A Scandalous Arrangement

BOOK: A Scandalous Arrangement
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A Scandalous Arrangement

 

 

By

 

Ashe Barker

 

Copyright © 2015 by Stormy Night Publications and Ashe Barker

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2015 by Stormy Night Publications and Ashe Barker

 

All rights reserved. No part of this 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 Stormy Night Publications and Design, LLC.

www.StormyNightPublications.com

 

 

Barker, Ashe

A Scandalous Arrangement

 

Cover Design by Korey Mae Johnson

Images by Period Images and Bigstock/Petejeff

 

 

 

This book is intended for
adults only
. Spanking and other sexual activities represented in this book are fantasies only, intended for adults.

Chapter One

 

 

Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire, July 1881

 

“I’m sorry, Victoria, but it’s done now. There can be no going back.”

“Done? It can’t be done. How could you…? This is our home, our livelihood.”

Edward Wynne had the grace to squirm in his seat, and looked more than a little discomfited under his sister’s stormy, outraged gaze. Even so, his face was set. He shoved back his chair, causing a shrill scrape as it rasped against the floorboards of the small office where Victoria now glared at him from across her desk. It was the same gleaming partner’s desk their father had ordered to be built to his specific requirements some thirty years earlier when he first acknowledged that his modest weaving mill in the even more modest market town of Hebden Bridge was showing distinct signs of prosperity.

Always a cautious man, Edward Wynne senior had nurtured the small concern he inherited somewhat unexpectedly from his second cousin. The firm had been nothing much when it came into his possession but Edward gave his name to it and expanded the business slowly, making prudent investments in new, modern machinery and in exploring overseas markets for the fine woollen cloth he started to produce there. Nothing spectacular, that was not the way of Edward senior. He could never have been described as courageous in his commercial affairs. Rather, he was steady and reliable, and that worked. His weaving mill grew, holding its own against stiff competition from the massive sweatshops that dominated textile manufacturing in nearby Bradford and Leeds. His workers enjoyed relatively healthy conditions, he employed no one under the age of thirteen, and they all had every Sunday to call their own. Or rather, God’s. A diligent churchgoer himself, Edward made it known he expected no less from his employees.

He was widely regarded as a good owner, a fine man to work for, and as Wynne’s Weaving Mill prospered, so did the town around him. As well as upholding godliness in his workers and offering a decent example himself of the Protestant work ethic, Edward was proud to serve on the town council. He would have been appointed mayor but for his untimely and somewhat improbable demise in 1871, the result of having imbibed a little more fine claret than was strictly necessary and falling in the river Calder on his way home from a singularly relaxing municipal function.

Edward left a grieving widow, Hester, and three children. Victoria was seventeen when her father passed away, and Edward a year younger. The baby of the family, Georgina, was just ten years old. Victoria’s education was considered to be complete and her days now consisted of supporting her mother through myriad charitable functions and social engagements, interspersed with a little embroidery and dabbling in water colours. Edward was about to embark on furthering his academic career. Not a natural scholar, he had nevertheless secured a place at the university in Leeds with the intention of studying law. He was no doubt aided in that endeavour by a generous endowment by his late father, which had enabled the university to add a wing to their library.

Edward junior saw no persuasive reason why his unexpected inheritance and new responsibilities as head of his household should derail his plans. At his father’s funeral he announced his intention to leave Hebden Bridge within the week and establish himself in an apartment in Leeds. A manager could be appointed; Edward could supervise their affairs from a distance.

Edward’s supervision of the ongoing commercial fortunes of Wynne’s lasted about as long as his studies. He was asked to leave the Leeds School of Law after just two terms following an unpleasant incident concerning the bursar’s daughter. Edward insisted he was innocent of any wrongdoing, but when the young lady was discovered in his apartment after having been missing for two days, drunk and wearing little more than a smile, the dean saw no other course but to eject young Mr. Wynne summarily from the faculty.

Edward did not return to Hebden Bridge. As she glared at him from across her desk, it occurred to Victoria that she was uncertain precisely where her brother had spent the intervening decade, and she cared not a jot. They heard from him occasionally, usually when he required funds. On one occasion she had sent money to him in Cannes to settle a gambling debt that had turned out to be life-threatening, and on another she had paid a fine to secure his release from Stirling jail. Always, her mother wrung her hands, bewailing the plight of her beloved boy and begging Victoria to step in and aid him. Victoria always complied, though with increasingly bad grace.

No manager was ever appointed to steer the affairs of Wynne’s Weaving Mill. At just seventeen years of age, on the day following her father’s interment in the family plot at St. Saviour’s Church, Victoria had marched into the mill office, seated herself at his desk, and called for his clerk to attend her. It was this same desk across which she now regarded her brother’s belligerent display of pretend authority with a mix of incredulity and blind rage, whilst that same clerk hovered on the threshold.

“Miss Wynne. Would you like me to—”

“No!” Both Wynnes turned to Mr. Timmins as one and bellowed at him. The clerk withdrew, shuffling away backwards and closing the door behind him.

“It
was
our home…” Edward continued, articulating his words slowly as though to a child, or a half-wit.

Victoria was neither. “
Our
home. Ours. Not yours. You have no right to sell it from under us. I won’t allow it.”

Edward tilted his chin and puffed out his chest. “You have nothing to say in the matter. The property is mine and mine alone. I have been kind enough to allow you to remain here all these years, but no longer.”

“How dare you!” Enraged, and not in the least impressed by her sibling’s self-important posturing, Victoria rose to her feet, leaning across the expanse of polished rosewood. Not especially given to violent impulses, had Edward been within reach she might well have struck him about the head even so. “I have run this mill for the last ten years. Me, not you. It was me who kept everything going when our father died, me who took care of our business and our family whilst you swanned off to Leeds and then goodness knows where.”

“I was—”

She brandished her fist at him, then brought it down on the gleaming desktop with a resounding thump. Her fine carved glass inkwell jumped, pens scattering across the surface. “Do I look to you as though I care even remotely where you have been these last ten years? Do I give that impression? Do I, Edward?”

“Victoria, I know this is a shock, but—”

“It is not a shock, it’s an outrage. And furthermore, it is not happening. You can just take yourself back off to this, this—individual—and tell him the deal is off. Wynne’s is not yours to dispose of.” Both fists now firmly planted on her blotter, Victoria glared at her brother under lowered brows. Her heart thumped, her breath heaved, but she was not backing down. Not here, not in her own office.

Her mill.

“I cannot do that. The mill is mine to do with as I will. Or it was. The deal is already concluded. Wynne’s now belongs to Mr. Adam Luke, as do the adjoining land and properties. The mill building itself, the workers’ cottages, and Wynne House, all his. I’m sorry, Victoria, but you and the others will have to move out. By the end of this month. The workers should be fine though as the new owners will doubtless have need of them, if they decide to continue in this same trade.”


No!
The house is ours. Mine. You can’t do this, not without consulting me. What about mother? And Georgie?” Victoria’s ferocity was waning now as the awful reality of her situation began to sink in. Incredible, unbelievable, unjust as it was, the mill and all else left by her father was legally her brother’s property. It had been since the reading of the will, naming Edward junior as sole beneficiary.

At the time of writing that will, Edward senior had no doubt seen no reason to anticipate taking an unfortunate tumble into the river. He would have fully expected his son to graduate from Leeds with a degree in law, bought and paid for. Edward junior would emerge well qualified to take up, eventually, the reins of their family business and to see to the welfare of the dependent Wynnes.

It had not worked out that way.

The fact that Edward had not displayed the smallest scrap of interest in the mill or his family for ten years, except for on those occasions he needed extricating from some mess or other and an injection of cash was called for, made no difference to the reality now facing Victoria. She was a businesswoman and she understood the legal position. Her brother was entitled to sell the mill, and their family home, Wynne house. Morally the whole thing stank, but legally it was sound enough.

Her head whirling, Victoria sank back into her chair. What could she do? Even now, at this late stage, there must be a way out, some way to avert this disaster. There was nothing to be gained by further remonstrating with Edward; that much was clear. Her brother was out of the equation. She would have to find some way to reason with the new owner, explain to him the true circumstances, and convince him to do the right thing. Whatever that might be.

“This Mr. Luke? Who is he? Where is his office? His mill? I do not know that name.” Through her trade connections Victoria was at least acquainted with every mill owner and textile baron in the county, and several further afield. Her brow wrinkled as she tried—and failed—to place this unfamiliar individual.

“He is a businessman, based in London. He owns ships, I gather.”

“London? Ships? Then what possible reason would he have for wishing to acquire a weaving mill in Yorkshire?”

Now Edward did writhe in his seat, his embarrassment acute. Victoria inhaled and leaned against the back of her chair, waiting for an explanation she knew she would not like.

“He did not
acquire
the property, exactly.”

“Did he not? Then how, Edward, did
my
mill,
my
workers’ houses, and
my
family home come into his possession?” Her tone was quiet, deceptively soft.

“He… won them.”

“He
won
them?” Victoria repeated the words as though she did not entirely comprehend their meaning. Indeed, she was not convinced that she did. “How exactly did Mr. Luke win our home and our livelihood from us, Edward?”

“In a game of faro. At Crockford’s.”

“Faro? A card game, a game of chance. Are you telling me that you went to a gentlemen’s club in London and gambled away all that we own? All that our father and I have worked for these last forty years? Is that what I am to understand from this conversation, Edward?”

Edward declined to respond verbally. His sharp nod was sufficient.

Victoria was incredulous. “But how? How could you lose so much on the turn of a card?”

He shrugged, as though the matter were of little consequence. “I owed Adam Luke money already. A lot of money and he demanded that I settle up. The man is totally unreasonable, and I had to do something, I needed to get straight or find myself in jail again. Had I won he would have cleared my debt.”

“But you did not win, did you? Instead, you lost even more. You lost everything.”

Edward’s jaw was set, his expression defensive but unmoving. “It’s done, and Wynne’s is his now, I owe no one anything.”
Least of all you.

The final words were unspoken, but hovered between brother and sister like a distasteful odour. Edward got to his feet and reached for his hat and cane, which were lying before him on Victoria’s desk. “I need not have even bothered coming all the way here today, but I thought I should tell you. Before Adam Luke’s man of affairs does. The lawyer will be in touch with you soon to make the necessary arrangements.” He tossed a white business card on the desk. “Those are his details. Now, I’ve done what I came for and need to take my leave. There’s a train back to London in forty-five minutes. Please give my regards to mother, and to Georgie.”

“What’s the matter? Can’t you face them?” Contempt dripped from her voice now as she swept him with an icy glare. Victoria made no attempt to get her brother to remain, to help her to break the news to her mother and sister that they were homeless, ruined, their family business gone. She wanted him out of her sight, now and forever. If she should be unfortunate enough to set eyes upon him again in this lifetime it would be too soon. She watched in arctic silence as he slunk from the room, listened as his footsteps clattered down the wooden staircase leading to her private exit at the rear of her mill. The door slammed, and he was gone.

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