“Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life: and I will dwell in the house of the Lord for ever.” Suddenly from between two barrels, a pirate wearing a black bandanna lunged, driving his sword at the monk's gut. At the same time, another rogue leaped off a crate from behind, meaning to drive his two daggers into the priest's back. Padre Dominguez let his feet slide apart, dropped into a split, and held up his two black rods. He used the first pirate's momentum against him and threw him into the oncoming blades of the other man. They met with a tremendous wet crash. Then they both went down and lay still.
Anne closed the Bible and drew her cutlass.
“No, Anne!” the monk yelled, bashing one pirate across the cheek and jabbing another in the center of the chest.
Anne hesitated. She couldn't just let him fight alone. She stepped forward and brandished her cutlass, but someone called from behind the mass of pirates, “That's him! That's Dominguez!
Capture him, but don't dare put a mark on him. Thorne's orders!”
That changed the battle. The pirates stopped charging at Padre Dominguez. They surrounded him, kept him turning. A tall pirate emerged from the door behind them. He had long greasy hair and a thin beard that sharpened to a point at his chin. His eyebrows were so arched, his eyes so large they looked like they might leap out of his head. Anne saw he had something in his hands.
“Padre Dominguez, watch out!” she cried.
The monk had been trying to turn around, for he sensed the danger behind. Anne's cry had confirmed it, but he was already occupied by the jabs of three pirates. Anne raced toward the bug-eyed man, but another pirate stepped in front and engaged her.
Even as she blocked and countered, she saw the man with the pointed beard throw a huge weighted net over Padre Dominguez.
His arms unable to swing freely, he could not defend himself. The other pirates grabbed the ends of the heavy rope net and began to twist it and pull. And that fast, Padre Dominguez was caught.
Breathless and exhausted, driven only by fear's pure adrenaline, Declan Ross crashed down the hill through the palms. In an effort to get quickly in and out of St. Pierre's fort with their needed supplies, Ross had taken the strongest and most experienced crewmen off the
Wallace
. With each thunderous
boom
, each flash of angry orange just visible through the trees, Ross knew that his decision had been a terrible mistake. He'd left the shipâleft Anneâdefenseless.
The silence suddenly hit him. The cannon fire had stopped. Ross knew what that meant. Screaming, “Anne! I'm coming . . . Anne!” he at last broke through the last stretch of palms and crashed onto the shore. No sight had ever greeted Declan Ross that so wrenched his heart and his mind. Not even coming back to port in Scotland those many years ago to discover that his beloved Abigail had diedânot even thatâmatched the horror of this vision.
It seemed half the inlet was ablaze. Hunks of debris, like islands of fire, floated around the gutted, sinking hulk of the
William Wallace
. Flames climbed the foremast and the bowsprit. The sails were long ago consumed, now just strips of char. Black smoke wreathed the inferno that raged still within the bow, even as it slipped slowly below the surface with a never-ending hiss. All around the debris, illuminated by the fires, drifted a multitude of bodies. And sharks had followed the scent of blood into the cove.
Ross cried out something guttural and barreled into the bay. He ran until he could not run and swam with wild, powerful strokes.
“Anne!!” he screamed, coughing out gulps of bay water. “My sweet Anne . . . where are you?!”
He swam in circles, searching frantically among the bodies. He saw forms he recognized, but not Anne. Several times, he felt something under the water. Something nudged his leg or bumped his foot, but he went heedlessly on. The enormity of what had happened washed over him. He realized with dreadful culpability that once again, he had left someone he loved alone . . . alone to die.
And then he stopped. A coldness gripped his mind and heart, and he stopped swimming and let himself sink.
At almost the same moment, the captain and his ship slipped below the surface of the dark water.
G
et out of the wattah, thrice a Scottishâ!” came a muffled voice from above. Ross felt an iron grip around his upper arm, and he was hauled upward. He broke the surface spluttering and coughing. “Yer coming with me, mon,” said Stede as he hauled Ross onto his back and began to swim for both of them. “The sharks have had enough.”
Stede drew Ross up onshore. Jules, Red Eye, and the others parted and watched numbly as their captain and quartermaster passed between them. But Cat stood apart from them, just a few feet from the tree line. His face was ghostly white, his eyes far away.
Ross looked up and saw Cat, and something unspoken passed between them.
St. Pierre knelt just a few inches from where the water lapped at the shore. He grasped huge fistfuls of sand, stood, and squeezed so that ragged clumps bled out between his fingers. He stared at the burning debris and said, “I will break his neck.”
Jules replied, “You'll have to get in line.”
“Captain!” A voice came out of the darkness. They heard wet footfalls on the sand. Ross spun aroundâhe knew that voice. “They took 'em, Captain!”
“Nubby!” Ross exclaimed and grabbed Nubby by the shoulders.
“You said âthey took them,' Nubs. What did you mean? Took whom?”
“Why, Anne, of course. Anne and the monk. Thorne took 'em.”
Ross swayed. His thoughts reeled. “Anne . . . she lives?”
“Aye!” He pointed out of the inlet, out into the dark sea beyond.
“I was in your quarters when the attack began. Begging yer pardon, but you asked me to get a barrel in there to you. I just barely escaped through the window when Thorne's men broke in looking for you. Captain, while they were searching for the charts, I heard some of them talkingâespecially this one with a real pointy chin.”
“Skellick,” muttered Ross.
“You know 'im?” asked Nubby.
“He's Thorne's quartermaster, a wicked, skulking shell of a man.”
“Sounds right,” said Nubby. “He seemed to know quite a bit about Thorne's plans. Captain, he kept talking about Thorne seeking
black gold
for the mission. I think they're taking Anne and the monk to Spain, a place he called Cape Verde.”
“Not Spain,” said Jacques St. Pierre. “Cape Verde is a small chain of islands five hundred miles off Africa's western coast. Thorne has a huge stronghold on the biggest island, from which he deals sugarcane and . . . slaves.”
“He will get word out to his other ships,” Ross said, “and they will meet their captain at Cape Verde to bulk up their crews with slaves. Nubby, are you sure they took Anne off the ship?”
“They had Anne and the padre in shackles on a longboat. I'm sure of it.”
Hope surged anew in Ross's thoughts. He'd let Anne down, but at least she was alive. And now there was a chance that he could get her back.
“Thorne has been building a shipyard in Cape Verde for years. On the backs of those slaves,” Jacques said. “If he gets to Constantine's Treasure, do you know what he'll do?” Jacques spat in the sand.
“He'll build a pirate fleet twice as big as any colonial power can put to sea. He'll own the North Atlantic and the Spanish Main.”
“We can't let him do that,” Ross said coldly. “And I will not let him take my Anne away.”
“What do ya propose we do, mon?” Stede asked. “We have no ship. Barely a crew.”
“We're going to need both,” Ross said. “Jacques, can anyone on the island get us a ship?”
“I know a few men who might have something we can use,” said Jacques. “But these will not be warships.”
“Hmmm . . .” Ross muttered. “That's a problem. But I guess we'll just see what we can get.”
“Captain?” It was Jules. He had a dark clump in his hands, and he handed the wet mass to Ross. At first, the captain did not recognize it. . . . It was badly burned and torn in places, but as he unrolled it a white wolf and a claymore sword appeared.
“The flag of the
William Wallace
!” Ross looked out to sea. “I'm coming, Anne,” he whispered.
Belowdecks on the
Raven
, ship's mates Davis Lowther and Howell Ames decided to have a little fun with their prisoner and try to earn a little extra reward from their captain in the bargain.
“So . . . priest,” said Lowther as he stood over the kneeling Padre Dominguez, whose hands were shackled behind his back. “Yer the one ol' Cap'n Thorne's been worried about findin', eh?”
But the monk said nothing.
Ames frowned. Perhaps the monk did not understand Lowther's gutter language, he thought. “Seems you have something valuable in your possession, old chap. Something Captain Thorne desires.
You would do well to relinquish it into our possession.”
Lowther frowned. “Re-what-quish?”
“Oh, do shut your mouth,” said Ames. He turned back to the monk. “Padre, you would save us all quite a bit of duress if you would simply hand it over.”
“Leave him alone!” Anne screamed from her cell a few yards away.
“Oh, you'll get yer turn, me pretty,” said Lowther.
“Be quiet, idiot!” Ames said. “Thorne will have your head on a spit if he hears that kind of talk. This young woman is something special to Captain Thorne. Else why would she still be alive?”
Lowther swallowed and absently rubbed his neck.
“What do you say?” asked Ames, kneeling close to Padre Dominguez. “Will you give us what you have?”
He grabbed Padre Dominguez by the shackles and lifted him to his feet. He shoved him over to a single wooden beam that reached from floor to ceiling on the portside of the cell deck. Even in the dim flickering light of the lanterns, Anne could see that the beam was splotched with dark stains. “What are you doing?” cried Anne.
“Don't you worry yer pretty little head,” said Lowther, reaching into a large leather satchel on his waist. “We're just goin' t' soften 'im up a bit. Make 'im more helpful.” He removed a long whip and let its coils fall down at his feet.