Fate & Fortune

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Fate & Fortune Page 2

by Michaels, Fern


  “Tori, you are impossible,” Granger said sourly. “I, for one, don’t want to be robbed. First of all, I have not even a farthing to my name.” For an example he turned out the satin lining from his trousers’ pockets for her to see. “What do you think Scarblade would do when I tell him I have nothing to give?”

  “Why he would probably slit your throat. I do so hope it doesn’t happen today,” she said, fingering the fine yellow muslin of her skirt. “Blood does spurt so.” Granger paled perceptibly as he looked at the laughing eyes of his cousin. “Please don’t worry, Granger; if it happens I will throw myself at the mercy of this Scarblade and plead for your life. I’ll tell him I’ll do anything to save you. Besides, if I absolutely must, I can defend myself.” She added, pouting her full, pretty mouth, “It’s not been so long since you taught me to throw a knife. I am quite an accurate marksman, if you remember.”

  Granger blanched and nervously glanced at his uncle. He had been accused so frequently of teaching Tori unladylike behavior that he had almost forgotten it was Tori, not he, who led the way in social transgressions.

  “It will make no difference, my dear cousin, this man wants only money and jewels. He doesn’t care what he does to get them. A man’s blood on his hands would not concern him. But I will tell you this: If we can get through the next few miles without being accosted, then we’ll make it home safely. This section of the road is Scarblade’s lair.”

  Lord Rawlings groaned aloud and Granger began to tell him that what he had spoken was the truth when he realized his uncle’s disinterest. Granger knew when he was being ignored and allowed the matter to pass. What he did not know was that Lord Rawlings was thinking that if they should be robbed, his last shilling would be taken and he would be even more beset by financial worries.

  Tori noted her father’s attitude and prodded Granger further. “Do you really think this is his lair? And that we’ll be robbed and our throats cut?” she asked softly, in an effort not to disturb Lord Rawlings.

  Lady Lydia gasped, “Cut your hair? I won’t hear of it! Did you hear the child, Nelson? She wants to cut her hair! My dear,” she said, not waiting for a reply from her husband, “only madwomen and criminals have their hair cut. I won’t have it! Do you hear? I never heard of such a thing! Foolish girl, what will you think of next? I knew it was a mistake to let you play in the kitchens when you were a child. I forbid it, Tori! Now let the matter rest. I want to hear no more of it!”

  Resigned, Tori nodded her head. She knew from past experience it did no good to explain that her dear mother had misunderstood. Lady Lydia’s hearing had been getting worse of late. Tori and her father pretended there was nothing the matter, for vanity’s sake. But now, Tori wondered, what would she look like with her hair cut?

  “What does Scarblade look like, Granger?”

  “He’s handsome, all right, at least that’s what the ladies say. A scar on his left cheek in the shape of an S that flames brightly with the heat of passion. S for seduction,” Granger smirked. “I’ve heard in town that one or two wealthy ladies have actually made arrangements for him to rob them a second time. A slip of the tongue, a casual mention, next they know they’ve found themselves in his clutches once again.”

  “Imagine that,” Tori mused, “making arrangements to be robbed. Tell me more.”

  “He’s said to have coal-black eyes. He rides a magnificent chestnut stallion that makes him ten feet tall. That’s all I can tell you, Tori.” Warily, Granger eyed the dusty windows and prayed silently that Scarblade was somewhere else this day.

  “Oh,” Tori breathed, enraptured by the tale, “I would like to meet this man.”

  “Victoria!” Lord Rawlings shouted, shocked at the words coming from his daughter, though why he was stunned was beyond him. She had been doing much as she pleased since she had learned to walk. It would be just like the girl to make an appointment to be robbed by this uncouth fellow. “I want no further talk of this nonsense!”

  Tori always remained calm under her father’s furious gaze and sudden shouts. She knew his bluff, she had cut her teeth on his outrages. Inwardly, Tori believed he had a kind heart, even to where Granger was concerned. Besides, she mused, the poor old darling really was frightened by Granger’s story. She stifled a smile as she noticed Lord Rawlings fumble in his waistcoat for his purse.

  Suddenly a shout from the top of the coach and the quickening of speed made the occupants fall over in helter-skelter positions.

  “What is it? What’s happened?” Lady Lydia quivered.

  “I think we’re about to be robbed,” Tori laughed, as the pounding of hooves could be heard coming from behind the coach and thundering closer.

  Chapter Two

  As the yellow light from the side lanterns swayed back and forth, Tori could see the decidedly green cast to her cousin’s pale face. She couldn’t help but prod the barb again.

  “Don’t look so sick,” she hissed. “Haven’t I already promised you I would do everything possible to save your throat?”

  Granger shot her back a venomous look and sneered through clenched teeth. “Hold your tongue, Tori. You shall be lucky if your own life is spared.”

  Lord Rawlings said in a whisper, “Hold! The pair of you! For if the robber spares your lives, I promise you I shan’t!”

  Lady Lydia, whimpering to herself in fright, came around long enough to side with her husband. “Tori, now is not the time for your ill jokes! Hush!”

  Peering out the window, Tori could see that the coach had finally stopped in a thickly wooded glade. She heard scuffling atop the coach as the footmen were forced from their seats. A wave of fear washed over her, and in her ears a roaring sound echoed, making it hard for her to hear exactly what was happening outside.

  Abruptly, the coach door opened and an authoritative voice boomed over the roar in her head, commanding the passengers to come forth.

  Tori grasped her mother’s hand, and with the help of one of the highwaymen they stepped down. Lord Rawlings and Granger were close behind.

  Three men in rough clothing stood in a semicircle, while a giant of a man sat astride a huge chestnut. All wore soiled cloths, with eyeholes, tied around their heads, covering half their faces.

  Tori tried to see the rider of the stallion in the deepening light, knowing she had the advantage because the coach lanterns were to her back and the thieves were bathed in yellow light.

  “Your money and your jewels!” the rider demanded imperiously.

  “Why should I give you my jewels?” Tori asked. “Who are you that you hide behind a mask and dare not show your face? I refuse to part with the emerald ring that I carry in my pocket!” she said brashly.

  “Oh, no!” Granger muttered. Standing as close to Tori as he was, he could feel the quivering of her body. The vixen, Granger thought angrily, she’s enjoying every moment of this. The little fool will see us killed!

  “I think you will be more than glad to hand over your valuables,” the man astride the chestnut replied in a dangerous tone.

  “You sound very sure of yourself. Masked bandit, I have no intention of handing anything over to you, much less my ring! And you dare not molest a lady!”

  Lord Rawlings stepped forward and grasped his daughter’s arm, pulling her back from the point to which she had advanced during her last speech. “Forgive her, sir,” he addressed the horseman, “’tis but my addlepated daughter. She’s not the sense she was born with. An embarrassment to my wife and myself.” He tapped his head near his temple and nodded despairingly. “We’re just returning from the country where she was staying. The doctor said she would be better, but now I’m afraid all this excitement has only brought her back to her former, invalid state.”

  “Father!”

  “Calm yourself, child, else you’ll find yourself back at the house in the country,” he hissed through clenched teeth as he grasped Tori’s arm cruelly. Lady Lydia, unable to control herself any longer, began a fit of weeping, and Lord Rawlings left h
er to herself, feeling it would serve to convince the robbers of the sad state of their daughter.

  Tori, resigned to being quiet for the moment, took to studying the three men who surrounded her and her family. They wore incongruous hats; brushed beavers and silk toppers, quite incompatible with their shoddy, rusty black suits, and no doubt supplied by their past victims. One of the three smiled at her lewdly, showing broken, rotted teeth. Tori felt disappointed. Granger had always said the highwaymen were handsome, but these were no more than street beggars. Feeling repulsed by the robber’s lecherous smile, Tori retreated backward a step. Granger came close behind her and whispered, “What do you think you’re doing? You don’t even have an emerald ring! You’ll kill us all yet, Tori!”

  “Silence!” the lead horseman thundered. “I will repeat myself once more only: Your money and your jewels.”

  “Pay no heed to my daughter,” Lord Rawlings protested in a commanding tone. “She is but a child and I can assure you, she owns no such ring. None of us have any monies or jewels. My wife wears only her wedding band, surely you would not deprive her of that small trinket?”

  “If what you say is true, no. But such cannot be the case. You are persons of some quality and I see by the coach that you bear a seal of Parliament. Up to now I have been patient, but it is wearing thin. I am known to give only one warning, then the result you will bear alone. Now, hand to my men your money and jewels!”

  “Nelson, why does he keep calling us fools?” Lady Lydia whimpered.

  “Hush, dear. All will be well,” Lord Rawlings comforted.

  “And if we do not, will you slit our throats, Masked Bandit?” Tori demanded. “Will you draw and quarter us? Will you drag my mother and myself off to your lair and make slaves of us? Take me!” she cried dramatically, “for I will never part with my precious ring. It was given to me by my betrothed.”

  “Tori, for God’s sake, keep still!” Granger hissed.

  “Come here!” the rider demanded.

  Brazenly, Tori walked to within a foot of the huge stallion and looked up into the face of the highwayman.

  “Is it true? Would you become my slave rather than part with your betrothal ring?”

  Tori nodded, suddenly at a loss for words. She had never seen such black eyes. He was a handsome brute, even with his face half covered. When he spoke to her, he punctuated his statement with a smile and Tori saw that his teeth were white and strong and, more, they all seemed accounted for, no gaping holes in this smile. He sat on the horse with an ease that made him and the magnificent beast seem as one. A lover of horseflesh, Tori found herself distractedly trying to keep her hand from feeling the hot, quivering animal.

  “Beware of your answer,” the horseman shouted. “One word from you and your family could be dead in seconds. Think carefully!”

  His shouts had startled the chestnut, and the bandit felt the beast begin to rear up in fear. Tori, too, saw the horse move and she reached her hand out to touch its muzzle. Her gesture had the required effect, the stallion calmed. Its rider found himself awed by the girl’s knowledge of horses and admired the stance she took in the face of danger.

  “No!” Tori exclaimed softly. Suddenly, she started to tremble, shaking in her shoes. She had gone too far. She could read murder in the black eyes. “Let my family go. They mean you no harm. We have no money with us. My cousin is destitute. We are returning from our summer home and our luggage and personal belongings have gone before us in a flatwagon. I beg of you, let my family go!”

  “You plead prettily for your family. Is this true what you say? Don’t lie to me, for I can seek you out within an hour’s time and have you all murdered in your beds.”

  “It is the truth,” Tori said meekly.

  “I will spare them if you give me the ring.”

  “I can’t do that. It’s from my betrothed.”

  “You must love this man very much to be willing to die for his ring.”

  “With all my heart,” Tori said quietly.

  Suddenly, without a moment’s warning, a long arm reached down and grasped Tori under the shoulders. Feeling herself being lifted from the ground, she struggled, but the man’s grip was firm.

  He lifted her in one swoop onto the saddle before him. So quick was his action, Tori found herself caught between excitement and fear. Turning her head to face him, she determined to brave out her predicament. From somewhere she could hear her father making noises demanding her release, but his words became indistinct. Looking into dark, brooding eyes, Tori gazed at the deep curling scar that ran across the highwayman’s cheekbone. It stood out sharply in the dim evening light. The girl fought an almost uncontrollable urge to reach up and caress the snakelike indentation. As the man’s jaw tightened the scar moved to form a letter S. Tori’s thoughts choked her as she remembered Granger’s smirk and his words, “S for seduction!”

  Forcing her gaze away from the fascinating line, Tori found herself locked in a stare with the highwayman. In his night-dark orbs there was an excitement, a passion! Her heaving breaths knotted in her throat.

  The fast-fading light of late evening threw Tori in shadow. Scarblade peered beneath the brim of her bonnet but could not see her face. He could only discern a loveliness there and a voluptuousness of figure as a ray of light from the lanterns on the carriage slashed across her rising bosom. He noted her scent, the feel of her weight against his thighs, and the slim fragility of her ribs encased within the silkiness of her gown.

  Tori sensed his appraisal of her and her senses reeled as she became aware of his masculine scent mixed with the pungent smell of horse sweat. Feeling the rippling muscles beneath her, she noted a stirring tautness in his loins. Her breath came in choking rasps. She felt his fingers pressing into her ribs, drawing her imperceptibly closer. Then, just as she sensed he would kiss her, she became frightened of her own soaring emotions. Drawing away from him, she cut the air between them with a sharp retort. “Don’t tell me you’re that facetious sort of highwayman who warrants laughter in the ladies’ bedchambers. That most low and ridiculous form of scoundrel known as a ‘kissing bandit’!”

  The highwayman froze, struck by her words, angered that she had sensed his intentions. “I give you your choice: You will hand over the ring or I will take it from you.”

  Tori could feel his breath upon her cheek and was aware of the oddly disconcerted emotions he stirred in her by his nearness. Slowly, Tori searched the pocket of her gown, her fingers grasped the small ring and withdrew it. She felt the wild beating of his heart as she leaned against her accoster. Her own fluttered madly within her breast and she felt herself being gently lowered to the ground. Half falling, she quickly regained her balance and stood tall.

  “If you must have it, then it is yours.” She tossed the ring into the air and watched as it was deftly snatched by Scarblade.

  “That’s enough, child; quickly now, come here to us,” Lord Rawlings sputtered.

  “Yes, please, dear,” Lady Lydia entreated, a tinge of hysteria edging her voice.

  “You hear your parents,” Granger hissed, “now come here to us!”

  Heedless of the frantic words of her family, Tori was only aware of the eyes of the highwayman upon her and their thinly veiled desire.

  “I think, sir,” she said haughtily, “we shall meet again one day. I am allowing you to safeguard the ring for me—one never knows in these times what dangerous men are lurking about on the highways. I trust you will guard it well!”

  The bandit’s jet eyes bore through her, and to her terror she discerned the scar on his cheek had deepened in color.

  Chapter Three

  Hidden in a woody glade, the bandit Scarblade quieted his nervous chestnut and watched the Rawlings’ ornate coach rumble by. He took no pleasure in these robberies and found it hard to believe that he, Marcus Chancelor, would land himself in this unlikely position.

  Like the pages of a calendar flipping backwards, his memory brought him to a point in time less than
a year ago, and there before him were the reasons behind his banditry.

  Evening fell silently on his sprawling, two-storied white clapboard home, wrapping the Carolina countryside in tender arms. He paced the spacious half-beamed room impatiently, stopping now and again to peer out the mullioned windows into the darkness, anticipating the sight of the horse-drawn cart. Marcus’s long, easy strides were unhindered by the provincial furnishings that graced the room.

  Carver, a manservant, entered the informal sitting room with a questioning look in his watery eyes. “Excuse me, sir, but your father isn’t home yet?”

  Marcus turned abruptly to face the elderly Carver. “No, dammit, and if you come in here once more asking for him, I swear I’ll skin your hide!”

  Carver watched his young master, a sullen expression drawing the corners of his wide mouth downward.

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Sorry, Carver,” Marcus apologized. “If it weren’t for the damn Indians, I wouldn’t be so jumpy. Samuel’s not as young as he thinks he is, and he might take on more than he can handle. You know how the Indians in the North Carolina area are plaguing the colonists with frequent raids and war parties.”

  “I know, sir. They just love to torment us.” Carver mumbled to himself.

  In two easy strides Marcus reached the desk in the corner of the room. He toyed nervously with the familiar rolls of blueprints, his ears pricked for the sound of approaching horses. He picked up the heavy parchments and opened them as he had on many occasions, studying the white lines etched in the thin coating of blue wax. These were the plans for the house that was in progress on the other side of the rise, closer to the river. The house his mother had dreamed of and which his father, Samuel, had promised to build for her. Now it was to be a shrine to her memory, she being dead these twenty-four years. Samuel was determined to see the house built just as she had dreamed, before he was called to rest beside her for all eternity.

  Carefully, Marcus rolled the parchment and replaced it on the desk. Sorrowfully, he doubted his father would ever realize his ambition. Materials were expensive when one had to purchase them on the black market, and the constant threat of Indians made progress slow. Twice now they had burned the strong cedar beams to the ground, and Samuel, refusing to admit defeat, had sighed wearily, cursed soundly, and had begun over again.

 

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