Escaping the Lion’s den needs more than a warrior angel.
Jack
Portman had never forgotten Filly Malvaise.
Then she walked into his local pub
and into the clutches of a loan shark.
Can he
rescue her before she falls victim to evil?
. ~ . ~ .
~ .
The
Lion’s Den is a
brief novella set in London of the early 1920s with the Bright Young Things.
The returned soldiers of the Great War have settled uncomfortably into their
lives.
Although
this story is not part of a series, Filly and Jack were originally introduced
in the 2nd book of the Into Death trilogy, Christmas with
Death.
This title
was formerly published with a different cover.
I offer this novelette as a freebie through my newsletter. You can join the M.A. Lee Newsletter to receive your free copy of this novella through a Book Funnel link. To receive the link, email winkbooks@aol.com
Purchase links at below.
The Lion’s Den
I
Hell and damnation.
Jack Portman lifted the pint of stout to hide his
face and watched Filly Malvaise look around the pub. That had to be her fourth
look, just as blind as the previous ones. Not all of them would be blind.
He hadn’t forgotten her, not a single jot. She’d
changed, though. Up with the times, in one of those head-covering hats, her
hair bobbed. The loss of her long brown hair hit him like a punch. She wore a
shapeless serge grey jacket over a dress. The skirt revealed her calves. That
skirt almost made up for her cut hair.
Jack had spotted Filly as soon as she entered the
pub. She had threaded her way through the early Wednesday evening crowd of
clerks and office jobsmen and a light sprinkling of women. A small table in the
center caught her eye, and she slid onto the rattan-backed chair. No sooner had
she planted herself than a man placed his hand on the other chair. Jack wanted
to hit him. Brown eyes wide, Filly gave a decided shake of her head. The man
dragged out the chair anyway. Her gloved hand shot out in a warding gesture.
Whatever she said wiped the grin off the man’s face. He rejoined his mates at a
larger side table and mouthed a word. Looked like married.
Which Jack knew was an effing lie.
He might not have seen Filly Bedamned Malvaise for
three years, but he’d listened for information about her. He’d known when she
moved to London and took rooms from the widowed Cecilia Arkwright before she
became the married Cecilia Tarrant. He knew she’d found work at a dress shop.
Jack watched her give an order to the barmaid. Her
upturned face caught the lamp’s glare. When the maid departed, she looked
around the pub.
Something troubled her. Whatever had brought her
to his local. The Gold Eagle Pub was far from her flat and her work.
They were up to five looks, still blind.
Occasionally, Filly ran with the other Bright
Young Things, the racy ones who jumped in fountains with her cousin Tori or the
Bohemian ones who talked around paintings and sculpture with her cousin Greta.
Tori and Greta ordered around anyone in their circles. Filly didn’t take their
orders, which put her in the outer sphere, for all the blood connection.
He’d like her from the start, that Christmas at Emberley,
the Malvaise estate—although her father was second son and had inherited only a
modicum of wealth. Still, a modicum was more than Jack had. Filly hadn’t
panicked when Tony Gresham turned up murdered. She hadn’t tried to interfere
with the investigation. Plucky thing had stood up to her cousins’ interferences.
Jack had thought her too young. His years in the
sodding trenches aged him, mental years rather than physical years. He had a
need to earn his pay rather than live off the Malvaise family.
Filly Bedamned Malvaise wasn’t effing married,
though.
The barmaid returned with two pints, one for
Filly, one for whomever she’d come to meet.
Married.
Shite. How had he missed that news?
She sipped the beer and grimaced.
Jack should leave. He had an early day tomorrow.
His job required a clear head, clear thinking and quick reactions.
He stayed to see who came to her table. He didn’t
see Filly seeking out a pub on her own. She fit a tea room.
She unsnapped her purse and withdrew a lace
handkerchief. She dabbed her pinkened mouth to remove the beer foam. Jack drank
his stout while she rummaged in her purse. She drew out a man’s pocket watch
and opened it to check the time. Then the watch and the hanky returned to the
purse, and she snapped it shut. She expectantly watched the door where thugs
monitored who entered the Gold Eagle.
A man bumped past Jack. The man didn’t bother to
apologize, just headed around the bar.
Jack took one look at the mustached profile, the
smashed nose, and round spectacles under bushy eyebrows.
Oh, hell no.
Boggs. Thaddeus Boggs, the arsehole. Filly wasn’t
in debt to him, was she?
Boggs came from the back, employees only. That
made Jack rethink his choice of local. The arsehole wrapped his thick fingers
around whoever he could then squeezed and squeezed until they choked up
whatever he wanted.
And he plonked down in the chair across from Filly
Bedamned Malvaise.
Hell and damnation.
She didn’t smile. Jack would have cursed aloud if
she had. She could have ruined all his dreams with one sweet curve of her
pinked lips. But she didn’t smile at Boggs.
She frowned.
Boggs grinned. His tongue touched his upper lip as
he listened. Then he shook his head. Whatever he replied widened Filly’s brown
eyes.
Then Boggs wrapped his fat fingers around the pint
and stood. His other hand swept out, an obvious gesture for her to precede him.
She hesitated. Boggs said something short. Filly’s dislike couldn’t be
mistaken, but she stood and looked over at the bar’s corner.
Right at Jack.
His nearly empty pint of stout still hid his face.
Yet she wasn’t looking at him. She spied the
swinging door behind him and started for it. Boggs followed, enjoying the view
he had of Filly’s legs in low heels.
She passed within inches of Jack. Boggs came right
behind her.
And Jack intended to find out what shady business
Filly had with a moneylender like Thaddeus Boggs.
He waited until the barkeep shifted down the bar
to pour a cluster of pints. Then Jack slipped back the half-yard needed to step
against then through the swinging door.
The shadowed hall lacked the yellow glaring light
of the pub. Light streamed around the door directly opposite, a kitchen by the
sounds leaking through. At the hall’s end was a heavy door with two locks, the
side door. On the way down to it were two more doors. Pubside would be the
coze, no longer in use. Opposite it, a little further along, was another door.
Jack tried the knob to the coze. It turned easily.
The door swung into darkness, street lights shining through the windows, the
bottom halves blocked by curtains so the people in booths had privacy. He left
the coze door ajar and soft-footed to the opposite door.
Pale light streamed under the door. He heard Filly
before he reached the door.
“—gone up? Why has the price gone up?”
“I said it does. Fair market price.”
“Fair?”
Hell and damnation. Why had she gone to a
moneylender?
“Bidding war,” Boggs said.
“You had a deal.”
“Like I said then, one time offer. Gone now. Price
went up. And up again.”
“What do you mean? What do you mean by bidding
war?”
“Someone else wants it. They’ve offered more.”
“How much more?”
“I want £400.
From you.”
“Four—? I don’t have that much. I brought the
agreed price. I don’t think we can get more.”
“We can make that the down payment. Sweeten the
deal.”
Jack didn’t like that oily insinuation.
“Sweeten it how?”
“You. Now.”
Jack reached for the door.
“Or her. Tomorrow night. All the night. Matter of
fact, I like that idea more.”
“She won’t agree to that.” Filly’s voice shook,
fear or rage. “And what guarantee do we have that you will not raise the price
again?”
“That’s a chance you take. Like I said, he offers
more, the price will go up and up.”
“You are a monster!”
Ah, Filly¸ Jack thought, Boggs holds all
the best cards. Don’t make him take everything. He wondered who the other
bloke was, offering more money to start a bidding war.
Boggs laughed. “She tell you to say that? Let’s
see what she says after tomorrow night.”
“How much is he offering?”
“I told you.”
“No, you said our price had gone up to £400. How much is he
offering?”
“£350.”
“Do you have his guarantee that he’ll pay £350?”
“What do you care? You can’t pay that.”
“I can—I can pay £325. I have that much. £25 more than what you agreed to. All of it, right
now, a sure thing.”
“He offered £50 more.”
“You don’t know he’ll pay £350. You don’t know he’ll pay anything.”
“He wants it, maybe more than she does. He’ll come
up with it.”
“But you have no guarantee. £325 now and everything
in my hand, and we’re done. A certain thing, Mr. Boggs, versus a chancy thing
later.” Silence descended. Take it, Jack prodded, take it. Filly
broke the silence with “See? £325.
All of it. Right now, Mr. Boggs.”
“Just one problem, Miss.” Boggs’ voice did sound
regretful. “I don’t have the packet here.”
“Where is it? We’ll retrieve it.”
Don’t go with him, Filly.
Or maybe she should. Jack would follow. He would
ensure nothing happened to her. He would force Boggs to follow through on the
deal instead of discovering a way to crook her again.
“It’s in a safe place.”
“Then we’ll go there now. You will get your money.
I will have the packet. And we’re done.”
“I got a couple more meetings.”
“After them, then.”
A pause while Jack reckoned the arsehole Boggs
stared at the money she offered now and weighed up a guaranteed profit versus a
chancy future, as Filly had pointed out.
She could drive a bargain for him anyday.
“How long before these other meetings are over?”
“Couple of hours.”
“I’ll wait then.”
“Out in the pub? You? Two solid hours?”
“To ensure we keep our deal current, Mr. Boggs.”
More silence, then the man said, “Tell you what.”
Here it comes. Hell and damnation. The arsehole
was changing the deal on her again.
“Two hours gives you time to get her down here.
You fetch her. You get her to hand me the money, and I’ll hand over everything.
Or is she too good to dirty her hands with payment for her own problems? You
get her down here. She gives me the money herself, and we’ll make it a round £300, as agreed. Save
yourself £25. But I want
to see her smiling as she hands me the money and I hand her the photographs and
the negatives and those letters. That’s our deal. Good until midnight.”
“£300.
Until midnight.”
“And
her pretty hands giving me the money. Her pretty eyes looking into mine. Her
pretty mouth saying ‘Nice doing business with you, Mr. Boggs.’ ”
“You
keep adding things.”
“We
can leave you out of it, if you want.”
“No.
No, I’ll come with her. And I’ll thank you now, Mr. Boggs, for agreeing to my
offer.”
Jack
heard chair legs scrape on the wooden floor.
“Sure.
Why not? I’ll get me £400.”
“What
do you mean?” Filly sounded close to the door.
Boggs
laughed. “She won’t come. Not her.”
“Yes,
she will.”
“No.
Or she would have come now. She got you to come for her, never caring what you
might face.” He chuckled. “I’d lay a bet on it.”
Filly
didn’t answer, and Boggs laughed again.
Jack
backed into the darkness behind the door as it opened. It swung wide into the
hall and shut with a thud. Filly paused a second then headed for the pub.
Jack
caught her as she passed the door to the coze. He slipped an arm around her
waist, the other around her shoulder, his hand covering her mouth. She
stiffened then jerked. An elbow hit his stomach.
“Filly,”
he hissed in her ear, her bobbed hair whispering against his lips. “It’s Jack.”
He took his hand away, hoping she wouldn’t scream.
She
remained rigid. “Jack?” Her voice was the barest breath.
“Jack
Portman.” Did she forget me? He’d thought their connection at Emberley
was strong, but maybe she hadn’t wanted to remember anything about that
ill-fated Christmas party. They hadn’t met since. Work had consumed him for a
solid year, then too much time had passed to re-introduce himself to her. He
kept hoping to meet her at her cousins’ parties, but she must attend the ones
he didn’t. They always just missed each other.
“Jack,”
she repeated, but she became pliant. “What are you doing?”
“In
here,” he said and guided her by the shoulders to the coze. He pushed her
inside then shut the door with the faintest of clicks.
She
stood in a puddle of light from the street lamps. She had turned toward him,
but he could only see her dark silhouette against the windows.
“Over
here.” He headed for a booth in the corner, away from the light, out of the
line of sight from the door, protected from any passersby. He let her pick the
side against the interior wall, facing the room and the windows. He crowded
after her, jamming her into the corner and not caring.
She
scooted inches away, and Jack followed, using his bulk and touch to break any
barriers she wanted to throw up.
Her
protest was only a muffled sound, then “How safe are we in this room?”
“Keep
your voice low. No one uses the coze.”
She
nodded. She glanced at the windows then leaned away to face him. “Jack Portman.
What are you doing here?”
“What
are you doing here, Filly? What are you doing making deals with Thaddeus Boggs?
He’ll crook you right, left, and sideways.”
Her
shoulders sagged. “As I have discovered.”
“Well?”
Filly
bought a few seconds by placing the so-valuable purse on the table. She rested
her gloved hands on it. Her breath huffed out. “It’s secret, Jack.”
“Not
so secret that Boggs is not looking for a higher bidder. Sounded like he had
one.”
She
flinched. “How did you kno—? How much did you hear?”
“Pretty
much everything.”
“Then
you know what a monster he is. He is going back on his deal with Daphne.”
“He’s
an arsehole, no mistake.” She flinched at the curse word. “Apologies. I forget
you’re gently born.” She waved a hand, as if the word meant nothing, and he
knew that was a lie. He also knew that was a lesser word than most she heard
from her own cousins. “Who is Daphne, the one he had the deal with?”
“I
shouldn’t say.”
“You’ll
have to if I’m to get you and her back here before midnight.”
“Jack.”
Her pale face turned to him, the faint light catching in her dark eyes and
creating a gleam. “You can’t.”
“You’re
not coming back here without me. No, Filly, listen. Midnight is four hours,
nearly five. That gives Boggs too much time. He’ll set up problems for you
both. He has guards here. Thugs. Ready for whatever he wants.”
“I
didn’t see any guards.”
“Out
in the pub. Watching. Two at the entrance. Probably one or two in the side
alley. You come back with your friend and the money, and what’s to stop him
from taking more? What’s to stop him from taking it now?”
She
sat very still, barely breathing. “Jack, you don’t mean—?”
“You
heard him. ‘You now’,” he spat, “ ‘or her. All night.’ Why else do you think
he’s willing to take £300 as long as she pays it herself. He’s a sodding
shite.”
This
time she didn’t flinch. She rolled his words around. “You mean, when we return,
he takes what he wants in addition to the money.”
“With
no guarantee that he’ll turn over whatever is in that packet. I would guess
whoever gave him that packet gave him the idea. Who is your friend Daphne?”
“Just
a friend. Oh, Jack, I didn’t think it would be complicated to help. Dear God.”
He
thought that was a prayer, not a curse.
“How
did you know? About me? About Boggs?”
“This
is my local. I saw you come in. Damn, Filly, you cut your hair.”
“That’s
what you notice?”
“Hell
no. Noticed a lot more than that.” He flicked the bobbed curl beneath the brim
of her hat, and his finger brushed her cheek. “You cut it for your job?”
“Yes.
They wanted someone au courant, you see. Wait. You know about my job?
Jack Portman, are you keeping tabs on me?”
She
didn’t sound outraged or shocked. Pleased, maybe. “Wasn’t hard, Filly. Your
cousin Tori chatters about the whole family, everything Emberley and connected
to Emberley, including your side of the Malvaise crew. At one party a season, I
keep up-to-date.”
She
fiddled with her purse. “Are you and Tori still an item?” Her posh voice
sounded flat.
“Not
since that Christmas. Before then, really.”
And
she knew which Christmas he meant.
“I
didn’t see you attend her parties when I came to London.”
“I
was working. Still am, but it’s easier to make time to attend the occasional
do.” He ran a finger under his tight collar. The effing Malvaise didn’t have to
have jobs to pay their way. They took jobs to have something to consume their
time. Never had he felt the distance between him and Filly Bedamned Malvaise
than at this moment.
Right
after he was demobbed, flooding into England with the rest of the trench
survivors, he hadn’t cared about any distance between him and the upper crust.
He drank and danced and—well, more, all for the sensation of life. He took
whatever he found, drunk on dissipation for months.
One
night too many, with the sun making the world from black to grey, he dragged
himself home. He had drowned himself in cocktails to forget the war … until the
money ran out.
He
dried himself out that December and January. In February he kept a headache;
that’s when Filly came to London. He pawned his medals and played on his former
colonel’s sympathies to get a job. Until he could afford digs again, he slept
in the garage. But Filly didn’t need to know that.
“Look,
we need to get to your friend, whoever she is, to make Boggs’ deadline.”
She
gave him her profile. Pretty profile it was, too, all sharp angles, pert nose
and decided chin. “I know two places she may be. A third, if we run late. She
didn’t want to come here. She hates Boggs.”
“Friend
that she was, she sent you,” his words making clear his view of that
friendship. “And she’ll have to deal with him now—or lose this chance.”
“Will
you come with us?”
“Filly.
I’m not letting you come back here alone.”
“Then
we better go. Can we leave without going back through the pub? You said he had
guards out there. I want you to be a … surprise to him.”
He
grinned at that.
“And
we’ll need to change.”
“What?”
“Where
we’re going—well, Jack, you will need a better shirt front and evening jacket.
And then it’s a long trek from here to where she’ll be.”
Party,
he realized. “What about you?”
“Hat,
shoes, then I’m ready.”
A
woman who dressed that rapidly was after his own heart. He’d known that about
Filly for three years.
Why
did I leave it so long?
“I
can shorten the time,” he offered. “I’ve got an auto. Access to one.” He didn’t
clarify.
She
gripped her purse and scooted, but Jack didn’t move on the bench.
“Filly,
you certain?”
“I
committed to helping Daphne. I will help her.”
“Daphne?”
The name came to him, then. He felt a fool for not placing it earlier. “Daphne
Leicester.”
“Do
you know her?”
Jack
slid out of the booth. This was an effing shite storm. Daphne Leicester was one
of many who had filled his first months after the great powers hauled him out
of the mud-filled trenches, before he fell in with the Malvaise set and before
he dragged himself out of the liquid trenches and began re-making his life.
That first wildness after demobbing had left him. For Daphne’s set, the Bright
Young Things, they only became wilder as the years passed.
He
gripped Filly’s hand. He reckoned the next few hours would be the last ones
she’d let him anywhere around her. “Keep quiet. We’ll leave through the
kitchen.”
“Those
guards will still see us.”
“Better
than the pub, sweetheart.” Curse his tongue for slipping in the one word that
had haunted him since that ill-fated Christmastide party three years before.
He’d
take what he could this evening before Daphne’s recognition blew everything
sideways.
Trailer https://youtu.be/qbx47Cmm7UY
Trailer audio of first scene https://youtu.be/_q5OgMIkUSQ
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08V4YNH34
https://books2read.com/u/47gQeE







