Home > The Serpent Prince (Princes #3)(59)

The Serpent Prince (Princes #3)(59)
Author: Elizabeth Hoyt

Simon advanced into the main hall of the brothel and looked around. He hadn’t set foot in here since before he’d met Lucy, but the place hadn’t changed. Half-dressed whores paraded their wares, enticing men, some barely old enough to shave, some toothless with age. Minor royalty rubbed shoulders with upstart merchants and foreign dignitaries. Aphrodite didn’t care. As long as the color of the money was gold. In fact, it was rumored that she had just as many female customers as male. Perhaps she charged them both, Simon thought cynically. He looked around for the madam but didn’t see her distinctive gold mask. Just as well. Aphrodite frowned on violence in her house, and that was exactly what he was intent on doing.

“What is this place?” Christian whispered beside him.

He’d picked up the younger man two—no, three—houses before. Christian still looked fresh-faced after the theater earlier in the evening, the fight outside it, and the three increasingly seedy gambling places they’d visited before this. Simon very much feared that he himself resembled a newly unearthed corpse.

Damn youth anyway. “Depends.” He started up the stairs, dodging the race going on there.

Female jockeys wearing only brief corsets and masks rode bare-chested steeds. Simon winced as a jockey drew blood with her quirt. Although, judging by the bulge in the trousers of her mount, he didn’t mind at all.

“On what?” Christian watched wide-eyed as the winning pair galloped up and down the upper hall. The jockey was bare-breasted and bouncing exuberantly.

“On your definition of heaven and hell, I suppose,” Simon said.

His eyes felt as if a handful of sand were under each lid, his head ached, and he was tired. So very tired.

He kicked in the first door.

Christian exclaimed something behind him, but he ignored it. The occupants, two girls and a red-headed gentleman, didn’t even notice the intrusion. He didn’t bother to apologize, just shut the door and moved on to the next. He didn’t have much hope of finding Walker. According to his sources, Walker had never patronized Aphrodite’s Grotto before. But Simon was getting desperate. He needed to find Walker and get this over with. He needed to make Lucy safe again.

Another door. Shrieks from within—two women this time—and he closed it. Walker was married with a mistress, but he liked the bawdy houses. If Simon visited every single brothel in London, eventually he’d find him, or so he hoped.

“Won’t we get thrown out doing this?” Christian asked.

“Yes.” Kick. His knee was beginning to hurt. “But hopefully not before I find my quarry.”

He was at the end of the hall now, at the last door, in fact, and Christian was right. It was only a matter of time before the house thugs arrived. Kick.

He nearly turned away, but he looked again.

The man on the bed had his cock buried in a saffron-haired wench on her knees. She was naked, save a demi-mask, and had her eyes closed. Her partner hadn’t noticed their interruption. Not that it mattered. He was short and swarthy and black haired. No, it was the second man, the one almost in the shadows observing the show, that made the squawk. And a good thing, too, since Simon had almost overlooked him.

“What the hell—”

“Ah. Good evening, Lord Walker.” Simon advanced and made a bow. “Lady Walker.”

The man on the bed started and swung his head around, although his hips still moved instinctively. The woman remained oblivious.

“Iddesleigh, you bastard, what . . . ?” Walker lurched to his feet, his now-limp prick still hanging from his breeches. “That’s not my wife!”

“No?” Simon cocked his head, examining the woman. “But she looks like Lady Walker. Particularly that mark there.” He pointed with his stick at a birthmark high on her hip.

The man humping her opened his eyes wide. “This ’ere your wife, guvnor?”

“No! Of course not.”

“Oh, but I’ve known your fair lady intimately for quite some time, Walker,” Simon drawled. “And I’m quite certain this is she.”

The big man threw back his head suddenly and laughed, although it sounded a bit weak. “I know your game. You’re not going to trick me into—”

“Never had quality before,” the stud said from atop the woman. He increased his pace, possibly in appreciation.

“She’s not—”

“My acquaintance with Lady Walker goes back many years.” Simon leaned on his stick and smiled. “Before the birth of your first child—your heir, I believe?”

“Why, you—”

The black-haired man gave a yell and bucked his hips into the woman, shuddering as he obviously deposited a load of sperm into her. He sighed and fell off her, revealing a cock that, even half-deflated, was of equine proportions.

“Jesus,” Christian said.

“Quite,” Simon concurred.

“How the hell did he get that thing in her?” the younger man muttered.

“I’m glad you asked,” Simon said as if instructing a pupil. “Lady Walker is quite talented in that regard.”

Walker gave a roar and charged across the room. Simon tensed, the blood singing in his veins. Maybe he could finish this tonight.

“See, here,” a voice exclaimed from the door at the same time.

The house bullies had arrived. He stepped aside and Walker ran into their waiting arms. The big man struggled ineffectually in their grasp.

“I’m going to kill you, Iddesleigh!” Walker panted.

“Possibly,” Simon drawled. God, he was tired to the bone. “At dawn, then?”

The man merely growled.

The woman on the bed chose that moment to roll over. “Would you like a go?” she asked no one in particular.

Simon smiled and led Christian away. They passed a new race on the stairs. The male mounts this time had actual bits in their mouths. One man had blood running down his chin and a cock-stand in his breeches.

He’d have to bathe before he returned to Lucy. He felt like he’d rolled in manure.

Christian waited until they made the front steps before he asked, “Was that really Lady Walker?”

Simon caught himself mid-yawn. “I’ve no idea.”

WHEN LUCY WOKE AGAIN, it was to the sound of Simon entering the study. The room was that gray shade that foretold the dawn of a new day. Simon walked in, carrying a candle. He set it on the corner of his desk and, still standing, pulled out a sheet of paper and began writing.

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