Captive Splendors (39 page)

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Authors: Fern Michaels

BOOK: Captive Splendors
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She had killed before and she had done it again;
would
kill still again, if necessary, but never would she allow herself to be at the mercy of a man's lust.
 
Silently she crept from her seclusion near the foremast and took stock of the situation. Her eyes widened as she watched Caleb square off against a burly attacker who wielded a wicked cutlass. Another of Kiefft's men was creeping up behind him, his intent only too clear.
With a wild whoop Wren was on the man's back, smacking him over the head with the hilt of her weapon. Startled, Caleb turned and took a blow on his shoulder. He grinned as Wren slid from the dead man's back, her eyes gleaming in the dim light. It couldn't be possible! Her dark hair was flying about her shoulders and her skirt was gone, revealing her long, curvaceous legs. With her tattered clothes and wild hair, she looked just like the Sea Siren.
“I couldn't let him kill you. Not after I've only just found you again.” She smiled. “Are we winning or losing?”
Caleb threw back his head and laughed. “You might look like the Sea Siren, but she'd never ask a question like that. Look around—we've repelled them for the time being. But they'll be back.” His expression changed, his voice became deeper, his eyes lingered on her face. “Sweetheart,” he said, gathering her into his arms, “I, for one, am proud to fight beside you.”
“Then you believe they'll come back?” she asked, her eyes darkening with an unspoken fear.
“Aye, sweetheart, we can almost bet on it. Are you frightened?”
Wren clutched at him, her lips close against his chest. “Yes,” she whispered, her voice barely audible. “I'm frightened that something will happen to one of us.” She lifted her head and looked directly at him, her eyes filled with meaning. “I want you, Caleb. I love you and I want you to make love to me. If something should happen . . . I don't want to die without knowing you completely, totally.”
Caleb's eyes grew darker with pent-up desire. Wren, his beautiful Wren, had at last become a woman. A woman who loved and wanted to be loved. Wordlessly, he lifted her into his arms and carried her across the deck, taking her to the captain's cabin. And as he did, he whispered against her ear, telling her of the first time Regan had made love to his Siren, there in the same cabin, behind the shroud of an isolating fog.
Wren touched her fingers delicately to his lips. “Shh. Ours is the first love, the only love. Never have two people loved the way we do. Ever since I was a little girl I've wanted to be like the Sea Siren. For the longest time I hadn't even dreamed that Sirena was that woman and that Regan was her handsome captain. But I'm grown up now, Caleb. And the only woman I want to be is your woman.”
With his foot he swung the cabin door shut, his mouth closed over hers, his heart filling with an overpowering love for her. He worked the laces of her bodice, stripping her of the confining cloth. Her clothing came away piece by piece, and always his mouth kissed and tasted the freshly exposed skin. She was naked in his arms, turning her body beneath his caresses, offering herself, tempting him again and again with her sighs of pleasure and low moans of passion.
Finally, having little patience for the restrictions his own clothing imposed, he broke away from her, tearing and ripping at the material, eager to be naked in the arms of the woman he loved.
Wren's senses soared and whirled, making her dizzy with yearning and a deep hunger for him. Gone were the fears she had known. She was a woman, Caleb's woman, and she wanted him, needed him, demanded he possess her. She answered his caresses with a sizzling response that bordered on an animal lust. Wantonly, she explored his body with her lips, brazened the most sensuous caresses and invited him to partake of her passions with an exquisite joy.
Caleb delighted in his bewitching partner, withholding the moment of completion to savor her charms further. He rejoiced to find his desires met by hers. In the darkness he perceived her through his fingers, through his lips, and was intoxicated with their love for each other.
Straining toward him, throbbing with unfulfilled desire, her body rose and fell in rhythmic obedience to an instinctive yearning. And then a cry came from her: “Take me! Have me! Make me your own!” She pulled him to her, gathering him into her, making his flesh a part of her own.
 
Hours later, sitting on the quiet deck, Wren snuggled deep into Caleb's arms. “Did you really think I looked like the Sea Siren?”
“For a moment I really did. But there's only one Sea Siren and only one Wren. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” she breathed contentedly. “You love me because I'm who I am.”
Caleb frowned and then laughed. “That's exactly what I'm saying, but somehow when you say it, it sounds different.”
“That's because men use too many words when action is needed.” Her silken arms embraced him, her lips covered his.
“Caleb, tell me about the boys back in Java. I can't wait to see them again. I was in England three years, and Wynde was just a baby when I left.”
Caleb's voice took on a faraway tone as he recalled the last time he had seen his half brothers. “I imagine they've grown at least a head taller since I've seen them. At times they're so much alike I can hardly separate them in my mind. Let's see if I have it right. Thor is the oldest. Strong and domineering and quite aware of the responsibility of his younger brothers. Then comes Storm, serious and inquisitive, always asking ‘Why?' Rein is third in line.” Caleb laughed, remembering. “Rein is always complaining that he gets left out of everything, but he's the most headstrong of them all. Sometimes I think he gets himself into trouble just to gain attention. And Wynde is the baby. He's still hanging on to Sirena's skirts, but that will soon change. You see, I know a secret. ”
At the mention of a secret, Wren's head popped up from his shoulder. “Tell me. I love secrets.”
“Sirena is expecting another child. By now she and Regan should be in Java awaiting the birth. I pray it will be a girl. Regan will need a daughter now that I'm taking you away from him.”
“I wonder what Sirena will name the baby if it is a girl. All the boys managed to be born during some of the worst storms in Java's history.”
“Knowing Sirena and Regan, could you expect anything else?” Caleb asked, laughing. “Regardless of the weather when this child is born, Regan said if he had a daughter he would call her Fury.”
“Fury,” Wren whispered, trying the name on her lips.
Caleb smiled again. “Regan will have his daughter, and she'll be born during a storm, and she'll carry the name Fury van der Rhys. Sirena will see to it.”
 
All through the rest of the night the crew of the
Sea Siren
was on watch, scanning the water and the shoreline.
“What do you think, Captain?” Peter asked in a whisper, careful not to wake Wren, who was sleeping contentedly in the crook of Caleb's arm.
“I don't think they'll be back anymore tonight, but tomorrow will tell another story. The only thing that saved us is the fact that they're not fighters but farmers, men of the earth. There was no heart in most of them for what they were doing. As their friends fell at their feet, some of them went over the side. God alone knows how many will return in the morning. How one man can and did make such a mess of things, I'll never understand.” Caleb shook his head. “I find it hard to believe that Kiefft would kill innocent people just to prevent me from going back to Holland to make my report. We're playing a wait ing game for now. If it weren't for the sandbar. . .”
“. . . we'd be out to sea by now,” Peter said softly. “Captain, I. . .”
“I told you I place no blame on you for our circumstances, nor do the women or the crew. Full tide will get us out of here.”
“Only if full tide arrives before Kiefft and his men.”
“We can't think of that now,” Caleb said as he shifted slightly to ease Wren into a more comfortable position. Then he dozed off.
When the first pearly gray streak of light heralded the coming dawn, Caleb blinked and was instantly awake. Joining Peter at the rail, he watched as dawn fought the darkness for supremacy. His eyes, like Peter's, were on the shoreline. Even from this distance they could make out hurrying figures and frenzied activity.
“Two more hours till full tide,” Peter said morosely.
Caleb's gut rumbled and his face became a mask of hatred for what his eyes were seeing. They would all be killed. He would never make it back to England and Holland and would never live to enjoy his new life with Wren. There were at least fifty men assembling on the shore. As each minute raced on, more arrived carrying guns.
“Captain, look! Upriver! Do you see what I see?” Peter cried excitedly.
“By God, I do, and I don't believe it!” Caleb exclaimed, tossing his seaman's cap in the air. “It's Sassacus!”
“How many canoes do you count, Captain?”
“At least two dozen.”
“They're coming to help. Never have I been so glad to see an Indian in my life!” Peter shouted hoarsely.
“Peter, they're not coming to fight. Sassacus will not intervene between the white men, just as I wouldn't intervene between the red men. He's bringing those canoes to pull us off the sandbar. Lord, if I live to be a thousand, I'll never forget this sight. Order the crew on deck to help secure the lines. Make fast work of it. Sassacus timed it just right. As soon as we're free of the sandbar, the tide will carry us out. The settlers will have no stomach for a fight on water with all those Indians. They would be hopelessly outnumbered and it would be a slaughter.”
Caleb drew in his breath as he watched the Indians strain with their paddles to cross the Sound. Their bodies gleaming with sweat, they surrounded the
Siren
and worked to free her from the spit that held her down. A mighty lurch, and the lady crashed into the water.
There were no happy shouts from the Indians at the success of their efforts. Their expressions were staid, placid. They didn't understand why they had done what they had, only that their chief and the captain, who was a white man, were friends.
No words were spoken, and Caleb raised his hand to his head in a jaunty salute to Sassacus, who returned it in kind. This time Caleb put a name to the damnable mist that clouded his vision. He was shedding tears for a friend he would never see again. How could he ever repay his debt to the courageous Indian?
A single tear formed in the corner of Sassacus's eye and he wiped at it unashamedly; at the same time Caleb ran the back of his hand over both his eyes.
“Another time, another place, Caleb van der Rhys, and we will again be brothers,” Sassacus said softly.
Only Wren was close enough to Caleb to hear him say, “Look for me in that other world one day, Sassacus, and we will hunt and fish together, good friend.”
If you enjoyed CAPTIVE SPLENDORS be sure not to miss
CAPTIVE EMBRACES
Read on for a special excerpt!
 
 
 
An eKensington e-book exclusive on sale now.
Chapter One
1628
 
The late afternoon sun dipped low on the western horizon, suffusing the tropical isle of Java in a red glow that crept through the tall, narrow windows and reflected off Luanna's slim naked beauty. Sleekly formed hips, narrow as a boy's, caught the sun as she raised her arms to undo the pins at the back of her head, allowing her jet-black hair to cascade to her slim waist. Her small breasts were firm and high; her body absent of hair as was the Javanese tradition. Luanna was fully aware of the sensual picture she presented to Regan van der Rhys. As the most sought after and notorious prostitute on the island, it was her business to know how to appeal to a man's lusty appetites.
Regan watched Luanna's preparations; mentally comparing her to a sultry feline. She moved toward the bed where he waited, sliding in beside him, pressing her hips suggestively against him. Her oblique, dark eyes smiled into his. Regan pulled her to him, conscious of her slender length against his flesh, feeling his responses rise to a throbbing urgency. Her skin was cool and fragrant, her hair perfumed and silky, falling over his face as she kissed and nibbled artfully at his lips. He returned her embrace, tasted her mouth, enjoyed the suppleness of her body. His hands found her breasts and he heard her make a faint sound almost like the purring of a contented cat. He wanted to taste, to feel, to lose himself in her, to forget.
Passions mounted and he tumbled her beneath him, burying his face in her cloud of hair, experiencing the slow curl of heat in his belly, aware that Luanna was matching his movements with a rhythm of her own.
Luanna's hands kneaded the broad muscles of his back, drawing him closer, excited by his increasing passion. Her thighs closed savagely around him, locking him to her as she felt herself being swept away by the wild emotions this man created within her. “Regan . . .” she moaned against his demanding mouth, tasting the sweetness of the wine he had consumed.
She was aware of the thick golden fleece on his chest brushing against her breasts, stimulating their coral tips to stand erect, the hard flat muscles of his stomach pressing against her, the strength of his arms and hands, the clean masculine scent of him. Each of her senses was heightened and filled by this man who could make her feel as though she'd never known another lover, who could make her believe she was created for his pleasure alone and, in giving that pleasure to him, find her own.
Her fingers traced the lines of his face and, even with her eyes closed, she could perceive his image. The brightness of his hair was like moonbeams captured on the water, thick and crisp and whitened like the grasses on the hillside during the summer. His heavy brows gave such a defiant, determined expression to his cool, agate-blue eyes, eyes that could pierce a woman's soul and make her his slave. The bronze of his skin, warmed by the sun and stung by the sea; his full sensitive lips—his smile, white and strong—the cleft in his chin which gave him a certain boyishness and endowed his handsome, almost craggy features with a vulnerability.
Touching his broad shoulders and rock-ribbed torso, she knew the power of this man, a force and energy that made a woman aware of her own defenselessness. But she also knew his gentleness, his consideration. She was reminded of it and reassured by it with each caress stirring her desires and leading her to the threshold of ecstasy. His hands reached down to grasp her hips and she gasped with anticipation. His mouth closed over hers and she began to moan and he carried her with him. Together they spun over the threshold of sensuality into the universe, whirling on a roll of thunder and blinded by a flashing bolt of rapture. In the quiet of the room she heard his voice, deep and heavy, “Sirena . . .”
Afterward Luanna's fingertips traced the frown that furrowed his brow. Lightly she kissed the slight downward pull at the corner of his mouth. She had seen him this way many times in the past months and she knew he only came to her when his passion demanded release and he needed the arms of a woman to comfort his sorrow. “There was a time, Regan, when I would have cheerfully killed you if you had whispered another woman's name while you lay in my arms,” she said softly, watching the traces of bitterness cloud his eyes. “Do you know you call out for her?”
“I don't know what you're talking about!” Regan growled, making a move to leave her side.
“No, stay here with me,” she whispered, pressing him back against the bedding. “It's time you told someone of your grief.”
Regan turned and looked at Luanna's lovely face beside him on the pillow. “There is nothing to tell.” Wresting himself free of her, he rose from the bed and reached for his clothes.
Luanna sat up, her long hair falling over her shoulders, cloaking her nudity from his eyes. “You lie! Each time you come here to be with me it is her name you call out. Don't you think I feel it in your touch? It's not my body you reach out for, it is
hers!”
“Leave me alone, Luanna. You don't know what you're talking about.” He spoke in a monotone, teeth clenched, frightening in his intensity.
Still, Luanna persisted. “I know. I am not stupid! Ever since you came back to Java with your wife and infant son you do not seek Luanna's arms. You want no other woman, only Sirena. Yet, since your young son died it is to Luanna that you come with such loneliness in your eyes.”
“Nonsense!” Regan growled as he fastened the buttons on his shirt and reached for his boots.
“It is not nonsense. Do you think it is only Luanna who sees this change in you? Bah! You men! Always so strong! But a woman knows, Regan.”
“It's your female imagination,” he bristled, angry with this turn in the conversation. “I don't come here for advice, Luanna,” he smiled with bravado.
“You can't fool your Luanna. It is not for me that you cry out at the moment of release. It is for your wife . . . Sirena! Go back to her, Regan, go to your Sirena. I can't bear to see your heart breaking this way. Don't you think I know a man starved for love when I see him? Go to her. Bare your heart to her. Make her love you. Force her if you must. Break through her grief, Regan, make her see that she needs you and loves you!”
Regan was taken aback by the sincere tears he saw in Luanna's eyes. In the manner of a woman she saw straight through to the root of his problem. “Is this what I've come to, Luanna? A man who evokes a whore's pity?” he asked softly.
“And the best damn whore in all the Indies!” Luanna defended proudly.
Tentatively, he stretched out a hand to brush away the tears glistening on her smooth round cheeks.
“Get out of here, Regan! Go back to your Sirena!” Picking up the bedside lamp, she held it threateningly. “Go home to your wife!”
Silently Regan left the room, closing the door quietly behind him.
 
Twilight was descending again upon the long stretch of lawn that came to an abrupt end at the edge of the dense primeval jungle surrounding the van der Rhys mansion. From here, the busy growth of Batavia, Java's primary seaport, was unnoticed. The vibrant foliage insulated the house's inhabitants against any intrusion from the outside world. The splendid dwelling and outlying plantation had become the entire world to Sirena van der Rhys in the six months since the death of her only child, Mikel.
Tonight, as every night, Sirena took her place near the delicate pane-glass doors leading out to the garden, to stand sentry. Her deep green eyes penetrated the falling darkness as her mind trod the path to the edge of the lawn where Mikel's lovingly tended grave rested.
If the one ebullient servants in the van der Rhys home were subdued and watchful in her presence, Sirena did not notice. If their once spirited steps were now a quiet shuffle, she did not care. If Regan looked to her for a sign of affection or a soft word, she did not think to respond. Sirena's only thought was of Mikel. His world was her existence; his eternity her fate.
Regan watched his wife from beneath lowered eyelids as she stood near the doors. The muscles in his lean, clean-shaven jaw tautened as he observed her shoulders slump and her classic profile turn once more to gaze out over the lawn. It had been an error of judgment to allow Serena to place Mikel's grave so close to the house. He should have insisted that the child be placed beside his grandfather in the small plot of ground at the far end of the nutmeg grove. This standing guard, playing sentinel to a child six months cold was bringing him to the breaking point. He ran a sun-bronzed hand through his thatch of wheat-colored hair and groaned inwardly.
Why couldn't Sirena turn to him? Where had he failed her? Could she not see that the loss of their son was as painful a cross to bear for him as it was for her? Couldn't she see that sharing the loss would make the burden lighter for both of them? Where was the woman he had once known? Where was his Sea Siren? Had the spirit left her at the same moment the breath had left Mikel's body?
Regan closed his eyes against the mournful sight of Sirena and he saw her once again as he remembered her; tall and slender, an expression of supremacy on her delicate features, the light of challenge burning in her eyes. Once again he reveled in the memory of her long raven tresses swept by the sea's errant winds and the haughty set of her shoulders and the daring lift of her chin. He lived again the moments when he had seen her with a mantle of spindrift clouding her hair and settling in a salty wetness on the smooth, tawny flesh of her long, sensuous limbs.
How long had it been since he had heard her laugh? He imagined he heard it now as he had that day when he first saw her aboard her phantom ship, nearly six years ago. She had been a sea witch as she stood with feet placed firmly apart, the rapier's point dug into the deck and her rippling laugh coursing over the waters to taunt him. Then, he had been aware mostly of her abbreviated costume which revealed much of her swelling breasts and all of her lightly muscled legs.
He had never seen a woman as beautiful as the Sea Siren and he realized that beneath the somber, heavy gowns which had become Sirena's regular attire, the same beauty still lurked. The same loveliness, yet so much more. Her skin was still buffed ivory. Her eyes, once flashing emeralds, now without luster beneath a thick black fringe of lashes, were nevertheless wide and slightly tilted at the corners, giving her an Oriental appearance. And her full, sensuous lips were now drawn into a firm line. But once they had been mobile, smiling over strong, dazzling teeth. Motherhood had ripened her beauty and softened it. Though still as slim as a girl, there was a lushness about her.
His arms ached to hold her, to press her head lovingly against his chest and fill her world with love and tenderness and share with her again that all-encompassing yearning for one another. His desire to love and be loved was only secondary to his wanting to comfort her, to be comforted.
Yet Sirena had denied them both this sweet release from grief. She had spurned his advances and turned him away. And fool that he was, he had allowed it. His desire to see her comforted had controlled his passions. In his respect for her grief he had determinedly quelled his needs for her as his wife.
Currently, as Regan shifted his weight in the deep armchair he knew that the constraints of that respect had reached the breaking point. He wanted her, he needed her now! Mikel was dead and if the situation were allowed to continue there would be no respite from the eternal sorrow.
Night had fallen swiftly and the edge of the lawn was barely discernible. There was no moon to light a silvery path to Mikel's grave. These were the times Sirena dreaded the most—when Mikel was shrouded in darkness.
The sound of Regan shifting in his chair caught Sirena's attention. In the glass panes of the doors she saw his reflection. A deepening grudge burned within her. It was this emotion that was the only part of her still alive. She returned her attention to the darkness outside and recalled her horror the day Regan had come upon her soon after the child's death when she had been placing a lantern upon his grave. “It's for when the nights are black and long,” she had explained tearfully. She had expected Regan to understand. Instead he had wrung the light from her hand and sent it crashing against the simple stone marker. There had been a fury in his blue eyes and a tensing of the muscles along his jaw.
“Mikel is dead!” he had exploded in a demonstration of rage. “There is no earthly light which can ease his soul. Where's your Christian belief, Sirena? Were you not taught that all little children find their place beside the Lord?”
“My son,” she had returned, “was fearful of the dark!”
“Your son!” Regan had bellowed. “Was he not also mine? Would you deny me my own grief that he should be taken from me so cruelly?”
“You bury what misery you feel in your damnable office. You leave this house with thoughts of business on your mind and give not a second thought to your own flesh and blood placed so heartlessly beneath this ground. Tell me, Regan, was it for you Mikel called in the night when a stray wind would blow out his lamp? Did you hurry from your bed to cradle him and chase away his imaginings of winged creatures?” Sirena's face became alive with anger. “More than once you pulled me back against you with reassurances he would be over his terrors that much quicker if I paid them no mind! When I think of the times I heeded you, when I rested again in your arms and closed my ears to his whimpers to listen instead to your soft murmurings of love, it grates my soul! And now you would deny him this final respite which we alone can give him—a lantern on his grave!”
Regan had appeared as though struck full in the face. His features whitened, his mouth drew downward with sorrow. “You would have me believe Mikel cried out in fear. Think back, Sirena, and know the truth for what it is. When Mikel suffered nightmares, there was no chance for anyone besides you to go to him. I swear there were moments when I felt as though you kept your slippers on your feet perchance he should call to you. And those whimperings. Childhood dreams! The boy never turned in his sleep or sighed over dreams of angels that you didn't rush to his crib to watch over him. If there were indeed nights when I was able to take your thoughts from him and turn them to me, they were rare indeed!”

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