Read The Rogue’s Prize Online

Authors: Katherine Bone

Tags: #Romance, #Historical

The Rogue’s Prize (5 page)

“Bos’un! We’ve only got a matter

of minutes before all hell breaks loose.”

He leaned her head back until only

she could hear him. “Whatever you do,

trust no one but
me
.”

She focused on the woodwork

above her head. Did he honestly expect

her
to trust
him
? Ridiculous! Captain

Collins and Lieutenant Guffald were

risking their lives or were perhaps even

now lying on deck, dead. They deserved

her loyalty, her trust.

“I trust no one,” she admitted,

“especially pirates. Kill me now and be

done with it!”

“What a loss that would be,” the

pirate aggrieved.

Constance suddenly grew bolder.

“A loss of your sport!”

“Aye. But no one else will help

you. You’d best figure that out soon. If

you want to get off this ship alive, you’ll

do what I say.”

“It’s time, bos’un!”

The demon growled, an ominous

sound belying his vow of protection. He

peered over her shoulder at the man in

the doorway. Hard, lean, there was no

escaping the tight rein on her shoulders.

“We stand to lose everything if we

don’t appear on deck,” the harassing

man continued.

Constance’s captor turned her

around to face him. She barely reached

his shoulder and had to tilt her face up to

meet his. “Remember what I said. You’ll

be safe with me. Stay by my side. And

whatever you do, do not look the captain

in the eyes.”

“Why should I trust you?”

“Would you trust Simon Danbury?”

he asked.

Of course, she thought. But that was

— impossible! “How do you know that

name?”

“It doesn’t matter. Would you trust

him?” he gritted between his teeth.

“With my life,” she vowed.

His fingers dug into her shoulders.

“Then trust
me
.”

“I’m

afraid,”

she

confessed,

choking back a sob.

“You have no other choice. Or

would you prefer taking your petition to

Captain Frink? I guarantee you’ll not

find him as accommodating.”

She had no time to answer. The

man tugged her bound hands, then

dragged her along behind him. His

strides were sure, lengthy, and quick. It

took every ounce of her strength to

maintain her footing as they left the cabin

and thread their way through the

companionway up onto the deck. Along

the way, she stumbled here and there in

the darkness, trying to keep up with his

strides. Once, she lost contact with the

man and, reaching down to right herself,

came into contact with a large form

coated with something warm and wet.

She wiped her sticky hand on her shift

hastily and kept her eyes trained upon

first the ceiling, then the night sky, after

realizing, with horror, her error.

“Keep up,” he shouted, grabbing

her hands when she lagged behind,

looking back at her more than once. “If

you want freedom, you must earn it.”

All Constance had ever wanted

was her freedom, freedom from her

father’s overprotection, the pressures to

increase his coffers, not to mention an

unsuitable forced marriage. Now, as she

ascended the steps that lead to her

certain execution, once again she clung

to a pirate’s hand with vigorous zeal,

unwilling to be parted.

“Don’t kill me,” she pleaded.

He turned, his eye narrowing, anger

marring his features. “If you trust
me
,

you shall have your freedom.”

Gunfire sparked the night. She

screamed. Her actions drew men with

crazed expressions toward her.

“Stay calm,” he warned. “That’ll

keep you alive.”

Her eyes roamed over the once

pristine ship, unrecognizable now as she

scanned the broken debris searching for

signs of Captain Collins and Lieutenant

Guffald. She could barely make out a

man in garish clothing through the

crowd, lurching over a man’s form,

shouting, waving his sword to all who

would listen.

“Keep to my back,” her captor

warned. “Do not feast your eyes upon

the carnage ahead.”

They moved closer to the crowded

men positioned at the bow. Bodies of the

unfortunate

lay

scattered

about,

illumined by fires aboard ship, forcing

her to remember another ship, another

night, and the last glimpse of her

mother’s face. Her legs threatened to

buckle as a man’s scream pierced the

darkness and her captor’s arm tensed.

She squeezed his hand, mindful to keep

her eyes trained upon her feet. But she

could not remain detached from her

surroundings long. A flash of light to her

left drew her attention. Near that lighted

torch, she spied two men picking through

a limp man’s pockets. Her eyes focused

on the poor soul, his blond hair bloody,

body vulnerable, yet somehow familiar.

Another torch made everything clear.

Constance

gasped.

Lieutenant

Guffald! With a terrified plea, she tried

unsuccessfully to jerk free of the pirate’s

grasp in order to aid the wounded

lieutenant. But she could not pull free.

The grip on her arm remained

unrelentingly firm.

“Do not fight me,” he growled.

Another scream rent the air like

thunder and lightning during a storm. She

could no longer fight the urge to

discover its source. Curiosity getting the

best of her, she peered around the

pirate’s arm until her gaze locked upon

Captain Collins tied to the mizzen mast.

The sight emerged so horrific, Constance

sank into the abyss.

• • •

Percival Avery braced himself to catch

Lady Constance Danbury in his arms.

Surrounded by the stench of death and

misery, she posed a shapely, unwelcome

mystery he had no time to explore. Why

Simon Danbury’s niece was on the

Octavia
in the first place he couldn’t

comprehend. Her presence aboard the

merchantman put him in a tenuous

position. She was not what he needed.

Not now, not when he’d been so close to

achieving everything he’d worked so

hard to attain, vengeance. His mind

weathered the odds of fate that bound

him to a woman he simply had no time to

rescue.

Simon Danbury’s directive had

placed him under Captain Frink’s

command. The coordinated efforts of

members within Nelson’s Tea dictated

routes taken to sabotage the madman’s

attacks on various cargos sailing the

Channel. Frink’s association with his

sister’s killers created a division of

loyalties within him. He’d lived and

fought for eight months to win the

depraved captain’s trust. Now, thanks to

the appearance of one woman, he stood

to lose everything.

Percy cursed his rotten luck. The

irony was inescapable. Mutiny, the last

resort for a pirate, would be his only

chance to get the lady safely off the ship

and back home into Danbury’s expectant

arms. He was not immune to the

ramifications that one miraculous act

would ignite upon his own hide.

“We can’t afford to let anything get

in our way,” Ollie, his second in

command said, grabbing him by the

sleeve. “We’ve come too far to let

anything stop us now.”

He recalled the many lives lost in

their race to catch Frink’s backer and

swore under his breath. None of their

efforts had gone unrewarded. Time and

time again, they’d prevented further

bloodshed. Yet, the primal creature he’d

become in order to stay sane sickened

him.

“Have you lost your sense of

decency?” he spat. “Allowing Simon’s

niece to bear witness to Frink’s

bloodbath is not part of our plan.”

“We do what needs be done. It’s

the only way to collect our golden

goose. You know this better than I.”

Ollie’s words stung more than salt

on a whipped man’s back. He hated

what Ollie had become, what he’d been

forced to become in order to survive

among Frink’s crew. What had happened

to his convictions of right and wrong?

God help him, he was not the man he’d

set out to be at the beginning of this

mission,

especially

if

he

even

considered finding a way to protect the

girl without making the final cut with

Frink.

Percy turned his back on Ollie, then

scanned over the
Octavia
’s remaining

crew, men who’d fought bravely to

protect the woman in his arms — and

lost.

Their

dwindling

numbers

guaranteed his limited options. He’d

have to make a final stand or die.

Ollie hounded him. “If Frink gets

wind of this, he’ll have you killed.”

“That’s a risk we’re going to have

to take.”

Ollie glared at Constance. “What if

the girl recognizes you?”

“That won’t happen.”

“Are you certain? Would you

wager the lives of our men?”

Percy scowled. He rued the day

he’d accepted Simon’s writ and signed

on with Barnabas Frink. Since that

moment, he’d proven his loyalty to the

insane captain again and again in a quest

to find answers to the mystery of his

sister’s death. He’d been flogged

countless times for his endeavors.

Presently, he shifted his hip, allowing

the scars rubbing against the fabric on

his back to remind him how much he’d

sacrificed to get into Frink’s good

graces. He’d put aside his name, his

position among the ton, and denied

himself happiness. What more would he

be asked to give?

“Sexton!” Frink bellowed. Oh, how

the name and invention of Thomas

Sexton blighted Percy’s soul. “What

have you got there?”

Percy’s gaze dropped to the

unconscious woman in his arms. Golden

hair draped over his arm like the

impenetrable shield of an angel in the

aftermath of Armageddon. Tiny, fragile,

she was no fallen angelic warrior, but an

innocent Frink would destroy.

“Bring her here, Sexton. I want her

to join our little gathering.”

Percy exchanged glances with

Ollie, and then gathered Constance’s

shapely form closer to his chest. She

was a Danbury all right, a lioness. For

this reason, he worried for her safety.

One wrong word, one open-ended threat

had sent Frink into a frenzy more times

than he could count.

“Give him no need to admonish

you, lad. You’ll need your strength,” his

first mate, Jacko, said as he sauntered up

alongside.

Keeping his eyes trained on Frink,

Percy made the decision that would

derail every one of his aspirations for

revenge. “Wait for my signal. We cannot

and must not fail.”

Captain Frink appeared to show

signs of losing patience. There was no

mistaking why the man was the most

feared captain known to man. His form-

fitting maroon brocade jacket was

splattered with blood of the innocent.

His face was smeared with oil,

gunpowder, and sulphur. He wore a

maniacal smile that decreed his hunger

had yet to be staunched. Percy hugged

Constance closer to his heart, prepared

to die protecting her, if need be.

“What have you got there, Sexton?”

“A prize worthy of ransom,

Captain,” he pressed, desiring Frink to

treat his captive as a valuable

commodity and not incommodious sport.

Frink’s eyebrows furrowed. “Why

isn’t she conscious? Why have you

denied me her screams of fright and me

crew her delights?”

The threat in Frink’s eye warned

him to take care, but Percy knew the man

had already heard her screams. What

baited hook did the captain dangle

before him?

“She’s weak, Captain,” Ollie

intruded. “We had no more than made

our way onto deck then she fainted dead

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