Lorenzo and the Turncoat (7 page)

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Authors: Lila Guzmán

BOOK: Lorenzo and the Turncoat
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Hawthorne unlocked it. “After you,” he said to Madame De Gálvez.

Hands tied together, she stepped inside.

The room held two small beds covered with handmade quilts, a nightstand and porcelain washbasin, a folding screen, a chest of drawers, and a small table with two chairs. The floor was bare and squeaked with every step.

If she tries to get away, Hawthorne thought, I'll hear her moving about. He peeked out the room's only window.

Lightning sliced through the sky, illuminating the courtyard below.

It was a three-story drop to the ground. Madame De Gálvez would break her neck if she tried to escape through the window.

“You like the room?” the innkeeper asked.

“Yes, it is quite suitable.”

After the innkeeper left, Hawthorne locked the door and slipped the key in his jacket pocket.

Madame De Gálvez stood in the middle of the room, fidgeting.

Hawthorne untied her hands, removed his wet jacket and spread it over a high-back chair to dry. He took off his shirt, damp around the collar and cuffs, but otherwise dry. He laid the shirt over the folding screen. “Change into this.”

“No.”

“You're soaking wet and will catch a cold if you stay in those clothes.” He looked her straight in the eye. “I will not ravish you. I have never bedded an unwilling woman and I shan't start tonight. You have my solemn promise that I will return you in the condition I found you.”

Casting him a doubtful look, she stepped behind the screen.

While he waited, he cleaned his pistol and set it on top of a chest of drawers. Leaving a loaded weapon near such a cheeky woman would be unwise at best. She would use it on him if given the chance.

There was a timid knock at the door. Hawthorne opened it.

A scullery maid stood there holding a tray of cheese, horn-shaped bread, and a teapot. He gave her a tip and took the tray. He placed it on the table, locked the door, and slipped the key back into his jacket pocket.

Madame De Gálvez stepped from behind the screen, his shirt reaching her knees. She had taken off her bonnet and unpinned her hair. Reddish-gold tresses went halfway down her back. She edged over to the chair where his jacket hung and shifted nervously from foot to foot.


Ecoutez
, monsieur,” she said, hands knotted behind her. “If you release me, no harm will come to you. I give you my word.”

“In due time, Madame.”

“My husband will pay any ransom. Name your price.”

“It isn't money I want.”

“What then?”

“I will explain when the time is right, Madame. Please sit down.”

With great reluctance, she obliged him.

He sliced the cheese into thin wafers, cut slices of bread, placed them on a saucer, and put it in front of her. He poured her a cup of tea.

She frowned at the food.

“Eat, Madame.”

“I'm not hungry.”

“We have a long trip ahead of us. Eat.”

Sighing, she nibbled on a piece of cheese and washed it down with a cup of tea.

Hawthorne studied her while they ate in sullen silence. She kept her eyes down, glancing up occasionally. The last woman he had supped with in the privacy of his bedchamber had been his mistress. What a scene that had become when he told her he was going to Baton Rouge without her!

Madame De Gálvez finished eating and sat back in her chair.

He saw her shiver. “You're cold.”

“I'm fine.”

“Get into bed. You'll be warmer there.”

“No.”

“Lord, woman! Do as I say.” He went to the bed and turned back the covers. “If you please.”

Arms folded over her chest, she trudged to the bed and slipped between the sheets.

“That's a good girl.” He tucked the quilt around her. He pushed the second bed next to hers, stretched out beside her on top of the covers and put an arm around her middle. “This should keep you from going anywhere.” In this position, the slightest movement would wake him. “Good night, Madame. I am told I snore, so I apologize in advance for any inconvenience.”

Eugenie lay in bed, pinned in place by his muscular arm. Little by little, the cold iron key in her hand warmed. She had lifted it from Hawthorne's jacket right in front of his face and he had not noticed.

She watched lightning illuminate the room and struggled to stay awake. When he fell asleep, she could get away.

Light snoring turned to deep, throaty snorts. While she waited for just the right moment, she idly wondered if Lorenzo snored.

It seemed like hour upon hour went by, but she knew that was not so. Loud drunken voices, most speaking German, drifted through the floorboards from the room below. Tomorrow, they would pass through the Acadian Coast populated with French Canadians, some of them her father's friends.

Noises in the tavern became fewer and fewer.

Hawthorne rolled over. His snores changed to short rumbles.

Eugenie waited to make her move until she was certain he was asleep. She eased back the covers.

A lightning bolt lit the room. She memorized the location of the furniture to avoid running into it. She took mincing steps and prayed the floorboards would not squeak and betray her. Ever so carefully, she eased the key toward the keyhole, but before she could insert it, something rustled behind her. She froze.

Her abductor lit a candle. “Where do you think you're going?”

She whirled in surprise.

Hawthorne raised up on one elbow. “Give me the key. Get back to bed.”

A flash of lightning lit the pistol on the chest of drawers. She grabbed it and pointed it at him.

“Go ahead. Shoot. It's not loaded.”

She aimed and pulled the trigger.

The hammer clicked in the pan. Nothing happened. She growled in frustration and threw the pistol at him.

He caught it in one hand. “Damn, woman! I told you I would do you no harm. How am I repaid? You try to kill me.”

“Before this is over, I will see you dead.”

He looked at her with chillingly cold eyes. “Get back to bed.”

Chapter Eleven

Rain hammered the warehouse roof. Charles slid back the door a fraction of an inch and peeped out. How could Thomas be sleeping through this? They had finished the inventory some time ago, but decided that the weather was far too bad to venture beyond the warehouse.

The exhausted boy had curled into a chair, his knees drawn up to his chest. He looked uncomfortable. Charles took a blanket from a box and wrapped it around him, then went back to watching the lightning display.

Lorenzo walked through the driving rain. It slashed his face, but he didn't care. He had to find Eugenie. Where could she be? Who was the man she had left with?

He headed home. His path took him toward the warehouse on the waterfront. Lights in the upper window suggested Thomas was still there, working.

The howling wind gathered force. A sudden thrust of air hit Lorenzo so hard he had trouble staying upright. He leaned into the wind, only to find it so strong, it actually pushed him back a couple of steps. Rain whipped around him. He grabbed a tree trunk and hung on with all his might. Overhead, branches scraped against each other.

A wooden house across the way broke up bit by bit. First, roof tiles flew off. A rocking chair on the porch crashed into the wooden railing and smashed apart. Lightning struck the chimney. The loud boom accompanying the crash reminded Lorenzo of a cannon blast.

A bolt struck the mast of a ship at anchor.

It wasn't safe to be under a tree in a lightning storm, but the second Lorenzo let go of the trunk, he felt like the wind would pick him up and carry him away.

Debris swirled in the air. He put his arm before his face to protect it from flying objects.

Something whizzed past his head, so close it grazed his ear. If a lightning bolt didn't get him, a wind-driven object would. He had to get somewhere safe … and fast.

Charles strained to see in the dark. There was something morbidly fascinating about watching this. Nature seemed to be dissolving before his eyes. A swirling gray cloud of debris whooshed by.

A new bolt of lightning slashed through the clouds. It was quickly followed by another lightning bolt and another and another.

Nature was putting on a brilliant display, far more impressive than any fireworks he had seen. It lit the figure of some idiot who didn't have sense enough to get in out of the rain.

Lightning blazed.

Dios mío
, Lorenzo thought. I was right. It's a hurricane!

There was a bright flash of light. Something cracked overhead.

Lorenzo looked up.

A tree branch hurtled toward him.

Charles saw the branch fall and dashed outside. The force of the wind nearly took his breath away. He struggled forward. Completely drenched in seconds, he swiped hair from his eyes and waited for another lightning flash.

The whole street lit up. Wind blasted something the size of a bucket through the street.

Charles found it impossible to move quickly against the strong gale. Plodding along slowly, methodically, he eventually reached the downed man. In a burst of strength, he managed to move the tree branch, throw the man over a shoulder, and carry him to the warehouse.

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