The Queen Of Bedlam - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Queen Of Bedlam Part 33 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"Master Corbett, isn't it?" Polly Blossom asked, her face right up in his own. Before he could speak, she said quietly, "Sit down, Barsheba," without moving her eyes from Matthew's. He was aware in his peripheral vision of the female beast retreating to her sofa and curling herself up with a little sigh of lost love or, at least, an unearned groat. Polly leaned in so close her eyes, startlingly blue and clear, became the world. "We don't wish to frighten you away, your very first visit," she all but whispered in his ear.
In spite of the rigid design of his mission, Matthew had begun to sweat both at temples and under his arms. His stomach felt crawly. Polly Blossom was a handsome woman, no doubt. Her thick blond ringlets had no need of a wh.o.r.e's wig, and she wore only a modic.u.m of blue shadow-paint above her eyes. Her full, pouting lips-so close to his own mouth!-were daubed with pink. Her color was healthy, her body with its full swell of b.r.e.a.s.t.s and hips clothed in a rich indigo gown embroidered with lighter blue silk flowers. He had to look down to see if she wore the metal-toed boots, and yes, for all of her gentlewoman's finery and a perfume that smelled like peaches she did indeed wear the fearsome black kickers.
There came the sound of someone strumming a gittern. Matthew looked to one side to see that Becca Black had situated herself in a chair and was playing the instrument, her head c.o.c.ked and the remaining eye half-closed as if in reverie. The woman began to sing what might have been a West Indian song, a soft and lilting tune that seemed to be half English and half the language of her island heritage. He couldn't understand most of it, due to the lady's heavy accent, but he recognized in the lovely yet wistful song the sound of a universal longing.
A hand slid into Matthew's. "Come," said Polly, her voice still hushed. "Sit with me."
She led him to a sofa, where suddenly he found himself seated with New York's notorious and beautiful wh.o.r.e-mistress leaning against his shoulder and offering him a sugared almond from a silver dish. When he started to take it from her, she just laughed and pushed it into his mouth.
"Tell me," she said, as a hand lay upon his thigh, "about yourself."
This water was getting deep. He had not come here for dalliance, but for information. A meeting with Grace Hester, if possible. He had to keep his wits about him, before they flew away. He wondered what Polly Blossom might say if she knew he was unsure whether he was a virgin or not, for his memory of a heated physical encounter with Rachel Howarth might have been true yet might have been produced by the strange elixirs given him by an Indian medicine man after his fight with Jack One Eye the bear three years ago. He could hear Madam Blossom say as she stared steadily at him, After you leave here tonight, your memory will serve you well. But he was here for professional reasons, not for yearnings of the flesh. He was here to get in and out as quickly as possible. To get to the essence of things. To...d.a.m.n, this woman was sitting so close!
Footsteps descended a staircase. Matthew saw a narrow set of stairs at the opposite end of the parlor. Coming down and looking quite woozy, either from drink or his amorous exertions, was Samuel Baiter, whose face was still bruised from the dust-up during a dice game at his house on Sat.u.r.day night. He carried his tricorn hat in one hand and the other was still tugging his breeches up. "Good night, Madam Blossom," he croaked as he pa.s.sed, and the lady answered, "Good night, Master Baiter."
Then she turned her attention again upon her object of sugared almonds. "Oh," she said, "you're a very handsome young man. But surely you've been told this by many ladies much younger and prettier than myself, have you not?"
The question sounded as loaded as one of those multi-barreled pistols Ashton McCaggers had told him about. "I have not," he replied.
"Then I fear for the taste of the ladies of New York, sir, as well as for their sanity in letting you walk the streets without the companions.h.i.+p of the fairer s.e.x. Handsome, well-bred, well-dressed, and intelligent, too. Oh, how my heart pounds!" She used his hand to demonstrate if not how hard her heart was pounding then how soft was her left breast.
Matthew's flag had unfurled and was rapidly rising. He thought that if this went much further he was going to lose all professional account of himself.
One of the other customers was telling a joke and both the women laughed as if they hadn't heard about the farmer's daughter and the brush salesman a hundred times. Becca Black strummed and sang and Polly Blossom regarded Matthew as if he were Eros embodied, which he knew must be part of her own professional wiles for he certainly wasn't all that.
Madam Blossom ceased her faux swooning to watch like a hawk as the two men chose their paramours of the half-hour and put coins into a white ceramic bowl on a table beside Becca Black, who did not pause in her playing. One of the men either was mad or had terrible eyesight, as he'd chosen the white-wigged giantess; well, perhaps he craved what was nearly about to explode from her scarf and pantaloons. They went up the stairs chatting and laughing, leaving the spurned girl-a slim brown-haired doxy with sharp features under a heavy pancake of rouge and white powder-to lean back in her chair bored to the soul and rapidly stir the air around her face with a black fan as if dissipating the odors of manly musk and bad breath.
"Master Corbett," said Polly, again all smile and flirtation, "I regret I cannot offer myself for commerce tonight, as I might wish to, but I am under Eve's curse. Might I suggest that Nicole over there would be an excellent companion? Nicole! Please sit up straight and show your good breeding, my dear." Nicole obeyed, with a frozen grin. "Or I have a very pleasant and highly intelligent young blond, newly arrived from London just last week, almost a virgin so fresh is she, so supple and dewy. But if it's experience you wish, and a certain exotic charm, I also have a dark-fleshed gypsy with-I'm told-the firm grip of a sixteen-year-old and sure to delight. What is your pleasure, sir?"
"I..." Matthew's nerves betrayed him by making his voice crack. He cleared his throat and tried again. "I do have a request." She watched him intently, with perhaps a little hard flint back in those eyes somewhere. "I'd like to be introduced to-"
"G.o.dd.a.m.n, what a night!" said a waspish feminine voice as someone came down the stairs. "That b.a.s.t.a.r.d Baiter's got a c.o.c.k enough for three men!"
"Hold your tongue, missy!" At once Madam Blossom had risen to her feet in a show of indignation. "We have a gentleman on the floor!"
Matthew stood up as well, for on the stairs was the young prost.i.tute that he'd last seen hanging on Andrew Kippering at the Thorn Bush. Her dark hair, a shade of brown so deep it was almost black, was brushed back from her forehead and gathered behind with a crimson ribbon. She wore, as was the custom of ladies both high and low, white face powder and her eyebrows were drawn as thin black arches. As he'd noted at the Thorn Bush, she was about twenty years old and not unattractive, for her features were well-defined and her expression catlike with a s.e.xual cunning. She wore the pantaloon outfit but had a flimsy violet robe thrown about her shoulders and drawn over her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. Her ebony eyes found Matthew but remained vacant. She said in an affected voice, "My regrets, sir. I was simply remarkin' of what happens when a giant sausage is shoved into a silk purse."
"No apologies necessary," Matthew told Grace Hester, before the madam of the house could speak. "I understand that not all sausages are created equal, but all silk purses have a bottom. So my regrets to you that a so-called gentleman has no concept of physical volume."
There was a silence. Becca Black's music had ceased on an off-key note.
Grace Hester frowned. "Who the h.e.l.l are you?" she asked. "A gibberin' loon?"
"Hus.h.!.+" Polly snapped, and then her tone softened though her eyes had become as hard as her reputation. "This is Master Matthew Corbett, my dear. A magistrate's clerk and well-known young man about town. He featured prominently in a recent article in the Earwig, so he may be considered somewhat of a celebrity and we are honored to-"
Grace yawned and winced as she rubbed her crotch.
"Honored to have him visit us," Polly finished. "These young ladies!" she said to Matthew with a sad shake of her head. "They just don't know good manners anymore."
"I'm done for the night." Grace continued down the stairs, walking with a noticeable hitch in her roll. She had no pretense of being a gentlelady; she was all foul temper and crudities. "Somebody get me a f.u.c.kin' drink."
"Get yourself your own f.u.c.king drink," answered the mistress of the house, as the masks of civility began to crack. "You already owe me two s.h.i.+llings for your liquor. When are you going to pay?"
The girl shrugged and pa.s.sed Matthew and Polly, heading for a sideboard on which stood three open bottles of wine and a few gla.s.ses. Suddenly there was a yawp of female laughter from upstairs followed by an incomprehensible shout from a man. Becca Black returned to her gittern, this time playing a more stately and intricate tune that had no words. Matthew was impressed by her musical talents and he wondered what her story might be; but he was here for Grace Hester's tale, and it was time to work toward his aim.
"That wine's for the customers," Polly said, advancing toward the girl before a bottle could be tipped. "You'll pay me what you owe, or you'll have more than a pain in the puss."
"Pardon me," Matthew spoke up, before these two cats began to scratch. "The lady may have my gla.s.s." They turned as one to glare at him, as if he were the lowest creature ever born. "I am afforded a free gla.s.s of wine, am I not? If so, the lady may have mine."
Polly Blossom, to her credit, was quick to swing between her roles of wh.o.r.e-warden and flirtatious businesswoman. It was, Matthew thought, the key to her success. She lowered her eyes demurely. "How gracious of you, sir. How kind. We thank you."
Grace didn't thank anyone. She loaded up a gla.s.s and drank most of it down before Matthew could withdraw a silver s.h.i.+lling from his pocket.
"I'll take this girl," he said, holding out the coin. "And to ease her discomfort, I'll pay an extra half-s.h.i.+lling."
"I'm done, I said," Grace replied, without even offering him a look.
"We do have more suitable ladies, Master Corbett." Even as she spoke, Polly Blossom had her eyes fixed on the coin. "I have a very pretty maiden of seventeen, lately arrived from Amsterdam."
"That ugly b.i.t.c.h saw seventeen ten years ago," said Grace as she licked the empty gla.s.s with an extraordinarily long tongue.
"This girl," Matthew said. "One s.h.i.+lling for thirty minutes. Plus two groats for the trouble."
Suddenly Polly's eyes narrowed as she smelled a rat. "Very extravagant, aren't you, sir? Why may I ask do you wish this particular companion, when I offer so many other choices?"
"She appeals to me." Matthew ignored the girl's dark chortle. The next thing he said surprised him when it came out: "I prefer the wicked ones."
"Well, there's plenty of wickedness to go around here, sir," said Polly, and with a smooth motion she took a step toward him and put her hand firmly on his crotch. Before Matthew could jump back, the woman had taken stock of his package. "He's normal," she told Grace. "A s.h.i.+lling and two groats would make a nice end to your evening."
"h.e.l.l!" Becca Black rumbled. "Pay me de money and you ain't never seen such wickedness!"
Matthew doubted he would live through that much. He kept his hand outstretched with the s.h.i.+lling in his palm. Grace was busy pouring herself another gla.s.s.
The light of avarice shone in Polly's eyes, yet she did show concern for her charges. "Go ahead and do him as your last trick," she told the girl. "I'll get you some extra ointment in the morning."
Grace drank the second gla.s.s empty and slammed it down so hard Matthew thought it might shatter. Then she turned her black-eyed, feline gaze upon him and pulled up a crooked grin. "As you please, sir." Her voice was a mockery of manners. "I won't feel you down there, anyways."
With a forefinger, Polly directed Matthew to the money bowl, where he added his coins to the collection. As Matthew followed Grace up the stairs, Polly called out sharply, "Make sure you give Master Corbett his money's worth! The customer always comes first in this house!"
No comment was given from the sullen wh.o.r.e. She continued up the stairs, leading Matthew into a candlelit corridor with four doors on either side and one at the far end. In gilded frames on the walls hung scandalous drawings of such fevered intertwinings that a blush heated Matthew's cheeks. Another Turkish lamp on a small table sent out blue tendrils of incense, the spicy-sweet scent hiding perhaps the more offensive odors of sweat and musk. She opened the second door on the right and went in without a word to her customer, whose heart had begun to pound with a wild rhythm even though his intentions were honorable. He could hear Becca Black singing again downstairs, and again there was a harsh rasp of female laughter from along the hall before Grace shut the door at his back.
It was a plain bedroom with pale yellow walls and a single shuttered window. The bed was rumpled and obviously had seen hard use tonight. On a small round table sat a triple-wicked candle-holder. The flames gave the room a more romantic glow than it deserved, for Matthew did notice ugly cracks in the plaster. There was a mousy little gray chair, a chest-of-drawers with a was.h.i.+ng-bowl atop it, and next to it an hourgla.s.s. On the wall was a small square mirror. Pegs held various items of female clothing. The place was neater than Matthew had expected, as the plank floor had been swept clean and everything was orderly but for the bed, and he wished not to look too closely at the sheets.
Grace stood staring at him, her expression blank.
Matthew had no idea what to say. So he began with "I a.s.sume you've been busy lately," and immediately winced at the ridiculous statement.
"Your name's Corbett?" she asked, and then she frowned slightly. "Have I seen you before?"
"Possibly. One night at the Thorn Bush."
She seemed to be trying to remember, but it was beyond her. She walked past him to the chest and slid a drawer open, trailing the faint odor of peppermint. At least, he thought, she kept her teeth clean.
"You can call me Matthew," he told her.
She turned around and had a light brown object about seven inches long and oily-looking dangling off her hand. She said, "Put this sheath on yourself and I'll turn the gla.s.s when you're ready, or if you want me to put it on for you I'll turn the gla.s.s now. What's it to be?"
Matthew had heard of the p.e.n.i.s-sheaths, but he'd never before seen one. Made of sheep's gut, as he understood. He stared at the thing in Grace Hester's hand, and in spite of his excitement at being here in this den of pleasure he had a queasy sensation in the pit of his stomach.
"I won't need that," he said.
"No sheath, no f.u.c.k, and I don't care how much money you pay. I don't want to be laid up with that d.a.m.ned doctor diggin' a kid out of me." She held it toward him adamantly. "Go on, all the gents use it."
"Not that particular one, I hope."
"Are you stupid? You use it once and toss it." She nodded toward a bucket on the floor. "Thank Christ I'm not the one who has to wash 'em."
"I won't need it," he repeated quietly, "because I only want to talk."
Grace was silent. She blinked as if she'd been slapped. In the quiet Matthew could hear the gittern music and Becca Black's singing from the parlor. Then all the air seemed to rush back into Grace's lungs. "Talk? What the f.u.c.k about?"
"I would like to ask you a few questions."
She saw he was serious. She backed away from him, as one might retreat from a frothing dog. "Listen, you," she said, her voice tight. "One scream and Becca'll carve your heart out."
That threat was enough to send a s.h.i.+ver up his spine, but he had to keep his composure. "I hope you won't scream, as I'd like to leave here with all the parts I brought."
"You are a loon." Grace was nearly pus.h.i.+ng herself into a corner. "Who the h.e.l.l talks when they could f.u.c.k?"
"I came here to see you for a purpose, and it wasn't...uh...that. I promise you I won't touch you. All right?"
"You fool, you paid to touch me."
"That's incorrect. I paid for a half-hour of your time. I just have a few questions to ask, and then I'll leave. I'll tell Madam Blossom you were a wonderful..." He searched for the gentlemanly word. "Hostess. I won't touch you, and I certainly won't hurt you. Please." He kept his voice low and soothing. "Trust me."
Grace gave a bitter laugh. Her eyes were no longer vacant; now they held the steely glint of suspicion. She said, with nearly a spit on the planks, "I trust n.o.body."
Matthew decided to put himself where she might consider him the weakest. He sat down on the bed.
Her mouth twisted. "So now you've changed your mind?"
"No. I just want you to see that you can get out of the room at any time you please, and I won't stop you."
"You couldn't stop me."
"That's probably true," he agreed. He reasoned she might have a dagger or two hidden around here for her own protection, in case Becca was slow up the stairs. "I really do need to ask you a few things. Important things."
Grace just watched him without speaking. The p.e.n.i.s-sheath was caught in her fist. "If you'll answer them as truthfully as possible," Matthew continued, "I'll go on my way and you can get to bed. To sleep, I mean."
Still she made no response, but Matthew saw she wasn't going to scream. At least for now his heart was safe.
She took a hesitant step forward and then pa.s.sed him, pulling herself away so she wouldn't graze his knees. She returned the p.e.n.i.s-sheath to the drawer and then closed it. Her right hand came up and turned the hourgla.s.s over, and the sand began to slither through. Before she faced him again, she opened the chest's top drawer and brought something out that Matthew couldn't see at first. She went directly back to the corner in which she felt safe and when she turned toward him Matthew saw she was holding close to herself a small, dingy cloth doll with a red-st.i.tched mouth and black b.u.t.tons for eyes.
"What do you want to know?" she asked warily.
"First of all, what your relations.h.i.+p is with Reverend Wade."
"Who?"
"William Wade. The reverend at Trinity Church."
Grace stared blankly at him, with her doll nestled in the crook of an arm.
"You don't know Reverend Wade?" Matthew asked.
"I suppose I've heard the name. I hear a lot of names. But why should I know him?" An evil little grin stole across her face. "Does he come here in disguise?"
"No." He noted she looked a bit disappointed that the reverend wasn't walking on the fiery edge of h.e.l.l. He himself was dismayed by the response, for he thought it to be truthful from her tone of voice and lack of reaction to the name. "What about Andrew Kippering? I presume you know-" She was already nodding vigorously, so there was no use in finis.h.i.+ng it.
"Andy, you mean. Oh, he's a right fine gent. Big and handsome and the money flows out of him like water under London Bridge. He comes here two, three times a week. Sometimes stays the whole night. Gets a deal from the old dragon. He's a lawyer, you know."
"Yes."
"Wait." Grace had been warming, but now she froze again. "Andy's not in any kind of trouble, is he?" She took a step toward the door that made Matthew almost bolt to his feet, expecting the shrill scream for Becca Black. "Hey, who are you to be askin' questions about Andy? I'm not gonna be helpin' you put the finger on him, no matter what he's done."
"I didn't say he'd done anything."
"You can ask any of the girls here. The ladies, I mean." Grace thrust her sharp chin at him as she crushed the doll against her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. "Andy's made of sterlin'. Just who the h.e.l.l are you, anyway?"
"I mean no harm to Mr. Kippering," Matthew said calmly. "I was only trying to settle the fact that you knew him. I saw you together at the Thorn Bush, but I wanted to hear it from you."
"All right, I know him. So does every other lady here. Even the old dragon takes him to bed once in a while, and I hear it's for free." Grace spoke that word with disgust.
Matthew couldn't fathom how to proceed from this point. If Grace Hester didn't know Reverend Wade, then what had Kippering been going on about that day at the dock? What is it you know about Grace Hester? Kippering had asked, there in the shadows of the masted s.h.i.+ps. This can't get out, do you understand?
Matthew decided to change course. The sand made a faint hissing noise as it collected at the bottom of the gla.s.s. "How long have you been here?"
"Since the end of April, I suppose. Why?"
"Dr. G.o.dwin," Matthew said. "Did you know him?"
"That old fart? Got himself killed good and proper, didn't he?" The subject of her dear sterling Andy behind them, Grace was beginning to warm up once more. "They say he nearly had his head cut off," she said, with a delicious glee bordering on the obscene.
"He took care of you ladies, yes? Before Dr. Vanderbrocken stepped in?"
"And G.o.dwin poked us, too, while he was at it. Old b.a.s.t.a.r.d had a c.o.c.k on him. And at his age! You see Nicole downstairs? The skinny one? G.o.dwin was on her every time she turned around. Gave her some f.u.c.kin' dinner plates for her birthday, the very night he got his neck opened. Said he loved her. Can you believe it?" She made a face. "Love, in a place like this!"
"It is amusing," Matthew agreed, but actually he thought it was very sad. The plates, he recalled, had been crafted by Hiram Stokely.