The Wallflower Wager Read online Tessa Dare

Categories Genre: Historical Fiction, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 78
Estimated words: 75705 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 379(@200wpm)___ 303(@250wpm)___ 252(@300wpm)
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“You think I’m afraid. You don’t know the meaning of fear. Or hunger, or cold, or loneliness.”

“I know the meaning of love. I know that you deserve it. I know you are too good a man to be alone.”

“Don’t say such things,” he warned her. “Don’t make me prove you wrong.”

She put her hand on his arm. “I’m not wrong.”

He tipped his head back and cursed the sky. There was nothing for it. He couldn’t convince her with words. She’d never understand unless he showed her the truth.

“Come along, then.” He pulled her arm through his, roughly. “We’re going to take a little stroll, you and I.”

She pulled against his arm. “Where are you taking me?”

“On a tour of Hell.”

Penny stumbled as he pulled her around a corner, off the bustling street of shops and onto a smaller, crowded lane. Passing women eyed her with a mix of curiosity and contempt. Men raked her with lascivious gazes.

“Stay close.” His voice was dark and bitter. “This is where the ladies of the evening hawk their wares, and in a neighborhood like this one, it’s evening ’round the clock.”

Penny’s face heated. As they stepped off the pavement, she lifted her hem to keep it out of the muck.

He clucked his tongue. “Mind you don’t raise those skirts too high. Another inch, and you’ll be mistaken for one of them.”

The air was foul with the stench of filth and gin. People called and whistled to them from glassless windows and doorways on either side of the lane.

“Let’s have a little tour of my childhood, shall we? I was likely conceived in one of the many rooms above this street. Fathered by a man who could be any of dozens, and born to a prostitute who was a slave to gin. Nonetheless, she made a better mother than many. She didn’t abandon me to die of exposure. Not as an infant, at least.”

Together, they weaved through a dense warren of twisting, fog-smothered passages. Derelict buildings crowded either side of the alleys. Streets so narrow, one couldn’t see the sky.

Penny could have never retraced their steps. If he left her alone here, she would wander helpless in the fog forever.

But Gabriel never paused—and she didn’t suppose it was because masculine pride made him reluctant to ask for directions. He knew precisely where he was going. Every twist and turn belonged to a map etched in his mind.

They passed a beggar woman with her palm outstretched for a farthing. Penny slowed on instinct, but he tugged her past.

“There’s a cellar down that way that used to have a broken window.” He tossed out the observation as if he were pointing out a church with unremarkable architecture. “I spent a winter sleeping in it. Along with a great many rats.”

She tripped on a stone, and her boot sloshed into a shallow river of . . . well, of things probably best left unidentified. Gray gutter muck splashed her hem.

They ventured farther into the maze of tenements and doss-houses. Every minute or two, he paused to point out, in a tone of complete indifference, a doorway that could offer as many as six huddled urchins shelter from the wintry wind, or the baker’s shop where it was easiest to steal bread. It wasn’t difficult to imagine him here as a child. Everywhere they turned, she glimpsed the pale, grime-streaked face of a boy dressed in rags. A face that could have been Gabriel’s, once.

By the time he brought them to an abrupt halt, Penny’s feet were aching, her lungs were burning, and her heart was in tatters.

“Here’s the best part.” He took her by the shoulders and turned her to face the other side of the street. “That gin house, right there . . . ? That’s where my mother sold me.”

“Sold you? A mother can’t sell her child.”

“Happens in the rookery all the time. Husbands sell wives. Parents sell children. I was sold to the pub’s owner.”

“You said you were in the workhouse.”

“I was, after the owner pushed me out the door. But not before I spent three years in that gin house. Hauling coal, carrying water, scrubbing vomit from the same floors I slept on at night.”

“Gabriel . . .” She wanted to beg him to stop, but that didn’t seem fair. She couldn’t refuse to hear it, when he’d lived it.

“Do you want to know what those years of my life were worth? Can you guess the price a mother sets on her own child?”

Penny suspected she knew the answer. A sick feeling gathered in her stomach as he reached inside his coat.

“A shilling.” He produced the coin from his pocket and held it up for her to see. “That’s what I was worth. A single shilling.”

“Don’t say that. You were always worth more than a shilling.”


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