Read Wings of the Morning (Kensington Chronicles) Online
Authors: Lori Wick
Tags: #Ship Captains, #Romance, #Regency, #Christian, #Historical Fiction, #Women Merchant Mariners, #Fiction, #Christian Fiction, #Historical, #Large Print Books, #INSPIRATIONAL ROMANCE, #General, #Religious, #Maine, #Love Stories
Haamich Wynn, and Smokey began to tremble as she had done
when she'd been locked in the cell.
She was still shaking when the guard led her to the open
area of the courtroom and held the foil for her hand Her heart
sank when she grasped the weapon. It felt as if it weighed a
hundred pounds.
245
Smokey suddenly realized the room was deathly still. She
glanced up to find every eye in the court upon her, and she
hadn't even lifted her sword Brandon was in place opposite
her, and she met his eyes, ready to tell him she couldn't do it.
"Is that doubt I see in your eyes, Miss Simmons?"
From where the strength came, Smokey knew not, but her
chin lifted and so did her foil. Brandon cried "engarde," and
their foils met.
Occupants of the room barely breathed as they watched
Lord Hawkesbury's immediate attack. He came at Smokey
without mercy. She countered every move, years of training
overcoming her weakness. Judge Pinkerton came to his feet,
absentmindedly dragging the wig from his head as the opponents
danced around each other, both trying to gain the
advantage.
Using the move that had wiped the smile from Brandon's
face the first time they dueled, Smokey cut his coat. It was to be
her undoing. She couldn't recover, and in a merciless downward
stroke, Brandon flipped the foil right out of Smokey's
grasp. The move left Smokey's arm tingling from shoulder to
fingertips.
Smokey was so spent at that point that she couldn't move.
Only seconds passed before the room erupted in pandemonium.
Everyone seemed to be talking at once, and over the
pounding of the gavel, Haamich Wynn could be heard shouting.
"This proves nothing! You could see how easy he was with
her!"
Brandon turned to the man in fury, but the door burst
open and a commotion ensued from the rear. The occupants
of the room finally heeded the judge's call for silence as
Dallas Knight marched in. Wrists tied behind his back and
preceding Dallas at the point of his sword was Haamich Wynn,
scar and all.
Smokey stared at the man's face in shock. His eye was
blackened and his lip was bloody, but the resemblance to the
man already in the room was remarkable.
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Suddenly the first Haamich Wynn panicked. With no
warning whatsoever, he vaulted over the railing and grabbed
Smokey. With an arm around her throat in a choke hold, he
dragged her back toward the judge.
"I'll break her neck," he shouted in desperation, his eyes
wide with panic. Smokey clawed at the arm that was cutting
off her air, but it did no good
"Stay back or she's dead." He continued to back toward the
judge's podium. He was about to shout again when he stopped
dead in his tracks. The judge, his wig in place once again, was
holding the point of one foil in Wynn's ear. The impostor had
never noticed as Brandon set the foils up on the stand.
"Now release her," Pinkerton's voice was calm, "or the
entire room will watch what we do with pirates."
With the point pressed against his ear, the first Haamich
Wynn grudgingly released Smokey and stood frozen in place;
in fact everything seemed to freeze outside of Smokey, who
crawled to safety and stayed were she was as Brandon began
to speak.
"The man you see before you is not Haamich Wynn. This
man is Lawrence Lynne. The man in the rear, however, is Lord
Darrell Lynne, alias Haamich Wynn." The crowd began to
buzz, but Brandon continued.
"Darrell and Lawrence are cousins who have been robbing
us blind for nearly a year. When Darrell is in London, Lawrence
goes into seclusion. Only when Darrell is headed out to
sea does he contact his nearly identical cousin to cover for
him on the streets of London. The split is 50-50 from what I
understand, and with the success they've enjoyed, there have
been no plans to quit."
"Take them away," Judge Pinkerton said softly. "The case
against Victoria Simmons is dismissed." The room exploded
with noise and confusion.
The guards started toward Lawrence, but with a swift
move he leaped away from the judge's box and tried to run.
The guards fell on him.
247
It seemed to Smokey that a fight was breaking out in every
corner of the room, forcing her to hold her position on the
floor. Just seconds passed before Brandon appeared before
her. As he reached to pull her to her feet, she saw the Judge
shouting to be heard above the fray.
"The press will be pitiless. Bring her out through my
chamber."
Brandon followed without question and began to move
Smokey forward Her head whipped back just before they left
the courtroom, hoping for a final glimpse of Dallas. Smokey
spotted him amid the commotion, struggling with a man on
either side. Then just moments later, before Smokey could
find her bearings, she was outside, lifted into a carriage, and
headed onto the streets of London.
"Where to, Smokey?" Brandon asked her from his place
across the coach.
'The docks," she said wearily, praying as she did that
Dallas would be all right.
"Are you sure? I know Dallas wants to see you. Sunny is at
our town house here in London."
Smokey nodded "I appreciate the offer, Brandon. I would
like to see Sunny and especially Dallas, but I need to get to the Aramis."
"As you wish," Brandon told her, seeing that she was
fading fast. He gave orders to his driver and settled back
against the squabs.
"Brandon," Smokey's voice came weakly from her seat.
Her senses were beginning to dull, but this had to be said "In
Klink Prison I had a cellmate. Her name is Aggie. I told her
about Christ," Smokey's head had fallen back against the seat,
but she forced the words from her mouth.
"Please check on her. I didn't even get to say goodbye.
Please go to her, pray with her. Please--"
"I'll take care of it," Brandon told her, and Smokey let her
eyes slide shut with a sigh. She wasn't aware of the way the
driver used back streets to avoid being followed or of Brandon
250
himself, who was determined to get her to her ship safely,
even if he had to lay down his own life.
They stopped 30 minutes later. Smokey had been sound
asleep for most of that time and was not aware that her ship
was finally in sight. Not until someone called her name did
she come out of the dream she had been having about sitting
at Willa's kitchen table.
"Smokey," the voice grew louder. When someone shook
her by the shoulder, she opened her eyes.
"Darsey?"
"It's me, lass."
"Is Willa here?"
"No, but if you come aboard theAramis, we can sail home
and see her."
"I can go home?" Smokey asked with childish wonder, just
before she began to sob. Her hands covered her face, and
amid her harsh weeping she was hardly aware of the way
Brandon lifted her from the carriage and tenderly handed her
to her first mate.
A crowd that included newsmongers who had been keeping
an eye on theAramis was swiftly converging upon them.
Smokey's crew was there to surround her and to take care of
anyone overly zealous for a story. In an effort to see them
safely up the gangplank, Brandon's own coachmen climbed
down and assisted in the fray.
With no time wasted, Darsey carried Smokey to her cabin.
He knew that Scully was already preparing a bath, but when
he got to the cabin, he saw it would have to wait. Smokey was
asleep once again. Darsey stayed below only long enough to
cover her with a blanket before going topside to cast off.
Lord Hawkesbury's coach was gone, and Darsey was glad
that he'd already said his thanks. They cast off, leaving the
docks teeming with frustrated journalists and spectators. By
nightfall, they were out at sea.
249
Darsey held a cup of strong broth to Smokey's mouth, and
she drank greedily. Her hands came up to hold the mug, but
they were shaking so badly that Darsey did not relinquish his
hold. After just a few swallows, Smokey lay back as though the
effort was too much for her.
She had managed to bathe and even wash her hair. Darsey
had changed the sheets for her, since she had lain on them
before her bath and couldn't stand the thought of touching
them after she was clean. After washing she had put on a
nightgown and crawled into bed, ready to sleep for weeks, but
Darsey had other ideas.
"You've got to eat something."
"I'm too tired," she told him, but he ignored her.
"I'll help you," he said and did, holding the broth and
letting her take all she could. Then she was asleep again, and
this time Darsey allowed it. She hadn't taken much in, but
Darsey knew they were going to have to take things slowly.
Truly, "slow" would be the operative word where Smokey
was concerned. As long as he was in charge, they were in no
hurry. If it took weeks to gain their home port, then weeks it
would be. And if it took weeks for Smokey to tell him all she'd
been through, he would wait.
He found himself making these promises in his heart as
he gazed at her sleeping form. Like the last time they had been
separated, the tears poured down his face, tears for all the
pain she'd known, and tears of thanksgiving that God had
brought her back to him.
251
Q//^~Qfw
"iDiDN'TTHANKBRANDON/'SmokeytoIdDarseywhenthey
had been at sea for five days.
"He'll understand"
"Or Dallas," she went on.
"He'll understand"
"He didn't last time I left in such a hurry."
Darsey stared at his skipper. "This was nothing like last
time, mainly because this time Dallas knows that you love
him."
Smokey nodded from her place on the deck, desperately
wanting to believe Darsey's words.
She had barely been able to climb the stairs, but she was
sick to death of her cabin and insistent on going topside. She
was wrapped in a blanket against the wind, but the sun felt
wonderful on her face. The men had all come one at a time to
sit and visit with her, and she could see that although they
were a bit thinner, they were all right. Her heart overflowed
each time she looked at them and saw that they were safe and
well.
"Dars, can you tell Scully that I'm hungry?"
"Sure," Darsey forced himself to answer calmly and rose
slowly from his seat. What he wanted to do was shout and to
run for the galley as fast as his legs could carry him. She had
wanted so little to eat since they had set sail. And even though
her color was good, the skin of her face was still stretched