Pirate Wolf Trilogy (124 page)

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Authors: Marsha Canham

Tags: #romance, #adventure, #historical romance, #pirates, #sea battles, #trilogy, #adventure romance, #sunken treasure, #spanish main, #pirate wolf

BOOK: Pirate Wolf Trilogy
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“You had a funeral, but did you have a
body?”

Ross clenched his fists in frustration.
“There were three bodies, scorched down to charred bone. The house
burned like a pyre and spread to the two on either side and there
was little left to identify. We chose some bones, put them in a
casket and buried them in the Chandler plot.”

“And now she is resurrected from the ashes.”
Muertraigo cocked the pistol. “How did she get here so fast, senor?
And how could she have already managed to ingratiate herself with
one of the Dante cubs?”


I
don’t know
! God’s truth, I don’t know how
she got here. I have no bloody idea, unless—” Ross stopped, the
blood still pumping too hard and fast through his veins for him to
think clearly. “There were only two other ocean-worthy ships in
Portsmouth the day the
Cormorant
sailed. One had just come in the day before; the
other was a smaller carrack taking on trade goods. I noted the
carrack at the time because the captain…
what the bloody hell was his name?...
the captain was a former pilot on one of the Chandler ships.”
He snapped his fingers. “Fitch. His name was Fitch, by God, and the
ship was the
Eliza Jane
.”

“Did this Fitch know Chandler’s daughter?
Did he know her well enough to be persuaded to bring her here?”

“If she was able to convince him that her
father’s life was in peril, then yes. He could have been
persuaded.”

“This still does not explain why she was on
board Dante’s ship masquerading as his wife… and quite convincingly
so, I might add. There was no lady’s maid or duena present, no
manacles or chains holding her prisoner. Indeed, she looked quite
at home when she excused herself from the dining table and went
straight into his cabin, her eyes shining with lust as she gazed
back at him. For a woman to look at me that way, senor, I would be
hard for a week.”

The hot red blood that had been coursing
through his body, flushed upward to suffuse Lawrence Ross’s face
and throat.

“I cannot explain it. The bitch was always
as cold as ice to me and it was cause for celebration when she
graced me with a chaste kiss on the cheek.”

“There was nothing chaste about her gown or
her manner,” Muertraigo said, slowly lowering the pistol. “And from
what I know of this younger wolf cub, women spread their thighs for
him as eagerly as they reach for water to quench their thirst.”

“She can spread them until she turns raw for
all I care,” Ross said. “Right now the only thing that should
concern us is where they’ve gone. A ship that size could not simply
have disappeared.”

He heard the irony in his own words, for
that was exactly what an enormous treasure galleon had managed to
do two decades before. No sooner had the thought put a fresh scowl
on his face when he heard something else as well: The unmistakable
booming thunder of cannonfire.

Muertraigo was first to stride across the
cabin. He had to kick the limp arm of Augustus George out of the
way before he could open the door but then he took the stairs two
at a time to reach the upper deck. He ran to the ship’s rail,
joining scores of crewmen in the gathering dusk as they looked out
at the distant blooms of light.

~~

The
Endurance
, with Stubs at the helm,
had emerged from hiding and was attacking the crippled
Asuncion
. The two
galleons were on the far side of the reef, far out in the Tongue,
and from several miles distance looked like child’s toys.
Broadsides were lighting up the surface of the water like bolts of
lightning, silhouetting both vessels against the night sky. The
rolling booms of thunder took several seconds to reach the
San
Mateo
, whose captain watched with
renewed outrage as the
Asuncion
was turned into a spire of flame and
smoke.

The
Endurance
, having done its worst,
piled on sail and beat away on a course due south, her deck lamps
blazing a final insult before she disappeared behind the
headland.

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

 

Evangeline Chandler came back to
consciousness slowly, roused by the tantalizing aroma of… roasting
chicken? It was pungent and unmistakeable, and immediately conjured
visions of warm kitchen fires and big iron spits turning above the
flames.

She heard voices too. They were not above a
murmur but she thought she recognized Gabriel’s soft laugh—his
laugh!—and she opened her eyes a slit, trying to see past the
throbbing in her head.

Dante was there, seated with two other men
around a small fire. His face was bathed in the glow, starkly
handsome in the firelight. The sight of him made her belly shimmer
like the walls of the cavern, a reaction that was so unexpected,
she almost forgot where she was and what had happened.

The last thing she remembered seeing was an
enormous shadowy monster reaching out for her, but there were no
monsters seated around the fire. To be sure, there was a big,
broad-shouldered giant of a man sitting next to Dante, his face
furred behind a thick black beard, his eyes sunken behind an almost
unbroken, wide black eyebrow. His hair was twisted into thick
spikes that stuck out in all directions like a Medusa; his hands
were as big as shovels as they turned the spitted capon.

Eva did not recognize him as being one of
Dante’s crewmen.

There was a third man seated around the
small firepit but he had his back to Eva and she could see nothing
but a massive halo of ratty hair and bare arms bulging with
muscle.

Wincing, she pushed herself up onto her
elbows and used her fingertips to gently probe the tenderness at
her temple. There was a lump, but the skin was not broken. Her arm,
though, where she had scraped it in the fall, was bound in linen
strips.

Dante saw the movement and glanced her way
with a wry chuckle. “I didn’t think the Mermaid would want to be
left out of the conversation for too long.”

The third man turned and Eva stared for a
moment… then gasped.

“Father!”

“Eva!”

William Chandler shot to his feet and was
beside his daughter before she could fully grasp what she was
seeing. She jumped up and flung herself into his outstretched arms,
where she was spun around and around, the pair of them laughing and
teary-eyed and in no hurry to let go of one another.

“Eva, Eva… good God, girl, but you are a
sight for sore eyes! What are you doing here? Where have you come
from? You scared the shite out of Billy Crab who said you both just
dropped down out of the rocks. Of all the people I have dreamt of
seeing, you were always the first, and the last, but I never
expected it to come true.”

He hugged her again, hard enough to smother
her ability to answer any of his questions. She did not mind,
however. She doubted she would have been able to speak anyway
through the flood of tears streaking down her cheeks.

“The captain here has told me some of your
trials, daughter. God spare all the martyrs in heaven, but you’ve
had your share of frights. Enough to last a lifetime, I
warrant.”

“Father… Father, where have
you been all these years? Why have you not written? Why have you
not come home? Why--?” Her breath caught in her throat as she
looked up and saw the rough black patch covering his left eye. An
ugly, puckered scar ran from under the bottom edge of the ragged
leather down to his chin, carving through his full beard and
tugging the side of his mouth into a permanent smirk. His shaggy
blond hair was as matted as a lion’s mane with strands braided and
twisted around bits of colored beads and gold loops. His shoulders
and chest were broader than she remembered, and solid with muscle.
Had it not been for his voice, for the unmistakable brilliant green
of his eye, and for the way he hugged and held her, she might not
have believed it was really him. “Why are
you
here? What has happened
to
you
?”

“Nothing that can’t be told over a cup of
rum and a tasty bite of capon.” He tipped his head and examined the
lump on her temple. “You’ll be hearing jungle drums for a while,
but aye, you’ve as hard a head as your old father.” He grinned and
knocked his knuckles on his forehead. “You’ve young Billy over
there to thank for not having your nose rearranged on the
rocks.”

Eva glanced toward the fire and saw the big
man shift uncomfortably on his log seat. Under all that hair and
beard she could see now that he was much younger than her father,
with the same round cheeks as his mother, the baker. “Thank you,
Billy. And thank you for looking after my father all these years.
If it wasn’t for the letter you sent home to your mother, I might
have begun to believe Father was dead.”

“Billy is a good lad,” said William
Chandler. “Loyal as they come and as protective as a mastiff.
Pretty much leaves the talking to me, though, since he lost all his
teeth to the scurvy. Now come sit by the fire and tell me what you
mean by not getting any letters from me. I wrote many and sent them
every chance I had. Letters to you and to Lawrence Ross.”

She shook her head and frowned. “I only ever
received the one packet; the one with the coins hidden in the wax
seals. Lawrence claimed he never received any others, that he
hadn’t heard from you in all the years you’ve been gone.”

“If he never heard from me, how did he
manage to answer me?”

Eva rubbed the lump on her temple thinking
the throbbing had affected her hearing. “Did you say… he answered
you?”

“Aye, several times. I sent word for him to
outfit all three of our ships and bring them here. He informed me
that we had only the one vessel but that he would find a way to
bring more.”

“He found a way, all right,” Dante remarked
dryly. “He’s enlisted the services of Estevan Muertraigo, one of
the biggest pirates on the Main and a Spaniard with the loyalties
of a fox.”

Chandler nodded grimly. “I know him well.”
He touched the patch over his eye. “We met about a year ago. A
deadly choice of allies.” He turned his single green eye on Eva.
“Lawrence also informed me the two of you were married.”

Eva’s jaw dropped. “He lied. We were only
engaged, and for that I feel foolish enough.”

Chandler arched a bushy eyebrow.

“At the time he was attentive and concerned
for my welfare… or at least he pretended to be. I was alone and
past the age where I could avoid my cousin’s notice for much
longer. Without you there to intercede on my behalf, I would have
been married off in a blink to some foul-smelling old man who would
have happily taken the shipping line as a dowry.”

“Aye, the king was ever on the watch for
allies who could add to his coffers.”

It was Dante’s turn to look surprised. “The
king is your cousin?”

“Second cousin, on her mother’s side,”
William provided with a snort, “though I never held it against my
Elizabeth. She was ever a fine, loving wife with a rare, gentle
beauty deserving of more than the likes of me. She never
complained, mind. And I’ve never met her equal since.”

He raised a calloused hand and wiped a bit
of moisture from the corner of his eye then was all scowls and
thunder again. “And what’s this about a robbery and a fire? Surely,
Daughter, you must be mistaken that Lawrence tried to have you
killed.”

Eva shook her head. “No, Father. There is no
mistake.” She tugged the hem of her shirt up and showed him the
puckered scar over her ribs.

The thunderclouds darkened on William’s
face. “You’d best start at the beginning and tell me
everything.”

While Billy turned the capon and Dante sat
quietly poking embers with a stick, Eva told her father about
finding the coins in the wax and not realizing the importance until
many months later. She told him about the baker’s letter and
finding Augustus George ransacking the house, and what he said when
he shot her, that it was on Ross’s orders. As she spoke, William’s
face grew tighter and his hands trembled around the cup he was
holding, the strength of his outrage threatening to crush it
flat.

“I trusted him,” he growled when she was
finished. “I trusted him with my daughter, my business. I even
trusted him with the news that I had solved one of the greatest
seafaring mysteries of our time.”

“Then it’s true?” Gabriel
asked quietly. “You found the
Victorio
?”

William studied Dante’s
face for a long moment before answering. “Aye, it’s true. I found
her. And I was foolish enough to share that information with
Lawrence Ross.
Risked my bloody neck
numerous times venturing to New Providence in order to dispatch
letters back to Portsmouth
for him… and
for my Eva.”

“I never received any of
them beyond that first packet that came back on the
Gull
. And that was
delivered by the captain himself into my hands.”

“Aye, those were the
instructions I gave him. The bastard Ross must have intercepted the
others and kept them from you. He should pray I never get
my
hands around his
throat.” He ground his teeth, as if contemplating the pleasure it
would bring to do so, then glanced over at Dante. “Whereas I owe
you a debt of gratitude I cannot hope to ever repay, young man. You
appear to have won my daughter’s confidence, though with what I’ve
heard so far, her ability to judge an honest man has been set
somewhat askew.”

“Father!” Eva was shocked
enough to drop her cup on the ground. She may not have known
Gabriel Dante for long, but the thought of questioning his honor
would never enter her mind. “Captain Dante was sailing for his home
port and showed not a wit of interest in pursuing any lost treasure
galleons. Nor had he any intention of helping me find you, for that
matter, for he told me repeatedly that it would be like trying to
find a single drop of water in the ocean. He saved my life not
once, but twice! He put his entire crew at risk from the plague and
faced down a threat of mutiny when he took me off the
Eliza Jane
, after which
he nearly drowned swimming through shark-infested waters in a
hurricane to save me!”

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