The Pirate Bride. Shannon Drake

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The Pirate Bride - Shannon Drake


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Blackbeard,” she said, determined not to sound disappointed, “I will be honored to lift a glass with you.”

      He shook his head. “Ah, and you speak like a lady, lass.”

      “Maybe I was a lady. Once. Past memory, past caring. God knows, I was so young when the troops came. I remember…”

      “Aye?”

      “My mother,” she said, blushing slightly. “Aye, she was a lady. So softly spoken, so regal…but she is gone, dead and gone, and so is the life I was born to. There is nothing to return to of the life I lived then. But…I have not lost faith in all humanity. There was Lygia.”

      “Lygia?” he repeated.

      “The daughter of the witch who bought my indenture papers from the officer who decided I was worth more alive than dead,” she said. “She was ugly as sin, but as sweet and kind as her mother was cold and cruel. We’ll drink to her! I imagine she is rich now, with her mother’s passing. May she find happiness at last.”

      “To Lygia. Bless the lass!” he said. “Rich, you say. How ugly was she?”

      Red laughed, lifting her glass high. “Quite. But who knows? With enough darkness and enough rum, the ugliest lass may become the fairest. Especially if she is rich. Or so I’ve heard men say.”

      He looked at her strangely as he drank his rum.

      “Curious…”

      “What?”

      “That it is you who came upon Laird Haggerty.”

      “Why is that?”

      “Ah, poppet. I keep your secrets, but I keep his, as well.”

      “He has secrets?”

      “He has…an agenda.”

      “And?”

      “I just said, I keep a man’s secrets.”

      “Edward…”

      “Don’t you go wheedling me, girl. I have said all I shall upon that topic. Men come to this tavern for amusement. For whores and for drink. And to listen.”

      “Listen to what?”

      “I’ve said all I will say.”

      “But you keep giving me clues!”

      “I shall say no more. Drink up.”

      She tried, but he had made up his mind, and he would say no more. So they drank. She would have her promised gold, and there it would end.

      THERE WERE MANY MEN in the shanty tavern so drunk they wouldn’t have noticed an earthquake. Some lay on tables in the puddles of their own ale. Whores sat atop the laps of others, mindless of the drunkards snoring nearby. Bodices slipped, hands ran up under skirts and ribald shouting and jokes filled the air, along with the stench of old meat, stale tobacco and unwashed bodies.

      Logan turned to Brendan. “Nice place,” he commented dryly.

      “Aye, and obviously you know it well,” Brendan said, his tone equally dry.

      Logan shrugged. “You and the captain don’t look the type to…appreciate such an establishment,” Logan said.

      “Nor do you.”

      “I come for business, then leave.”

      “There’s no legitimate business done here.”

      Logan had to laugh. “Actually, there is. I certainly didn’t intend to run into a pirate vessel on the high seas, but dealing with pirates on land can be quite profitable.”

      “And very bad business, as well,” Brendan commented, eying Logan carefully. “You do know something about the art of negotiation, my friend. But there are those who don’t wish to negotiate. I’ve met many a fellow who cares nothing for human life. Expediency is what rules. Many a pirate captain would gladly have slit the throat of every man on your crew—or saved steel and bullets and simply tossed them all overboard.”

      “But not without great loss of life and limb, even if I would have gone down fighting,” Logan informed him.

      “True enough. So…” Brendan stared at him still. “A man of honor, are you?”

      “And your captain’s a pirate of honor,” Logan returned.

      “We’ll drink to he—him,” Brendan said, lifting his glass.

      “What business has the captain with Blackbeard?” Logan asked.

      Brendan looked back at him, weighing the risks of sharing information with a captive. “The captain wishes to join forces with Teach.”

      “With Teach?” Logan was startled. He knew himself that Teach was crafty, but not nearly so cruel as his carefully crafted reputation would have others believe. Teach didn’t hesitate to kill when necessary, but he was far more prone to let a man live when possible. He never relished killing the innocent, as did some fellows on the sea.

      Knowing what he knew, Logan couldn’t but feel that Captain Red Robert…should not be partnering with the notorious Edward Teach.

      His honor urged him to leap up, stride into the private room where the two were meeting and demand Teach unhand the woman known as Red Robert. But the impulse was pure insanity, he knew. He had battled Red. She could hold her own. She didn’t need nor want his protection.

      And, should he attempt to give it, he would no doubt find himself skewered through the heart or the liver, perhaps even castrated, but certainly, in whatever manner, left dead or dying.

      Still, it was hard to remain sitting upon the raw wooden stool where he was perched, and warning himself not to be an idiot wasn’t much help. Yet surely, if there were something to fear, Brendan would not be sitting beside him so calmly, sipping his ale.

      Hagar came up to the bar just then. “Brendan,” he said, offering a nod to Logan. “Ye’ll be needing to talk to the cap’n. Ship’s carpenter has warned, we’ve got to careen her. Soon.”

      Brendan frowned, as if warning Hagar to speak softly on such a matter.

      Since pirates couldn’t simply take their ships into a port and have them dry-docked, it was necessary to take them to a secluded place where they could be “careened,” hauled ashore and rolled to each side, so that the hull could be scraped of barnacles and tarred against woodworm. It was a dangerous procedure, for it left both the ship and her crew vulnerable. Most pirates, Logan knew, did only one side of a ship at a time. It was too easy for others to discover that a ship was lying vulnerable, and even if other privateers left her alone, there was always the law to fear. The governors of the various colonies were always pleased to increase their popularity by sending out their naval officers to bring down a pirate, and a hanging was a full day’s entertainment for most.

      “Aye,” Brendan said, and Hagar nodded, aware that it wasn’t something Brendan wanted to discuss in their present circumstance.

      When Hagar moved on to answer the taunting call of a bare-breasted woman, Logan commented casually, “I take it the fellow has not long been a pirate?”

      Brendan ran a finger up and down the heavy glass that held his ale. “You’re a decent fellow, Lord Haggerty. If you want to live long and prosper, you shouldn’t ask so many questions.”

      “I’ve given my word. I won’t be trying to escape.”

      A dry smile curled Brendan’s lips. “Aye, but you see, we intend not only to let you live, but to see to it that you are returned to your people, whether there be a fine ransom paid or no. Too much information is not good for a man who will return to the world where the king’s law holds sway.”

      “The king’s law,” Logan repeated, his tone hinting of bitterness. “There are no doubt good men in that world, but I have never been


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