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The Scandalous Mrs. Wilson
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Contents
PART I
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
PART 2
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
About the Author
Copyright Page
Guide
Contents
Start of content
The Scandalous Mrs. Wilson
Fraser Springs, Book 1
Laine Ferndale
Avon, Massachusetts
PART I
Chapter 1
If Fraser Springs held a dirty looks contest, Mrs. McSheen would be the reigning champion. Josephine Wilson swept the wooden planks of the bathhouse’s porch as she considered the list of other likely entrants. Mrs. McSheen would face stiff competition from the ladies of the First Presbyterian congregation, the Ladies’ Charitable Club, and the Society for the Advancement of Moral Temperance. World-class scowlers, every one. There were probably more societies in this tiny town than there were ladies to fill them. Heavens knew how they found the time to play bridge in between all of the meetings.
It was a beautiful morning. The sharp, mineral tang of the springs felt invigorating in the breeze, not oppressive as it could on a hotter day. The rhododendrons in front of the bathhouse were fat and rosy. There was no reason for scowls. But Mrs. McSheen was intent on showing little Emma McSheen, dressed in a starched white pinafore with a pink sash, how a true lady treats a woman like Josephine.
“Can ... may I have a flower?” little Emma asked.
“Any flower grown from this soil is not fit for good little girls such as yourself, dearest,” Mrs. McSheen said, proffering Josephine another of her world-famous sneers as she clomped down the wooden boardwalk towards the general store. “And at any rate, those gaudy red things smell like cheap perfume.”
In the years since her husband died and she took over the bathhouse, Josephine had received more dirty looks than she could count. Scowls, muttered curses, raised eyebrows; someone had even gone so far as to throw a rock through one of her windows. Mostly, however, the townspeople’s outrage took the form of anonymous letters slipped under her door or left in her mailbox. She was a whore, apparently. A harlot. A murderess. A temptress. A jezebel. A “shrew sent from the environs of hell to cast ruin and immorality upon the weak.” (It was clear Fraser Springs had at least one aspiring poet among its citizens.) She called them her love letters and kept them all tied with a red ribbon in the top corner of her husband’s old desk as a daily reminder of how important it was to maintain a thick skin.
But the hot springs looked lovely today. The surface roiled in shades of silver, purple, and blue. Mist swirled in tendrils towards the rocky shore of the lake, and somehow its color made her think of opals. Josephine had never actually seen an opal, but with the hot springs reflecting the sun into pools of light on the boardwalk, it wasn’t hard to imagine. After each day’s work ended, there wasn’t much to do in Fraser Springs besides imagine.
The town was little more than a cluster of wood-framed houses huddled around its namesake hot spring, the rickety structures leaning towards the water like old hens huddling together for warmth. In recent years, a few lucky mining operations and health-seeking tourists had provided the money for a fancy brick bank and the St. Alice Hotel with its marble floors and formal dining room. It was a town at a crossroads, and it was clear which way Mrs. McSheen and her cronies wanted it to go. The improvements had drawn a whole class of respectable women intent on scrubbing out the traces of the Canadian wilderness. Never mind that the town was a seven-hour steamboat ride from Vancouver or that their closest neighbours were bears or that the main patrons of the springs’ bathhouses were still loggers and miners hoping to soothe a year’s worth of aches and injuries.
“Miz Jo, customer!” Ilsa’s call drew Josephine out of her daydreaming. She’d poached Ilsa from a dance hall in Gastown, but though she was no longer earning her living by charming men into buying overpriced drinks, no amount of training could rid her of her sultry voice. She could make an advertisement for dentures sound like a provocation.
When Josephine’s husband had passed away suddenly, the staff he’d spent a lifetime cultivating had taken the next boat back to Vancouver. She had been faced with a choice: close the bathhouse or find new staff as quickly as possible. She’d chosen the latter and assembled a cadre of equally desperate women who she’d trained in the healing art of massage—and massage only. The women were quick learners and keen to start new lives, and the lure of an all-female staff had paid off. Soon, Wilson’s Bathhouse had become so successful that the husbands of the Society Ladies started becoming patrons. Now, however, business was down, and nasty letters were the order of the day.
Jo propped the broom against the wall, pulled off her apron, and tucked a stray curl back into her chignon. Whatever the McSheens of this town might think, her customers would meet a polished and respectable proprietress when they arrived.
She took a breath and straightened her posture. There, that was better. In a business like this, you never knew who was going to be on the other side of the door: maybe an old miner, maybe a local businessman who’d snuck in through the side entrance to avoid suspicion. Either way, Jo was ready.
• • •
Owen Sterling sat in one of the overstuffed chairs of Wilson’s Bathhouse. Did the bowler hat look ridiculous? It was on loan from his publisher, as was the gold pocket watch and the three-piece suit, but it was important to look the part. In his Vancouver bachelor quarters, he’d dressed carefully and practiced introducing himself.
“Why hello there,” he’d told the mirror as he’d slicked back his hair with pomade and parted it. “My name is Ross Wister. It is a pleasure to meet you.” Ross Wister, wealthy banker, not Owen Sterling, writer of wilderness stories, soon-to-be ace reporter.
When he broke this story, he wouldn’t be stuck writing about boys, their loyal canine companions, and the increasingly unlikely capers in which they found themselves. He’d be a real journalist, writing about real people and issues that really mattered. And so for now, he had to be Ross Wister, a banker with a nervous condition in need of the “services” of Wilson’s Bathhouse.
Owen stared out through the plate glass window and tried to focus on the hot springs in the distance to keep himself from fidgeting. The window had Wilson’s written across it in gold lettering and was adorned with dozens of blue bottles hung from fishing line. The bottles tinkled melodically as they swayed against one another, and the mottled blue light they cast made him feel as if he w
ere underwater. The sales cases along the walls were full of more blue bottles, together with tins that seemed to be filled with poultices and powders. Snake oil. The selling of false cures to desperate people was disgusting, but not nearly as disgusting as what his publisher had assured him was going on behind closed doors.
“It’s a house of ill repute, and they don’t even try to hide it,” his publisher had said. “I’ve got several trustworthy sources who tell me that Joe Wilson hires thugs to kidnap innocent farm girls, then keeps them trapped in a life of sin. One day they’re in their parents’ loving home, and the next, they’re earning their keep in a brothel. One big article exposing Joe Wilson, and the whole operation will be run out of town. They say Joe Wilson’s a murderer, too. How’s that for a story for you?”
A door opened quietly behind him. Owen looked up.
“How can I help you?” asked the slim figure standing just inside the doorway. Bold as brass, especially after he’d specifically requested to speak to Joe Wilson, not another of his “lady attendants.” For a fallen woman, though, she looked surprisingly wholesome and respectable: auburn hair pulled into a proper chignon, modestly dressed in a neatly pressed white shirtwaist and bottle-blue skirts. Her eyes, flinty and pale grey, were the only hint that this woman was no stranger to the ways of the world. He could sense her sizing him up, probably calculating his annual salary.
He stood, determined to act the gentleman. “I specifically told your ... colleague that I want to speak to Mr. Joe Wilson,” he said. “I have business with him.”
The woman’s mouth quirked just a little. Not a smirk, exactly, but unsettling enough. “Oh you do, do you?”
“I most certainly do. And I do not appreciate being kept waiting.” That sounded like the way a banker would talk. He ran his thumb over the embossed face of the pocket watch in his waistcoat pocket. The metal was slick under his palm. He wasn’t sure if it was the wool suit, the bowler, or the woman’s appraising look, but he was beginning to sweat.
The woman put a hand on her hip, her eyes narrowing. “Ah. I hate to disappoint you, but you ought to know that the Joe Wilson you have business with is actually Mrs. Josephine Wilson.” She walked few steps forward, and Owen caught the faint, warm odour of talc. “My late husband was Albert Wilson, founder and proprietor and so on.”
No banker’s bluster could hide Owen’s confusion. “Oh, I ... I’m sorry, I thought you were a ...”
Jo Wilson’s smile seemed slightly chagrined. That was a little comforting, perhaps. Her voice, however, was even. “I’m terribly sorry to disappoint you, Mr. ...?” She paused expectantly.
Owen wrapped himself in the protective dignity of his phony persona, extended his hand, and gave the name he’d been practicing for so long. “My name is Ross Wister. It’s a pleasure to meet you, ma’am.”
When she shook his hand, he found himself staring into those grey eyes, so pale they were almost colourless. Her hand, warm and faintly rough, sent a chill through him. “You as well,” she said in her carefully even voice. “What can we do for you, Mr. Wister?” And she smiled again.
Mister Wister. How had he not heard that absurd sing-songy rhyme when he’d chosen the name? Damn. Owen shoved his hand back in his pocket, pulled out the pocket watch, and burnished it against his trouser leg. “I’ve been advised by my physician that the stresses of banking have grown too much for me. I’ve been plagued by headaches and fatigue. Neurasthenia, the doctor says.”
Her smile remained fixed and professional. This irked him, for some reason. “I’m sorry to hear that. I suppose overwork must be a hazard of your profession, Mr. Wister.”
“He tells me that a stay at the hot springs are just what I need to restore my constitution. And I’ve heard that Wilson’s is the best.”
Jo’s expression softened, the smile becoming a bit more sincere. The sun through the plate glass window lit her hair in shades of copper. It was distracting, but Owen forced himself to meet her gaze again. Notorious madams did not have lovely copper-colored hair.
“We most certainly are very good,” she said. “Let me bring you a list of our treatments. Will you be staying in our cabins?” Unlike the thoroughly modern accommodations at the St. Alice, guests at Wilson’s Bathhouse boarded in the clapboard cabins behind the main building, with meals served from the bathhouse’s kitchen.
“Uh, no, thank you. That is, I’ve taken rooms elsewhere. But I’ll take my meals here, if that’s possible.”
Jo nodded. “Of course. I’ll be happy to arrange that for you.”
She retrieved a ledger from the counter and came to sit on the chair beside him. “Have a seat, please, and we’ll get you sorted.” Underneath her talc scent, she smelled of grass and leaves rather than the heavy perfumes he’d expect from a woman in her line of work. Probably whatever she’d been crushing to put into these snake oil cures. Eye of newt, toe of frog, and what have you.
“For headaches, I would recommend our standard bath, with our salve treatment and a mercury tincture to relieve tension and anxiety.” Salve treatment! One salve treatment delivered by one of these young ladies would be the start of a very successful exposé. He’d get to the bottom of what was really going on at Wilson’s Bathhouse inside of a week. Three days, if he was half the journalist he knew he was.
Chapter 2
The stranger with the borrowed suit wasn’t fooling her. Not for a single moment. For starters, he was too handsome: strikingly so. The loose fit of that sack suit couldn’t hide his strong shoulders. His blue eyes were startlingly alert, and though his jawline betrayed tension, it surely wasn’t the result of balancing account ledgers and foreclosing on penniless widows. Besides, anyone with a suit that fine would be walking his fancy shoes straight over to the St. Alice’s marble foyer, not into Wilson’s, with its arthritic miners and battered loggers and slightly tarnished reputation. Yet he hadn’t blinked as she’d signed him on for every service Wilson’s offered, and he’d calmly nodded when she’d asked for a truly absurd deposit and he’d placed the notes into her hand with that same unnerving blue glitter in his eyes. Something was most definitely amiss.
“Don’t see a fellow like that around here often,” Ilsa said when Jo joined her to help crush mint leaves for salves. “Almost makes me wish this was a house of ill repute!”
“Well, it’s not,” Jo snapped. “And it’s not going to be. I’d lay odds that that man is here with ulterior motives.”
“Do you think he has strange tastes, then?” Ilsa whispered, delighted. Her eyes were wide. Ilsa had hair so blond it looked almost white, and eyes so blue that men were forever writing her poetry comparing them to the water and the sky. Which showed what men knew, since Ilsa was as earthy as anything in God’s creation.
Jo dug the pestle into her mortar. “He might. You never know, though I suspect he’s too bad a liar to have lived a life of perversion. Still, it’s strange.” The mint leaves released their oils against the stone bowl, and she breathed in the clean, cool scent. She leaned her weight into her work. “In fact, schedule his treatments with me. I don’t want any of the girls around him until I know what he’s up to.”
Ilsa laughed. She had a high, giggling laugh that sounded younger than her nineteen years. “Oh sure,” she said. “First good-looking rich man comes through here, and you want him all to yourself. Girls aren’t going to be too happy with that.”
Jo shook her head. “I’ve got problems enough without throwing myself at men. He’s after something. I’ll take care of his treatments, and we’ll see what it is. Tell the girls to give him a wide berth.”
Ilsa laughed again. “Good luck with that. The mint, Miz Jo.” Jo looked down to discover that she’d smashed the poor leaves to an absolute pulp.
Their laughter was interrupted by Doc Stryker slamming open the kitchen’s screen door. Doc owned the establishment next door, which apparently made him too important to knock like a civilized neighbor. His leaflets claimed that he was a doctor shunned by the medic
al profession for discovering the key to eternal youth, but it didn’t take a genius to suspect that his medical license was more than likely purchased from some ad in the back of a mail-order catalog. Doc’s premises featured a menu of eye-watering “restorative libations,” and the card and dice games that went on in back of the bar were the worst kept secret in Fraser Springs.
“Good morning, Doc,” Jo said.
“They’re threatening us,” he replied by way of greeting. His face was so pale you could see the blue veins underneath his temples as he waved a crumpled piece of paper at her. Jo took it from him, feeling the trembling of his fingers.
“They’ve been posting this around town,” he said. “Puttin’ one on every fence post, handing them out to the tourists. They’re coming for us.”
She smoothed out the paper. Unlike the other handmade signs, this one had been properly typeset.
To all Good Citizens of Fraser Springs:
There is a Great Menace lurking among us, and We all Know what it is. We have been blessed with a Miracle from God in our Town: Waters that Restore Energy and Give Health. That Cure the Sick and the Wounded. If We want the Good and Proper Citizens to enjoy the many benefits of our Miracle Waters, We must rid them of Corruption.
Every Good Citizen knows that there are certain Dens of Ill Repute that infest our town with Filth, Drunkenness, Gambling, and Sins of the Flesh. We, the Society for the Advancement of Moral Temperance, call for a meeting of all True Citizens of Fraser Springs. Come to the St. Alice Hotel on Saturday at noon, and We will decide on the Fate of the Town together. Our Town is at a Crossroads, Ladies and Gentlemen. Make no mistake. Will it be dragged into Squalor and Filth, or will it Rise Greater than Vancouver or even New York City? Let us commit to Rise and never to Fall.
Yours in Christ,
The Society for the Advancement of Moral Temperance