Read The Geek Girl and the Scandalous Earl Online
Authors: Gina Lamm
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #Historical, #Adult
He eyed her warily, and she swallowed. It had been a stupid lie. The only reason she hadn’t been petrified of the horse was the leftover fear of her would-be attackers and the fact she was pressed up against Mike’s strong, warm back. He’d never believe her. This was a bad idea. She’d have to…
“I would be delighted. You will need to change your gown, however. Mrs. Knightsbridge should be able to help you locate a riding habit. I shall meet you at the front door when you are suitably attired.”
She couldn’t stop the relieved grin that spread across her face. She hopped down from the desk. “Thanks, Mike. See you in a few.”
She left the office and winked at Mrs. K as she thundered up the stairs. Phase one of the plan was working. Now, she had to get over the idea that she’d be stuck on a huge horse all by herself.
Mrs. Knightsbridge entered the Lemon Room in time to see Jamie yanking the gown over her head.
“Heavens, dearie, slow down. Let me help.”
“He’s going to teach me to ride. Is there something I can wear? God, I’m so nervous. What if I make a fool of myself again? Crap, I’ve got a hairpin caught.”
Her struggles against the gown and her hair only got her entangled further.
“Still, now. Here.” Mrs. K easily detached the pin and finished pulling the gown over Jamie’s head. “Now, let me look. The late countess was fond of riding in her younger days. She was a talented horsewoman. Ah, here we are.”
She pulled an outfit from the trunk, the vibrant green of a wine bottle. It had a full skirt, with a jacket embroidered with gold and black braids. She fetched a hat from the wardrobe, a tall-looking black thing with ostrich feathers adorning it.
Jamie looked up at the ceiling. “Really? Feathers? Did I do something horrible in a past life?”
“Come now, we mustn’t keep his lordship waiting.”
Much as Jamie hated to admit it, the riding outfit did look good. The ornamented jacket was tailored, and it fit her like a glove. The skirt was so long that it covered the toes of the dark leather boots that completed the outfit. They were a touch too big for her, though not so much that it would be difficult to walk. When she’d pulled on the tan gloves and Mrs. K had repinned her hair up and placed the hat on top of it, she gaped at the sight of herself in the mirror.
Her normally pale skin glowed. There was a light in her eyes, something approaching excitement. She stood tall, and her figure looked more womanly than it ever had before. Seeing herself this way made her think that Mike might be able to see them as a couple. She looked the part, even if inside she was still Jamie.
“You look a treat, Miss Jamie. Come now. Off you go.”
With a quick kiss on her cheek, Mrs. K steered her out of the bedroom and down the hallway. Butterflies beat against the inside of her stomach as she descended the stairs. What was the matter with her?
When she saw Mike standing beside the front door, hands clasped behind his back, the butterflies turned into water buffalos. When he looked at her, brows lowering, eyes hungry, they turned into rampaging African elephants.
“You are looking quite fine, Miss Marten.”
“Thank you, my lord.”
Her use of his proper title earned her a cryptic look. “Shall we?”
“Let’s do,” she said grandly, and sailed through the door that was held open by a footman.
Her bravado lasted exactly two minutes and sixteen seconds. On the seventeenth second, a stable boy led two horses from their outdoor residence.
“Holy shit,” Jamie whispered as one of the beasts was walked directly in front of her. She was eye-to-shoulder with the thing. And Mike expected her to ride this monster. Alone. The other day when Mike had pulled her up behind him had been the first time she’d ever sat on one of them. They always seemed way too strong and big for a single person to handle—especially if that person was Jamie.
“Um, Mike? This is a weird-looking saddle. How does it work?”
“You sit atop it.”
She shot daggers at him with her eyes. Was that a smart-ass smirk on his face? She thought it was. There was no mistaking the mischievous curl to his lips.
“Wow. Thanks for the insight there, Batman.” She bit her tongue, remembering too late that she was trying to be easy to get along with.
Before she could apologize, Mike had grasped her around the waist and hoisted her atop the beast.
“Oh my gosh. Okay. How about a little warning next time?” She grabbed at the horse’s mane to steady herself. It tossed its reddish head and snorted.
“Easy, Belle,” Mike crooned to the creature, patting its soft nose. “Easy.”
When he’d finished calming her horse, he gave her a couple of pointers, then mounted his own horse. They started a sedate walk toward the park. A groom followed them on another mount several yards back.
Jamie clutched the reins with a white-knuckled grip, holding them the way Mike had shown her. The sidesaddle was awkward, and she felt very precarious up there on top of the world. The horse’s feet clacked loudly against the cobbles of the street, and she gritted her teeth, willing her body to stay rigidly still.
“Miss Marten, relax. Do not fight the rhythm of Belle’s walk. Watch me.”
She looked beside her and watched Mike’s body as he rode. His body was relaxed, easy, and natural. His lean hips rolled with the horse’s movement, almost as if he and the beast were one. She swallowed hard and shifted a little in her saddle.
Belle sidestepped at the sudden shift in weight. Jamie felt her hips start to slide off the left side of the horse. Panicking, she threw her body right to compensate.
“Careful, Miss Marten!” Mike reached out a hand and steadied her before she could slip off the sidesaddle into the street.
Her heart thumped hard. She locked her eyes forward and mentally glued her ass to the polished leather seat. “Sorry,” she whispered.
“No harm done. I say, are you quite sure you want to continue?”
She nodded, never looking his way. She didn’t want him to see the embarrassment-slash-terror in her eyes. “I’m sure.”
After nearly falling on her ass, she was much more careful. She pretended she was on a quest, and in a very real way, she was—one that would hopefully end with her winning a very distinguished prize.
By the time they’d reached the park, she was starting to get the hang of the rhythm of Belle’s walk and the odd sidesaddle. Fortunately, the park wasn’t crowded. She’d hate to embarrass Mike in front of a big group of people.
“You are doing quite well, Miss Marten.”
Mike’s voice startled her, but she was careful to keep steady as she swiveled her head to look at him. “Really?” Her voice came out sort of soft and shaky.
“Yes. For a lady who has never ridden before, you are taking to it quickly. In time, I think you will find you’re enjoying yourself.”
She smiled at him and looked forward once more to the grassy expanse of the park ahead. “You know what? I think you’re on to something. This
is
fun.”
He chuckled then, a warm, deep sound that made her suck in her breath. “Simple pleasures, Miss Marten, should never be taken for granted.”
“You might be right, your lordship.” Her wink at him brought a true grin to his face.
He flicked the reins lightly against the deep black of his horse’s neck. As the animal broke into a trot, Mike called back over his shoulder. “Simple pleasures, Miss Marten, like feeling the wind in one’s face.”
She scowled at his back as the distance between them grew larger. She was really starting to get the hang of this, and he had to go and show her up like that? So not fair. She chewed the inside of her cheek, wondering if it was a stupid idea to coax Belle into catching up with him. She’d almost made up her mind to nudge her horse’s side with her boot and to hell with the consequences when Mike stopped his horse next to an open carriage. His voice carried over the chattering birds, sounding pretty happy to be talking with whoever the old man was. The salt-and-pepper whiskers on the older gentleman were kind of startling. She hadn’t decided whether they made him look like a badger or a demented and ancient elf when a woman’s voice called behind her.
“Hello there.”
Laying the rein across Belle’s neck carefully, she was relieved when the horse responded by turning around to let Jamie see who was speaking.
The dark-haired woman gave a tight-lipped smile from her perch atop a snowy white horse. She was wearing a riding dress of deep red, her skirt looking like a splash of blood against the stark white of her mount.
“Hi,” Jamie said, smiling back in a confused way.
“It is quite a beautiful day to be enjoying the park, is it not?” The stranger tilted her head at Jamie slightly, a quizzical look on her face.
“Yes, ’tis. Quite.” Jamie tried her best to sound authentic, but her “quite” came out sounding like “quoit.”
“I do not believe I have made your acquaintance, but it is easy to see by your lack of chaperone that we share a certain, ah, occupation.” Her horse tossed its head, and she jerked on the reins rather viciously in response. Jamie winced. She wasn’t a horse fan, but that didn’t mean she thought they should be mistreated. “Those in our position would do well to band together, do you not think?”
Jamie was pretty sure that she wasn’t mistaking the subtle venom in the woman’s tone. Her mount apparently agreed with Jamie, its eyes rolling wildly as it stamped one hoof.
“Sorry, but I think you’re mistaken. My chaperone is back there, and I should really be getting back to Mi…er, his lordship. Good day,” Jamie said with as polite a smile as she could manage, and tried to turn Belle back around. Where the hell was Mike?
“I shall accompany you. I would dearly love to make the acquaintance of your protector,” the woman purred as her horse drew alongside Belle.
“No, no, I would hate to bother you. Honestly, I’m not a hooker, erm, mistress. Just a normal woman.” Jamie nudged Belle’s sides to encourage her to speed it up. She didn’t trust this person, and she wanted to get far away from her. Mike was only about fifty yards away.
The black-haired female must have followed Jamie’s gaze, and her gasp jerked Jamie’s attention over to her. “Whatever are you doing with Lord Dunnington, you common trollop?”
The skin between Jamie’s shoulder blades pricked and burned, and she stopped Belle in her tracks as Mike had shown her. When Jamie turned her head, she wasn’t at all surprised to see the raven-haired beauty glaring death. Jamie’s sense of self-preservation warred with frustration and the need to retaliate. The snark won hands down.
“Listen, if you’re going to call me names, you should at least know the one I was born with first. I’m Jamie Marten. And you are?”
The woman drew herself up taller, the vibrant red of her riding dress matching the flame of temper in her cheeks. “I am Collette Dubois, if you must know. I demand that you answer me. Who are you to Lord Dunnington?”
“That’s not really polite, you know.” Jamie stared straight into her eyes, not backing down a bit. “I’m not sure what kind of mother you had, but even where I’m from, you catch more flies with honey than vinegar. Of course, I don’t know that I should expect anything more from somebody who writes horrible, pathetic letters practically begging for the return of her sugar daddy.”
Jamie swore she could hear teeth grind together. She hoped in the back of her mind that the woman would bite down hard enough to break one loose. The stranger probably could have put up with the return insults, but when Jamie smiled at her, sweet as pie, that was the straw that broke the hooker’s patience.
“You know nothing of me, you damned bitch!”
When time slowed to a crawl and the riding crop in her white-gloved hand rose, then fell toward Belle’s hindquarters, Jamie knew that she had no one to blame for this predicament but herself. If she’d kept her damn trap shut and caught up to Mike, then this wouldn’t have happened. But she’d let her stupid jealousy over his former lover goad her into this. As the whip cracked against Belle’s flank and her shriek cut the air, Jamie had the guilt of her horse’s pain as well as the anticipation of her own that would surely be coming very, very soon.
Time restarted with a vengeance as Belle took off running headlong. Jamie grabbed at her long mane, but the smoothness of the saddle made her slip and slide at the violent pace of the horse’s gait. Jamie had enough time to hear hoofbeats thundering behind her as Belle rounded a tree and sent her sliding off the slick saddle into the very thick, very hard trunk.
***
The sound of pounding hooves turned Micah’s head from his conversation with Sir Humphrey and stopped his breath all in one go. Belle was bolting away from them, and a terrified Jamie was being jounced atop her back like so much dead weight. Without a word to Sir Humphrey, Micah whipped Hart into a gallop, trying to catch up to them before Jamie’s grip failed. When Belle rounded the curve of the path, she slung her rider into a tree with a sickening crack.
Micah flung himself off Hart’s back and dashed to Jamie’s side, fear surging through his veins.
“Jamie!” He knelt by her side, somewhat relieved to see her wide eyes looking at him, dazed though they were.
“Mike?” Her voice was thin and confused.
Leaning closer to her, he cupped her cheek with a gloved hand, cursing the fabric barrier. Her eyes fluttered closed, and her forehead furrowed in clear pain. Her jaw tightened, and her body went rigid as a corpse. He panicked.
“Jamie, open your eyes. Look at me, damn it!” He’d probably sounded too demanding, too commanding for her current state, but he could do no less. He needed to see her eyes again, to make sure she was alive. He breathed a silent prayer of thanks when her lids slitted open.
“Stop being so damn bossy,” she whispered, pain robbing her of her voice.
“Stay with me.” Mike scooped her up and placed her atop his horse, keeping her steady with one hand as he mounted up behind her. He barked a sharp order to the groom to fetch her mount, kicked Hart into a brisk gallop, and headed homeward as quickly as he could, steadying her against his chest.
“Ah,” Jamie gasped, grabbing at the back of her head. The bouncing of the horse must have been excruciating for her, but he could waste no time, not knowing how badly she’d been hurt.
“Stay with me,” he repeated, one arm drawing her body close to his. He steadied her, and she melted against him, finally relaxing the rigid set of her muscles. It worked. He held her still, absorbing the shocks of Hart’s gait through his tensed muscles.
She turned her nose into his jacket, and he tried not to think of how wonderful it felt to hold her close. She was injured, for God’s sake. She might even die, and it was all his damned fault for tweaking her nose as he had. She’d probably tried to coax Belle into a trot and spooked the horse somehow. A soft moan emanated from her lips, and he tightened his arm around her and nudged Hart’s sides to encourage him to go faster.
While it was only minutes before he reached the townhouse, it felt as if hours passed before he handed her down to Thornton. Tossing Hart’s reins to George, he clasped Jamie against his chest once more and dashed up the stairs to her bedchamber.
“It hurts,” she whimpered as he laid her on the bed.
“I know, dearling, I know.” He gently pulled the pins free of her hair, tossing the feathered hat away. He rolled her onto her side. “Wait here.”
He’d rung for Mrs. Knightsbridge, but he did not intend to wait for the housekeeper to arrive. He’d see to her needs until then. He studiously ignored the thumping ache in his chest as he dipped a clean cloth into the basin and wrung it out. It was guilt, guilt for her injuries that were solely his fault. He eased down on the bed behind her, pressing the cloth to the swollen knot at the back of her skull.
“Do not fight it, Jamie. Trust me. The pain will lessen if you relax. Doesn’t this cloth feel good?”
“Yes,” she whispered. His bare fingers brushed a hair from her forehead. “Don’t leave me, Mike.”
“I shan’t, dear.” The endearment fell from his lips unbidden. “I am sorry you fell. I should not have left you.”
She smiled at him without opening her eyes. “No, you shouldn’t. You’re going to owe me for that one.”
“Whatever you ask, Miss Marten. A gentleman repays his debts.” He’d give her anything she wished, so long as she came through this whole.
A harried Mrs. Knightsbridge bustled into the room, toting a basket clinking full of bottles.
“Oh good heavens, your lordship! Whatever happened to poor Miss Jamie?” Mrs. Knightsbridge pulled potions, herbs, and cloths from her basket and began spreading concoctions out on the dressing table.
“An accident, Mrs. Knightsbridge.” Micah did not prevaricate, admitting his guilt full on. “I left her, and her horse spooked and threw her into a tree. She has a swollen area on the back of her head.”
“Belle didn’t spook,” Jamie grated, wincing as she looked at them. “That damn bitch cropped her and made her run.”
“What?” Mike took a step toward Jamie, an ominous thunder gathering in his brain.
“She said her name was Collette Dubois. She called me names, and we argued. At the end, she whacked Belle across the ass and nearly killed me.”
Collette.
Mike yanked on his waistcoat so hard he nearly popped a button.
“Miss Marten, I am deeply sorry for the pain you’ve suffered this afternoon.” He reached a hand to her but stopped before it could caress her soft skin once more. He schooled his face into its proper, emotionless mask. “I will approach the lady in question and demand an apology on your behalf.”