“After a blast like that …” Gray’s voice took on a steely edge. “Dead, some of them. Stunned or maimed, at least.”
A swell tipped the deck, and Sophia stumbled back against his chest. His chin scraped the crown of her head. They fit together so perfectly. Since the day he’d helped her board this ship, she’d fallen time and again into his embrace. To her, the truth was plain. His arms belonged around her. If only he would let her into his heart.
She turned her head and rested her brow against his shoulder. “Gray,”
she whispered.
He tensed and pulled back. But he didn’t let her go.
The captain cupped his hands around his mouth. “Put in the boats!” he shouted toward the men at the bow. “Brace the mainsail aback!”
“You’re falling back?” Gray asked.
“What choice do we have?” The captain scrubbed his face with one hand.
“There’s no telling which direction that mast will fall. We can’t risk the Aphrodite catching fire. I’ll put in the boats. If there are any survivors, they’ll make their way overboard.”
“Not if they’re injured or trapped in the hold, they won’t.”
“What do you propose to do, Gray?”
His reply was quiet, but firm. “Board it.”
“What?” Sophia pulled out of his grip and turned to face him.
“What?” The captain’s expression mirrored her sense of alarm. “Board a burning ship? Gray, are you mad?”
“You act as though we’ve never done it before. This used to be our livelihood, boarding burning ships. That mast is a fuse. It’ll send the whole ship up in smoke if it’s not cut down before those flames reach the deck.”
He clapped a hand on his brother’s shoulder, his lips thinning in a tight smile. “Come on, Joss. It’ll be like old times.”
“In old times, any blaze we faced was the result of our own cannonfire. You know a lightning strike can spark fires all through a ship. Even now, there could be a blaze in the hold. If there’s a keg of powder, a cask of rum nearby … The whole thing could go any moment.”
“Then we’d best look lively, hadn’t we?” Gray strode toward the rail, shouting up at the sailors, “Mainsail haul! Bring her around!”
The men complied without hesitation, and the Aphrodite pivoted, coming abreast of the other ship. Sophia stood transfixed as the flames crawled across the royal yard. The furled sail took fire like a scroll of paper.
“Volunteers!” Gray lifted a coil of rope from its pin. “Who’ll board her with me? No men with wives or children.”
Levi appeared at his side out of nowhere, strong and silent as ever. He and Gray exchanged nods of agreement.
“I’m in.” O’Shea swung down from the yardarm and dropped to the deck with catlike grace. “Just like old times, eh, Gray?”
Gray shot an amused glance at his brother. “See?”
As the distance between the ships narrowed, the three men tested their ropes.
“I’ll go, too.” Davy pushed to the rail.
“No!” Sophia cried. “Gray, you can’t let him.”
“The ship could suffer my loss easier than most.” The boy stood tall, rolling the sleeves of his tunic up over his elbows. “And I’ve no wife or children, sir.”
“So you haven’t,” Gray said. “All right, then.”
The four men grabbed hold of their ropes and climbed onto the rail, preparing to swing across the gap of churning sea to board the burning ship. No anxiety showed on Gray’s face, only sharpened focus and grim determination. By contrast, Sophia was consumed with fear. She glanced up. The flames had reached the topgallant now. Dread numbed her entire body, and the bitter gale seemed to howl straight through her, whistling through her ribs and chilling her heart. She remembered the captain’s words. There could be fires throughout the ship … A keg of powder, onecask of rum, and …
And he would be gone.
“Gray!” A gust of wind took her choked sob and flung it out to sea. The captain strode forward, reaching for a coil of rope. “If you’re determined to do this fool thing, I’m going with you.”
“No.” Gray’s face was hard. “No men with wives or children.” His gaze darted toward Sophia, then quickly away. If he read the desperate plea in her eyes, he did not acknowledge it. She winced, feeling the meaning of that dismissive glance. What ever she was to him, she was something less than a wife. And he would never allow her to be more. She wasn’t reason enough for him to live.
I don’t want you.
Something inside her splintered and cracked. Sophia wrapped her arms tightly across her chest, as if she could hold the pieces together. Gray turned back to his brother. “Fall back as soon as we’re aboard, you hear? We’ll signal when all’s clear.”
He hoisted his body’s weight on the rope, the powerful brawn of his arms and back straining against the seams of his wet shirt. “The Aphrodite’s yours, Joss. Take care of her for me.”
“Aye, I will.” A knowing look passed between them. “I’ll look after the ship, too.”
Surrender of a Siren (The Wanton Dairymaid Trilogy #2)
Tessa Dare's books
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- Romancing the Duke
- Say Yes to the Marquess (BOOK 2 OF CASTLES EVER AFTER)
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- A Week to Be Wicked (Spindle Cove #2)
- A Lady by Midnight (Spindle Cove #3)
- Beauty and the Blacksmith (Spindle Cove #3.5)
- Any Duchess Will Do (Spindle Cove #4)
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