He didn’t much mind that—he’d had far worse than verbal jeers in Bedlam—but he didn’t like the way Lily’s face had grown pale at the sight of him. “Caliban, please.” She gripped her hands together as if to keep from wringing them. “Can you come back in a bit? Perhaps half an hour or so?”
Her voice was too low, too controlled, as if she was afraid of setting the man off. As if she’d set him off before and hadn’t liked the consequences.
“You know this… oaf?” The man spat the word at her, then threw back his head in cruel laughter. “I vow, Lil, your taste in bedmates has come down. ’Fore long you’ll be lifting your skirts for common porters, if this is the sort—”
The end of his vicious rant ended in a satisfying squawk as Apollo backhanded him. The other man staggered and fell on his arse.
“No, don’t hurt him!” Lily cried, and Apollo hated to think she cared for this man.
“I won’t,” he assured her in a level tone. He stared at the sputtering rogue for a moment and made up his mind. “But neither will I… stand by while he… abuses you.” So saying, he picked up the man and tossed him over his shoulder. “Wait here.”
The man made a sort of moan and Apollo hoped he wouldn’t toss his accounts down his back. He’d bathed and changed into a fairly clean shirt before coming to see Lily.
Pivoting, he marched toward the dock, the man still over his shoulder.
“Caliban!”
He ignored her calls. He didn’t really care who this ass was—as long as he was nowhere near Lily or Indio.
“Put—” The knave had to gasp for breath as Apollo leaped a fallen log, jostling the man’s stomach against his shoulder. When he could draw breath again he swore foully. “Do you have any idea who I am?”
“No.”
“I’ll have your head.” The other man gulped and tried to kick.
So Apollo let the man roll off his shoulder and onto the ground. They were far enough away from the theater anyway by this point.
The villain stared up at him, pale with rage, his wig fallen to the side. His own hair was nearly black and cropped short. “I know people—people who can and will cut off your blasted cock.”
“I have no… doubt.” Threats were two a penny. Apollo straddled the prone dandy and leaned down into his face, intimidating him as he’d dared to do to Lily. “Don’t come… back until… you can talk… to her with a civil tongue.”
He nimbly avoided the kick aimed at his groin and left the knave there on the ground. Lily, after all, hadn’t sounded too pleased when he’d left.
Nor was she looking very happy when he got back. She was still in the clearing, pacing.
She whirled on him as soon as he appeared. “What did you do to him?”
He shrugged, watching her. “Dumped him… on the ground… like the rubbish… he is.” His throat ached, but he ignored it.
“Oh.” She seemed to deflate a bit at that, only to puff back up a second later. “Well, you shouldn’t have interfered. It wasn’t any of your business.”
This was not how he’d hoped to spend the afternoon.
“Perhaps… I wanted it to… be my business.” He approached her cautiously as he spoke.
“It’s just…” She waved one hand, obviously frustrated. “You just can’t. He’s…”
Apollo cocked his head. “Indio’s father?”
“What?” She turned and stared. “No! Whatever made you think that? Edwin’s my brother.”
“Ah.” The knot that had been pulled tight in his chest ever since she’d started defending the dandy loosened. Family was another matter. One couldn’t choose family. “Then he… should speak… to his sister more carefully.”
She screwed up her face rather adorably. “He’s not himself. He lost quite a bit of money and he’s anxious about it.”
He caught her hand and tugged gently as he turned down a path into the garden—away from where he’d left Edwin. “I see. And this is… your fault?”
“No, of course not.” She frowned, but let herself be led, so he counted that as a contest won. “It’s just that he makes money from my plays.”