guarantee that I will be able to maintain
my good behavior.”
Moving off the bed, he strode
across the room and began rummaging
through a trunk, throwing assorted
clothing in garish hues this way and that
at his sides. Kneeling on the floor to
reach into the bottom, he tossed her two
pieces of corbeau fabric, the color
hinting between dark green, black, and
death.
“These will do. Put them on.”
She caught the pieces mid-air.
Plying the fabric apart, she recognized a
pair of breeches and a muslin shirt.
“Put them on and be quick about it,”
he ordered. “Don’t keep me waiting.”
“I prefer privacy.” She straightened
her spine. “You will have to leave.”
He rose to his full height, balled his
fists, and took a step forward. “You’ll
put the clothes on or you’ll try something
else on for size. A tutorial I’d be more
than happy to oblige.”
His black breeches clung to his
muscular frame, leaving nothing to her
imagination.
Constance
jerked
the
clothes beneath the sheet and held it like
a barrier between them. Satisfied she
would do as he’d ordered, he walked to
the garish desk and busied himself with
papers scattered there. He did not leave.
“Turn your back, pirate!”
His gaze instantly narrowed upon
her. He growled low in his throat and
took a hasty step forward. Then mid-
stride, he stopped with fisted hands and
leaned back against the desk to cross his
arms over his chest.
“I do believe you
want
me to
watch, you haughty wench. Aye. It would
do my heart and my rudder good to give
you my dutiful attention.”
Constance realized her mistake as
Mrs. Mortimer’s words echoed in her
head.
A whiny woman drinks sour milk,
while a soft-spoken woman eats cream.
Her stomach growled, furthering her
shame.
“Do you plan to taunt me as well as
starve me?” she asked.
“To the one, I will do as I please.
To the other, your gut will thank me soon
enough.”
“The day will never come that I
thank you for anything.”
“Including your life?” he queried.
Her stomach growled unpleasantly.
Why did the man know exactly what she
needed and when? It was exasperating.
“You have saved my life. I’m grateful,
but I do not need anything else from
you,” she insisted.
“Liar.” As if on cue, her stomach
growled loudly. “Suit yourself,” he said
pointing to her clothes.
Frowning
with
embarrassment,
Constance reached for the shirt he’d
given her and put her arms through the
sleeves while keeping the sheet pulled
high over her breasts. The task proved
difficult but once she learned how to use
the sheet to her advantage, she was able
to dress with calculated ease. When
she’d tied the bodice in place at the
neck, she shyly directed her gaze at the
pirate. His heated expression proved
that his prying eyes had never once left
her person.
“It would be much easier if you
stood up,” he scolded.
His vulgarity sent a shock through
her system. Mrs. Mortimer had been the
only other human soul ever in attendance
during her toilette. It was positively
scandalous that she dressed in front of
this man, with or without a sheet. No
gentleman he. Even so, perseverance
held sway. She would rather confront the
man dressed than devoid of a stitch of
clothing. At least clothed, she stood to
regain some dignity. Drawing the odd-
fitting breeches over her legs, trousers
which fit loose around her waist and
snugly around her hips, it grew
somewhat easier to relax with a degree
of modesty salvaged.
He gifted her with applause.
“Bravo! Quite a performance.”
“You’re despicable,” she snapped.
“Why? I’ve seen everything you
have to offer, and more.”
She gasped. “What do you mean?”
“Exactly that. How do you expect
you slept so calmly last night, little rose?
Who do you think took off your wet
clothes and comforted you through your
feverish tremors?”
“You despicable lout!”
“Despicable
louts
are
often
comforted by naked women.”
Constance leaped off the bunk and
rushed toward him, her nails bared to
scratch out his good eye. But he
extended his long arms and his hands
caught hold of her before she could do
any damage. He laughed, turning her
around in his iron-clad embrace. He then
pressed his groin against her backside
and whispered huskily, “I dare what I
want, when I want.”
His hands braced her against his
rock hard body. Frightened by his
obvious arousal, she struggled to regain
her freedom.
“Resisting
me
is
pointless,
Constance. I know what you need and
I’m more than willing to provide. Only
say the word and I will gladly show you
how thrilling it is to sail with a pirate.”
“I’d die first,” she hissed.
“So you’ve said and nearly done.”
“You’re a vile, despicable beast!”
she railed.
“A hungry beast,” he said close to
her ear, taking one lobe between his
teeth.
The hair on her neck stood on end
as his breath energized her skin all the
way to her lower extremities. Sensations
prickled along her spine as his lips
traced light kisses from her ear to her
shoulder. Unbelievably, Constance felt
her body reacting to his touch. Her legs
weakened,
her
womb
constricted
strangely, and she let out a defeated
moan. Encouraged, he pushed her blouse
down the top of her shoulder and flicked
his tongue across her neck, working up
to her ear in a circular pattern.
“I’ll not pluck your petals unless
you allow it, sweeting,” he whispered.
“Never,” she moaned.
“So you say now. Mark my words
— you’ll be craving what I can give you
before long.”
His hands led a full assault on her
senses, inching up her stomach until his
fingers wrapped around both of her
breasts, teasing the neglected buds into
expectant peaks. Constance covered his
hands with her own in an effort to
remove them and sucked in a struggling
breath, trying desperately to douse the
engulfing fire coursing through her veins.
“Remember what a real man feels
like, Constance,” he said, huskily,
pressing against her. “Hard where you
are soft, strong where you are weak.”
His breath, his words tapped her
strength. Her legs nearly buckled as he
nuzzled her neck and continued the
assault on her awakening body.
“Remember the heat between us
when you’re cold and aching with
want.”
Constance moaned as his lips
traced kisses along the length of her
shoulder. Never before had she felt so
adrift. She leaned into him, completely
lost in the moment, eager to absorb his
strength. Desperate to taste his lips
before she collapsed weakly to the floor,
she turned her head toward his. But she
met empty space. No sooner had she
given up fighting his seduction, she
found herself indelicately propped
against the desk. Gathering her wits,
trying to understand what had just
occurred, she heard the cabin door slam
shut. Angered that she had just betrayed
herself, she ran toward the door, latched
onto the knob and threw it open to spin
his head with her insults. But instead of
catching the man who’d just humiliated
her, she came face to face with a dirty
scoundrel bearing a toothless grin,
sporting eyes as round as glass beads.
“Well. Well. Look at the cat what’s
jumped in my lap,” the strange man
yapped like a gutter dog.
Constance backed into the room,
desperate to escape the filthy man. With
a sudden boost of courage, she slammed
the door in the jackal’s face. Then,
leaning back on the portal, she berated
herself for coming so close to giving in
to her enemy against her own better
judgment. It was apparent, now more
than ever, that she had to find a way to
regain her freedom. For all intents and
purposes, she’d been compromised. The
only hope she had for rectifying her
father’s downfall was making it to Spain
and begging for Aunt Lydia’s help.
London held no future for her now.
Things as they were, Constance would
rather die trying to help her father, then
return home in disgrace, and be forced to
marry Lord Burton and spend a lifetime
of misery in his household.
Yet how was it her body ignited
beneath her enemy’s caress when
Burton’s touch filled her with horrible
misgivings? Surely the opposite should
be true. Burton was a member of the ton,
the pirate wasn’t. Was she doomed to
end up on the streets, cast out of society?
She couldn’t allow it to happen. She
needed a plan.
First, it was imperative that she
contact Mrs. Mortimer. She’d been told
her childhood governess was in another
cabin. But with a guard posted at her
door, how would she be able to find
her? Her gaze scanned the captain’s
cabin until a thought sparked her into
motion. Hurrying over to the captain’s
desk, she pored over the various papers
there, hoping to find a blueprint of the
ship. Once found and researched, she
was sure it would provide information
she needed to locate Morty and collect
her. From there, she and Mrs. Mortimer
could escape using one of the gigs above
deck.
Yes, it was a sound plan. Once she
arrived in Spain, she would locate Aunt
Lydia and use her connections to report
the
Striker
’s activities, to include turn in
the pirate who was a threat to more than
her life.
• • •
death of him. Percy strolled out onto the
Striker
’s deck and inhaled a lung’s
breath of salty air, letting the stinging
breeze fill his nostrils and cool his
ardor. He loved the sea, had felt a
kinship to it since he’d enlisted in the
navy as a young man — against his
father’s wishes and rules of the peerage
— using a name that would not bring his
father shame. It had taken years to mend
the rift his rebellious act had caused
within his family.
Percy wanted nothing more than to
please his father, to make life right again
for the old man. For many years, he’d
consigned his soul to Simon Danbury,
director of a secretive group of patriots
bound to do anything within their power
to protect England’s shores and the
country from within. No sacrifice had
been too great. No deprivation too
weighty. He’d willingly cast the mold of
foppish Percival Avery in order to
maintain his secret identity. The creation
of his alter ego was his complete
opposite in every way. Underneath his
mask of disguise, nothing mattered but
revenge. To members of society,
publicly to his father and his many
acquaintances, frivolity ruled the day.
No one suspected he’d enlisted into
Frink’s ranks. His acquaintances thought
him away on sabbatical, venturing to
unknown lands before responsibilities
tied him to London and his future role as
the Seventh Duke of Blendingham.
Simon had never needed to ask for
his assistance on this particular mission.
He was the first to comprise his crew,
the first to communicate with Whistler,
Nelson’s agent behind enemy lines.
Though Whistler’s identity remained
secret from everyone but Simon, Percy
believed the mole would be the driving