Chapter 19 Genuine Fraud

Genuine Fraud

Alice glances up as Béatrice slides into the study, closing the door behind her almost as silently.

Alice hides the hitch in her breath as best she can.

Béa stands staring at Alice for a long beat before she says, “This is too much.”

Alice raises her eyebrows, prepared to debate the point, but the disappointment in Béa’s eyes as she draws nearer silences

her.

“Alice, you cannot force the girl to get married. To take vows, to change the course of her life like this. It’s too much, it is ridiculous, and you know it is.”

“What’s ridiculous is how much you’re both blowing this out of proportion.” Alice rolls her eyes. “What is the difference,

really, between a marriage and a long engagement, if at the end of each, you run off, never to be seen again?”

“A legal remarriage, for one,” Béa suggests softly.

Alice exhales a pah, muttering, “Not you too.”

A knowing glint lights up Béa’s eye as she draws closer. “It’s different for Cora than for you. You would never marry a man,

so you cannot conceive of anyone else legitimately wishing to do so.”

Alice reels with the plain truth of that. She’s never understood the appeal of marriage. And yet . . .

She peers up into Béa’s warm hazel eyes, taking in her high cheekbones, her sweet smile, the scar that cuts through it all.

A wave of tenderness washes over her.

She blinks hard and looks away, pointlessly straightening the assorted objects on her desk. “I admire your attempt to instill

empathy in me, Béa, but it’s a question of practicality, not emotion. A new element has been introduced into our plan, and

we must adapt to it. It’s that simple.”

“Adapt in a different way, then.”

“How?” Alice’s voice takes on a hard tone. She hates the way Béa flinches at the sound of it, but she cannot help herself.

“If you’re so clever, you tell me.”

“You’re the planner and we all know it.” Béatrice drifts like a feather into the nearest chair, her energy for this argument

plainly flagging. “Dagmar has her hundreds of Bowery connections, and I have my assorted skills. And Cora . . . is the beauty.”

The quick-fingered beauty, Alice thinks, remembering what else she needed to talk to the girl about—but this is clearly not the time to bring that

up.

“But that’s not the only reason you brought us in, Alice,” Béa goes on, her eyes piercing in their raw affection.

“I remember the day we met. Two years ago, in April. Montreal’s Bonsecours Market.

You saw me pocket that cruller, saw that the vendor saw it too, called out to me by the wrong name and bought it for me on the spot rather than see me get thrown in prison yet again, this time for desperate hunger.

Brought me to a tearoom, heard my story, pathetic as it was, and took me in, then and there.

I still don’t know why you were down in the city’s old town that day, but grace à Dieu, you were. ”

I was there to find accomplices to bring with me to New York, Alice remembers dully. And Béa’s story was far from pathetic. She’d been a seamstress’s assistant, yes, but she’d also worked

for years as a forger and fence before being caught and imprisoned up in Montreal, then released into a world that would never

employ an ex-convict, no matter how capable. Alice didn’t care about her record. She simply wanted someone useful on the payroll

who could also pose as a housemaid to sell the lie of nobility.

She’d taken Béa in because she could use her.

It was only later that she’d become more. Her home. Her person. Even if she couldn’t say it out loud.

“You have a good heart,” Béatrice says. “I see it. It’s real. Not counterfeit.”

She smiles, her mouth quirking shyly upward in the way that always stops Alice’s heart for a beat.

“Speaking of counterfeits,” Alice says, clearing her throat. “It’s imperative that I have the replica of the Württemberg solitaire

in hand as soon as possible.”

A frown line forms between Béa’s delicate brows. “Yes. They’ve said—”

“I’ll need you to go down first thing tomorrow and check on their progress. I fear some people need to be overseen closely

in order to perform their work to a satisfactory degree.”

Béa looks stricken by the change in tone. She swallows hard. “I’ll leave before dawn so as not to be seen.”

“Good,” Alice says, standing briskly. “I’m off to bed. You’d best get some sleep as well, as you’ll be off so early.”

She breezes past her maid—the woman who cannot, must not be anything more, not while all of this is swirling in her mind, not while they are so damned close to the first of May.

“You know . . .” Béa’s voice rises quietly behind her. “Sometimes I wonder if the person you’re bent on punishing the most

is yourself.”

Alice’s eyes burn. She closes the study door behind her as she goes with a bit more force than necessary.

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