The Mercenary Pirate (The Heart of a Hero Book 10)

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by Katherine Bone




  Table of 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 One

  The Mercenary Pirate

  The Heart of a Hero Series, Book Ten

  by

  Katherine Bone

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  License and Copyright Notes

  Also Available

  Dedication

  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

  Author’s Note

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Thank you for reading, The Mercenary Pirate

  Excerpt from No Rest for the Wicked

  License and Copyright Notes

  The Mercenary Pirate

  Copyright © 2017 by Katherine Bone

  Kindle Edition

  Cover Design by For the Muse Designs

  Editing by Double Vision Editorial

  ISBN: 9780998207407

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means—except in the case of brief quotations embedded in critical articles or reviews—without the author’s written permission.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. Thank you for respecting the hard work of the author.

  For more information contact [email protected]

  or visit www.katherinebone.com.

  Also Available

  The Heart of a Hero Series

  No Rest for the Wicked by Cora Lee, Prequel novella, Book One

  Only a Hero Will Do by Alanna Lucas, Book Two

  Once Bitten by Aileen Fish, Book Three

  Lightning Strikes Twice by Jillian Chantal, Book Four

  No Hiding for the Guilty by Vanessa Riley, Book Five

  The Marquis of Thunder by Susan Gee Heino, Book Six

  The Good, the Bad, and the Scandalous by Cora Lee, Book Seven

  The Archer’s Paradox by Ally Broadfield, Book Eight

  The Missing Duke by Heather King, Book Nine

  The Mercenary Pirate by Katherine Bone, Book Ten

  The Regent’s Revenge Series

  Grab your complimentary copy of Book #1, The Pirate’s Duchess!

  The Pirate’s Debt, Book #2

  The Pirate’s Duty, Book #3

  Dedication

  “The only thing I am afraid of is fear.”

  ~ Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington

  For my readers.

  Do what scares you and make an impression on the world.

  What if your favorite superheroes had Regency-era doppelgangers? And what if a group of them were recruited by the Duke of Wellington to gather intelligence for him during the Napoleonic Wars while they protected their own parts of the realm?

  You’d get the Heart of a Hero Series.

  Chapter One

  Saint-Malo, France, September 1812

  Nothing drew more suspicion than a lone wolf scouting for his pack.

  Wolfgang entered La Guêpe—the Wasp—and took in the scene unfolding in the tavern, reaping uninvited attention from those who glanced his way.

  “It’s the captain of the Sea Wolf!” someone shouted.

  Chairs screeched against the floorboards in the smoky din. Voices stopped mid-conversation. Several men ignored the disruption his entrance was causing, continuing to brawl in the corner. One bumped into a corsair, who became so enraged that he grabbed the unfortunate man by his neck and snapped it. The gamblers who were spread throughout the Wasp ignored the murder without flinching. They merely continued to cast bets on the mounting caches in the center of rough-hewn tables. It was a testament to the level of violence typically found in places like these. And Wolf thrived on it.

  Saint-Malo was a stronghold with a centuries-old reputation as a den of disreputable pirates. Wolf had docked there on several occasions while participating in free trade and rendezvousing with contacts from the two secret intelligence-gathering organizations he worked for—Wellington’s spies and the Legion, a group operating under Lord Fynes that hunted down those responsible for undermining British rule and funding Napoleon’s war, in particular a man or group known simply as Typhon.

  Wolf’s habits and tracking skills—a talent he’d perfected while living with Indians in the Colonies—had been useful in scouting Marshal Marmont’s activities in the Battle of Salamanca. Since then, Marmont had withdrawn to Madrid, giving Wolf leeway to travel to the coast and sail to Saint-Malo where another one of Wellington’s agents was waiting to pass along information he’d been promised about his long-lost brother’s whereabouts. The investigatory work done on Wolf’s behalf was supposed to lead him to his brother, Kearney, who he hadn’t seen since he’d received a head injury at age eight on the docks in Bristol, an injury that had erased his earlier childhood memories.

  The air crackled with tension inside the tavern, drawing Wolf’s attention back to the present and reeking of tobacco, stale malty ale, body odor, and a hint of desperation. Wolf didn’t favor this particular tavern as the men who frequented it were Malouines. Few of these men who hailed from Saint-Malo did not take to sea, and they certainly never counted the odds against themselves. They’d been bred to raid Spanish and British ships, and they shirked every decency known to man. He was accustomed to the stares and the fear he provoked; it was treatment shown him no matter the port or establishment. Disregarding potential threats—like him—tended to get people killed.

  Smoke plumed from his cigar as he chewed on the fermented end of the dark tobacco wrapper, trying to hide his contempt. Wolf didn’t abide complications. Seedier establishments offered more privacy than the lofty clubs fellow members of Wellington’s ring—Lords Hartland, Thorston, Bateman, and St. Peter—frequented. Being willing to go where the titled dared not go made Wolf invaluable, and appreciated men did not vanish without a trace. Competence and cunning kept men alive.

  Wolf waited none too patiently for the crowd to sate its collective curiosity. When his audience finally lost interest in him and focus returned to the evening’s entertainment of gambling and sensual pursuits, Wolf took the spicy, peppery Portuguese cigar from between his lips with his thumb and forefinger as he searched the crowd for the man he’d come to meet.

  He bared his teeth. He’d been in
Wellington’s employ for four years, and during all that time, the world had been at war and Typhon had been at large. One mission had led to another and another without Wolf ever receiving what he’d been promised at the onset of his joining the Legion. Bollocks. He’d served his purpose. He’d fought with honor, killing only when necessary, though the demon inside him yearned to cut his enemies to ribbons, while information about his brother dangled temptingly out of reach.

  Anger reared its ugly head, not for the first time—or the last, he wagered.

  “Je ne veux pas de problème!” a small, defiant voice shouted. I don’t want any trouble.

  Who did? Wolf grumbled to himself, beset by the lack of empathy that enveloped his senses. The stranger shouting to his left mirrored his own thoughts. Trouble always managed to find Wolf.

  With Wellington’s army entrenched around the Castile at Burgos and Wolf’s men waiting for orders aboard his ship, the Sea Wolf, he didn’t have time for distractions. He proceeded forward with a slow, purposeful, and steady gait, ignoring the scuffling to his left as he made his way through the crowded interior to the bar where a winking barmaid displaying her ample breasts to full advantage.

  The tempting French woman was not who she claimed to be, however. The name Jolie was one of Joanna Pearson Devlin’s better-known aliases. She was the wife of Michael Devlin, the Demon of Dublin’s Hell, and an ally. Joanna and the Earl of Hartland had been pivotal in organizing Wellington’s British intelligence ring. It was she who had recruited him four years ago after spotting him earning stake money in a boxing match in Bristol. His roughened edges, streetwise fighting abilities, and roving lifestyle had been an asset when Wellington campaigned outside England and critical information needed to be passed from one country to another.

  “Why, if it isn’t the Sea Wolf.” She batted her eyelashes, continuing her ruse and taking no chances that someone might overhear their conversation.

  “Jolie.” He regarded her over the smoke coiling from his cigar and nodded in acknowledgment.

  Joanna was a minx who had a way of switching characters like adorning a new gown. It was a necessary talent when it came to survival in their business.

  But Joanna and their fellow spies weren’t Wellington’s first operatives of espionage. Wolf had come from the Battle of Salamanca mere weeks after Wellington’s cunning Scotsman Colquhoun Grant had been captured and taken to Bayonne. He’d left the keen-eyed Scot Andrew Leith-Hay and nobleman Charles Cocks to accompany Wellington and his army to the Castile at Burgos.

  Wolf bowed his head slightly. “To what do I owe this pleasure?”

  “A reunion of sorts, Monsieur,” she purred. “It has been a long time, no? But first, you look weary. What can I serve you?”

  Joanna knew very well that Wolf wanted information on his brother, Kearney. Hadn’t that been what Wellington had promised him? His services had been successfully acquired because of that promise. Though Wolf enjoyed serving his country without complaint, he had already waited four years to find out where his brother was. And after what Wolf had endured in Salamanca, he expected payment for services rendered.

  “Give me a beer,” he said.

  Joanna turned around and reached for the large barrel positioned behind her as Wolf leaned his elbows on the counter. To serve Wellington, he’d turned his back on Captain Franco Charve in a tavern similar to this one. The cut had cost him plenty, including Franco himself, the man who’d plucked him out of the mud, the father figure Wolf had been denied during his murky childhood. The little he could recall—images of his elusive brother and the haunting guilt that plagued him—filled him with dread.

  In the meantime, he had nothing to show for his involvement with Wellington or the Legion.

  The scuffling and grunts grew louder, making Wolf curious. He peered over his shoulder at the crowd that was encircling someone in their midst, his leather overcoat straining as he moved.

  “You heard me. Stay . . . back!” the voice shouted again.

  Wolf’s sluggish heartbeat began to race as concern washed over him. He straightened, a tingling weight building in his chest.

  He narrowed his eyes and cut them to the corner where the voice had originated from. His instincts called him out, and his nerve endings blazed to life as he tensed for a fight. This time, there was no mistaking the fear he heard in the voice or the slight feminine tone that was prickling his senses. A boy, perhaps? Or . . .

  Bollocks! Surely those men weren’t beating a woman on the premises?

  “Monsieur?” Joanna asked when he didn’t acknowledge the beer she placed before him. “What is happening over there is none of your concern. We have more important matters to discuss. Hart—”

  “Can take care of himself,” Wolf said. The man was an earl, and his homes, medieval Hartland Abbey in Devon, Glanmire House in Cork, and Elliot House in Hampstead, were veritable strongholds. Hartland had titled peers, plus Captain Alexander, Major Bannerman, Michael Devlin, and Colin Hoskins to help the Legion uncover Typhon’s true identity. “Whatever he needs from me can wait.”

  Restless now and completely ill at ease, Wolf turned around and headed toward the crowd of men while everyone else attempted to mind their own business. Thirst came second to the protective urges clamoring inside him. His instincts had never failed him before. And right now, he was sure the voice he’d heard wasn’t from a mere boy but a young woman who was but moments away from losing her life.

  Wolf placed his cigar between his lips once more. He marched back the way he’d come, shoving his way through the derelict group, men clothed in shabby threads that appeared to have never seen water or soap. In their midst, he finally clearly observed the owner of the raspy voice. It seemed to be a small, disheveled boy, after all. The lad boasted a bloody lip and a swollen eye. He was chained to a wall, bracing himself against his attackers, knees bent, fists out in front of him, prepared to take on the horde.

  A filthy mop of hair half covered the boy’s face as he glared through the strands. Wolf narrowed his eyes on the captive, studying him carefully. Regardless of whether the child was incredibly brave or terribly unwise, Wolf was almost certain this boy was not who he appeared to be. A lot of care seemed to have been taken to alter the stranger’s physical shape, but the filth couldn’t completely hide the facial bone structure that made him revert to his earlier belief that he was looking at a young woman, who for some reason was masquerading as a boy. But who was she? And how had she gotten here?

  Chains rattled as she moved, the sound horrifyingly familiar as flashes of his childhood assaulted him. A spoon clanking on a tin plate. Iron bars that barred his view and prevented escape. Staccato footsteps on the floorboards and wicked laughter announcing his captor’s approach.

  Damn. He’d seen what happened to captured boys who couldn’t hold their own against a group of well-oiled cutthroats. He’d lived it. In fact, he’d been one of the few lucky enough to survive the docks in Bristol. But this girl wasn’t Wolf. She faced brutal odds. These men were hardened by malcontent and misdeeds, and they punished first and asked questions later. Corsairs like these either turned boys into men or issued a slow and painful death to those who opposed them.

  Violence certainly didn’t favor the weak. Not in Saint-Malo, a citadel that bred pirates and privateers and some of the mightiest and most valiant sea dogs that ever sailed. Even so, the bloodthirsty claw-cat fought her captors. But she was in a precarious situation: if she revealed her identity, she could expect a crueler fate than the one she was suffering now. But if Wolf used her troublesome behavior to his advantage, he might be able to broker her release before she got her arse handed to her on a platter or found herself on her back servicing every last one of these scabrous dogs.

  Corsairs didn’t relax diplomatic practices for anyone, including female captives, unless it benefited them monetarily. They also had long memories. Malouines were willing to do anything for entertainment and profit, which meant he’d have to be a savvy barterer
and offer them something they’d be hardpressed to get on their own—figuerados. The cigars originated from Portugal, and it just so happened that the entire region was steeped in war. He took his figuerado out of his mouth, stared at it, then growled, cursing his rotten luck.

  His stare cut to the girl. Her wild desperation and courage was a rare find. Her curly hair was tied up in a handkerchief, her slender nose bloodied, and her mouth swollen. Her leather coat was too large for her frame and hung off her shoulders, the sleeves folded up at the ends to reveal clenched fists chained at the wrist.

  Wolf’s senses heightened, and he growled low in his throat. “What’s going on here?” he asked a man to his right, barely controlling his temper. “What’s this boy done?”

  “Slave boy,” the man spat. “Kicked that man there in the cock.” He pointed rudely to two men. One limped, balls in hand, protesting loudly to the other who sat calmly at a table. “He won’t be rutting for days, I wager.” He arrowed his finger at another man. “And he sullied that one’s grog. Been cowering in the corner like a rat ever since.”

  “Cowering?” Wolf scrutinized the girl’s bloody knuckles. “I see a little rat baring its claws.”

  “Not right in the head, that one. He shouldn’t bite the hand that feeds him.”

  “Depends on the hand.” Wolf shook his head. Complete and utter fools, the lot of them. How long had the girl been held captive? Certainly not long enough to let her identity slip.

  He clenched his fists, struggling to control the violent impulses coiling inside him. This wasn’t England. He was a foreigner on French soil during a time of war. Losing his temper would only draw attention to himself, Joanna, and the girl.

  He took a deep breath to curb his rising fury as another man goaded his captive into swiping at air. Dark circles discolored the skin beneath her eyes. Sod it, she looked as if she hadn’t eaten a good meal in at least a fortnight, and she smelled as if she hadn’t bathed in twice as long. He wasn’t sure she’d even been given liberty to relieve herself.

 

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