Little Conspiracy

Home > Other > Little Conspiracy > Page 1
Little Conspiracy Page 1

by Lucy Wild




  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  EBook Offer

  Little Conspiracy

  Lucy Wild

  Blushing Books

  Contents

  Pssst… Amazon Customers…. Free Stuff

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  About the Author

  EBook Offer

  Blushing Books Newsletter

  Blushing Books

  ©2017 by Blushing Books® and Lucy Wild

  All rights reserved.

  No part of the book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  Published by Blushing Books®,

  a subsidiary of

  ABCD Graphics and Design

  977 Seminole Trail #233

  Charlottesville, VA 22901

  The trademark Blushing Books®

  is registered in the US Patent and Trademark Office.

  Lucy Wild

  Little Conspiracy

  EBook ISBN: 978-1-68259-975-4

  Cover Art by ABCD Graphics & Design

  This book is intended for adults only. Spanking and other sexual activities represented in this book are fantasies only, intended for adults. Nothing in this book should be interpreted as Blushing Books’ or the author’s advocating any non-consensual spanking activity or the spanking of minors.

  Pssst… Amazon Customers…. Free Stuff

  Do you love Blushing Books and our spicy stories by your favourite authors, Livia Grant, Vanessa Vale, Maggie Ryan, Yasmine Hyde, April Hill, Carolyn Faulkner, Alta Hensley, Stevie MacFarlane, Mariella Starr, Maren Smith, Misty Malone, Maddie Taylor and dozens of others?

  We have our own store, but we know many of you prefer to buy from Amazon, and now we’re making it much easier for you. We’ve started a new newsletter, aimed at just our Amazon customers.

  We’ll be sending out one newsletter per week, letting you know about our most recent releases. In addition, everyone on this newsletter is guaranteed TWO free stories per month, and to sweeten the deal, we’ll be giving one person on the list

  A $25.00 AMAZON GIFT CERTIFICATE

  every week. Nothing to buy… just stay on our list and you’re eligible for the drawing.

  Signing up is easy. Just text blushing2 to 22828

  OR use this link.

  WOULD YOU LIKE FREE STORIES ON YOUR KINDLE EVERY MONTH?

  That’s right. FREE. And we’re not talking about some short “throw-away.” Every month, Blushing Books gives our customers two novel or novella-length stories (typically at least 15,000 words) completely free. You can always download our current month’s stories at our website, located at http://www.blushingbooks.com.

  But we’re offering an additional service for Kindle customers - we’ll send the monthly free stories directly to your Kindle device. They will also come automatically if you’re using a Kindle app on your smart phone or tablet. You don’t need to do anything, pay anything or remember anything. Every month, free stuff will just magically appear.

  Here’s how:

  1. Email us at [email protected], and put FREE KINDLE STORY in the subject line of your email. The email address you mail FROM will not be kept or mailed in any way unless you also sign up for our newsletter with that address.

  2. In the body of your email, you will need to provide your KINDLE’s email address. Your Kindle email will end with @kindle.com. If you do not know your Kindle email, you need to log on to your Amazon account and find it under “manage my Kindle.”

  3. You’ll also need to add [email protected] to your permitted email list on Amazon (otherwise your Kindle will not accept email from us.) If you don’t do this step, you will not get the story. This is also found under the “manage my Kindle” section of your Amazon account.

  Once we get an email from you, you’ll be added to our free monthly story list. You’ll receive two free stories per month. And remember, if you prefer, you can always get the free material at www.blushingbooks.com.

  Chapter 1

  York, 1868

  Vanessa White awoke to the sound of hammering on her front door. Whoever it was sounded angry, their ferocious knocking echoing inside her skull as she climbed reluctantly out of bed. “All right,” she muttered. “I’m coming.”

  “I know you’re in there,” a man’s voice shouted up through the letterbox. “Get down here, Miss White.”

  Fear rose up in Vanessa’s stomach. It was the voice she least liked to hear, that of her landlord. Frantically, she dressed, still tying up her hair as she ran downstairs.

  “Mr. Woodhouse,” Vanessa said with a smile as she pulled open the door. “What can I do for you?”

  “Do not attempt to talk your way out of this one, Miss White. Two months to the day. I have come to take back my house.”

  “I can explain. My benefactor’s payments have not been forthcoming this month—”

  “Or last month.”

  “Quite. But I have had assurances that the money will be with me shortly. I just need a little time, that’s all.”

  “There is always an excuse with you people.”

  “What do you mean by ‘you people,’ Mr. Woodhouse? Is there something about me that offends you?”

  “It is your lack of payment that offends me, Miss White. I should never have let to someone so young, this is what I get for dealing with children.”

  “I am twenty years old, Mr. Woodhouse, I am no more a child than you are.”

  Mr. Woodhouse grunted before shaking his head. “No, you are not a child. You are an adult and you have a responsibility to ensure your rent is paid. You have not paid so I am here to take possession and that is an end to the matter.”

  “But, Mr. Woodhouse, I need only a little more time. I am certain my benefactor will make good the money you are owed, if you would only grant me another week.” She took his hands in hers, her eyes widening as she looked up at him. “Please.”

  Snatching his hands away, Mr. Woodhouse shook his head again. “Do not use that look on me, it was that look that made me give you this place against my better judgment and on a monthly rental instead of an annual term. I was a fool to trust you.”

  “Please. A little more time.”

  “You have the length of time it takes me to empty your belongings onto the street.” />
  “You wouldn’t, not to an innocent woman?”

  “Innocent, my foot! You want something for nothing, same as everyone else in this city.” He pushed past her, slamming the door shut behind him, leaving Vanessa out on the street.

  She tried the door but it was already locked. “You can’t do this to me!” she shouted through the letterbox. “I demand you let me in.” Her voice began to falter, “I have nowhere else to go.”

  “Then I suggest you go and see your benefactor,” Mr. Woodhouse shouted back through the door. “Get me my money.”

  “I do not know where he lives. I have never dealt with him personally.”

  “Well, isn’t that convenient? Here.” The landlord’s hand emerged from the letterbox, thrusting out an envelope.

  “What’s this?”

  “Your payments came from that address. I suggest you make haste to pay them a visit, Miss White. My patience with your excuses is at an end.”

  Vanessa tore open the envelope. In her landlord’s poor handwriting the letters were hard to decipher but eventually she was able to read:

  10 Micklegate

  So that was where he lived, a mere few streets away from her. All this time he had lived so close to her and yet she knew nothing of him, not even what he looked like. When the letter had first arrived at her single garret room, informing her that he would pay for any house she chose, that all bills incurred would be paid by him, it had seemed too good to be true. Yet how quickly she had become used to having her every extravagance funded by her anonymous benefactor.

  She had spent readily and easily once the first few bills were paid. She did not know how he was able to ascertain to whom she owed money at any given time but whoever she bought from, no receipts were ever issued, no bills of sale given, yet the accounts were always settled by the next time an urge to spend struck her.

  As she walked through the streets towards Micklegate, she began to ponder. She had not once thought about the oddity of her bills being paid by someone she’d never met. Why had she taken for granted that her rent would be paid without fail? Why had it never occurred to her to have a contingency plan for this eventuality? All good things came to an end, she knew that. Yet she had wilfully ignored it, and now here it was biting her on the behind. She was to be made homeless if she did not secure two month’s rent from whoever was waiting for her at 10 Micklegate.

  Crossing the road, she passed under the arch of the medieval walls and down the cobbled hill, clutching the envelope tightly in her hand whilst wondering who might be waiting for her there. She stopped outside number ten, surprised to find herself looking at the tall glass windows of an office rather than a house. It was part of a terraced row of tidy Georgian houses and stood out as the only commercial premises amongst the fine properties that surrounded it.

  Taking a deep breath, she pushed open the door and stepped inside. From behind a desk, an elderly gentleman in a dark blue suit looked up from his ledger. “Good morning,” he said, inclining his head slightly as he rose to his feet. “May I help you?”

  “I hope so,” Vanessa replied, taking a tentative step towards him. “This may sound strange but I was told this was the address of my benefactor.”

  “Your benefactor? Forgive me, my dear, but this is merely an administration office. Perhaps you have been given the wrong address?”

  “This is 10 Micklegate, is it not?”

  “Yes, but I do not think I can help you.”

  “Perhaps it is someone else working here whom I seek. My name is Vanessa White; does that mean anything to you?”

  “I am afraid not. Now if you don’t mind, I’m rather busy this morning.” He began ushering her towards the door.

  “You must help me,” Vanessa replied, digging her heels into the rug at her feet. “For the last two years, all my bills have been paid by whoever runs this place but now they have stopped and my landlord has thrown me out of my house. I was given this address. Please, I have nowhere else to go. I beg you to help me.”

  The man sighed. “Wait here a moment, would you?” He vanished through a door in the back wall of the office.

  Vanessa paced up and down in front of the windows, waiting for him to return. What if he came back and said no, what if she had been given the wrong address, what if this was just a cruel trick her landlord was playing on her? What then, homeless once more, back on the streets she thought she’d left behind forever? She shuddered at the very idea, taking a lock of her hair in her hand and twirling it round her finger at an ever increasing speed.

  The door opened so suddenly it made her jump. She looked across to see the old man holding a sheaf of papers, smiling up at her. “You are in luck, Miss White. I have looked into the paperwork and your benefactor does exist.”

  “Wonderful, where is he?”

  “He is not here but I believe you may find him at his school. You are welcome to visit and find out for yourself if you wish.”

  “A school? But my landlord is currently tossing my possessions out onto the street! Could you not lend me the money yourself?”

  “That I cannot do. I can give you the address of his school, nothing more. Anything else is up to you.”

  Chapter 2

  It was only because Nathaniel Crow was running late that he saw her at all. The fleeting glimpse was all it took to send guilt racing through him, as if it had been only a day since it happened, not nineteen years.

  He was late to arrive at the office because someone had been interfering with his affairs and he had a sneaking suspicion he knew who it might be. If his suspicions were right, and they usually were, she was in danger. He had thought hard during the carriage ride to the office. The safest place for her would be at the school, that way he could keep an eye on her.

  But could he do that without revealing who he was? And how best to get in touch with her? What if his past caught up with them both whilst she was there? The thought was a troubling one and it continued to plague him as he climbed down from his carriage and went through the door of 10 Micklegate. He nodded to Benson before passing through to his private study, another mountain of correspondence waiting for him in a teetering pile.

  He had awoken that morning in a fine mood. The school was running well, making a handsome profit at last. It had suffered three years of loss after he took over and he had begun to think it might have to close, a shame as of all the investments he had made over the years, the school was the most rewarding in a number of ways.

  The sun had been shining brightly through the window as he dressed, breakfast had been excellent, and then the letter had arrived, spoiling his mood in a few short lines. He read it three times in the hope of understanding its contents but was still confused. It did not add up.

  Dear Mr. Crow,

  I regret to inform you that your rental payment for the property of 92 Blossom Street has not been received for the second month in a row. As I informed you on this date last month, in such circumstances, no leeway can be given beyond a demand for immediate payment of the arrears within twenty-four hours plus ten percent interest for costs incurred by myself. If such a payment is not received, repossession of the property will occur.

  Your faithful servant,

  William Woodhouse Esq. - Landlord

  He laid the letter down on the table and it looked up at him in mute accusation. You said you would look after her, it seemed to say. Look how that worked out. Yet this was the first he had heard of any rental arrears. Each month his accountant sent out the payment. He, himself, had not been involved beyond providing the necessary signatures when it had first been set up.

  She was to be thrown out on her ear. He was furious at the thought of it but then he realized it might be the perfect opportunity. If the payments were being intercepted, that added to the evidence of recent foul play. If letters were going missing, that also suggested foul play. That suggested he was in serious trouble which, in turn, suggested Vanessa was at risk. After taking so long to find her, he had no i
ntention of losing her now.

  Climbing into his carriage after breakfast, he called up to his driver. “To James first, if you please.”

  He could scarce spare the time but he had to speak to his accountant before going on to the office. He needed details of the missing payments as soon as possible.

  James received him with polite confusion, bringing him into the parlour. “Mr. Crow, I was not expecting you until the end of the quarter. Is there something amiss?”

  “There is, James,” Nathaniel replied, sinking into the armchair offered to him. “The rent has not been paid on Vanessa’s house for two months. Perhaps you might explain why?”

  “Two months?” James said in a high pitched squeak, his cheeks turning pink. “Mr. Crow, I had absolutely no idea. Please, forgive me.”

  “So this is the first you’ve heard of it then?”

  “I confess myself shocked by the news, Mr. Crow. I will trace the payments immediately and ensure this matter is resolved at once. I can assure you if I had a clue that something was amiss, I would have dealt with the matter personally.”

  “You did not forget to send them perhaps?”

  “Not possible, Mr. Crow. They go out automatically on the first of the month without fail. It is done through the bank you requested, you made me promise I would handle the White matter myself.”

 

‹ Prev