The food smelled deliciousโor so Jameson was informed, since he couldnโt smellย anythingย at the moment. Eating was also out the question.
โCould I get you some soup, sir?โ The bartender looked more like a bouncer. Like the dealers in the gaming room, he wore clothes lifted straight out of another era. No jewels around his neck, but Jameson caught a thick ring on his middle finger.
A triangle embedded inside a circle inside a square.
โOr something a little stronger?โ The bartender lifted a crystal goblet onto the bar. The liquid inside was a dark shade of amber, almost gold.
โSoup and spirits,โ Avery murmured into the back of Jamesonโs head. โThink they offer that to everyone who survives the ring?โ
Jamesonโs body drank in the closeness of hers, allowing it to fuel his resolve, and then he cut to the chase with the bartender. โIโm after the book.โ
The bartender looked Jameson up and down. The man appeared to be in his forties, but Jameson thought suddenly of the boy in the boat that first night and wondered exactly how long this gentleman had worked at the Devilโs Mercy.
Exactly how loyal to the Proprietor he was.
โAh.โ The bartender reached below again, and this time, he withdrew a leather-bound tome that looked like it weighed too much to be so easily maneuvered with one hand.ย One very large hand, Jameson noted.
โAre the two of you looking to place any bet in particular?โ the bartender asked.
Avery stepped back. โNot me,โ she said. โJust him.โ
Jameson knew how hard it was for her to sit this one out, just likeย sheย knew that he was the one who needed to impress. Ignoring the pang of the distance Avery had just put between them, Jameson flipped open the book. โMay I?โ
The bartender laid his massive hands flat on the bar, just behind the book, but said nothing as Jameson began to flip through it. The pages were yellowed with age, the dates beside the earliest bets written in script so formal it was difficult to read.
December 2.ย Jameson finally made out one date on the first page.ย 1823.
Beneath each date was a single sentence. Each sentence contained two names.
Mr. Edward Sully bets Sir Harold Letts one hundred fifty that the eldest daughter of the Baron Asherton will not be wed before the younger two.
Lord Renner bets Mr. Downey, four hundred to two hundred, that Old Mitch will die in the spring (spring defined as the latter half of March, the whole of April, the whole of May, and the first week of June).
Mr. Fausset bets Lord Harding fifty-five that a man, agreed upon in confidence between the two, will take on a third mistress before his wife begets their second child.
No wonder the book was so large. It contained every random wager ever placed at the Devilโs Mercyโor at least in this room. Political outcomes, social scandals, births and deaths, who would wed who and when and in what weather and with what guests in attendance.
Jameson flipped to more recent bets. โAre there any rules,โ he asked the bartender, โon what one may or may not wager?โ
โThis room is dedicated to longer-term outcomes, three months or more. If youโre looking to place a bet on the shorter term, youโll require the book next door. Beyond that, you may wager on anything for which you have a taker, with the understanding thatย allย wagers will be enforced.โ
Jameson looked up. Compared to the ring, attendance in this room was
sparse, but every manโand the one womanโpresent was paying attention to his exchange with the bartender, some doing less to hide their interest than others.
One man, who looked to be in his thirties, stood and crossed the room. โIโd wager ten thousand that this lad gets himself killed before heโs thirty. Any takers?โ
โIf you exclude illness and require the death be the result of his own actions?โ Another man stood. โIโm in.โ
Jameson ignored them. He caught Averyโs eyes, a silent warning for her to do the same. As the bet was written into the book and signed, Jameson let his gaze come to rest on the bartenderโs ring. That and a mirror behind the shelves of liquor were the most likely points from which the Proprietor could observe.
What kind of bet will get me an invite to the Game?ย Jameson thought back to Zellaโs advice. He needed to be surprising, tempting, threateningโ or a combination of the three.
At that exact moment, Rohan stepped through the black curtains. His face wasnโt quite as battered as Jamesonโs, and he wore it better. He walked like his ribs werenโt smarting at all.
It killed you, Jameson thought, with a slight twist of his lips,ย to stay down.
โWere I a member,โ Rohan said, his words carrying, though his voice wasnโt loud, โIโd be wagering on the likelihood that Ms. Grambs breaks up with him within the year.โ He met Jamesonโs gaze. โNo offense.โ
โNone taken,โ Jameson replied.
โLots taken,โ Avery told Rohan, her eyes narrowing.
Jameson smiled like his bruised jaw had never felt better. โIโll wager fifty thousand pounds that the Proprietor chooses someone other than his Factotum as his heir.โ
Sometimes, Jameson felt like he knew things without knowing how. The glint in Rohanโs eyes told him heโd guessed correctly: Rohan hadnโt yet been named heir.
He was still being tested.
โIโll take that bet,โ the man whoโd wagered that Jameson was going to get himself killed said. โAssuming youโre good for it.โ
โI am,โ Jameson replied, and then he looked back at the bartenderโs ring,
back at the mirror.ย Surprising. Tempting. Threatening.ย โAnd Iโll offer up another fifty thousand pounds that says the Proprietor is already dying. Iโd give himโฆ letโs sayโฆ two years?โ
The look in Rohanโs eyes now made Jameson feel like the two of them were back in the ring, like Rohan was standing over him, saying,ย Stay down.ย A threat and a warningโand something more.
โNo one is going to take that bet,โ the bartender told Jameson. โAre you done here?โ
Jameson could feel the clock ticking onward, feel the night slipping away from him.ย Iโm not done. I canโt be done.
He had to do something. He swallowed. โShort-term bets are kept next door?โ