The Charleston Chase (Phantom Knights Book 2)

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Authors: Amalie Vantana

Tags: #love, #suspense, #mystery, #spies, #action adventure, #regency, #romance 1800s

BOOK: The Charleston Chase (Phantom Knights Book 2)
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The

Charleston

Chase

Phantom Knights

Book 2

AMALIE VANTANA

The
Charleston
Chase

By Amalie Vantana

Copyright 2013 Amalie
Vantana

Smashwords Edition

Thank you for downloading this
ebook. This book remains the copyrighted property of the author,
and may not be redistributed to others for commercial or
non-commercial purposes. If you enjoyed this book, please encourage
your friends to download their own copy from their favorite
authorized retailer. Thank you for your support.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters,
places, and incidents are either products of the author’s
imagination or used fictitiously. Any similarity to actual people,
organizations, and/or events is purely coincidental.

 

Cover art © by Stephanie Mooney.
All rights reserved.

http://www.mooneydesigns.net

 

 

 

 

 

 

For my sisters;

Elizabeth, the
determined,

Kim, the princess,

and Amanda, the ninja.

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Read on for the next adventure in the Phantom Knights
series

Chapter 1

Acknowledgements

About the Author

Chapter 1

 

Bess

 

10 February 1817

Charleston, South Carolina

 

B
eing a
spy had taught me some valuable tricks, like how to pick locks.
When I was fourteen, I had discovered that I had an aptitude for
unlocking barriers that were meant to keep people out. I had yet to
come up against a lock that I could not undo. The key was to
control your breathing. If you control your breathing, you control
the beating of your heart and in turn, the fumbling of your hands.
If you stay emotionally controlled, you will find your
way.

It also helps when people are trusting, for trust
leads to unlatched windows, and the people of Charleston appeared
to be very trusting.

Stepping through an open window that was nearly as
tall as I was, I let myself into a large house on Fort Street. I
knew the owner to be away from Charleston; I also knew the owner
had information that would serve me well.

When I took a good look at the room I had entered, I
paused to stare. It was a two-story book room. On three of the
walls were stocked bookshelves, and in one corner was a wooden
spiral staircase that led up to a second level of bookshelves.
There was a narrow walkway that encompassed all three walls. The
room was unlike any I had ever seen or dreamed. Jack, my little
brother, would possibly kill to possess such a room.

The window I had entered through was one in a wall
of windows that overlooked a garden. There was a large desk with
books and papers all stacked in orderly piles. Snapping out of my
stupor, I moved to the desk first. There was a map unrolled across
the center, and all the books were nautical ones. There was a stack
of opened letters, so I started going through them.

Bills, invoices, correspondence;
there had to be twenty letters there. Finally, at the bottom of the
stack, I found one that interested me. It was written in a woman’s
hand; the flourishing script and the slant told me as much. There
was no signature, but there was a list of names—associates in
league with the secret society known only as the Holy
Order.

Folding the letter, I tucked it into the pocket of
my black trousers. There were only two more drawers but as I pulled
them open, the sound of the front door opening halted my hand. When
a man’s voice spoke, coming clear and loud through the wall, my
heart felt like lead in my chest. I knew that voice, but I had been
told that his return was not expected for another three days.

Closing the drawers quietly, I moved away from the
desk to the window, slipping through without a sound.

Crouching low, to avoid being seen through any of
the windows that covered the side of the house, I inched my way
toward the front gate.

Everything that happened only a month ago still
haunted both my waking moments and my dreams like a never ceasing
nightmare. I felt as if I should have known that I was walking into
a trap, but I had not, and now a friend was dead, and my dreams of
a new life were shattered.

Three persons had escorted me to Charleston; Levi,
who was a former Phantom under my leadership, Reverend Gideon Reid,
and Mrs. Beaumont my mother’s housekeeper. My mother had insisted I
bring her housekeeper with me for respectability since I would not
allow my mother to accompany me to Charleston.

When I walked off the
Queen’s Reward
, there
was only one plan in my mind—to find all the information on the
Holy Order that I could and depart the city.

George Crawford, founder of the Phantoms, had sent
me to Charleston to work for his nephew’s team of spies, but when
he told me that Samuel Mason had been tracking the Holy Order for
months, I formed my own plans.

As we set out at the port, Levi and I were supposed
to follow Mrs. Beaumont and Reverend Reid to the church he would be
ministering in for a year, but Levi and I had made good our escape,
directing the coachman to take us to Samuel Mason’s house
instead.

Levi was down the street in our hired carriage
waiting for me. When I approached Samuel’s house, I had to stop and
stare, for it was beautiful. All the houses in this waterside city
were different from those in Philadelphia; colorful and exotic.
Samuel’s was made of grayish white bricks with three stories of
white porches and white columns flanking the front. There was a
black, iron fence running the length of the front of the house with
a black gate. When I looked upon the house, the face belonging to
the master of the house flashed in my mind. Seven months had done
nothing to diminish his image from my thoughts. I would have been
intrigued by both the house and its master, if I did not detest the
man so much.

The gate was ahead of me, but I paused at the edge
of the house, for coming through the gate was a woman, smiling
slightly and idly swinging her gloves from her hand. My breath
stalled in my lead-feeling chest.

All of the pain from the past year slammed through
me accumulating into one delirious conviction. She was responsible
for it all.

She halted when she saw me. Her eyes that were a
mixture of deep blue and purple, widened, and her mouth opened. She
was small in stature and blonde, but I knew that the color of her
hair was a pretense, like every word that ever fell from her lips.
I rose up to my full height of five feet and nine inches, a giant
in a sea of dainty women. Then again, I had fought a giant in the
past, and he and I were nothing alike.

“Raven,” the woman before me hissed recognizing the
mask I wore that had a black leather raven on one side. She turned
and ran.

I pushed off the ground with the balls of my feet,
running hard as I pursued her. After six months of waiting for that
moment, I would not waste it.

She ran across the cobblestone street into a wooded
area of land that stood between the house and the water. She was
fast, but she was also wearing a dress, and the fashionable boots
women wore were ridiculously difficult to run in with their high
heels. I was on her heels, so I leapt forward, knocking her to the
ground from behind.

As a puff of air exploded from her at the force of
landing on the ground, I took advantage of her momentary weakness
by sitting up, rolling her over, and slamming my fist against her
middle. She jerked up, gasping. Throwing my fist forward to hit her
again; she jerked to the side, and my fist hit the ground. Pain
shot up my hand and into my arm. I shook my hand trying to dispel
the pain, and that distraction cost me.

She pummeled me in the side.
Groaning against the pains her fists were creating, I grabbed her
right wrist, but she used her left hand to grab my knit cap and
pull my face down toward her. I released her wrist and grabbed her
neck, trying to choke her. I did not want to choke the life from
her, only scare her—repay her for all the trouble she caused me.
When I thought about that, anger boiled my blood, and for a moment,
I did want to kill her.

She shoved her hands beneath the sleeves of my
jacket and dug her nails into my flesh. The pain was like little
knives piercing me. I released her neck with a yelp, pulling my
arms away from her clutches. She started to cough. Drops of blood
were trickling down my arms, sliding onto my gloves. I threw my arm
back to punch her again, but she jerked her head to the right, and
her fist hit my side again, knocking me back. She scrambled up, but
I was quicker.

Grabbing a fistful of her hair, pins went flying as
I pulled her blonde wig from her head. It served her right for not
wearing a hat. Netting was covering her ebony hair. She moved until
a good ten feet were between us. I stood, holding up her wig in a
taunt.

“What do you want, Bess?” she asked, clutching her
stomach.

“The Holy Order,” I replied smoothly, running
strands of her wig between my fingers.

“No,” she said.

So be it! Dropping her wig, ready
to run at her again, she raised her hand, and the late morning
sunshine glinted off a silver blade. I had but
a second to react as her hand came down, sending a dagger
flying at my chest. I leapt to the right, and the blade sailed past
me.

Landing on the hard ground, pain shot through my
ribs. As I blew out a furious puff, everything inside of me went
rigid in a burning desire to cause her as much pain as she had
caused me. I pushed myself to my knees, but she was beside me
before I could get to my feet. She kicked my stomach, and I let out
a shout as I fell back. The witch dropped to her knees on my
stomach; the tip of a sharp blade placed against my temple.

“I do not want to hurt you.” She shrieked as I
pinched her leg. She slapped my cheek, sending pain through my
face; then she pressed her blade against my neck again. “But I will
if you do not leave Charleston.” She kept the blade against my
throat as she rose. I did not move for I knew she would cut my
throat. “Today,” she added before kicking my side, hard. Fiery pain
covered my whole side as I rolled over gasping then coughing.

She started to walk away.

“Guinevere,” I called out, she
looked over her shoulder at me, “I am not leaving.”

“We shall see,” she replied before retrieving her
wig and half running, half limping down the street.

As I rose up, she disappeared around the corner of a
house. Fury was soaring through me as I held my side that felt like
it had some cracked ribs.

The sunlight glinted off the steel
of the dagger she had thrown at me. In her haste to retreat, she
had forgotten it. I stumbled toward it, but could not bend over to
retrieve it, so I lowered to my knees to pick it up. It was nine
inches in length, and seeing the handle caused me to suck a sharp
breath. Engraved in the center of the gold handle was a heart with
the letters
J
and
G
. I
knelt there for several painful heartbeats as my mind shouted what
that stood for. It was for her, after all, that Jack had deserted
me in November. He loved the vixen and would not stop until he
found her.

Though Jack had never told me, I
had known he was betrothed to her. I had overheard their stolen
conversation at a ball when Jack had given her an engagement ring.
It was the same night that she was supposed to murder James Monroe,
who was about to be inaugurated as the president of our country.
She had not done it, switching the poison with a sleeping draught,
but the woman had done many other travesties, which was reason
enough why I should keep her whereabouts a secret. I did not want
my brother to do anything foolish, like marry the witch. Betrayal
flashed in my heart, followed by bitter anger, for I knew he would
do that if I did not stop him.

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