Read Microsoft Word - FortunesFool.rtf Online
Authors: Kat
club chairs scattered about with cast iron scrolled reading lamps and side tables. Off in the back the card tables were filled, smoke coming up from them like chimneys.
He scanned the small crowd and found Charles Fernald and
Robinson Fletcher playing poker with a few others.
He wove through the tables and pulled a chair out next to Fletch
who glanced up at him and threw out a card.
"Slumming?" Fletcher asked, the cigar clenched between his teeth, his face shrouded in a blue-grey haze.
"Not hardly. Dinner at the Prestons, but I slipped out."
Charles ribbed Fletch in the ribs. "I thought you would be looking to replace Beatrice. Trolling the market district looking for a wayward
milkmaid?"
"No, he's aiming for a palm reader." Michael walked up behind him.
All three men stared at him until Fletcher and Charles began to
laugh so hard tears started to roll down Fletcher's face.
Caden nodded at Michael. "Ditch your party?"
Michael shrugged.
Charles took a deep breath and calmed for a moment. "Did she see it in her future that she would be fucking the Vice President of Boston
Trust?"
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Fletch started howling again and slapping Charles's shoulder.
Michael stood watching them and then turned to Caden, "See. I told
you so."
"Which one, eh? Camille?" Fletch got back into the game and
pushed out five chips.
"No, Abigail." Michael pulled out a chair and sat down.
"The old one? Man, the least thing you could do is take the younger one. The older one must not be a very good fortune teller if she hasn't
found herself a benefactor by now." Charles counted his chips, "I see you and raise you two."
"Cheap tonight, Charles? Maybe I can loan you a few." Caden was as angry as the tip of his cigar.
Fletch chuckled. "Put on the banker now, why don't you."
Caden decided he hated the three of them.
Michael snorted. "You didn't think she hasn't pulled this before have you? Why do you think her mother whores out her daughters to every
party?"
Fletch shot back the last of his scotch and plunked the glass on the
table. "Haven't you heard anything about their family?"
"No." He should have left already, but it was as if his feet were cemented in the floor. Dreading to hear what he would be told, but
needing to hear it all the same.
Michael waved at the table with a flourish, "Sit while we tell you a few stories."
His hand rested on the back of the captain's chair as he looked at the
three of them deciding if he would even entertain what they had to say,
and how much he would allow himself to believe. Knowing that tales
would be told whether he were there or not, he yanked the chair out and
sat. "So, we were saying that the mother whores out her daughters."
Michael leaned back in the chair, his arms across his chest.
Not Abby, he wouldn't believe it for a minute.
"Not only does she whore them out, but she taught them all that
psychic crap so they could rub around high as they could. Women love to
spend their husband's money on that shit." Fletch threw down three cards and beckoned Charles, who was dealing, for more. "S'all lies, if you ask me."So Caden had thought, too, until Abby had told him truths about himself that no one but him could have known.
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"Sluts, all of 'em. Even the mother," Fletch continued. "'Specially now that the husband is dead. I've seen her at almost every party. She's always looking for those girls to match up with someone in our set." He nodded, pursing his lips over his cards.
It seemed as if Fletch was tossing them back faster than usual
tonight.
"Better watch yourself, Cade," Michael said. "Women like that are good for one thing only, and that's not being a wife." Michael poked Charles, "Anyway, those gypsy tricks are supposed to make you shoot your load faster than a scared skunk."
He could feel the sweat gathering and the anger running through his
body just like when he was about to get in a scrap in the old days. Maybe he should have stopped them before, but he knew anything he said would
be wasted on them, and he didn't want them knowing what he was up to
anyway. Pearls before swine and all that.
When he was young he had to prove himself with his fists. That was
all he had. No longer, but even now he wanted to take Michael out back.
But, he worked long and hard to groom himself to be better than that.
Still and all, looking at it logically, he knew nothing about her life.
Nothing other than she shook when she climaxed and that she tried to
give him his money back. Which in itself was admirable, but she could
have done that so she could see him again, sacrificing the five dollars in hopes for making more.
He stood up and pushed the chair back. He didn't want to think that
way about her, and he needed to clear his head. He planned on having
her over to the house, and he still would, but maybe this time he wouldn't assume her honesty.
But when had she proved herself to be anything but truthful, even in
sex? He knew the first time they were together she was embarrassed to
do the things he asked, but even still she met him fully in his passion, even overwhelming him with her response. Beatrice on the other hand,
with her it was always an act to get him to give her more, to make sure
he kept up the house arrangement.
Caden regarded himself as a pretty good judge of character and
although this time he allowed for being wrong on a few counts, he
honestly didn't see that depth of guile in Abby.
"Are you going to stand there all night, Caden, or are you in?"
Fletch shuffled the cards.
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Michael sat forward, slipped out his cufflinks, and rolled up his
sleeves.
"No, not this time. I have an early morning." He turned and walked off with his cigar still between his teeth. He took a paper off the bar, scribbled a note, addressed it, and gave it to the waiter.
* * * *
from the mercantile with one dollar in her pocket from selling the quilt she'd made. The store never took any on order, so this would be the only money she got for a few months. It was never enough, but it was more
than she had before she walked in.
Evening had arrived while inside she haggled for every nickel. It
was the time of winter that lasted the longest. The sun went down around five in the evening and it seemed as if spring would never come.
Everything seemed gray, even though she knew spring would eventually
come. She yanked her hat down around her ears and when she looked
back up Mr. Preston was approaching with a beautiful blonde woman.
Whom, she knew was not Mrs. Preston. Mr. Preston leaned down and
whispered something in her ear and the woman leaned into him with a
seductive smile. Abby kept walking, trying to pass, pretending she had
no idea who he was, or that she ate his food the other night at his
daughter's birthday party. And it looked as if he hadn't noticed her at all, which was a small miracle, because Abby was not good at urbane banter.
She snuggled into her coat and recoiled when the woman stopped
right in front of her with a snide smile, Mr. Preston hanging back and
going off to a storefront.
"So, I hear you're Caden's new slut."
"Excuse me?" Abby stepped back at the vicious tone, and her
cheeks felt as if they'd both been slapped. She couldn't believe such nasty words were coming out a woman who looked as she did. Her hair was
upswept in the latest style, her skin was perfect bisque and her eyes were riveting. She wore a dress Abby would have to save years to buy. Abby
must have shown her thoughts on her face because the woman's smile
became superior.
"All this is what Caden bought me. He still loves me, and I know
he'll come back. And you'd never fit in his circle anyway. So, why don't you scamper off like a good girl?"
Her vision swam a moment as she understood what the woman said,
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so it didn't matter. At least not to her. But the woman was obviously hurt by his actions, and Abby felt bad for her. She was enthralled with him
and she'd barely known him.
And then she wondered if this was the relationship that she saw in
Caden's hand. His lines showed that it was a long one, but it was also a shallow line, meaning it didn't mean much to Caden. Apparently the
woman saw things differently. Abby wasn't surprised. After all, she was
having a hard time defending her feelings for Caden, and she'd only
known him a few days. But she saw his character, and his heart that lay
in the lines of his hands.
Abby raised her eyebrow. "And you are?"
"Beatrice. Caden will know."
Even if the woman spent years with Caden, she obviously didn't
know him. Once Caden made a decision it was final. And there would be
no way that he would have the woman after she bedded his friend. Abby
didn't know what to say to Caden about Michael, but she bet he already
knew what kind of man Mr. Preston was.
"Not if I don't tell him. And anyway, I don't think he'd like Mr.
Preston's leftovers." Abby gave Beatrice the once over. "Excuse me."
Abby heard Beatrice gasp and call her another name, but she kept
on walking.
Thankfully her coat was long because Abby was sure anyone on the
street could see her legs shaking. Her stomach trembled as she made her
way around Beatrice to continue on her way home.
Would she tell Caden? Probably not. She didn't want to hear any
explanations as to who Beatrice was, she already knew. And if she
expected those answers from him, he might ask questions, too. Not that
she was a light skirt, but he knew she was no virgin. Nothing good ever
came of those conversations. Some things were better left unsaid.
But Beatrice was beautiful. She could see why Caden was attracted,
and why Michael Preston didn't care if she was Caden's cast off. And
Beatrice was right; she did fit in with Caden's friends better. Beatrice probably knew which forks to eat from, too. And if Caden had left her,
how long did Abby think he'd want to be with her, when she knew none
of those things, and could never be that person?
The inevitable would happen. Abby knew that, and she would be
smart to not get anymore involved. But why was it that even to think of
him made her anxious to see him again?
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Abby walked up the stairs into her house and was greeted by the
smell of her mother's chicken soup cooking and the warmth of the
kitchen. She hung her coat on the tree and spied a note on the side table addressed to her and ripped it open.
Her mother poked her head into the foyer. "Oh good, you saw it.
Dinner is in a few minutes. You have just enough time to wash up. Tell
me what the note said over dinner?"
Abby nodded and climbed the stairs to her room, her heart as loud
in her ears as her footsteps on the stairs. Caden asked her to come by the bank.
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Frist had a bit of the sniffles when he brought her to Caden's door
three days after the Prestons' party. So far, as he escorted her down the office hallway he sneezed three times and never took his kerchief from
under his red nose.
Her mother thankfully hadn't insisted on seeing the note, Abby just
told her, and Caden didn't incriminate. All it asked was that she meet him at the bank, Friday afternoon at five PM. It was a peculiar time to make an appointment, and it was all she could do to keep her anticipation from her mother and sister. She told them he might have a job for her.
A fine sheen broke out of her face as Frist rapped on the door, and
she wished for a fan to cool her even though it was winter.
"Come in." Caden's baritone boomed through the door.
Frist opened the door and there he sat, behind that massive block of
oak with his feet crossed at its corner. He eased up, his movements lithe and slow, as if he knew who would be behind the door. She had the
distinct feeling of being stalked by an animal much higher on the food
chain.
A soft click told her Frist had removed himself to sniffle and
wheeze back to his front desk, and now Caden stood before her, taking
up all of her air.
A tiny gasp slipped from between her lips as he lowered his head to
kiss her, the tension sizzling her skin like water on a hot pan.
He pressed his lips to hers and broke off as quickly leaving her
bereft. "Hello."
"Hello?"
His bemused smile teased a smile from her as well.
"I missed you," he said as he cupped her chin and traced the corner of her mouth with his thumb. The familiarity of him touching her calmed
her anxiety but heightened her ceaseless wanting of him.
She leaned her head into his palm. "I missed you, too. I'm so glad
you sent the note. If you had made me wait I would have been mad with
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despair wondering if I would ever see you again." She couldn't help the overdramatic teasing.
He smiled. "You could have always come here."
She shook her head. "No, if you sent no word, I would never have
come."
"Then let me assure you, you are always welcome. I would hate to