranch had offered her many unique talents not associated with women.