Read Marrying the Royal Marine Online

Authors: Carla Kelly

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #United States, #Romance, #Historical, #Regency, #Historical Romance, #Series, #Harlequin Historical

Marrying the Royal Marine (12 page)

The Sergeant smiled and squatted on the floor by Sister Maria. He lifted her head by the hair. ‘Do you hear that? This Englishman harbours a soft spot for guerillas like you.’

‘Viva Portugal,’
she murmured.

Her heart in her throat, Polly watched the Frenchman as he squatted there, engaged in thought. He rose then, and inclined his head towards them. ‘Very well, Colonel. Since you are so concerned, you kill her.’

Hugh made that same huffing sound that had escaped him on the
barco
when he was shot. He took an involuntary step back and Polly had to steady him as he threatened to topple them both.

‘Please, Colonel,’ Sister Maria whispered from the floor. ‘Please.’

Polly reached both arms around the Colonel and held him as close as she could, her hands splayed across his broad back. He buried his face in her hair, and she just held him.

The Sergeant came closer until Polly smelled all his dirt and perspiration. ‘In fact, Colonel, I insist. If you do not kill this spy, I will see that your little wife suffers the fate I originally intended for her, and you can watch that.’

‘I will do it,’ Hugh said immediately. ‘Certainly I will. Hand me a pistol.’

The Sergeant laughed as he gestured to one of his men. ‘Don’t you wish you had not come upriver today, Colonel?’

While the Sergeant took Hugh aside and handed him the pistol to load, Polly gathered up more courage from a hitherto unknown source. Ignoring the soldiers, she walked to the nun, knelt on the floor and wiped Sister Maria’s battered face with the altar cloth. She draped the cloth around the woman’s bare shoulders.

‘I never meant you to be involved,’ the nun whispered.

‘I wish you had not invited me upriver,’ Polly replied, dabbing carefully around the woman’s ears. ‘How could you put us in such danger?’

She hadn’t meant to be harsh, not with a woman about to die, but she could not help herself.
I can repent later
, Polly told herself resolutely, as she dabbed away.
If there is a later.

‘I love my country more,’ Sister Maria said. She grasped Polly’s arm with fingers surprisingly strong. ‘Watch over João for me.’

Polly nodded, ashamed of herself. ‘We will treat him as our own son.’ She glanced at Colonel Junot, surprised at herself.
He is not my husband, but that came out so naturally
, she thought.

Sister Maria Madelena nodded, her face calm now. ‘Come closer,’ she whispered.

Polly crept closer on her knees, as though to arrange the woman’s hair.

‘I never was a nun. Hear me out! My brother is El Cuchillo, a guerilla of León. He said he would always watch out for me…’ Her voice trailed off and she looked up at the dead priest above them. ‘Perhaps one of his men is watching now. Be ready for anything.’

‘Don’t give me false hope,’ Polly whispered. ‘You have done enough.’

There was more she wanted to say, but she knew it would not make her feel any better. Then the moment was gone, when one of the soldiers grabbed her by both elbows and lifted her off the floor. She shrieked, unable to struggle.

‘Polly, my love, steady as you go,’ Hugh said, as the soldier pinioned her arms behind her back and led her away from Sister Maria Madelena, who crouched and clutched the altar cover, her face calm.

‘Madam Junot, you must not struggle so!’ the Sergeant admonished. ‘I am handing your husband a pistol now. You are my guarantee that he will not turn it on me.’ He shrugged elaborately. ‘Call me cautious. I have not lived from Jena and Austerlitz by being overly trusting. You understand?’

‘I understand,’ Polly replied, her voice soft. ‘I’m sorry, Hugh.’

His face pale, his eyes so serious, the Colonel looked at her for a long moment, as though willing her to understand that what was about to happen was not his choice. No matter—she knew that, and tried to communicate her emotions with a return gaze as compassionate as his own.

He squared his shoulders and took a deep breath. ‘I will do this my own way, Sergeant, and in my own time. Don’t interfere with me or my wife.’

He stood a moment in silence, head bowed, then walked to the altar, where Sister Maria Madelena knelt. He squatted beside her and carefully draped her hair over her shoulder, away from the back of her neck.

‘What is your name, my dear?’ he asked, his voice conversational.

‘Maria Ponce, from León,’ she replied in English, ‘although my family is originally from Portugal. Your wife will tell you of my brother.’

He squeezed her shoulder gently, stood up, and cocked the pistol. ‘God forgive me,’ he said.

‘He already has,’ Maria Ponce said.

Polly tried to look away, but the Sergeant put the blade of his sword against her neck and gently forced her to watch.

‘If there is any foolishness, Colonel,’ the Sergeant called, ‘I will violate your wife myself.’

‘I know that,’ Hugh said with a certain weary patience, as though he dealt with a child. ‘There will be no foolishness. You have my word as an officer and a gentleman, if that holds any merit with a soldier of La Belle France.’

‘It’s quaint, but I like it,’ the Sergeant said. ‘An officer, a gentleman, a murderer. Hurry up.’

Hugh pointed the pistol towards the nape of Maria Ponce’s neck, then lowered it. ‘No. Not this way,’ he said, speaking to the Sergeant. ‘I don’t want my wife to see this.’

‘Poor you,’ said the Sergeant, when he finished laughing.

‘I mean it,’ Hugh said. Polly watched as he seemed to stand taller. ‘Sergeant, do you have a wife?’

The Dragoon took the blade of his sword away from Polly’s neck. She held her breath. ‘I do. She is no concern of yours.’

‘What is her name?’ Hugh asked calmly, with all the force of his rank and age behind the question, to Polly’s ears.
You are so audacious
, she thought.
You are trying to bend this man to your will and you have no power whatsoever.

‘Her name is Lalage,’ the Sergeant said, speaking as though addressed by a French officer, and not a British captive. Polly could hardly believe her ears.

‘Lalage is a beautiful name,’ Hugh said. ‘Madame Junot is
my
Lalage. She is my love and my life. Would you want
your
Lalage to witness what I must do here? I cannot imagine a loving husband would do such a thing in France.’

Polly reminded herself to breathe as the two men stared at each other. The Sergeant looked away first. He sheathed his sabre and took Polly by the arm, shoving her towards one of his Dragoons.

‘Take her outside. Sit with her on the steps.’


Merci
, Sergeant,’ Hugh said. ‘I would ask all of you to leave. Let this be between me and Sister Maria Madelena.’

‘I can’t do that!’ the Sergeant protested, but his voice had lost its edge.

‘You can, Sergeant,’ Hugh said. ‘If this woman kneeling before you is not dead when I come out of the church, you may shoot me next, after I have killed my own Lalage.’

Again the two men stared at each other. Again the Sergeant yielded. He gestured to his troopers, who followed him into the sun. Polly felt as though she stood on blocks of wood instead of her feet. With a look at Colonel Junot, one that tried to convey every emotion she was feeling, she forced herself into motion and left the chapel of São Jobim.

The sun was hot on her face. She welcomed the warmth, even as she shivered and knew she would never be warm again. The Sergeant sat her down on the top step, then pulled her up gently and took her down several more steps. He sat down beside her, not looking at her.

Polly steeled herself against the sound of the pistol, but when it went off, she still jumped and cried out. The Sergeant gripped her shoulder, but it was not the grip of a captor. He did not release her until she heard Hugh’s steps behind them.

He came towards them slowly, going down each step as though he weighed a thousand pounds. Polly knew if she lived to one hundred, she would never be able to entirely erase from her mind his expression. She couldn’t interpret it. She had thought to see revulsion at the terrible act he had been forced to perform. There was something thoughtful in his look, instead. If she hadn’t known it was impossible, she would have called it relief.

He sat down heavily beside her and gathered her close to him, his grip as tender as the Sergeant’s had been.

‘Where is the pistol?’ the Sergeant demanded.

Hugh shook his head and gestured behind him. ‘You can get it. I’m not going back in there.’ He looked across Polly at the Sergeant, wonder in his voice now. ‘I pointed the barrel right at the nape of her neck. Before I could fire, she grabbed the gun and killed herself.’ He began to weep.

It was Polly’s turn to gather him close, uttering sounds of comfort that had no language, as he sobbed into his hands. To her surprise, the Sergeant and the Dragoons left them there on the church steps as they went inside again.

‘Oh, Colonel,’ she whispered into his neck, at a total loss for words.

‘From now on, I am “Hugh, love” to you,’ he said, after a long moment. ‘Never forget it. Our lives depend on it, Polly, dear wife.’

They held hands and sat as close together as they could while the Dragoons finished up whatever business they had in the church. When they came out, the Sergeant gestured for them to stand up.

‘What do you intend to do with us, Sergeant, now that Sister Maria has done our dirty work?’ Hugh asked.

‘Dirty work it is, Colonel,’ the Sergeant said. ‘Do you know who the whore’s brother is?’

‘El Cuchillo,’ Polly said. ‘Sister Maria told me before she died.’

The Sergeant’s smile broadened. ‘Poor you, indeed, my Colonel! He is a guerilla leader of León, where we are heading.’ He sheathed his sword. ‘I have always been amazed how word gets around. El Cuchillo will probably assume you killed his sister. You might as well paint a bull’s-eye on your back.’

‘Perhaps you should just kill me now,’ Hugh said, pulling Polly closer.

The Sergeant laughed and shook his head. ‘And miss the fun? Never. They say he likes best to kill with a long needle through the eye.’

‘Well, into every life some rain must fall, I suppose,’ Hugh replied, with just a touch of amusement.

‘You’re a cool one,’ the Sergeant said.

‘No, I am not. Actually, let me suggest a very good reason why you should keep me and my wife alive.’

The Sergeant looked down on them from the step above, perfectly at ease again and in charge, looking for all the world like a cat with cornered mice. ‘Colonel, will you never cease to entertain me?’

‘Probably not,’ Hugh said, his tone equally affable. ‘In a word, Sergeant, money. This knowledge is for you alone. You have no idea how rich Madame Junot is.’

Chapter Twelve

‘S
o that is why you married her,’ the Sergeant said.

Polly flinched, which made Hugh’s heart sink even lower.
Bastard!
he thought.
Damn the man.
But this was no time to argue, so he merely shrugged. ‘Think what you will. I am speaking of money.
Dinero, dinheiro, denaro, geld.
Think of all the words for money you have learned as you have tramped through Europe! Imagine that in your pockets.’

He had no idea how this would play. If today was his unlucky day—so far, there was nothing to dispute the notion it could be the unluckiest day of his life—then he had just attempted to bribe one of the few incorruptible men in anyone’s army. He stood up, pulled Polly to her feet, and started walking away from the church. One step, two steps, another. The Sergeant did not stop him, but walked at his side. Was it possible even a battle-hardened veteran of Napoleon’s campaigns didn’t care so much for what had just happened? One could hope; Hugh did. But then,

‘A bribe? You want to bribe
me
, Colonel?’ the Sergeant asked, putting out his hand to stop them.

I found the only honest man in Napoleon’s army
, Hugh thought with regret.
Well, then, we have nothing to lose.
‘I suppose I do,’ he said frankly. ‘One doesn’t make Colonel without exercising some initiative. Not in the Royal Marines, at least.’

He knew how that sounded in English. In French, Hugh thought it had a certain Gallic panache. At least the Sergeant hadn’t motioned for one of his men to run him through with a sword.

In fact, the Sergeant was smiling—a little smile, to be sure, but a smile. After a long pause, the Sergeant even chuckled.
In for a penny
, Hugh thought. ‘It’s not for me, especially,’ he said. He turned to Polly and gave her a kiss on the temple and a little shake to get her attention. ‘And it’s not even just for my wife.’ He nudged Polly again. ‘Shall I tell him, darling?’

He looked her in the eyes and she gazed back through those spectacles that magnified her eyes a little.
Follow me with this
, he thought, trying to communicate through nothing more than a look, something he knew his parents, married years and years, had been quite good at. To his infinite relief, she inclined her head towards him as though the conversation was a delicate one.

‘It’s this, Sergeant: my wife is in the family way. I especially want her to survive this experience and at least give my estate an heir.’

To her credit, Polly didn’t even flinch. He knew she understood his French, because her lips came together in a firm line and she concentrated on her shoes.

‘If you can help us, it is worth a great deal to me, Sergeant,’ he concluded simply.

They were in the square now. Hugh concentrated all his attention on the Sergeant, even as his skin crawled at the sound of women and children screaming in some of the buildings. The Sergeant seemed almost reflective, as though he stood in a glade in southern France filled with carnations.
My God, these are hard men
, Hugh thought. He almost hated to interrupt the thought process of a man who obviously had the power to end his life in the next second, but time was passing.

‘I know you have a wife, Sergeant,’ he said. ‘Do you and Lalage have children?’ Maybe it wasn’t such an unlucky day. While not appearing to stare, Hugh watched the Sergeant’s face, and at least thought he saw a slight thawing. He breathed more regularly when the Sergeant gestured with his hand towards a bench and spoke to Polly.

‘Madame Junot, let us sit here. You look done for.’

It was probably the understatement of the ages, considering what had just happened in the chapel. Polly nodded, her pale face tinged with pink now, as though she were shy about sharing her
faux
husband’s phony admission with a complete stranger, much less the enemy.

Hugh kissed Polly’s temple again and whispered in her ear as he sat her carefully down on the bench, ‘You’re a game goer, Brandon.’

In response, she burrowed in closer to him, shivering in the warmth of the afternoon sun. In a more familiar gesture, Hugh put his hand on her waist and pulled her as near as he could. She responded by resting her hand on his thigh.
Bravo, Brandon
, he thought, enjoying the act.

‘Can I get you some wine,
madame
?’ the Sergeant asked.

Polly nodded, and the Sergeant gestured to one of his men and made his request. The Corporal shook his head and indicated there was none. The Sergeant merely nodded philosophically. ‘We travel light,
madame
. Perhaps he can find something in this pathetic village.’

‘Water will do,’ she said.

The Sergeant was silent until the Corporal returned with water in an earthen jar. Polly tried to take it from him, but her hand shook so badly that Hugh took it instead and held the jar to her lips until she sipped. A frown on his face, the Sergeant observed her terror.

He spoke at last. ‘We have two sons on a farm near Angoulême. It is a small farm.’

Hugh nodded. ‘If you will see to my wife’s safety, I can promise you your wife will receive whatever sum you consider appropriate.’

The Sergeant nodded, and gazed across the small square of São Jobim, where his men were methodically going through the buildings. He rubbed his unshaven jaw, looking unconcerned as flames suddenly roared skywards from a home. It was just another day in Portugal.

‘Of course, I cannot promise anything until we—or she—is restored to Allied lines, but you can trust us to deliver what you wish, and where,’ Hugh added, keeping his voice soft, hoping not to distract from whatever the Sergeant might be thinking.

‘Because you are an officer and a gentleman?’ the Sergeant said suddenly, and his voice was harsh again.

‘No. Because I want to be a father,’ Hugh said. ‘You understand.’

The Sergeant stood up suddenly and slapped his worn gauntlets on his thigh. Hugh had always been a praying man, much to the amusement of his fellow Marines, and he prayed now, as the Frenchman weighed the offer on a scale of delicate balance.

Polly tipped it, to Hugh’s everlasting relief. ‘Sergeant, what are your son’s names? And who are you?’

The Sergeant looked down at her, and Hugh thought he saw pity in the man’s eyes, as brown as his own, and something more: a father’s love. ‘Emile and Antoine,’ he said. ‘I am Jean Baptiste Cadotte. Colonel, I will help you if I can.’

‘I am in your debt,’ Hugh replied simply.

‘I can promise you nothing.’

‘I know that.’

Most of São Jobim was blazing when the Dragoons mounted the horses that had been stabled inside the town hall. Two of the lighter men doubled up and the Sergeant directed Hugh to mount the other horse. He tied Hugh’s hands together, then tied Polly’s, only not so tight. To Hugh’s amusement, Cadotte directed a man to hand her up carefully to sit in front of him. She tried to sit sideways at first, as though she rode a sidesaddle, but gave that up quickly and threw her leg over the saddle, which raised her skirts to her knees. To her credit, Polly scarcely seemed to mind. Directing her to lean forwards, Hugh raised his roped arms and lowered them over her body, resting them against her stomach. The Corporal took the reins and led the horse behind his own.

Polly was still shaking and there was nothing he could do about that. After what seemed like an hour of travel on what was a little-used track, he felt her shoulders lower as her jangled nerves attempted to relax. She said nothing, though, which suited him well enough, since he couldn’t think of any words to comfort her. Just as well. Unaccustomed to riding horseback, Hugh felt his inner thighs begin to burn and his buttocks go numb.

After several hours of steady climbing, Sergeant Cadotte raised his hand and the Dragoons stopped. Everyone knew what to do. In another moment, all the men were urinating into the road.

‘My blushes,’ Polly said, the first words she had spoken since leaving São Jobim.

Hugh chuckled. ‘Boys will be boys,’ he told her. ‘I hope Cadotte will take a little pity on us, too.’

He did. When the men were standing by their mounts again and eating what looked like hardtack, Sergeant Cadotte sent a trooper to help Polly off the horse. He untied her hands and helped her down, then indicated that Hugh should throw his leg over the saddle and slide off.

‘I can’t,’ Hugh said, looking at Cadotte. ‘Sergeant, you’ll have to appreciate that I am a Royal Marine and not a horseman of any kind. Undo my hands, please, and I will struggle off and probably fall on my face, to your total amusement.’

Cadotte laughed and told the Private to untie his hands, but was kind enough to steady Hugh as he dismounted. He sank immediately to his knees. All the men in the troop laughed, but Hugh only shrugged and staggered to his feet.

‘You meant what you said,’ Cadotte murmured. ‘Take your wife and go relieve yourselves.’

‘Merci,’
Hugh said with a grimace. ‘Just let me stand here a moment and see if there is any blood in my pathetic body willing to circulate to my ass again.’

‘But he is never seasick,’ Polly said suddenly in French, which made the men laugh again.

In good humour, Cadotte gestured to the stand of trees. ‘Have a little privacy, Colonel. That ought to be worth the price of a few cows at my farm by Angoulême.’

‘A whole herd,’ Hugh said as he took Polly by the hand. ‘Come, my love, and let us find a tree.’

To his relief, the Dragoons turned away and squatted on the far side of their horses, some smoking and others conversing. Wincing at every step, Hugh led Polly into the stand of trees. ‘Well, my dear, turn your head and give me a moment.’

Her face bright red, she did as he said. When he finished and buttoned his trousers, he pointed towards a fallen log. ‘It’s the best we can do, Brandon,’ he said, and turned around to face the Dragoons on the road while she took care of her own business.

‘You needn’t stand so close,’ she scolded, when she had finished and joined him.


Au contraire, ma chérie
, I’m going to stick to you like a medicinal plaster. If you have any inhibitions about that, I suggest you abandon them right here.’

He watched her expressive face, still red, as she considered his words, then nodded. ‘Consider them abandoned, Colonel—’

‘No. No. “Hugh, my love”,’ he teased.

‘Hugh, my love, you’re trying me,’ she shot back, which made him smile and took the lump of fear out of his stomach for the first time.

He draped his arm across her shoulder and gave her a squeeze. ‘Adventures never are as much fun as bad novels make them out to be, Polly.’

‘I can see that,’ she said, as she tucked her fingers in his swordless belt. ‘Just don’t think for a minute you are going to take advantage of me!’

He kissed her temple and whispered in her ear, ‘I already did, Polly. You’re going to be a mother, remember?’

‘How could I forget such an immaculate conception? I defy even the Pope to be more surprised than I.’

They laughed together, which made Sergeant Cadotte turn around in surprise. With a scowl, he motioned them closer to retie their hands and continue the journey.

They travelled off the beaten track until they came to a deserted village just at sunset. The casual way the Dragoons rode into the abandoned town told Hugh volumes. ‘I think this must be where they bivouacked on the journey to São Jobim,’ he whispered to Polly. ‘Look how familiar they are with it. They knew it was deserted.’

He could feel Polly sigh against his chest. ‘We might have been travelling on the moon,’ she whispered back. ‘This poor country. Does no one live in the interior any more?’

‘Precious few, I gather. Only think how many armies have picked it clean, like a flock of vultures dining on one thin rabbit.’

Hugh put his head closer to hers to keep his voice low, but also because he could not deny the comfort he derived from her presence. ‘I can’t help but think this patrol of Dragoons was a forlorn hope.’

‘I don’t understand.’

He could see Sergeant Cadotte watching them. ‘I’ll tell you later.’

With help, they dismounted for the first time since the afternoon, with the same results. In agony, he leaned against Polly, who held him up, then kissed his cheek. ‘You Marines are pretty worthless on horseback,’ she chided.

‘Aye, aye, wife. Just wait until you’re back on a ship.’

He wanted her to laugh, but tears came to her eyes. ‘Hugh, it couldn’t be a moment too soon, even if I vomit from Oporto to Plymouth,’ she whispered, her face turned into his chest. All he could do was hold her and silently agree, with all the longing of his deepwater heart.

Expertly, the Dragoons took their mounts into the half-burned church while Hugh and Polly stood in the square, then gradually edged over to a bench, where he spent a long moment trying to decide if sitting down again was worse than standing. He sat down gingerly, grateful at least that the bench wasn’t going anywhere.

The evening meal—eaten in a barren interior courtyard—continued to confirm his suspicions about the nature of the French army in Portugal. He knew how fond Napoleon was of exhorting his soldiers to live off the land, but the Peninsula was frail and bare. Dinner was a stew of French hardtack soaked in a broth of wild onions and nothing more, washed down, at least, with excellent port someone must have pilfered from farther downriver. The men were already on starvation rations.

They sat close together in the cool evening air that was beginning to feel like autumn. Rains would come soon enough, spreading enough discomfort around to last a lifetime, if they were still prisoners on the trail.
Or we could be dead, my lady and me
, he reminded himself. It was better not to borrow trouble from tomorrow.

His thoughts were unprofitable, so it was with some relief they were interrupted by Sergeant Cadotte, who motioned for them to rise. He felt the hairs prick on the back of his neck. Was this the end, then? Was the Sergeant going to shoot him and turn Polly over to his soldiers? Hugh forced himself to subdue his rising panic.

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