Jo Beverly Read Online Free

Jo Beverly
Book: Jo Beverly Read Online Free
Author: Winter Fire
Pages:
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blessing.
    Most of those drinking looked like local men, but Ash spotted his friend Octavius Fitzroger alone at a table across the room, a flagon and a plate in front of him. Trust Fitz to get right to the serious business of food and drink.
    Ash was aware of silence and of people watching him as he crossed the room. They would be recognizing that he was a stranger, not just to the inn, but to their lives. He realized he was still wearing jewels, which he wouldn’t normally do in circumstances like this. He’d put them on only before arrival, hoping to remind Molly whom she dealt with.
    Too late to correct that now, and he couldn’t pass himself off as an ordinary man if he tried. Being a marquess from the age of eight left its marks.
    The locals settled back to their talk and drink as Ash slid onto the bench opposite Fitz.
    “Well?” Fitz asked. He was tall, blond, and slender, but it was the slenderness of a rapier. Though only two years older than Ash, Fitz had been an adventurer and a soldier and matched Ash’s temperament well. A recent friendship had rapidly become close.
    “Not well. Molly’s not here.”
    “That sounds excellent to me.”
    “I need to deal with her. This can’t go on. Apparently her coach went into a ditch a few miles east of here, but some other travelers came across her and took up her baby and nurse.”
    Fitz straightened. “The baby’s here?”
    “Guarded by an adventuress by the unlikely nameof Miss Smith, who did her best to stick me with it. I was planning to leave, but now I find the great-aunts are here.”
    Fitz stared at him. “The Tunbridge Wells great-aunts? What have you been drinking?”
    “Unless the whole staff of grooms is lunatic, it’s true.”
    A blowsy barmaid sauntered over, prepared to fetch Ash a drink. He shook his head. “I do remember providing the traveling chariot and some servants, but I assumed a short trip. I need to take care of them, and I want to discover what this Miss Smith knows. I’m quite looking forward to that.”
    “Poor woman.”
    “She’ll deserve everything she gets.”
    Fitz drank from his tankard. “What’s Molly up to now? How can abandoning her baby here help her cause? Does she think to touch your tender heart?”
    Ash swore at him, but without heat. “I intend to find out. Perhaps she heard about the king’s decree.”
    “That you marry a suitable woman before appearing at court again? He didn’t specify whom.”
    “Thank Jupiter. It would be like Molly to seize on that, though, with reason. Since she’s the cause for royal disapproval, any other bride will only cause a slight thaw.”
    “If the king had wanted you to marry her, he’d have said so.”
    “He doesn’t approve of her, but he approves of my supposed callousness less.” Ash muttered something treasonous.
    “Never mind,” said Fitz. “Miss Myddleton awaits.”
    When Ash swore again, Fitz added, “She’s clever, of tolerable looks, and extremely rich. Other men would snap up such a prize.”
    “I don’t like having my hand forced.”
    “The Dowager Lady Ashart can be forgiven for pushing you toward an heiress.”
    “Desist. Yes, I’ll doubtless marry the chit, but at the moment, I need to sort out Molly. That’s the onlyway to truly vindicate myself. Rothgar has to be behind this. It’s too devious for Molly alone.”
    Fitz tilted his chair back against the wall. “If your cousin is behind this peculiar incident, perhaps you should let me take care of it.”
    Ash looked at Fitz. He hadn’t told him about a recent development. “I might have something to force Rothgar to reveal the truth.”
    Fitz whistled. “Watch your back. What?”
    Ash found that he didn’t want to tell even Fitz yet. The incriminating papers felt like a smoldering keg of gunpowder. “Safer for you not to know. I only mentioned it so you would cease fretting. I have the whip hand now.”
    Fitz straightened his chair with a thump. “Over
Rothgar
? Ash, this enmity has
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