Swept Away
SWEPT AWAY
Marsha Canham
First published by Dell, November 1999
Copyright 1999 © Marsha Canham
Cover Copyright 2010 © Marsha Canham
ISBN 978-0-9866872-2-8
Published by Marsha Canham
All right reserved. No part of this may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from Marsha Canham.
This Ebook version is dedicated to the memory of the real Auntie Lal.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 20
CHAPTER 21
CHAPTER 22
CHAPTER 23
CHAPTER 24
CHAPTER 25
CHAPTER 26
CHAPTER 27
PROLOGUE
July 13, 1815
The man who had nearly succeeded in bringing the world to its knees sneezed and wiped his hand on the front of his coat. It was cold in front of the open window. The wind was brisk off the sea, laden with the dampness of a week’s worth of raging storms. Something even more ominous lurked out there in the darkness and mist. The riding lights of the British warship Bellerophon could be seen, if one knew where to look, hovering at the mouth of the estuary like a predator crouched in the shadows waiting for its prey.
Napoleon Bonaparte knew where to look. He had been tracking the movements of the warship since she had first been sighted taking up a position in the blockade nearly three hours ago. There was anger in his expression and not a little disdain as he thought of his own navy, never fully recovered after its crushing defeat at Trafalgar some years before.
For a man whose reputation had already assumed legendary proportions, Bonaparte was small in stature, his figure squat, his paunch an ignoble swell over the tight fitting white kerseymere breeches. His hair was fine as silk, reddish in color, his eyes gray and brooding and capable of instilling fear in all who met him. At the moment, dread of becoming the target of one of those piercing glances commanded respect in the half dozen men who stood tense and silent in the room behind him.
“Excellency, it is beginning to rain. You should come away from the window else you take a chill.”
“Do you know the English news sheets refer to me as ‘that Corsican Ogre’,” he mused, dismissing such petty concerns as weather. “They accuse me of treason and urge the Bourbon puppet to demand my execution. Me,” he said with a shake of his head. “Me, the man who saved France from drowning in her own blood and made of her one of the most powerful countries in the world. Now they call for my execution and would make it a public spectacle.”
He clasped his hands behind his back, visibly reining in his temper before he turned and addressed the solemn gathering of officers. “Who do you suppose would dare wield the blade? Louis Capet? He only dares to enter Paris behind the heavy guns of the allied armies. Weak, pompous, cowardly fool. Like his father before him, he can barely execute a bowel movement without assistance.”
“Louis would never dare issue such an order, Excellency,” said the former grand marshal of the French army, Henri-Gratien Bertrand. “He does not have the stomach for it. A cut finger and he pukes his guts on the floor.”
Bonaparte nodded smugly. “Then his brother, perhaps? Now there is a stout fellow, by any measure, with guts enough to unleash a private army of assassins on me. He must feel he is bound to succeed one of these days, must he not, Cipi?”
Franceschi Cipriani pursed his thin lips in an effort to contain a smile. There had been at least thirty failed attempts on Bonaparte’s life over the past decade alone, all of them made at the instigation of the persistent Comte d’Artois. The last devil-for-hire had tossed a bomb at the Emperor’s state carriage as it passed by and had blown the vehicle twenty feet in the air, horses and all. Unfortunately for the erstwhile assassin, the blast had also taken off his legs, but he had lived long enough to be informed that the carriage had been empty, and Napoleon fifty miles away at the time.
Of all the dour faced men crowded around the door, Cipriani was the only one who could afford to smile. He was neither a soldier nor a courtier. He was dressed in gentleman’s clothing now, but at the blink of an eye could appear in stinking rags with several days growth of beard concealing the lean, pointed jaw. A master spy and deadly assassin in his own right, it was Franceschi Cipriani who had discovered that the allies had been planning to remove Napoleon from Elba to an even more remote location, and it had been Cipriani who had made arrangements for his Emperor to escape the island and make his triumphant return to France.
For one hundred days Napoleon had marched boldly across France at the head of an army loyal to the core, eager for revenge. Following the debacle at Waterloo four weeks ago--a battle that could have, should have been won--he had been forced to ride by night down deserted streets and across windswept fields to the small port town of Rochefort, and from there, to seek refuge on the tiny island of Aix, in a grim stone cottage overlooking the mouth of the bay. With the armies of four countries fast on his heels, he had no where left to run, nothing but his anger and contempt to hide behind.
Some of that contempt was directed now at another member of the stone-faced group.
“You have remained remarkably quiet, my bold seahawk. Have you nothing to say?”
The man stood half in the shadows, one broad shoulder leaning against the wall. He was dressed in the elegant clothes of a gentleman, wearing a fine woolen jacket with high molded lapels, an embroidered silk waistcoat worth a year’s soldiering wages and a muslin cravat so white and precisely pleated he might have recently come from an evening at the opera. He was easily the tallest man present, a full hand’s width above Cipriani which made him tower a head and half a shoulder above the stocky Bonaparte. His features were in shadow, but his smile was as white as his stock as he responded to the emperor’s question.
“What would you have me say, Excellency? The Prussian army is a day behind you, the Swedes have the roads to the north blocked, the Spanish guard the south. They would want nothing better than to have you try to fight your way through, thereby removing the need for any puppet king to sign an order for execution.”
“Montholon and Las Cases--” Napoleon paused and tipped his briefly toward the two men standing beside Bertrand “--are convincing in their arguments that I should make for America. The colonials were our allies during their own war with England and would not be hasty to comply with any demands to surrender me.”
“I agree it would be a wise choice, Excellency, but you still have to get there first.” Dark eyes briefly reflected a glitter of candlelight. They were an intense brown, almost the same shade as the thick waves of black hair that curled over his collar. “The Bellerophon is a seventy-four gun ship-of-the-line, manned by the same fighting crew who created havoc at Trafalgar. Onshore, there are guards on every dock, soldiers
in every village, patrols watching every mile of coastline. You could try dressing yourself in rags and hiding away in the bilge of some local fishing vessel, but I warrant even the poorest excuse for a boat is being thoroughly searched. Would you really want to be discovered buried under a pile of fish heads? I shudder to think what the wags who write the news sheets would dub you then.”
The errant curl that fell over Napoleon’s high forehead seemed suddenly darker against the whiteness of his skin as he blanched, offering proof that he had already imagined the ignominy and did not need to hear it put into words. “I have, until recently, worn the Imperial Crown of France, gentlemen. I have no intentions of replacing it with a fisherman’s cap now or ever.”
“But Sire--” one of his minor officers protested, “you cannot simply abide here and do nothing. The British foreign office has spies everywhere. By morning your presence in Aix will be the best known secret in Europe.”
“I am counting on it,” Napoleon said quietly. “And by morning, it will not matter. Lord Wessex will no longer need his legions of spies to inform him of my whereabouts, for he will know precisely where I am at all times. Be assured,” he added, “ there are plans underway to remedy the unfortunate situation we find ourselves in at the moment, but until they can be put into effect, I must once again appear to be the docile, defeated lamb quaking at the thought of slaughter. General Montholon, you will kindly send word to the brave compatriot who stands willing to run the blockade that his services will not be required. Colonel Bertrand, you have dispatched the missive to the captain of the Bellerophon advising him that I am prepared to surrender my sword into his hands?”
“It was delivered an hour ago.”
“It is fitting that tomorrow should be the fourteenth of July,” Napoleon continued. “The very day the Bastille fell to the citizens of France and thus set us on our glorious path to honor. And it will be honor, gentleman--fine English honor that saves us now, for I will convince this British captain that I come to him in peace to kneel at the mercy of the English people. Like Themistocles, the Greek general who was forced into political exile after he defeated the Persians, I seek asylum from my enemies and put myself under the protection of the laws which govern England’s own Prince Regent.”
“Do you really think they will believe you?” The Englishman asked.
“Why would they not? I have been fighting battles and waging wars in one form or another for thirty-five of my forty-six years. I doubt Wellington, with whom I share the same year of birth, has been at it half that length of time, yet he has already declared his desire to live quietly and anonymously in some small village in the English countryside. Whether he does or not, remains to be seen, but he seems determined to put forth the illusion of docility, does he not?”
“Is that what you are doing? Putting forth an illusion?”
It was not Bonaparte but Cipriani whose lips flattened in a slow, malevolent grin. “Surely you do not expect us to tell you all of our secrets, Captain? If we did, they would be poorly kept secrets indeed, would they not?”
Bertrand led the other officers in shifting back several less than subtle paces. It was no secret whatsoever that Cipriani did not trust the English mercenary despite having hired him and his ship to effect the emperor’s escape from Elba. Nor was it a surprise to anyone in the cabin that the Englishman returned the feelings of distrust and animosity tenfold. What astonished them was that both men were still alive. They could only surmise it was the hand of one man who kept them from slashing each other’s throats in the dead of night.
“This is neither the time nor place to see who can piss the farthest,” Bonaparte said. “In fact, all of you may leave me now. I need time alone to compose an appropriately contrite letter to the British captain. Cipi--did you manage to find anything resembling a palatable wine on this godforsaken islet?”
“Will a bottle of your favorite Vin de Constance do?”
Bonaparte dismissed the others with an impatient flick of his wrist. When they were gone, he extended his arm to take the heavy green bottle Cipriani had produced.
“You have never failed me, have you, my lifelong friend?” he mused, lapsing comfortably into the Corsican dialect they often shared when they were alone.
“And I never will,” Cipriani promised. “Let me kill the Englishman now. Tonight. We have no further use for him.”
“Ah, but perhaps we do. I am told the British admiralty has increased the reward for his capture. They want him brought to trial almost as much as they want me. How much of our true plans do you suspect he knows?”
“We have been careful to speak of it only amongst ourselves. In the letter your brother wrote, he did not mention any specific details, though I thought he was somewhat imprudent in mentioning certain people by name. It could--” Cipriani stopped. He was staring at the top of the table. “The letter. Did you move it, Excellency?”
The former Emperor of France turned and scanned the sheaves of documents, maps, dispatches that covered the wooden surface. “No. It must be there somewhere.”
Cipriani started sifting through the papers, scattering some carelessly on the floor, but his search proved futile. “It is gone.” He stopped again and looked up. “He was standing by the door when we all came in, but when I called your valet to fetch your surtout--” his eyes flicked back to the side of the table-- “he was standing here. He could have taken it. He must have taken it.”
“Oh, come now, Cipi. In a room full of my most trusted officers?”
Cipriani’s cold, hard gaze levelled on his master. “I warrant he could pluck the eyes out of snake and leave the serpent none the wiser.”
“Then you had best kill him,” Bonaparte agreed, his fist tightening around the neck of the bottle. By sheer dint of will he refrained from smashing it down and shattering the glass into a thousand pieces. “Kill him and get that letter back, for there can be no room for error now, Cipi. Not this close to our ultimate triumph!"
CHAPTER ONE
July 24, 1815
She thought he was dead. There was nothing to indicate any life in the half-naked body that was being gently nudged to and fro in the shallow water of the tidal pool. The cuts and scrapes that marred the broad slabs of muscle across his back and shoulders were a bloodless raw pink, the skin itself was yellowed as old tallow. He was dressed only in thin linen underdrawers which ended at the knee and were secured about the waist with a slackened drawstring. He might as well have been completely naked, however, for the linen had been rendered nearly transparent by the water and though her eyes did not linger overlong, she could plainly see the sculpted curves of his buttocks, the shallow dimples in the small of his back.
With a threatening whoosh, the surf swirled forward, clattering across the sand and shingle to surround the still form. The blue-gray lips opened with the fresh incursion of salt water and it was there, in the expelled rush, she saw the silvery foam of bubbles.
Annaleah Fairchilde gasped and jumped quickly back. Her gaze darted around the jumbled rocks on either side of the body as if she half expected to see a dozen more corpses scattered among the boulders, but the beach was deserted as always. A treacherous fog had blanketed the coastline through the night; the last of it was just burning off in the early morning sun, but she had not heard any alarms to signify a ship blown off course, nor any church bells tolling to call out the villagers to help with a shipwreck.
Yet the body must have come off a ship. Torbay had become an important seaport during the two decades of hostilities with France and the entrance lay just to the east beyond the jutting promontory of Berry Head. There were always vessels in these waters--along with periodic stories of a body washing ashore that had not been properly stitched into a weighted shroud.
But this one was alive.
She looked down again. Thick, wet strands of dark hair lay across his face, obscuring most of his features from view. His eyes were closed, the long black lashes spiked against his cheeks. His upper torso
was broad and well-defined with muscle, his thighs lean and hard as those belonging to the men she had seen climbing nimbly up the tall masts of sailing ships. The one hand that lay palm up in the sand was square, the pads of the fingers white with waterlogged calluses; the other was clenched in a fist, the arm folded under his head. It was this meager bit of leverage that had probably saved him from drowning.
If it had saved him.
Annaleah glanced over her shoulder, the panic rising in her chest again, this time because she was alone on the beach. The cove was small and isolated, the beach less than a half mile in length and curved around water that was too shallow for anchorage, too turbulent beyond the breakers for fishermen to set their nets. The inlet itself was ringed by steep limestone cliffs, the cracks and crags populated by colonies of screaming gulls, most of which were in the air now, circling in white flashes above as if they too were waiting to see if this tempting morsel of fleshy driftwood would live or die.
Widdicombe House sat at the top of the cliffs, accessed by a steep path that had been worn into the face of the rock by a few thousand years of high winds and blowing sands. It was not a conceivable thought, even if Annaleah had been a man, that she could manipulate the dead weight of a body to the top on her own. She would have to go back for help, although she strongly doubted, in the time it would take her to reach the house and tell them what she had discovered, that the sailor would be there when she returned.
The tide was inching higher up the shingle even as she took another step back to avoid staining her shoes with salt water. Further out, beyond the jagged breakers, the surface of the sea was a calm, undulating sheet of liquid pewter beneath the hazed sky, but she knew that calm could be deceiving. Many a ship had made the mistake of sailing too close to shore and having their hulls cracked open when the currents pulled them into the rocks.