Never Tempt a Scot by Lauren Smith Page 0,33

just did, lass. You begged me to touch you, and I surrendered to your pretty plea.”

She stared at him, lips trembling, and he felt like a cad.

“Rest, lass. We have a while to go before we stop again to rest. I’ll not touch you again . . . for now. You may sleep without fear.” He moved back to his seat across from her, and she began to relax. In a few moments, she fell asleep, and he simply watched her.

That sense of something being off continued to bother him. He had every reason to believe that this was the woman who’d ordered his abduction. It had to be pity he felt. She was reaping the consequences of her actions, and she was terrified, as she should be.

His instincts rarely failed him, yet right now those same instincts warned him that there was something wrong about Miss Hunt. Something he was missing and couldn’t understand. It bothered him more than he wanted to admit.

Jane Russell hurried up the steps of the townhouse that Lysandra said was being rented by Rafe Lennox. They’d only just left Lydia Hunt’s townhouse. No one had been at home, but Lysandra had begged the butler, Mr. Annis, to tell them what he knew about Lydia. A horrifying story had been related in whispers.

“I wouldn’t tell a soul, Miss Russell, but as you are a close friend of my lady, and I know you have her best interests at heart, I must tell you the whole affair,” the butler had said to Lysandra.

Jane could barely believe what she’d heard. Mr. Kincade’s drugging and abduction. Lydia’s discovery of Kincade and her attempt to rescue him. The drugged Scotsman stealing Lydia away into the night at knifepoint. It was almost too incredible to believe.

The crucial bit of information lay in that Kincade had taken Lydia to Rafe Lennox’s residence. The driver had, after being questioned by Jane, admitted that he had lied about where the coach had taken Lydia and Kincade.

“Oh, Mama, I hope she is here,” Lysandra said as Jane tapped the knocker under the door.

“As do I.” Jane didn’t want her daughter to know how truly worried she was about Lydia Hunt. Abducted. Held at knifepoint. Taken away in the night. The child was ruined if word ever came out about this, and she was in grave danger. Jane was determined to help her.

The door to Mr. Lennox’s house opened.

“We are here to pay a call on Mr. Kincade,” Jane said to the butler.

“I’m terribly sorry, madam, but Mr. Kincade is not home at present.”

“When shall he return?” she asked quickly. Time was of the essence if she was to bring Lydia home. She might then be able to concoct a story that would explain Lydia’s disappearance and thereby save her reputation.

“He has left Bath, madam,” the butler replied uncertainly.

“And Mr. Lennox? Is he at home?”

“No, the master is also abroad.”

“Abroad?” Jane asked. “What the devil do you mean, abroad? Did they run for France? Did they take that poor girl with them?”

The butler held up his hands. “Madam, please calm yourself. Please, do not upset yourself. The master would not wish anyone to suffer a fit of hysterics.”

“Hysterics?” Jane pushed her way past the butler and into the foyer. “You would perish on the spot if I ever succumbed to hysterics. Bah!” She spun and jabbed a gloved finger into the butler’s chest. “Where have they gone, and do they have that poor girl with them?” Jane narrowed her eyes. “And should you even contemplate trying to deceive me, know this—my son is Lucien Russell, the Marquess of Rochester, dearest friend to Ashton Lennox, the older brother of your master and the person who pays to keep this house running and staffed. Think wisely about your next words.”

The butler’s face was ashen. “I have no intention of deception, my lady. The master and Mr. Kincade, along with their female guest, departed for Scotland.”

“Scotland?” Lysandra gasped. “Do you think they’ve gone to Gretna Green? Is Lydia to be married to Mr. Kincade?”

The butler swallowed hard before he answered Lysandra’s inquiry. “No, miss, they are bound for Edinburgh.”

“Not Gretna Green? But it is so much closer. Surely the inconvenience would—”

“Lysandra, dear, what I believe the man is trying to say is that Mr. Kincade does not have marriage in mind. Am I correct?”

Again, the butler nodded, his face pale.

“Oh heavens. Poor Lydia,” Lysandra whispered.

“Where in Edinburgh are they bound?” Jane asked firmly.

“I do not truly know, madam.

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