A Rag-mannered Rogue

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Authors: Hayley A. Solomon

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“WHY CAN'T YOU TELL ME WHO YOU ARE?”
“You said you did not want to be bored by my tale,” Tessie replied.
“Well, that was before you saved my life and I hadn't the faintest inkling what a devilish fine shot you are!”
“A fine shot is no recommendation for marriage, my lord. And I told you, saving your life was payment of the tab.”
“Extravagant payment.”
“Indeed, but then I was horribly hungry and sadly in need of a chamber. I do not deceive myself that I should have succeeded in either had you not intervened.”
“True, but it took little effort on my part.”
“Yes, it is a shocking thing what rank and a haughty demeanor can achieve.”
Nicholas grinned, but those subtle marks of pain were back. Tessie noted it instantly, for his brows furrowed and there was telltale moisture upon his brow.
“Try sleeping,” she said. “If there was some laudanum somewhere . . .”
“There is. Joseph carries it. For . . . emergencies.”
“For acting the spy, you mean.”
“For acting as government's agent, Madame Sharp-Tongue.”
Tessie grinned, for he was obviously nettled. “I shall get some, then. And a cotton shirt. You will feel better clean.”
She slid down from the bed, glad of something to do other than fall under the spell of those mesmerizing eyes and the sheer lines of his body, hardly decent under the bedclothes. . . .
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A RAG-MANNERED ROGUE
Hayley Ann Solomon
ZEBRA BOOKS
Kensington Publishing Corp.
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
One
“Mr. Dobbins, you will kindly remove your arm before I either scream out or do you serious injury.”
Miss Hampstead's voice was calm but dangerously firm. Her dark eyes flashed brightly. Little ringlets persisted in escaping from her somber bonnet, trimmed, as it was, in colors of half mourning. Its redeeming feature—a merry, twirling feather, now looked somewhat worse for wear. Tessie thought of it as the last straw on her present haystack of troubles.
She tugged at the bonnet's lilac ribbons and wriggled on the hard perch seat. Her furious words appeared to have
no
apparent effect, for the negligent arm still crept about her waist, persisting in its unwelcome attentions.
Tessie breathed hard from a virtuous desire to practice patience. If she had it her way, she would simply heave the driver
straight
onto the Great North Road and take off with his cattle. But
that,
she knew, would be unladylike. She sighed and tried again.
“Dear
Mr. Dobbins, in case you are deluding yourself, I should mention that I would not permit you to touch me if you were the last man on earth. So
do
be a dear and let me go before I feel obliged to create a fuss!”
But Mr. Dobbins, who was
very
fine in an ill-fitting olive riding coat with an extremely high collar, did not seem to care about threats. He took his eyes off the horses and the narrow stretch of road simply to enjoy Miss Tessie's satisfying curves. Then he compounded his sin by setting his arms squarely about her waist again, scraping a good deal of carriage paint on the only signpost in miles, and causing his elderly high steppers to sweat.
Tessie hurtled forward but managed not to land in an undignified heap. Nevertheless, her gown was made hopelessly dusty, the hems acquiring two grubby brown stripes across the front. She dusted them down crossly, noting that her tormentor
still
did not have his team under control. He clearly had not the faintest notion how to handle a team. She murmured a few sterling words of advice—for she was an excellent horsewoman—but was, naturally, ignored.
She prepared, rather fatalistically, to be ditched. After two hours of traversing the countryside with the hapless Oliver Dobbins, she did not repose the
least
confidence in his skill with the reins. Consequently, she resigned herself to the inevitable collision, clutching hard at her perch and squeezing her eyes tightly shut. When a phaeton curled quickly around a nearby bend, she heard it, and accepted her fate calmly.
Or at least, as calmly as her volatile nature permitted. At the last moment, she could not refrain from opening her long lashes, grabbing the ribbons, muttering a few choice epithets—and, I am sorry to say it, actually yelling.
“You will ditch the gig, you unutterable beast!” Tessie's eyes gleamed in fury, a fact that Mr. Dobbins, hardly ruffled by the clouds of dust that the near accident had caused, ignored. He merely coughed, tugged ineptly on the reins, and smirked when his horses pulled up a mere matter of inches from the oncoming phaeton.
This, due more to the skill of the
other
driver, who had swerved neatly, narrowly avoiding the ditch on the opposing side.
“You complete fool! You . . .” Words escaped Tessie. Well, ladylike ones did.
“Hush, Miss Hampstead. It is of no use to squawk. I am perfectly accustomed to insults.”
This Tessie
immediately
had the proof of, for the gentleman in the phaeton pulled to a halt. Within a very few seconds he'd jumped from his chaise and begun a lively series of abuses, beginning with Mr. Dobbins's hamhandedness and ending with a derogatory remark, interpolated with several choice epithets that Tessie silently appreciated and, sadly, rather admired.
Upon sighting Tessie with a profusion of lovely curls still escaping her dull lilac straw, he colored up and began “pardoning his language in front of a lady.”
Whereupon Miss Hampstead nodded demurely, relieved that he could have heard nothing of her
own
colorful expletives seconds earlier. She was actually saucy enough to bat her lashes, an act that had the effect of making the gentleman in the phaeton falter a little, his annoyance trailing off in a flurry of jumbled exclamations that even the most avid listener could have made no sense of whatsoever.
Tessie did not seem to mind, for though the
words
were not immediately apparent, the intentions were. For a fraction of an instant, she nearly applied to the gentleman for assistance, for he looked young and kind and charming, even if a little too eager to tool his horses around the bend at breakneck speed.
But then a second, more sedate carriage drew up behind, and Tessie realized he was one of a party—probably his mama and his betrothed—and
her
presence would likely be irksome. As a very high feather emerged from the window, followed by a fashionable poke bonnet and a pair of inquisitive eyes, the impression was confirmed. Further, the difficulty in describing her own reprehensible circumstances to the satisfaction of all seemed perfectly impossible.
So she held her tongue and extended her hand regally, hoping that no introductions needed to be made. She had her wish, for Mr. Dobbins was in no mood for civil banter.
None of this interlude seemed to phase Miss Hampstead's would-be seducer, for he merely fiddled with his reins and got his ill-matched beasts trotting again, although hardly in tandem—a fact Theresa's tired derrière was now becoming accustomed to on the hard seat.
“What was I saying?”
Miss Hampstead adjusted her hat.
“You were saying,” she answered sweetly, “that you were perfectly accustomed to insults.”
“Ah, yes. So I was.” He nodded in satisfaction, long sleeves flapping against his reedlike frame. “What I am
not
accustomed to is a pretty little armful.
That,
I am happy to say, I am bound to rectify this afternoon.”
“I will shoot you first, you silly creature. I should
never
have asked you to take me up.”
“Oh, but then you would never have reached London, would you?”
Since this was unanswerable, Tessie contented herself with glowering at the wretch and tilting her chin significantly toward the horizon. Out of the corner of her eye, she could see that this stratagem was pointless, for Mr. Dobbins was affording her yet another infuriating smirk. He continued as if unaware of her annoyance.
“In point of fact, my dear, I should never have agreed to the excursion, for a more tiresome, quarrelsome vixen as you have proven to be I cannot imagine. So, you see, neither of us are best satisfied, but we are bound to endure.”
Tessie ignored the unpleasant beating of her heart. She was not afraid, for she was far from puddinghearted, but she would have been a great fool not to take Mr. Dobbins's threats at least a little seriously. Still, she did not think it at
all
necessary for Mr. Dobbins to know that he had overset her, so she retorted with spirit.
“If that means bumping all down the road pulled by a couple of job horses and enduring lascivious glances for the next few hours, do pray excuse me. I declare I can hardly stomach the notion.”
“You do not have to stomach it, merely comply with it. You have excellent shoulders, Miss Tessie. I have always thought so, though for some perfectly skatter-brained reason, your grandfather was
never
so kind as to afford me a closer look. I would have offered marriage, you know!”
“Marriage? Why in the
world
do you think Grandfather would have countenanced that?”
“Because our lands march together and it would have saved him the cost of a London Season.”
The answer was almost
too
prompt for Tessie. Her eyes glimmered with sudden mirth.
“Never say you actually had the nerve to put that to him?”
“I did, though the old goat behaved so disgracefully, I withdrew the offer instantly.”
“For which, I own, I am heartily grateful.”
“You may not think so at the end of this day, Miss Hampstead, for I find it is no longer convenient to marry you. Your dowry is apparently disappointing, if village rumors are to be believed?”
There was just the faint interrogative in his tone that made Miss Hampstead color slightly, for it was to answer precisely this question that she'd been so determined to find her way to London.
The offices of Mr. Devonshire, the Viscount of Hampstead's solicitor, was of far more significance to her at this point than viewing the Elgin Marbles or even the Tower of London.
It was
there,
she knew, that she would be able to ascertain, at last, in precisely what circumstances she stood. But none of this was any of Mr. Dobbins's business, though he eyed her keenly.
Too
keenly, she thought. But if he thought her portion sufficient, he might be distracted away from his current deplorable intentions. Accordingly, Tessie swallowed the preposterously unladylike comment that hovered teasingly on her lips and assumed an air of haughty disdain.
“Disappointing? I would hardly call sixty thousand pounds a year disappointing, Mr. Dobbins!”
The eyes sharpened for a moment, then the tips of a rather elongated mouth slackened in disbelief.
“Never smoke without fire, Miss Hampstead. And though your bonnet is rather fine, your gown is . . . shabby.”
“Oh!” Tessie was incensed, the more because she knew the remark to be true. Truth to tell, after putting away her blacks, she had no gown suitable for half mourning besides this pink and a pearly mauve in the bandbox. She satisfied herself that more could be procured in London, but to be told as bold as brass that she was “shabby” was the absolute outside of enough. And now those creeping hands again . . . she pursed her lips and wriggled.
Mr. Dobbins seemed satisfied by her silence. Smug, really. At last, thinking he had made a rather significant point, he concentrated on the reins. Tessie watched the autumn leaves fall from the trees and contemplated the enormity of her scrape.
She had tumbled into it quite accidentally really, for how was
she
to know that she could be so horribly mistaken in Mr. Dobbins's character? Or that London could be so very far? She was positive that every bone in her body would be aching before they reached the next posting house. But that, of course, was not the worst of her problems.
Her problems were prodigious and tangled. She would be hard pressed, for example, to explain
exactly
how it came to be that she, a gently bred female, the granddaughter of a viscount no less, should be trotting off to London in horse and trap unfit for the knacker's yard. Worse, why she should be unaccompanied by
any
female of respectable age, lineage, or relationship to her, and worse yet, why she should even now be fending off the most unwelcome advances of a certain Mr. Oliver Dobbins, late of the village of Greenford?
Certainly, if the viscount had been alive, none of these strange circumstances would have occurred. She would doubtless be preparing for her first London Season, arguing over ball gowns—she had most unsuitable taste—and dashing through the park on the high stepper she was
sure
she could have wheedled out of his lordship.
If Grandfather Hampstead had
not
died in a carriage accident, she would have driven sedately to London in his chaise, on soft squabs and accompanied by outriders.
Certainly
not in so ramshackle a manner as this!
Miss Hampstead tried her very best not to look guilty. But her features, piquant beneath the straw hat, were far too expressive for her liking. She knew, of course, perfectly well that she should have waited for the full period of her mourning to be over before attempting this unsuitable excursion. Further, she knew that she should have sent word to Brighton, for dear old Finchie, despite being newly married at the grand age of seven and forty, would doubtless have hastened back to chaperone her.
But Tessie, try as she would, could
not
think that poor Mr. Moreton, once coaxed out of his bachelorhood, would welcome such an outcome to his marriage trip. Even so, Miss Fincham—no, it was Mrs. Moreton now—was just the redoubtable sort of person she needed.
She
would have been quite able to depress the pretensions of such a person as Oliver Dobbins. Not that Tessie was not perfectly able to do so herself, but her methods were less socially acceptable than Miss Fincham's.
Had she not been told time and time again that ladies do
not
shoot gentlemen? They do not even, as she had once shockingly put it, “plant them a facer” no matter
how
much they were deserving of such treatment. Females of
quality,
as Miss Finch frequently liked to instruct, raised their eyebrows coldly, pointedly remarked upon the weather, or at their most cutting, bobbed the slightest of curtsies and turned their backs.

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