Authors: Patricia Potter
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Historical, #Scottish
And if the Honorable David Murray did not want her, perhaps she could find a position as governess. Surely if the colonies were so scarce of women that a man would offer for a wife he did not know, then there must be a shortage of governesses as well.
“I agree, Papa,” she finally said. As always, she hoped for some slight sign of approval for succumbing to his will. There was none, only a fleeting look of relief.
“We will answer him then and make the necessary financial arrangements. It will be three months or more before all can be completed. You will leave for Barbados from London.”
Grief mixed with anticipation. Grief that she would leave, and no one would mourn her. Anticipation that she would leave this place on an adventure. She had taken many adventures through her books, and she had always hungered to see more of the world. Because of the “taint,” she had never been taken to Edinburgh, although her sisters had gone there in search of husbands.
Now she would see Edinburgh and London and travel on a ship across oceans. And maybe at the journey’s end she would find peace and contentment and, if God was with her, a gentle man.
Paris, France
Alex found homes for his charges—one after another.
Only Meg and Robin had not found permanent homes, mainly because they had refused every overture. There was a strong Scottish Jacobite community in Paris. They had readily offered homes to the younger children. But Meg at eleven and Robin at twelve had dodged British patrols for nearly eighteen months. They had gone hungry and cold and had seen the people they loved killed in cold blood and their homes forfeited to the men who had done it. They were rebellious and independent and trusted only Alex and Burke.
They made it clear they wanted to stay with Alex, though he’d tried to make it equally clear he had no way of keeping them. He had found them temporary refuge with a French count and his wife who had three children of their own, yet still they appeared at his door at the oddest of hours.
He would have to work harder at finding them a permanent home.
Letting the children go had been far more difficult than he’d thought. That surprised him. He’d thought he would be filled with relief.
Yet he had protected some of them for months. He had tried to care for the mother of two of them and had ended up watching her die. He had shared their hardships, and their grief. At some point the children had carved out a piece of heart he hadn’t thought he still retained.
He had not been alone when he’d had them with him. They had given him a reason to live. Now he had to find another one.
Alex looked in the mirror in his rented room. A scar ran up to the right side of his face, giving him a permanent smile. It wasn’t a particularly pleasant expression. Men looked at him with curiosity, women with either fear or a perverse fascination that sickened him. He remembered when he could have his pick of lasses.
He’d even considered marriage in the days before Culloden. Now he had no idea where Mary Ferguson was, or whether she still lived. He had no future, no land. Where once he’d worn the finest clothes and played cards without a thought of stakes, he now hoarded every coin.
The former Lord Alex Leslie had no title, prospects, future, not even his real name. It might well reflect on his sister, and on his most unexpected benefactor, the Marquis of Braemoor, if the British knew he still lived. Not only lived but had made his way robbing from them. He had taken the name of Will then, and he kept it now, along with the last name of Malfour. Although some in the refugee community in Paris knew his identity, or at least knew he’d been a Scottish noble, they accepted his new name without question. They knew from the children what he had done for them, how he had harassed the British for over a year. Some even speculated he might be the infamous Black Knave.
He didn’t care about acceptance. He’d only wanted to be rid of responsibility and indulge a burning desire to avenge himself on those who had destroyed his country. But that would be difficult without funds. He would cheat and lie and gamble to achieve his goals but he could not do that with children at his heels.
Alex sat down in a chair at a table and took out the deck of cards he’d carried during his escape from Scotland. A game of solitaire might serve to focus his thoughts. He studied the first card he laid down. The jack of spades— the black knave. He hesitated, then searched the cards for the heart queen.
The two cards were his only links to family and country. The legend known as the Black Knave had helped him escape Scotland. And his sister had been called the heart queen by her husband, a man Alex had once hated but now respected. They had made a life together despite the aftermath of Culloden and their conflict of loyalties. He didn’t think he could ever forgive or forget the horror of Culloden.
A knock at the door interrupted his bleak thoughts.
Burke rose from his chair to answer it. He was acting as butler, manservant, bodyguard. He was not an elegant one. He still looked like a footpad. But there was no questioning his loyalty.
An elegantly dressed and wigged gentleman stood at the door. Alex recognized him. They had met at a soiree hosted by a friend of Prince Charles, who had returned to Paris after hiding for months on the Isle of Skye.
Comte Etienne de Rochemont. A gambler, he’d been told, who won and lost fortunes.
“Monsieur Malfour?” the comte asked.
“Aye,” Alex said. “Welcome to my rooms, such as they are.”
The comte, a man of thirty-five years or so, took off his gloves. His hands had the pampered look of someone who had never worked with them. But his smile was warm, even as he studied the poor rooms. His gaze lingered on Burke, who looked more like what he was—a thief and murderer—then a gentleman’s gentleman.
“I have some brandy,” Alex said. “It is better than the room would indicate. A gift from a sea captain.”
“Smuggler, you mean.”
Alex shrugged.
“I have been told you once captained a ship.”
“More than once,” Alex said. “My family had a share in a shipping business. My father wanted to make sure he would not be cheated and I took a liking to it, much to his chagrin.”
“Where did you sail?”
“Philadelphia. Virginia.”
“The Caribbean?”
“Not as a captain, but I went as first mate.”
“How many years did you sail?”
“One as an owner’s representative, two as first officer, and three as captain.”
“Ever fire on another ship?”
“No, but I practiced with cannon.”
The comte looked disappointed. “I can find you men who have,” he said, almost to himself.
Puzzled, Alex regarded him. “Why?”
“What do you know about privateering, monsieur?”
“That it can be a very dangerous profession,” Alex said dryly. “If a peace treaty comes, a privateer can be tried as a pirate, even if he’s unaware of the newfound cordiality between nations.”
The comte grinned at him. “I had hoped you were not aware of that small problem.”
“I’m not sure why that should concern me,” Alex said, though indeed he was beginning to understand exactly why it would concern him. Excitement stirred inside him. Still, it was wise to play the unsuspecting observer.
“I have been told you are honorable. And have courage. Or is it, perhaps, recklessness?” the comte asked.
“I ran from the British, if that is what you consider valor,” Alex said wryly. “As for honor, I lost that too at Culloden.”
“You tricked them for over a year. Anyone who can elude Cumberland interests me.”
“A forest is far different than the sea,” Alex said.
The comte nodded. “I need funds, and privateering is the fastest way to improve a disastrous financial situation.” He paused, watching Alex, assessing him. “I have a ship. I need a captain.”
“Why don’t
you
captain the ship?”
“I am not a sailor. Neither do I like the odds of being personally involved,” his visitor said honestly. “France and England may make peace at any time. I do not want to be a fugitive from my own country. You, on the other hand, have already lost your country. Your need of funds is obvious. I also suspect you would like to meet the British on, shall we say, more equal terms.”
The comte’s honesty was disarming. Alex suspected it was calculated to do exactly that. “And the split?” he said.
“Forty-forty of the profits. Twenty percent goes to the French government. Your share includes the crew.”
“Guns?”
“Adequate.”
“I would want to see them,” Alex said. “And I would need a crew.”
“You can find them. There’s any number of unemployed Scottish and French sailors who would welcome a chance to earn more than a seaman’s pay. The trick is finding capable men with some sense of loyalty.”
“And supplies?” Alex said. “You would pay for them, of course. From your share.”
“
Oui
, monsieur. Does that mean you will accept my offer?”
“I have little to lose,” Alex admitted.
“We all have much to lose, monsieur. Life is precious.”
Alex could have debated him on that philosophical view, but didn’t. “I also suspect you couldn’t find anyone else.”
“That too is correct,” the comte said with a smile.
“And how do I know that I can trust you?” Alex said.
The comte shrugged. “You can ask your friends.”
“I don’t have any friends.”
“Then you can ask your fellow Scots. I am usually in need of money, but I pay my debts.”
“How did you get the ship if you are usually in need of money?”
“A game of chance,” the Comte de Rochemont said.
“You could sell it.”
“
Oui
, but there are other ships for sale now that the war is drawing to an end, and I would not get a good price. I would rather double or triple what a sale would bring.”
The ship probably needed repairs before it could be sold but Alex didn’t say that. Instead, he raised an eyebrow. “Any necessary repairs would also come from your pocketbook.”
The comte shrugged. “As much as I can afford.”
Which probably meant very little. Still, the offer appealed to him. A chance to strike at British shipping and improve his financial position at the same time.
It didn’t require much thought. He no longer had a country. If he ever returned to Scotland, he would be condemned as a traitor. His face and leg prevented much of a future as a gentleman. He had no family.
“I will make a decision once I see the ship,” he said.
The Frenchman’s face broke into a wide smile. He held out his hand. “Monsieur Malfour, or is it ‘my lord’?”
“Will is agreeable,” Alex said. “If I agree, I do want a legally drawn contract as well as letters of marque.”
“That will be no problem. This government has no love for the English. They continue to try to usurp us in the Americas. And the government will, of course, welcome a percentage of the prizes.” He hesitated, then added, “Please call me Etienne.”
Alex turned to Burke. “What think you?”
“I don’t like the sea,” the man said sullenly.
“You didn’t like horses either, but you rode throughout the Highlands on one.”
“Reluctantly, my—” He stopped suddenly with a sideways glance.
“But you will come with me?”
“Aye,” he said.
“I have my first seaman,” Alex said cheerfully. In truth, he felt better than he had in years, despite the prospect of sailing what would probably be a wreck with outdated gunnery and an inexperienced crew and inadequate supplies.
For the first time in two years, he would be master of his own destiny.
It mattered little if it ended in disaster.
Le Havre, France
Alex was pleased to see that the comte’s vessel was a frigate, a long, low ship that was swift in the sea. It looked as if it had once served as a warship, then had been sold and refitted as a merchantman. Most of the guns had been stripped from her, though some had been retained, probably as minimal protection against pirates.
As a privateer, the ship needed at least twenty-eight guns capable of firing twelve- and eighteen-pound shot. This one had only fourteen guns capable of firing twelve-pound shot.
It also needed other repairs, but on the whole looked sound, better than he’d expected. If he obtained additional guns, he could have it ready in three, maybe four weeks. Time, he knew, was vital. He would not receive his letters of marque nor be allowed to leave France if the ongoing peace talks between France and England succeeded. After that, he would take his chances of being charged as a pirate. God knew England would hang him fast enough in any event if they ever captured him.
He looked over the remaining guns carefully. He was familiar enough with artillery, since some of the merchant ships in which he’d sailed had traveled over sea-lanes inhabited by pirates and had been lightly armed. He knew how to direct fire. He’d practiced gunnery, though he’d never been on a ship that had actually fired at an enemy.
He knew his first acquisition had to be an experienced naval artillery officer. Then a first mate. With those two in place, they could then help him select a crew and the armor and supplies they would need.
Etienne waited on deck as Alex prowled through the ship. Alex wondered how much his partner—if they concluded the deal—could put into the vessel. As much as he wanted the ship, he would not risk the lives of those recruited to sail it.
Alex had always loved the sea. He had in instinct for sailing that he did not have for agriculture. There was something exhilarating about testing his skill against the sea and wind, a freedom he didn’t find on land. He wanted this. He wanted it very badly.
He went back on the main deck where the comte was waiting.
“You said it was adequately armed. It is not. We will need at least fourteen additional cannon.”
Etienne shook his head. “The most I can afford is ten.”
“Then the arrangement is off. I will not ask men to commit suicide. I do not really fancy it myself.”
The Frenchman’s expression did not change.
Alex waited.
Etienne finally nodded. “I will see what I can do.” He hesitated. “There is something else,
mon ami
. I have learned that diamonds have been discovered in Brazil. If you take several prizes, you can use the money to then go to Brazil and purchase diamonds for very little.”