An excerpt from THE
COURTESAN...
CHAPTER 1
"C’mon, Jack! You used to be game for any lark!"
Jack Carrington, captain in the 1st Foot Guards, peered over a stack of
half-unpacked linen at the young dandy accosting him from his doorway.
"I’m happy to see you, too, Aubrey, and while I appreciate the flattering
enthusiasm for my company which led you to hunt me down before breakfast,
I’m not interested in going anywhere. As you know, I didn’t reach London
until late last night, and as you can see, I’ve yet to settle into my
rooms. Can this excursion not wait?"
Receiving the rebuff with no noticeable dimming of his enthusiasm,
Aubrey Ludlowe crossed the room and, pushing aside Jack’s portmanteau,
poured himself some ale from the flagon on the desk. "Can’t wait. Besides,
why unpack? Leave it for your man."
"I sent my batman to rejoin his family as soon as we landed and haven’t
yet had time to find a replacement."
Aubrey waved his hand. "Let your new man attend to it after you hire
him. The lesson begins shortly, and if we do not arrive soon, all the best
seats will be taken."
Surprised, Jack swallowed his ale in a gulp. "You want to drag me away
at barely past dawn to watch a lesson? Since when did you develop such
enthusiasm for education? Not while we were at Oxford, to be sure!"
Aubrey set his mug down with a thump, his expression affronted.
"’Tisn’t a matter of some rubbishy book-learning! Nay, ‘tis more important
than that. Indeed, ‘tis the most important thing going on now in London,
what with the Season not yet begun. Every gentleman of note will be
present. Stands to reason there must be a decision soon, and good friend
that I am, I don’t wish you to miss having a chance."
Jack stared at Aubrey. "A lesson is the most important event now taking
place in London?" he asked, trying to sift the most intelligible bits from
his friend’s speech. A sudden thought occurred and he leaned forward to
sniff the air. "Are you sheets-to-the-wind, Aubrey?"
His friend chuckled, seemingly much less offended to be accused of
being drunk at seven in the morning than at the suggestion he’d taken up
scholarship. "Nay, though I don’t mind a little nip first thing, to revive
the spirits. A sirloin wouldn’t come amiss either, but we haven’t time."
Aubrey snatched the folded shirt from Jack’s hands and tossed it on the
bed. "Wear regimentals, since you’re half-dressed in them already, but we
leave now. The fencing master closes the doors promptly at seven-thirty."
"You’re haranguing me to go to—a fencing lesson?" A sudden vision
filled Jack’s head—smoke, screams, the rattle of musketry and clang of
blades, himself with saber slashing. Shaking it off, he said grimly, "No,
thank you, Aubrey. My fencing skills are quite proficient enough. Pray
God, I shall never need to hone them again."
His friend sobered. "Amen to that. Heard Waterloo was a dreadful
slaughter. But I’m proposing a different sort of contest—and one you
definitely will want to see. Trust me, old fellow! Have I ever led you
awry?"
Recalling a long line of dubious exploits stretching from childhood to
university, Jack smiled. "Frequently."
Grinning back, Aubrey protested, "Well, not this time. If you decide I
was wrong, you may afterward exact whatever retribution you like, but I’m
sure you will be thoroughly grateful I insisted you come along. ‘Tis
nearly a—a life-altering experience! Or," he added with a heavy sigh, "so
it has proved for many of us. But no more—you must see for yourself.
You’ll thank me, I promise you!"
"Oh, very well," Jack capitulated, his curiosity by now thoroughly
piqued. Abandoning the shirts, he shrugged on his uniform jacket. "In
compensation for making me leave my kit in such disorder, you may buy me
breakfast."
"Immediately after the match," Aubrey promised. "Only hurry! I’ve a
hackney waiting."
With the speed of long practice, Jack looped the fasteners as he
followed Aubrey into the hall.
"Why are you at Albany anyway?" Aubrey asked as he hustled Jack down
the stairs. "Dorrie’s making her come-out, isn’t she? Why not stay at the
family manse?"
"Mama and Dorothy won’t be coming to London for another month. You know
old Quisford won’t stir from Carrington Grove until the family leaves, nor
would he trust an underling to properly open the house here. When I
mentioned I intended to put up at Grillon’s until they arrive, a fellow
officer whose regiment hasn’t yet been ordered home from Paris offered me
his rooms at Albany."
"You’ll stay in London until the family comes?" Aubrey asked as they
boarded the waiting hackney.
"I’ll remain just long enough to sell out, purchase new garments and
consult our solicitors. Then I’m off to breathe country air and let Mama
and Dorrie fuss over me."
"If they can spare you the time," Aubrey replied, signaling the driver
to start. "When Mama fired off my sister, ‘twas such a frenzy of
preparations you’d think they were mustering an army. You’ll return with
them for the Season, of course?"
"Yes, after I get the spring planting sorted out with Jackson. I
promised Dorrie I’d escort her to parties, introduce her to any army chums
who happen to be in town and see that only eligible gentleman are
encouraged to call. Which leaves you out," he added with a grin.
"As if she’d look at me anyway, when we’ve known each other since we
were in leading strings," Aubrey retorted. "Besides, I’ve no desire yet to
become a tenant-for-life."
"Since as Dorrie’s equerry I shall be obliged to go about in society, I
plan keep my eyes open. Perhaps I’ll discover a little charmer who
persuades me to settle down."
When Aubrey chortled in disbelief, Jack continued, "No, I’m serious.
There’s something about finding oneself intact, after riding through a
hail of musketry and artillery shot, that makes one contemplate one’s own
mortality. Perhaps it’s time I do my duty to marry."
Aubrey stared at him. "I believe you mean it. Thank Heaven I’m a
younger son! No duties of procreation for me—not of the legitimate variety
anyway," he amended.
"So what illegitimate activity are we pursuing this morning? Must be of
some great moment, to get you up at such an hour. Or have you merely not
been to bed yet?"
"Got a few hours’ sleep," Aubrey replied. "Man needs his wits about him
for this endeavor."
"Which is precisely—what?" Jack pressed.
"You’ll see for yourself soon enough."
And with that Jack had to be content. During the rest of the drive,
Aubrey refused to be coaxed, tricked or bullied into revealing anything
further. Mystified and a bit annoyed, Jack was more than happy when his
friend had the carriage stop at a modest townhouse in Soho Square.
They followed several other gentleman up the stairs to the main floor
where Aubrey, after tossing coins into a box beside the door, led him into
what appeared to be a converted ballroom. The area by the door was
thronged with groups of chatting gentlemen; beyond them was arranged an
assortment of chairs, all occupied.
"Blast, I knew we’d tarried too long," Aubrey grumbled. "Now we shall
have to stand."
After scanning the crowd, Aubrey elbowed a path to a space against the
left wall. "This will have to do. Ah, they’re beginning. Is that not
magnificent?"
In the sudden hush, Jack heard the clang of steel on steel. Turning his
attention to the floor, he noted facing them an older man clad in breeches
and shirt sleeves. His opponent, posing en garde with his back to them,
appeared to be a mere stripling, but before Jack could glean any further
impression, the young man went on the attack.
Although the older gentleman, clearly the instructor, was taller and
heavier, the young student seemed nearly his match. The flashing blades
struck sparks as the boy thrust and counter-thrust, offsetting the
master’s advantage in size and experience with superior agility and
audacious, risky changes of direction that allowed him to steadily drive
the man back.
His distaste for combat forgotten, Jack’s attention riveted on the
interplay of blade with blade. When, after checking an advance intended to
throw him off-balance, the boy countered with a thrust so swift and
unexpected Jack barely saw the weapon move, he joined the gallery in a
roar of approval as the master’s sword went flying.
"Brilliant!" he said to Aubrey while the student trotted to retrieve
the errant foil. "How long has he—"
As the boy untied his mask and turned to face them, the rest of Jack’s
sentence went unuttered. Walking toward them, the master’s sword in hand,
was not a young lad, but a girl.
A woman, rather, Jack amended, noting with appreciation the curves
suggested beneath the loose-fitting linen shirt and breeches. Though with
those rounded hips, that delicious curve of bottom, how could he have
believed for a moment the student was a boy?
And her face—Jack literally caught his breath as his gaze rose to what
must rank as one of the Almighty’s supremest acts of creation. Its shape a
perfect oval, the skin luminescent as a China pearl, her countenance was
animated by large eyes of deep gentian blue set under arched brows. Though
the full, petal-pink lips were unsmiling, the newly-minted-gold hair
pulled severely back and tucked into a knotted queue, she was without
question the most beautiful woman he’d ever beheld.
Aubrey’s low chuckle pulled him from his rapt contemplation. "Did I not
tell you?"
Realizing from the amusement on his friend’s face that his mouth must
be hanging open, Jack shut it with a snap. "Who is she?"
"Lady Belle—or at least, that’s what the ton calls her, after her
long-time protector, Lord Bellingham."
"An actress?"
"No, a courtesan—and since Bellingham’s death a month ago, the most
sought-after woman in London. Every unattached gentleman in the city has
been pressing her to consider his offer, though Lord Rupert—" Aubrey
gestured to a tall, thin man in black, his expression as somber as his
garb—"has the blunt to outbid all comers. Rumor says he once offered
Bellingham two thousand guineas to relinquish his claims to Belle—and
doubled the offer to the lady privately, though she never left Bellingham,
so it might be all a hum. Thought you might want to enter the running."
"At a starting bid of four thousand guineas?" Jack laughed. "I haven’t
that sort of blunt! She’s ravishing indeed, but—alas," he said, surprised
to feel a genuine pang of regret, "I could never afford her."
"If ‘tis true that she’s turned down Rupert on several occasions, she
might be angling for more than just money. You’re a well-favored gent, war
hero and all. Might have a chance with her. And if successful, you would
upon occasion allow your best friend to worship at her feet."
Something in Aubrey’s tone made Jack transfer his gaze from Belle back
to his friend. "You have a tendre there?"
Aubrey sighed. "She’d never look twice at me—an undistinguished younger
son of modest appearance and fortune. But wait—the most amusing part is
beginning. Once Wroxham discovered she was taking lessons—wearing
breeches—the news raced through the ton and a crowd began gathering to
watch. Hoping to discourage it, I suppose, she told Armaldi to charge
admission, but that only seemed to bolster attendance."
"If she makes enough from that, she’ll not need a new protector."
"Oh, she don’t keep it—gives it to Armaldi, to reimburse him for his
trouble in having such a crowd foisted upon him, she told Montclare. But
Ansley—young cub who’s been dangling after her since last season,
protested that her admirers deserved a boon for their devotion. He induced
her to agree that after the lesson, she’ll meet one challenger. Any who
manage to best her win a kiss."
Indeed, as Aubrey spoke, Jack noticed several young men talking with
the fencing master, their voices raised as they evidently pressed rival
claims to that honor.
While the dispute continued, Lady Belle stood unmoving, the tip of her
foil resting on the floor. Jack felt his gaze pulled inexorably back to
her—indeed, he expected she would immediately command the attention of all
the men and most of the women in any room she occupied.
After subjecting her to a searching second inspection, he found his
initial awe magnified. Truly, in appearance she seemed perfection, as if
the most skilled of Greek sculptors had crafted the very image of a
goddess and then breathed life into it. Though the scandalous man’s attire
she wore fitted her loosely, there was no mistaking the amplitude of the
curves tantalizingly concealed beneath that excess of cloth.
Jack found himself imagining her garbed in classical draperies, her
slender arms and toes bare, the fine linen of the chemise outlining,
rather than concealing, the shape of her breasts and thighs. Desire
tightened his body, rose in a flush of heat to clog his throat.
Idiot, he chastised, making himself look away. The last thing he needed
was to fall under the spell of this courtesan, who probably made demands
as limitless as her beauty and possessed a heart as warm as the marble
from which that Grecian sculptor would have crafted her.
"She doesn’t appear to be worried," he said, his tone sharper than he’d
intended. "Has anyone ever bested her?"
"Not yet," Aubrey admitted. "But doesn’t stop men from fighting for a
chance to try. Now, they’re beginning.
At that moment, the fencing master pointed an imperious thumb at one of
men. Muttering their disappointment, the other contenders quit the floor.
The fencers took their places. In a few moments, with considerably more
ease—and decidedly more disdain—than she’d displayed against her
instructor, Lady Belle disarmed the challenger and knocked him to the
floor.
She looked up from her vanquished opponent, her face expressionless,
her intense blue eyes scanning the crowd. By chance, her gaze crossed
Jack’s. Connected. Held.
The force of it sent a vibration through Jack, raised the tiny hairs at
the back of his neck. For a long moment they simply stared at each other,
until abruptly, Lady Belle jerked her gaze away.
Ignoring the babble of masculine voices calling out to her, she stepped
around her humbled opponent, bowed to the fencing master, and strode from
the room.
Suppressing a shiver, Belle forced herself to walk with calm, even
strides to the door. A bold fellow, that tall, thin, dark-haired officer
whose scarlet regimentals had drawn her eye—and whose gaze had commanded
hers, as if by right. She didn’t recognize him, which meant he must be
newly come to London.
Probably another bored hanger-on, amusing himself by watching the
latest show. Botheration, how she wished those useless fribbles would
leave her in peace!
She’d already refused Lord Rupert half a dozen times and turned down a
score of other offers in extremely blunt terms. How could she make it any
plainer that she had no intention of accepting carte blanche from any of
them?
Not now that she was free. Free! Even after a month, the realization
still sent her spirits soaring. After six long, painful, humiliating
years, the shreds of what remained of her life now belonged solely to her.
Even if she had no clear idea as of yet what she meant to do with it.
Except, she thought, smiling with grim satisfaction as she recalled her
challenger face-down on the floor, train herself so that she was never
again at any man’s mercy.
Mae was waiting to help her change. "Good lesson?"
"Yes," she told her companion as she stripped off her men’s garments.
"Armaldi made some suggestions about adjusting my stance that improved my
thrust nicely."
"Must have made quick work of your challenger," Mae replied, handing
Belle her gown. "Who was it this time?"
"Wexford. The man fences like a turnip. Wooden wrists, poor form, no
grasp of strategy. Fortunately for the security of England, he was never
in the Army."
That comment called up the image of the dark-eyed captain and something
stirred in her chest. No, she told herself, pushing the vision away, she
was not curious.
"Oh, I nearly forgot," Mae said, pulling a sealed note from her
reticule. "A boy brought this for you."
While Mae fastened the buttons down her back, Belle scanned the
missive. "It’s from Smithers, my solicitor, requesting that I call at my
earliest convenience." She frowned, wondering what had prompted the
unusual summons. "I suppose I can stop on my way home."
"Whatever do you think he wants, Belle?" Mae asked, a bit anxiously.
"He handles your finances, don’t he? I hope—I hope there’s nothing amiss."
"You needn’t worry. I reviewed the accounts with him just last month,
and the investments are performing well."
"You’re so clever, I expect you’re right. Funds and investments!" The
older lady shook her head. "In my day, we dealt in jewels, gowns and
carriages. Are you sure it wouldn’t be safer to accept another offer? So
many you’ve had this month! And some of the gentlemen quite charming."
Having already responded to this question on numerous occasions, Belle
had to struggle to keep a sharp edge out of her voice. "For years I’ve
saved every penny and had Smithers place the funds in the most reliable of
investments. We shall not run out of blunt, and the house and its
furnishings are deeded to me outright. I don’t need another protector."
"I know you weren’t too happy with Lord B, but surely you could find
one more to your liking. You can’t really mean to live without a man."
Her patience wearing thin, Belle snapped back, "Why do you continue
urging me to take lover? You should know how unreliable are their vows of
devotion!"
"Oh, in my youth, ‘twas me what was fickle, leaving one for another
when I had a better offer. But toward the last—" Mae sighed. "You mustn’t
fault Darlington for his lack of constancy. I was getting older, and ‘tis
the way of the world for men to prefer a younger woman."
A world I need no longer inhabit, Belle thought defiantly. But contrite
now over her loss of temper, she said, "Pray forgive me for chiding you!
‘Twas truly Darlington’s loss, for he could have found no one to replace
you with so sweet a temper or generous a heart."
Mae smiled at Belle, her eyes misty. "You’re a dear child, and I don’t
know what I should have done, had you not taken me in when he cast me off.
I wasn’t as wise as you over the years, and after I’d sold all my jewels—"
"You were the only woman who treated me kindly, that first year
Bellingham brought me to town, when I thought I should die of loneliness."
And shame, she added silently. "And have ever been a true friend. Besides,
who advised me to make the best of my lot and accept all the gifts
Bellingham showered on me, stashing them away for later use? We owe our
wealth today to that wise counsel."
"Well, ‘tis good of you to say so," Mae replied, "but I wouldn’t know a
fund from a trust, and that’s a fact."
"Enough of that! Would you like to stop for ices while I visit the
lawyer? I should count it a great favor if you would take the carriage at
the front and go to Gunter’s while I slip out the back. As soon as I saw
the crush in the ballroom today I asked Meadows to summon me a hackney.
I’d rather not have a crowd following me."
A great lover of sweets, Mae brightened at the suggestion. "Are you
sure you’d not like to meet me there? We could stop by the lawyer’s
after."
"No, for wherever my carriage goes now, the most annoying throng
gathers. Besides, looking as fetching as you do in that new gown, I image
some admirers will stop to flirt with you. Darlington will burn with
remorse."
"Red always did become me, and if I do say so who shouldn’t, I’ve kept
my figure. The most magnificent breasts in London, they used to say, and
you’re still quite handsome, aren’t you, my pretties?" she crooned,
patting her ample bosom, the powdered top of which bulged above the low
bodice of her scarlet dress. "Seeing how Frederic threw me over for that
chit out of the opera—the most grasping, cold-hearted little strumpet you
could imagine—I like to believe he did come to regret his choice."
Belle gave her companion a hug. "I’m certain of it! Now, off with you
and create my diversion."
"You, my dear, have taken on the appearance of a-a veritable Quaker!"
Mae said frankly, looking Belle up and down as she put on her pelisse.
"Not that you ain’t still a beauty, whatever you wear. But with your
looks, to garb yourself in a plain gray gown with nary a ribbon, cut so
high there’s not a bit of flesh showing!" Mae shook her head, obviously
finding Belle’s behavior incomprehensible.
Belle shrugged. "I can dress to please myself now."
Mae looked at Belle thoughtfully. "Will you please yourself? I don’t
mean to vex you by saying it again, and you may call me a foolish old
romantic, which I’m sure I am, but I cannot see how you mean to exist
without a man in your life, and you so young! It’s—it’s not natural."
Belle walked to the door, her smile brittle. "You’ve not been listening
to my detractors. Have you not heard that I’m the most unnatural woman in
England?
Copyright © 2005 by Julia
Justiss.
® and T are trademarks of the publisher.
This edition
published by arrangement with Harlequin
Books
S.A.
THE COURTESAN --
HQN Books;
December
2005 -- ISBN: 0-373-77082-0