did not think she needed the glasses to see clearly: he had felt her
seeing into his soul since the moment they met. He knew he should
fear her for that, should be as wary of her as she was of him.
Instead he felt as giddy as the wild boy he had once been, the boy
he rushed to tell her about as he paced.
"You would have liked me in those days. I would have taken
you to the flower market, and we would have bought oranges and
eaten them on the long steps above the harbor and watched the
fishing boats. I didn't like fishing, but I love to sail. My mother
didn't want me to go to sea, but I was nearly a man. It was time I
started to take care of her." He sighed and gestured broadly. "But
there was a storm that blew the fishing fleet off course, too close to
the routes sailed by the corsairs."
He moved to perch on the table before Honoria's chair.
Everything he'd felt and feared and been through had been his
closely guarded secrets for years. He'd held his privacy tightly,
protected it when it was all he had in the world, yet now he handed
his life to Honoria Pyne with an eagerness that was almost
unthinking. She did not laugh, or repudiate him. She listened
gravely, her guard down. She was lost in his story, her bright blue
eyes full of innocent interest.
He did not know when he had taken her hands in his, but he
found he needed to be touching her when he told the rest. "I was
big for my age, and strong. Ibrahim Rais took me for a slave on his
galley. I pulled an oar and fought to survive, and tried to escape.
Ibrahim Rais does not take kindly to escape attempts. He flogged
me, and I tried to run again. Only to be flogged again. He said he
didn't intend to kill me if I escaped again
—
not until he tracked
down every member of my family and killed them first. He will have
complete loyalty, even in his galley slaves. I've seen him murder
innocents, Honoria—the relatives of those who thought they had
escaped him. He always finds the ones he calls traitors. He rules
through fear, and once you are his, you are his forever. I stopped
fighting him and started thinking. He found out I was smart, and
cunning." His laugh was soft, bitter and dangerous. "I learned
what battles to fight and when. I learned patience. I was more
cunning than I ever let show, but cautious. I've become rich and
trusted, but I have never given up trying to escape."
He was on his knees in front of Honoria's chair. He still held
one of her hands in his, but his other hand cupped her cheek. Her
soft, warm, supple cheek. Her eyes were large and bright as coins.
"I will never let Ibrahim Rais hurt you," he promised her. "I will
protect you with my life." He did not know why he spoke so; he had
not meant to offer her anything but a safe haven inside the walls of
his house. Instead he was making extravagant promises, and
meaning every word.
She didn't look like she believed it, and Diego was glad of
that. At least he told himself it was better for her not to trust him.
Despite the prick of hurt, he knew he could not afford to make
promises
—
not when the need for freedom was eating up his soul.
He had to think of himself first. He moved back and resumed his
perch on the edge of the table
.
"I never wanted to be a pirate."
"But you are one." The first words she'd spoken in some time
were no more than blunt truth.
"But I don't want to be one. Last year I thought I had found a
way out. Last year, I actually performed a good deed. You look
skeptical
, señorita,
but it is true. I saved the bey's life," he said,
drawing himself up proudly. "An assassination attempt while the
bey visited the harbor to inspect the fleet. I was rewarded grandly
at a ceremony in the bey's palace. The bey himself presented me
with a priceless sword made of solid silver." He stretched his hands
out before him, to show her the length. "A beautiful cutlass, though
of course, silver doesn't hold an edge. I was grateful for the honor,
but it was the several pounds of silver and the jewels in the hilt of
the sword that I wanted. That, and for the bey to give me safe
conduct from the city. I could have returned home a wealthy man.
But Ibrahim
Rais
interfered. He insisted the sword and my service
rightfully belonged to him. The bey needed Ibrahim Rais's ships
and the wealth he brought to the city, so he agreed. I was left with
nothing but his gratitude, and all I could do was smile and say that
his gratitude was more than enough
."
He could still taste the bitterness in his mouth, and dark
anger burned in him as though he'd swallowed hot coals. He took a
long swallow of the cool fruit drink and forced down the anger that
he had kept under control for so long. He had to be patient, to keep
his head. But he was so close! And she was so
—
What was she? He looked at the red-haired Englishwoman,
trying to be ruthlessly objective. She is your tool, he reminded
himself. You bought her for her talent with languages. She is
nothing more than a means to an end. Use her. That is what she is
here for. He studied the alert intelligence on her fine-skinned face,
and found himself counting the dust of freckles across her cheeks
and nose
—
not for the first time
.
He found himself wanting to trace the soft line of her lips. It
would be a sweet mouth to kiss. Her lushly curved body was hidden
by layers of loosely fitting robes, but he studied that as well as she
sat stiff and straight in the chair across from him. He wanted to do
more than to look, he wanted to touch and taste and explore. He
found that his hands had curled tightly around the inlaid edge of
the table, aching with the urge to draw her from the chair and strip
off layer after layer to finally look at all the woman that
—
Belonged to him.
Why not do what he wanted with her?
Because that was not why he had schemed to bring her
secretly into his house.
Wasn't it? the insidious voice in his head questioned. He
ignored the voice that told him he could do whatever he wanted. He
had never taken a woman, slave or free, against her wishes. He
was not Ibrahim Rais, he reminded himself harshly, to do what he
wanted with whomever he wished. But Diego knew he was no better
than Ibrahim Rais; that his master had taught him well how to be
cruel and indulge every man's natural selfishness. If he had a
conscience or any kindness left in him, this innocent young woman
would be safely waiting to be ransomed back to her home and
family. What was to become of her, once he'd used her for his own
purposes?
She'll be safe, he told himself as he moved to the other side of
the table. It was necessary to put distance between himself and the
woman he wanted. He doubted she'd ever been alone in a room
with a man before. He wondered if she had the slightest notion of
what happened when a man and woman came together when they
were alone. To teach her was so tempting.
He fought the temptation, and took up the letter to show her.
His hands shook a little. He stared at them, telling himself that, yes,
desire ran hot through him, but that it was desire for freedom,
desire for the treasure that was rightfully his. Honoria was not the
cause of this weakness, or the heat that flared inside him. He was
not going to lay a hand on her. She was safe, from his needs, and
Ibrahim Rais's vengeance. All she had to do was translate the
letter. Ibrahim Rais would never know Diego had stolen his
precious letter, or that Honoria Pyne had translated it for him.
There was no way any harm could come to her over this.
St. Ambrose Rectory
London, 1838
"I am convinced that I know the very girl who is the key to your
happiness, my son."
The Reverend Joshua Menzies read the words aloud slowly,
trying once more to make sense of them before he was called to his
duties as pastor of St. Ambrose's.
Someone had died in a brawl—no surprise there. Not a night
went by in this parish in the slums of London without someone
dying in a fight, or from cholera, or in a house fire, or from being
attacked by thieving ruffians, or from drinking bad spirits. People
died all the time, and were no great loss. That his flock expected
him to hold a funeral service in the rain was damned inconvenient.
He wanted to wait until he was good and drunk before joining the
mourners out in the downpour. If he joined them at all—he might
just let the sexton read through the service. The message from his
long-lost father made a good excuse to spend the day indoors and
alone.
The letter that had arrived at the parsonage just an hour
before, delivered by the hand of a grimy, furtive gypsy vagabond,
had been written at least a year before. The paper was soiled and
torn, the ink faded. The words, from a man he thought dead, were
strange. Instructive. Morally uplifting. Full of repentance for the
days the old man had spent as a renegade corsair calling himself
Ibrahim Rais. The hoary platitudes were even worse than the
sniffling breast-beating. This was not the man Joshua remembered,
but certainly the handwriting was his father's.
"Abraham Menzies, back from the dead," Joshua mused.
"Lucifer probably wouldn't have him." He'd thought the old man
dead, or that he'd forgotten his English family completely when he
disappeared into hiding in the Ottoman Empire. His wealth and
power and cunning hadn't saved him from capture when the pirate
city was taken back in 1830. The wonder was that the fierce and
feared Ibrahim Rais hadn't met the fate he so richly deserved.
Perhaps all his wealth had gone into buying a prison cell rather than
a hangman's rope. What really mattered was not that Abraham
Menzies was still alive, but that none of his wealth had made its
way home to the son he'd left behind.
Joshua Menzies remembered the days when he'd wanted to
be a pirate himself, how he'd longed to sail off to Barbary to join
his father in raiding and plundering. But his father wanted
respectability for his family. Abraham Menzies had deserted the
British Navy to find his fortune, but he wanted his family tucked
safely away, far from the dangers in the heathen land where he'd
found wealth and power. Little Joshua remained with his mother in
a sleepy Cotswolds village, living on the money and letters that
always arrived by mysterious means, until one day word came that
Algiers had fallen. He was well into his studies at Oxford by
then—reluctantly, but it had been what his father wanted of him. It
was just as well that he'd struggled on and taken a divinity degree,
as there was no future in pirating anymore. But not much future in
being a vicar with no rich patron or relatives to help him get on in
the Church, either. His hope had been to secure a place as secretary
to one of the wealthy friends he'd caroused with at Oxford, but no
young lord had taken him into their service. And the money from
his father had long ago run out, so it was a poor London parish for
Joshua Menzies.
Menzies stretched his long legs out under his desk, smoothed
the wrinkled paper once more, and continued reading.
The more I think upon the past, if my mind does not betray me, if
my reason has not been stolen, if my hunger for gold and gems has
not driven me mad, you will listen to me now. I was wicked then—
as vain as the young Spanish captain I loved as a son. He stole my