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Carruthers' Demise, Chapters ten and eleven (standard:drama, 2434 words) [6/24] show all parts | |||
Author: Brian Cross | Added: Jul 22 2011 | Views/Reads: 2651/1777 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Carruthers suspects his wife of having an affair with his publisher, but are his suspicions well-founded? Continuation of my drama. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story going to be witnessed by all and sundry, and who knew what influential literary figures he'd find inside. But the stark realisation did little to pour water on his fire of certainty that he'd find Chelsey inside. He'd gone too far now, his indignation knew no bounds – Carruthers rang the bell, his heart beating the drum in grim contrast – he needed to ring twice before a dinner-suited male sporting a black bow-tie answered the door. ‘I'm looking for Alexander Goldhawk – and my wife.' Carruthers used the flat of his hand to force the unyielding figure aside and the man tottered backwards, upending an oval table and sending the tray of glasses he'd laid upon it crashing to the hardwood floor. The commotion it caused was enough to bring Goldhawk hurrying from the main reception room. ‘What on earth – Martin...' Goldhawk clapped his hand on brow. ‘There was no need to make such a dramatic entrance old chap – I would have invited you only...' ‘I'm sorry Mr. Goldhawk, this man simply barged in...' ‘Yes, I can see that, Bolton,' Goldhawk said, keeping his eyes on the approaching Carruthers. ‘Get yourself cleaned up and attend to the mess.' ‘Where's my wife, you louse – where's Chelsey?' ‘I beg your pardon? Martin what are you on – what's this all about?' ‘My wife, where is she?' Carruthers stormed past Goldhawk, heading for the room he'd seen him exit, turning and thrusting a finger as he went. ‘I'll find her and then I'll account for you.' But Carruthers' advance was halted as he reached the arched doorway leading into it. Five, maybe six males attending the gathering had rushed to Goldhawk's aid, and Carruthers, his arms pinned behind him, was bundled towards the door. ‘I want my wife, you lecherous old bastard,' Carruthers screamed. ‘I'm not going until I find her.' Goldhawk brushed his silver hair, took a nervous look back along the passageway. ‘She's not here, Martin – I promise you – now look try to calm down and we'll talk about it in private – I don't know what's got into you but...' ‘Alexander, what's happening, why all the rumpus?' It was Jacqueline, Goldhawk's wife, demure, soberly dressed in a beige, calf-length frock who emerged from the reception room – ‘Why, Mr. Carruthers, what on earth's going on?' ‘Mr. Carruthers has himself slightly confused, my dear; I feel he is a little the worse for wear. I'll find him a quiet place to rest, it's perfectly alright Jacqueline.' ‘Well – if you say so.' Goldhawk's wife sighed and fixed Carruthers an assessing stare. ‘I'll help out in the kitchen.' Carruthers hung his head as Goldhawk looked to the group restraining him. ‘It's okay, you can let him go.' The host watched the congregation slowly disperse and approached Carruthers cautiously. ‘I don't know what's got into you old chap, but we'd best have a quiet chat.' Goldhawk led Carruthers to the rear of the house, into a small, richly carpeted parlour, closing the door behind them. ‘Now, what's got into...' ‘This!' Carruthers thrust Chelsey's mobile into Goldhawk's unwilling hands – ‘Read it. This is Chelsey's phone and your message to her, asking to meet and telling her she doesn't know what she's missing – and then of course she dropped the damned thing when you picked her up in your grey Jag...' ‘No, no – this is madness, please keep your voice down, Jacqueline is very... look.' Goldhawk raised his hands, backed away. ‘Yes, it is – was my message, but I sent that text, two – possibly three months ago. Sit down, Martin, please. I'd rather we deal with this cordially.' ‘Cordially, you expect me to be cordial – damn you...' but Carruthers sat down with a vast exhalation of breath. Slowly, through his enraged senses, it was becoming clear to him that whatever had happened to Chelsey, Goldhawk hadn't been involved. ‘But you are telling me that you had an affair with my wife.' ‘No, no, no!' Goldhawk turned to the drink cabinet, poured himself a whisky, offered a glass to Carruthers receiving only a glare. ‘Look I'll admit I tried it on – no hear me out...' Carruthers seemed to Goldhawk as though he would spring from his chair. ‘I'm sure you must know the way Chelsey comes across to men – I did what any red-blooded male would do – I sent her a text, that text. It was following an afternoon function, she'd been funny, amusing – good company – I thought I'd go for it. Sorry if it distresses you old chap but it's the oldest game known to man, and I'm as much of a player as anyone else. Only it didn't work. I didn't even get an answer. I regret doing it now.' Goldhawk gave Carruthers a long look. ‘I don't know what's happened to Chelsey, Martin, but I can see how stressed out you are. I wouldn't blame you for...' ‘Okay, okay.' Carruthers cupped his face in his hands, perched awkwardly forward in his seat. ‘I jumped to conclusions, but tell me something honestly; I don't know what's happened to Chelsey – and right now it's driving me out of my mind...' he fixed Goldhawk with a hard stare, ‘but I'd call that a rejection. Was that why you rejected her novel?' Goldhawk swallowed, remained silent. ‘Was it, damn you?' Goldhawk threw his hands in the air, forgetting the whisky in his grasp. It showered him, made him cough. ‘I don't know,' and then flinching from Carruthers' gaze he said, ‘Yes – I think possibly it was, I suppose I gave the final thumbs down. Once again, we're all susceptible to rejection; it doesn't apply solely to writers.' ‘In which case, I've nothing more to say.' Carruthers strode past Goldhawk as though he was heading for the door and then stopped dead. He swung his right arm, catching the editor flush on the chin. ‘Take that from both of us.' Out in the night air, Carruthers shivered. The humidity had finally gone, at least in these parts. His conscience though, was prickling him big time. He'd commenced a two hundred and fifty mile round journey in the belief that Chelsey and Goddard were having an affair. He should have known that she wouldn't have betrayed him. Now all he could wonder was what had happened to her, and to go right back to Lyndhurst and hope to find her safe and well. * * * He'd used her, acted as though it was a privilege of his position – and she'd gone along with him, because if she hadn't, maybe he wouldn't have published any more of her work. After all, he was the publisher – her agent wasn't the one pulling the strings. But it went deeper than that – it cut deeper, because he'd been getting greedy, more demanding, creating more pressure – and all the while he was doing that he was selling her work at exorbitant profit; in effect stealing it. Her mind whisked into fury; whirling her back to a time when in adolescence she'd effected retribution for that overriding reason. And the thing was – She'd have to effect it again. Chapter Ten Alexander Goldhawk felt his chin, painful where Carruthers had struck him; quite some temper that man, not unlike his wife, who he doubted would be seeing him today. Despite the blow, he regarded Carruthers as a decent enough chap as things went, though too gullible by half. Crossing the room he examined his jaw line in the mirror, only the faintest trace of a bruise there, nothing to mar his appearance, thank heavens for small mercies. Closing the imposing oak double doors behind him, Goldhawk then slung his heavily laden briefcase into the boot of the car and slipped behind the wheel. The case and its contents could wait until later, until afternoon in all probability, because he had a surprise engagement which took priority over his day's publishing agenda. He'd called his secretary, Joyce Wainwright, and informed her that the weekly production meeting would need to be postponed for two hours at least – in all probability it would be four. These things happened, they were unavoidable. Goldhawk smiled; both unavoidable and desirable. Well, every so often one of his favourite writers would return his favours, as had happened on this occasion. Out of the blue it was too, and overdue. He'd almost given up on this case, had been practically convinced he'd been getting nowhere, that his overtures hadn't been receiving the attention they deserved, and so he'd resigned himself to pulling the plug on this particular author's ambitions – at least where Goddard and Co were concerned. But now they had borne fruition, his endeavours hadn't been in vain, even though the chosen location had surprised him. It was the towpath at Chiswick – a quaint, refined and attractive spot, but rather close to his conquest's abode, although when all said and done he wasn't unduly concerned by that. He whistled a tune subconsciously, pleased with himself. A publisher's lot wasn't such a bad one, all things considered. He made plenty of money, that was the thing. A glossy cover, a bit of patching up by a decent copy-editor, a shrewd and astute advertising campaign and publishing program and bob's-your-uncle. If one author didn't comply with his demands there was always one that would. His conquest was a reasonable writer, he'd give her that, but it was his own professionalism in producing the finished article that she owed him for. Well, to be frank they all owed him. That was his justification, in that there was no remorse. He reached Chiswick, turned off the high street and approached the Thames, parking his car in a quiet side street and strolling down to the towpath. He didn't see her at first; she hadn't been quite in the arranged location. He crooked his head when he heard her call; she was walking down a steep alleyway towards him. She looked a picture; he could scarcely contain his delight. * * Greedy, good for nothing Goldhawk; she'd seen his approach even though he hadn't seen her. He thought she was going to guide him to some seedy hotel for a few hours and let him have his disgusting way with her. Well, not any more buster, the game was over, at least for him. Her plans for today, for the foreseeable future were pointing in a whole new direction. Corrupt guys such as Alexander bloody Goldhawk got their comeuppance in the end, and his was nigh. He amounted to step one in her new direction; she was already planning step two. She strode to the top of the alleyway, through gaps in the cottages she could follow his approach, and although not close enough to focus, she could imagine his leer of anticipation. She allowed herself a smirk and then heart pumping blood ever quicker through her veins, trod lightly down to meet him. Tweet
This is part 6 of a total of 24 parts. | ||
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Brian Cross has 33 active stories on this site. Profile for Brian Cross, incl. all stories Email: briancroff@yahoo.co.uk |