The sudden cold stole Treynor’s breath. Instinctively he let go of Cunnington and stretched both arms out, parting the water until he burst through the surface and filled his lungs with air.
Somehow Cunnington managed to surface as well a few feet away. “Treynor! Help me!” His head disappeared in the frothy waves, but his hands flailed against the water. Eventually, he came up and gurgled Treynor’s name again.
Blast the man. He deserved to drown….
Treynor scanned the sea, looking for Jeannette. He didn’t want to waste his time with Cunnington if she needed him. Holding his head above the swells, he searched, but to no avail. “Jeannette!”
The voices of desperate men answered him: the cries of those who were drowning, the last of those jumping ship, the cheers of the French sailors.
Had she drowned? Treynor’s heart pounded hard and fast, fear for her life somehow lending him strength.
“Treynor!” Cunnington grabbed hold of him, nearly pulling him under.
Treynor gasped for breath and foundered before he could turn Cunnington on his back and begin towing him toward flotsam that might save them.
When Cunnington quit struggling and shut up, his pale lids lowering to cover his eyes, Treynor considered it a blessing. He was easier to maneuver this way. But as the
Tempest
sank behind them, it threatened to pull down everything close to it. Treynor had to use all his strength to swim away from the lethal force of the vast whirlpool that sucked at their legs.
He managed to break free from the ship’s invisible hold just as Cunnington regained consciousness and began mumbling, but the floating debris that had appeared so plentiful from the ship now seemed miles away. Treynor wasn’t sure how long they could survive with only his one good arm to propel them forward. The darkening sky and frothy waves promised a storm.
Squinting against the saltwater that stung his eyes, Treynor hoped to distinquish between the shades of gray surrounding them.
Behind him, the
Tempest
was gone.
Larger and larger waves curled over their heads, causing them to sputter time and again. They passed other sailors as Treynor struggled on, some drowned but still floating. Bits of debris swirled around them, too, but none large enough to support one man, let alone two.
Still, Treynor swam toward the enemy frigate that appeared and disappeared on the horizon like an elusive phantom ship. He could hear the French call to each other in their native tongue as they lifted survivors out of the water. But they seemed in no particular hurry.
Using only enough effort to keep them afloat, which was taxing enough, he paused to stare at Cunnington’s thin, white face. The first lieutenant was responsible for a massacre of good men, a true loss to England, but a shipmate was a shipmate. Treynor could no sooner condemn Cunnington to die than he could willingly forfeit his own life. But that didn’t mean he wanted to save him.
More determined than ever to survive, he swam on.
So now …the battle’s over …we will drink a can of wine …and you will drink to your love …and I will drink to mine
…. He sang inside his head to keep his mind off the numbness invading his limbs.
I’m coming, Jeannette. Don’t give up
.
As if he’d spoken those words aloud, he heard her voice, shaky but otherwise true, “Treynor! Over here!”
Treynor had not the breath to answer loudly enough to be heard, but the knowledge that Jeannette lived and was only yards away kept him swimming. He pulled Cunnington in her direction as she maneuvered a portion of the ship’s broken mast toward them.
You will …drink to your love …and I will drink to mine
.
“Are you all right?” she gasped when he came within reach.
“Aye,” he whispered and allowed her to pull him closer. With one last surge of effort, he threw his good arm over the mast and lowered his head to the wet wood.
Jeannette slid around it until she clung next to him. “You look t-t-terrible,” she said, her teeth chattering through her words. “D-amn if you …didn’t rescue …that d-devil.” Shivering violently, she reached out to help support Cunnington.
Treynor didn’t protest. Too exhausted to utter another syllable, he could only close his eyes in relief as she wiped seawater off his face.
“Don’t you dare …d-drown, Lieutenant,” she warned through blue lips. “You have p-promised me something …and I intend …t-to collect it.”
* * *
The French lieutenant stood in front of the ragtag line of prisoners huddled together, sopping wet and shaking, on the deck of the frigate
Superbe
. Short and stocky, with dark hair and a long mustache, he strutted before them, preening like a rooster.
“I am Lieutenant Favre,” he announced in passable English. “Your captain has not survived. His small boat capsized, and he died before we reached him. We lost our own captain when the mast fell, our first and second lieutenants as well. So you can officially surrender to me. Who is your most senior officer?”
“I …am.” Cunnington responded as best he could from where he sat next to Treynor and Jeannette. Propped against the forward mast, he looked no better than a talking corpse. “We …surrender, sir.”
He tried to stand but couldn’t manage it, and Favre didn’t move to help him.
Treynor watched, cradling his wounded arm. Jeannette wondered if he, like her, was taking stock of the ship’s damage and the dirt-streaked faces of the surviving French crew, who were far less numerous than she had supposed.
Evidently, the battle had been brutal on both sides.
“It was close, no?” As the French lieutenant addressed Cunnington, his words echoed Jeannette’s thoughts. “Only a fraction of our men are left.” He nodded toward several of his crew who stood close by, pistols drawn. “Unfortunately, our Breton navigator has been killed. Has your navigator, by chance, survived?”
“No.” Treynor answered for Cunnington; Cunnington didn’t seem to know.
“Then we shall keep to the open sea to the north of us until after this storm has passed.” Favre squinted at the hazy sky. “I have no desire to end up shipwrecked along our own rocky coast.”
“Meanwhile, may we have some blankets to keep the wounded among us warm?” Treynor asked. “And the lady?”
Jeannette crossed her arms in front of her in an effort to hide her near-nudity as Favre turned his attention her way.
“Ah, yes. The lady. I was coming to her.” He strode across the five or six feet between them to stop in front of her. “Who are you? A stowaway? A whore? The captain’s daughter or mistress?”
Jeannette bit her lip. Her accent would give her away as soon as she opened her mouth.
“She is the wife of a powerful English baron who will pay handsomely for her safe return.” Treynor answered for her.
Favre raised his dark eyebrows. “Indeed! Then I should like to hear the lady tell me who he is.”
When Jeannette hesitated, Treynor once again filled the silence. “She is married to the Baron St. Ives of Cornwall. Perhaps you have heard of him?”
The French lieutenant kept his eyes on Jeannette, but raised his pistol at Treynor. “I said I would like to hear from the lady.”
Jeannette did her best to eradicate the accent from her speech, but she knew the moment she heard her own voice that she had failed. “Lieutenant Treynor speaks the truth. My husband is the Baron St. Ives.”
“Aha, a Frenchwoman, no?”
Jeannette didn’t respond.
“I suspect there is more to this.” He looked to Treynor. “Who is she really?”
“I just told you.”
Favre’s jaw tightened. “So you did,
monsieur
. But I want to know how this woman came to be where she is.”
“By abandoning ship and swimming for all she was worth, like the rest of us.” Treynor’s sarcasm did little to endear him to Favre. The French lieutenant’s finger tightened on the trigger.
“You will not make a fool of me. Answer my question!”
Treynor glared up at him without response.
Afraid Favre would shoot him, Jeannette opened her mouth to tell the truth, but the report of his pistol deafened her before she could speak. She screamed and lurched toward Treynor, but Cunnington beat her to it. With a groan of anguish, the first lieutenant took the ball in the chest.
“Cunnington!” Treynor cried as Cunnington’s body sagged on top of him, eyes wide as he gasped for air.
Treynor eased him to the deck. Bright red blood spread over the first lieutenant’s shirt to mingle with the crimson of his earlier injury.
“Cunnington, can you hear me?” Treynor asked.
Cunnington licked his lips. “Had to do something—” he swallowed “—to make it worth …your effort in saving me, Treynor.”
“You should not have done it,” Treynor said.
“No? Ah, well”—a gasp and a groan—”I am the son of …a viscount, remember? I must live up …to my station.”
“Indeed.” When Cunnington’s eyelids closed, Treynor gently shook him. “Hold on, man. This isn’t over yet. We will make it, you and I.”
The first lieutenant’s eyelids fluttered open again. “No. It is better that I …die. You are so—” he coughed “—so much better at living.” He tried to laugh, but groaned instead.
Treynor stripped off his shirt and wadded it up to plug the hole in Cunnington’s chest, applying pressure to stop the bleeding. “Concentrate on catching your breath.”
“I am dying …an honorable death, am I not?” he asked, his voice wobbling as his chest started to jerk.
“Yes.” Jeannette took his hand. “We are witnesses to that.”
At her words, his face lit up with the most genuine smile she had ever seen him wear. “Tell my father,” he whispered and with one final gasp, he was gone.
Jeannette’s throat constricted and her eyes stung as she stared at Cunnington’s face. “Thank you,” she told him.
Releasing the first lieutenant’s hand, she stood and faced Favre, who watched dispassionately. It was beginning to rain, which only made their situation more untenable. “I am Lady Jeannette Boucher, daughter of Jacques Boucher, Comte de Lumfere,” she said proudly. “I shall appreciate your taking any further revenge on me and not these injured men.”
The French officer saluted her, his dark eyes shining like pieces of obsidian. “So it is as I thought! We have managed to reclaim one of our own.”
“It matters not who she used to be,” Treynor said. “She is now the wife of an English baron. He would happily line your pockets with gold to get her back.”
The Frenchman reached out to finger a lock of Jeannette’s cropped hair.
When she pulled away, he dropped his hand, but his eyes warmed as they took in the generous amount of flesh revealed by her gauzy shift.
“Hmmm …the only thing I hate worse than an Englishman is a former member of our own aristocracy,” he mused. “But I must say, she is a rare beauty, even for a Frenchwoman.”
“Do you not hear, man?” Treynor argued. “St. Ives—”
“I have heard enough about this baron,” Favre snapped. “What is he to me? Would you have me sacrifice my principles for a few francs?”
“But you have nothing to gain by taking her back to France!”
“This woman has missed her rendezvous with the guillotine,
monsieur
. Justice must be served. But how would you know? You English still labor under the control of the rich and powerful, while we …we are free.” He lifted his chin and paced in front of them. “And then there is the pleasure of her company on the voyage home,” he added with a lewd smile. “The English baron would certainly hold me accountable for any liberties I might take. The guillotine will not.”
Treynor shoved himself to his feet. “She would be worth much more—”
“I have been at sea a long time,
monsieur
. Nothing could be worth more than what I plan to enjoy at her expense. And the fact that she is a highborn lady will make our time together all the more …stimulating. Perhaps it will teach her how a real man takes a woman. We all know the English make love only to their money!”
Some of the French sailors sniggered.
Lieutenant Favre seemed to enjoy their mirth, but he didn’t laugh with them. Instead, his teeth gleamed beneath his mustache as he smiled, his eyes wandering back to Jeannette. “I will provide you with what clothing I can find,” he told her. “You will bathe and dress, then join me and the other officers at supper.”
“And if I refuse?” she asked.
Favre’s eyes sliced to Treynor. “Then I will kill this man here.”
A muscle twitched in Treynor’s cheek. “My life means nothing to her.”
The Frenchman cocked one eyebrow. “What I have observed tells me differently,” he told Treynor. “And I can assure you your life means even less to
me
.” He nodded to one of his men who moved forward and put a newly primed pistol to Treynor’s head.
His body tense, his eyes mere slits of hatred, Treynor glared at Favre.
“No!” Jeannette’s pulse raced, making her blood rush in her ears until she could hear nothing else. The soldier with the gun grinned, but before he could pull the trigger, she sank to her knees. “Please. I will do anything. Just spare him.”
* * *
Treynor’s injured arm began to throb as soon as he grew warm enough to feel it. Propping himself against a cannon on the badly battered gun deck, where three of the French crew guarded him and the other prisoners with pistols, he proceeded to extract the splinters, gasping from the pain with every jerk.
Blessed darkness hovered at the corners of his mind as he worked, but the thought of Jeannette, frightened and alone in Lieutenant Favre’s quarters, kept him from succumbing to oblivion.
Laying his head back and breathing deeply as the rain fell on his face, he let himself rest when his grasp on consciousness became too tenuous. Then he started again.
The French had given them blankets, but brought no food or drink. Treynor longed for a bit of rum or brandy to steady his hand and ease the pain. Or some nourishment to rebuild his strength. His only respite from the gruesome, bloody business with his arm turned out to be Smedley, who moaned next to him, gut-shot.