They were nearly upon her.
“Aw . . . She don’t ’ave it, Eddie,” Cap tutted.
“Wot are we to do, then, lady?” Eddie asked. “Maybe you could work it off? Mikey don’t mind big girls.”
She lifted her chin. Pulled her shawl tight, one hand disappearing into the folds. “Don’t come any closer.”
“Or wot?”
“Maybe she’ll scream,” Mikey said, yellow teeth flashing as though he’d like that, the monster.
“She can,” Eddie said softly, close enough to touch her if he tried. “But she won’t find no savior ’ere.”
Her heart pounded, fear and fury warring within. Fury won out. “Then I shall have to save myself.”
Chapter Nine
He didn’t like her in the Garden.
Beast headed for the market, keenly aware of the setting sun—of the way the place could turn from friendly to dangerous in an instant, especially for the daughter of an earl, too full of Mayfair no matter how much time she’d spent in the Docklands. She’d as well be from the other end of the world as here, where darkness came like a promise, and brought with it all manner of malice.
What if she’d left before he got there?
He increased his pace, hurrying to get to her before the last rays of light settled, weaving in and out of buildings and down alleyways, making the final turn and nearly crashing into a tiny body speeding the opposite way. He reached for the child who threatened to ricochet off his legs and land herself in the muck, taking in her empty basket and threadbare cap.
“Bess,” he said once she was stable again, the drawl of the streets thick on his tongue. “What’s got you racin’?”
Her eyes went wide. “Beast!” she said. “I ain’t told her nuffin’! I thought she’d make a good mark for me last blooms.”
Hattie.
He looked to the empty basket. “Looks like she was that.”
The girl nodded, her cap going further askew. “Aye. Bought the lot. And for thruppence.”
He was unsurprised by Hattie’s generous spending, but made a show of looking impressed. “And now, moppet? Where’s the lady?”
She shook her head. “I didn’t tell her ’ow to find you. I’d never.”
“I don’t doubt it.”
Her chest bowed out with pride. “Left ’er in the square, I did. Told her no one beats you.”
He imagined Hattie hadn’t cared for that. He reached into his pocket and extracted his bag of sweets, offering it to Bess. When she popped one into her mouth, he chuffed the girl beneath her chin and said, “Good work today, Bess. It’s getting close to dark. Best find your mum.” The duo would have another early day tomorrow—up at dawn to collect their blossoms and then back to the square to sell them.
If the Bastards had their way, every child in the Rookery would wake early to get to lessons, but families had to eat, and the best Devil and Whit could do was give them clean water and as much protection as was possible.
Which meant he didn’t have time to protect aristocratic ladies hell-bent on adventure when he’d expressly told her he would find her, and not the other way around. He saw Bess off, then headed for the market square, crossing into it in just enough time to see Hattie on the other side, getting fleeced by one of the square’s card men.
He imagined she’d chosen the dress to blend in with the Garden crowd or some nonsense, a simple walking dress in a soft, mossy green with a bonnet to match, topped with a knitted shawl pulled tight around her shoulders in an attempt to, what—make her shapeless? Whit supposed that he might have ignored the whole ensemble if not for the woman inside, who was impossible to miss and nothing near shapeless. She was taller than most and with wild curves that no one would miss. Especially not a man who’d had a taste of them the night before.
Memory flashed, her tongue meeting his in a delicious stroke, her breath coming fast at his lips, her fingers tight in his hair, as though she wished she could direct the caress.
Christ, he would allow her to direct his caress wherever she liked.
He resisted the urge to linger on what might come of it, ignoring the waking of his cock as he headed for her without hesitation, speeding up when he realized she wasn’t getting fleeced. She was doing the fleecing.
The broad-tosser stood, anger clear on his face, collected his table, and turned away—heading for the nearest alleyway. And Hattie followed . . . not knowing she was being led into the darkness to be set upon by thieves.
Whit began to run.
He followed down the dark, empty lane where they’d disappeared, turning down one alleyway, then another, searching the dead ends that peeled off the path—each a perfect place to rob a toff. To do worse to them. He cursed, loud in the darkness.
“Don’t come any closer!”
No, he didn’t like Hattie in the Garden. He didn’t like her boots in his filth, or her voice ricocheting off his stone walls. But he absolutely didn’t like the fear in it.
He’d break anyone who touched her.
He was at a flat run at that point, desperate to get to her. Telling himself, as he tore down the street, that he only rushed to protect her because she was the key to his enemy’s demise.
Protect her.
Around the final corner, still in the shadows, Whit discovered the Doolan brothers—proper Garden thugs, homegrown from the muck of the place and far stronger than they were smart—backs to him.
Facing Hattie.
Whit couldn’t see her face behind the duo’s thick shoulders, but he could imagine it, and he hated it. Pale with her violet eyes—that impossible color—wide with fear, and her full lips open as her breath shallowed with panic.
Rage coursed through him, setting his heart pounding.
Protect her.
He couldn’t see her. But he knew she’d be inching away from the stink of the brothers, from the rot of their teeth and the scars on their faces and the filth on their hands.
Wait.
She wasn’t inching away from them. “The way I see it, gentlemen,” she said, her voice ringing out, steady as a steel, “you’ve misjudged my ability to fend for myself. I don’t think you’d like to see how I would do it.”
She’d had a small knife in her pocket in the carriage last night—a blade sharp enough to cut the ropes at his wrists, but too small to strike fear in the hearts of the Doolans, who’d been on the threatening end of far more dangerous weapons. And still . . .
They were inching away from her.
What in hell? Whit edged closer in the shadows.
“Where’d you get that, gel?” Eddie Doolan asked. Was his voice wavering?
“You know it, then?” She was surprised.
“E’ryone in the Rookery knows it,” Mikey said, his panic undeniable.
She came into view, lit from above by a shaft of reflected sunlight, and Whit nearly rocked back on his heels at the sight of her. Tall and strong, her shoulders back and her jaw set like a warrior. And in her hand . . . a blade that promised wicked punishment.
Punishment Whit knew without question, because he’d meted it out a hundred times. A thousand.
The woman held one of his throwing knives.
Shock was chased by a thrum of anticipation when Eddie asked, words reed-thin with fear, “Are you Beast’s?”