The Captain of All Pleasures (Sutherland Brothers 1)
Page 18
"What do you mean, 'no future'? You're my bloody heir. Everything goes to you. And I'm not exactly living as though I plan to get old."
"One day you'll have an heir," Grant said quietly but with absolute conviction.
Derek's fingers paled on the glass he grasped. "I will not have an heir. We've been through this. It won't happen."
Grant ran a hand over his face. He suddenly looked tired, and his absolute self-control was slipping. "I don't accept that. I want to work in the shipping line, but it's impossible when you've taken over what was supposed to be my place in this company."
"This company is half mine."
"But think back to why it was formed all those years ago. We learned to sail so you and I would have a livelihood when William was alive and the heir. Now this earldom is yours. After Lydia, you were too..." Grant stopped, uncomfortable. "Well, I took the reins. But, damn it, it's been years. You've had plenty of time to adjust to your lot in life. My life is completely on hold until you decide to think of someone else for a change and free me from your responsibilities."
Derek had never looked at it like that. He'd assumed he did Grant and everyone else a favor by staying off the estates. He'd easily avoided home and all the attendant worries because his younger brother did such a good job with them.
Now, learning that Grant was encumbered by those duties, Derek understood it wasn't fair to tie him up in his affairs. But he couldn't think about that now. Besides, Grant knew better than to have mentioned Lydia and William to him in the same conversation.
"To hell with you, Grant. I have other plans. I don't give a bloody damn what happens while I'm gone. No one's forcing you to stay on."
A look of bitter disappointment flashed in his brother's eyes before he stood and turned away. Seemingly resigned, Grant walked over to the port window, studiously taking in the scene of activity on the docks. Derek wasn't fooled. This wasn't the last he'd hear about this, and the only reason it had ended now was that Grant despised emotional scenes.
Changing the subject, Grant remarked, "I am pleased that you're captaining this race, at least. We need this win." He turned to stare Derek down. "We really need this win. Our reputation has been compromised--whose wouldn't be after losing twelve cargoes in the last year? Yet you continually sign on the riskiest ventures. In case you haven't noticed, we've had several contracts pulled."
"Of course I've noticed," Derek said testily. And he had. Shipping contracts were based on past performance and reputation, so lost ships and the consequently damaged reputation could prove ruinous to a line.
"If Lassiter wins this race, his company will finally be on solid footing. He could easily take over even more of our business."
"I will never allow that to happen."
Grant's brows drew together. "Why do you two hate each other so much?"
Derek drank while considering his answer. "He harasses me because he has a Yank's natural aversion to the aristocracy--men should make their own way and all that drivel." He looked up when he realized Grant had said nearly the same thing, but ignored his brother's frown. "He complains to any who'll listen that I was handed everything while he works tirelessly."
"You know that's not true," Grant said. "And you? Why do you hate him?"
"Of those twelve lost cargoes you were mentioning, he's directly responsible for at least four--"
A knock on the door broke the tense conversation.
When Derek called permission, Jeb entered and said, "Cap'n, we've got goods come to be delivered. I just wanted to make sure that we're not taking on perishables until the decision to sail is made."
Whatever Grant detected in Derek's face had him clenching his fists. "Decision to sail--what bloody decision?" he ground out. "Why aren't you provisioned?"
Jeb decided this was a good chance to escape, and with a "Sorry, Cap'n," he scrambled out to close the door behind him.
"Calm down. I do plan on sailing," Derek said. "Just not yet." Seeing the uncompromising look on his brother's face, he reluctantly began filling him in on Nicole.
"Derek, don't take me for a fool," Grant said when he finished. "You don't expect me to believe you are looking for a woman. Much less Lassiter's chit."
"It's true. And it's important to me." He took a generous swig of brandy. "Lassiter, you obviously haven't heard, is in jail right now. And will be until after the race. Without him, there is no competition for the Southern Cross."
As Grant took in that new information, Derek continued, "And what's the urgency about sailing today? I'll win, but if I didn't, what's the worst thing that can happen? We lose a few more contracts? You know that won't break either of our banks."
Grant loomed over his desk. "Don't you have any pride left? Peregrine could be the most powerful line in Britain, was well on its way to being that. But then you let a woman crush you and, as a result, the company?" Grant's eyes bored into him. "I'm glad the American's picking us off. He deserves it more than we do."
"That's a little much--"
"You damn well know it's not. Think of the people we employ. What happens to everyone who works for the line? To the sailors' families? I can't tell you how much it pleased me to watch the company grow, to revive another port town. Now, without regard for anyone else, you're killing the one thing that made me proud."
Derek gave an unconcerned shrug just to irritate him.
Grant exhaled and then changed tactics. "You may shun everyone you used to associate with, but the rest of your family doesn't."
"So that's what this is about?" Derek demanded. "Your standing in the ton? I can see it now, you and Mother at Lady Sarah's rout hearing tales of the drunken reprobate heir. Do they whisper about me? About me ruining what was already an embarrassing foray into commerce for an ancient family?"
Both men stared at each other, neither prepared to back down.
His eyes like ice, Grant finally said, "I'll sail this ship if you don't."
Derek recognized where this was going. Yes, he could have all the time in the world to search for Nicole. But then he'd have to take up the running of the estates.
"Forget it. I'm sailing," Derek said. "When I feel like it."
Grant leveled a look of fury at him, and Derek was sure he'd charge him--actually hoped for it. But then Grant's restraint came to the fore. That worthless, damning restraint. Grant controlled himself, but did say in a scathing voice, "Looks as if you'll destroy yourself again because of a woman. Only this time you're taking everyone else down with you." He started toward the door but turned back. "You are the most selfish bloody bastard I've ever had the displeasure to know. That we're related makes the insult greater."
Chapter 9
C hancey, will you relax?"
"Don't want to be here a mite longer," he grumbled as he threw jerky glances over his shoulder around the sitting room of her grandmother's palatial town home. Though none of the priceless knickknacks had changed location since he last checked his surroundings, the hunted look on his face deepened.
She shook her head. "As if I do?" They simply didn't have a choice since Sutherland had started tearing up the dockside looking for them. They couldn't stay on the quay, much less on their ship. "Glaring at the vases will not stop them if they truly want to charge into your hip and break."
He scowled at her. She'd never seen another person so uneasy as Chancey appeared now and for the two nights they'd spent here. And he couldn't stop pulling at his collar, which divided his neck above and below like two cogs from a gear. The dowager, who frightened Chancey more than her home did, had decreed their dress code, but it was next to impossible to find clothes to fit his great bulk. The woman couldn't be dissuaded. If they were to stay in her home or use any door other than the servants' entrance, then by God they would dress appropriately.
Abruptly, Chancey stood. "I'm gonna confront him today."
She exhaled loudly and reached for a small branch of table grapes. "We've been over this. The last time someone 'confronted' Sut
herland, he landed in jail indefinitely!" With effort, she softened her tone. "I can't risk losing you, too, even if you are miserable. And think about it--we're safe here. This is the last place Sutherland would ever look."
"I'm not hidin' any longer. And he needs to pay for yer hurt honor."
"My hurt honor?" she cried. She looked around the room and dropped her voice. "One more time--I was not compromised. Even if I were, would you see me leg-shackled to a wastrel forever?"
He bunched his lips together and contemplated the ceiling before answering in a definite tone. "No, ye'll marry like ye promised yer gram."
"Exactly." Would he finally cooperate?
"Still don't like not tellin' yer pa...."
They continually fought about the decision not to tell her father what had happened on Sutherland's ship. She'd ultimately persuaded him that her father would go mad not being able to get at Sutherland. And what if he did catch up with him in the future? They'd kill each other this time.
They had enough problems with that man as it was. He'd already been furious with her before he'd been knocked out, because he presumed she'd not only want to marry him, but would scheme to do so. The arrogance! She wanted to pull his ear to her lips and scream that hell would freeze over before she married him, and that Chancey had only been protecting her. As Chancey said, they'd merely "bonked his head and tweaked his nose." It wasn't as if they'd killed him.
Yet because of him, they'd gone to ground in, well, Mayfair. Even visiting her father became a concerted effort, since Sutherland's crew regularly checked the jail for her.
She was furious with Sutherland. So why did their time together remain constantly in her mind and plague her nights?
In his bumbling way, Chancey had tried to get her to stop dwelling on the man. What he told her chilled her to the core. She'd known Sutherland was a rake, but she'd thought the way he'd kissed and touched her so intimately had been...special.
For him, what they'd shared was a nightly occurrence. She'd been just another notch in a rake's bedpost....
Her thoughts were interrupted when Chapman knocked on the parlor door. He looked apologetic as he said, "Your grandmother would like to know why you ordered a carriage brought around to the front."
"I'm about to go see my father."
Chapman nodded gravely. "If that was your answer, I am to instruct you to order the carriage to the mews instead."