Deadly Illusions (9 page)

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Authors: Brenda Joyce

BOOK: Deadly Illusions
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However, Maggie and he were from different worlds. They both knew it. The gulf of class and economy that separated them was as wide as the Atlantic Ocean. So even if Francesca was right—which she was not—any feelings on his part, other than the noble ones of admiration, respect and friendship, were entirely inappropriate.

“Thank you,” he said very quietly. He was uncharacteristically shaken.

“Joel and your sister are on a case,” Maggie said, hovering over the kettle she had just set to boil.

He stared for a moment at her slim back. Most women who had had four children had long since gone to fat. Maggie remained slender. Not for the first time, he thought her a touch too thin. But then, he knew her rather well now and he knew she gave the best of everything, including their meals, to her children. He saw a pot on the stove. Now curious, he wandered over.

She whirled and they were face-to-face, mere inches separating them, her back to the stove.

For one moment, he did not move, impossibly aware of her, realizing that she wore the faintest scent, floral and sweet. Then he stepped aside. “I beg your pardon,” he murmured, glancing into the pot. She was making a stew, a few potatoes and onions simmering with some bones. There was no meat to be seen.

Maggie had scurried to the kitchen table and grasped the back of a chair. “Have you had supper?” she said very breath
lessly. “I mean, we do not have much, but you are welcome to dine with us.”

He knew he had made her nervous and he hated that she was so skittish around him. Maybe she sensed his admiration could have been something more, if the circumstances had been different. Suddenly, he wished that the circumstances
were
different.

Confusion stunned him.

“Mr. Cahill?” she asked.

He leaped away from the stove, smiling. But he remained shaken. “I'd like to take you and the children to supper,” he said.

Her eyes widened.

Now that he had spoken, he liked the idea. He'd put a huge meal into them all.

“You want to take us to supper? You mean, to a restaurant?”

“Yes, that is what I mean. We should wait for Joel,” he decided.

Maggie hugged herself. “I can't accept.”

His smile vanished. “Mag—Mrs. Kennedy, please. I'm hungry, and not in the mood for soup. A nice beef roast would do.” He smiled encouragingly now and could almost feel her mouth water.

“Surely you did not come all this way to take my family to dinner?”

He became sober. “Francesca told me about your neighbor.” Then he glanced at the children. “I'd like to find a private moment to discuss this with you.”

She bit her lip, also glancing at the two boys, who were playing with some toy soldiers, all in Confederate gray. “It is very unsettling,” she whispered.

He walked directly to her and took her hand. He also lowered his voice. “Two doors down, Maggie? It's not acceptable. I must insist that you take my sister up on her offer.”

A mulish expression appeared on Maggie's face. “I know that Francesca means well, as do you, but we are not a case for charity.” Her tone rose with some anger.

And he was as angry. Still, he fought to keep his voice down. “This is not about charity. This is about the safety of your children and your own safety, too.”

“I have thought about it. On Monday we will stay with my brother-in-law.”

He started, surprised. And while he would prefer her to be safe and sound in the Cahill home uptown, this was better than nothing. “Where does he live?”

“A bit farther uptown, right on the East River at Twentieth Street. He won't mind. Since my husband died, he is the only family we have here in the city. He's a good man and very fond of the children,” she added.

“You would be safer uptown,” he said, and by that he meant Fifth Avenue and Sixty-first Street where the Cahill mansion and his own home, now abandoned, were.

“I heard that all of the victims lived between Tenth and Twelfth Streets. My brother-in-law's flat is far from this vicinity,” she said stubbornly.

He sighed. “I can hardly twist your arm.”

“No, you cannot.” And then she softened. “Do not misunderstand. I truly appreciate your concern. Really.”

“I will surrender—but only if you agree to have supper with me,” he said. The moment he realized how flirtatious his tone had become, he tensed. “With the children,” he added quickly.

She stared. “I…I don't know,” she said helplessly.

He had been chasing and seducing women his entire adult life. Taking her hand was sheer instinct. “It's only supper, Mrs. Kennedy. One you and your children shall thoroughly enjoy.” The same instinct widened his smile and intensified his persuasive stare.

Her cheeks turning red, she tore her glance away. “While we wait for Joel,” she said, low, “I'd like to tidy up the children.”

He had won. Grinning, he realized he held her hand and almost lifted it to his lips. Instead, he released it. “I'll go see if I can find Joel,” he said, still smiling.

Maggie nodded, slipped past him and called for the two boys.

 

“C
AN
I
GIVE YOU
a lift home?” Bragg asked as they paused before his motorcar. Night had fallen, a pleasant warm evening filled with winking stars and the remnants of last night's full moon.

“Actually, I have to stop at Sarah's.” Her friend, the artist Sarah Channing, had sent a note that morning asking Francesca to come by at her earliest convenience.

“I'll drop you there, then,” Bragg said with a smile. He walked around the car and held open the passenger door for her.

Francesca got in, picking up the spare pair of goggles. He closed the door, cranked the motor and then got in beside her. Their interview of Bridget had not produced any further clues. The child had not seen or heard anything Monday afternoon, which was frankly a blessing. They did not need Bridget to have any knowledge of the murder that might put her in danger. Gwen had arrived home shortly after their talk with her daughter.

As Bragg turned onto Tenth Street, she turned toward him. “I feel sorry for Gwen O'Neil.”

“Why? Because she fell foolishly in love with a man she should have never looked twice at?”

They had spoken with Gwen, as well. “Lord Randolph was her employer! Any attraction on his part was as faulty as any on hers. But now I know why she does not have references,” she said. Still, it had been apparent from Gwen's expression and
tone that she had fallen in love with the Irish aristocrat and that she loved him still. Francesca felt certain that he was a cad. She had quickly sensed that they had been lovers. No wonder her husband, David Hanrahan, had tried to kill Randolph. Gwen had been using her maiden name since leaving her husband.

But was he still incarcerated in Limerick, or was he now in the city? If he had arrived in New York, then he was on her exceedingly short list of suspects.

“Why are you concerned about her lack of references?”

“I intend to find her better employment, as a lady's maid,” she said.

Bragg smiled. “Will you become involved with each victim or near victim on every single case we work on?”

She faced him fully and his smile faded. Softly, she said, “You are implying that there will be more cases for us, Rick.”

He finally glanced at her. “I doubt you will give up your newfound profession. And while I am currently police commissioner, I will not turn my back on you should you ever need my aid.”

Francesca stared, touched. But what was he implying? “You sound as if you are not certain of your future.”

“I'm not,” he said. “You are aware of the politics surrounding my job. I may be out of my position far sooner than I would choose, before I can really make the changes this department needs.”

Francesca forgot about their investigation for a moment. The press had begun to note the increase in activity of the city's saloons and so-called hotels on Sundays. One of the hot test debates in the city since Bragg's appointment was whether or not to enforce the blue laws against serving liquor on the Sabbath. That issue was constantly fueled by the clergy and the goo-goos—the good government reform movement. Early in his term Bragg had closed a number of establishments
violating those laws; recently, the police department seemed to be looking the other way at those infractions. “Is it true? Have the police begun to ignore the Sunday saloon openings?”

He sighed heavily. “We have been selectively enforcing the law, Francesca, and only closing the worst offenders. Low asked me to ease up.”

She gripped his arm. “Why?”

He glanced at her. “The mayor is worried about reelection, as well he should be. Every time we close a saloon on Sunday, he loses votes to Tammany Hall. Which is the greater goal? Reforming the corrupt police or reelecting a great reform mayor?”

“But he appointed you to uphold the law!” she cried, frustrated for the dilemma in which he found himself.

“Yes, he did. But there is so much of an outcry by the working community against the closings that he has asked me to exercise the arm of the law with caution and care.” He was grim. “I am torn, Francesca. If I do my job as I wish to do, Low will lose the next election. It has become very clear.”

“And you are loyal to Low, instead of to the people who believe in you and the cause of reform?” She felt despair, for she was one of those people who so believed in the law, the cause of reform—and in him.

“I am focusing on the corruption within the department now. I have an internal investigation in progress. When it is concluded, a number of officers will be dishonorably discharged.”

She blinked. Then, filled with admiration for him, she touched his arm. “I am proud of you,” she said.

He smiled at her then.

Traffic had become heavy as they had turned onto Fourth Avenue, where a huge excavation was in process for the new railroad line that would terminate in the Grand Central Station. A trolley crept slowly forward just ahead of them, while several carriages and a hansom penned them in. Francesca suddenly
realized that Bragg's home wasn't far from where they now waited, ensnarled in traffic, and that his wife had come home as scheduled but he was not there to greet her.

She looked at him. “Please, Rick. You should not be driving me all the way across town. You should be at home with Leigh Anne.”

His jaw tightened. It was a moment before he spoke. “You will never catch a hansom at this hour. I am happy to drive you to the Channings and I am sure they will send you home in one of their coaches.”

His reply was not satisfactory. “I know you well, Rick. Why didn't you take Leigh Anne home from the hospital? I am starting to think that you are avoiding going home.” She stared at his handsome profile, which now seemed cast in stone.

He stared at the back of the trolley and finally said, “You are right.”

She was stunned. “I am right?”

He sighed and, not looking at her, replied, “I am avoiding going home.”

“What?”

He was grim. “Leigh Anne did not want to leave the hospital today.”

Francesca blinked. “She did not want to come home?” But everyone wanted to leave the hospital as soon as they could!

“I don't blame her.” And finally he glanced at her, his eyes filled with anger.

“What does that mean? And why didn't she want to leave the hospital?”

The trolley moved. Bragg took a moment to shift gears and the Daimler crept forward. “She didn't want to come home because I am there.”

“What?” That was nonsense, Francesca was certain.

He faced her, his eyes wide with anger and anguish. “Cease all pretense, Francesca. We both know that this is entirely my fault.”

“What are you talking about?” she cried.

“The accident,” he spat.

“The accident?” She was thoroughly bewildered. “You mean, Leigh Anne's accident?”

“Yes, of course, her accident, what other accident would I mean?”

She could only stare.

“She would not be in this predicament—a cripple for life—if not for me.” He slammed his hands on the wheel.

Francesca jumped in her seat. Then she seized his wrist. “Dear God! You had nothing to do with the accident. It was just that—an accident. You speak as if you were driving that runaway coach that ran her down!”

“I might as well have been the driver,” he said savagely.

“Why are you doing this? Why are you blaming yourself?” she gasped, horrified.

“Because I was trying to drive her away, to drive her from the house, to drive her away from me!” He halted the car so abruptly she almost slammed into the dashboard. “A witness saw the entire thing. Apparently she was standing in front of a shop, crying. She was so distraught she never saw or heard the run away carriage until it was too late. And we both know why she was crying,” he added darkly.

A horn blared behind them. Francesca hardly heard. “Even if she was crying, you do not know why. But to say that you made her cry and then to conclude that makes you responsible for the accident, why, that is absurd.”

“I wished her dead,” he said suddenly, his tone raw. “I did, Francesca, I did, and my wish was almost granted.”

The horn blared repeatedly now.

Francesca took his face in her hands and forced him to look at her. “It doesn't matter what you wished. It doesn't matter how angry you were with her. You have every right to your feelings. But your feelings then do not make you responsible for that accident. They do not! You must stop blaming yourself.”

“I can't,” he whispered. “And do you know what makes matters even worse?”

She swallowed, shaking her head, and felt tears well in her eyes.

He inhaled harshly. “What makes matters even worse is that finally, too late, I realize I still love her.”

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