The Redemption of a Rogue, стр. 8
“I understand a little,” he said. “How many nights did you go there, seeking out a savior?”
“Twice,” she said with a shudder. “As I said, the first was a few days ago, but it…it didn’t go well. He could not complete the…matter and got angry with me for it. He might have harmed me, I think, if he hadn’t passed out drunk before he could. My friend Aurora was horrified. She begged me not to return. I should have listened.”
He scrubbed a hand over his face. “So you’ve escaped with your life twice.”
“Three times. The reason I ran away and saw the body was because the man I was meant to…to service sounded like an even more brutal one.”
He pushed to his feet, his chair screeching across the floor as he did so. He paced to the window and stood there, broad back to her. She held her breath, for she didn’t know if he had decided she was too much trouble or not.
“Mr. Fitzhugh,” she said softly.
He faced her slowly. “How did you see the body?”
She shut her eyes, the images bombarding her again. She hadn’t realized she was speaking, but she was. And she told him about running, about staggering upon the scene. About seeing that poor woman’s body.
“What did she look like?” he whispered.
“Blonde hair,” she murmured. “I couldn’t see much else from that height and in the shadows.”
That seemed to appease him and he moved back toward the table. “You said it was the Earl of Roddenbury down below. Are you certain?”
She nodded. “Yes. Maggie said his name. And he was a friend of my husband. I’ve seen him many times over the years, though we’ve rarely interacted. It was him, I’m certain of it.”
His lips had pursed, thinning their full line. She drew a long breath.
“You saved me, Mr. Fitzhugh. I don’t just think it, I know it. I owe you more than I could ever repay,” she continued. “But I cannot impose upon your hospitality any longer. I will determine what to do to protect myself…somehow. Just have your man call me a hack and I can be on my way.”
Saying those words was terrifying, but she had to do so. This was not this stranger’s trouble to deal with. She had to manage it herself.
He tilted his head, his gaze unyielding. “You aren’t leaving.”
Chapter 4
The shock that flooded Imogen’s expression was obvious, as was the anger that followed. She lifted her chin, her jawline going harder, and Oscar saw a strength in her, that spunk that had been revealed only briefly last night. She had heart and he had always been attracted to that concept. Not that most men wouldn’t be attracted to this woman.
That thought pulled him back. She might be desirable, that was a fact, but he couldn’t afford to be drawn to her. It wasn’t in the plan, for one thing. For another, what she needed was help, not some stranger panting over her. He had to get himself in line.
“You have no right—” she began.
He held up a hand. “Imogen, these people killed someone. And if you’re right about Roddenbury, they are powerful people. Do you really think they’ll let you skip off into the world where you might tell your tale and perhaps bring their house down around them?”
He saw that sink in. Saw her lose hope. He hated himself for being the one to do that to her, but what choice was there? She had to come to grips with the truth of the matter if he was to have any hope in helping her. Saving her.
He had to save her.
“We could…tell the guard…” she began.
He shook his head slowly. “Without any evidence, you’re going to tell the guard that an earl murdered a woman who worked at the Cat’s Companion? I have lived in this world a long time, my dear—I can tell you they’ll turn away without a thought.”
Her bottom lip began to tremble. “Because she doesn’t matter.”
“And he does.”
“Then there is no hope,” she whispered. “What would you have me do? Change my name and run away to the country? Look over my shoulder for the rest of my miserable days?”
He shifted because the fact was, it might turn out that way in the end. “Let me help you. I have resources—I’ll work with them to try to figure out how to manage this. If we gather enough evidence, we might be able to stop these people. In the meantime, you will stay with me.”
She had gotten up from the table and walked away while he spoke, and now she pivoted to face him. “No!”
He arched a brow. “That option is so distasteful to you?”
“No.”
She stepped forward and he watched as her amber gaze flitted over him. She licked her lips, a tell that she wasn’t immune to him, just as he wasn’t immune to her. He ignored it. The circumstances were still the same, after all.
“No,” she repeated, more softly. “I just…I can’t…you wouldn’t want…” She huffed out a breath in apparent frustration. “You are a busy man. You have a successful club built on catering to men like Roddenbury. And I am nothing to you. Nothing at all. Why would you do this?”
He gripped his hands at his sides. Confession wasn’t in his nature, it never had been. It was too…dangerous. But these circumstances called for something like it. Some way to make her understand that he was on her side. That they would fight this together.
“There was…a woman,” he said through clenched teeth. “She…she disappeared from the same brothel six months ago. There is evidence she is also dead.”
Imogen’s hand came up to cover her mouth and she moved toward him with a long step. “What did she look like?” she whispered.
He understood