phantom knights 04 - deceit in delaware (31 page)

BOOK: phantom knights 04 - deceit in delaware
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“Melly, I need to know, are you friend or foe?”

She tilted her head to the side, contemplating my question. “Freddy would say that I am a friend.”

“Do you agree with him?”

She straightened her head. “I find that I do. Tell me what I can do to help.”

“I need you to lead me to my husband.” My hand hovered over my belt, as a precaution. If she proved to be an enemy, I would not hesitate to restrain her. Finding Jack was my first order of business and I would not have Melly standing in my path and possibly getting herself harmed.

“Come with me,” she said, and led me down the hall.

 

CHAPTER 24

JACK

 

“D
o not stand there like a lump,” called a stringent voice from somewhere near me, but I could not see them. I could not see anything.

“If you have killed my brother, I swear that I will have your head staked upon the moat wall surrounding my castle,” called Levi from somewhere ahead of me. He sounded angry, wild.

Someone laughed. That trickling sound that raked against my thoughts and made me want to cringe. “You do not have a castle, though I find your threats amusing,” said the voice that belonged to what I would guess would be a woman, though the timber was low and the pronunciation of words held a distinct accent.

“Much you know about it,” Levi retorted. “My future wife is a princess, and
she
lives in a castle. Or she would, if the tripe that you serve had not murdered her parents and forced her to flee.”

Fighting against the heat and throbbing pain in my head, I forced my eyes to open. Everything was a blur so I blinked a few times until I could see what was around me.

“There,” called the same voice. “He is not dead. So there is no need for dramatics.”

“I will warn you again, doxy, that you have yet to see dramatic,” Levi growled before he dropped down to his knee beside where I was laying on a cot—a foul smelling cot. “Jack, are you alive?”

“So the pain in my head tells me,” I said, easing myself up. Levi gripped my shoulder as I began to sway. “What happened to my head?”

“A guard hit you on the head with the butt of his gun. Could have killed you, and so I told them, but little they cared.”

“Where are we?” Gently, I touched the back of my head where there was a gash and the beginning of a good sized lump.

“Beneath Luther’s house. Prisoners of Luther and his doxy.” Levi spat the word toward the door that closed off the room that had been converted into a cell. There were even bars in a portion of the door. One the other side of the bars stood Martha.

“Why did you do it, Martha? Why did you murder Henry and place the blame upon Bess? Why were you trying to destroy her?”

Martha appeared taken aback. “Destroy Bess? Good gracious, why should I? She is as dispensable as the two of you. As for Henry, he had the artifact that I needed to secure my alliance with Luther. I needed your sister away from Philadelphia so that I could find the rest of the artifacts. I knew that you had many of them, and that Bess was keeping them. She needed someone to place the blame upon. The Holy Order was a stroke of genius. She already hated them. What was a little more deceit?”

“Where did Andrew come in to play?” Levi asked.

“If she was betrothed to him she would never have left Philadelphia.”

Levi lurched toward her, gripping the bars of the door and shaking it. Martha leapt back, squawking as if she thought he could break down the door. Rising, I joined Levi at the door, trying to see her face.

“Why capture us? Why not capture Edith? If you are trying to lure in Harvey, she would be a greater draw than us.” Levi said after he stopped trying to reach her.

“Oh, the lies you do weave, Levi. That would be redundant. We have Mary Edith, and soon we will have her sisters. Do you know what I discovered?”

Neither Levi nor I spoke. Martha had to know that Charlotte was not Edith. What game was the woman playing?

“You both have been instrumental to the safety of the women you care for most … up to this point. If it had not been for you leaving your guard to safeguard her, Levi, Bess would have been ravaged. If it had not been for Jack going with Guinevere, Mary Edith would have been surrendered to Lucas Marx, which would have made my part all the easier.”

Well, when she put it like that, I suppose I could see why she was being clever in capturing us. Bess, Mother, Guinevere, Mary, even Rose would never leave us to our fates. They would come for us as soon as they found an opportunity.

A door beyond our cell opened and Luther appeared, carrying a lantern.

“I understand that you have unmasked our coup,” he said, and Levi and I exchanged a knowing glance.

“My good lady, how well you have done,” said Luther, raising Martha’s hand to his thin lips.

She laughed boisterously. “Admit, Luther. You doubted my abilities.”

“Never,” he claimed. “As for the other?”

“Being secured in the wood as we speak,” Martha replied happily.

“Where is my treasure?” Luther’s voice was thick, greedy.

Martha walked over to the door across from our cell and pushed it open. When she emerged, something scraped loud against the floor. She dropped a brown wood and leather portmanteau at his feet.

Luther gazed down at the portmanteau for a moment before smiling as if amused. “It is locked.”

A brass key emerged from the shadows. As Luther unlocked the trunk and lifted the lid, Levi leaned forward for a better view. When he saw the contents, his gaze shot to mine and his expression was grim, wary. I leaned into the bars.

Luther reached into the trunk, and emerged with the black box. “Sfære af lys,” he whispered reverently. “Never before has such power been in my hands, but now it will all be mine. As it always should have been.”

“Do not you mean ours,” said Martha.

Luther glanced toward her with a hateful glare, as if being interrupted was the height of treason. “Of course. Our contract still stands, for you have given me what I need to claim the throne.”

Luther pulled out a second artifact. A gold ring with a raised emerald stone. Levi’s jaw sagged as mine clenched. He had Father’s ring. It was as Mother’s journal had claimed. Father’s ring had been given to him by Guinevere’s father. All this time, our father had possessed one part of the sacred artifacts that would grant the throne to a member of the royal family, or a man that the council approved.

After Luther locked the trunk and pocketed the key, he motioned toward the door, and a guard appeared. Luther had him take the trunk away from our cell.

“As soon as my nieces are with me, I can depart. My ship awaits at the harbor as we speak.”

Luther kept talking but I was trying to find a way to get the door open. I had to stop Luther from leaving, and protect my wife’s home country from a man with all the makings of a tyrant.

“Our contract?” Martha was persistent. She would not allow Luther to depart until he agreed.

Try as I would, I could not get the door open, for there was nothing to use to pick the lock. All I could do was wait until one of our friends arrived.

“Once I have my nieces, all which is left is for you to finish this and join me as we agreed.” Luther raised her hands to his lips again, tossed a smirk at me over his shoulder, and departed.

When he had gone Martha turned back toward us.

“Why did you want us to witness that? You must know that we will pursue him the moment we are let go.” For that was certainly why she had given Luther the artifacts before us.

“Perhaps. Perhaps not. It all depends on what means the most to you. Stopping Luther, or sparing your mother’s life. You see, my agreement with Luther was easier secured than one would think. All I had to offer him was a way to capture all of the members of the Holy Order.”

“For what purpose could Luther want the Holy Order?” Levi asked.

“Why, for revenge. They are responsible for harboring his nieces, and for so many other crimes. His goal is one that you should be concerned with. He means for me to kill every member of the Holy Order, including your sister’s husband.”

“What is in this for you? What do you want, to kill us?”

“No. What I require is much closer to your hearts. You see, I could not very easily rule at Luther’s side with those girls in the way. You two will draw two of my problems to me, and after I dispose of them, all that is left is for me to cut life from the third, and sail with my dear Luther to Lutania.”

Levi and I must have pieced that together at the same moment because we both reacted at the same time. Levi lurched forward again, reaching his hand through the bars for her arm, while I reached through for her hair. She was trying to fight off Levi’s hand, which made it possible for me to grasp a strand of her hair. Wrapping it around my fingers, I pulled her toward us. She swatted at my hand as she screamed.

Four of Luther’s guards burst into the prison and tore Martha from my grasp.

Martha gave a good show of instant tears. “They were trying to ravage me! They are dangerous. Murderers, each of them. Bind them, or they will escape and kill us all!”

One led Martha away, and she tossed a smirk over his shoulder before feigning sobs again.

The cell door was opened and muskets were pointed at our chests as one of the guards came into the cell and shackled our wrists.

We were left alone in darkness. For almost an hour neither of us spoke, both listening to the clicking of mice running across the floor. Silence for any amount of time was uncharacteristic of Levi.

“What do you know?” I asked when the silence became too much.

Levi said nothing and I could not see his face, but I knew where he was seated. “You knew that they did not have Edith, so why would you come into this house?”

Levi kicked out one leg and his boot hit mine. “You would not believe me if I told you,” he said.

“You might be surprised,” I replied.

Levi refused to say more, and nothing I could say would get him to speak.

We heard someone coming through the cellar and then a key scrape against the lock, but no light shone from outside our cell. Levi and I quickly felt our way toward the door. He stood behind it, while I stood close to where it would open. As the door pushed open, and a moment later light flooded into the darkness, I closed my eyes against the painful brilliance.

“Mr. Jack? Mr. Levi?” Melly said as she held a lantern out before her.

Shielding his eyes, Levi stepped around the door. “Melly, my angel. Have you come to set us free?”

Melly smiled at Levi’s term for her, but it faded instantly. “No quite.” Melly stepped into the cell and the first thing we saw was the musket barrel against her back. Held by Betsy.

“Betsy, what are you doing here? Where are Bess and the others?”

“Some are in the woods fighting guards, but Sam is at the cottage, for something happened to Bess. Guinevere led a party here so that we could free you. This here girl says that she has not seen Guinevere, but James heard them speaking before this girl led her away. To safety she claims.”

Betsy kept her musket aimed at Melly as James came into the cell and unlocked the shackles around our wrists.

“It was to safety,” Melly interposed, “for she could not remain here and neither can any of you.”

Hearing that something had happened to Bess had fear gripping me, but I stamped it down for the moment. “Let us go at once, but do lower your weapon. Melly is on our side.”

Betsy lowered the weapon to her side. “If that is the truth, perhaps she can lead us out of this hive.”

“I will do my best,” Melly said, “but you must make haste. The guards are occupied and this is our only moment.” Melly led the way out of the cellar and up the stairs, but instead of leading us through the great hall, she kept going up the narrow staircase, all the way to the top floor of the house.

She led us down the dimly lit area with a few doors on each side. Melly turned to the right, but Betsy halted her.

“Is this not the way down?” Betsy asked, pointing toward a staircase at the opposite end of the hall.

“Yes, if you wish for the whole of the house to know you are fleeing,” Melly said softly before motioning us to follow her.

Melly paused before the wall at the end of the hall. She pushed upon it, and the wall moved to reveal a round turret that had a spiral staircase going down.

We followed Melly down and when she came to a door, she opened it and we were back in the hall with the bedchambers.

Portraits of stern looking ancestors lined the walls between the doors, the candlelight from wall sconces flickering on their faces and making them look sinister.

“Should not we be going down?” Levi asked her as he followed on her heels.

“So you will, but not the main way.” She paused outside the door to the chamber that Levi and I had first been held in. “This is as far as I can go. Take this,” she handed her lantern to Levi, “and go to the wardrobe. Behind it you will find a door. Follow that staircase down and it will lead you out of the house.”

There had been a way out inside of our prison chamber? It would be something like that.

“Thank you, Melly,” I said.

Levi went further, catching her hand and kissing the back. “You are an angel, Melly.”

Pink covered her cheeks as she smiled. “You must hurry.”

“We are staying at a cottage about a mile from here. Should you have need of us, you need—”

“I will send word,” she promised.

Betsy, James, and I went into the bedchamber. Levi was just following us in when a voice called from down the hall.

“Melly! What have you done?” The door slammed shut, and we could hear Melly yelling at someone.

“Quick!” Levi and I ran to the wardrobe while Betsy leveled her musket at the door.

My heart was beating a swift rhythm as we began pushing the wardrobe aside. Part of a small door appeared as Melly had said there would be. The wardrobe was a heavy thing, but it was on a track. As I pushed against the wood some more, trying to get it moved enough to open the door, nothing happened. Shoving again, the things refused to move.

BOOK: phantom knights 04 - deceit in delaware
3.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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