The Pirate Hunter. Laura Martin
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‘I know you have a kind heart and would risk your life to ensure a stranger doesn’t drown.’
Mia turned away from him.
Will leaned forward in his chair. She had a sadness about her this evening.
‘Anything else?’
He shook his head.
‘When I was captured I was given a choice; help you or be executed the very next day.’
Will felt a knot forming in his stomach. He might have only known her for a short time, but the idea of Mia swinging from a noose was far too disturbing.
‘It wasn’t a hard decision to make.’
Will sat silently, wondering where she was going with this.
‘They didn’t ask what I knew or how I could help you, they just told me I would not be killed if I came with you to hunt my brother.’
She paused and closed her eyes.
‘I didn’t tell them at the time because I didn’t want to die, but I’ve got no idea where he is.’
Will leaned forward in his chair and smiled gently at her.
‘Of course you don’t.’
‘I don’t,’ Mia said quickly, ‘I’m not lying.’
‘I know.’
‘I’m not lying,’ she repeated.
‘I believe you.’
She frowned and studied his face.
‘Why?’ she asked.
‘Why do I believe you?’
She nodded.
‘Because why would you know where your brother is?’
She looked perplexed.
‘When was the last time you saw him?’
‘Four or five years ago.’
‘And when was the last time you heard from him?’
‘I got a letter with some money about eighteen months ago.’
‘So why would I think you’d know where he was?’
‘But...’ Mia started.
Will leaned back in the chair and allowed her a moment of confusion. She looked beautiful in the glow of the candle and he imagined taking her into his arms and laying her down on the bed beneath him. Hurriedly Will pushed the thought from his mind and tried to focus on his mission.
‘Why am I here, then?’ she asked.
‘You might not know where your brother is, but you do know him. I can obtain information easily enough about his whereabouts, but I can’t capture him, outthink him, if I don’t know how his mind works.’
Mia sat digesting this piece of information for a while. She looked so innocent, sitting on his bed with her legs crossed underneath her. Her hand was moving backwards and forwards across the covers, an unconscious movement whilst she thought about what he was saying. By candlelight she looked young, too young to be embroiled in such dangerous affairs.
Will felt a protectiveness towards her he hadn’t felt for anyone in a long time. She was vulnerable and alone and out of her depth. He wanted to shield her from what was to come and guard her from the evils of the world.
His other feelings for her weren’t quite so noble. The kiss they’d shared on the beach might have stemmed from delirium on his part, but he couldn’t forget the softness of her lips, the sweet taste of her mouth or the way her body had moulded to his. He was trying to keep professional and businesslike, but every time he saw her he found it difficult not to take her in his arms and relive that moment when they had collapsed on the sand.
Each time he tried to force his mind back to the business of hunting Del Torres his thoughts seemed to wander instead to Mia. He wondered what it was about her that piqued his interest so much. He’d known beautiful women before, often resisted their advances. Will had always prided himself on being able to control his passions. It was in his nature to be on his own—indeed, as his friends had started to settle down and marry he had always assumed he would not have that domesticated life. Despite all that, he very much wanted to reach out and touch Mia, draw her to him and do wicked things to her.
Suddenly he needed to get out of the cabin. It was far too small and Mia sitting on his bed was far too tempting.
‘Shall we get some air?’ Will asked. ‘It’s a little hot in here.’
Mia shrugged, slipped off the bed and followed him to the door.
The sea was so calm it was almost flat. The wind had dropped and the ship was barely moving. It was a complete contrast to two nights previous when the storm had struck The White Rose. Had it only been two days? It felt so much longer. No wonder he was so weary, his muscles still protesting every time he moved.
‘Tell me about your childhood, Mia,’ Will said, trying to distract himself from his inappropriate desires by getting back to work.
‘What do you want to know?’
‘Everything.’
Mia took a few seconds before she started speaking, looking out to the horizon as if remembering better times. He saw her hesitate and for a moment wondered if she was going to refuse.
‘My father was a sailor, or so my mother said. I never knew him. It was always just Jorge and Mama and me.’
Mia pushed a stray strand of hair back behind her ear before continuing.
‘Mama was born a slave—her parents were brought here from Africa many years ago. She worked on a sugar plantation on Martinique, but when she was about my age she escaped with my father’s help. They came to live in Barbados together to start a new life.’
‘So what happened to your father?’ Will asked.
‘Rum,’ she said sadly. ‘He was found lying face up on the docks when I was five hours old, choked on his own vomit. Probably died at the same time I came into the world.’
‘So your mother raised you and your brother alone?’
It was a very different childhood to Will’s. He’d been privileged and pampered and treated to every little luxury. Some elements resonated with him, however; he’d grown up never knowing his mother, the child of a kindly but lonely man. And he’d had his older brother, Richard, to guide him through his early years just like Mia must have had her brother.
‘She did what she could. There were always a lot of men around, but what else could a runaway slave do to make money?’
Will couldn’t imagine such a childhood.
‘Jorge