Whitechapel Wagers 02 - Wanton Wager
Page 1
Wanton
Wager
A Whitechapel Wagers Series Novella
by
Christy Carlyle
Wanton Wager
Copyright: Christy Carlyle Published: June, 2014
Publisher: Entice Publishing in cooperation with Windtree Press
The right of Christy Carlyle to be identified as author of this Work has been asserted by her in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
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Find out more about the author and upcoming books online at www.christycarlyle.com or @writerchristy.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
About the Author
CHAPTER ONE
London, 1888
He has a terrible predilection for death.
The thought dominated Captain William Selsby’s mind as he sat in the study of Frederick, Lord Ashdowne, drank the man’s brandy, and studied the collection of stuffed fowl, fox, deer, and boars’ heads decorating every wall and flat surface. The creatures stared back at Will with glass eyes and what he imagined was a glare of resentment for the state he found them in.
He had just whipped the aristocrat quite neatly at a game of cards and would have been content to collect his winnings and be on his way, but Ashdowne had cajoled him into stopping for a bit of libation and another round of cards.
“Your hand is shaking, old man. Sure you’re up for another game?”
Flexing his left hand, Will attempted to ease the spike of pain that shot down his arm. Eight years had done nothing to eradicate the ache, though he had grown used to it, learned how to accommodate it. If nothing else, he had become skilled at drowning it, and in liquor far less tasty than the amber fire Freddy continued to pour from a seemingly bottomless crystal decanter.
A bird, a fragile little thing in life, now even more delicate in perpetual stuffed existence, gazed at him with a single black bead eye from the table at his side. His thoughts wandered to memories of another eye—the wild, terrified gaze of his war horse, Hercules, as they lay together, both wounded, with Will’s broken leg caught beneath the stallion’s massive body. The ache in his leg began to thrum, as if his body’s memory of the injury was as keen as his mind’s.
A decade earlier a display of preserved animals would have escaped his notice. As a medical student he had been more interested in human anatomy and physiology rather than that of animals. But most of all he had been brash and foolish, as heedless of death as he was careless with his life. He had been eager to join the army and even hungrier for battle. Nowadays he wished he could stumble upon his younger self in a back alley and clip the arrogant blighter on the chin. What a fool he had been. What a fool he had become.
Will lifted a snifter to his lips and tipped more brandy into his mouth. He savored the burn lancing down his throat, into his chest, the heat swelling out to give him a brief sense of warmth and comfort.
“Marvelous specimens, are they not, Selsby?”
Will bit his tongue to still his honest retort and formed a more diplomatic response. “I have never seen such an extensive collection.”
“They are all the work of my own hand, you know. Killed them myself. Skinned them myself. Stuffed them myself. The old bear detests my hobby. Only makes me more keen.”
Ashdowne had a ferocious grin, giving the impression he had just finished some particularly nasty business and was quite proud of himself. Will knew the man well enough to know “the old bear” referred to Freddy’s father. Something to do with the family’s coat of arms which featured a black bear—up on two legs, claws at the ready, and as ferocious as Freddy’s grin. Though he had never explained it to Will, Ashdowne’s hatred for his father was palpable. It was likely something to do with Freddy’s impatience. When the earl shuffled off his mortal coil, Ashdowne, his first born son, would inherit all the old man’s lands and titles.
“Quite a talent.” It was the only response Will could muster, and it wasn’t a lie. Freddy had a definite skill for taxidermy, and Will thought it worth pointing out, since he had never found much else to admire about the man. Spending time with Ashdowne, which he usually only did at the gentleman’s club where they had met, always made Will ill at ease, as if an invisible current of energy he could not itch was crawling across his skin.
Freddy flashed him one of his savage grins, managing to look more self-satisfied than usual, and stood to approach the fireplace. He lifted a polished brass poker and tormented the coals in the grate for a bit, stoking bright flames into life.
“I did not invite you here to speak of my collection, old man. Nor to best me at cards.”
Now they were coming to the point. Finally. Will had only accepted the man’s invitation to his Grosvenor Square townhouse to satisfy Kate, his sister, who spent far too much time urging him to get out into society, to visit with friends, to live again.
“I have a proposition for you, Selsby. One that I believe will do you a great deal of good and will relieve me of a rather embarrassing problem.”
Will was intrigued despite every instinct he had about Lord Ashdowne. Meeting the man’s gaze, Will lifted an eyebrow, urging him to go on.
Ashdowne grinned, more knowing than fierce, and settled himself in the wingback chair adjacent to the fire and across from Will. He took time arranging his limbs, crossing his long, slim legs and smoothing his palms over the intricately woven antimacassars on the chair’s arms.
“When is the last time you had a woman, Selsby?”
Will choked on the swig a brandy and lifted a hand to his mouth as he coughed and swiped the potent liquid from his lips. His voice was husky when he could find the breath to reply.
“That’s out of order, Ashdowne. None of your damned business and certainly none of your concern.”
“Mmm. That long, is it?”
It wasn’t worth it. Whatever money he might win from besting Ashdowne at cards, it was not worth being subjected to the man’s salacious assumptions, nor his pity. And it was the pity that stung most intensely. He had read it in so many gazes in the last eight years, and he still saw it there in his sister’s eyes nearly every day. He had left Afghanistan with a shattered leg, but it had not affected his ability as a man. The enemy had attempted to cut off his arm, not his manhood.
The truth stung too. The truth was he had been without a woman for the past eight years. When he’d returned from the war and learned that Emilia had married during his absence, he had longed—for just a moment—for death. He had wished to join Hercules in whatever existence or nothingnes
s lay beyond the veil of life. Hercules should have been spared. God knew the beast would have gone on to be useful, valiant and ever brave.
Will closed his eyes and released a sigh so deep it burned his chest. “It has been that long.”
“Then my proposition is fortuitous. As you may have heard, I am betrothed to Miss Bramson.”
Will had heard of Ashdowne’s betrothal. Kate took an uncharacteristic interest in aristocratic tittle tattle and was a devoted reader of several scandal rags. She even claimed to have met the Bramson woman at some lady’s society meeting.
“I am aware. Please accept my belated congratulations.”
Freddy literally waved off his well wishes, raising his hand in a dismissive gesture.
“Yes, well, my impending marriage lends urgency to my proposal. There is a woman in Whitechapel—“
“Tell me you don’t still go sporting in Whitechapel. Surely you have outgrown such nonsense. Especially now, with a madman on the loose.”
Kate’s newspapers carried daily stories regarding the horrific attacks on several women in the East End district. The details were so disturbing she would set the papers aside, but she always returned to read them, sometimes recounting bits to Will aloud, her voice tinged with sadness and a thread of fear.
“Worry not, old man. My sporting days are over, but there is a single matter I must tie up.”
Sporting was what the young men of the club called it when a group ventured into Whitechapel or another East End district to drink, gamble, carouse, and pursue every sin available for a handful of coins. Will had joined in only once and woken the next day in an opium den in Limehouse with no memory of how he’d got there, barely a memory of his own name. The experience, the loss of control, had soured him on ever attempting such a venture again.
Frederick was still talking, though Will missed some of what he’d said.
“So you see I must find some way to distance myself from her. She’s quite lovely. I am sure you would find her desirable. She does not ask for much, and I—“
“You’re offering me your whore?”
“That is a distasteful word.”
“This is a distasteful business.”
“You won’t say that once you’ve tasted her.”
The man was loathsome. Will stood to leave, the stiffness in his leg slowing his progress and creaking in protest. He grasped his cane and leaned on it more heavily than he liked.
“Forget my winnings from our first round and this wager of yours, Ashdowne. Keep your money and your…mistress.”
“You far too honorable fool. She is a young woman who has given me a good deal of comfort over the past year. She could do the same for you.”
Will turned and tried to take a step toward the door of Ashdowne’s study but realized his leg had gone numb while he sat. He waited until the sensation of pins stuck in his flesh began to ease.
“I shudder to think what will happen to her once I discard her. She will become one of those creatures that murderer hunts.”
Will tipped his head back and closed his eyes. Flashes of the illustrations from Kate’s newspapers whirled in his mind. He could not imagine the kind of poverty that would force a woman to sell her body so she might earn doss money for one night’s shelter.
Could he protect this young woman from the same fate? Yet what kind of a monster would he be to expect her to lay with him for such protection?
“Give the woman enough money to keep herself from an ugly future, Ashdowne. You must have enough to spare.”
Ashdowne laughed, but it wasn’t his usual deep chortle. It was brittle and sharp, souring his already high voice. “You know nothing, Selsby. I barely have enough ready cash to pay your winnings this night. Do you have any notion what it costs to maintain this residence, an estate in Derbyshire, and my ridiculous sisters?”
Will glanced back at the man and realized Ashdowne was not only distasteful but pitiable. Yet Ashdowne seemed to have no notion of how he appeared to Will. He still stood tall and proud, wearing a self-assured smirk on his narrow mouth.
“She has red hair, Selsby. Just like your Emilia.”
The air left Will’s lungs as if Freddy had punched him. He ducked his head and took a deep breath.
He could not recall if Ashdowne had ever met Emilia. Will did not think so, and yet the gleam in Ashdowne’s eyes told Will the man knew he had found his mark. Emilia had red hair, and she was the only woman Will had ever cared for, ever considered marrying. She had rather famously broken their engagement to marry a duke, one of the most impressive catches of the season that year. The year he had returned wounded and broken from Afghanistan.
And now there was a red-haired woman in Whitechapel, a woman who was about to lose her protector, her security. The soldier in Will wanted to protect her, the man in him wanted to meet her, to see the loveliness that Ashdowne touted. And though he would never admit it to the man smiling at him wolfishly from across the room, Will harbored a sliver of hope that she might offer him what she had given to Freddy. Comfort, he had said. Will would give anything, everything, for one moment of a woman’s comfort.
“Shall we play for her? Forget the winnings you stacked up earlier. One last round and winner takes all.” The man had no scruples whatsoever.
“You have already said you wish to be rid of her. It is hardly a wager.”
“If you win, I shall relinquish her to you completely. If I win, I will treat myself to one more moment in her arms. Then I shall tell you her name and where to find her.”
The thought of Ashdowne touching this woman again, whoever she was, made Will’s stomach turn. He had enjoyed beating Ashdowne in their first round, but this time it wasn’t about besting him. It was about doing anything he could to prevent the man from winning.
CHAPTER TWO
“Watch yerself, missus!”
Ada Hamilton’s eyes snapped open. She had collided with a man in a filthy woolen coat, and his shout and the pungent smell of his clothing roused her from a kind of waking sleep. She blinked, startled and frightened to find herself in the man’s arms, and pushed away from him. He flashed a toothless grin and held her arm to steady her before letting go.
Though daylight had fled long ago, the Whitechapel Road was as crowded and noisy as earlier in the day. The costermongers were gone now or perhaps they were part of the throng who spent a long day working and now turned their attention to other business—finding a pint, a companion, and a place to sleep for the night.
Ada paid them no mind. A few more steps and she would be at her door, but her legs were sore and she battled to keep her eyes open. She could not recall a more wearying day. Every inch of her body ached, and her feet, confined in tightly laced boots, protested most of all. The charity hospital where she worked as a probationary nurse had been overflowing with the sick, wounded, and dying, more than they usually saw in an entire week. And after her shift she had gone door to door among their neighbors and inquired if any of them had seen or heard anything of her sister, Beth. Some wished to help, others wished her gone, but none had provided a shred of information about the girl’s whereabouts. With the ominous thunderclouds hanging overhead, it was easy to fancy that God was displeased with Whitechapel and everyone in it, as one doctor had mused during the long, tiring day.
“Pardon me, sir.” She had already passed the man she unknowingly plowed into, but her exhausted mind remembered too late that she should offer some apology for her misstep. He wouldn’t hear her through the fog, but guilt demanded she atone for her carelessness. Then she caught sight of the pub’s glowing windows and nothing else mattered beyond getting inside.
Warm light spilled out of The Golden Bell, and the scent of pipe smoke, roasted sausages, and stale beer beckoned. Ada did not trust her tired legs to make it up the side stairs that led directly to her family’s living quarters. Instead, she stumbled straight through the doors of the pub like any other patron desperate for grog.
As the door closed behind
her, she was enveloped in heat and sound. The fireplace was roaring on the stormy November night, and the pub was filled to the rafters with men and women who must have wished to escape the chill as much as Ada did.
She scanned the bar for any sight of her mother but only glimpsed the bulky figure of Harry, their giant of a barman, who ruled The Golden Bell with a ready smile and an iron fist. When Harry was about there was very little mischief from their patrons, no matter how much liquor they consumed.
Ada raised a hand to wave at him, the motion requiring much more effort than expected, and caught his eye. His grin fled as he left his station behind the bar and pushed his way through the crowded pub. It seemed only a moment later he was by her side, a massive arm around her shoulders, escorting her toward the wooden door at the end of the bar.
“Go on up to your mum, miss. She is that anxious to speak with you.”
Ada stopped and looked up at him. “Is there news of Beth?”
Harry shook his head and his broad shoulders seemed to sag. “No, miss. Not a word. But Mrs. ‘Amilton is anxious, int she?”
Always. Mama was always anxious. Ada could not remember a time when her mother was not nervous, worried, or at her wits end. As the eldest of three surviving siblings, Ada spent much of her childhood fearing she was the cause of Mama’s hand wringing. But Father had caused his share of misery too, drinking the pub’s stock and frittering away its profits before he disappeared.
There were rumors he had been in a fight in Limehouse, a brawl over a card game. Some said he had died there on the pier and been discarded in the Thames. They looked for him for months before Mama found a crumpled note inside a drawer. In it, George Hamilton made a half-hearted attempt to explain why he was not suited to marriage or fatherhood. Mama thought he would return one day. Ada knew they must go on, father or no father. There was a pub to run, and Beth and Vicky needed stability, if such a thing was possible with Mama’s constant fussing.
But now there was reason to fuss. Beth had “gone astray,” as Mama put it. Ada thought her claims of catching an earl another of the girl’s fanciful boasts, but now her sister was nowhere to be found. It had been four days and no one had heard from or seen her.