Beautiful Rene+a7e d'Anton forms a risky, passionate alliance with Captain Starlight, a notorious highwayman who represents her only hope in a dangerous game of chance with a fortune in heirloom rubies at stake. Original.
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Marsha Canham has written nine historical romances for Dell, including the classic Scottish historicals The Pride of Lions and The Blood of Roses. She has received numerous writing awards and lives outside Toronto, Canada.
night--the dark, dangerous highwayman who stole her heart....<br><br>"It was a fine night for treachery, dark with a pale moon rising...." <br><br>Like a wraith he appeared in the Coventry night, the notorious highwayman called Captain Starlight. Renée d'Anton watched, breathless, as the cloaked figure commanded, "Stand and deliver!" and her coach shuddered to a halt. Little did he know Renée had come in desperation to meet him. For the dark, seductive highwayman was her only hope in a perilous game of chance....<br> <br>She was pure temptation, challenging Tyrone Hart to steal a set of heirloom rubies and name his price. He couldn't resist her. So he agreed to risk his life for the fiery beauty--to recover the jewels that would free her from an arranged marriage and an unspeakable threat. But first Renée had to win his trust--even as she ignited passions that seduced him out of the s
The horses were maintaining a comfortable canter when they passed over the log. Being unsprung, the body of the coach jumped as high as the wheels when they struck, rocking back and up then lurching violently forward, twice in rapid succession. As expected, the tremendous cracking sound of the rotted wood breaking made the driver draw back on the reins and put his foot to the brake handle. The matched pair pranced to a stop and Dudley waited until the coachman had climbed down from the box--not a quick job, as it turned out, for he took his sweet time and seemed much put out by the inconvenience. He had one gloved hand braced on the front wheel for support and was bent over, squinting at the undercarriage of the coach, when Dudley emerged from the shadows by the side of the road.
"I bid ye good evenin', sar. 'Ad a wee mishap, 'ave ye?"
His greeting, delivered with his best cockney accent, had no effect. The horses were stamping and snorting, and the driver was half covered by the body of the coach, poking at the axle to check for damage.
Dudley leaned forward and lifted the bottom edge of the curtain-mask that now covered most of his face. "Evenin', sar! 'Avin' a bit o' trouble are ye?"
This time the driver's head came up sharply enough to make contact with the edge of the wood frame.
"Mary and Joseph--" He backed away from the coach, his hands rubbing the top of his head. "There is no need to shout, my good man. I may be old, but I am not deaf!"
Dudley straightened in his saddle and raised his pistol so the driver had no trouble seeing it in the yellow spill of light from the coach lamp. "Not blind either, I trust?"
With fastidious care, the driver tugged the front of his livery to smooth the wrinkles. Tall and thin, he had a face as lined as a prune, bearing an expression that bespoke too many years of serving the nobility to tolerate impudence from a mere brigand.
"I assure you my eyesight is more than adequate." He glared at the gun, then glared at the masked highwayman with equal disdain. "So this is what you are about, is it? Robbing honest travelers in the dead of night?"
"Aye, that it is," Dudley admitted candidly, and raised his voice again for the benefit of those inside the coach. "An' such a fine night, too, I'd like t' invite all the 'onest folk t' step down an' get a ripe lungful o' fresh, 'eathen air. Lively now, one at a time."
The pale blur of a face appeared at the window. A moment passed while Dudley's figure came under harsh scrutiny, then the unmistakable sound of a softly muttered curse.
"Mon Dieu, this cannot be him."
The strongly accented pronouncement took Dudley briefly by surprise, delivered as it was by a distinctly feminine voice.
"'Appens I might be," he answered, increasing the gruffness in his voice. "'Appens I might not, dependin' on 'oo ye were expectin'. Either way, I've a gun in my 'and an' a finger willin' t' pull the trigger, so when I say "stand an' deliver' I'd be quick as spit t' do as yer told!"
The blur remained at the window a few seconds longer than Dudley found comfortable before a second whisper prompted the driver to turn the latch and open the door. He held out a gloved hand to assist a cloaked and hooded figure disembark one wary step at a time, dragging a handful of carefully gathered skirts in her wake. She had her back to the light so that Dudley could see nothing other than the bell shape of her hood and cloak, but there was no mistaking the richness of the silk garment.
"Frenchie, eh? 'Eard tell' that them o' ye what escaped sneezin' in th' basket brought away 'arf th' crown jewels stitched in yer 'ems."
"Sneezing in the basket? Qu'est-ce qu'il dit?"
The question was directed in a low whisper at the driver, but Dudley answered. "'Ad yer 'ead lopped off. Like this--" He held up his left hand to display the stub of a pinky finger. "Felt the kiss o' ma-dam gill-o-teen. Aye, an' I truly 'ope you an' yer friends brung a fine selection with ye tonight." He chuckled and steadied his aim on the coach door. "Rest o' ye now: Out ye come, one at a time, 'ands where I can see 'em."
"There is no one else," the woman said with an exasperated sigh. "I assure you I am quite alone."
"Alone? Ye're travelin' the Chester 'pike in th' middle o' th' night . . . alone?"
"I was told . . . that is, I was led to believe . . ." She stopped and seemed to reconsider what she had been about to say, and ended up expelling a huff of misted breath instead. "But I can see I was sadly misled. You cannot possibly be the one they call "Capitaine Clair d'Etoile.'"
"Eh? Cap'n 'oo?"
"Captain Starlight. I was led to believe he might be out on a night such as this." She paused and glanced up at the smeared disc of the moon. "I paid an outrageous sum for this information, but I can see now I was merely being played for the fool."
"I did warn you it would be a waste of time, mad'moiselle," the driver said, his hands clasped primly behind his back. "But as usual . . ."
"Yes, yes." Another puff of breath marked the woman's disappointment. "You warned me, and I did not listen."
Dudley raised his gun and scratched his jaw with the snout. "'Old up a minute 'ere. Are ye sayin' ye paid someone t' tell ye where t' go so's ye could get robbed?"
The driver provided the answer with a righteous sniff. "I advised mad'moiselle most emphatically against it, warning her she was just throwing good coin after bad, for what manner of highwayman advertises where and when he will be stalking a particular road? Indeed, this so-called Captain Starlight certainly would not have been able to elude capture for as long as he has if every unwashed jackanapes raising a tankard knew his business."
"And so he would not," came an amused voice from the shadows behind them. "Nonetheless he would be extremely interested to know where this information was purchased and from whom."
The driver and the woman both whirled around to stare at the shifting layers of mist. Even Dudley was somewhat startled, for he had not expected Tyrone to reveal himself without due provocation. Now he seemed to materialize like a ghostly specter out of the blackness at the rear of the coach, with nothing to lend horse or rider substance save for glints of light reflected off the stallion's bridle and the gold foliate work on the brace of leveled snaphaunces.
"Capitaine Clair d'Etoile," the woman whispered.
*
There was a lengthy pause, time enough for the mist to settle around the stallion's legs again, before Tyrone offered a slight bow. "At your service, mam'selle. Did I hear correctly: You have been looking for me?"
She continued to stare, for so long he was forced to gently prompt her again.
"Oh. Yes, m'sieur. Yes--" She took a halting step forward, her hand pressed over her breast as if to keep her heart in place. "I must speak with you, m'sieur. On a matter of some importance."
Dudley glanced nervously over both shoulders. "I don't like it, Cap'n. Don't like it a-tall."
His features masked behind the raised collar of his coat, Tyrone surveyed the shadows on either side of the road, searching for any sign of movement. He tuned his hearing to the forest and the hills, trying to catch the accidental nicker of a horse or the snap of a twig beneath a boot, but if it was some ingenious new trap set by...
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