Read Under the Boardwalk: A Dazzling Collection of All New Summertime Love Stories Online
Authors: Geralyn Dawson
Tags: #Fiction, #Anthologies (Multiple Authors), #Romance, #General, #Thrillers, #Suspense
His Mirry's sixteenth birthday: no wonder he'd never forgotten it. How could she possibly not feel the same?
"You disremember your own birthday, Zach," he scoffed. "Why should your sister's be any different? As for this new soberness in her, why, most likely her pitiful schoolmaster has given her no reason to smile."
But Zach only shook his head glumly. "I tell you she has changed, and not for the better, either. She fancies this Chuff because he's respectable and dull and because he's learned enough to spout Greek like a—well, like a very Greek. Everything you're not, Jack. I said that to her outright. 'Because he's not Jack,' I said, and she agreed."
Jack stared at him in disbelief. "She agreed? Just like that?"
Zach nodded vigorously. "Aye, aye, just like that. I tell you, she's a whole different Miriam."
"Hah." Jack scowled down at the last of his ale, his own mood turning equally flat. He'd considered it a sign of great good luck that his return to Westham had coincided with Zach's as well, but now he wasn't as certain. How could his Mirry be eager to marry another man? Even though Zachariah Fairbourne was his oldest friend, one whose word he'd trust with his life, he refused to believe that Miriam would be so faithless, and so willing to squander her sweet self upon a schoolmaster at that. Zach might be his oldest friend, but Miriam was the one he loved best.
"Yet I'll wager she's still the fairest lass in Westham," he said firmly. "I'll wager there's still no other that can hold a candle to her."
"You would know her," said Zach with such blunt and unpoetic brotherly honesty that Jack could have throttled him. "She's not changed
that
way."
She wouldn't have changed at all, not to Jack. For four endless years, as he'd been forced to become harder, tougher, stronger to survive, he'd held tight to the memory of Miriam as she'd been: of the taste of her kiss and the scent of her skin and feel of her, soft and yielding, in his arms, of the round, high curve of her breasts, the pouting ripeness of her lower lip, the teasing, throaty laughter that lit her eyes from within, and how her petticoats pulled taut over her hip when she held them clear of the rocks and sand, her little bare feet pink in the cold seawater.
"She said she was done with running in the sand," said Zachariah mournfully, echoing Jack's own thoughts, "and that she was too old for playing princess with us, hunting treasure on the island. As if we'd still expect her to, the silly muffin!"
"
I
would," said Jack. "And I will."
Yet instantly Zach's jaw tensed, his whole body on guard, enough to make Jack mutter a half-hearted, disgusted oath to himself. What the devil had made him mention piracy and Miriam together like that, anyway, as if Zach needed one more reminder? Likely there wasn't a man, woman, or child in Westham that didn't suspect the wicked, lawless nature of his former ship and crew, and the rest would pretend they did.
It would be common knowledge, just as everyone knew Jack's father had sailed with the infamous pirate Henry Avery in the
Fancy
. Not that Jack would be blamed, or even scorned, for what he'd done. As most Westham folk would be quick to point out, Jack Wilder had never harmed any Englishmen, choosing instead to plunder the richer ships in the Red Sea and Indian Ocean with heathen owners and crews, who all likely deserved whatever they'd gotten. Besides, what else could be expected? Such things ran in the blood, didn't they?
Everyone
knew; but obviously Jack himself had been foolish to hope that his oldest friend wouldn't have been among them.
"I didn't mean it like that, Zach," he said wearily. "I told you before: I'm done with pirating."
"Aye," said Zach with none of the conviction Jack had wanted to hear from a friend. "That you did."
Jack sighed. "Then for God's sake, at least
pretend
that you heard me."
Zach took a long swallow of ale. "Honest men don't rely on deceit, Jack," he said earnestly, "or on words alone. You'll have to show me you've changed. I know you can sail anything that floats. I can get you a place in a Fairbourne vessel by noon tomorrow, if you wish it. But you have to be the one to make that decision, not I."
Jack's smile held more bitterness than humor. He'd come back for Miriam, not charity from her brother and his righteously perfect Fairbourne cousins, and he'd no intention of accepting it. He did have his pride.
Yet he'd often considered how differently their lives might have run if they'd each been born into the other's family. God knows they'd both started out the same, both fatherless boys who loved the sea. But would Zach have been better able to resist the legacy of a dashing pirate father? Or would Jack himself be wearing that elegant gray gentleman's coat instead of gold hoops in his ears if he'd had the power and the wealth of the Fairbournes to steer his choices?
"I'm considering it," he said lightly. "Now you didn't tell Mirry that I'd come here with you to Westham, did you?"
"After I'd sworn to you I wouldn't?" Zach's expression was carefully impassive. "I told you I'd help you for Miriam's sake, not yours. But if you don't love her true the way you claim, or if you make her suffer in any way, why would you then—"
"Why what?" demanded Jack automatically, unable, even with Zach, to keep the reflexive challenge from his tone.
"Why?" With the single word, Zach tossed the challenge back in his face. "Damnation, because she's my sister, that's why, and you're a—"
"A what?" Jack smiled bitterly. "A thief, a scoundrel, a murderer, a black-hearted devil born only to be hung? Do you think I'd have dared come back for Miriam if even half the stories were true? I told you before, Zach, and I'll swear to it in whatever way will make you believe: I'm done with that trade, done for good and the sake of my own tattered soul. And for Miriam."
"For
Miriam
?" repeated Zach with patent disbelief.
"Aye, for Miriam, and what other reason would be better?" Impatiently Jack struck his fist to his knee. "I've come back to make her happy, Zach, and I'd have thought you'd want the same for her."
"I do, but—"
"Wouldn't you rather see her with your oldest mate, the one man who would put her life and joy before his own? Or would you prefer she tossed herself away on this puling schoolmaster, and see her swallowed up into dull old Cambridge, away from the sea and away from us?"
With obvious reluctance, Zach shook his head, and Jack, to his sorrow, could understand. He could wax on endlessly about old acquaintance, but the cold truth was that he wasn't the same man who'd left Westham, and he and Zach both knew it. He'd seen the change himself in every looking glass. Four years of bloodshed and mayhem, typhoons and hurricanes, living with one eye on the hangman's noose and the other on the knives of his crewmates, all of it had left its mark on his face. His pale eyes in particular now held a dangerous, almost wolfish look that made other men keep their distance. It was not the face of an honest New England gentleman, and it was most definitely not a face to trust with a favorite sister.
"Your word of honor, Jack," Zach was now saying. "Give me your word of honor that you'll treat her well."
"Given," said Jack with an impatient sweep of his hand. Of course he only wanted the best for Miriam, as long as that best included him.
"And that you love her," continued Zach. "The dear little fool still loves you well enough, though she's too stubborn to admit it. God knows that's the only reason I'm even considering acting like some blasted matchmaker on your behalf."
Jack strived to look properly lovesick. It wasn't hard, considering how he really did feel about Miriam. "I do love her, Zach. Always have, and always will."
"Then you'll give me your word that you'll wed her?"
Jack hesitated as the icy finger of respectability traced down his spine. Miriam was the one good thing in his entire misspent life, and what he felt for her went well beyond love the way other people seemed to mean it. In the years they'd been apart, the sharp ache of separation had never lessened. He'd missed her more than if he'd lost an arm or a leg, she was that much a part of him, and he'd no intention of ever leaving her again.
He wanted her back, wanted her more than anything else in this life or the next, yet somehow that wanting had never quite translated itself in his mind into marriage. Marriage was grim and doleful and cheerless, a cold, black pit of duty that swallowed up all the joy and spice between men and women. He wouldn't wish that on his Mirry, any more than he would on himself, but he wasn't about to abandon his chances by confessing as much to her brother, either.
"I told you I'd treat her honorably, didn't I, Zach?" he declared heartily, and that much he meant.
"In every way," said Zach firmly. "Else I'll see you hung myself, friend or no friend."
Jack nodded impatiently. The fine points could be worked out later, once he had Miriam by his side where she belonged. "You did make her a present of the seashell?"
"Aye," said Zach, still eyeing him warily, "though she thought the part about finding her true love on the third morning was a bit daft."
"In three days it will seem to her the most logical notion under the sun," said Jack with a confident smile as he settled back against the oak's trunk. "And best of all, there won't be a word of that schoolmaster's Greek to any of it."
Carefully Miriam poured tea from the polished pewter pot into the cup in her hand, striving to make an elegant arc of the golden brown liquid. Though Mama had insisted she learn such nieeties so as to be able to cater to the occasional gentry who stopped at the Green Lion on the road from Boston north to Salem, now she was glad because it pleased Chilton. She smiled as she handed him the teacup, and he beamed back at her with approval.
On so warm an afternoon Miriam herself would just as soon have sipped buttermilk or sweetened lemonade than a steaming dish of tea, but Chilton would never sacrifice his genteel ritual. Besides, this was the one part of the day, after the dinner dishes had been washed and before the preparations for supper were begun, that Miriam—and the Green Lion's single private dining chamber where they sat—could be spared from the tavern. With a weary little sigh she settled herself in the chair beside Chilton's, taking care to hide her dishwater-reddened hands in the folds of her apron.
And she
was
weary, not just from serving dinner to twenty, but from her own restless sleep these past two nights since Zachariah had returned. Instead of convincing her brother of the wisdom of her coming marriage, their conversation seemed to have shaken her own resolution. Of course accepting Chilton was right; of course she'd be happy with him. So why, then, had she taken such care to put that foolish seashell beneath her pillow each night, a small, mischief-making lump that had caused her to toss and turn and dream odd, broken dreams of Jack Wilder?
"Miriam dear, you do not attend me," chided Chilton indignantly.
"But I do, Chilton," said Miriam with guilty haste, thrusting a small tray of biscuits before him. "These lemon ones are your favorites, aren't they?"