Read The Pirate Captain Online

Authors: Kerry Lynne

Tags: #18th Century, #Caribbean, #Pirates, #Fiction

The Pirate Captain (5 page)

BOOK: The Pirate Captain
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Time came in blissful increments. Her heart pulsed, a hollow echo of itself, once…twice…slower…thrice…

A voice, deep and so very familiar, said, “Not yet.”

She yearned to remain, but knew she must go. It was what he wanted. She allowed the hands, ones she knew as intimately as the voice, to propel her upward, back to the light.

Rough handling shattered her euphoria.

A bit more gentleness was to be expected in the Dear Beyond
, she thought crossly, as she was lifted and pulled. As if her complaints had been heard, peace was returned, gently rocking. Her hopes soared anew. She was being taken. This was the journey of which she had been told. Her heart raced with the anticipation of waiting glories, reunions with loved ones.

The journey, however, came to an abrupt end. She was manhandled once more, coarsely passed through a progression of hands. She thrashed in protest, desiring to be returned to the blessed exultation. To be shown such rapture only to have it taken was too cruel. The unpleasantness increased. She was dropped on a hard surface with the same care as the day’s catch. Her senses congealed enough for her to know that she laid half on her stomach, an arm pinned under her, in a growing pool of water. The vibration of approaching footsteps was felt through the wood under her cheek.

Through water-clogged ears she heard, “She breathin’?”

“Barely,” came in a male voice.

Breathing. Air!

Cate’s chest spasmed and she was caught between the gurgling wheezes of inhaling, while at the same time retching up foul-tasting sea water and bile.

“Aye, well, she lives now,” said the first.

On the small hope that she had been returned to the
Constancy
, she opened her eyes to a sideways view of a deck, but an unfamiliar one. Feet, bare and shod, surrounded her. She looked up into the faces of strangers staring down, with expressions of everything from curiosity to bemusement. A touch on the shoulder startled her and she swung out. With one arm pinned, however, she could only squirm like an exposed worm in the wetness, the feeble efforts bringing a chuckle from the onlookers. The hand returned to run from the crest of her shoulder down her back.

“Great Caesar’s ghost, lookit this, Cap’n.”

“Bloody hell! What the…?”

“Looks like a sword blade,” murmured another voice, gruffer than the first.

“Looks like she’s been through a war.”

Amid their wonderment and shock, came an inner voice.

Run!

Cate sprang up and fled. In a part of her mind, she sprinted like a startled deer, evading those giving chase. Another part knew she was but floundering, rubbery-legged and heavy-footed. Whether her path was aft or forward she had no notion. Foremost in her mind was the rail, and then the water. The pirates readily caught up and ran alongside, herding her away from her goal. Taunting, they plucked and snatched, shouting insults at her, until she came up against the raised face of the forecastle. She was trapped.

The pirates closed in. Cate elbowed a tall one in the throat and kneed a smaller one in the gut before she was seized and pressed against the wall. Ducking away from the mouths seeking hers, she screamed, a pitiful half-choked thing. They tore at her meager scraps of clothing to grope her breasts and plunge their hands between her legs.

A shout from somewhere amid them caused them to fall back. Cate was pinned to the wall, as if in presentation to a single man. A scar angled from brow to jaw across his brutish face. The thick braid hanging from the side of his head, studded with beads and bones, swung with his step as he strolled toward her. He was regarded with such deference, he had to be Blackthorne. Fondling his crotch, he intent gaze slid from her face downward. She felt sufficient breeze to know one breast was exposed. She angled an eye down to see her belly was bared, revealing its web of scars, old and so very secret. Mortified, she tried to draw up a knee, but it was seized and forced back down.

Scarface’s gaze returned to Cate’s face. His lips drew back into a leering smirk. “So you like knives, do ye? I’ll part that pretty flesh with somethin’ what will make you smile.”

Her breath coming in ragged gasps, she thought to spit in his face, but a mouth once filled with seawater had gone dry. He twisted up a handful of her hair in his fist, wrenched her head back and kissed her. His tongue plunged to gagging depths as the onlookers cheered.

“Hold fast. Belay, there! Belay!” came a shout, growing nearer with each word.

“Aye, Cap’n!” the pirates chorused and fell back, snapping to attention.

Only Scarface held her now. Cate writhed under him as his assault continued. She caught a glimpse over his shoulder of a face and a thunderous expression.

“Release her, I say. That. Is. An. Order!”

Scarface was jerked away, growling in protest. Now left to stand on her own, Cate swayed and staggered. Her legs folded and she crumpled to the deck. She tried to push up, but her arms were rubber. Head hanging, her hair in wet snakes about her face, she could only see the feet of the two men squared off over her. Scarface struck a belligerent stance. The “Captain” stood so near, she had to move a hand to keep from being stepped on.

“You bunch of rutting, unhung, clam-for-brains. Your mates are over there risking their asses for your pockets and all you can think of is your quim-wedges?” bellowed the Captain.

Something was dropped on her. A coat. She clutched it, rolling into it like a crab into its shell. A violent siege of coughing overtook her; the two men’s words came only in broken spurts. Their tone was telling enough: Scarface’s defiance and the captain’s fury.

“She’s a hostage, not plunder. Can’t you bunch of slavering curs remember that, or did your brains drain into your cockstands?” the Captain shouted.

Cate was jerked to her feet. Much to her relief, she caught enough of a glimpse to know it was the Captain who propelled her from behind, catching her when she stumbled. Unlike the flush decks of the
Constancy
, this ship had a raised afterdeck and cabin. It was there she was taken.

“What cursed piece o’ slime fouled that goddamned deck. Swabbers!” came a bone-penetrating bellow from outside as she was shoved through the door.

Stumbling, Cate caught herself on a mast that passed from the ceiling down through the floor.

“Stow yourself over there,” he said, pointing to a far corner.

She squinted into the cavern-like room. She had the impression of dark walls, but it was impossible to see past the blaze of sunlight streaming through the skylight. Shielding her eyes against the glare, she felt her way around to where she had been sent. Every few steps she was stopped by a gurgling hack of a violence that seemed to originate from somewhere near her toes.

“And put a stopper in your gob. I can’t abide a yammering woman.”

On deck he had been but a blur. Her eyes still unaccustomed to the darkness, he was still no more than a dark blot against the light. Still, she could feel his malignant glare. Light-headed from coughing, she thought to at least nod an acknowledgment, but even that small gesture threatened to be an affront. She stood gripping her elbows against the shivering that now beset her.

The light failed long before it reached the room’s corners, but it felt considerably larger than Chambers’ cabin. Under the skylight sat a large curve-legged table. Its surface was barely visible under the clutter of paraphernalia and charts, their curled edges weighted by everything from a candle sconce to something that resembled a dried cloven hoof. Pencils, dividers, and all manner of navigational tools were scattered about as well. The Captain stood there now, over a chart. Head bent, he walked the dividers across the parchment, the fingers of his other hand tapping the wood as if in calculation.

While he was thus occupied, Cate wormed her arms into the sleeves of the coat and nestled deeper into it. From it rose the smell of male and sweat, with undertones of orange oil and cinnamon. Styled without lapels, the deep cuffs reaching nearly to her elbows, the coat had the feel of having once lived a life of privilege. As her eyes adjusted to the darkness, she could see traces of its original rich burgundy where soutache or other decorations had once laid. Now faded to the point of near colorlessness, the garment bore few embellishments other than horn buttons.

The knife scrape on her breast burned horribly. She twitched at the sting of the nicks on her ribs and belly. Water dripped from her, patting on the floor with the regularity of a ticking clock. She ventured a hand to wipe the wetness from her face, quickly tucking it back into the coat before the movement was noticed. The tremors increased, threatening to tear her joints, with the realization of what had just happened, or nearly so. She kept a sharp eye both on the captain and the door, half-expecting the snarling pack to burst in and finish what they had started.

“Would you mind not staring at me with those damned eyes?”

Cate started at being spoken to. His voice held a timbre that could have been quite fearsome had it not been so throaty and ragged. It took her a moment to find her voice.

“I beg pardon. I didn’t realize—”

“Aye, well, you are,” he huffed indignantly. “Seeking to curse me, I’ll wager. I’ve only seen eyes that color once. On a jaguar idol in Vera Cruz, they were. Cursed me, the bloody thing did.”

He ended with a dramatic shudder. A squat brown bottle sat amidst the table’s clutter. He snatched it up, uncorked it, and took a long drink.

Cate ducked her head to hide a smile. It wasn’t the first time such comments had been made, most especially while living in the Highlands. Nearly as superstitious as mariners, the Highlanders had more than once accused her of casting spells and curses.

He continued to work, while she continued to stand, her gaze fixed on a point at her feet where rug and floor met. From the corner of her eye, she saw him dart a glance at her now and again, presumably in hopes of catching her evil eye.

If only putting a curse on him would be that simple.

“What are you—?” Cate was cut short by another fit of coughing, this one full of fluid.

The Captain straightened. His scowl was visible even through the dimness. “You look bloody awful!”

She cleared her throat, a wholly unfeminine sound. “I feel like I’ve swallowed half of the Caribbean,” she said more crossly than intended.

“Rum will answer.” He seized the bottle, and then glanced about, muttering darkly under his breath. “Ah,” he said at finally locating a glass atop a desk. “I knew I’d seen one somewheres or another.”

Looking up from pouring, he was disconcerted to find her still standing. “Well, don’t just stand there gaping. Sit!”

She came up against something hard and cold, and realized she had been inching backwards the while. It was a cannon, one of a pair, “
Merdering Mary
” roughly carved in its carriage.

“Jump and I swear I’ll cheer whilst you drown,” he said.

“Excuse me?”

“Come the bloody hell away from the damned window!”

Another glance showed she was indeed not much more than an arm’s length from a gallery of windows. Running ceiling-high, they angled out at the top, with a broad sill at their base.

“I didn’t mean…I mean, I wasn’t—” she began.

“Seems once in a day would be enough, but mark me, I shan’t raise a finger to preserve you from Jones’ locker. Most of the men believe ’tis the hand of God on a drowning soul. To save one is to deny God, so ’twill be no matter to watch you go.”

By the sound of his voice coming out of the shadows, he was pacing.

“Then why did you pull me out?” Cate considered how much easier things would have been if they had allowed her to drown.

“Because you are valuable,” he said coldly. “At least for now. But pressing the point could prove unwise. Value can be ever so relative, don’t you think?”

She had the impression the inquiry wasn’t meant to be answered.

“Pray, would you not oblige me to shout like you’re a f’c’stleman. Sit there if you like. Oh, hell, I don’t really give a damn,” he grumbled with an irritated swipe.

Minding the coat, Cate reflexively sat on the nearest thing: a chest beside her. Gripping the wood beneath her, the urge to cough built like a rumbling bubble in her chest. She gulped several times, breathing quickly in and out, hoping to squelch it.

“Be warned: puke on me deck and you’ll regret it. And take those rags off before you catch your death,” he said.

Squinting at him, she searched for any sign of lustfulness, but found none. Turning her back, she did so, the shift, now so torn, nearly falling off on its own accord.

His path around the table brought him into the full light. She sucked her breath in sharply at seeing him fully for the first time. Her first impression was of black eyes and a leonine head of black hair and beard. The back of her neck prickled as the name “Blackbeard” sprung to mind. She stoutly reminded herself that infamous personage was long since dead. He was of average height and slimly built, his hair bound by a faded blue headscarf. The remainder of his features being so buried in beard, it was blessedly difficult to tell much more about him, other than he was probably not much more than her score and a half in years.

In spite of the bucket boots he wore, he moved like a great dark cat as he brought the drink around, barely making a footfall; a predator, lithe and lethal. She drew her legs up underneath herself and tucked in the coattail more snugly around her, then shakily took the proffered glass, murmuring, “Thank you.”

Cate took a drink. Her throat constricted, requiring her to swallow several times before it was allowed it to pass.

“Rum!” She shuddered. “But, it’s fine. I’m grateful for anything, if it will allow me to warm up.”

A fortuitous fit of coughing helped make her point.

He eyed her with suspicion, then took a drink, closing his eyes to anxiously await its effects. She eyed him, trying to judge his level of drunkenness. Drink could bring a man to do many things not done when sober. His step was solid, but his speech seemed thickened, almost slurred, although that could have been resultant of its graveled quality.

BOOK: The Pirate Captain
2.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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