The Watchmaker's Daughter (Glass and Steele Book 1) (14 page)

BOOK: The Watchmaker's Daughter (Glass and Steele Book 1)
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"I'm English."

"Aha. A pretty young English rose. Perfect."

Clearly the lighting wasn't very good if he thought me pretty and young. "Thank you," I said, nevertheless.

"Has your friend taught you to play?" he asked, nodding at Willie.

"No. We've only just met.”

He squinted at me through his monocle. "You're not a hustler, are you?"

"A what?"

"A confidence man, or woman, who pretends not to know the rules then fleeces everyone at the table."

"I assure you, I don't know how to play poker. Whist is more my game."

He chuckled and the monocle fell onto the table. He returned it and studied his cards again before plucking a single coin off his pile and placing it beside the others. "She fleeced me last night," he said with a nod at Willie, "but I think I know her ways now."

Willie smirked. "Then I wish you luck, my lord."

Lord? I stared at Travers, but he was engrossed in the game and paid me no mind. I caught the gaze of the newcomer opposite and he shrugged. His bright blue eyes sparkled with intelligence.

I watched several rounds and thought I'd worked out which combination of cards constituted a winning hand. Then everything I'd learned was thrown upside down when the lord beside me won with nothing more than a pair of eights. Willie watched him rake in his winnings with a scowl on her face.

"Why did he win?" I whispered. "You had a pair of threes and sixes."

"He was bluffing. I folded too early." She picked up one of her coins and rubbed its surface with her thumb as if she were trying to remove the queen's face. She seemed in no mood to answer any more of my questions.

Lord Travers draped his arm across the back of my chair and leaned so close to me I could hear his moist smile. "My dear girls, why not call it a night? This is no place for lovely roses. We thorns might prick you." His guffaw had heads at the other tables turning.

"Speaking of pricks," one gentleman muttered loud enough for everyone to hear.

A sprinkle of laughter filled the room, led by Travers himself.

He won the next two rounds, much to Willie's annoyance. She tossed her cards into the middle of the table and sat back in the chair, arms folded over her chest. She was down to her last five shillings.

"Your friend doesn't like to lose," Travers said in my ear.

I swayed away from him. "I'm quite sure nobody likes to lose."

Willie's flinty glare slid toward him. She hunched over the table and scooped her coins toward her like a protective mother cat. Lord Travers chuckled. His fingers skimmed my shoulder up to the bare skin above my collar. I shivered and recoiled.

"Would you care for a drink, ladies?" asked the blue-eyed gentleman who'd suddenly appeared between Willie and me. He addressed me, but his hard gaze fell upon Travers at my other side. "Why not join me in the refreshments room, miss? All this poker is making my head spin."

"Thank you." I put out my hand. "I think I will."

He led me away from the table. Willie didn't seem to notice that I'd left, and even Travers didn't seem to care all that much. He simply returned his monocle to his eye and studied the new hand he'd been dealt.

The gentleman steered me to the adjoining room where sandwiches and little cakes were set out on the table. A long white tablecloth edged with lace draped to the lushly carpeted floor. Decanters and glasses stood ready on a sideboard, their crystal facets glinting in the candlelight cast by the overhead chandelier.

"Brandy?" he asked. "Wine? Sherry?"

"Brandy. Thank you for your gallant rescue, sir. I appreciate it."

He smiled at me over his shoulder. Although he wasn't a strikingly handsome man, he had a friendly smile and clear blue eyes. I guessed him to be in his mid-thirties, going by the lines fanning out from the corners of his eyes and stretching across his forehead. "I'm at your service. Miss Steele, was it?"

I nodded and joined him at the sideboard.

"My name is Dorchester." He poured two brandies from a decanter and handed one of the tumblers to me. "To your health, Miss Steele."

I sipped and eyed him over the rim of the glass. "Have you learned anything tonight, Mr. Dorchester?"

"I've learned not to play poker with Lord Travers."

"He does seem to win a lot." And have roaming hands.

"Your friend is an interesting character. Did I catch an accent?"

"Willie's American."

He made a face.

"You don't like Americans?" I asked.

"I've only met two, and they were somewhat brash, boastful fellows. They lacked polish and sophistication, if you know what I mean."

I simply smiled. While Willie and Duke certainly fit that description, Mr. Glass didn't, and I wasn't yet sure what to make of Cyclops. "What brings you to this gambling house?"

"Gambling." He grinned. "I'd heard about this new game of poker and decided to see what it was all about. I admit that I enjoy the thrill of winning, but I'm cautious too. I never wager more than I can afford to lose."

"Hence the evening spent observing rather than participating?"

"Indeed. And you, Miss Steele? Are you planning on returning to try your hand at poker another night?"

"I don't gamble." I had nothing to wager with, but even then I couldn't see the appeal.

"Perhaps you'll simply come and keep your American friend company again. It would make the evening more interesting if you were here." He smiled again.

Heat crept up my face. I sipped to hide it. "Are you from London, Mr. Dorchester?"

He shook his head. "I studied here in my youth, but reside in Manchester. I'm in manufacturing."

"Oh? Your accent sounds pure London to me." And upper class at that.

"So I've been told. I must have picked it up years ago." He sipped. "So tell me how a nice English girl winds up at a gambling den with an American woman who dresses like a man."

I laughed. "It's a long story."

"I have all night."

"Don't you want to return to the poker table?"

"Not when there is a more interesting option." Those lovely blue eyes fixed on me, and my face flamed.

I searched for something to say, but could only smile pathetically and sip my brandy. I was saved from responding by two men who joined us at the sideboard. They sported the cocky swagger of youth dipped in privilege and money. One poured drinks and the other, more portly fellow, helped himself to the cakes. The one with the drinks leaned back against the sideboard and downed the contents of one of the glasses.

"What's your name?" he asked me.

"Miss Steele," I said.

His pale gray gaze slipped over me, lingering on my chest, my throat, my mouth. His top lip curled into an indolent smile. "I'll double whatever he's paying," he said with a jerk of his head at Mr. Dorchester.

I blinked. "Pardon?"

He rolled his eyes. "Don't pretend innocence, Miss Steele. It's not going to earn you anything more with us."

Us? I glanced at his companion. He sneered, but thanks to the dusting of sugar on his lips, it didn't seem quite as sinister as his friend's. Even so, I knew what these men wanted and what they thought I was selling. I backed away.

"You're mistaken, sir," I said with as much courage as I could muster. "I'm not what you think I am."

"Course you are. Why else would you be here?"

Why indeed?

Mr. Dorchester stepped between the gentleman and me. He was shorter by a full head, but strongly built, where the other man was slender and wiry. "Kindly leave Miss Steele alone."

"I'm not paying a penny more," the gentleman snarled. "Your doxy isn't worth the double I'm offering."

Before my gasp had left my lips, Mr. Dorchester grabbed the man's coat at his chest and lifted him clear off his feet. The fellow swung his fist but missed. Mr. Dorchester threw him bodily against the wall. A moment later, Unger rushed in, and at least a half dozen gamblers crowded in the doorway behind him. More than one sniggered at the dazed looking fellow on the floor.

"India?" I could hear Willie before I could see her. She managed to push through the small crowd and rushed up to me. She clasped my forearms and searched my face. "What happened? Are you all right?"

"Quite, thank you." My hands shook and my heart pounded, but I wouldn't admit that to Willie. I was unharmed, after all, and the danger was over now.

She blew out a long breath and checked me over once again. "Thank God. Matt would haul me over hot coals if something happened to you."

Mr. Dorchester looked up sharply then away. He scratched his jaw but stopped suddenly and dropped his hand to his side. It was as if he didn't know what to do with it, or with himself, now that all eyes were on us both.

Willie eyed the fellow slumped groggily on the floor. "What happened?"

"Mr. Dorchester defended my honor against that man," I said.

Willie grunted. "Your honor?"

Mr. Dorchester straightened his tie. "It's impolite to call a lady a doxy."

"A doxy!" Willie hooted with laughter and kicked the shoe of the fellow on the floor. "Are you blind, sir? She's tied up tighter than a miser's purse strings. Wait'll I tell Duke and Cyclops. They'll laugh 'till their sides split."

I thrust my hand onto my hip. "And Mr. Glass? Will you tell
him
?"

Her grin faded. "Best not to tell him, unless you don't want to come here again."

At that moment, I didn't care if I never set foot in this gambling house or any other again. I'd wanted to be a little reckless and experience something I'd never done before, but staying in with a good book now seemed more appealing.

"This is why you should forbid women," one of the gamblers said to Mr. Unger. "They cause trouble."

"I'll have to ask you to leave, sir," said Mr. Unger to Mr. Dorchester. "No fisticuffs. House rules."

Mr. Dorchester held up his hands. "I understand."

"He was protecting me," I protested. "You should ask that fellow to leave.
He
started the trouble."

"Lord Dennison and Mr. Fryer-Smythe are regulars here." He nodded at the friend who'd set aside his cake to help his companion to his feet. "They've caused no problems prior."

"It's quite all right, Miss Steele," said Mr. Dorchester. "I don't think poker is for me, and there are other gambling dens in the city willing to take my money."

"But it's not fair!" I said. "You don't deserve this treatment."

He took my hand between both of his. "I'm tired anyway. May I be so bold as to suggest you leave now too, for your own safety?"

"Not yet," Willie said before I could respond. Her mouth set into a determined line. "I need to win back what I lost first."

"Or lose more!" called Lord Travers from the other room.

"Mr. Dorchester is right," I said. "We should go."

Willie seemed not to hear me. She marched back to the gambling room and resumed her seat at the poker table. She tapped her finger on the surface. "Deal."

"Would you like me to escort you home?" Mr. Dorchester asked as the others returned to their seats.

While the offer was tempting, I refused. I didn't know him well enough to walk alone with him in the dark. "I'll wait for Willie."

"Very well. But do be careful, Miss Steele. I'd hate to think of anything happening to you." He bowed. "It's been a pleasure making your acquaintance. I hope we meet again." He collected his hat, coat and gloves and spoke quietly to Mr. Unger, perhaps seeking assurance from him that I wouldn't come to any harm. Mr. Unger glanced at me then nodded, and Mr. Dorchester left.

I was sorry to see him go; not because I missed his company, but because it meant I ought to remain in the gambling room and not retire to the refreshment room. The fellow who'd called me a doxy—Lord Dennison—had fully recovered. He sauntered out too, a glass in hand, and leaned a hip against the roulette table. His cold eyes watched me and his lips twisted. I shivered again.

Lord Travers patted the empty chair beside him. "Come sit by me, Miss Steele. I'll keep you warm."

"I prefer to stand," I said and moved to the hearth behind Willie's chair.

They played a few rounds, with either Lord Travers or Willie winning most hands, even when they lacked good cards. I couldn't tell when either of them was bluffing, but Lord Travers seemed to have Willie's measure. He also had more winning card combinations.

I grew bored so picked up the carriage clock on the mantel. It was running perfectly well, but I removed its casing and inspected its mechanisms anyway. I ran my thumb over the wheels, feeling comfort in the familiar parts and their small yet precise movements. The metal warmed to my touch. I would have taken it apart and put it back together again for something to do, but I didn't have my tools with me. I replaced the back casing and returned it to the mantel.

After half an hour, the other two players on the poker table retired, having lost everything, and Lord Travers possessed most of the money. Willie was down to her last coins, and I found myself hoping she would lose so we could go home. According to the clock, it was half-two. I wanted to go to bed. My heart sank when I saw the three tens in her hand. A winning hand now would keep her here longer.

She pondered her cards for some time then pushed all of her coins forward.

Lord Travers matched her wager without hesitation, and added an entire stack more. Willie couldn't possibly meet it.

She lifted her brows at Mr. Unger who'd come to watch.

He shook his head. "I'm sorry, Miss Johnson, but the bank only lends money to patrons well known to us. If you return to America, we have no way to get our funds back."

She swore under her breath.

Lord Travers chuckled. "Surely you have something of value that you can wager, Miss Johnson." He licked his fleshy lips, wetting them even more. "Or your friend does."

Surely he didn't mean
me
? I recoiled. "Willie, it's time to go."

But I may as well have not been present. She didn't seem to hear me. She passed her hand over her chin, down her neck, and let it rest on her décolletage.

Lord Travers leered at me. The gamblers at the other tables had all stopped and now watched us with interest. The fellow who'd called me a doxy ambled over and leaned down to Travers' level to whisper in his ear. Travers snickered and licked his lips again.

BOOK: The Watchmaker's Daughter (Glass and Steele Book 1)
8.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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