Light from a nearby candle reflected in her eyes every time she looked his way.
Anthony was certain she was the catalyst for his phenomenal luck this evening. As a lifelong gambler, he was accustomed to both long stretches of near-invincibility as well as dry spells of dashed fortune. From the moment he’d laid eyes on this mysterious woman, every trump that turned up matched the cards in his hands.
She was his talisman. His saving grace.
Her moss-colored gown was simple muslin, but the blood-red rubies about her neck and dangling from her ears indicated wealth. A nondescript bonnet bathed her face in shadow. Were it not for a rogue ringlet slipping out the back, he would not have known her hair was spun gold.
“Fairfax?” prompted Leviston. “You in?”
“Absolutely.” Anthony placed a dizzying sum of money on the corner of the table. Thirty pounds was more than he’d seen in months—and far more than he could afford to lose. But with Lady Fortune gazing in his direction, he knew he could not fail.
Smugly, Mr. Bost tossed his final card onto the table, face-up. Mr. Leviston and Mr. Whitfield groaned as they displayed their cards.
As Anthony had expected, their cards were no match for his. Not tonight. He turned over the last of his cards without fanfare.
Bost gasped in dismay. “You are positively beggaring me tonight, Fairfax!”
Anthony gazed back impassively as he tucked his winnings into his purse. He knew a thing or two about being beggared. It was what had chased him from London to Scotland—but only temporarily. He would recover his losses.
Beau Brummell might be able to hide in France the rest of his life, but Anthony had friends and family in England. Friends and family who would welcome him back with open arms once his vowels were paid.
Tonight was the night. He could feel it. Fate had been on his side from the moment Leviston had suggested a game of Speculation. Anthony could not possibly have resisted.
He had always preferred games of chance over strategy. His strength was not in counting cards or doing figures, but in being incredibly lucky. Any gambler experienced periods of soaring highs and devastating lows but, in Anthony’s case, fortune favored him so often that his winnings at the gaming tables had been his family’s sole income for years.
True, he had recently suffered agonizing losses but, as any gambler knew, a windfall was always a mere turn of the cards away.
All he needed was one big win.
Whitfield shook his head. “Demme, I should never have believed the rumors of your luck running out. You’re unsinkable! Think you’ll ever retire from the gaming tables and leave a few pence for us mortals?”
Anthony twisted his face into a comical expression of horror. “Never!”
Chuckling, Whitfield gathered the remaining cards and began to shuffle.
Anthony sent a quick smile toward his shadowy Lady Fortune. She was his charm, his muse. He had won that last round simply because she’d gazed upon him.
“I see our would-be adversary has caught your eye,” said Whitfield.
“She wagers?” Anthony asked in surprise.
“She’d like to,” Leviston answered dryly, “but Bost wouldn’t let her join us.”
Bost drained his brandy and waved his empty glass at a barmaid. “What do women know about cards? Her husband should pay more attention to the purse strings.”
Whitfield’s eyes glittered. “And if she hasn’t got one, she should just say the word and I’ll be happy to step in for the night.”
Anthony’s lips flattened in distaste. “Leave her alone.”
“Why?” Bost crossed his arms. “You have claims on the lady?”
“You never know, do you?” Anthony countered icily. It was a nonsense rejoinder, but at least his tone served to silence the blackguards.
Good. He needed to keep winning. A brawl over Lady Fortune’s honor would have ruined everything.
“Your wine, my lords.” The harried barmaid refilled the other gentlemen’s glasses, then turned toward Anthony. “Anything for you, sir?”
“Not for me.” Anthony placed a gold sovereign he’d set aside onto her tray. “For you. Everyone deserves some good luck once in a while.”
Her eyes glistened. “Thank you, sir. Thank you.”
Anthony inclined his head. Inn staff would not know him this far north, but he always shared a small token from his winnings. He couldn’t imagine a worse fate than having to be employed to scrape out a living—not only because gentlemen of his class did not work. Anthony had never cleaved to anyone else’s schedule or demands in his life. Gaming hells were much more suited to his style of living.
In fact, he won the next three rounds. A thrill shot through him. Lady Fortune’s presence had made him unconquerable indeed.
“I’m out.” Bost pushed his chair back and stood with a disgusted expression. “If I risk any more, I shan’t be able to afford to break my fast in the morning.”
“Make that two of us.” Whitfield glanced at Anthony as he rose to his feet. “I suppose the gossips also lied when they said all the gaming hells in London had closed their doors to you.”
“London?” Anthony leaned back in his throne with a careless grin. “Try England. Why do you think I came all the way to Scotland to deprive you of your last ha’penny?”
“Scoundrel.” Whitfield shook his head with a chuckle. “Good night, all.”
Bost adjusted his hat. “Next time I see you, Fairfax, I’m winning back my blunt.”
“You can try,” Anthony agreed with good cheer before handing the cards to Leviston. “One last round?”
“I’ll no doubt regret this,” Leviston grumbled as he shuffled the cards.
A movement caught Anthony’s eye. He straightened his spine as Lady Fortune rose from her shadowy corner and made her way toward their table.
“Now is there room for a lady?” she asked in a rich, sultry voice.
“Without question.” Anthony leaped up while she took her seat. She had no chance of winning, but he saw no reason not to welcome her to the table.
“Your funeral,” Leviston said to her under his breath. “Fairfax here is unbeatable.”
Anthony was in full agreement. Leviston could bid his last farthing adieu. Now that Lady Fortune was seated at their table, Anthony’s luck would be boundless. He was on the longest winning streak of his life.
“Fairfax, meet Miss Devon.” Leviston began to deal the cards. “Starting wager is twenty pounds, pet.”
She placed her bet on the table without changing expression.
Anthony couldn’t stop staring at her from the corner of his eye. He was normally quite gifted at sizing someone up in the briefest of moments—it was the key to reading tables, and knowing when to pass or when to triple his wager—but he couldn’t quite get a fix on Miss Devon.
It wasn’t just the high-necked modesty of her thick fichu being paired with extravagant rubies, or her concealed golden tendrils and pristine white gloves. Now that she was close enough for him to read her features, he still couldn’t do so. Her clear blue eyes were as calm as a winter lake and her pretty, unlined face betrayed nothing.
He was fascinated. Tempted to give up on cards altogether in favor of unraveling the far more intriguing mystery beneath the oversized bonnet.
But winning big was his only chance of repaying his debts.
Anthony took the next round, and the round after that. Leviston took the third, only for Anthony to win it back double the following hand with an ace on his first deal.
By the fifth round, Leviston’s grip on his cards was white-knuckled and he trembled with obvious anxiety.
Miss Devon murmured, “Breathe in through your nose…and out through your mouth. It is but one hand of cards amongst many. A moment in time. Feel your fingers relaxing. If you wish to stop, you may do so. It is only a game.”
To Anthony’s amazement, Leviston visibly relaxed as he listened to her soft, coaxing words. His knuckles returned to their normal color and his hands ceased trembling.
“You’re right,” Leviston said with a rueful smile. “How easily we forget that the turn of a card is meaningless overall.”
Meaningless? Anthony would have laughed if so much wasn’t riding on his continued lucky streak. For him, the turn of the cards meant the difference between eating or not. Between having a roof to sleep under or not. Between being able to look his loved ones in the eyes or consigning them to poverty.
Thank God, up ’til now, Lady Fortune had only worked her calming magic on Anthony, or he would not have won a penny. The sight of white knuckles and trembling fingers was his cue to wager big.
Then again, Fate alone dealt the hands. All the subtle cues in the world were useless without the capacity to win.
He glanced down at his final card. Indescribable joy spread through him. He should never have doubted Lady Fortune. Miss Devon could calm Leviston with as many reassuring words as she wished, because Anthony’s hand was unstoppable. A rush of excitement surged through him. These were truly the best cards he’d ever been dealt in his life. The best cards anyone had ever been dealt. All three of his cards had been the three highest trumps.
Leviston was about to go home in tears.
“All in.” Anthony dropped the entire contents of his purse next to his twenty pounds. “Forty per player if you stay in.”
“Curse you, Fairfax.” Color drained from Leviston’s face, but he kept a stiff upper lip and ponied up his blunt. “This is my last hand.”
Her porcelain face as smooth as a doll’s, Miss Devon placed her purse alongside her bet.
A twinge twisted Anthony’s stomach. He felt bad about taking money from a lady. Once he won, he would return her portion to her and take the rest straight back to London. The other toffs could afford to lose a few pence, Anthony reasoned, but he needed every penny he could get in order to stay out of prison. Two thousand pounds worth of pennies, in fact.
It had taken a year of ill luck—and increasingly riskier bets in his growing desperation—to amass such mindboggling debt. Because Anthony had always gambled everywhere and with everyone, months had passed before his peers began to realize he had no means to repay them. To say they were displeased would be an understatement.
His goal was much higher than repaying his debts, of course. He wanted a pot so full of gold he couldn’t lift it without a wheelbarrow. To not only win enough never to fear being poor again, but also to win enough so that those he cared about would never lack for anything. He wanted to be rich. Not just for a few months or a few years. Forever.
Leviston displayed his card with a sigh. He had no chance of winning, and likely knew it.
Anthony felt oddly proud when Lady Fortune turned over her final card to reveal an astonishingly solid hand. If the trump had been different, Miss Devon would have swept the table. Alas for her, luck was firmly on his side. This was his night. His streak was invincible. Finally, he could go back home.
He flipped his final card face up with a flourish.
“I suspected as much.” Leviston covered his face with his hat.
A streak of visceral, hopeless dismay flashed across Miss Devon’s face so quickly that Anthony almost missed it.
“We can play again,” he said. “You might earn your money back.”
“I’m out,” Leviston reminded him with a sigh of regret.
“Not you.” Anthony shot him a pointed look. “Miss Devon.”
Her eyelashes lowered. “I have no more money.”
“You can wager something else.” When her blue eyes widened with sudden outrage, he regretted his unfortunate phrasing. Anthony had meant to rescue her, not offend her. He added hastily, “A lock of hair, perhaps. I’ve just the locket to put it in.”
“Don’t do it,” Leviston advised under his breath. “This man is why half of the House of Lords have grown bald.”
Miss Devon’s lips twitched. “And yet, I am tempted. The same bet? So I might have all my money back if I win?”
“Of course,” Anthony assured her magnanimously. She wouldn’t win, but he would be certain to return her portion to her after he won. This way, she would feel like she’d had a fair shot.
“Very well.” She gave him a brave smile and his insides melted with pride. “I’m in.”
As the most impartial party at the table, Leviston agreed to deal again.
Fifteen years of daily gaming was the only reason Anthony’s body didn’t betray him with even a flicker of satisfaction upon seeing his first card. It wasn’t going to be the same hand he’d held last time—that was a once-in-a-blue-moon deal he’d dream about for weeks—but it was close enough to steal the breath from his lungs. His luck was damn near unbeatable.
“I’m afraid you won’t like my hand,” he said when it was time to display the next card.
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