Read The Forgiven Duke (A Forgotten Castles Novel) Online
Authors: Jamie Carie
Tags: #Christian romance
“But I made it just for you. Come on, Alex . . . ander . . . ia . . . please?” He leaned closer and gave her a pout reminding her of a little boy. The smell of strong spirits on his breath took her breath away. He nearly fell against her. “Take a moment and chat with me, won’t you? You owe me that, at least, don’t you think?”
She sighed. Maybe if she drank some of his awful tea he would go and find his bed and sleep off the effects of his ale. From the few experiences she had had with drunken fools, she’d found it was better to go along with them when at all possible. She took a few sips from the cup, grimaced, and then set it on the bedside table. “It’s awful. Did you make it yourself?”
“Yes! Yes, just for you. I badgered the whole kitchen down there for the right ingredients. Just like my mother used to make it. You have to finish it, love.”
She shook her head and then sighed, picked it back up, and drained the cup in one long swallow. “There. Now, John, what do you want?”
“Alexandria . . .” His voice trailed off, his hand came up and brushed against her hair. “It wasn’t just the money, you know. I really do love you.”
The money? Did he think she thought he was marrying her for her money? Did he think that if he assured her he was not, she would change her mind? “John, I know you love me, but you need to go to your room,
quietly
, and sleep. We will talk about this in the morning.”
He took a step closer and grasped hold of her shoulders. She tried to back away but he was too strong. His grip tightened. He brought her against his chest and mumbled, “So beautiful, you’re so beautiful, Alex.” His head came down and his lips crushed against hers.
“John.” She tried to back away and talk against the pressure. “Stop it. You’re not thinking clearly. Stop right now.”
But he didn’t stop. He nudged her with that sweet, teasing smile on his lips, almost gently, but too strong for her to get free, toward the bed. He leaned over her, swaying and smiling, kissing her face and then forcing her back, down on the bed. He landed on top of her with a whoosh of breath. “Mmmm, so soft and lovely,” he murmured into her hair.
“John, I will scream if you don’t get off me and leave this instant.”
“No, no, none of that. Dearest Alex.” His lips clamped down over her mouth, kissing her like he’d never kissed her before, deep and consuming, too consuming. She couldn’t breathe! She kicked out and heard a little grunting laugh come from his chest. “I love you, Alex. Love you, only you. I’ll be a good husband, I promise. We’ll find your parents; we will together! That duke doesn’t love you like I do.” He moved over her until she could hardly draw breath, encompassing all but her arms. “Let me show you how much I love you.”
Fear spiraled through her. He wasn’t listening. “John, listen to me. Look at me. John!”
He looked at her, blinking hard as if to focus. Finally he sighed, seeming too tired to argue. “All right. We’ll just lie here a moment ’til you feel better.”
“Until
I
feel better?” Alex tried to squirm away. He pulled her back against his chest and, after a few minutes, started snoring.
Thank God.
She would wait a few minutes, just to be sure he was sound asleep, and then leave him in her bed and go and find another.
It was a good plan. She meant to sneak away from under the tight grip of his arms, but a slow creeping lethargy came over her limbs, from her shoulders to her feet. She shook her head, trying to clear it. She lost track of time, floating it seemed, lying with her eyes half-closed as a wonderful warmth seeped into every fiber of her being. And then she drifted into a deep sleep.
Chapter Twenty
G
abriel woke with a jerk, rolled over onto his stomach, and reached for the ginger root hidden under his pillow. He closed his eyes against the pain of stretching the delicate, healing skin on his back, concentrating instead on chewing the ginger before he opened his eyes. He had found it helped, somehow, getting some of it in his stomach before he opened his eyes. A few minutes passed while he chewed on it and then Ryan entered the room. He was one of the few Englishmen on board the ship, used for translating and now nursing, though Gabriel still couldn’t figure out how he had accomplished that feat.
Matter-of-fact and efficient, he bade Gabriel to sit up and hold his arms out while he unrolled the bandages, took a look at his back, and then spread some new salve on the cuts. He wrapped fresh bandages around him and then stood back and cocked his head to one side with a thoughtful look on his face. “Healing nicely,” he mouthed clearly, taking Gabriel’s chin and studying his eyes. “How’s the rest of you?”
“Sick to death of this stinking hellhole.” Gabriel felt the rasp of his voice against his vocal chords and knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that he would have died without this man. That God had decided to save his life with a song and a pragmatic Englishman.
Ryan chuckled and handed him a cup of tea and bread and then, when he’d finished that, a bowl of broth with some rice in it. Gabriel ate it slowly, wishing he could really talk to Ryan, ask him questions about how he ended up with these madmen, but they wouldn’t allow them a speaking book so they were forced to make do with short sentences.
He had learned a little about Ryan Wrothwood though, enough to know he’d been in the Royal Navy and was from Cornwall. He’d probably been captured on some port of call and pressed into Spanish service. A thin, stately looking fellow, not the typical brawny choice when searching for a good sailor, but he was a good communicator and someone must have noticed that and had him captured. If Gabriel ever got out of here, he was going to take Ryan with him. The question was, could he risk speaking the idea aloud?
“How long until we dock at Reykjavik?
Ryan held up two and then three fingers for days. “Depending on the weather.”
So they were almost there. They had been aboard the
San Cristobel
for over two weeks, and while his back wasn’t the constant fiery agony of the first few days, it was still sore and tight with new skin knitting the strips of torn flesh back together. His back would never look the same, that was certain.
“Do we walk today? I need to regain my strength.” Every day he was allowed on deck for a brief walk, but the jeers and violent-filled hatred he received from the crew made him uneasy to be on the top deck alone. If Ryan was available to walk with him, he went. If not, Gabriel roamed his tiny cabin like a caged cat, padding back and forth with darting, suspicious green eyes, wondering if at any moment they would burst in with new reasons to harm him.
Ryan nodded. “One hour.” He took the empty dishes and turned to go.
“Wait.” Gabriel lowered his voice, hoping he could still be heard. “Escape is paramount. I plan to find a way. You are welcome to come with me.”
Ryan’s gaze darted to the door and then back to Gabriel. He nodded and then took something from his pocket—a very small piece of paper—and passed it over to Gabriel. He pressed a companionable hand on Gabriel’s shoulder, squeezed, and nodded again, turned and left, locking the door as he always did behind him.
Gabriel sat back on the bed and opened the note.
Your Grace, I sense in you a desire to escape if the opportunity presents itself. If you are reading this then you have confirmed my suspicions. If we should have opportunity, I am willing to take the risk and hopefully make my way back to England with you. I will be looking for opportunities when we dock. Let us pray God provides one. Please destroy this after you have read it. Your faithful servant, Ryan Wrothwood
Thank God. Someone on his side. He bowed his head and prayed that God would have mercy and provide them the opportunity and means of escape. Then he tore off a little piece of the paper and placed it in his mouth. He chewed with a grim smile.
Compared with some of the fare they’d been giving him since his capture, it wasn’t half bad.
THE DAY DAWNED EARLY WHEN
the
San Cristobel
docked on Reykjavik’s shores. Three soldiers burst into Gabriel’s cabin, filling the small space with their muscled bodies and dark, scowling faces, demanding he come with them. He barely had a chance to throw on his shirt before they hauled him above to the foredeck where Didacus, resplendent in the Spanish uniform of black coat with tails, red waistcoat with gold buttons, a golden sash, and dark breeches, stood ready to meet him. His cohort, El Gato, made the uniform look less stately, more like a tomato with a tricorn hat for a stem, but his eyes were equally hateful as he glared at Gabriel.
The Spanish soldiers shoved him in front of the two men. Gabriel stood straight and lifted his chin, refusing to acknowledge the ill treatment, acting as if he had come here on his own accord, in full health, with the power of the St. Easton name behind him. It was a bluff. But a bluff was all he had at the moment.
“We will be going ashore now.” Didacus motioned with his hand toward the shore.
Gabriel nodded briefly that he understood. The first order of business was to find out if the regent’s army was still here. If so, and he wouldn’t be surprised if that were the case, then they had yet to locate Alexandria and it would be up to him to find her. If they had departed for England, then she was on her way or already there. But he must not let the Spanish know of this possibility. If Alexandria was in the regent’s care and protection, they would no longer need him. That fact would make him as good as dead. And if the regent had her safely in England, then his only chance for any kind of future would be escape.
Didacus motioned to Ryan, who was ready with pen and paper. He spoke instructions while the man wrote. Gabriel pressed his heels together and waited, the wind blowing his hair into his face. It hadn’t been this long since he was a boy. He didn’t like it long; it had too much curl in it. Even though waving locks were the fashion for some, it wouldn’t behave well enough to suit him. He liked it short. Manageable. Within the confines of a quick brushing or raking of his fingers. What he wouldn’t give for a haircut and shave.
He looked down and almost chuckled at his thoughts. His clothes were filthy, in tatters, his body thin and battered. Alexandria probably wouldn’t recognize him if she saw him like this. He doubted his own mother would.
Finally, the paper was handed to him.
Didacus says you will be given one day in Reykjavik to find out if Alexandria is in the town. You will be closely guarded and watched, so don’t do anything stupid. He will allow you to disembark with a contingent of six soldiers, and you are to report back to the ship by nightfall. Do you understand?
“Do these soldiers speak English?” Gabriel asked Didacus. “I should like Ryan to accompany me to help translate and write in the speaking book so I may question the residents.”
El Gato spit toward Gabriel’s shoes, missed, and scowled at him, saying something Gabriel was glad he couldn’t make out. Didacus rattled off a stream of commands at Ryan and then nodded.
“I am to come with you, Your Grace.”
“I would also like funds to tidy my appearance and for food and other expenses for the day.”
Didacus smiled a humorless smile, brows raised as if he found the request amusing. He looked down his long nose and nodded though, took a purse from his pocket, and counted out some coins. “Going to make yourself pretty for her, St. Easton? I suppose that is part of the trap, isn’t it?” He handed the coins over to Ryan. “He will keep them for you and see that you spend them wisely.”
Gabriel ignored the barb and shrugged. “When do we leave?”
“As soon as you can be ready.”
“How about now?”
“Fine.”
Didacus walked up to him, reached out a gloved hand, and took hold of Gabriel’s chin. He squeezed it hard, lifting it so his dark brown eyes narrowed and stared into Gabriel’s gaze. With as much intention as he could manage, Gabriel lifted his dark lashes and put his notorious green eyes to use, narrowing his eyelids until they were green slits of steel, mimicking the wild stare of lethal contemplation—a panther on the hunt.
Didacus let go of him and took a step back. “Don’t try anything . . .”
Gabriel’s lip curled. He lifted his chin and kept the steady stare on him until Didacus turned his back and strode away.
THE INN IN REYKJAVIK WAS
crowded with British soldiers, eating and drinking, laughing, some playing cards, some grouped around the fire, heads together in conversation. Their presence answered Gabriel’s first question. They hadn’t found Alexandria yet. It was as he had suspected.
As their group of eight made their way inside, the English soldiers eyed the Spanish soldiers with distrust and vice versa. Some of the soldier’s eyes lit on Gabriel with brief curiosity, thinking him a prisoner perhaps from his appearance.
Gabriel stared each of them in the eye, hoping for a familiar face, and sat at a long table next to Ryan. “You must spread the word of who I am among them. Find the commander and tell him I am a prisoner and the regent’s confidant in the matter of Alexandria Featherstone and that they would do well to help us,” he whispered.
Ryan nodded once. The Spanish soldiers watched them, two of them edging closer to hear any conversation.
A serving woman came over, eyes fearful as she looked from one to another of them. “I am afraid we are low on provisions, sirs. I can bring you drink and a bowl of fish stew. That is all I have.”
Ryan wrote down what she said and what the men around them were saying. They agreed to the food. She started to leave but Gabriel brushed her sleeve with his hand, stopping her. “Madam.” He gave her his best self-deprecating smile as he brought her attention round to him. “Do you have a barber in this town? I have been seasick and on a ship for a very long time. I would like a haircut and a shave.”
She shook her head and then stopped, studying him. Ryan wrote:
No barber, but she says she cuts her husband and son’s hair and she would be willing to cut yours if you like.
“Yes, thank you. Can we do that soon? Now?”
“Let me get the food first.” She left and came back a short time later with a tray of bowls, putting the steaming stew in front of each soldier. She turned toward Gabriel and motioned him to follow her up the stairs to the second floor.