Moonlight Rebel (47 page)

Read Moonlight Rebel Online

Authors: Marie Ferrarella

BOOK: Moonlight Rebel
6.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Jason looked at Sin-Jin. The man's voice was that of calm, of reason. It didn't alleviate the anger in Jason's breast.

"I promise you that Winthrop is the worse for wear. And the best part is, he won't be marrying into your wealth and having his way with your sister."

"And how do you feel about her?" All things considered, Jason realized that he'd much rather have this blond ex-British officer in his family than Winthrop.

"I must admit she's caught more than my passing fancy." Sin-Jin grinned, thinking of his times with Savannah. "She has many qualities that she keeps hidden beneath a spoiled and shrewish nature."

Without doubt, he has a clear image of my sister, Jason thought. "Savannah can get under your skin."

Sin-Jin smiled fondly. "That she can. When this war is over, or perhaps even sooner," he cast a guarded glance in Jason's direction, "I should like to see more of her." He laughed as he thought of Morgan McKinley, barricaded in his room. "I'm sure that won't go far in pleasing your father."

"You're a lot better than Winthrop."

"I'm not certain how to accept that. A pig would be better than Winthrop." The road grew steep, and Sin-Jin took care to sit his horse well. Unlike Jason, he had no affinity for riding. It was just another arduous task a soldier had to accept. He preferred a carriage.

"They deal badly with deserters," Sin-Jin said suddenly, voicing his thoughts aloud.

Jason studied him a moment. "Are you considering it?"

The other man shifted in his saddle. When would they reach journey's end? "Yes." The answer came quietly.

Sin-Jin looked around as Jason dismounted again to search for fresh signs. Below them was a valley. Peaceful and green, untouched by war. It would be nice to settle here.

"There's nothing for me back home, and I'm beginning to tire of this existence as a soldier." Sin-Jin's face sobered as he thought of the real reason. "I don't like killing people, not for a cause that has little to do with me. Advancement in the army is beginning to mean less and less to me as the days wear on. I think I'd like to find a place here and try my hand at plantation life. I do have a little money put by. My mother left it to me." It had been meant only for emergencies, but this, Sin-Jin thought, is beginning to feel like one.

"There's land to the south of us that no one's claimed." Jason swung back into the saddle. "The carriage is heading north."

Sin-Jin toyed with the idea as they rode. "South of you, eh?" He grinned. Jason saw where Savannah might find him attractive. And Krystyna. "Might be interesting, being your neighbor."

Jason knew that he was speaking of Krystyna, of possibly trying to woo her away. "Savannah would keep you in line."

Sin-Jin laughed. "That she would."

Krystyna felt herself being lowered to the ground. Suddenly, the sack was yanked from her and she tumbled out, rolling on the floor. The light blinded her as she scrambled to her feet. Still unsteady from the blow to her head, she tripped and fell against a desk. She was in a room, a study, she realized as she began to focus in on her surroundings. But whose?

Andrej was in the room with her. And Fargo. She fought back the bitter taste of bile. The pungent taste of fear. "Where have you brought me?" she demanded.

The bitch. When would she treat him with the respect he deserved? He'd get his revenge on her, make her beg for mercy as he used her flesh for his pleasure. The thought made him smile. "To the house of a loyalist sympathizer." He studied her, tearing away her clothing with his eyes. "I am borrowing it." He gestured around grandly. It was a fine room. "My headquarters, so to speak."

Her eyes darted about, looking for a way out. She saw by glancing out the window that they were on the second floor. "You are a Tory. I might have known."

He reached out to touch her hair, and she pulled away. "There is no other side to be on."

"Why are you not at home? You are obviously in league with the people who helped our enemies partition Poland." She spat out the words.

He enjoyed admitting that to her. "Yes, I am." He indicated a sofa to her left. "Sit down."

Krystyna raised her chin. She was taller than he, but not by much, though his sloping shoulders made him appear even shorter than he was. "I shall stand, thank you."

Placing a large hand on her shoulder, he pushed her down onto the sofa. "You will sit when I tell you to sit and stand when I tell you to stand. You will do everything I tell you to do, or it will go badly for you."

She glared at him, fire in her eyes. "I will not be treated like this by the likes of you!"

He hit her across the face, but nothing took away the hatred in her eyes. So be it. In time it would dull. He would wipe it away. "You are no longer the high and mighty Countess. I now have your lands."

"So, it was you." She wished a weapon was nearby. She'd snuff out his useless life in an instant.

This, too, he enjoyed telling her. "Yes, I seized your lands. They are a reward for the work I have done to bring the partition into being. Even now, I am working to sustain that goal.
 
The Americans are almost throwing their money at me. A rich man can go far in Poland."

"Animal!" Hands raised, she threw herself against him and raked his face with her nails. He seized her hands and shoved her onto the floor. Fargo stepped closer, ready to help his master. Krystyna waited for the inevitable.

But it didn't come.

He wiped his cheek with a lace handkerchief, which he then threw down in disgust.

His voice was deceptively calm. "It will do you no good to call me names. You are at my mercy now, and I shall do what I want with you, you high-nosed whore."

"I shall never marry you!" She scrambled to her feet.

"Marriage?" The room rang with his laughter. It made her shiver. "Who said anything about marriage? That was when I needed you." His eyes narrowed as he looked at her. "I do not need you anymore. I have what I want." The expression on his face was triumphant, evil. "I always get what I want. I will take you as my mistress."

"I will die first."

"No, I think not." He shrugged his hunched shoulders. "It does not matter if you do not come meekly. As a matter of fact, I prefer spirit. And I shall greatly enjoy breaking yours."

"You are not man enough to do so!" she spat out.

"We shall see about that." He lunged for her, grabbing hold of her wrist. As she cursed him, he pulled her closer.

Desperately, she pulled back, throwing him off balance. He fell, dragging her down with him. Suddenly, he was over her, his body on top of hers, his hands ripping her clothing.

Raising her head, she caught the tip of his ear in her teeth. He screamed in pain, but she kept her teeth clamped firmly on his flesh. His hands went to her throat. He was choking her breath away.

Someone knocked. The noise seemed to bring the Count to his senses. He realized that he was killing her.

That would have been a waste. He had worse things than death planned for her.

Releasing her, Andrej rose and looked accusingly at the man who had stepped into the room. He touched his ear. There was blood on his hand.

"Well, what do you want?"

The man tried not to look at Krystyna, who sat on the floor, gasping for air. "There's a man to see you, sir. He says he's had business with you and that you'd understand if I was to say 'Dutch traders.' "

Jason! Krystyna's heart began to pound wildly. Jason was here.

Andrej was instantly alert, the bloodied ear forgotten. "Stupid fool." He laughed, unable to believe his good fortune. "He came with the money after all. These Americans are a strange lot." He looked at Fargo and motioned toward Krystyna. "Get her out of here."

Taking her by the arm, Fargo began to leave through the same door the other man had used. "Not that way, you idiot! He'll see you. Take her up the back stairs to my bedroom. And tie her to the bed."

Krystyna tried to scream for Jason, but before she could open her mouth, Fargo clamped a hand over it. Then he dragged her from the room.

Andrej watched them, satisfied. She would pay for every slight she had ever given him. He would use that supple body well, he promised himself. There were things even prostitutes had refused to do. But Krystyna wouldn't refuse. She couldn't. She was his prisoner.

The thought pleased him well as he dusted off his vest and fixed his coat. He touched his ear gingerly. Good, it had stopped bleeding. She'd pay dearly for that, too.

Savoring the thought, he opened the door that led into the long hallway.

Chapter Forty One

"Come in, come in, my boy," Andrej said warmly, motioning Jason into the room and closing the door behind them. "You are late. I was beginning to worry about you. I was afraid that something had gone wrong with the exchange." He studied Jason. The man looked like a ruffian. What did Krystyna see in such a heathen and how could she prefer this man to him?

"It did," Jason answered flatly. Because of what the camp followers at the fort had told him, he knew that his contact and the man who had kidnapped Krystyna were one and the same. Nonetheless, when the trail he and Sin-Jin were following led him to the same door where he had received his initial instructions for the clandestine trade only a few short weeks ago, Jason was numbed. Angered at his trust being betrayed, stunned at being set up, and enraged over the possible harm that might have come to Krystyna, it was all Jason could do to keep from grabbing the man by the throat and choking him.

But for now, he had to play his part. He turned to look at the Count. "I was captured."

"No?" Andrej tried to look properly sympathetic. "But you are here." He went to the decanter that stood on the table and poured a small glass of wine. It was a shame to waste it on someone like this, but the charade demanded it. He turned and handed the wine to Jason. "By what miracle have you come back to me?"

Jason watched him pour another glass, and only when Andrej had taken a sip of wine did he follow suit. "I was freed by some friends."

"How fortunate for us all." Andrej set down his glass. "Did you, perhaps, manage to recapture the money as well?"

"Yes, as a matter of fact, I did." As he produced the money belt, Jason saw the Count's face brighten.

Andrej hurriedly opened the compartments on the belt. He didn't notice Jason slipping around behind him until it was too late. Jason seized his arm, holding the tip of a knife to his throat.

"All right, where is she?"

So, the bumpkin wasn't as stupid as he looked. Next time, I won't underestimate him, Andrej vowed. "Where is who?" he sputtered. "You are breaking my arm."

"I'll break more than that if you don't tell me. I've no patience with thieves and liars." Jason wrenched the man's arm higher, and Andrej cried out in agony. "You played me for a fool once, but that won't happen again. What have you done with Krystyna?"

"You mean your whore? Ah!" Andrej screamed as Jason yanked again. Sweat poured from his brow. "You will never get out of this house alive. It is filled with British soldiers. They will shoot you without so much as a thought if I order it!"

"Then we'll make sure you won't issue any orders." Jason pressed the knife closer. "Now, take me to her."

Andrej's arm was about to snap. "The stairs." He pointed to the other door. "She is in my bedroom."

Still holding Andrej's arm behind his back, Jason loosened his hold on it for only a fraction. "Lead the way," he said, urging him on with the point of his knife.

Stumbling, Andrej led Jason up the stairs to his room. He stopped before the door.

"Open it," Jason ordered.
 
"And remember, if there's anyone in there other than Krystyna, your big belly will be the first thing they'll see, so don't get any ideas." To reinforce his words, he pressed the knife against Andrej's pasty flesh.

"There is no one there, I swear it." The Count's knees shook. "Only the woman."

"You still won't mind going in first, will you?" Jason pushed him forward.

No one else was in the room, just as the Count had said. Krystyna was on the bed, each arm tied to a bedpost. She was gagged, but conscious. A look of overwhelming surprise and relief came into her eyes when she saw Jason.

He wanted to run and untie her, to hold her in his arms and comfort her, but he didn't dare. The Count's treachery was not to be underestimated. Instead, Jason threw his arm around Andrej's neck, tightening its grip so that he almost choked the man. "Now we're going to edge our way over slowly, do you understand? You try anything and you won't live to hit the floor. Move!"

Keeping a grip on Andrej, Jason cut the cords about the closest bedpost, freeing one of Krystyna's hands. "Here, you do the other." He gave her the knife. Quickly, she cut the last rope and then took off her gag.

"Are you all right?" With a little encouragement, he'd strangle Andrej.

"I am fine. Now." Scrambling from the bed, she handed the knife back to Jason, then rubbed her wrists. They were raw. As soon as Fargo had left, she had tried to pull free of the ropes. The hemp had chafed her flesh.

"You will not get away!"

Krystyna looked at Andrej, loathing consuming her. "He was the one who ordered my father's murder." She reached for Jason's knife again. "Let me kill him now."

The door swung open suddenly. Krystyna looked to see

Sin-Jin standing in the doorway, a musket in his hands. "There'll be no killing here."

Andrej almost crumpled with relief. And then his expression became vindictive. "Lieutenant, these two tried to kill me. Take the man prisoner. I have ways of dealing with the woman."

But Sin-Jin took Krystyna's arm. She stared at him in horror. He hated the look in her eyes. "John, you cannot be on his side." Her voice pleaded with him to deny it.

He wished he could tell her the truth. He settled for half. The wrong half. "He is one of our people, I'm afraid."

"Well, get on with it, Lieutenant." Andrej reached for Krystyna, but Sin-Jin put his hand up, restraining him. "They're both my prisoners, Count. They'll be treated as spies and brought to General Howe. The general wishes to try all spies and make examples of them."

Other books

Siempre en capilla by Lluïsa Forrellad
The Witch's Daughter by Nina Bawden
Because of You by Lafortune, Connie
Refugee by Anthony, Piers
Taken by Barbara Freethy
John Racham by Dark Planet
The Last Kolovsky Playboy by Carol Marinelli
Roma Victrix by Russell Whitfield
Screaming Yellow by Rachel Green