Out of Time: A Time Travel Mystery (Out of Time #1)

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Out of Time: A Time Travel Mystery (Out of Time #1) Page 4

by Monique Martin


  Elizabeth self-consciously tugged at the chain. “Not worth anything. My ring’s a fake too,” she added with an embarrassed smile.

  She’d never had any real jewelry, certainly nothing worth pawning. She looked down at her ring. Fat lot of good it would do them. They needed something real, something gold.

  “The ring!” she blurted and then without further explanation took off back down the street.

  She’d nearly forgotten it in all the excitement, but she’d been holding it when they’d…done whatever they’d done to end up here.

  Elizabeth turned the corner and hurried back into the alley, glad to see the big steel door was shut again.

  When Simon caught up, she was on her hands and knees crawling around on the pavement in the alley.

  “What in God’s name are you doing woman?”

  “Ah-ha!” she cried and jumped to her feet. She held out her hand to him in triumph. In her palm rested the small scarab ring. “I thought I remembered holding it when the watch did its thing.”

  Simon’s face paled as he took the ring from her. Elizabeth watched the play of emotions across his face, a sinking feeling in the pit of her stomach.

  “It’s a good thing, right?” she asked. His face was ashen. “Bad penny?”

  Simon looked up at her and clenched the ring in his hand. “Very much so.”

  She waited, but he offered nothing else in the way of explanation. “We can find another way.”

  “No,” Simon said and put it away in his pocket. “It should bring a good price.”

  He stood up a little straighter and nodded toward the street.

  “It’s getting late,” he said. Everything about his demeanor had changed. All the emotions he’d let seep out were tucked neatly away. Even his voice was different. Crisp and business-like. What was it about that ring that frightened him so much? The tension in his body was palpable. “We should find a pawn shop.”

  “Right.”

  Simon stepped back and gestured toward the mouth of the alley. His face was again an impassive mask as they headed back out. Elizabeth’s eyes darted toward the street. Despite Simon’s mood change, she felt a sense of calm acceptance start to take root. If life had taught her anything, it was that she couldn’t control anything except her response to it. Especially when the unexpected happened—like a little unplanned trip back in time.

  She could do only one thing. If she wanted to survive, she had to take each day as it came and mine the good from the bad, as she’d always done. At least this time, she wasn’t alone. She let out a deep breath and glanced over at Simon. Together they rounded the corner and stepped into the past and into their future.

  Chapter Four

  CALVIN COOLIDGE SAID THE business of America was business. And nowhere was it more evident than the streets of Manhattan in 1929. From the red-hot vendors and shoe-shine stands to the upscale Stork Club and New York Stock Exchange—money was in constant flow and so were the people.

  Elizabeth could feel the energy of a city at the height of its power and purpose. People walked with a fast pace suited to the jazz rhythms of the nightclubs. Traffic surged along the streets in tempo with the city’s heartbeat. Raucous, dizzying and intoxicating—New York was a party spiraling toward the inevitable calling of the cops.

  The people were well-dressed by modern standards. The only ones casually attired were workmen in their coveralls. She felt as if she’d shown up for a wedding in a potato sack. Or worse. There was sharp disapproval in the eyes of people they passed and something she didn’t want to define in a few of the men. She tugged self-consciously at the hem of her T-shirt.

  “I wish everyone would stop staring,” she whispered to Simon.

  Simon arched a brow and said off-handedly, “I’m sure your T-shirt has nothing to do with it.”

  “What? It’s brand new, mostly. What’s wrong with it?”

  “Nothing a little more of it wouldn’t cure,” he said and looked down at her uncomfortably. “It is rather on the small side, isn’t it?”

  Elizabeth stopped walking and tugged at her shirt again. Getting fashion tips from a man who thought a Windsor instead of a four-in-hand knot was accessorizing was really too much.

  Simon sighed heavily and pulled his sweater over his head, leaving him wearing only a crisp white oxford shirt. He held the sweater out to her, but his eyes wouldn’t meet hers. “Put this on.”

  It was ridiculously large for her. The sleeves fell well past her hands and the hem rested barely above her knees. But it was a good fit in other ways, better ways. It smelled like Simon—clean, with a hint of aftershave. The weight of the soft fabric was comforting, like the pressure of a hand on the small of her back. She let herself snuggle into it and then noticed Simon looking at her with a strange, far off look in his eyes. Whatever he’d been thinking, he pushed it away quickly and found a fascinating spot of gum on the sidewalk.

  Elizabeth pushed the long sleeves up to her elbows. “We should be…”

  Simon put his hands in his pockets and nodded. Slowly they fell into step together again and joined the busy flow of pedestrians.

  They started in mid-town and after a few inquiries headed south toward the lower class sections where pawn shops would most likely be found. Before too long, the neighborhood changed. The streets were a little dirtier, and the people a little harder. The Lower East Side was a haven for immigrants and the working class, all of them trying to find their piece of the American dream.

  “There we go,” Elizabeth said and pointed to a sign: Arbogast J. Smith - Pawnbroker.

  As they stepped inside, she was struck by how every pawnshop was like the next—a sad mixture of lost hope and second-hand dreams. The owner stood behind the glass-cased counter and looked up sharply when the bell at the top of the door announced their arrival.

  He was a tall, thin man with dark eyes that seemed unnaturally large behind the thick lenses of his glasses. Elizabeth shuddered. He looked like the proverbial spider, and she felt like the unwitting fly.

  “Why don’t you see what you can get for the ring and I’ll try to find some clothes,” Elizabeth said. She tried to shake the feeling she was being sized up for something unpleasant and browsed the shop’s wares.

  His large bug eyes followed her as she looked at the merchandise—clothes, jewelry and the inevitable saxophone. Why was it every pawn shop seemed to have a tarnished sax hanging in one corner? A bit of someone’s soul dangling by a thin cord. A piece of someone’s heart taken in trade. She’d left a few chapters of her life behind in glass cases.

  She noticed Simon hadn’t started haggling and nodded her head toward the counter to prod him along. She thought about doing it herself. Simon was clearly out of his element. But could a woman in the 1920’s get the same price as a man? Hell, they couldn’t even in the next century. Some things were slow to change. She reminded herself to try to check her impulses. A headstrong woman in this time would be as welcome as a skunk at a lawn party, and they couldn’t afford to stick out at all. She spied a rack of second-hand dresses in the back and went to find something suitable.

  ~~~

  Simon watched her disappear into the back of the store and then turned his attention to the owner. The man wasted no time appraising Simon, and a thin smile stretched his pinched mouth. “Name’s Smitty. What do you have for me today?”

  Simon didn’t have much experience in bargaining, but he knew a shark when he saw one. He took the ring out of his pocket but didn’t hand it over just yet. “A family heirloom. It’s quite valuable.”

  Smitty’s lips quivered in anticipation. “Of course.” He held out his bony hand.

  Simon hesitated, looking at the man’s black, smudged fingers. He had little choice though, and set the ring on the counter. He loathed the idea of pawning it. Even though the ring brought with it painful memories, they were the last he had of his grandfather. The watch and the ring had come to symbolize those final moments—frightening and confusing, but all he
had left.

  Elizabeth poked her head around the corner and held out a pale, floral print dress. “Is there somewhere I can try this on?”

  “There’s a partition screen in the back,” Smitty said, as he stopped examining the ring and leaned over the counter to stare at Elizabeth.

  She came around the corner and put the dress on the counter. As she started to pull the sweater over her head, Simon gave in to the ridiculous urge to block Smitty’s view. Not that she was undressing, but there was something sensual about the way she moved, the way her hair fell across her shoulders.

  She smiled and handed Simon his sweater. “Thanks for the loan.”

  He watched Elizabeth walk to the back of the store and then turned to Smitty, whose leer slid effortlessly into an oily smile.

  “Mr. Smith,” Simon bit out. “If you don’t mind…”

  Smitty’s lips tightened, his mouth looking like a gash cut into the middle of his face. Simon clenched his jaw. He couldn’t afford to say the things he wanted to. Not now, when they needed money so badly. The sooner they finished their business here the better. “The ring,” he said tightly.

  “Of course,” Smitty said and examined the small scarab. He turned it over in his hands and looked at the setting closely. “You’re not from around here, are you?”

  “We’re new in town,” Simon said. Now he was going to be forced to make small talk with this creature.

  “Where ya staying?”

  Simon hesitated. “We haven’t settled in quite yet.”

  Smitty looked up from examining the scarab. “You on the lam?”

  “Of course not,” Simon said and racked his brain for viable story. “We just got off the train and…I really don’t see how it’s any of your affair.”

  “You’re a little jumpy aren’t ya? No luggage, odd clothing. If this ring’s hot it’ll affect the price.”

  “Now, see here—”

  “You wouldn’t be the first.”

  Simon’s patience was wearing thin. “We are not on the run.”

  “No?” His bug eyes narrowed and the corner of his lips curled in a smirk. “Out for a little fun then?”

  “What exactly are you implying?”

  Smitty shrugged. “You wouldn’t be the first man to have a little milk without buying the cow.”

  Simon reached the end of his rope. No matter how badly they needed money he wasn’t going to tolerate such insolence. “Mr. Smith,” Simon ground out. “If I were you—”

  “We’re newlyweds,” Elizabeth said as she came to Simon’s side. She hooked her arm through his and turned to Smitty with her sweetest smile. “He’s still getting used to the idea.”

  “Yes,” Simon stammered. Smitty seemed to step back a little. Apparently, Simon’s claim on her was enough to bring the man up short. It was a ridiculous charade, but if it gave Elizabeth a modicum of safety he’d gladly keep up pretenses. “It all happened rather unexpectedly.”

  “Very,” Elizabeth said with a grin, her eyes bright with mischief.

  Smitty narrowed his eyes. “She’s not wearing no ring.”

  “There wasn’t time to see to everything properly,” Simon said. “We were hoping you could help us with that. Unless, of course, you’d rather continue to insult my wife,” he finished, laying his hand possessively over hers.

  Smitty didn’t seem to believe them, but if it meant more business he clearly didn’t care what their story was. “I think I might have something.”

  “I thought you might,” Simon said. He looked down at Elizabeth sternly, but his pique melted. The dress she was wearing was simple, but she looked wonderful. The pale blue-green pattern made her hair seem that much more striking. A series of ridiculously tiny buttons ran up the front, stopping at the base of the v-neck. Her pale skin led to the enticing arch of her collarbone. The scalloped hem fell to her knees, giving him a glimpse of her shapely legs. Elizabeth seldom wore dresses, and he wondered why when she was so enchanting in them.

  Elizabeth ducked her head shyly. “Do you like?”

  Simon swallowed. “Very much.”

  She blushed and stepped back. She couldn’t quite meet his eyes. “I’m gonna need shoes too. I’ll just go see what’s back there.”

  Simon watched her walk away. She should definitely wear dresses more often. Or perhaps it was best she didn’t. He had enough trouble keeping his feelings under wraps as it was. The softening of his heart whenever she was near was untenable enough. Now, with seemingly every man they encountered leering at her, it was almost impossible to hide how he felt.

  “I’ll give you thirty for the ring,” Smitty said.

  “Thirty? It’s worth ten times that.”

  “Got a crack in the stone. Thirty.”

  “Thirty-five.”

  Smitty’s cold face split into a grim smile. “I say it’s worth thirty.”

  “Unconscionable,” Simon muttered.

  There had to be other pawn shops and he glanced out the door half-tempted to take his business elsewhere. But he didn’t know the city and the day’s light had already started to dim. They couldn’t afford to search all night for another shop.

  “Take it or leave it. No skin off my nose.”

  It was a crime to sell the ring for so little, but they needed money. Now.

  Simon grimaced. “Fine.”

  “The ticket’s good for sixty days, then it goes in the general merchandise,” Smitty said and wrote out the receipt. “Pleasure doing business with ya.”

  “I assure you,” Simon muttered. “The pleasure was entirely yours.”

  With the money he purchased one dress, one suit, one broadcloth shirt, one pair of ladies shoes, a small suitcase. He’d also bought a pair of imitation gold rings, much to Smitty’s confusion. While women had worn wedding rings for centuries, it wasn’t common for men to wear them until WWII when they’d taken to wearing the rings to remind them of home. A man wearing a wedding ring in the 1920s wasn’t unheard of, but it was rare. It had been an illogical thing to do, buying a pair of rings, but for reasons Simon didn’t want to examine too closely, he wanted to wear his. Even if it was only a charade.

  The rash of purchases had left them less than twenty dollars and still no place to stay.

  The street was dimly lit, but still filled to the edges with people hurrying this way and that. No wonder it was called the city that never sleeps. As far as Simon could tell it never even took a breath.

  They walked aimlessly in an uncomfortable silence until Elizabeth suggested they ask someone for directions to some boarding houses. Simon didn’t think they needed help, but when they passed the same little diner twice, he finally relented. With vague directions to head down Market Street, they set off again. The uncomfortable silence joined them.

  Clearly, Elizabeth had some sort of allergy to silence and broke it quickly.

  “Well, this is quite the adventure, isn’t it?”

  He glanced sideways at her. “Which part?”

  She shrugged. “All of it, I guess. I mean…” She glanced up at him. “We’ve had a big day.”

  “Quite,” he agreed. “Traveling through time, being rooked at a pawnshop, getting married…. Not sure how we’ll ever manage to top it.”

  His sniping shut her down for nearly an entire minute.

  “Sorry about springing the whole just married thing on you back there,” Elizabeth apologized.

  Simon looked at her, waiting for more of an explanation.

  To her credit, she did look uncomfortable.

  “It sort of came out. But it’s probably a good cover. We can’t exactly rent a room together if we aren’t. I mean we could, but there are only so many times in one day a girl can be called a…you know before it starts to affect your self-esteem a little.”

  He smiled sympathetically and nearly touched her arm in comfort before he could stop himself.

  “I guess we could get two rooms,” she continued. “Be most of our money, but if you’d rather—”

&
nbsp; “No,” he said quickly. One room was the best idea and not just monetarily. He had no intention of letting her out of his sight while they were here. And if the few reactions she’d gotten from men so far were any indication, she was going to need some looking after. “One room will do, Miss West.”

  She pinned him with an adorable expression of admonishment. “We’re married now, remember? People will think we’re into something kinky if you keep calling me Miss West.”

  Her candor was a sucker punch to the gut. “Dear Lord.”

  “I know it’s awkward, but…”

  “We don’t have any choice, do we?” he asked too sharply. He rolled his shoulders to release some of the tension. It wasn’t her fault he couldn’t get a grip on himself. He was used to having a place for everything and everything in its place. This sudden turn into the unknown left him off-balance and he didn’t like the feeling one bit. Not to mention being here with her. He’d managed quite well to control himself around her before. But then, he’d been able to hold academia between them. He could step back and regain himself, rebuild the wall she unwittingly felled. But now, they were forced together and he wasn’t sure what to do. For the first time, he wasn’t sure of anything. And they’d only been here three hours.

  He turned his head away from her and kept his eyes on the opposite side of the street. Dilapidated tenements and brownstones nearly black at the base with soot told them they were in the right area. This area they could afford at least. Simon watched the people gathered on the stoops warily and gripped the handle of their suitcase that much tighter. Thankfully, it wasn’t long before he saw signs for rooms to rent.

  They settled on the Manchester Arms. It was an average sized residence hotel—three stories, no elevator, but the lobby was clean and the price was right. Seven dollars for the week, paid up front. Simon took the key from the desk clerk, and they started up the stairs.

  “He was nice. I was beginning to wonder if everyone here was just nasty,” Elizabeth said. “Gives me faith in humanity again.”

  “You’re easily persuaded,” he said, squinting to read the door numbers in the poorly lit hallway.

 

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