EscapeWithMe

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Authors: Ruby Duvall

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Escape With Me

Ruby
Duvall

 

Being shot is bad enough, but waking
up in eighteenth-century London is even worse. Samantha must follow the clues
in her magic locket to find out why she’s here and how to get home, and a
tempting offer of shelter is too good to be true when she learns her patroness
is actually a procuress. Even more startling than her overpowering attraction
to her first client is the fact that submitting to her desires may lead to the
answers she needs.

The beautiful redhead is a
distraction that naval officer Ryder cannot afford. His father is dying and his
fugitive brother has bankrupted the family business. But he cannot deny
himself, and Samantha turns out to be just what he needed—both in bed and out—yet
the more passion they share, the more embroiled she becomes in his dangerous
dealings, including the dark secret between Ryder and the obsessed revenue
officer who wants to see him hang.

 

A
Romantica®
paranormal erotic romance
from Ellora’s Cave

 

Escape With Me

Ruby Duvall

Acknowledgements

 

I’d like to thank Sheila for her feedback and research
assistance. I certainly asked her a lot of questions! Thanks also to Linda and
Tassa for beta reading. My EC editor Grace has been a pleasure to work with, so
big kudos to her. Lastly, I’d like to thank my spouse for his earnest support
of my writing.

Chapter One

 

Samantha woke with a powerful, burst-from-the-water gasp.

The air was relieving at first. Then it caught in her
throat. Coughs stabbed through her abdomen and what little breath she could
take ended in more painful coughing. Tears sprang to her eyes. Once she could
draw a full breath, she wailed in agony and writhed where she lay. God damn,
did it hurt.

He had shot her.
Actually
shot her.

She wouldn’t have said anything—or at least, she would’ve
lied about not saying anything and then would’ve narced on him, but he hadn’t
even given her the chance to speak. The look on his face…

The burning in her gut spread. She lifted her hand and found
that she couldn’t see more than an outline, but she could smell something sweet
and metallic. She was dying. Cupping her hands against the wet wound in her
stomach, she moaned again as tears rolled down to her ears. She looked around
for the telephone.

Wait, where was she? This wasn’t the storeroom. It smelled
too terrible—dusty and dank. In the dim light, she saw rafters overhead. Was it
an attic? Had he moved her?

She tried not to cry. Just breathing hurt terribly. Moving
would hurt even more. Could she get up? She tried to roll to her side and
nearly puked.

Her face felt hot. Her vision shimmered. She was going to
pass out.

* * * * *

She breathed in and opened her eyes. The room was brighter,
illuminated from somewhere behind her. The muffled din outside was an array of
discordant noises—voices, footsteps and other sounds she didn’t recognize. She
must’ve been unconscious for a while. Recalling the wound, she pressed her
hands to her stomach, but the pain was gone. She lifted her head and looked
down at herself. Her black trench coat was open and her white blouse was
unblemished, her hands free of blood.

Had the wound been a dream? It couldn’t have been. He had
reached into his coat, sighing as he always did when he was disappointed.
“Goodbye, Sam.”

She laid her head on the floor. “Son of a bitch,” she
breathed. She’d forgive herself for being surprised that he shot her, but not
that he was doing something illegal. She should’ve known. None of their pieces
were worth nearly as much as what he had sold them for. Why did she always turn
a blind eye when it came to him?

And where had he brought her? She found her feet and stood
slowly. The room was indeed an attic, lit by a shuttered window that was closed
against a gray day. Sheets were tossed about haphazardly across trunks and
discarded furniture. Dust was everywhere.

She walked to a large sheet-covered lump and tossed the
covering aside. Beneath was a chair, mid-eighteenth century by the look of it.
Sam had learned a lot at the shop over the past few years and could tell how
remarkably preserved it was. They would’ve made a nice profit off its sale.

Now curious, she walked to another cloth boulder and
revealed it. This one was a mahogany
secretaire
and the wood was still
in beautiful condition. The desktop had a squeaky hinge and a few ink stains,
but nothing that couldn’t be fixed.

Thump.

She froze. From somewhere beneath her came a scraping noise.
Was it Brian? The person in the room below called out, but the voice was too
high to belong to a man and too muffled to understand. Another person walked
briskly through the downstairs hall and entered the room beneath. The two
voices, both female, spoke in low tones for a minute. The first sounded almost
panicked, and the second exasperated. More scraping and thumping. Eventually
the two people left and their footsteps quickly faded.

Where the hell was she?

She walked to the window with the floorboards creaking
beneath her feet and lifted it open. The noises grew louder. She pushed open
the shutters. Her jaw dropped.

The street below was full of people. A couple men walking up
the street were dressed as if straight out of that colonial-era musical—the one
with Congress singing about the Declaration. The two men wore long coats with
dozens of buttons, knee-length hose and shoes with buckles. One tipped his
tri-cornered hat to another man passing by. A couple of older women plainly
dressed were hauling a covered basket to the side door of a house across the
street.

Directly below her, a coach drawn by two matching horses
came to a stop at the curb. A man dressed in pale-blue-and-gray livery
approached the coach. He opened the door, drew out a small step ladder from a
compartment beneath, and did his best to help a woman with an enormous skirt
out of the vehicle. The skirt was so wide that the woman was forced to exit
sideways. Amazingly, a second woman also stepped out of the vehicle, which
didn’t seem large enough to accommodate both of their dresses. The second woman
lifted her head and looked up at the house. Her wide eyes found Sam leaning out
the window.

Sam darted back. The room wheeled sharply and that hot,
shimmering feeling filled her head. She couldn’t get any air. She stumbled back
and clung to the
secretaire
to stay standing. She concentrated on
breathing in and out. Eventually, the dizziness receded.

“Oh God. Oh my God.” She could say nothing else, but in her
mind questions begat questions. Where became when and when became how and how
became why. She couldn’t be sure of where, but the style of clothing suggested
the latter half of the eighteenth century. As for how and why…she couldn’t
fathom a single theory; at least, not a plausible one. Only ridiculous and
outrageous ones came to mind. She had to be dreaming or maybe the victim of an
elaborate prank. Was some D-list celebrity going to walk in and point out all
the hidden cameras?

Someone was coming upstairs.

“Oh shit,” she whispered. She went to one of the trunks,
thinking that she might hide herself in one. Inside was an enormous pile of old
clothing, topped with a black tricorne.

The attic door opened. Sam grabbed the hat and turned. At
the door was another man in livery. His wrinkled, sagging features went from
determination to shock to anger in mere seconds. He looked almost unreal
standing there, as if he were in a Halloween costume. He even had the powdered
wig.

“You dare to enter this house,” he shouted in a British
accent. “We’ll have no budges in here.”

Budges? What the hell?

He came inside the attic and she ran at him. She had to get
out of there. The man predictably backed up. Sam gave him a hard shove and
escaped past, running down the stairs as though someone were chasing her with a
hot poker.

At the second floor, she whipped around the balustrade,
heading to the next staircase at the opposite end of the hall. Two maids, one
young and one old, screamed at the sight of her and scurried into the nearest
room. Sam could hear the elderly male servant rushing after her, and at the
next staircase, she hopped the handrail to land on the ground floor.

The two ladies from the coach were peeking out of a salon.
The first let out a shriek and retreated into the room. The second pointed at
her with one trembling hand. “It w-was you. You were crying in the attic last
night.”

Sam looked around, trying to decide on which exit to take.
The front door was right there, but the house surely had a back door. She was
about to run to the kitchen in the rear when a woman in an apron emerged from
the back. She had a large pan in her hands.

“Shit!” Front exit then. Sam ran to the door and flung it
open.

“Get out of here!” The elderly servant was just now making
his way down the last set of stairs.

“What do you think I’m doing?” she yelled.

Sam shot out of the house. A couple of pedestrians turned to
look at her, mouths open. She ran down the street, dodging potholes, murky
puddles and piles of horse manure. The stench was ever-changing but constantly
and consistently awful—from the sweet smell of garbage to the rancid smell of
unwashed bodies to the rotten smell of sewage.

The streets angled this way and that, and she had absolutely
no idea where she was going. She kept hoping that she’d reach the edge of this
seemingly inescapable movie set, but no matter how many corners she turned, she
was still running through a grim, unfamiliar city. When her lungs and legs
couldn’t keep up anymore, she found a narrow, grimy alley and ran in far enough
to be somewhat sheltered from a light mist floating down from the overcast sky.

No one seemed to be following her, but she watched both ends
of the alley while wiping away tears of fright and catching her breath. A
couple of minutes passed without incident and she ran her hand over the top of
her head to skim off rainwater. She realized then that she still had the hat in
her hands and gratefully shoved it onto her head.

“You still look like a lady,” a young voice said. Sam
jumped. A boy no older than fifteen stood from where he had been crouching
between boxes and barrels. He was filthy and far too skinny. “It’s your hair.”
He pointed at his own head, which was covered with a mop of fine, stringy
locks. “I don’t know a fellow with hair as long and fine as that.” He spoke
with what sounded like a cockney accent, dropping the letter
h
and
pronouncing
th
as
f
. “And I’ve seen sailors with gold rings in
their ears, but nothing like those.”

She touched one of her garnet earrings. Brian had given them
to her after forgetting her last birthday. How many times had she let him buy
her off with a rose, a present or a promise to do better next time? How many
times did she forgive him and hold out for a spontaneous gesture of affection?

The earrings went into her pocket and she took off the hat.
After arranging her hair to hide its length, she used the hat to keep it in place
and then popped the collar of her trench coat. She tied it shut.

“Not so tight. I can see your shape,” the boy said. Sam
loosened the belt. “What’s that?”

He pointed at her chest and she looked down with a wide-eyed
“whoa”. Her necklace had escaped from beneath her blouse, but it wasn’t the
same one she had nipped earlier that day from the newly acquired Victorian
jewelry. The one now dangling from her neck shone beautifully. It was an oval
locket made of sterling silver, and a bird’s cage was delicately etched in gold
on the front. The cage’s lock was highlighted with a single tiny diamond that
hadn’t been there before.

She opened the locket.

A rising gust of wind pushed through the alley. Its deep
whistle was loud and it sprayed cold mist against her face as it threatened to
knock her hat off. She ducked her head down, holding her hat on with one hand
and cradling her locket with the other.

When the wind died, she wiped the moisture from her face and
opened her hand to look inside the locket, too curious to help herself. She
expected to find nothing inside since she hadn’t yet had a chance to insert any
pictures, but there was a tiny piece of folded paper nestled within.

Her attention was fixed as she retrieved the slip of paper.
She could feel that she had found a big clue to the how and why of her
predicament. When she unfolded the note, however, she found only lines of
strange characters scrawled across the thin paper. The writing was like nothing
she had ever seen.

“What’s it say?” the boy asked. The characters began to
shift, rolling over and around each other. She blinked, wondering for the tenth
time today if she had lost her mind. The script slowed to a stop and the
remaining characters turned as if they were rolling over to show their bellies.
It was all English, sitting there as plain as day. She read it aloud.

 

The dove doth dream of grand and lofty flight,

She and the sly mistress will swing tonight.

One is the cage and the other’s plight.

Neither capitulates without a fight.

 

The owl doth hunt ’neath the lanterns of red.

The mouse doth hang by a single frayed thread.

One is followed and the other is led.

Now one must act in the other’s stead.

 

“What does ‘capitulates’ mean?” the boy asked. Sam spouted
off a dictionary definition, but so many other questions swarmed inside her
mind. Who was the mistress? What was the owl hunting? The mouse? What did it
mean? What did anything on the note have to do with her waking up in the
eighteenth century?

She looked at the cage etched onto the front of her locket
but found no clues. Flipping it over, she found an inscription. Her eyebrows
went up.

“It says ‘Covent Garden’ on the back.”

He lit up with recognition. “I know where that is.”

“I’ve been there too,” Sam said. “I must be in London.” She
put the paper back inside the locket and hid it beneath her shirt.

The boy was surprised. “You don’t know where you are?”

“Where in London are we now?” She buttoned her coat all the
way up to her chin.

“North side of Westminster,
sir
,” he said with a
wink.

Knowing that didn’t help though. She hadn’t visited London
often enough to know which way to go. She remembered visiting Westminster
though, and it hadn’t looked anything like this.

“What’s your name?” she asked. He straightened up.

“Name’s Peter Powlett.”

“Would you be so kind, Peter, as to point me in the right
direction?” She slid her hands into her pockets. “How do I look now?”

“Your clothes are something strange, but it helps that
you’re so tall, sir.” At six feet, she was tall for any woman, let alone one in
Ye Olde England. Peter wiped at his nose and walked to the end of the alley.
She followed. “You may want to keep quiet though. You don’t sound right.
Where’re you from, sir?”

“New York. I wish I was there right now.”

He looked over his shoulder with big eyes. “A colonial?” He
looked forward again. “My father hates the colonies, says the war ruined
business. Mum don’t care so much. I’ve an aunt what lives there. She sends us
money.”

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