The Last Wicked Scoundrel

The Last Wicked Scoundrel by Lorraine Heath Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Last Wicked Scoundrel by Lorraine Heath Read Free Book Online
Authors: Lorraine Heath
Tags: Fiction, Historical Romance, Victorian
is not the man I thought he was.”
    Obviously he’d not appreciated being interrupted, but the truth of it was that there should have been nothing going on to interrupt. “I know very well what you were doing. I was asking why you were doing it.”
    “I was doing as ordered, ensuring that the lady would want to keep me close.”
    She took a step forward. “You cannot toy with her affections.”
    “You can’t have it both ways, Countess. Either you tell her why she needs to have someone watching over her or I provide her with a reason to want to keep me near.”
    “And when the reason no longer exists?”
    “We’ll deal with the aftermath. I promise it won’t be worse than a hangman’s noose.”
    Spinning on his heel, he strode toward the door. She wanted to call after him, wanted to demand more of him, that he not hurt Winnie. But the only way to ensure that would be to do as he suggested: tell Winnie the truth.
    Her friend would despise her. She might even decide that Avendale should be welcomed home. Then all would be for naught. She would again be at the mercy of a brute. And those who had been involved in his false demise could very well be introduced to prison or, as Graves had implied, the hangman’s noose.
    Catherine had worked too hard to protect Winnie from Avendale to see it all undone now. All she could do was hope that they were mistaken about the man being about.
    S itting at a small table on the terrace with Catherine, Winnie ordered the butler to have tea and biscuits brought out. She had retied every ribbon, secured every button, and yet she still felt slightly askew. Every now and then a few strands of her hair would blow across her face with the gentle breeze. No matter how many times she tucked them back into her bun, they came free, reminding her of the madness that had consumed her within her tiny study.
    She could taste peppermint on her lips, smell sandalwood on her skin. Her tea sat untouched and cooling because she didn’t want to lose the taste of William.
    She could only be grateful that it hadn’t been Whit who had walked in on them, but she’d had the foresight to send him on an outing to the zoological gardens with his governess that morning. She hadn’t wanted him to be about when the inspector arrived. The last thing she desired was for her son to become frightened or to have any doubt regarding his mother’s sanity.
    “Win, I know it’s none of my business—”
    “If you’re about to comment on what you walked in on, then I quite agree that it is not your business.”
    Winnie wasn’t certain she’d ever seen Catherine’s eyes so large with surprise, but then she’d never been one to stand up for herself. However, those days of cowering were behind her. She had nothing to fear any longer. Except for a possible thief or a bout of forgetfulness.
    “He’s a commoner,” Catherine said.
    “I’ve had an aristocrat, thank you very much. And that wasn’t so jolly.”
    “I just don’t want you to get hurt,” Catherine said.
    Reaching out, Winnie squeezed her friend’s hand. “I know you mean well. But he’s always been kind to me.”
    “Just don’t misinterpret his kindness. Because of your past you’re vulnerable.”
    Shaking her head, she looked out over the gardens. “I used to fear everything. I believed my opinion didn’t matter. I thought I was unworthy. I dreaded hosting balls or dinner parties, because I always disappointed Avendale. Now I can do so much more because I’ve no one to disappoint. William enjoyed the ball. He likes my plans for the hospital. He doesn’t judge me, Catherine. He accepts me as I am.”
    “I didn’t realize you knew each other so well.”
    She gave a secretive smile. “While I was healing he always there. He brushed my hair once. I was fevered and I think he thought I was unaware of my surroundings, but I was afraid if I let him know that he would stop. A man brushing my hair. I may have begun to fall in love with him

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