Moonrise
Ana Seymour
To my wonderful parents…and all those swashbucklers we’ve shared
Contents
Prologue
September 3, 1666
From the gardens at Vauxhall to the bustling and smelly streets of Southwark, Londoners agreed that it had been an odd year. The city was tinderbox dry. Instead of fresh autumn winds, a sweltering heat enveloped it like a clinging blanket and showed no signs of dissipating.
Behind three feet of clammy stone wall, Sarah Fairfax felt prickles along her arms where her wool dress clung damply to her skin. She glanced for the hundredth time at the basin of water sitting on the room’s single table. It would be heavenly to rid herself of the heavy gown and bathe.
A movement at the small, barred window in the door caught her eye. In the shadowy light she could just make out the features of the warder, the one who had been coming around more and more often. His leering eyes and blackened smile had begun to appear in her dreams...darting in and out amid the other haunting faces.
“Say the word, mum, and I’ll fetch ye some fresh water,” he said with relish, putting his face right up against the bars. “Won’t cost ye nothin’. A lady like yerself needs her baths.”
A scar along his left eye made it look squinty and small, while his good right eye had a lecherous gleam that turned Sarah’s stomach. “No, thank you,” she said calmly. She turned away from him toward the narrow, deep window that had been her only source of light for...how many days now? Weeks? She had lost count.
At the beginning she had demanded candles, blankets, writing materials. Her guards had been only too happy to oblige the beautiful new prisoner, but she had soon discovered that the price of their largesse had been filthy propositions and surreptitious gropings. Finally she had ceased to ask for anything.
She felt the warder’s uneven eyes staring at her back. A chill went along her spine in spite of the heat. When she had entered the Tower weeks before, she had been defiant and angry. But day after endless day in the tiny cell had drained the defiance out of her, along with the hope.
Only the hate remained.
Her father would have told her to give that up, too. She could almost hear his sonorous voice echoing around the cell. “My dearest child,” he would say, “you must make peace with all mankind before you can find peace with your Maker.”
She believed that Jack had done so before he died. He had been possessed of a wonderful serenity during that last sad meeting they had had here in this very cell. But Sarah had reconciled herself to the fact that she simply wasn’t as good as her father and brother had been. She intended to take her hate with her all the way to the grave and beyond.
It was early afternoon. By now she knew every angle of the sun’s rays through the window slit and could judge the hour more accurately than a timepiece. The warder had at last moved on to torment some other poor victim. Sarah gave a little shudder. Actually, she’d been lucky. She had had to suffer the guards’ leers and their hands on her, but some blessed edict from an unknown higher authority had so far kept any of them from bothering her in a more direct way. If she still had an ounce of hope left in her, it was that her death should come before this mysterious protection was lifted.
She stood and walked over to the basin of water, glancing quickly at the opening in the door. Perhaps now, before he returned... She bent and carefully lifted the hem of her skirt to dip it in the water, then brought the wet wool up against her hot cheeks. She closed her eyes, savoring the coolness.
There was a loud thump against the thick wood door. Sarah dropped her skirt and jumped back. A key rattled in the lock. She took an involuntary step backward against the rough edge of the table. Prison routine was more regular than the tide, and it was not the time of day for a scheduled visit. The fear that Sarah had worked so hard to conquer since she had been seized at Leasworth weeks ago came flooding back, leaving an acid sting at the base of her throat.
The door opened with a harsh scrape against the stone floor. The visitor was dressed in solid black, from his hose to his fine silk shirt. His hair was black, too, as were his eyes. Coal, demon black in the dim light of the cell.
“You!” Sarah gasped, bracing herself with her hands on the table behind her.
The black eyes narrowed. “Surprised to see me, my love?”
Sarah forced herself to stand straight and meet the newcomer’s gaze. “Not surprised,” she said, her voice low and fierce. “Disappointed. I had hoped by now you had been blown to bits by a Dutch frigate.”
The man smiled. Without taking his eyes off her, he reached easily back to shut the heavy door. “I’ve managed to stay out of that particular war so far,” he said lightly. “You see, I have some unfinished business yet in the world of the living.”
Her chin went up. “Not with me, you don’t. Our business was finished long ago.”
“Perhaps not.”
The softly spoken words made the heat rush to Sarah’s face. She put up a hand as he advanced toward her. “Leave me be, Anthony,” she said fiercely.
He came like a stalking animal, graceful and deadly of purpose. Sarah’s hand shook, then fell to her side. An arm’s length away, he stopped. “Now there’s a problem, my sweet.” His voice was husky. “It appears that I can’t let you be. Were old Mephistopheles himself chasing me away, I’d not be able to let you be.”
He drew her against him then, and she went without resistance. His lips found hers with the inexorable force of a river seeking the sea. Their bodies molded,