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The Sugared Game




  The Sugared Game

  The Will Darling Adventures, Volume 2

  KJ Charles

  Published by KJC Books, 2020.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  The Sugared Game (The Will Darling Adventures, #2)

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  The Will Darling Adventures

  About the Author

  Note to readers:

  This book has references to miscarriage and self-harm. A full list of content warnings is available at my website.

  For Mum, with thanks for the emergency book surgery!

  Chapter One

  Will Darling was going dancing, and he felt pretty good about it.

  With the legal machinery of probate finally ground through, he was the official owner of his deceased uncle’s savings as well as his antiquarian and second-hand bookshop. He’d celebrated his new wealth with a spending spree of sorts, and the results were pleasing. Freshly shaved, with his unruly hair combed back ruthlessly and a few months of plentiful food and heavy lifting under his belt, he was in respectable shape, and his nearly-new jacket and well-polished shoes made him feel positively smart.

  Not smart like the Smart Set, of course. He wasn’t one of those, a fact that had been made abundantly clear to him, but still smart enough to take a fashion-conscious girl to a night-club. It would be nice to be the evening-dress type, rich and sophisticated, of course, just as it would be nice if he knew any girls who had ideas for the evening beyond dancing, but you couldn’t have everything. He was solvent, healthy, and going out with his best friend as a thank-you for her unflagging support in some of the hardest times of his life, and all that made him a damned lucky man.

  He took the omnibus to Maisie’s lodgings. Her landlady, a woman artist who smelled of oil paint, let him in with an admiring look up and down and called out, “Your young man, Miss Jones!”

  Maisie emerged into the hall. Will gaped.

  Her frock was spectacular. It was silver with crimson fringes that shimmered over her at the tiniest movement, the colour contrast dramatic against her warm brown skin, and short enough to reveal most of a pair of plump and shapely calves. As if that wasn’t enough flesh, it was also cut low at the front, and Maisie had a lot of front. Rather than a hat, she wore a wide silver headband with crimson silk rosebuds over her black marcelled waves; even her heeled shoes were silver. She was painted and lipsticked to the manner born, and looked like the brightest possible Young Person.

  “You’ll catch flies,” Maisie told him with some satisfaction.

  His mouth was indeed open. “Blimey.” He struggled for words. “Blimey.”

  “You look all right yourself.”

  Will looked fine. Maisie glowed. He cleared his throat and said, “We’ll get a taxi-cab.”

  “We can get the bus from here, can’t we?”

  “Not in that frock,” he said firmly. “You deserve a taxi.” Plus, if she showed that much leg on public transport, there might be a brawl. A riot, even.

  He glanced at her as the taxi-cab took them through Piccadilly, bright and garish with the electric lights of advertisements blurred by the drizzle on the windows. “You really do look marvellous. I’m sorry I’m not smarter.”

  “Don’t be silly, you look very nice. I thought I’d dress up a bit for this place, that’s all. Are you sure it’s all right, going here?”

  “Of course it is. You deserve it.”

  Will was taking her to the High-Low Club. He’d never heard of it, but he wasn’t a night-club sort of man; he’d simply asked her where she’d like to go for the evening out he owed her, and she’d named this on the grounds of having a voucher for free champagne. “Have you been before?”

  She shook her head. “I’ve wanted to. Phoebe’s been. Apparently the band is wonderful and it’s awfully glamorous in a seedy way. There’s all sorts of desperate characters as well as the Smart Set.”

  That didn’t sound much of a recommendation to Will. “Do I count as a desperate character?”

  “Only if I can be a gangster’s moll.”

  The taxi stopped on Maddox Street. Will paid, and helped Maisie out. She really was showing a great deal of leg.

  The High-Low Club didn’t look like much from the outside: a tall, thin house that presented only a closed door to the world. This was opened by a large, suited doorman at Will’s knock, and they descended a rather narrow and poorly lit flight of stairs down to the basement. If Will hadn’t been able to hear the distant blare of the band, he’d have suspected they were about to be mugged.

  The stairs led into a little cloakroom area, where they handed over their hats and coats and went through a set of double doors to the main room.

  The music hit them with a blast as they entered. A band played at the far end, loud and frenetic, and the floor was filled with bright-coloured women and monochrome men, moving frantically to the rapid rhythms. It was an astonishingly tall space, the full height of the house, with two rows of gilt-railed balconies going round the walls. The lower balcony, at the level where a ceiling probably used to be, was supported by pillars all round the edges of the dance floor, and filled with people who talked, strolled, or leaned over the rails to watch the dancing. The top balcony, another normal room’s height above, seemed to have mostly people sitting at tables. It was all cleverly lit with electric, giving just enough light to make the dance floor glitter.

  “Oh, this is lovely,” Maisie said. “What fun!”

  A man approached. He wore a harlequin of a jacket of which some panels were white, and others a lurid striped green and pink material. If this was the new fashion, Will was leaving London and going back north right now. He heard Maisie inhale.

  “Dancing, sir?”

  “Sorry?”

  The hideously-dressed man indicated the balcony. “Upstairs for conversation, down for dancing.”

  “Oh! Dancing, please.”

  The waiter conducted them to a table half way down the room, which made it just possible to speak over the music and the shouted conversations and raucous laughter from other tables. “And to drink, sir?”

  “We’ve a voucher for a bottle of champagne,” Maisie said, flourishing it. Will felt a bit of a skinflint, since he was taking her out and should be paying for everything, but Maisie was a frugal soul and, as she’d said, the voucher was no other use.

  He glanced round while they waited for their drinks. There were a couple of well-dressed Indian men visible, plus the band, all of whom were black men, but the rest of the clientele was entirely white. He and Maisie had always gone dancing further east, where the dance-halls were a lot more mixed. He hoped she didn’t feel looked at.

  She seemed comfortable enough as she looked around with a calculating expression. Taking in the posh frocks, no doubt. Will assessed the room, trying to work out the point of the balconies. There seemed to be two spiral stairs from the floor to the top level, catercorner from one another. Both had a moderate flow of people going up and down. The lower of the two balconies was blocked midway on the back wall by a room with large glass windows overlooking the dance floor. Windows inside a house; what a thing. He supposed it would be the manager’s
office.

  “What do you think?” he asked Maisie in the subdued shout required for conversation.

  “Very grand,” she said. “Except the waiters’ uniforms, goodness me. How are you getting on, Will? I haven’t seen you properly in ages.”

  “I’ve been pretty busy. Lots to do. I cleared myself a room to sleep in.”

  “How’d you manage that? Throw away all the books?”

  “A fair few of them. I sold a pile as job lots to get them out of the shop, did some shifting of the rest—found a few good things in there—and now I have a proper bedroom above the shop. I even bought furniture.”

  “Look at you, Mr. Fancy.”

  “The best part is having a proper bed that doesn’t fold up and drop you on the floor. I’d forgotten what it was like not to wake up with backache.”

  “And are books selling well, to pay for all this extravagance?”

  “Some. More as I get the hang of it. How are hats doing? I like your thing.” He indicated her headband. “Very smart.”

  Maisie, a milliner, took that as her due. “Thanks. I’m pleased with it. Phoebe loves it.”

  “Seen much of her?”

  She beamed, a look of far more happiness than the casual enquiry merited. “We had lunch just yesterday, actually but I’ll tell you about it when we’ve our drinks. She was asking me if you’d seen anything of Kim. Lord Arthur, I mean,” she added conscientiously.

  “Kim,” Will said, because the title grated on his nerves. “Why doesn’t she ask him?”

  “I don’t know,” Maisie said. “She said he’s been awfully funny, and not around much, and I said was there anything up, because the last time he disappeared off for days, well...”

  She let that trail invitingly. Last time Kim had disappeared off for days, he’d been attempting to rescue Will, who had been kidnapped and held prisoner. Maisie adored the pulp serials, and remained bitterly envious that her involvement had been only tangential.

  “Don’t look at me,” Will said. “I’ve no idea what he’s up to. I haven’t heard from him since I don’t know when.”

  He knew exactly when: the second of January. It was currently the twenty-second of February. That was a sore point he had no desire at all to discuss, so he added, “I’m not sure if he ever uses the title. It’s not compulsory, is it, if it’s one of those whatsits?”

  “Courtesy titles.”

  “I don’t follow how those work.”

  “Well,” Maisie said, taking the bait. “If you’re a duke or a marquess, your oldest son borrows one of your titles, like Kim’s brother is Viscount Chingford. Then your other children are called Lord or Lady with their Christian name, Lord Arthur and Lady Jane. The younger ones don’t get any extra names, it’s just a politeness to show who their father is.”

  “So if my old man was the Duke of Northants, I’d be Lord William Darling?”

  “No, because you’re an only child, aren’t you? So you’d use a spare title he had lying around. Where is it you’re from again?”

  “Bugbrooke.”

  “You’d be Viscount Bugbrooke, imagine. I wish you were a lord.” She switched to a terrifyingly upper-class accent. “‘Oh, how mahvellous, Bugbrooke, old chap!’ Except you’d probably say it Booray or some such if you were posh. Do you know how Phoebe’s father’s house is spelled and pronounced? You wouldn’t guess it in a million years.”

  “You’re Welsh,” Will pointed out. “You’ve got no room to talk about spelling.”

  “Nothing wrong with Welsh spelling, thank you,” Maisie said, with an edge on her accent.

  “Come off it. You put two ‘l’s in everything and don’t say any of them.”

  She stuck out her tongue. “You’ll be sorry when my da is Marquess of Cardiff. Pronounced Caff.”

  “What would that make you? Lady Jones?”

  “Lady Maisie Jones, but you can call me Lady Maisie.” She sighed wistfully. “If only he’d gone into aristocracy instead of down the docks.”

  They laughed over that as the champagne arrived. The waiter made a production of opening it and pouring Maisie a foaming glassful, and by then her original question was entirely forgotten, which was a relief. Maisie was his best friend, but she was still a nice girl from Cardiff and there were some things Will couldn’t talk to her about, no matter how much he’d have liked to.

  He would have liked to very much. He wanted to tell her the truth, to have someone who’d give him good, sensible, measured advice, while also being entirely on his side. He couldn’t risk it. That had felt increasingly like lying for a while now, but he simply didn’t know how she’d react if she knew he was—well, not queer exactly, since he liked women very well. Open-minded? Whatever you called it, it wasn’t a topic he could throw into the conversation and expect things to end well.

  Anyway, they scarcely needed to discuss it since he hadn’t so much as seen Kim in close on two months, so it hardly bloody mattered.

  He forced that train of thought to a jarring halt. He was a blasted lucky man, and out with a girl who deserved a good time. That was a lot more important than an unreliable aristocrat who’d dropped him like a hot potato when he was no longer entertaining.

  The waiter finished faffing about with the champagne. Will raised his glass and clinked it to Maisie’s. “Here’s to you. Best dressed woman in the room.”

  She gave a little shimmy that made the dress move intriguingly. “Do you really like it?”

  Will began to give an ‘of course’ sort of reply, but managed to stop. Maisie knew he was an ignoramus when it came to clothes, so she didn’t want a meaningless endorsement; she wanted moral support. “Can I have another look?”

  Maisie checked she wouldn’t bump into anyone, then stood and stepped back from the table. Will took her in, impressed. The frock was so stylish that he’d have thought she’d borrowed it from Phoebe, except Phoebe was the sort of tall, slim build that modern times were made for. She was very fine indeed, and he noticed a couple of admiring glances from their fellow customers, which might be for the dress, the curves it flattered, or the leg it revealed.

  Any man would like it, he thought, or at least any man who liked ample bosoms. The fashion demanded women should be shaped like boys, skinny ones at that, and dresses went straight up and down accordingly, which didn’t usually do much for curvier bodies. Maisie wasn’t straight up and down from any angle, and her dress emphasised that in a way he could only appreciate.

  “It’s marvellous,” he said. “You look top notch. Divine, darling.” He imitated Phoebe, which made Maisie giggle. “What I like is, it’s not exactly the usual sort of”—he mimed a tube—“but it still looks right for the fashion, only it’s right for you. Does that make sense?”

  “Thank you,” Maisie said. “That was what I meant to do. It’s ridiculous to squeeze women my shape into styles that don’t suit, and I shan’t follow some absurd grapes-and-water diet to whittle myself down to a stick. You need to dress for your own body, not pretend you’ve someone else’s, don’t you think?”

  “Quite right. I wouldn’t be seen dead in a flapper dress.”

  Maisie cackled. “I should hope not, with your shoulders. Well, I ask you: Phoebe said the other day that frocks now would suit Kim better than me, and what does that say?”

  Will had a sudden picture of Kim in a flapper dress. He’d probably wear something shimmery in purple, and it probably would look good on his tall, slender frame, for a value of ‘good’ that Will didn’t want to consider too closely. Phoebe would doubtless dress him up if he wanted, and Will felt a ridiculous pang of envy at that, because Kim and Phoebe loved each other so much that it hurt to be on the outside of it, looking in.

  “It does seem a bit silly,” he said. “After all, most women have, you know.” He started to mime again and thought better of it. “Chests.”

  “Exactly, so someone ought to be making dresses that don’t pretend we’re a completely different shape that doesn’t work. Sorry, I’m go
ing on. I know you don’t care about this.”

  “You listen to me talk about football.”

  “Which isn’t easy, I can tell you.”

  “And that’s not even my job, unlike you. Well, hats are your job—” Something clicked into place. “Wait a minute. Maisie, did you make that dress yourself?”

  Maisie flushed. “It’s my own design.”

  “That is cracking. Absolutely first rate. Have you shown Phoebe?”

  Her cheeks darkened even more. “This is what I wanted to tell you about. I’ve been waiting to say in case it didn’t come off, but I’ve been working on ideas for a while now, and I showed her them back in December, and Will, she loved them. She gave me some notes and we’ve come up with some more designs together, and she’s going to take them to people. We’re going to. You know she was a mannequin for Worth once, and she’s friends with Lanvin—Jeanne Lanvin!—and Edward Molyneux?” She wriggled. “It’s too exciting. And she’s got marvellous ideas and knows such a lot and has such a good eye and she really thinks people would want my designs. That I could do it, that we might be able to do something together. And she asked her father, and he’s going to lend her, lend us money to start up a venture!”

  “Maisie Jones!”

  “I know! And of course I’m not setting my heart on it working, but—well, it’s worth a try, isn’t it?”

  “Of course it is,” Will said. “Look at you, the newest Bright Young Person. This is wonderful.”

  “Touch wood.” Maisie rapped the table. “We’ll see, but I’m so excited. And look at you, with your own business and a house and everything. We’re doing all right, aren’t we?”

  “Not bad for a couple of bumpkins up from the country.” Will raised his glass again, and Maisie met it with hers. “Cheers.”

  They talked her plans through as they finished their glasses and had another, then Will led her onto the dance floor. The band was as good as he’d ever heard, and they danced for a solid half hour. Will loved dancing. He found it easy to lose himself in action, focusing on nothing but the movements of his own body and that of his partner, fitting together without the need for words.