Read Her Wicked Captain: The River Rogues, Book 1 Online

Authors: Sandra Jones

Tags: #riverboats;steamboats;gamblers;fortunetellers;historical romance;19th century;Mississippi River;gambling

Her Wicked Captain: The River Rogues, Book 1 (10 page)

Chapter Twelve

After most of the ship’s guests returned to the city, the
Queen Helen
made its new port an hour past sunrise near a bluff overlooking the wooded stretch of sand the crew called “Bloody Island,” though the real Bloody Island lay four hundred miles upriver near St. Louis. Only the crew was awake, gathered in the dining room sipping coffee, while Rory left alone on a keelboat so quietly no one seemed to notice until he was gone.

Dell caught up with Trap as he jumped onto one of the
Queen
’s rowboats. She hopped in behind him while his back was turned.

He wheeled around with the mooring line in his hands. “What the hell are you doing?”

She sat down and rested her rifle across her lap. “Comin’ with you, of course.”

“Women ain’t got no business on that towhead. Get back on the boat with ya.”

Dell arched an eyebrow at him. “I assume you’re going to act as Rory’s second in place of Mr. Moreaux?”

He grunted. “Cap’n asked me to watch Asa, but the boy’s still in his bunk. If Rory doesn’t have a second, who’ll collect his—”

Dell held a hand up. “I don’t need an illustration. I’m goin’ there, too, with or without you.”

His gaze went to her rifle. He rubbed a hand over his spiky red hair and face. “Awwwright. The cap’n can kill me later.”

Trap rowed them to the bluff side of the towhead, barely breaking a sweat for his effort in the crisp river breeze. Two boats had been dragged ashore and now stood empty on the beach. Dell sprang out and helped Trap secure theirs as well.

“Look. See the tracks?” Dell pointed to the footprints leading along the beach around the wooded area. “Rory’s boots and two other men.” Uncle Reuben had often counted on her better vision while hunting for deer and rabbit.

He nodded, casting her an appreciative glance. “Good eyes. Those tracks would be Christopher Wainwright and his second, Ottenheim.”

Following the men’s trail, Dell walked ahead of Trap, but with the cumbersome petticoats of Molly’s day-dress, she soon fell behind. He was a good thirty yards ahead when she saw a set of footprints veering off into the woods. For an ambush? She opened her mouth to call out, but then stopped. If she alerted him to the fact that someone had gone to another part of the island, he would be torn to choose which direction to follow, likely refusing to let her tail either party alone.

Careful of her footing, she surreptitiously walked between the scrubby trees and followed the lone man’s prints along the wooded path. The trail led up a steep incline. She fought saplings and thorny vines with her free hand while she kept her gun tight beneath the other arm and steadied her footing over craggy rock as she grappled up the hill. At last she made it to the top where the hill crested on a bluff and found herself alone. Strange. Someone had come that way this morning, but now they were gone. The treeless patch of ground spanned a broad expanse. She could see the
Queen Helen
and a few of the crew who’d climbed the bluffs of the riverbank for a view of the beach and the duel unfolding below. Worried now she’d taken too long, she hastened to the other side of the hill for a better view.

On the beach far below, Rory stood at the ready, dressed in a black vest and pants and a white shirt, his back turned to his armed opponent, yards away. The duel had begun.

She was wasting time. She had to reach him.

Scrambling to get down the hill, she neglected her footing, sending a loose stone the size of cannonball bouncing down the bluff. She caught herself from falling, but rough hands gripped her waist, pulling her up and back.

“Vere are you going vith that,
mein fraulein
?” He pulled the gun from under her arm and hauled her against his chest.

Dell swung at his side and kicked his shin with the heel of her boot, but he threw her across the ground away from him. When she climbed to her feet she faced her own rifle with Ottenheim staring back at her, his finger on the trigger. The fair-haired, lanky, dry-goods merchant had a Colt of his own holstered on his hip.

“What are you doing up here? You’re supposed to be down there with Wainwright.” Her hands balled in fists, anger and fear pounded blood in her ears.

“I’m making sure my friend isn’t valking into a trap. Good thing I did, eh?”

“Campbell didn’t set a trap. He—”

Crack!

The blast echoed off the bluffs, causing both her and the German to flinch.

Her heart jumped into her throat. Rory.

She headed back toward the vantage point to see what was going on, but Ottenheim closed in, grabbing her arm. He spun her around.


Nein
!” He prodded her chest with the Brunswick’s barrel. “Vee go down the vay vee came. Now!” Did her captor not care what the outcome of the duel had been?

Dell considered wrestling him for the gun. It was hard to shoot someone with a rifle in close proximity, but in the end, he was stronger, bigger. He’d surely overpower her. Besides, getting back to Rory as quickly as possible was the only thing she needed to do at the moment.

With the German poking her back with the rifle, she descended the hill through the woods. Only one shot. Her mind tumbled through the possibilities of what she’d find when they circled the beach.

Reaching the place where the trail leveled and the paths forked, Dell quickened her pace, hurrying to get to the dueling field. Ottenheim could either run to keep up or shoot her in the back—she didn’t give a damn which.

Rounding the towhead, she came upon the men. Trap stood with his back to her, his hands at his waist. He looked down at the combatants sitting side by side on a fallen tree, their guns in their laps.

The sight of them—both of them—alive and well, sent a current of relief through her. But she’d heard the shot. Two excellent marksmen? One man should be dead.

“What in the hell is going on here?”

Three pairs of eyes snapped to her at her question. Caught off-guard, Rory’s warm smile lingered on her briefly, then died as he saw her captor and the rifle at her back. Wainwright looked between Dell and the German with a puzzled stare. He stood and helped Rory to his feet.

Trap pulled a knife from his belt, wielding it threateningly at the armed Ottenheim. “Bastard! It’s a trap, Cap’n!”

“Put it down, Herbert.” Kit Wainwright, strikingly handsome with black wavy hair and blue eyes, moved to intercept his second.

Dell slipped away from Ottenheim, trying to get closer to Rory and his pistol. If he wouldn’t draw it on the German, she would!

“The
fraulein
had this,” he growled, lifting the rifle, while keeping it trained on the three of them. “She vas going to kill you.”

“No, I wasn’t!” Dell looked at Trap and then at Rory for his understanding, but Rory’s dark gaze tracked her arms. She glanced down, noticing the bloody scratches and scrapes she’d earned while the German had forced her down the steep bluff. Rory’s eyes narrowed when they reached her bodice where a ragged tear exposed the curve of her breast.

He lifted his pistol and cocked the hammer, the muscles in his jaw working as he stared down the barrel at her captor.

“No! Wait!” If she didn’t do something, whatever truce Rory and Wainwright had begun would end with someone’s blood spilt for real this time. “Let me explain. I saw Ottenheim’s tracks leading up the hill. I thought he was going to shoot Rory, and apparently he thought I was trying to kill Wainwright. It’s all a misunderstanding.”

Rory’s gun stayed firmly trained on Ottenheim. “I promise you my aim will be true this time. Did you hurt the lady?”

Dell answered for him. “No, Rory. He didn’t. I’d have killed him myself if he had.”

Rory arched a brow at Ottenheim. “You think I don’t have any more honor than that, that I’d send someone to ambush my opponent?”

He lowered the gun a fraction and sneered. “I vould not know. You vork for Quintus Moreaux. Vat are you capable of?”

“All right, all right.” Wainwright wrapped a congenial arm around Ottenheim’s shoulders. “My honor is duly restored. Let’s not go insulting the good captain. We might want to enjoy another game or two of cards in St. Louis, right?”

He tugged the rifle from the German’s loose grip and passed it to Dell, before leading his friend away toward the boats.

Trap chuckled and rubbed a hand over his brow. After waiting until they were alone and out of earshot, Dell tucked her rifle under her arm and turned to interrogate Rory, but the murderous expression on his face stopped her in her tracks. He grasped her elbow and wheeled her around.

His fingers dug into her as he marched her along, his movements taut with fury. Worse than anything his opponent could’ve wrought, she’d somehow managed to wound his pride.

When they reached the boats, he told Trap to take the keelboat despite the Irishman’s protests.

When the other boats glided out into the river’s current, Rory ordered her into the smaller rowboat. Suddenly, she wished she still had Trap’s company. Rory’s anger was palpable between them. He cast them off the sandbar wearing a deep worry line between his brows. As he settled behind the oars he uttered an oath, and Dell caught first sight of a scarlet bloom on his left arm.

“Rory, you’ve been shot!”

His scowl deepened at the stain on the torn fabric. He continued to row, directing their bow toward the waiting
Queen Helen
. “It’s shallow. Besides, there’s nothing to do for it out here.”

He cringed as his shoulders rotated, turning the paddle against the current.

Dell swallowed a curse of her own, and slid across the boat. Taking the oars, she caught his look of surprise. “Hate me all you want for injuring your masculine dignity further, but I’m strong enough to get us back. There’s no need for you to bleed to death.”

He released a long breath and relinquished the oars, but he only gave up a few inches of room for her to sit. She settled in beside him, her hip against his, as he reclined. She watched him from the corner of her eye as he cradled his arm, still frowning.

“If anyone should be angry, Rory, it should be me. You haven’t been honest about what you were doing. The two of you seemed very friendly, despite the fact Wainwright shot you.”

“We’ve faced each other over cards, but that’s no reason we shouldn’t get along. Besides, Kit is amicable enough. He had no quarrel with me. His aim was damn-near perfect.” Dell watched in dismay as he peeled back his shirt, casually examining the damp wound.

The smell of the powder’s char on his skin filled her nose, and her stomach roiled. Her hands tightened on the oars as realization dawned. “Did the two of you plan this? He shot you on purpose for Moreaux’s sake?”

“Don’t sound so outraged, angel. You make me wonder if you’d like to see a bullet in my chest,” he grumbled.

She wet her dry lips, torn between grinning in relief and thwacking him with the paddle. Instead, she sighed. “You’ve got one helluva job, if you ask me. But I’m glad you didn’t get yourself killed. If you had, I would’ve been stuck alone on that boat of yours. I’ve no idea what I’m supposed to be doing, and your boss would likely cast me out on a sandbar.”

“My boss? That’s interesting. So now he’s my boss and not your stepfather?” His nostrils flared with inexplicable anger. Before she could process what that cryptic remark could mean, she felt the tickle of his finger, circling one of her scrapes. “So many scratches. Be honest. Did Ottenheim hurt you?”

“No.” She wrenched her arm back, giving a hard pull at the oars.

“Damn. I would’ve liked to have shot him.”

Rory was sullen for the rest of the way, rubbing his temple with his thumb as he gazed darkly across the water.

The rowboat slid in beside the gangplank where Trap was waiting. The passengers and crew had gathered for their return. Some who’d witnessed the duel were descending from the high riverbank while others stood along the deck’s rails. When Rory stepped out of the boat and helped her onto the walkway, a murmur spread through the crowd. His sleeve was nearly half crimson like some bad jester’s outfit.

Dell bit the inside of her cheek with anxiousness for him, seeing the pale, tense look on his face. His narrowed eyes locked on Moreaux standing on a deck high above with Asa at his side.

Then as if remembering the crowd, Rory flashed them a smile, clutching his arm with a measure of chagrin. He would probably clean up, patch up, and return to his boss for a severe lecture. Dell couldn’t help wondering what the loss to Wainwright cost him.

Once on board the
Queen
, she planted a foot on the stairwell, eager to return to her stateroom to wash and be rid of thoughts of duels, pride and killing, when someone caught her wrist. Rory’s hand, covered in crusty blood, gripped her, keeping her from moving. She followed his hold up the stained sleeve to his tight face.

“Where do you think you’re going?”

Chapter Thirteen

Once they were inside Rory’s stateroom, he slammed the door and took the rifle from her to lean it against the wall. Panic fluttered within Dell, partly because she’d never seen him so angry, and partly because a voice deep inside her whispered that she’d been wrong—her presence on the island could’ve had horrible consequences. She also had a strong feeling Rory had taken the shot in the arm for mostly unselfish reasons. For one, like he’d said, he didn’t want to kill Kit Wainwright. For another, if Rory died, Asa would lose the man who kept him in medicine, a man he considered a big brother. And then there was her…but she doubted she ranked very high on his list of concerns. He’d shown her that last night. To Quintus and him, she wasn’t a guest but instead another device for their gaming rooms. A pawn to draw out the opponents.

With his eyes dark and hard, he stood facing her. His jaw clenched and unclenched as the seconds ticked by. He finally shoved his fingers through his hair as if half-maddened. “Dress my wound,” he growled.

She gave him her sternest look. “I’m not your cabin girl. Don’t order me. Ask p—” Her gaze went to his bloodstained arm where a fresh stream of red trickled down to his wrist, and cold washed over her. “You said it was shallow!” She brushed his forearm with a light hand.

“It is.” Truth. He cradled his arm and went to sit on the bed. “I left clean water in the washstand and towels on the dresser. I could also use some rum. If I’m wrong and I bleed to death, all our troubles today will be for nothing.” He opened the buttons of his shirt with his right hand.

Dell sighed, aware of his ploy for her attention, but went to dampen a towel anyway. She chastised herself inwardly. Always a sucker for a suffering beast.

A warmer yet larger room than his tiny berth she’d taken over on the
Enchantress
, the chamber also held better furnishings with a Queen Anne style mahogany desk, dresser, crystal spirit decanters and a luxurious bedspread. An enormous mirror spanned the wall, making Dell’s mouth twist with the sour thought of the captain’s view of his nocturnal adventures.

Heat inched up her neck as she wondered what she might look like in that mirror, stretched across Rory’s bed with the captain at her side—

“I can trust Trap to keep silent about Kit, but now what to do with you?” he muttered to himself. “No one was supposed to be close enough to see Kit’s aim. You could’ve ruined everything.”

Pride wouldn’t allow her to endure his censure, deserved or not. “If you’d been open with me about your plans, I wouldn’t have followed. What did you expect? Me to wait on this boat wringing my hands, crying for you?” He had the front of his shirt completely undone by the time she sat down beside him. She put the bowl and towels at her feet.

He slanted his head thoughtfully, his eyes grazing across her face. The line between his brows deepened. “No. I wouldn’t expect your tears, but I sure as hell hadn’t expected you to come to Bloody Island with a gun. What in damnation did you think needed to be done? It was a duel of honor. Now Ottenheim will tell Kit’s uncle and everyone else I have no honor!” He swore and lifted his angry gaze to the ceiling.

The heat of his displeasure closed in around her, but the unintentional nudge of his thigh against hers on the bed made her face hotter still. “You went alone.” Voice shaky with anger, she paused for a breath. “Even Trap knew you needed a second, and I needed to make sure you didn’t…get killed or kill somebody.”

“You could’ve let me die, then you would’ve had your money and freedom from us.” He cupped his elbow, and his thumb rubbed the muscle beneath the wound, leaving her uncertain if he was lying again.

“I could have. But clearly you never intended to take that chance.”

He shook his head. “Too many lives at risk, including mine. If Moreaux finds out what I did, there’ll be hell to pay. He has a warped code of honor. He lives for vengeance, and he punishes those who insult him with swift death. Now, he expects me to do the same. It’s what he’s been training me for my whole life.”

A tool of death? She leaned away from him. Rory might’ve spared one man’s life, but how far would he go if his boss pushed? Sweet mercy, what sort of man was Moreaux? How had her mother stayed married to such a violent person?

Why had Rory remained in his employ?

Out of greed? Or self-defense, as he’d claimed? Surely he could simply walk away and find another ship to captain. One where he wasn’t expected to become a murderer.

“Moreaux must believe I’m not ready to take his place in duels. I can’t have you telling him I didn’t try to kill Wainwright.”

“Why would I tell?” Dell boiled at his lack of trust. “I don’t owe Quintus any loyalty.” Subterfuge left an unpleasant taste in her mouth, but if the past thirteen years of telling fortunes had taught her anything, it was how to keep people’s secrets.

He dropped his hand from the cuff of the sleeve he was trying to unbutton, wincing from the new difficulty of his efforts, and glanced up at her. “I can’t have you actin’ this way either.”

“What way?” Her hand gripped her torn neckline like a shield, and her heart thumped wildly at the dangerous new tone of his voice.

He took her hand. She gasped but he ignored her reaction, turning her palm over to kiss the fresh blisters from the oars. He breathed across her skin. “If you want to impress your stepfather, you’ll stay in the gaming salon. Moreaux’s women don’t wield guns and bandy about where they don’t belong.”

His words scattered the lovely sensations his kiss caused. She took her hand back, curling it into a fist, and scowled. “I don’t aim to please him. Have you forgotten? I’m not Moreaux’s.”

His eyes held hers. “No. Thank heaven you aren’t, angel.”

He extended his wrist for her to unfasten his cuff. The pleasure she felt from his lingering gaze took the edge off her wariness and his audacity—not to mention the fact that she’d longed to see him without his shirt anyway—so she slid the garment off one arm and then carefully down the damaged one. His chest was all sun-kissed skin and corded muscle from years of moving cargo—his body as beautiful as his face. Holding his bloodstained hand, she gently stretched his arm across her lap to have better access to the bullet’s mark. When his hand slid to rest around the curve of her thigh, she left him alone—surely it wouldn’t be wrong to allow him to be comfortable.

She’d cleaned wounds for the children so many times, but never a bullet wound. As gently as possible, she washed away the oozing blood around the burnt mark, biting her lip. Luckily, the ball had grazed his flesh and hadn’t damaged the muscle. He cringed while she dabbed at the wound, getting the shallow gash as clean as possible. “I’ll get the rum,” she told him.

He nodded, frowning.

She brought the bottle and a glass, as well, and poured him a dram. His throat worked as he swallowed it in one drink. When he handed her the empty cup, the rum glistened on his lower lip. She could almost taste the burn of the liquor as if she’d licked the drop away. Craving a drink…or the man?

“More?” she asked, hating the husky sound of her voice.

He shook his head. The corner of his mouth lifted. “No, I haven’t eaten so I’m lightheaded enough as it is. You’ll think you can out-drink me.”

“I can out-drink you.” She poured a small amount straight from the bottle across his wound, making him hiss. Then she wrapped a bandage around the thick muscle of his upper arm. Her fingers lingered on his bare skin, enjoying the stolen moment as she tied a knot. When she glanced at his face, she found him watching her. Daylight poured through the cabin’s curtain, illuminating an array of color in his eyes she’d never before noticed. More than green, tiny flakes of gold scattered around the black of his pupils. But she’d barely gotten a glimpse of them when his golden-tipped lashes fell closed and he leaned forward.

Dell knew his intentions, had probably known deep down from the moment he’d stopped her on the stairs. He could’ve dressed the simple wound without her. As his bandaged arm snaked around her back and his mouth, his beautiful mouth, came closer, all she wanted was to press against him and repeat the provocative dance of their tongues once more. But when her eyes fell closed, surrendering to temptation, she heard the tread of boots on the deck above, reminding her where she was.

A proper schoolteacher like Rosemary Hughes wouldn’t allow herself to be seduced by a riverboat gambler.

She stopped Rory, planting a hand on his chest. He opened his eyes. “Respectability, Captain. You ordered me to your cabin, and I came. You told me to dress your wounds, and I did. But I’m not here to address your other needs.”

The corner of his mouth curved, and he leaned into her so that her breasts touched his bare skin. “You’re a fortune teller, Dell. You’re also a mite too friendly with the young man we rescued, and you’re the daughter of Eleanor Moreaux—a notorious moll before she married Quintus. Hell, you slept in my bed on the
Enchantress
. Believe me, angel, no one here believes you’re virtuous.”

Damn him! She smacked his cheek with her free hand. Her left hand, it hadn’t been nearly as hard as she’d wanted to strike him. He turned away, releasing her.

“Quit saying things about my mama!”

When he faced her again, she saw the red imprint on his cheek. He continued in a quiet voice, “But you’re not denying the rest? It’s true. All of it. Even the dalliance with your Jeremiah. I saw the two of you holding hands in the crew’s quarters before he was taken to the hospital. What harm could one more lover cause now?”

A rebuke for his assumptions was on her lips, but why bother? Virtues seemed to have such little value to the man. “This may come as a surprise to you, but I don’t want to be your lover.”

He lifted a mocking eyebrow and smiled. “That’s not what your body tells me. You’re the expert on lying. What are your tells, angel? How do I know when you’re lying?”

She swallowed. No one had ever tried to read her before, not even her kin. For so long, she’d believed it couldn’t be done. “Your arrogance makes you presumptuous. I’m not lying.”

“I think you are. I think you want me. Why don’t we give some truth to the matter?” His gaze drifted from her mouth to her eyes and back. “Right now your body is saying you want to kiss me again.”

“No it’s not.”

Another smile. “Don’t believe me? Here.” He placed his hand against her chest just above the curves of her breasts. “You turn pink here…like just now when I look at your mouth. Molly’s dresses suit you, by the way.”

His fingers fanned across her chest while the heel of his palm felt warm against her pattering heart. Her face smoldered with embarrassment at being caught lying—and enjoying the attention.

“That’s not because I want you to kiss me.”

“Really?” He put his other hand on the side of her neck, his thumb softly stroking the tender spot beneath her ear. She smelled the oak aroma of rum on his breath as he leaned close. He whispered, “You can’t keep your hands off me.”

“That’s not true. I bandaged you, but—”

“You could’ve left me minutes ago when I stopped holding you”—he glanced down at her hand on his chest with a wry smile—“but you didn’t.”

Dell noticed the way she’d snuggled up against him. She sucked in an outraged breath and stood. “My mama taught me how to bluff. I’m fully in control of my body. Unlike you.”

He pursed his lips and shifted his legs uncomfortably as she stared pointedly at the bulge in his breeches. “You have me there. But still, you can’t control yourself any more than I. If you could, you’d just kiss me until you got me out of your system. But you’re too afraid. You’re afraid you’d want to do more.”

“I’m not afraid.”

He chuckled. “Yes you are. Even if I promised like we used to do as kids—like when I taught you how to take a catfish off the hook without getting barbed.” He spat in his hand and extended it toward her. “A promise from Gory Rory, I won’t make you do anything you don’t want. Or are you still afraid you can’t control yourself?”

She stared at his hand. That she even considered his challenge amazed her.

And intrigued her.

She could enjoy more of his kisses and stop him at any time. She could prove she could resist his charms. He was everything her mama had told her to stay away from. Gambler. Pirate. Ambitious. Dangerous. Surely she could resist
him
.

But she couldn’t resist a challenge.

She spat in her hand and clamped her palm against his, giving it a firm shake. His eyes went wide as if her answer startled him. Yes, she’d called him, raised him.

Emboldened by his reaction, she moved to stand between his spread knees and bent to kiss him, bracing a light hand on his shoulder. She touched the tip of her tongue to his, tasted the buttery flavor of aged rum—surely the finest liquor that she’d ever experienced. He returned the kiss, pressing his mouth firmly back. Her hands tangled in his hair as she deepened the kiss, reaching in to explore his mouth as she’d longed to do since he’d first arrived in Posey Hollow. His arms came around her tentatively, as if waiting for her permission. Their weight felt strong and good, encircling her with security and making her insides liquefy. Without breaking the kiss, she gathered her skirt in one hand and planted her knees on either side of his hips, straddling him. He leaned back, cradling her, yet allowed her full authority over him as she positioned herself above him.

His hands glided around her, stopping to rest on her ribs, just beneath her breasts. But she needed to feel his hands on her skin—wanted him to want the same, to struggle and squirm, to pay for tempting her with his discomfort.

She broke the kiss and he lifted his head, his mouth seeking the return of hers. She crushed her lips back against his and took his tongue into her mouth, her hand roaming down the chiseled muscles of his chest. He groaned with pleasure. She grazed his bottom lip with her teeth as she broke away. Rising up to stare down at her conquest, she felt the cabin’s air wrap around her. Feasting on his flushed lips and tan body, all she wanted was to meld against him. She slid downward, raking her fingertips over his flesh. Solid pressure strained against her maidenhead.

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