Home > The Second Mrs. Astor(9)

The Second Mrs. Astor(9)
Author: Shana Abe

Like many of the ladies in attendance, she wore a picture hat, tied in place by a scarf that wrapped around the crown and brim, tugging against her head with every burst of wind. The cream silk scarf was wide and opaque, and it was easy enough to knot it so snugly beneath her chin that it concealed half her face.

Perhaps that was why she didn’t see him at first, or perhaps she was just distracted. One moment he wasn’t there, and the next he was. As before, in the audience of Hamlet, he seemed to simply manifest between two beats of her heart.

“Miss Force. A pleasure to see you again.”

He was standing next to her on her left. As her hat gave another quick, hard tug, the long tails of the scarf lofting, she reached up to brush them back into place, and he bent his head to meet her eyes past the panels of silk framing her face.

“Colonel Astor! Forgive me! I didn’t realize you were there.” I thought you were in Newport, she almost said, but stopped herself in time.

He smiled broadly, removing his bowler. “Quite all right. I’ve been told I’m stealthy as a cat sometimes.”

She was flustered, and surprised at being flustered. She’d thought of him every single day since their last conversation—of course she had; he’d made certain that she would with the daily flowers. Newspaper reports or not, she’d searched the summer fashionables for him every time she ventured out. But here he was again, without warning, like a genie’s wish unexpectedly granted.

He stepped back, lifting a hand to the person standing silently on his other side. “May I introduce my son, Vincent. He’s decided to summer here with me for a while, no doubt to keep me in line. Vincent, Miss Madeleine Force.”

They shook hands, their palms barely touching. One quick shake, up-and-down, before he pulled away.

Vincent Astor, she knew, was her age, or not much older. She’d seen his face in the rag sheets, his name linked to one blue-blooded socialite after another amid constant speculation of some imminent engagement, even though he was only just starting his studies at Harvard.

It was said that his mother, the scandalous Ava, had been a great beauty in her day, but she spent more time abroad than not, so Madeleine had no idea if it were true. It was probably true. Her son had the brooding, heavy-browed look of a man already in his twenties, not his teens, and he certainly didn’t resemble his father much. But he was attractive, if unsmiling, and his eyes had met hers steadily, almost defiantly, in that moment that their hands clasped.

His eyes were gray, like the colonel’s, only darker. More dire.

Careful, warned a voice inside of her, clear and sudden. Careful with this one.

From over her shoulder came a diffident cough.

“Oh,” said Madeleine, blushing. “Sorry! I don’t know where my head is today. Colonel Astor, Mr. Astor, please meet my father, William Force.”

She leaned back as they all greeted each other, keeping her eyes on the hem of her dress, on the shiny black tips of her shoes. She was afraid to look up again and afraid not to look up. She knew they were all three waiting for her to speak, but her mind was empty. If only Katherine were here—she always knew the exact right thing to say, something droll and smooth and gracious.

Then be Katherine, directed the voice. Play the part.

She lifted her lashes. Across the racetrack, a photographer had raised his camera, pointing the lens straight at them.

She turned around, set her back against the railing. She imagined herself a Gibson girl, cool and perfect, and smiled up at the colonel.

“How pleasant you’re both here for the season. Do you have any special plans? I’m told there’s going to be a regatta among the yachts in Frenchman Bay this weekend. Unofficial, of course.”

Thank goodness, it worked. Straight off, everything returned to normal. Well, as normal as it could be with Jack Astor and his heir standing with them, chatting about nautical miles and tides and who in Bar Harbor had the fastest ship.

A horn sounded in the distance. Madeleine turned again to the track. The ground beneath her began to tremble seconds before she saw any of the horses, but then there they were, streaking past in percussive, rolling beats, and for a very brief moment the steeds and their jockeys were the entire world, the massive engine of their competition churning by, the heat and essence and pulse of it engulfing her senses.

In a flash, they were gone. She gazed after them, her hands gripping the metal railing with the excitement of it all, bits of sod now clinging to the front of her dress by her ankles. Father craned his neck to peer down the course, and Madeleine let go of the railing, opening and closing her fingers.

Colonel Astor leaned closer to her ear. “A zealous fan of the ponies, Miss Force?”

She glanced up at him and then it was as if the rest of the world were gone, too, not just the sweating horses and their jockeys, their thunder; everything else was gone but the colonel, smiling down at her, his eyes bright, his lashes long, the shadow cast by the brim of his bowler a soft painted darkness along his cheekbones.

She hesitated, weighing the consequences of truth against what she knew she ought to say.

“I would rather be the rider than the observer, honestly.”

“A young lady of action. I appreciate the sentiment.”

“Or, merely a young lady who is easily bored.”

“Are you? Easily bored?”

She sensed a line crossed, some moment of politeness missed, and tried to think of a way to go back but couldn’t. “Maybe. My mother might say so.”

“I hope,” he said quietly, after a moment, “that I do not bore you.”

Madeleine studied her toes once more. When she answered, her voice was even quieter than his. “Colonel Astor, I cannot imagine any man more stimulating than you.”

As if they’d planned it, they dropped their poses and faced each other as the crowd around them milled and the horses battled close again. The wind pushed, recapturing the tails of her scarf, lifting them to float between them. She saw his gaze follow that, the cream silk dancing.

Without meaning to, she licked her lips. “How is your dog?”

He watched that, too, and the horses rumbled by, and it was another long moment before he answered her. “Restless, I think. Like you, she prefers to be in the thick of action, rather than observing from afar.”

“A good pup.”

“Very.” He looked away. She felt that, the physical and mental distance he constructed between them as he took two steps back and slipped both hands into his jacket pockets. He aimed a wry smile down at the ground, then turned to her father.

“Mr. Force. I wonder if I might be so forward as to invite you and your family to spend the weekend at my cottage here, sir. We’re slightly starved for company, you see, and if there is a yacht race, we’ll have an exceptional vantage of it from the back lawn.”

“Ah,” replied Father, bland as rice pudding. “A kind offer, Colonel Astor. Most kind. I must consult with my wife, of course, but I think I can say we are free.” William Force glanced at his daughter. “I admit I do enjoy a good regatta. We would gladly accept your hospitality.”

“Wonderful.” The colonel gave a nod, not looking at Madeleine or her father again but instead at the trampled, empty track that stretched before them.

The thunder of the race began once more to swell near.

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