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Eden's Pass
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Table of Contents
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
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
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
About the Author
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This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.
Samhain Publishing, Ltd.
577 Mulberry Street, Suite 1520
Macon GA 31201
Eden’s Pass
Copyright © 2008 by Kimberly Nee
ISBN: 1-59998-914-X
Edited by Tera Kleinfelter
Cover by Angela Waters
All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
First Samhain Publishing, Ltd. electronic publication: May 2008
www.samhainpublishing.com
Eden’s Pass
Kimberly Nee
Dedication
For Jason, because you made sure the light was always on, the fan was always running, and my notes were scattered all over my office.
Chapter One
West Indies, 1680
“Boy!”
Finn jumped as the door slammed shut and hissed sharply as she tugged harder than she’d intended and the bandage bit into her chafed skin. Pulling her shirt down, she darted around the open wardrobe door. “Aye, Captain?”
Antoine Beauregard's eyes narrowed even as he swayed back and forth, reaching for the wall to steady himself. “Go topside. There’s a ship bearin’ down and refusin’ to run up her colors. Get your arse up there and help Jackie.”
“Aye, Captain.” She wanted to reach out and steady Beauregard, but it would be pointless. She almost saw the rum fumes radiating from him. “The cannon, sir? Is that where he is?”
Beauregard let out a roar of laughter, shrugging out of his dingy red coat and letting it fall in a heap at his feet. “Aye, ye dumb jackass. The cannon, o’ course! Where else would I send ye? Ye don’t truly think I’d want to see ye wi’ steel in yer clumsy hands, do ye?” He stomped across the cabin, trying to walk in a straight line, but failing miserably. He staggered first to the right, to his left twice over, and finally reached his destination. Dropping into his favorite chair, he groaned and sighed at the same time, his ratty, graying beard rippling as he growled, “We’re almost to Port Royal. It’s time for ye to prove yer mettle, boy. Lest, of course, ye wish me to find another to take me place when I retire?”
She moved away from him, in case he decided to cuff her, as was his wont. Scurrying to the door, she crouched, swiping his coat from the floor and rising to shake it out. Turning back to drape it over the other chair, she looked up to see Beauregard tug his flask from his belt and bring it to his mouth. “No, sir. I mean, aye, sir. I will show her what she faces.”
Beauregard took a long swallow and lowered the flask. The grizzled iron-gray hair hiding his mouth split to reveal a yellow-toothed grin, and he heaved himself forward to clap Finn on the back hard enough to practically lift her from her feet. “There’s a good lad. Now get! Let’s see if yer worth yer weight, boy! Prove yer usefulness!”
Finn fought to hold her tongue as Beauregard's chin fell into his rain-barrel chest. He never failed to remind her of her place, never missed an opportunity to take a jab at her, demanding she prove her worth. It was sport for him, especially when he was drunk—which was most of the time. She could count the number of times she’d seen him sober on both hands, not that she’d complain. It made hiding the fact that she was a woman and not some stripling lad much simpler. The bargain she’d struck with him was well worth tolerating his petty insults. One day soon the Smiling Jack would be hers and she had no desire to muck it up.
“Aye, Captain.” She bobbed her head as he began to snore loudly. Beauregard slept the sleep of the dead. His flask toppled onto its side at his feet, the remaining dark gold rum dripping from its neck.
Sighing with disgust, she waved him off, forgetting about him entirely as she sunk to her knees before his wardrobe and thrust her hand under the delicate arch at its bottom, reaching into the darkness beneath it. It took a moment of blind groping, but then her fingers brushed cool steel and she smiled, angling the cutlass to slide it free from its keeping place. The baldric cradling the blade was battered, but the leather was intact and she wasted no time in dropping it over her head and shifting it to hide beneath her voluminous black canvas coat.
Certain she was prepared to jump into the battle, she didn’t even glance back over her shoulder, but dashed through the door and into the corridor. She would not go aid Jackie. In fact, she didn’t care if the lazy sot was blasted to bits. No, she was going topside and damn anyone who thought to stop her.
She was no more than ten paces from the cabin when it seemed as though a giant had grabbed hold of the ship in its fist and gave it a thunderous shake. The Smiling Jack rattled to her timbers, lurching to port and sending Finn slamming into the wall as she hurried down the cool, shadowy corridor. She quickly regained her balance, righting herself as she mounted the steps.
Dust filtered down through the boards overhead with the thundering rattle of pounding feet. Men ran along the length of the deck, hollering back and forth as they hurried from one area to another. She sneezed, dragging the back of her hand over her sweat-dampened upper lip as she sniffed. “What the devil—?”
Who on earth would be firing on them? Beauregard said naught about having fired any shots. After all, the Smiling Jack and her lazy captain didn’t often engage in battle. Especially as Beauregard was considered something of a fool by the other men who roamed the Caribbean. The Smiling Jack carried almost nothing of value, even to the most desperate of pirates. Who would bother waging battle with them?
“Beauregard would be offering a great service if he drank himself to death,” she muttered, taking the remaining stairs two at a time to burst out into the brilliant sunshine and warm, velvety sea air. It was a perfect day to be at sea, if someone wasn’t heaving shot in their direction.
That someone was clearly visible—a looming ketch with billowing white sails. Fire erupted below her main deck as more guns fired in their direction.
“Damnation!” She stared in horror at the devastation already wrought upon the Smiling Jack. The foremast had been split mid-shaft
, crashing down to pin three men beneath it. Wood shards, iron clamps and blood now stained the deck’s surface. Tattered strips of canvas—once a whole, mottled gray sail—snapped wildly in the wind.
Her gaze fell on a tall redhead with a glowing, sunburned nose. “Ennis!” she shouted, forcing her voice into the deeper timbre she’d adopted since coming aboard ship. “Who fires on us?”
Ennis hurried toward her, his expression a mix of concern and irritation. “We don’t know, but what the devil are you doing up here?” He pulled up short beside her. “Where is Beauregard? Does he know you’re here? He was ranting about you giving Jackie a hand down below.”
She rolled her eyes. “Never you mind about Beauregard. To the devil with him. We don’t need that sot’s help to defend ourselves.” Despite the bravado she forced into her words, she couldn’t ignore the flutter of fear unfurling in her belly. It was the first time she’d ever faced the prospect of battle, as they were seldom approached. Very few captains troubled themselves with the Smiling Jack.
“That drunken fool!” he shouted over the growling blast of the guns. “You ought have hidden his blasted bottle! Rum muscle. I might have known!”
Ignoring her churning belly, she managed to scowl. “It isn’t possible, keeping that man from a bottle, Ennis. I’d swear he has rum flowing in his veins.” She squinted again at the ketch, closer now, and swarming with sailors. Her throat went dry. “Who started this?”
“Bloody fool thought it’d be wildly amusin’, heavin’ shot in their direction. Ask me, he didn’t know they’d return fire!” Ennis jabbed a forefinger off the port side of the Smiling Jack. “They didn’t give a warnin’ or nothin’. Jus’ opened fire!”
“And he calls me a blooming jackass,” she retorted, wishing she had thought to swipe Beauregard's spyglass before leaving the cabin. “Can you tell what they’re heavin’ at us?”
Ennis looked more disgusted than concerned as he shrugged almost lazily. “I don’t bloomin’ know, Finn! I can’t tell one blasted shot from another. All I can tell is they took out the foremast with one blow.”
Around them, the Smiling Jack’s crew, nearly thirty in total, ran this way and that. It was difficult to tell if they were preparing themselves to meet their attackers man to man, or if they were scurrying to save their skins. Black plumes of smoke rose in thick columns from the destroyed foremast, and a bloodcurdling scream erupted from somewhere within the cloud.
The deck lurched beneath her. Screaming like a madman, Johnny smacked into her, and then bounced off, smearing her tunic with scarlet blood. He clutched his left wrist in his right hand, shrieking in almost inhuman tones as he spun wildly around her, and disappeared back into the smoke plume. His screams died away, and her stomach twisted violently when she saw what had caused his maniacal screaming—a severed hand lay in a pool of blood beyond the smoke column.
A sickly-sweet taste flooded her mouth and her vision swam as her knees threatened to betray her. Ennis he reached to steady her. “Finn?”
Before she could answer, there came another boom and a flash of fire from the side of their attacker. The ship was closer now—close enough for her to actually make out the faces of the men on her decks. Her nausea was replaced by horror. “They’re going to board us!”
Ennis swore beneath his breath as the second low, loud c-r-a-c-k echoed all around them. “Look out! Mainmast is goin’!”
More shrieks, more splitting wood, and Finn watched in horror as the mast shattered and toppled to the deck, going right through it. Shards of wood exploded outward, raining down all around them as the deck splintered and tore beneath the mast’s weight. She threw her arms up, wrapping them about her head as the heavy, acrid stench of gunpowder, soot, and singed flesh and hair stung her nose and made her eyes water.
“Bloody hell…” She groaned as all around her, men raced up from below deck, where they’d been manning the guns that could not sink their pursuer. Now they prepared for hand-to-hand battle, something she had absolutely no experience with at all.
The Smiling Jack’s crew was quite accustomed to being leaderless and it seemed no one troubled themselves to go in search of Beauregard. Her stomach kinked as the Smiling Jack’s guns were forgotten and men flooded topside. Not a one cared about saving their ship. No, they were too preoccupied with saving their own skins.
Men raced about from bow to stern and back, armed with cutlasses, broadswords, shattered planks of wood, anything and everything they could get their hands on and use as a weapon. Half were at least partially into their cups, judging by their bloodshot eyes and staggering gaits. Even Ennis seemed a bit haggard, though not as much as the others. Perhaps he wasn’t suffering any severe after effects, as the others did.
Her hands shook, despite her efforts at keeping them still, and she ignored the others as she slid her cutlass free and held it tight. “They want to come aboard? Let’s host them a welcomin’ party they won’t soon forget!”
“Finn, do you even know what you’re doing?”
She shook her head. “Not really, but how difficult can it be? If Beauregard can wield steel, so shall I.”
A swarm of dark-haired men, all brandishing swords and pistols of their own, rushed across the foredeck. They shouted to each other in a lyrical, foreign language as they dove into the fray. Minutes later the deafening clang of steel against steel reverberated across the open decks.
Everywhere she looked, Beauregard’s men engaged in merciless battle with the dark-haired men. Unsure of how to approach, she watched in horror as men she’d toiled alongside fell. Sticky, dark blood oozed over the salt spattered decks.
A shadow fell over her and she came face to face with one of them. The man towering above her was one of the fiercest looking men she’d ever seen—tall and broad, with a thick black beard hiding the lower portion of his face. His hair was long and black, a straggly mess about his shoulders.
Her hands remained surprisingly steady as she lifted her cutlass. It’d been a stroke of good fortune that she’d discovered the weapon, as well as a dagger, buried at the bottom of a trunk in the hold. By keeping both secreted beneath the wardrobe, she prevented Beauregard from confiscating them, and by watching the others practice, she managed to learn a few simple defenses. Of course, practicing them in the cabin, whenever the opportunity arose was not nearly as good as receiving proper training.
Though it was the first time she’d ever raised a weapon with the intent of inflicting harm, she didn’t hesitate, lifting the blade even as she forced her eyes from the bloodstained front of the man’s tunic. Only the sun’s glint off the devil’s blade broke her daze.
He thrust. Finn dodged the blow, swinging around to block his rebound. The jolt tore up her arms when their blades met with a deafening clang, and she tightened her fist about the handle to retain control.
Her blood chilled at the low chuckle rising from his parted lips. “Ah, bueno, muchacho. Most impressive you are.”
She deflected another blow. It was too easy, too simple. The man was not taking their battle seriously. Nay, he sported with her. Any moment now he’d run her through without hesitation. Still, it did not stop her from grunting in reply, “And most brazen…you are.”
Back and forth, thrust and retreat. Finn danced with her opponent, her confidence growing with each deflection, with each of her opponent’s back steps. The bubble burst, though, when the tip of the devil’s blade nicked her shoulder. She gasped, though there was no pain at first, but a hot sting replaced the numbness. She bit back a pained hiss as Ennis approached her attacker from behind. Ignoring her wound, she thrust in unison with Ennis, running the devil through.
The man howled as both blades sliced clean. He dropped to his knees. He teetered for a moment, his blade clattering onto the deck as he released it. Ennis jerked his sword back, and the man toppled over backward. A sharp yank to free her steel and her relieved sigh became a horrified gasp as another man stepped up behind Ennis. He yelped and Finn saw the tip
of a sword pressed into his side.
“Ah, I commend you, lad. So young, and yet, such fight, such spirit. I feel it only fair to tell you that your cowardly captain is no more, so there is no need for you to remain defiant. His mistake is now yours and you might wish to lower your steel. Unless, of course, you wish me to run this one through.”
His English was smooth, but the lyrical lilt of his words sounded very much like the man she and Ennis slaughtered. Spaniards, no doubt. She’d crossed paths with only a few, but that lilt was one she’d heard before.
She opened her mouth to argue, but saw the Smiling Jack’s captain lying crumpled against one of the bulwarks, clearly dead. Beauregard must have emerged in a drunken attempt to defend his ship and been run through. Her stinging shoulder forgotten, her surprise gave way to bitter regret. To surrender would mean surrendering her ship. Anger bubbled forth for a moment, but was quickly replaced by icy fear as she glanced up into the coldest eyes she’d ever seen—dark gold surrounded by thick black lashes.
Like his shipmates, he was dark-skinned, with a heavy fall of raven black hair tumbling to his shoulders. Unlike most of the others, though, this man sported no beard, but a neatly kept mustache instead. He towered above Ennis, holding one shoulder to keep Ennis in place, while pressing the tip of a lethal-looking blade into his side.
Where most of their invaders wore battered, buff-colored breeches and equally battered, stained white linen tunics, he was dressed entirely in black. Black leather boots blended into black breeches, which then blended into a flowing black shirt. His shoulders were broad, his chest was broad, but his body narrowed into slim hips and long legs. He wore no baldric, but a leather scabbard fastened around those narrow hips.
The scabbard, of course, was empty, as he held the finely-honed weapon in his left hand, its tip poking into Ennis’s side. Unlike the broad-bladed cutlass, this weapon was narrow, forged to a sharp point.
She looked up to see Ennis's eyes squinched shut, and she cleared her throat. “Leave him be. I will, of course, lower my weapon at once.”