Calhoun Chronicles Bundle (76 page)

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Authors: Susan Wiggs

Tags: #Romance, #Retail, #Historical, #Fiction

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As she passed behind the upper gallery of the house chambers, two newsmen burst out of the room and headed toward the wire service office in the basement. Curious as to the cause of their agitation, she entered the gallery and took a seat in the rear.

Unlike the gentleman’s-club atmosphere of the Senate, the House of Representatives was loud, crowded and undisciplined. Men in homespun clothing sat around, spitting and smoking like spectators at a sporting match. It didn’t surprise her in the least to see Jamie Calhoun at the podium, his collar undone and his hair falling over his forehead in maddeningly attractive fashion. What surprised her was the topic of his impassioned speech.

“…why I came to Washington, gentlemen. Not to build railroads but to protect the smallholders who would be turned off their land by the railroad expansion,” he shouted over the buzz of the crowd. “What value is the iron road to a farmer who has no harvest to ship?”

A portly man across the aisle from Abigail shook his head in disbelief. “Man’s got a death wish,” he muttered.

His badge identified him as Timothy Doyle of the
Washington Post.

“Why do you say that?” Abigail whispered.

“He’s opposing the Chesapeake railroad expansion. The fool might as well oppose free enterprise.” Doyle rubbed his jowls, frowning in concentration. “It’s a puzzle, isn’t it? Why would a man from plantation society oppose the railroads? They’ve been hand in glove for decades. What does Calhoun hope to achieve?”

“I’m sure I don’t know.” Abigail listened to the speech with growing amazement. In so many respects, Mr. James Calhoun was not what he seemed.

They returned to Georgetown at suppertime. Abigail’s father was full of bluster and self-confidence, Helena with praise for a new object of interest—Senator Troy Barnes.

Their father frowned at her as they entered the foyer. “I thought you’d settled on Boyd Butler.”

“Of course I did, Papa, every bit as much as you did. I replied to his letter right away, didn’t I, Abigail?”

“You certainly did,” Abigail said, feeling a cold chill at the memory of the passionate letter.

“I was very prompt about it.” Helena handed her hat and shawl to Dolly, then turned to their father with a winning smile. “Ah, don’t look so cross,” she scolded. “I’m certainly allowed to admire more than one man at a time, aren’t I? Senator Barnes danced with me twice at the wedding. He’s a wonderful man from a fine New York family.”

“You mustn’t let him misinterpret that admiration.”

Arguing back and forth, they headed upstairs. Only Abigail had noticed the notes and letters stacked in a silver tray on the table in the foyer. With a heart full of dread, she picked up the top letter, passed her thumb over the embossed seal of the Naval Academy.

With shaking hands, she raised the letter to her lips and shut her eyes, filled with panic and horror and joy. Lieutenant Butler had responded.

Part Two

In the midst of great joy, do not promise anyone anything. In the midst of great anger, do not answer anyone’s letter.

—Chinese proverb

 
Ten

“I
finally figured out why my father was so keen to send me up to Washington,” Jamie said, holding his whiskey bottle aloft. Empty. The perfect end to his first day in the legislature.

Bent over one of his inventions, Michael Rowan tinkered with an apparatus of long tubes that dripped a dark liquid into a beaker.

“And why is that?” Rowan asked without taking his attention from the machine.

“Because he never forgave me for not returning home from my grand tour of Europe all those years ago. This is my punishment, surely.”

“I take it you had a trying day.”

“That would be putting it mildly. Christ. Where did those men learn to preach and pontificate? I was hardly able to make a dent in my cause.”

“I think you’ll find patience is a virtue in Congress.” Rowan tipped the liquid from the beaker into a pair of marginally clean tumblers and handed one to Jamie. “Cheers.”

“What’s this?”

“A plum brandy, I believe.” At Jamie’s startled look, he indicated the apparatus on the table. “It’s a fast-action still. My own design.”

Amazing. So few of Rowan’s machines actually worked. Jamie lifted his glass. “Cheers.”

Rowan had been busy, too, that much was clear to Jamie. He’d managed to add a layer of clutter to the mess already littering the parlor. On a slate hanging on the wall, he’d begun writing a long formula in what appeared to be hieroglyphics. The writing filled the slate board and spilled over onto the wall itself, all the way to the floor.

“So why didn’t you return home from your grand tour?”

Jamie already regretted letting that slip. But the fact was, he’d taken an unexpected liking to the slovenly Rowan and didn’t mind giving him a glimpse of his past. “Given a choice between hobnobbing in the courts and capitals of Europe or tending horses on a tidewater plantation, I chose the obvious.”

“I’ve never understood tourism. Where is the value in standing by and watching others live their lives?”

Jamie took a sip of the brandy, finding it pleasant and mellow. “That’s an odd question coming from someone who makes his living writing formulas and equations all day.”

Rowan leaned back from the table. “That’s the way I make sense of the world. And things beyond the world—” he added, then seemed eager to deflect the topic. “So your father wanted you in the legislature as some sort of revenge?”

“Punishment for all the fine wines and absinthe I drank, all the women I bedded. I reckon my father always resented that.” He spoke lightly, but the fact was, the tension between Jamie and his father had been evident for years. Yet Jamie’s decision to serve in the legislature had not come about due to pressure from his father. He had run for Congress as an act of contrition.

“You’ve had quite an adventure,” Rowan said, fiddling with the homemade wine filter. “We’d all like to try our hand at absinthe and loose women. How did your family manage to lure you back to your native land?”

Jamie gripped the thick glass tumbler hard. “They sent my brother, Noah, to remind me of my responsibilities. But instead of boarding the next steamer home, I persuaded him to come with me on one last horse-buying trip to the Middle East.”

Rowan tinkered with a flange on the still. “And was it a success?”

Jamie slammed back the brandy in three gulps, grimacing as the liquor burned his throat. “It was,” he said, “my greatest failure.”

He went to the window at the rear of the house and looked out. Shadows gathered in the garden below, an unkempt tangle of overgrown hedges, weeds and a spent kitchen garden with a few turnips and gourds rotting into the soil. By contrast, the adjacent garden of Senator Cabot was as perfectly groomed as a poodle, with clipped box hedges, firethorns and late-blooming roses arranged symmetrically in the small space.

A movement caught his eye, and he stepped closer to the window. In the tiny arbor, beneath a pair of arching yew trees, sat Abigail Cabot, her head bowed and her fists clenched around some papers in her lap.

He set down his glass, murmured “Excuse me” and let himself out the back. A brick wall with a concrete top separated the two gardens, but that hardly slowed him. He’d scaled higher walls than this—sometimes in a hail of bullets, in front of a pack of guard dogs, and once when a horse trader in Carthage had charged at him with a scimitar.

He hoisted himself up and over, landing on the carpet of grass in Senator Cabot’s garden. Abigail shot to her feet and the pages in her lap drifted to the ground.

“What on earth are you doing?” she demanded.

“Paying a visit to my neighbor.” He bowed in mock formality. When he straightened, he saw with a lurch of his gut that she’d been crying. Her nose was red, her cheeks wet, her eyes swimming with tears.

“You have a bad habit of barging in uninvited. Visitors are generally encouraged to call at the front door,” she pointed out.

“If I’d known it would cause you this much distress, I would most certainly have done so.” He took out a clean handkerchief and thrust it at her.

She made no response to his joking tone, but took the handkerchief and loudly blew her nose. Christ. Her tears made him want to move mountains, slay dragons, walk across hot coals—anything to make her stop hurting. Except none of those things would help; Abigail was more complicated than that.

Hoping to distract her from her troubles, he pretended to admire the silver gazing ball set on a pedestal near the arbor. The curve of the ball exaggerated the endless arch of the sky and made Abigail appear ten feet tall. “Did you enjoy your visit to the Capitol this morning?”

“My sister and I accompany our father with pride every year.”

Interesting that she hadn’t answered his question.

“I understand you made quite an impression with your introductory speech,” she added. “Most new congressmen would be reluctant to publicly oppose the railroad companies.”

“That’s the whole reason I ran for Congress.”

“Because you oppose the railroad companies.”

“Here in Virginia, they’re driving good people off their land and spending public money for private gain.”

By now, her tears had dried entirely and she watched him with a round-eyed fascination that made him feel an inch taller than normal. He had an inexplicable urge to stroke his finger over the agitated pulse in her throat, to ask her what it was that made her sad.

“That’s a very unusual position for a man like you,” she said.

“I’m fond of unusual positions,” he couldn’t resist saying with an insolent grin.

She sniffed, tucking his handkerchief into her sash. “What a pity you have to be so crude. After realizing you came here to fight for the common man, I was thinking about revising my opinion of you. But I don’t know if I can do that.”

He tried not to sound too patronizing as he said, “You’re a bright young lady, full of intelligence. I have faith in you, Miss Cabot. You can learn. Of course, in between sessions, I’ll busy myself in the manner you seem so ready to condemn me of.” He could tell, by the look on her face, that he’d managed to remind her of his seduction of Caroline Fortenay. With a shrug, he bent to retrieve the papers she had dropped.

“Please,” she said with a helpless cry, “you needn’t bother—”

“Lieutenant Butler,” he said, reading the signature. “My, my, he didn’t waste a moment in replying to your letter, did he?”

“Give me that.”

Jamie held the papers high overhead, well out of her reach. “Sweetheart, if I hadn’t posted your long missive, you never would have received a response at all. I think I deserve some of the credit here. I think I—”

He broke off, focusing on a few phrases in the letter. By the sinking light, he made out the gist of it. “‘When I read your letter, I found the other half of my soul,”’ he read aloud. “‘Your heartfelt words give me a reason to believe in life and all its joyful possibilities….”’

Jamie looked into her horror-struck face, and with a start, realized what he was witnessing. Two naive, basically decent people falling in love, their words heavy with the weight of sincere sentiment. In her eyes he saw the pain and wonder of a dawning new love. In Butler’s response, he read the shining hope of a golden future. It was something Jamie didn’t believe in anymore, but that didn’t matter to Abigail. She was obviously new to this. She didn’t understand what was at risk. She loved with a fullness of heart and a totality of faith that left no room for doubt.

“How it must amuse you,” she said, “to toy with people as though they were game pieces on a chessboard.”

“Butler wrote a love letter. You replied. I merely performed the transaction. Do you hold the horse trader liable for the horse throwing a shoe?”

“It’s dishonest,” she said. “He thinks my reply was from Helena. This has already gone too far. I must send a wire immediately, informing him of the misunderstanding.” Snatching the pages from his hand, she started for the house.

He planted himself in her path. “I wouldn’t.”

“You’re in luck, then. You don’t have to. I shall do this myself.”

“Do what?”

“Inform him that there’s been a mistake.”

“Miss Cabot, brutal honesty has its place, but the occasional white lie does wonders for a fragile heart.”

Her face softened. “I don’t want to hurt him.”

He pressed his advantage. “No, you don’t. He’s just had a letter from you declaring him the keeper of all your dreams.” It was strange, the way he could remember word for word what she had written. “And look at the reply.” He grabbed the page and read, “‘With each phrase of your letter, my heart soared higher.”’

“He is so very sensitive,” she agreed, snatching it back.

“And he’s fortunate that you recognize his sensitivity. Really, Abby. A wire message?”

She returned to the arbor and sank down to the bench again. “I must figure out the best way to manage this.” She stared at the final page of the lengthy letter. “He intends to continue this correspondence as a formal courtship.”

“Your father will be overjoyed. You know that.”

“Not when he discovers that Lieutenant Butler’s love for Helena is based on a letter from me.” Abigail buried her face in her hands.

“You’re making this much more difficult than it has to be. As soon as Butler discovers who wrote the letter, he’ll transfer his affection to you.”

She dropped her hands and stared at him for a moment before bursting into laughter. Jamie loved the sound of her laughter, but not when it was edged with despair. “Don’t be absurd, Mr. Calhoun. It’s Helena he wants, Helena he pictures as he pens all these adoring phrases.”

Jamie hesitated. If this didn’t work out the way he’d planned, Abigail was going to get her heart broken. But he had to make her believe she could win Butler for herself. “Read his words again, Abby. He’s in love with the author of that tender prose, not with a pretty face.”

She scowled, and he realized he’d said the wrong thing.

“I refuse to go on with this deception,” she stated.

“Don’t call it a deception. Those letters—yours to Butler and his to you—are possibly the most honest things I’ve ever read.” He did not add his assessment that they were wrongheaded and bordering on foolish.

“I refuse to—”

“A Butler, Abby. America’s royal family. Think how proud and happy your father would be.” Seeing a soft glow of hope in her face, he realized he’d found her most vulnerable spot. She lived and breathed for the old man.

“Helena already asked me to reply to him again,” she admitted.

“Of course she did,” Jamie said with an excess of patience. “She knows how much your father values this association.” He plucked a small purple aster and tucked the tender blossom into the bodice of her shirtwaist. His finger trailed lightly across the tops of her breasts. This was an interesting game—keeping her attention while urging her to write love letters to another.

She moved away, but he pursued her. This was his shot, he told himself. He could become Abigail’s mentor, engineer a courtship with the vice president’s son, then reap the rewards of her grateful father’s political favor. Today in the legislature, the lesson had been hammered into him. Nothing was accomplished without powerful support, and no support was available to newcomers unless they found a way into the inner circle of influence.

Abigail Cabot, gateway to possibility, he thought wryly. “Unfortunately, your sister will lose interest in Butler.”

“How do you know that?”

Because he knew women like Helena Cabot all too well. “Tell me I’m wrong.”

She stared down at her hands, confirming his hunch.

“It’s up to you, Abby.” Seeing her hands tense up, he pressed his point. “For your father’s sake, you have to keep Butler’s interest. You’re a kindhearted girl. You can’t risk breaking the poor man’s heart by stopping the correspondence.” He stepped even closer, surprised and unexpectedly moved by her warmth, her womanly scent. “It’s what you want, Abby. Admit it, you do.”

She shuddered and half closed her eyes. “It’s all so hard to understand. Everything seems brand new to me. Even the merest thought of Lieutenant Butler inspires a host of embarrassing physical sensations, things I can’t even begin to comprehend.”

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