Paradise Island

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by Charmaine Ross




  Paradise Island

  Charmaine Ross, author of Daman’s Angel

  Avon, Massachusetts

  This edition published by

  Crimson Romance

  an imprint of F+W Media, Inc.

  10151 Carver Road, Suite 200

  Blue Ash, Ohio 45242

  www.crimsonromance.com

  Copyright © 2013 by Charmaine Ross

  ISBN 10: 1-4405-6403-5

  ISBN 13: 978-1-4405-6403-1

  eISBN 10: 1-4405-6404-3

  eISBN 13: 978-1-4405-6404-8

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, corporations, institutions, organizations, events, or locales in this novel are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character to actual persons (living or dead) is entirely coincidental.

  Cover art © 123rf.com; istockphoto.com/ranplett; grafikeray

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  About the Author

  More From This Author

  Also Available

  Chapter One

  Dartmouth Cove, Nova Scotia. 1853.

  “He is coming.”

  The hollow clunk of footsteps echoed down the pier.

  Estelle edged further back behind the crate some dock hands had been unloading from a merchant’s ship earlier that afternoon. Ignoring her straining muscles and the discomfort of the mask that covered her face, she hastily made sure her flaming, long hair was neatly tucked beneath the black scarf she’d used to contain it. Even the fog floating from the sea and the moonless night wouldn’t be enough to hide its vivid color. She made sure that Claire was hidden neatly in the darkest of shadows behind her. If the worst happened and this didn’t work out, there was no way she’d sacrifice Claire.

  She held a steadying breath. There was no way this was not going to work. They had come this far, gone to such lengths and she had waited far longer than she had ever anticipated she would need to. Now, Captain Gregory Marshall was nearly in her hands. She would need to kidnap him before his ship left port on a Navy mission in the morning. The opportunity to catch him alone, without his crew members, would not come along again for quite some time and she wasn’t going to wait any more. She’d done enough of that.

  He’d come back to his ship early. She’d guessed correctly that he would. She’d been closely studying him over the past week as his ship had docked and taken on supplies. He’d left his men in the comfort of the town’s inn. They were going to sea for a long time, and he wanted his men in the best frame of mind — the kind that that could only be found in the arms of a woman.

  Estelle nearly snorted at the thought. Men were simple. All they wanted was a toss and a tumble. Rarely did they think of the proceeds nine months after their little fling. Some of the women she’d rescued had babies by fathers they didn’t know. That wasn’t their fault, those were the women who had been used and abused so much that their array of children looked more like a school than a family.

  This was one time when a man would face justice.

  Claire stepped up close behind Estelle and peered over the other woman’s shoulder. “He’s a mountain, not a man,” Claire hissed, her aristocratic accent clipped.

  “Don’t be fooled by the width of his shoulders. He’s still just a man,” Estelle replied.

  The footsteps stopped close by and Estelle froze.

  “You there! Come out!” Gregory Marshal’s deep toned voice sliced through the fog.

  Estelle swore beneath her breath. How did he know they were here? They’d lost their only advantage. She’d wanted to keep Claire safe and now their cover had been compromised. Estelle whipped the scarf from her head — it would be less of a surprise for him to see her as a woman than as a kidnapper. Gregory took another step towards them. Keeping Claire behind her back, Estelle emerged from behind the crates.

  Gregory blinked wordlessly at her for a moment then seemed to remember how to use his tongue. “This is no place for a woman.”

  A flare of quick anger exploded in her mind, taking control of her mouth, “Women can go wherever they would concern themselves to go.”

  His lips pressed into a flat line. “This is not the safest of places. I am only worried for your wellbeing.”

  “You have no cause to be,” Estelle replied. “I can take care of myself.”

  Gregory stepped towards her, coming closer than she wanted him to. Still, she held her ground. She might need him as close as this anyway, so that she would not be heard when she used her song. His gaze darted to the shadows behind her and his eyes opened wide as he saw Claire hiding behind her. “Two ladies!” he exclaimed.

  Estelle motioned for Claire to stand next to her, “And what did you think we were?” She readied her stance, prepared for him to try and bundle them up and take them to ‘safety,’ wherever he deemed that may be.

  Gregory paused then held his gloved hand out to her. He clicked his heels, slightly angling his head in a formal invitation, “May I assist you and take you to a … more suitable place for a lady.”

  She blinked. She’d expected some manhandling, for him to use his greater strength. She hadn’t expected an observation of society politeness. Moments passed before she remembered what she’d come for.

  Retribution. Revenge. Him.

  She concentrated on his face, filling her lungs to their limit and then letting the air release gently, singing so quietly her melody was no more than a sigh. She didn’t know where the tune came from, only that it drew from somewhere deep inside. All her wants and needs combined with the song. She could almost see them swirling through the air and into the ears of the man she wished to lull to sleep.

  His brows knitted as the first few notes took hold. He held a hand to his forehead and his knees sagged. He stepped sideways, trying to correct his failing balance. Struggling, his gaze rose to hers, straining against the power of her song. “You … need to come with me. Too dangerous for … you here.”

  Estelle almost stopped her song. These were not the words she expected at all — at this stage, men she’d used her gift on usually swore. Although he was being rendered unconscious, he seemed to be concerned for them. Claire placed a hand on Estelle’s shoulder, went to step around her towards Gregory, but Estelle blocked her with a hand out to the side. She mentally pulled herself together. Gregory was intelligent. She would have to be on her guard around him. Gregory Marshall was a cunning murderer, knowing what to say and when to say it. He was one of the youngest men ever to become a Navy Captain. That didn’t happen without being a certain type of
man. She pressed on, increasing the strength of her song.

  Gregory crumpled to the ground, unconscious. She ran towards him, Claire at her side. Now she had the opportunity to study him up close instead of through a spyglass. She’d not expected him to be so handsome. A sleek, black curl fell across his forehead, the color of sin. Smooth twin slashes of brows were set above long lashes that fanned over the rugged planes of his face. Asleep, his lips were firm, full. A wholly masculine line.

  His skin was a deep olive, a tanned golden hue, a testament to his time in the sun. A silvery scar trailed along his hairline, from his forehead to the lobe of his ear and Estelle wondered how he had managed to come by it.

  But beneath that darkly handsome veneer lay the heart of a murderer. Estelle’s sympathy crumbled and her resolution firmed. No matter how outwardly attractive he was, his heart was twice as immoral. He was going to stand trial and pay for his crimes against her and her father.

  “Let’s get him into the shadows and into the dingy,” Estelle said.

  Claire wrapped delicate, black-clad wrists around Gregory’s ankles and hoisted them either side of her slender waist. Estelle waited as Claire grappled to keep a hold of each heavy, muscular appendage, more tree trunk than leg.

  “We have to be quick. We don’t know when the crew will be back and Dalia won’t be able to hide the Wanderlust for much longer,” Estelle whispered.

  She hooked her black-gloved hands under his arms and hoisted Gregory onto her chest. The man might have been made from solid granite. Beneath his clothes, Estelle felt mounds of unyielding, hard muscle.

  His shoulders alone were double her width and three times as thick. She was not a small woman, being the height of most average-sized men, and years at sea had honed her body into a lithe machine. She was much stronger than she had ever been in her twenty-five years, and could match most men in a fight. But this man dwarfed her. He was going to be one to watch out for. Although he was unconscious and his body pliant, she sensed a lethal power pulsing beneath the surface.

  Estelle inclined her head towards the crates they had hidden behind. “Over there.”

  Together they shuffled along the pier as quietly as they could. Claire’s heel caught between two rough boards and she toppled backwards, taking Gregory’s legs with her. They landed with a thump.

  “Captain?” A voice sounded from the decks of the ship above. Estelle’s heart hammered a staccato beat in her chest. They could not be found halfway through the kidnapping of a Navy Captain. Her terrified gaze locked with Claire’s. Claire’s sky blue eyes were round and shining. Estelle knew she was feeling it; The Terror, she called it.

  The force of Claire’s gift surged through her when she was in danger, tearing through her insides, striking hard and fast. It was a strange gift, one she had received at the mistreatment of a man’s hands; her own father. But it was very useful and had put them in good stead over the years. She was always able to alert them to possible danger and they had always respected and acted on it. However useful it was though, Estelle was grateful that she wasn’t the one who owned it.

  “Stand firm, Claire. If we are silent he will think it is a noise of the night and will go away.”

  “Captain?” It was the voice of a boy, the ship’s mate. Estelle knew that if he chanced upon them, she wouldn’t have a problem disarming him.

  Gregory stirred and mumbled something unintelligible in his sleep. He tipped his head back and Estelle felt his shoulders strain. She willed him back to rest, her mind a whirr of swirling panic. His body relaxed and she ground out her thanks to whatever deity could hear her. The boy must have finally doubted his ears and his footsteps disappeared into silence.

  Estelle slipped a vial and handkerchief from her satchel. It was embroidered with delicate lace around the outside and had her initials stitched into one corner. She ran her thumb over the tiny pink stitching, each thread a work of art, remembering a time when it was important for her to have a clean handkerchief.

  Not so now. She discarded the useless thought, unplugged the bottle and emptied the fluid onto the handkerchief.

  “What are you doing?” Claire’s blue eyes were round with worry.

  “I don’t know how long my song will keep him unconscious. Besides, he’ll be able to sleep off the effects when he’s safely onboard the Wanderlust.” Estelle placed the soaked handkerchief over his mouth. He shook his head, fighting even in his state of unconsciousness, but she followed the turns of his head and soon he slumped into a deeper sleep. She threw the handkerchief into the water below.

  “Let’s go.”

  Together they maneuvered him behind the crates to where their dingy was moored, hidden beneath the planks of the pier. As they moved him, Estelle saw a satchel at his waist. She flipped it open, and several items fell out.

  There was a flash of gold in the dark. A ring. The band was thick and large enough for a man’s finger. It was scratched and well worn; the gold that had once been shiny was now dull. For such a small object, it was weighty. Estelle picked it up, turned the ring over and saw a raised image of a handcrafted skull.

  The skull was vulgar. Its mouth hung lose, hinged open in an eternal silent scream. The eye sockets were elongated, as though the skull were squeezed. The grotesque eyes seemed to bore into her as though there was an unearthly force contained inside. She stared into the eyes as though hypnotically drawn to them. The metal started to buzz with a living energy that permeated her skin and made her palm tingle. It heated within moments, sinking into her bones as though fusing body to metal.

  “What is it, Estelle?” Claire asked.

  Estelle shook her head, hurriedly slipping the ring into her satchel at her hip. ‘It is nothing.’ Now was not the time to become drawn into an enchanted object, or whatever it was.

  A carefully folded map was amongst the objects from Gregory’s satchel. She opened it, seeing what she could in the darkness. A part of it had been marked with red ink. This was something she’d question him about when he was safely aboard her ship. She folded the map and put it in the satchel.

  The last item was a man’s pocket watch. Something half familiar tugged at a loose memory. She slowly picked up the watch, her breath catching in her throat as the vague, familiar feeling transformed into awareness. The outside of the watch was tarnished much more than she remembered.

  “What is it, Estelle?”

  “I knew he was responsible. What other reason could he have for keeping this?”

  “It’s a gentleman’s pocket watch. Why wouldn’t he have one? He is a man, after all,” Claire exclaimed.

  “It’s not his. This time piece belonged to my father.” Estelle opened it. The glass that covered the hands of the clock had been smashed.

  There was a photo of a woman and a child, cut to fit into the inside of the cover. It was, browned and water marked. She ran the pad of her thumb over the image of the woman. “My mother,” she said by way of explanation. “I was only two in this likeness.”

  “She is very beautiful,” Claire said.

  Estelle snapped the lip closed. “I really can’t remember her. She died soon after that photograph was taken. My father hired the best nannies after her death. I was too young to know any better so it really doesn’t matter.”

  It was no use dwelling on the mistakes of the past. It was useless and wouldn’t bring her any closer to her goal of jailing the man who’d killed her father. “Let’s get him into the boat.”

  “Look at the size of him. What if the boat tips with all our weight?” Claire asked.

  “Hmmph. You’re right. Can’t kidnap a drowned man. I’ll get the rope from the dingy and we’ll lower him down gently.” Estelle sprang down the ladder from the pier and quickly gathered the rope in the hull of the dingy.

  When she was back on the pier she secured one end around his torso. H
er fingers moved automatically as she tied the knots in the rope, used to the complicated twists and turns she used aboard her ship. His warm, masculine smell drifted from the folds of his shirt, infusing the air around her with the spicy aroma of the sea. It reminded her of the clean, crisp air of Paradise. Warily, she shook the sensations off — as unusual as they were, this was no place to explore them.

  She wound the other end of the rope around a wooden pole and quickly tested it with a few strong tugs. The knots held. She sat back on her haunches when she was satisfied, and was surprised to find she was a little out of breath. She wiped the hot prickle of perspiration from her forehead.

  “Right. We’ll get his feet over the edge and lower him down.”

  Together they inched him over the edge using the makeshift pulley system she’d made. His shirt caught on the rough end of a plank and there was a rip of material as the fabric gave way, baring his chest. Estelle caught a glimpse of toned, lean muscular planes before he disappeared over the edge.

  “Lower him slowly, until he is just above the water,” Estelle said.

  Estelle wound an extra length of rope around the pole when they had positioned him above the dingy. “I’m going to get in first to guide him down.”

  “How are we all going to fit?” Claire asked.

  “I’m going to swim. There will be room enough for you both that way.”

  “But the water is freezing.”

  Estelle reached out and squeezed Claire’s hand. “I’ll be fine. A bit of cold is nothing, and besides, our ship isn’t very far away. We’ll be there in no time.”

  Estelle quickly climbed down the ladder until she stood in the hull of the dingy. She maneuvered the craft until it was directly beneath Gregory. She reached into her belt and retrieved the hunting knife she wore in a leather sheath.

  “Lower him a little more,” she called, as loudly as she dared.

  Slowly, Claire lowered him. Estelle steadied herself, reached around his back and cut the rope. Gregory’s boneless body toppled onto her. She fell backwards. Her rear end hit the hull and she was covered by cumbersome limp limbs and an unforgivingly solid body.

 

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