The Wrecker (Isaac Bell 2)
Page 25
The train lurched into motion as she handed him the glass. She licked a spilled drop from an exquisitely delicate knuckle and flashed her eyes in French-actress mode. “She was very pretty.”
“Marion thought you were, too.”
She made another face. “‘Pretty’ is rosy cheeks and gingham dresses. I am usually called more than pretty.”
“Actually, she said you were unspeakably beautiful.”
“Is that why you didn’t introduce me?”
“I preferred to remind her that she is unspeakably beautiful, too.”
Lillian’s pale blue eyes flashed. “You don’t pull your punches, do you?”
Bell returned a disarming smile. “Never in love, young lady-a habit I recommend you cultivate when you grow up. Now, tell me about your father’s troubles with his bankers.”
“He has no trouble with his bankers,” Lillian shot back. She answered so quickly and so vehemently, Bell knew what to say next.
“He said he would by winter.”
“Only if you don’t catch the Wrecker,” she said pointedly.
“But what of this Panic brewing in New York? It started last March. It doesn’t appear to be going away.”
Lillian answered with sober deliberateness. “The Panic, if it remains one much longer, will bring boom times in the railroad business to a crashing halt. We’re in the midst of wonderful expansion, but even Father admits it can’t go on forever.”
Bell was again reminded that Lillian Hennessy was more complicated than a coddled heiress.
“Does the Panic threaten your father’s control of his lines?”
“No,” she said quickly. Then she explained to Bell, “My father learned early on that the way to pay for his second railroad was to manage his first so well that it was solvent and creditworthy and then borrow against it. The bankers would dance to his tune. No railroad man in the country would fare better. If the others collapsed, he’d snap up the pieces and come out of it smelling like a rose.”
Bell touched his glass to hers. “To roses.” He smiled. But he was not sure whether the young woman was boasting truthfully or whistling past the graveyard. And he was even less sure of why the Wrecker was so determined to uproot the tangled garden of railroads.
“Ask any banker in the country,” she said, proudly. “He will tell you that Osgood Hennessy is impregnable.”
“Let me send a wire telling people where to find me.”
Lillian grabbed the champagne bottle and walked him to the baggage car, where the conductor, who doubled as the train’s telegrapher, sent Bell’s message reporting his whereabouts to Van Dorn. As they were starting to head back to the parlor car, the telegraph key started clattering. Lillian listened for a few seconds, then rolled her eyes and called over her shoulder to the conductor, “Do not answer that.”
Bell asked, “Who is that transmitting, your father?”
“No. The Senator.”
“Which Senator?”
“Kincaid. Charles Kincaid. He’s courting me.”
“Do I gather that you are not interested?”
“Senator Charles Kincaid is too poor, too old, and too annoying.”
“But very handsome,” called Mrs. Comden, with a smile for Bell.
“Very handsome,” Lillian agreed. “But still too poor, too old, and too annoying.”
“How old?” Bell asked.