The Governess (Wicked Wallflowers, #3)(28)
The boy angled a glance back in Broderick’s direction.
“You did well,” he said softly.
Crimson splotched his pale cheeks as it so often did at hints of praise and affection.
Still, he lingered.
“’ow long do ya think Oi ’ave?”
Broderick respected the boy too much to feed him a falsehood. “I don’t know.”
It was the topic they all danced around but no one openly spoke of. Until this morning’s meeting had revealed what would invariably have to be discussed: the kidnapping of Stephen long ago that would have a marquess down upon them with charges surely brought, the family absent a member, and a fortune lost in the process.
Stephen grunted. He turned to go. “Mayhap ’e’ll let me stay? Wot fancy nob would want a bastard loike me around?”
The one who’d sired him . . .
And me. His gut twisted. I want you around.
“Run along,” he said quietly, tipping his chin toward the door.
Stephen jammed his cap back on and raced off.
As soon as he’d gone, Broderick downed his drink; the liquid stung a hot trail down the back of his throat. With a grimace, he abandoned his glass.
As they said at the gallows, three times lucky.
And given the Killorans were one vengeance-driven nobleman away from a noose about their necks, never had a saying proven more true.
After the boy had gone, Broderick surged to his feet. A curse exploded from his lungs; full of all the fury and resentment teeming inside, he focused all those energies on the one problem within his control.
Reggie Spark.
She intended to steal his staff, including his best guard, and open up a rival establishment. Despite that treachery, Reggie was the one matter that could be most easily resolved.
Through his earlier anger, hurt, and frustration at her betrayal, a clear head at last won out.
He stopped.
All he needed was to ensure Reggie’s silence and gain that which she’d been so reluctant to give—her cooperation.
Ultimately, Broderick always emerged triumphant. An icy grin ghosted his lips. And he had no intention of failing where Regina Spark was concerned.
Chapter 7
Have you found a way out? Have you still convinced yourself that is a possibility?
The next morning Broderick stood upon the dais at the center of his club, surveying the room, taking in everything and missing nothing.
It was an eclectic mix of people who wouldn’t look at one another on the streets, but in the Devil’s Den, just like in Satan’s real inferno, all sinners comingled without regard to rank. Lords shared spirits with sailors, who kept company with merchants.
Prior to Broderick’s inheriting the club from Diggory, the hell had operated altogether differently. Back then, only the most lethal, ruthless men in the rookeries sat at the tables and imbibed watered-down spirits.
Broderick had transformed this place, a hell in every sense of the word, into an empire which catered to all. He’d had the broken, scarred tables and chairs burnt as kindling and replaced it all with gleaming mahogany commissioned for the club and suitable for any nobleman’s residence.
When his father had proven himself a thief—and a bad one at that—Broderick had survived long after him and made a new life for himself here with Diggory’s three daughters and Stephen. They’d become his new family, and he’d been determined to offer them that which his own miserable father hadn’t—security.
This club sustained them, and any threat against it through the years had been quashed.
This time would be no exception.
From across the crowded gaming hell floor, his gaze landed on Gertrude. Her modest citrine skirts stood out in stark contrast amongst the scantily clad women and gentlemen surrounding her. Gertrude worked her way over to the dais.
No doubt triumphant in her victory. Pleased that she’d bested him.
“’ello, Miss Killoran,” the guard, Nerrie, at the entrance of the cordoned-off area greeted as she climbed the steps. The burly man with a barrel-like chest attempted to make himself smaller to allow her a wider path.
“Nerrie,” she returned, with a smile.
That smile faded as soon as she set her foot on the first step. Her gaze held on Broderick’s masklike features, and then she slowly continued the climb.
They remained in silence, shoulder to shoulder, arms folded in a like manner, both examining the crush of guests that filled every last corner of the club.
“It is busy,” she stated with her usual somberness. “Not even noon, and there’s not a space to be had at the tables.”
He grunted. The Devil’s Den was always busy. Their fortunes were vast. Unlike their rival club that catered only to the peerage, Broderick had enough business sense to realize coin was coin, and he’d built the Killoran fortune off the monies from street thugs and lords alike. And for all the pretend shows amongst Polite Society of shock and disdain for their world, ultimately they all craved a shred of the excitement to be found in the Devil’s Den. It was why a nobleman would one day wed Gertrude, and why others had courted his younger, now wedded sisters.
He motioned to the floor. “Soon, this will no longer hold true,” he said cryptically, his gaze focused on the noblemen surrounding the roulette table, loudly calling out numbers and plays while the clink and jangle of their coin punctuated their shouted wagers. “Soon the tables will be empty, and lords will look on in disdain at the family who . . .” He scowled and wisely silenced the remainder of that dangerous revelation. Instead, he focused on that which he could control. “You knew she would say no.”
Christi Caldwell's Books
- The Hellion (Wicked Wallflowers #1)
- Beguiled by a Baron (The Heart of a Duke Book 14)
- To Wed His Christmas Lady (The Heart of a Duke #7)
- The Heart of a Scoundrel (The Heart of a Duke #6)
- Seduced By a Lady's Heart (Lords of Honor #1)
- Loved by a Duke (The Heart of a Duke #4)
- Captivated By a Lady's Charm (Lords of Honor #2)
- To Woo a Widow (The Heart of a Duke #10)
- To Trust a Rogue (The Heart of a Duke #8)
- The Rogue's Wager (Sinful Brides #1)