Unraveled by Her (4 page)

Read Unraveled by Her Online

Authors: Wendy Leigh

BOOK: Unraveled by Her
2.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

If she unties my hands so that I can drink the coffee, I’m going to fling it straight into her fucking face . . .

But she’s clearly much too canny to make the mistake of doing that.

Instead, she holds the mug close to my mouth and waits patiently while I drink the coffee.

Then she opens a suitcase in the corner that I hadn’t noticed up till now and pulls out my vintage green dress (the same one I wore on my first lunch date with Robert, at Violetta, his restaurant in the Hartwell Gallery), underwear, and some flat shoes—not my usual stilettos.

Pity, as stilettos could have been a perfect weapon . . . but Georgiana was clearly smart enough to figure that out, which is why I’m stuck with flats.

“Good, Miranda, good. Now let’s get started,” she says, after she’s unshackled me and given me some momentary privacy in which to get dressed.

When I come out of the bathroom, she takes me by the hands. “Beautiful,” she says, running her fingers up and down the back of them, first the left and then the right.

Even from across the room, where Tamara is now back at the desk, polishing the barrel of the Glock, I can tell that she is bristling.

“Feeling better now, Miranda?” Georgiana asks in a voice so warm and friendly that I wouldn’t be surprised if Tamara jumped up and stabbed her.

If only . . .

“Very much, thank you,” I say.

My politeness is rewarded by Georgiana cuffing my right hand to another chain and attaching it to a chair leg, leaving my left hand free.

For a second I toy with flying at her to claw her eyes out. But what would be the point, with the trigger-happy Mrs. Hatch watching me like a hawk, and the killer guard dog, Pluto, probably about to tear into the room any second and go for my throat?

Before I can ask Georgiana to define what she means by “get started,” Tamara yanks my hair so hard that for a second I’m afraid she’ll snap my neck.

“Over to the desk, bitch,” Tamara says. She forces me over to it, pushes me down on the chair, and slams a Montblanc fountain pen onto the desk so hard that I’m surprised she doesn’t dent it.

Montblanc, the pen I used to write those interminable lines Robert ordered me to do over and over during my fourth dungeon test!

That, though, is the happiest of all the memories I have that are associated with Montblanc. My memory of Mont Blanc itself, the mountain that looms over Geneva, is tarnished by that terrible night on which Robert and I were so blissfully happy, and then that mysterious purple funeral wreath was delivered to him bearing a warning against me.

A purple mausoleum. A purple wreath, which sowed bitter distrust of me in Robert’s heart, and shattered our romantic idyll.

“So did you send Robert the wreath, Georgiana? Or was it you, Tamara?” I blurt out, before I can stop myself.

“Gigi sent it,” Tamara says, and smirks.

Gigi? Gigi—the beautiful doe-eyed Geneva boutique assistant who couldn’t keep her hands off Robert even as she helped select the spectacular designer wardrobe he bought for me. Why on earth would she want to send Robert the purple funeral wreath that drove him away from me and almost destroyed our love forever?

“But why in the hell would she send that wreath to Robert?” I ask.

“Very simple: Tammy, Gigi, and I all attended Les Orchidées finishing school in Switzerland together, and, like the Three Musketeers, we made a pact that for the rest of our lives we would look out for each other, come hell or high water,” Georgiana says.

The next moment, she swiftly removes my restraints with the expertise of someone accustomed to locks and chains.

Le Château. I wonder . . .

But before I can follow my train of thought to any kind of logical conclusion, she massages my wrists until the blood flows painfully back into them.

My hands are free now.

Shall I go for her eyes? Her throat?

Just as I am weighing the possibilities, I hear a ferocious bark and brace myself to be attacked by the Rottweiler or Doberman I assume is slavering outside. Tamara jumps up and flings open the mausoleum door—whereupon the tiniest and cutest miniature white poodle I’ve ever seen in my life charges toward me.

A miniature poodle! The evil Mrs. Hatch has a miniature poodle! Then again, Hitler loved his dog, Blondi . . .

Tamara scoops the poodle up with one hand. “There, there, Pluto, Mommy will take care of you,” she says, and showers him with kisses.

Out of the blue, Georgiana produces a pair of thin latex gloves, puts them on, and passes the other pair to Tamara, who follows suit.

Then Georgiana places a large piece of beige writing paper in front of me, and I stare at it, nonplussed.

“Write exactly what I tell you,” she says.

“I’m a ghostwriter, Georgiana, not a secretary. I don’t take dictation,” I snap, before I can stop myself.

I feel the muzzle of the Glock dig into the back of my neck, and my blood freezes.

“You do now, bitch,” Tamara says, ramming the Montblanc into the palm of my hand and closing my fist around it in an iron grip.

The pen feels like a lead weight in my hands. But perhaps I could scratch her eyes out with the nib . . .

Though if I do, she’ll probably go into shock and fire the Glock straight at my head.

Or else Georgiana will grab it from her and shoot me on the spot instead.

“Just tell me what to write,” I sigh, resigned, at least for the moment, to the sheer hopelessness of my situation.

“That’s more like it. You and I have so much in common—not just our look, but a certain Mr. Robert Hartwell as well. Nonetheless, I must warn you not to defy me, otherwise there will surely be tears at bedtime,” Georgiana says.

Defy you, bitch? I’d rather stomp all over you.

“Now, Miranda, I know only too well that your writing isn’t the most legible . . .” she goes on, and polishes the amethyst mirror with her handkerchief.

How does she know that? More to the point, why does she want me to know that she knows?

“In this case, sweetie, it’s crucial that you do your best and write as clearly as you can. So take your time, and concentrate on the task ahead of you,” she orders.

I’m tempted to reply, “Yes, Pamela”—the alias she used when she worked at Le Château as a professional submissive—just to show that I know all about her dark descent into an S&M fantasy parlor.

Bite your tongue, Miranda, until you’ve discovered what the fuck is going on.

“I’ll do my best,” I say.

She lights up with the kind of enchanting glow she probably routinely projected in order to charm the guests at her legendary Hartwell Castle parties. I hate it—and her.

“About time, Miranda. Now start with the following . . .

“ ‘My dearest Robert, There is no easy way for me to say this, but please don’t try and find me, because I never want to see you again as long as I live.’ ”

Chapter Three

My hand is paralyzed in midair.

“Please don’t force me to write this to Robert, please. I just can’t do it. I can’t!” I burst into tears at the utter nightmare in which I’m trapped.

“Just do it, bitch!” Tamara grabs me by the shoulders and shakes me so hard that my teeth chatter.

“Stop it, Tammy!” Georgiana says, yanking her off me, and for a second I wonder who in the relationship is the dominatrix and who is the submissive.

She puts her arm around me, and I practically choke on the sweet and sickly scent of violets. The unwelcome assault on my senses serves to stem my tears, and suddenly I have an idea that I hope will stall her in her tracks and buy me some time.

“Now that your eyes are blue, Georgiana, do you still love the color violet so much?” I say, attempting to sound genuinely curious, when all I really want is to grab Tamara’s Glock and shoot her in the heart—if she has one, that is.

“Always,” she says.

“Because you have violet eyes?” I say.

“Oh, the real reason is far more interesting than that!” she says, her eyes alight at my question. Terrified as I am, I suddenly flash back to Palm Beach, strolling by the shores of the Atlantic with Robert, and telling him, “Much as I love it when you spank me, whip me, dominate me, Robert, I love just talking to you almost as much.”

And he gave me his Robert Hartwell King of the World smile and said, “Unique as you are, Miranda, I can’t help but think of Napoléon’s finest seduction tactic: ‘Give me the ear of a woman and I have that woman . . .’ ”

At first, I was insulted that he’d pigeonholed me as a silly, susceptible woman, but then I remembered my ghostwriting experiences and was forced to admit to myself that he was right. It isn’t just women who are seduced by conversation, but men, too—especially when someone asks them about themselves.

Lucky for me, Georgiana is no different and is clearly delighted at the chance to hold forth about herself.

“Bring us some tea, Tammy,” she says, as if we are at afternoon tea in the Palm Court at the Plaza.

As Tamara skulks toward the small kitchen, Georgiana takes both my hands in hers, looks deep into my eyes, and, in a husky whisper, says, “You may think that I’m drawn to violet and violets because of my violet eyes, Miranda. But that isn’t the truth . . .” She pauses for a long time, presumably for dramatic effect, while I sit there and feign interest in what she is about to say.

Tamara deposits two cups of tea in front of us.

Time to fling the tea in Georgiana’s face?

I’d love to, but I can’t risk it. She’s so much taller than I am that it would probably miss her face and spill all over her chest instead, which wouldn’t do much damage at all. There’s no way I could overpower her and Tamara all on my own, and I have to accept that reality, much as I kick against it.

As Georgiana gushes on with her story, I force myself to drink my tea without gagging at her self-involvement. At the same time, I’m glad that I’ve succeeded in diverting her from her plans, if only for a short time.

“So why do I love violet and violets so much, Miranda? Let me tell you . . . I was fifteen years old, as innocent as the day is young, and in New York on vacation. In fact, I wish I still had a snapshot of myself that hot August morning. Me skipping along Fifth Avenue in a sweet little pink and white checked cotton summer dress, with delicate pearl buttons set in a frill that ran down the front.

“Outside Saks, an old man was selling tiny little bunches of violets for a quarter a bunch. I was broke, but they were so pretty that I couldn’t resist.

“ ‘Let me help you,’ the old man said, and moved closer to me, the violets in his wrinkled hands.

“I stood still. Then he leaned down to pin the corsage on my dress. All of a sudden, with lightning speed, he slid his fingers inside the front of it and pinched my left nipple, hard.

“That old man selling violets on Fifth Avenue pinched my nipple, and old and ugly as he was, he afforded me the first sexual thrill of my young life. Forever afterward, I always remembered that moment, and that thrill intermingled with the scent of violets.”

“What a riveting story,” I say, after I’ve digested her strange, dark revelation. “What gave you your first sexual thrill, Tamara?” I ask, as an afterthought.

Then I flinch at the butt of the Glock digging into the back of my neck again.

“Nice try, Miranda . . . Start writing!”

“Tammy is quite correct, cupcake. Plenty of time for social niceties after you’ve finished writing the letter,” Georgiana says.

She settles back in a cream leather armchair and, almost as if she were instructing a class in flower arranging, says, “Now, Miranda, pay attention. Write exactly what I tell you, word for word.

“ ‘My dearest Robert, There is no easy way for me to say this, but please don’t try and find me. There is no point, because I never want to see you again as long as I live. And even if you—with your stubborn, determined nature, which I know so well—persist in attempting to find me, I no longer love you. In fact, I never did.’ ”

“But he’ll never believe me, not in a million years!” I burst out.

“Oh, yes, he will, once you’ve told him everything in exactly the terms that I am about to dictate to you,” Georgiana says, just as Tamara digs the barrel of the Glock so deep into my neck that it takes all my willpower not to cry out in fear.

I’m trapped.

Held hostage by two maniacs.

No way out.

So I grit my teeth and start writing. “My dearest Robert . . .”

But I just can’t go on, and I slam the pen down on the desk.

“He won’t believe me. He won’t!” I say, as the tears stream down my face.

“Shut the fuck up and keep writing,” Tamara says, with a vicious twist of the Glock barrel against my right ear.

In fear for my life, like a robot trapped in a nightmare, I write the words Georgiana orders me to write.

“. . . By now you will have awakened from the drugged sleep after I dosed your champagne . . . and then shot you up with the tranquilizer gun, all done because I had to make my getaway, darling.”

I can’t bear the terrible lies that Georgiana is forcing me to write, and my hand is shaking so badly that, without intending to, I drop the pen.

“Keep writing, bitch,” Tamara says, and rams the pen back into my hand again as Georgiana resumes her dictation.

“My photographic memory means that I remember all the accusations you threw at me on that terrible night in Geneva . . . And remembering them, I can’t help but be amused by the irony of how close you were to the truth . . .”

Georgiana and Tamara exchange loaded glances, and Tamara sniggers.

“Lucky we had the hotel suite bugged,” she says, then gives me a vicious shove in the rib with the Glock handle.

“Robert, I could repeat every single lacerating word you threw at me on that terrible night in Geneva. I won’t go into details here, because in my heart I know that you must remember what transpired between us only too well.

“So I’ll just summarize; you accused me of being a trickster who somehow discovered that you were a seasoned dominant who hadn’t had a submissive for years, and consequently decided to use your desires as a way of getting my hands on your fortune.

Other books

What The Heart Desires by Erica Storm
Amos Gets Famous by Gary Paulsen
Lhind the Thief by Sherwood Smith
The Covent Garden Ladies by Hallie Rubenhold
South of Heaven by Jim Thompson
Labradoodle on the Loose by T.M. Alexander
She Loves Me Not by Wendy Corsi Staub