Gentleman Jim by Mimi Matthews
Author:Mimi Matthews [Matthews, Mimi]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Mimi Matthews
Published: 2020-08-19T00:41:08+00:00
Located on Albemarle Street in Mayfair, Grillonâs was an eminently respectable London hotel. Luxurious too, by any standard. But St. Clare hadnât taken rooms there to enjoy such luxury. If that were the sole consideration, heâd have sooner remained at his grandfatherâs house in Grosvenor Square. No. It was privacy he wanted. And privacy for which he paid a tidy sum.
The hotelâs manager, Mr. Fordyce, was the soul of discretion. He didnât utter so much as a peep when St. Clare appeared in the dead of night, shrouded in a cloak and leaning on Enzo for support.
No doubt the man assumed he was foxed. An assumption aided by the fact that, upon reaching his rooms, St. Clare immediately sent down for two bottles of brandy.
Enzo busied himself filling a basin in the dressing room while St. Clare stripped off his linen shirt. He sucked in a sharp breath as his sleeveâstuck fast with dried bloodâpeeled away from his arm. Fredâs bullet had merely winged him, but that didnât mean the wound didnât hurt like the very devil. And it hadnât stopped said wound from bleeding profusely.
It was no less than he deserved for behaving in such a reckless manner.
The moment heâd heard that Fred had taken Maggie away in his carriage, St. Clare had lost the remaining hold heâd had on his temper. For the second time that night, heâd seen red.
His grandfather often warned him of the dangers of his Beresford temper, both in words and with visual displays of his own poorly controlled ire. St. Clare had prided himself on his ability to manage that temper. To hold his emotions close, like a card player who never revealed his hand.
Even when heâd dueled with Fred so many weeks before, St. Clare had kept a tight leash on his emotions. Heâd been cold and calculating. Never once permitting the angerâthe hatredâthat roiled within him to melt through the glacial exterior heâd forged for himself.
Until tonight.
âAcqua, signore.â Enzo brought a porcelain basin from the dressing room, placing it on a low table near the bed. Water sloshed over the rim. âE un panno.â
St. Clare wet the proffered cloth and used it to clean his wound, rinsing the blood away over the basin until the water was tinted red with it. âPortami una bottiglia di brandy.â
Enzo obediently fetched a bottle of brandy from the sitting room and brought it back to him.
Uncorking it with his teeth, St. Clare poured a liberal amount over his wound. He may as well have doused it with liquid fire. It burned like the dickens. He clenched his jaw against the pain. âBlast Burton-Smythe to hell and back,â he muttered wrathfully.
âStupido inglese,â Enzo echoed in sympathy. He craned his head. âAgo e filo?â
St. Clare angled his arm to examine his wound. The bullet had taken a chunk out of him. It wouldnât be easy to stitch it back together, but he supposed it was worth a try. âSì,â he said. âAnd Enzo? Try and find a sharper needle than the one you used in Rome.
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