finest artist of the early eighteenth century. The tall windows
looked out on impressive formal gardens, and the walls were lined
with numerous portraits.
"Welcome to the Rogues Gallery," she said, bringing James
to the portrait of a thoroughly naked woman stretched out on a
velvet divan. The woman was quite lovely, blonde and buxom,
with a sensual mouth and huge, bold eyes of bright blue. "Her eyes
and breasts tend to run in the family," Honoria went on.
James looked the rather erotic painting up and down
appreciatively. Then he ran the same look over Honoria. "They
certainly do. Who is she?"
"My great - great - great - great - great - grandmother." She
counted on her fingers. "I believe that is correct." She pointed at the
painting. "That, oh, son of an honest, hardworking tavern wench, is
Maggie Pyne. The founder of the family. The first duchess. She
was a whore. Worse, she was an actress. A very good one,
apparently. She was also the mistress of a king, by whom she had a
son, who had a son, who had a daughter, and on down to me. She
was smart enough to get King Charles the Second to make her a
duchess, and to pass a law that allowed the eldest child to inherit
the title and property no matter what their gender. Whore she might
have been," Honoria added proudly, with a fond glance at the
founder of title line, "but she was sharp as a blade and took care of
what was hers."
"You are descended from a commoner?" James asked.
She wasn't sure if the horror in his voice and expression was
genuine, or if he was joking. "Who isn't descended from a
commoner at some point?" she asked back. "What's a nobleman,
but the descendant of someone with a big sword and an
overinflated sense of their own importance?"
He crossed his arms and tilted down his chin. "Do you think
so?"
"I do," she affirmed. "And that's not the worst of it. Let me
show you what sort of family you've married into." She led him
down the long row of portraits. "That's an aunt from last century
who was locked up in Bedlam. She escaped the madhouse and ran
off to America with the estate steward—whose name was not
Huseby, by the way. And that's an uncle named Joseph, who fought
bravely in the American Revolution. On the American side, I'm
ashamed to say."
"Shocking."
"
And
he married a Scottish Dissenter." She pointed to another
woman's picture. "Aunt Samantha married a Mohawk warrior."
"A what?"
She waved the question away. "You still haven't heard the
worst." They stopped before a portrait of her great grandparents.
"That's the second duchess, the second Maggie Pyne, as well. It's
said she also enjoyed acting." She pointed at the slender man
standing proudly beside the blonde and beautiful duchess. "James
McKay," she told her own particular James. "Highwayman. I
believe he went by the professional name of Jamie Scott. He and
the duchess met while he was robbing her coach."
"How romantic."
She couldn't stop her own smile at the merriment in his eyes.
She put her hands behind her back, and rocked back on her heels.
"Yes, quite. But my point, my lord, is that the Pyne family has no
cause to be high sticklers about the professions of others.
Especially the people we marry." She chuckled wickedly. "In fact,
your lady mother might insist we break off the alliance when she
finds out about
my
ancestry."
He nodded solemnly. "Perhaps it would be best not to tell
her. At least until the first grandchild is on the way. She could
forgive anything for the sake of my baby."
It finally occurred to Honoria that she was having a perfectly
normal conversation with her worst enemy about
their
marriage.
Even worse, when he mentioned their having children, her first
reaction was not a cringe of horror, but a warm and totally
unfamiliar feeling of sentimental longing.
"I need to sit down now," she said, as her legs would
suddenly not hold her. Fortunately, there was a velvet-cushioned
bench just behind her. She dropped onto it like a stone.
James sat down quickly by her side and took both her hands
in his. The fiend would not let the subject go. "Perhaps you're with
child already." He sounded unutterably pleased about the prospect.
"We should get started soon. I want lots of children." He massaged
his thumbs across her knuckles, setting her stomach to fluttering
pleasantly.
"Soon? Lots? Of children?" She blinked after each squeaked
question.
"So do both our fathers," he added. He gestured at the rows
of ancestral paintings. "We have to do our duty for our families."
This reminder of familial obligation helped settle her for a
moment. Then, as she looked at him, a fist formed around her heart
and squeezed hard.
"Honoria? What's wrong?"
Even though he'd moved closer to her on the bench, his
concerned voice sounded very far away. She could not see for the
pain. For a moment the world went white around her. One word,
one concept, dropped like a burning coal into her mind.
"That's why you married me, isn't it?" she asked after the
spasm of betrayed anguish lessened. She understood this pain; she
had lived with it for years. But right now, it felt like it would break
her wide open. "It has to do with duty, and not with me. It's never
anything to do with me." She was not important to anyone, and
never had been.
The pain transformed to anger as she focused her hatred on
James Marbury. "You care nothing for me," she stated flatly. "You
never have."
Instead of protesting his undying affection, he sprang to his
feet and glared accusingly down at her. "And you've never cared
for me! You've never felt anything but contempt for me, have
you?"
She surged to her feet. "That's a lie! I love you!"
"I love
you
!" he shouted back. The words reverberated down
the length of the Long Gallery as he continued to shout, "I've loved
you from the first moment I saw you. Not that you cared."
"What do you mean?" The family portraits gazed down
silently on her shriek of outrage. "You're the one who bundled me
onto that boat and then walked away!"
"You never said you didn't want to go with dear Derrick, did
you?"
"You never said you wanted me to stay!"
"You never said you wanted me to
ask
you to stay!"
They stood toe to toe, hands on hips, mirror images of fury,
surrounded by the staring painted eyes of her illustrious and
notorious ancestors, their unguarded words echoing around them.
Nothing was going right. Nothing was going as expected. He had a
plan, but it was not the original plan that was supposed to give him
his freedom and untold wealth. Honoria had changed everything.
The streets of Algiers were ablaze from the invader's cannon
fire. All his carefully made escape plans were going up in flames
and smoke like the white buildings of the Casbah, but his plans
weren't important to him anymore. The treasure wasn't even
important. He'd worry about his own hide and grabbing what loot
he could after he was sure Honoria was safely away from the
danger of the attack. It wasn't the attack that was the worst danger;
it was the looters he feared. He could hear the screams of helpless
victims as his party cautiously moved through the town. This was a
city full of pirates who knew their time was up. They understood
pillage and rape, and were turning on the helpless for one last
rampage while the city burned. Getting Honoria to the ship was
safer than remaining in his house, especially after cannon fire had
breached the wall. But they had to get through the looters and
frightened mobs to do it.
The narrow, twisting streets of the ancient mountain fortress
were full of panicked, frightened people. The high white walls
would be no protection from invaders this time. He pushed through
the crowd, saber in one hand, pistol in the other. Honoria followed
close behind, with Huseby holding onto Derrick and bringing up
the rear. Diego noticed that the supposedly feeble Englishman
moved quickly enough to save his own hide after Honoria
explained the plan to him.
Diego knew that taking Honoria toward the harbor might
seem an act of folly when the danger came from the French Navy
that had sailed into the bay, but she had agreed readily to his plan.
Too readily, he thought bitterly. "Oh, yes," she had said after
a cannonball knocked down the garden wall and they were battling
a fire that started in the kitchen. "The roof is going to come down
on our heads at any moment. Derrick and Maggie must be gotten to
safety."
Her face was covered in soot, but it was the most beautiful
face in the world, calm in the face of danger. She nodded
emphatically. "It's my place to take care of them."
She said not a word about what had passed between them in
this falling-down house. She made no protest that she didn't want to
leave. They might as well never have been lovers. It was obvious
that all she cared about was getting away. Very well, he would
make sure she got away from him.
"I want you out of here," he lied, wanting nothing more than
for her to stay with him forever. He couldn't stop adding callously,
to hide his hurt, "Consider it payment for the pleasure you've given
me." Her eyes narrowed briefly at his words. It was the slightest of
flinches. She let out a long, sighing breath, but that was all the
reaction he got. He had hoped she would slap him as he deserved,
berate him, and tell him she cared. But all the passion he'd
discovered in her was now covered by stiff English reserve. By the
time the house fire was out, Huseby and dear Derrick were ready
to go. Diego gave instructions to his servants, then he led the
English contingent away from the wreckage.
There was a naval battle raging between corsair galleons
and modern European ships. He did not think the fight would go on
for very long. The corsairs were too smart not to see it was a
useless fight. Those who could not cut and run would soon
surrender and try to make deals with the victors. The merchant ship
Manticore
was one of many prizes sitting in the middle of that
battle, unmanned, very likely going carefully untouched by both of
the warring sides. Those ships were valuable prizes to both sides:
spoils for the victors, bargaining pieces for the losers. Being
onboard the
Manticore
was the safest place for Honoria and her
friends.
"I got you to safety."
Honoria nodded. "I said I was grateful." How well she
remembered helping to row the small boat away from the dock.
The water around them had reflected the fires. It had been so bright
she'd expected steam to rise up off it. "You kissed me goodbye,"
she said, desperately. "Then you were gone."
"What else could I do? What was there to say when you
wanted
him
?"
"You told me you wanted me to 'get out of here.' "
"I didn't mean it. How could you think I meant it?" He wasn't
sure when he'd taken her in his arms. He held onto her for a long
time, and felt her shaking with sobs.
After a while she lifted her tearstained face and said, "I hate
melodrama."
"But you're very good at it," he teased gently. "Besides, if I'd
told you I loved you then, I would never have let you go."
She turned her tear-soaked face up to his and he kissed her,
tenderly at first, but neither of them needed tenderness right now.
The intensity of contact deepened and sparked through them
quickly. Honoria knew they had much to discuss, but did not care.
She drew him closer, pressed herself against the long, hard-
muscled length of him. She wanted contact with him, every kind of
contact, the more the better.