Starlight & Promises (9 page)

Read Starlight & Promises Online

Authors: Cat Lindler

Christian blew out an oath she’d not heard before, then said, “So be it. It’s your funeral, Miss
Modern
Woman, whatever the hell that means. I wash my hands of all responsibility regarding you.” He leaned forward, pointing a finger at her, his eyes hard, voice low. “But I warn you, should you disobey my orders
just once
, I vow I’ll turn you over to the nearest cannibal tribe and join them for dinner. If I cannot find any cannibals, I’ll shoot and cook you myself.”

He bent over, picked up his cup, drained his coffee, and started toward the door. With his fingers on the handle, he turned to meet her gaze once more. “We leave a week from tomorrow. Be prepared and pack light. I want this agreement in a contract. Write it up, sign it, and send Pettibone over to the house with it before we leave. You’ll not board ship without it.”

“Even the part about the cannibals and shooting me?” she asked with a tilt of her chin and a tight smile.

The smile flickering across his mouth would have given a bull elephant pause, and he departed, throwing the answer over his shoulder. “Especially that clause.”

After he left, Samantha allowed her nerves free rein. Goose bumps spurted across her skin when she finally realized what she had talked him, and herself, into. And, good Lord, she’d forgotten to tell him about Aunt Delia, Chloe, Gilly, and Pettibone, who had insisted on accompanying her from England and expected to come along for the journey. He would be annoyed at that disclosure.

Mayhap that was an understatement. He would be furious!

C
HAPTER
S
EVEN

Boston Harbor

C
hristian stood on the deck of the
Maiden Anne
under a leaden sky brushed with wispy, mare’s-tail clouds. Hundreds of ships clogged the busy harbor, jockeying for space at the docks. Older clippers, schooners, and barques competed with more modern wooden or metal paddlewheel steamers of the Cunard Line, sporting masts and barque rigs, and the most recent propeller-driven steamships.

The
Maiden Anne
possessed the qualities Christian required: speed, seaworthiness, alternate power, and defense. He knew well the dangers of South Pacific sea travel. The waters along their planned passage could range from balmy to full-blown typhoons.

With the
Maiden Anne
, flexibility was key. The ship was a hybrid design, a steamship masquerading as a clipper. Two screw propellers driven by a double-expansion engine and fueled by a steam boiler provided her main power. She could make nine knots under propellers alone in calm seas, though she looked and responded more like a clipper designed for long-distance commerce, combining speed and seaworthiness. Elongated, slender, and sharp-bowed, she carried a full complement of four masts in addition to the steam engine and made better time under sail with favorable winds and currents, leaving the screw propellers for the doldrums and stormy weather. Designed to sail in the U.S.-China trade, the ship carried thirty-six small cannons for defense against sea pirates. When confronted with calamity, they would have the options of running, maneuvering, or fighting.

Below decks space was at a premium, but Christian cared not the least for passenger comfort. Lady Samantha would have had her fill of bare-bones ocean cruising by the time they reached Hobart. He planned on it, neither wanting nor needing a woman on his hands. In the case of Lady Samantha, the thought occurred to him, he was more likely to have his hands on
her
. He grinned. In spite of that delightful image, he could not afford the distraction and danger she posed to the expedition and to his sanity.

He looked over the railing, regarding the twisting movements of dozens of jellyfish species teeming in the water between the docked ships. While ticking off their scientific names in his mind, he waited for Garrett and Samantha and again wondered why he had agreed to head this improbable expedition. Was he persuaded a Smilodon still existed? He supposed it was possible, considering the thousands of unexplored islands in the world’s oceans. He gave a short, bitter laugh.
About as possible as humans walking on the moon
, as Jules Verne described in his fanciful tale.

Straightening, he pulled a cigar from his coat pocket, struck a lucifer on the wooden rail, and touched the flame to the tobacco. He leaned back against the rail, smoke wreathing his head. Flicking ashes into the harbor waters, he tilted his head up at the squawking call of a circling seagull and narrowed his eyes to a spear of sunlight that pierced the cloud cover. Tangy salt-sea air and lapping waves bathed his soul, propelled his thoughts. Though he had left this all behind years ago, the surroundings still lifted his spirits.

Considering the obstacles, why was he here? What possessed him to accept her ladyship’s commission? He could say that he felt a slight obligation to Richard Colchester, a fellow scientist, but the search for a missing person was best left in the hands of the authorities.

He contemplated the alternative. Was his motivation Samantha herself? Had he convinced himself there existed an attraction, other than lust, a pedestrian emotion easily managed? Certainly, the feisty lady fetched his attention, piqued his curiosity. Was it enough? He shook his head, drew deeply on his cigar, and rejected the thought. The lady was haughty, outspoken to a ludicrous degree for a woman, impossibly stubborn, and too high in the instep. Aristocratic ladies were not his preferred cup of tea. In fact, he despised nothing so much as a highborn lady. Memories surfaced of Lady Jane, and a bitter taste coated his throat. He shoved the painful past aside.

Were he any judge of women, Samantha would defy him at every opportunity and make his life hell. Only one reason for his acquiescence remained—boredom. For six years he had moldered on the farm, writing books and breeding horses. He missed the field expeditions, the excitement, and the danger. Scientific curiosity still burned in his blood, although he had tamed it somewhat in recent years. As a result, he led a stale, passionless life. The opportunity presented by Lady Samantha Eugenia Colchester and the Smilodon, as improbable as it sounded, stirred that part of him still longing for the chase. The expectation of discovery engulfed him, stimulated him, and ignited a fire he’d not felt for many years.

One last expedition, successful or not, would pacify his wanderlust. He could retire to the farm in contentment. On this final trip, perhaps he would regain some of the satisfaction in his scientific skills he once enjoyed, and it was damned good to have a ship’s rocking deck beneath his feet again. It had been too long.

Jonas Lindstrom, a dignified, no-nonsense ship’s captain, motioned to him from the helm. Christian pushed away from the railing. Soon he and Jonas became engrossed in a discussion of charts and passages, and Christian immersed himself in the familiar details of a well-planned expedition.

When the carriage arrived in the drive to transport them to the ship, Samantha was as jumpy as a mouse caught in a pit of death adders. Bedlam reigned in the hallway behind her. Aunt Delia directed servants and family alike in a thundering voice, sending them scattering about the house to retrieve and pack treasures she could not possibly bear to leave behind. With her round figure and unfashionably large bustle, she resembled a mushroom cap floating across the hall on tiny feet too small to support her bulk. Chloe, her blond ringlets flying, whined, tugging at her mother’s arm and begging to remain in Boston with their relatives. Pettibone countermanded Delia’s orders, sending luggage back upstairs and trying to explain that ships had severely limited space. Gilly, Samantha’s Irish maid, cried and cast mournful glances at the attractive American footman who hauled luggage downstairs at Delia’s command and lugged it back up when ordered to do so by Pettibone. The iguana basked on a foyer tabletop, bathing in a stray sunbeam pouring in from the window above the door, while he supervised the chaos with unblinking eyes and admired his image in the polished mahogany surface.

All Samantha needed now was another argument with the abrasive and intimidating Professor Badia. No, they would more than argue. While she watched her noisy brood in perpetual motion, fingers of panic clutched her throat. ‘Twould be a proper row, perhaps even with fists swinging. No, not fists; surely he would not dare. However, ‘twould be a scene she would just as soon forego.

At a knock on the door, she swallowed around the boulder in her throat. Her stomach churned with queasiness, and her inability to take a proper breath made her limbs light and tingly. A headache threatened to crack open the top of her head.

When the footman made for the door, she waved him aside and opened it wide enough to slip outside, then closed it behind her. Garrett—beautiful, wonderful, gentlemanly Angel Garrett—stood on the porch, a wide-brimmed hat in his hands. She peered over his shoulder for any suggestion of a tall, dark body with piercing eyes.

“Chris sent me to collect you, my lady,” Garrett said, wrinkling his brow, she supposed, at her furtive movements and transparent unease. “Are your bags ready?”

“You may as well call me Sam,” she said while continuing her search for the mad scientist. “Professor Badia does. He seems to forget I’m a lady and we are barely acquainted.” She leaned to one side to see around the back of the carriage, but Professor Badia could not possibly be lying in wait there.

A frown marred his perfect mouth. “I beg your pardon, but are you feeling quite well?”

She jerked up her head, hand instinctively going to her mouth, and she nibbled on a fingernail. “Is he lurking in the carriage?” she whispered.

His lips lifted in a puzzled smile. “No, Sam, he’s at the ship. Perhaps you should spill the beans to me before we meet him. You obviously have some concerns on your mind.”

Cracking open the door without saying a word, she allowed him to look inside. The babble of shouting, crying, whining, and commanding assaulted their eyes and ears. Samantha slammed the door closed again.

“My God!” Garrett gasped as though in pain. “Surely not
all
of them are coming with us?”

She nodded.

“And you didn’t tell him?”

She shook her head. “I never found the perfect moment.”

He shuddered. “Chris will murder you.”

“Murder?” she squeaked, fingers clutching her throat like she imagined Christian might do.

“Perhaps not actual murder, but it’s bound to be ugly.”

His thin smile was thinner than she might have wished, and the sincerity in his voice made her quake.

Opening the door with the caution of a man entering a feeding frenzy of starving crocodiles, he stepped into the fray, raised a hand over his head. “Quiet!”

A hush fell over the hallway. All heads turned his way. Delia sniffed and looked affronted. Pettibone sighed and looked relieved. Chloe’s mouth fell open; she looked lovestruck. Gilly paid no attention and still sniffled away. The iguana climbed down from the table, wiggled over to Garrett, and wound around his legs.

He looked down at the three-foot-long green reptile and sucked in a breath. “Good Lord! What the hell is that?”

Samantha darted over, picked up the animal, and cradled him in her arms. He opened his mouth and closed his eyes in an expression of pure pleasure. “A South American iguana and quite tame, as you can plainly see. I named him Narcissus because he enjoys looking at his reflection. He is a good traveler and will be no trouble at all.”

Garrett grimaced, pointing a shaky finger at the iguana. “He’s coming, too?”

She nodded again, feeling as if she were transforming into one of those bobble-headed dolls sold at Harrods department store in London.

Garrett closed his eyes, lips moving, mumbling something inaudible. Opening his eyes, he faced the others. “Listen up. Each of you, excluding the iguana, may bring only one small chest. You will leave the remainder behind.”

They grumbled in competing voices.

“You have exactly ten minutes to load your baggage and be in the carriage, or I’ll leave without you.”

They flew into action with only ten minutes to accomplish the impossible, managing to cage up Narcissus and sort out their belongings within the allotted time. In a cacophony of noise, they climbed into the carriage.

Other books

Farewell to the East End by Jennifer Worth
Chorus Skating by Alan Dean Foster
Kachina and the Cross by Carroll L Riley
WINDOW OF TIME by DJ Erfert
The King Of The South by Karrington, Blake
Blackbird by Anna Carey
The Red Line by R M Reef