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Authors: Kerry Newcomb

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BOOK: Jack Iron
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“How long have you faithfully served me, old friend?” asked Navarre.

“Ever since you fished me out of the sea, Cap’n, and kept my hide from becoming shark bait. Must be nigh on to six years now since the
Magnus
went down.” The pirate scratched at his pitted cheek and tried to tabulate the months that had passed since he’d been accepted into the
Scourge
’s crew.

“No man has been more reliable. No man has shown more courage.”

“Thankee, Cap’n Navarre,” Bragg said, beaming.

The Cayman drew a pistol and fired. Blood spurted from Bragg’s left calf and the pirate howled and crumpled to earth. He groaned and clutched at his wounded leg. NKenai moved quickly to disarm his comrade to prevent him from doing anything rash.

“Oh, sweet mother of God,” Bragg groaned through clenched teeth. A lizard darted out from under rock and across a patch of blood on the earth.

Navarre turned and held the smoking gun up to Father Bernal’s face. The priest grew pale. He had never in his life confronted such raw evil. It left him speechless. The groaning from poor Tom Bragg punctuated the priest’s silence. Finally Father Bernal spoke out in indignation.

“This man is your trusted comrade. How could you treat him in so base a manner. What kind of monster are you?”

“Precisely,” Navarre said, drawing close to Bernal and placing his hand on the smaller man’s shoulder. “Hear me, Priest. This man was like my brother. Look at him and think to yourself what course my wrath might take toward the men, women, and children of Natividad who mean no more to me than what I leave in my chamber pot.”

Bernal grew pale and his rail-thin frame shuddered at the thought of the endless possibilities, each one more gruesome than the one before.

“In the name of God…” he muttered.

“I leave you your God,” said Navarre. “But Natividad is mine.” He returned the gun to his belt. The Cayman waved a hand, and NKenai took the priest by the arm and started him back down the shell-paved road to town. Bragg was carried away to the ship’s surgeon to have his wound staunched and cauterized. Navarre tucked a small pouch of Spanish doubloons into Bragg’s shirt as he was carried off. “The gold will ease the pain,” Navarre told the African, who returned to his captain’s side.

NKenai nodded. He could see the brilliance in the Cayman’s scheme. “Now the Christian shaman will guide his people in the proper way. He will see they do your bidding. You are a clever man, my captain. The heart of a lion but the crafty mind of the fox has Captain Orturo Navarre. Orturo the Magnificent.”

Navarre grinned and looked out across the bay dominated by his brig and guarded by the shore batteries he now commanded. The first stage of his empire. He was filled with a sense of triumph. “I will make these people my own; Natividad shall be my kingdom.” He held out his arms as if to embrace the earth and sea and the limitless horizon. “This is only the beginning, NKenai. Who is there to stand against me?” His chest swelled as the wind pressed against him and with fists clenched, the Cayman shouted in exultation, “Who can stand against me!”

Chapter One

K
IT MCQUEEN WASN’T LAUGHING
as the British marine clubbed him with the butt of his musket and sent the redheaded American sprawling in the dirt alongside the lightning-shattered hickory tree that served as a makeshift redoubt. The fallen timber capped a ridge of earth above Drake’s Creek five miles east of the Mississippi River. It was the first day of 1815. And about to be the last for me, Kit thought as the heavyset Cornishman landed on his chest and drew a dagger from his white canvas belt. Kit could read the name stitched into the marine’s leather cartridge box.
TREGONING.

“Now, you Yankee bastard, I’ll lift that red scalp of yours the same as your heathen friends would do me,” Tregoning snarled. White spittle clung to his lower lip. His brown eyes widened, his nostrils flared, and his hands trembled with the bloodlust that was upon him. His breath was heavy with the rum he and his mates had been sampling when the Choctaws surprised them.

Kit worked a hand loose from underneath the man straddling him and grabbed a fistful of Tregoning’s genitalia and squeezed with all his strength. The marine howled and thrust his knife, but the pain ruined his aim and the blade sank up to the hilt in the black earth inches from McQueen’s throat. The marine grabbed the smaller man by the front of his loose-fitting buckskin shirt and dragged him to his feet, forcing Kit to lose his hold.

“You Brits can sing a pretty note,” McQueen taunted. He felt the leather cord tear from around his neck as Tregoning staggered back, clutching a torn patch of shirt and the medal, a silver English crown sterling bearing the crudely scrawled initials of George Washington. The coin was a family keepsake, for General Washington himself had presented the makeshift medal to Kit’s father, Daniel McQueen.

The English marine glanced around and saw his companions had abandoned him among his enemies. Tregoning knew when to cut his losses. He spun around and leaped over the log and started down the creekbank. He spied the rest of the skirmishers fleeing into the trees on the other side of the creek. The cowards had scattered at the first volley from the American and his Choctaw allies.

“No, you don’t,” Kit shouted, and vaulted the fallen hickory. He landed square on the burly Cornishman’s shoulders. The impact tumbled them both down the creekbank and left the men splashing in the muddy shallows. The three remaining Choctaw warriors Kit had brought from General Jackson’s camp below New Orleans stared at one another in mute amazement, then watched with alarm as another dozen English marines from General Packenham’s formidable invasion force filtered through the trees. The soldiers wore faded red coats and white linen trousers and short-brimmed black hats. Their features were windburned masks of menace.

Kit and Tregoning weren’t alone in the creek. They shared the mud with three dead marines and a dead Choctaw brave. The brave lay belly down in the mud of the creekbank. His tomahawk was buried in the chest of one of the Englishmen. The rest of Tregoning’s companions crouched among the trees on the other side of the creek and were feverishly reloading their rifled muskets when reinforcements arrived.

Kit counted a dozen marines rise up from the emerald shadows; a dozen muskets were aimed at him. McQueen hauled Tregoning, sputtering, out of the water and placed the half-drowned Cornishman between himself and these lethal-looking newcomers about thirty yards away.

“Kill me and you’ll kill your mate,” Kit shouted, figuring he had the reinforcements stymied. Tregoning would shield him all the way up the embankment to safety. The sergeant in command stepped forward, ran a hand across his neatly trimmed beard, and scowled as he recognized Tregoning.

“Shoot them down!” he shouted.

“Christ!” Kit dove to one side and Tregoning the other as this second wave of marines opened fire. Kit and Tregoning chose different routes as they scrambled up toward the Choctaw defenders. Slugs sent geysers of earth erupting from the steep bank. At five foot eight, Kit McQueen offered a smaller target than Tregoning. Kit was as nimble as a panther as he climbed the embankment. The Choctaws returned the gunfire in an attempt to cover his retreat. McQueen and Tregoning darted and leaped through a gauntlet of lead death. For all McQueen’s feline grace and quickness, he reached the redoubt but a few seconds ahead of Tregoning, who lumbered across the hickory log and slumped wearily alongside the man who moments ago he’d been attempting to kill.

Tregoning’s chest rose and fell as he sucked in the cold damp air. His breath clouded before his lips. He’d lost his hat, revealing a bald head ringed by a fringe of black hair. His nose had been flattened by a well-thrown punch sometime in the past and issued a faint whistling sound with each and every breath.

Kit McQueen, with his keen bronze gaze, shrewdly appraised his adversary. McQueen ran a hand through his curly mane of red hair that Tregoning had recently attempted to lift with scalping knife in hand. Slugs gouged the makeshift barricade, showering both men with splinters. One of the Choctaws, a youthful brave named Three Snakes, clutched his throat as he rose up to take aim. The brave slumped onto his side and stared with a weakening gaze at the rivulet of blood showing from his wound. Kit watched the man die and his features grew dark with fury. A waste, a damn waste.

“Your friends have won this day, Tregoning. But there will come another, mark my words.”

“Friends, hell,” Tregoning said. “Your heathens scattered my mates. Them behind the trees are the Chiltern Rifles. They answer only to Sergeant Tiberius, who has no use for me at all.”

“So I noticed,” Kit dryly observed.

“He caught me playing at “bushy park” with his dear Megan and has been trying to center me in his sights ever since. Reckon he figures to kill me and blame it on the likes of you.” Tregoning wagged his bald head and scratched at his grizzled jawline. “Megan was his wife and a trollop and he’s well off to know the old gal for what she is, mark my words.” He glanced across at Kit, who finished reloading a matched pair of short-barreled, heavy-bore pistols he called “the Quakers.” One shot from these “hand cannons” made enemies into friends or left them dead. Either result was acceptable to Kit McQueen.

“See here—what the devil?” Tregoning noted as Kit trained the pistols at him.

“You’re my prisoner,” Kit said. “And I’ll take that coin in your hand.” Kit tucked one pistol in its buckskin holster and held out a mud-grimed palm.

Tregoning frowned, then shrugged and handed over the coin that had become a McQueen legacy. Surrender to the redheaded American squatting at his side seemed preferable to facing the outraged husband, Tiberius Smollet.

“Tregoning! Harry Tregoning!” the sergeant on the opposite creekbank called out. “Stand up so I can see that ugly face of yours.”

Kit peered over the edge of the tree trunk and saw that the Chiltern Rifles were reloading and fixing bayonets. He looked back at the two remaining Choctaws. Nate Russell was a year older than McQueen, a warrior of thirty-one winters. He had long black hair and a solid muscular build and wore a blue infantryman’s jacket over his buckskin shirt. Nate, like many of the Choctaw Nation, had converted to Christianity. The other warrior, Strikes With Club, was a decade younger and had no use for white men’s religion. His long hair hung unbound to his shoulders. He was shivering, for he’d cast aside his blanket to free his arms for fighting. He was a handsome brave and much sought after by the maidens of his village.

“Where’s Obregon?” Strikes With Club growled. “You said the others would come when they heard our guns.”

Kit had no answer for his red-skinned friend. Cesar Obregon, known throughout the Caribbean as the Hawk of the Antilles and whose black flag depicted a skeleton kneeling in prayer, had taken up a position along McQueen’s back trail about a hundred yards from Drake’s Creek. The freebooter and his men should have come running at the sound of gunfire. It had been a cold gray afternoon and an interminable-seeming wait, yet Kit and his Choctaws had remained at their post, hoping to intercept the British soldiers who had been studying the American entrenchments below New Orleans. Kit had the disturbing feeling that Cesar and his men had tired of the wintry discomfort and returned to New Orleans without alerting their companions by the creek.

A ripple of musket fire sounded below, and another round of slugs thudded into the hickory log forcing the men behind the makeshift rampart to crouch down.

“Hey, Yankee, be a good lad and haul up that no-good soldier of the king who’s with you. Prepare to meet your maker, Harry.”

“Now see here, Tiberius,” the Cornishman shouted back. “I didn’t do nothin’ to your Meg that she didn’t want me to do.”

“You son of a bitch!” came the reply punctuated by a pistol crack.

Harry Tregoning chuckled as shattered bark showered his chest and head.

Kit scowled. He was caught in the middle of two wars, one major and one private.
And if I live to meet up with Cesar Obregon, I’ll start a third,
Kit promised himself. Maybe he ought to force Tregoning over the top and allow the marine to buy them some time as Kit and the Choctaws made good their escape. Tregoning seemed to read McQueen’s thoughts.

“Now see here, I surrendered right and proper,” the marine protested. He didn’t like the look in Kit’s hard eyes.

“Surrendered hell, you damn near put a knife in my gullet,” Kit said, his bronze eyes flashed with fire.

“Well… we weren’t friends then.” Tregoning tried his most winning smile. It came out a crooked leer.

“This Meg Smollet must be blind,” Kit said.

“There’s something about us men of Cornwall, the women can’t keep their bloody hands off us. ’Tis a cruel lot to bear. Too many women can leech a man of his strength. Suck him dry and wither him before his prime. Mistress Smollet did her part.”

“Maybe I’ll do Tiberius a favor and shoot you myself,” Kit said, rolling his eyes and shaking his head in exasperation. What sort of character was this? Kit thought. A minute ago these two were trying to kill each other, and now Harry Tregoning was spinning tall tales of his life history as if he were sharing a campfire with the American. It was an amusing notion, an irony to stop and enjoy sometime when it wouldn’t get him killed.

Kit swore that the next time he picked a human shield he’d have to be more careful. Tregoning might be more trouble than he was worth.

“You staying?” Nate asked. His pistols were loaded and his rifle cocked and primed. Strikes With Club, standing at the blue-jacketed warrior’s side, looked as determined as the older brave. Kit had fought the Creeks at Horse Shoe Bend almost a year ago in the good company of these same warriors and the rest of their tribe. He counted many friends among the Choctaw and found them to be brave and crafty fighters, men not given to suicidal tactics.

“Let them come to us. Then we’ll make our break for the woods over yonder,” Kit said, indicating a grove of oak and hickory blocking their back trail.

“We won’t have long to wait,” Nate said, dusting his flashpan with a trace of black powder from his brass flask.

BOOK: Jack Iron
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