~ Bitter Betrayal ~

by

Margaret Blake

There was no one at the reception desk. Michael believed there should always be a clerk ready to greet customers. It looked like you didn’t care if there was no one there. He rang the bell; it seemed to echo out along the corridor. He checked his watch, almost ten thirty… there should have been some guests checking out, or a clerk making up bills, something happening, not this feeling of emptiness. The atmosphere was so desolate that he wondered if he was off his head to contemplate buying this hotel. After all, he owned a chain of exclusive hotels and Blooms was hardly in that league, far from it.

He was just about to slam his palm on the bell again when a door opposite the desk that he knew let in onto the office, opened. A tall, slim person wearing a sweatshirt and grubby jeans stood there. There was a baseball cap pulled low on her head, for it was a she. The curves at her chest showed that clearly enough.

“Hi,” he said, trying to stem the faint feeling of revulsion washing over him. What was Bloom thinking about having someone like that as a hotel receptionist? No wonder no one wanted to stay at his damn hotel. “I’m here to see Charles Bloom.”

“Charley Bloom is here,” she said, “Mr Hernandez, you’d better come through.”

That was one strike up for her; she knew who he was. She opened the little gate and raised the counter so he could step behind reception, then led the way into the office.

The office was in a real mess, with papers and files littering the desks and most of the area of floor space. There was a filing cabinet, one of the drawers open, files piled high on their holders instead of sitting snugly inside.

“Take a seat,” she said, indicating the only chair that did not have files on it. He refused to sit. She shrugged and went behind the desk, but the chair was also cluttered so she perched on the edge of the desk. He wished she would not keep looking down; he hated it when people refused to make eye contact.

“So where is Charles Bloom?” he asked as politely as he could muster. He didn’t have all day and his limited patience was fast evaporating.

“What do you want? You had to have heard we weren’t selling,” she answered in a rather impudent tone of voice.

He had not heard. “We weren’t? Who’s the we?”

“Me and my dad.”

“Your dad?” He thought he got it. “I didn’t know there was a me and my dad.”

“There wasn’t when you first spoke to my dad, but there is now.”

“Oh, yeah? Look, Miss Bloom, I don’t have all day. I want a definite yes or no from Mr Bloom. Is he selling or not?”

“He isn’t selling and neither am I, Michael…”

He threw her a sharp look at her use of his Christian name. She raised her chin, then her hand and pulled off the grubby baseball cap. Long nut-brown hair spilled out, falling in wanton waves over her slender shoulders. She met his stare; her eyes were so familiar, very pale tawny coloured round eyes that were shaded by long thick lashes.

“My God!” The words exploded from him. “Charlotte?”

~ * ~

“I don’t believe it,” he muttered, impatiently thrusting his hands into the pockets of his immaculate grey silk mohair jacket. He glared at her, pinning her with a hard stare. “What the hell is going on? You’re not called Bloom. You’re plain old Charlotte Smith, at least that was what you called yourself.”

Although knowing she did not have to explain herself, Charley gave him an ambiguous reply. “I was one and then the other and then the other again.”

“What are you talking about?” he demanded. His anger was plain to see, yet his anger was also a mask for something else. Other feelings that he did not want to come to the surface.

“I mean, I was born a Bloom, until Mum and Dad got divorced and my mother remarried. I wanted to please her, and dad did not want to know me, or that was what I was told, so I took her husband’s name.”

“I see.” It made no sense to him but he did not want her to know that. “So now you want to punish me for some crazy reason?” He raised an eyebrow at her, weighing her for her reaction.

“Why would I want to do that?” she asked, her eyes round, yet her cheeks flushed dark crimson, giving away some kind of inner feeling.

Perhaps she was not as detached as she was pretending. Damn the woman to purgatory, but she was still so beautiful. Not in the conventional sense, of course, but there was something stunning about all that nut brown hair, those tawny eyes that were ever so slightly tilted at the corners. Her nose was a little too long and straight but her lips were round and full and a luscious shade of fruity pink. She was not quite a tall girl, being about five foot six and neither was she slender, being round at the breast and hip in a delicious way. A man’s woman, he thought, very definitely screen siren more than catwalk queen.

He had stared at her a long time without saying anything and realising that she thought she had somehow gained an advantage, he abruptly broke the silence.

“Who knows? If anyone wants revenge, I guess I’m the one. But I’m not here to discuss that, Charlotte. As far as I am concerned, the past is the past. All I want to do is get on with my business and then get back to London.”

“My name is Charley,” she snapped at him, “use that or Miss Bloom but don’t ever call me Charlotte, because Charlotte, little naïve Charlotte, is as dead to me as the past is to you.”

She was giving off waves of anger. He could see that in the way she tossed back her hair … it was meant to emphasise what she said, but it was a very provocative action.

“Give me time,” he said. “You can’t expect me to remember on the spot—Charley—and I don’t get your description of Charlotte Smith. She was no little innocent abroad, albeit that she pretended to be.” He managed, with a good deal of effort, to speak very calmly, to summon up reservoirs of strength that made him seem cold and businesslike.

“I’m not giving you any time for anything, Michael. Look, you’ve been told; Bloom’s is not for sale.”

Her voice sounded really hostile and he could not understand why she should be that way. He had done nothing to her, whereas she—no, he was not going to examine that pot of worms; otherwise he really would lose control.

“So the prodigal daughter has come back to save the business. Hey, sounds like a good movie.”

“It could be something like that. However, it isn’t any of your business. You were told we weren’t interested anymore. Then, of course, you should ask yourself the question: why would I sell to you? You, of all people?”

“I guess because I’m the only one stupid enough to buy this place,” he said, glancing around contemptuously before turning to her once more. He studied her face… the pale skin, that lovely English complexion that was one of the first things he had noticed about her. He could recall so many things about her… her smell, the feel of her skin …and realised he had to be out of his head letting his mind carry him away like that. Michael straightened, chasing away the memories. He frowned at her and gave her a contemptuous look.

She was not cowed by it. Instead she said, very clearly and without much emotion,   “I’m not selling and I’m the owner now. You’re right, I am the prodigal daughter, but as I said, it’s not any of your business.”

“I’d still like to talk to Charles Bloom, Charlotte, if it’s not too much trouble.”

“I’d like to talk to him, too,” she murmured. Her eyes were ever so shiny. She saw the intensity of his gaze and turned slightly away. “But he died… two days ago.”

He was quiet for some long moments, words flashing in and out of his mind only to be discarded. In the end he said, “I’m sorry to hear that,” and he was. He had liked Charles Bloom. She had finally knocked the arrogance out of him; he could not call up any more strength nor act a part, not when she had revealed such sad and bad news.

“We had decided not to sell before…” she said, shrugging a little. “He thought I could do good things.”

“I’m sure you could, if you have the money,” he reluctantly agreed, although it was something of a white lie. He did not think she had the expertise to pull something off like that. She had known nothing about the hotel business in the past; in fact, she had been working at a diner in a small town in New York when he had first met her.

“That might be a problem,” she was honest enough to admit.

He had always thought Charlotte was very honest. It was one of the things that he had admired about her; only later did he find out that she was not to be trusted at all. Far from it, she was a cheating little schemer. It was not hard to remember that. In fact, it was difficult to push it out of his mind, but he knew he had to because of the circumstances in which she found herself. He never kicked anyone when they were down, and she was really down at the moment.

“Charlotte,” he began, then shrugged and changed his mind. “I’d like to pay my respects, if that’s okay?”

“Certainly,” she said in a clipped voice, then gave him the details for the funeral.

“I’ll be there. See you, Charlotte.”

He didn’t look back. Quietly closing the door behind him, he went with purposeful steps across the lobby. He had to get out in the fresh air. It was spotting with rain but he did not call a cab. His errant footsteps led him to the entrance of a park. He went inside. It was quiet, just a few dog walkers and mothers with infants. There was a conflict of emotion churning away inside him. Sorrow for the death of Charles Bloom, certainly. The man had to be barely turned sixty; it seemed that it had been a sudden death. Any other time, he would have felt sorry for the man’s daughter, only he could not feel anything but fury at Charlotte. Seeing her again had opened up old wounds.

There was a bench close by; he went and sat on it, staring at the row of elm trees, wondering if he would shake it off before his flight back to London. He was over her now. He was no longer the twenty-two-year old with stars in his eyes, far from it. She had seen to that. Charlotte had ripped out his heart and stamped on it. No, he could never feel sorry for her. The rage came, soaking up the pain. Then, a determination to somehow pay her back exploded inside him. He was not sure how he could do that, but he was sure he would try. Revenge was the dish best eaten cold; he would enjoy the feast, somehow, some way.