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The Gambler’s Deceit

In the glittering world of London's elite, the Whitmore family reigns supreme - until a mysterious stranger, Victor Mallory, arrives and upends everything. The Whitmores become entangled in Victor's web of secrets and lies, With a gripping blend of high-stakes thrills, simmering romance, and suspenseful twists, Can the Whitmores survive Victor's machinations unscathed? Victor’s Motto - “The ends justify the means when it comes to fulfilling my goals.” Warning: 1. There will be no set word limit, according to need some chapters can be large and some small. 2. Read at least 12 to 15 chapters before giving a review. 3. Some scenes can be detailed so be prepared. 4. Be attached to any characters at your own risk. 5. There will be many businesses, which means deals, and long negotiations, so be prepared. Disclaimer -All characters and settings are fictional, any similarity with reality is purely coincidence. PS: It's my first work, I'm hoping it turns out well. All reviews and constructive criticisms are welcome. Grammar and English should be fine, but I'm not sure how good the dialogues and scenarios will be. Hopefully, I'll improve as this novel progresses forward.

Victor_Mallory · Politique et sciences sociales
Pas assez d’évaluations
92 Chs

Chapter 28: Regnald Davis

Percival felt the air in the chamber grow leaden as the footman's words seemed to siphon away all other sounds. The Financial Manager for Whitmore Enterprises...here on urgent business relating to the recent negotiations. His brow furrowed as he tried to ascertain what precipitous development could have spurred such a solemn visitation.

Beside him, Woodridge inhaled a measured breath, the slight widening of his eyes the only outward betrayal of his inner consternation. To the casual observer, the butler's poise remained impeccably unruffled. But Percival could sense the undercurrents of trepidation lurking beneath that steadfast facade.

"I see..." Woodridge murmured after a tense pause, inclining his head towards the footman. "And you indicated the emissary brought counsel to accompany him on these matters?"

The servant bobbed his head in affirmation. "Indeed, sir. A solicitor from the Whitmore's stable of practising barristers attends the Financial Manager's presence. Though the exact nature of their combined intent has yet to be elucidated."

Without awaiting further acknowledgement, the butler turned on his heel and strode purposefully towards the door, posture radiating an aura of crisp command. As it fell open ahead of his path, he addressed the hovering footmen waiting outside.

"You shall convey our...esteemed guests to the North Wing parlour and ensure their needs for refreshments and respites are seen to." Each word was measured with the judicious weight of one accustomed to brokering no opposition.

"Tend to their every corporeal want, but afford them no insights into the purposes of their summons or the inner machinations of this estate. Is that understood?"

A flurry of deferential murmurs and nodding assent followed, prompting Woodridge to continue with a final directive.

"I shall attend to alerting your father personally, young master," he stated without preamble.

With that, the wizened butler turned and strode from the chamber, his footfalls carrying briskly down the corridor beyond. Percival watched the doorway long after he had departed, feeling unease and speculation gnaw at his vitals like starved hyenas.

Every detail catalogued, every asset meticulously appraised - this was the way of Reginald Davis, Financial Manager for the mighty Whitmore Consortium. Even as he was escorted through the opulent environs of Shaw Manor's main receiving halls, Davis's eyes roved with an unquenchable hunger for meticulous examination and ruthless quantification.

The shine on the bannisters, the quality of stitchwork in the servants' livery, the craftsmanship and heft of the imported Moroccan rugs underfoot - all were swiftly inventoried and assessed by his ever-watchful gaze. For this was the way of those born to wealth and influence, to master the nuances in ornamentation and luxury that bespoke both status and affluence.

As the eldest son of a wealthy industrialist, schooled from birth in the intricacies of patrician etiquette and gentlemanly decorum, Davis had been versed in the subtleties of ostentation and indulgence which signalled the true measure of one's station. Every polished wood inlay and hand-woven silk adornment whispered to his finely honed senses of the family's true standing and credibility.

Thus, as the footmen ushered him and his associate through Shaw Manor's cavernous receiving halls, Davis's eyes darted endlessly across every lavish appointment and embellishment. The high-polished gleam of the expansive entry hall's parquet floors fairly shouted off the fortunes and privilege invested in their luxurious upkeep and maintenance staff. Each antique chaise and brocaded settee arrangement bespoke a level of indolent indulgence reserved solely for aristocratic scions of true substance and stature.

Even the scrupulously polished buckles and buttons adorning the servants' regalia practically glowed under his scrutinizing assessment, speaking volumes about the level of meticulous attention paid to even the smallest details of presentation and respectability. Every polished surface, every glimmering bauble and knickknack arrayed for his perusal shouted from the very souls of the estate's family the station and esteem to which they undoubtedly held themselves.

For as his father had instructed from his earliest years, it was not merely the raw opulence on display that mattered in their circles. No, the true hallmarks of power and credibility lay in both the degree of luxury as well as the practised ease with which one wore the mantle of privilege - for all the world to see and admire.

With a sharp nod, Davis acknowledged the artfully arranged settings arrayed in the manor's main receiving chambers. Every bespoke detail - from the hand-carved Erté oyster service and high-borne luncheon regalia to the extravagant Moroccan textiles covering the floor - spoke to a family line secure in the well-appointed privileges bequeathed by generations of aristocratic dynastic largesse.

As the household servants withdrew with decorous propriety to allow him and his associate privacy, Davis permitted his roving survey of the sumptuous surroundings to resume in earnest. Each cherished object d'art, each meticulously staged centrepiece and accent complement was carefully evaluated and appraised - their worth measured against the patrician credibility and standing they conveyed to those displaying such lavishness on demand.

For that, after all, was the singular measure by which House Whitmore would judge the calibre of those they deigned to continue their association and allegiances with moving forward. Were the Shaws unable or unwilling to command the appropriate degree of opulence and influence expected among their societal equals, it would be incumbent upon the Whitmore Consortium to recalibrate their judgments and expectations accordingly. 

With an almost revelatory sense of clarity, Davis felt himself enveloped by the sumptuous atmosphere suffusing the estate's appointments and decor. It was as though every gemlike flourish and bespoke indulgence whispered in sensuous tongues inviting consumption and emersion at the highest bespoken levels.

He took another sweeping assessment of the assembled trappings, allowing his penetrating gaze to roam each bauble and embellishment presented like offerings for his discernment. Yes...perhaps there did remain a kernel of credibility and dynastic grandeur remaining to be excavated from the unfolding revelations, despite their current tribulations.

For the slightest flicker of reassuring candlelight from the corners of his vision, Davis allowed the first seeds of hope to send germinating tendrils through the fertile soil of his psyche.

A faint smile playing across his face, the Whitmore surrogate settled into his role as arbiter of believability among the aristocracy. Should the Shaws wish to retain the mantle of true gentility and privilege, the benchmark would remain high indeed.

Reginald Davis allowed his gaze to roam the appointed chambers like a falcon scanning for prey. Everywhere his eyes alighted, it was as if ethereal price tags and auction valuations shimmered into existence alongside each ornate fixture and family heirloom. 

The Garrick grandfather clock standing sentinel against the far wall practically glowed with notations of its immense intrinsic worth - its hand-carved burl walnut cabinetry alone would fetch upwards of £18,000 at any reputable auction house. Yet that failed to account for the intricacies of its finely-wrought internal movements, the legacy bequeathed by the clockmaker's masterwork. With its provenance taken into full consideration, a conservative resale estimate whispered around the £32,500 mark before Davis's discerning inner eye.

The antique silk damask draperies festooning the apartment's tall windows appeared suddenly annotated with ticker streams of their considerable material valuations. Purely from a textural and craftsmanship standpoint, each bespoke panel represented a jaw-dropping £7,800 investment. Yet Davis's penetrating insights perceived additional considerations that inflated their worth exponentially - the delicate floral embroideries whispered of artisanal mastery from obscure Sumatran enclaves, processes and techniques long since lost to the modern world. Suddenly, conservative showroom valuations crested past £27,000 per window's adornments.

Every underfoot step produced a susurration of numerical appraisements imprinted upon the very carpet fibres - its vintage Ziegler Mahal weave and intricate wood burl motif design bespoke a level of sublime artistry and heritage commanding upwards of £65,000 from the most rarefied collectors. The sumptuous Ushak and Laver Kirmans draped across the antique library couches? A mere £180,000 or so in saleroom acquisitions, if one were so inclined to dicker with their current estate managers.

Davis's acute perceptions seemed to penetrate beyond each object's physical facade, peeling away layers of intricacy and artisanal craftsmanship to divine their truest quintessential values. The Argillaceous celadon vases atop the escritoire fairly radiated priceless historical significance and provenance in his inner estimations - a grand £275,000 at auction on the overly-conservative end if verified as Song Dynasty artefacts as their character proclaimed.

Even the most ostensibly prosaic objects seemed encoded with layers of opulent worth and status by the estimations streaming unceasingly through the Financial Manager's analytical consciousness. The damask chenille sofas - a mere £37,000 retail investment. The Baroque tasselled key armchairs - a sizable £56,000 to acquire through venerated antique dealers. Every polished brass chandelier inlay and filigree balustrade carried whispered estimates of sums tottering into the tens of thousands for those with an appreciative eye towards the true hallmarks of quality and exclusivity.

As Davis circulated through the state apartments, his senses were bombarded by a dizzying array of appraisements and rarefied valuation streams. Every antique parquet floor inlay, hand-knotted Kashmir wall covering, and hand-blown Venetian glass objet d'art glowed incandescent with the ghostly imprints of their estimated worths and provenance details.

At the centre of it all stood the Financial Manager himself, unblinking and impassive as the most accurate of asset evaluation algorithms. His gaze possessed the ability to unmask each object's intrinsic pedigree and affluent legacies as surely as if they wore their estimations and resale values like finely tailored garments. 

The parlour may have been staged to evoke atmospheres of casual opulence and relaxed privilege to the untrained observer. Yet through the preternatural acuities possessed by Reginald Davis, every curated indulgence on display radiated the incandescent aura of its true monetary worth - from the humblest tasselled ottoman flourishes to the highest crystal chandelier.

This was the rarified vision allowed to those ascending to the apex of Financial Stewardship and Arbitration within the elite noble consortiums. The ability to assess and determine intrinsic valuations with a single surgical application of insight, to appraise the entirety of a legacy's net worth across every asset and privilege on display.

And as Davis lowered himself with practised grace into the plush accommodations of the parlour's central seating arrangement, the flickering fire's light seemed to imbue each licked and danced upon the surface with its own notated estimations of material significance and pedigree. The Fireplace mantle - A scant £65,000 to acquire those exquisitely carved corbels and embellishments. The hand-adzed limestone hearth - at least £38,500 to commission and install such exemplary Old-World artisanship. 

With every measure of patrimony and lineage arrayed for his penetrating judgment, Reginald Davis allowed the faintest of ruminative smiles to grace his countenance. So it would seem the illustrious Shaw Dynasty did still command a certain degree of circumstance and extravagance befitting their touted pedigrees...at least on the surface.

Whether those estimable material assets translated into a credible legacy worthy of maintaining unbroken alliances with House Whitmore, however, remained to be illuminated once the discussions ahead concluded their opening gambits. 

For the time being, the Financial Manager would permit himself to appreciate the spectacle of unsurpassed luxury and splendour curated throughout these baronial receiving chambers. The costs and investments each embellished surface and artefact would command on the open market remained branded into his perceptions like the ghostly watermarks of unfathomable riches.

And when at last Lord Alistair Shaw arrived to address the urgencies at hand, Davis would assess the man himself as he had everything else surrounding them - peeling back the veneers and estimating the core validity of the dynastic commodities represented.

A dynasty, after all, was no different than any other asset class awaiting ruthless quantification and appraisal. Value could be conferred or rescinded at the stroke of a report's assessment...something that was never far from Davis's appraising insights regardless of circumstance or setting.

Whatever unpleasantries lay ahead, he would prove as exacting and precise in arbitrating them as the Shaw family's own proclaimed pedigree merited.

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