The Heart of an Earl (A Box of Draupnir Novel Book 1)
Page 1
The Heart of an Earl
A Box of Draupnir Novel
A Regency Romance
K.J. Jackson
Copyright © K.J. Jackson, 2020
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, Living or dead, is coincidental. All rights reserved. No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any forms, or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from the author.
First Edition: April 2020
ISBN: 978-1-940149-43-1
~
http://www.kjjackson.com
~
Never miss a new release, freebie or sale! Sign up for my VIP Email List. You’ll get my FREE starter library when you sign up—three full-length books!
~
More of my Books
Historical Romance
If you haven’t already, be sure to check out my other historical romances—each is a stand-alone story and they can be read in any order (here they are in order of publication):
Stone Devil Duke, Hold Your Breath, currently free!
Unmasking the Marquess, Hold Your Breath
My Captain, My Earl, Hold Your Breath
Worth of a Duke, Lords of Fate
Earl of Destiny, Lords of Fate
Marquess of Fortune, Lords of Fate
Vow, Lords of Action
Promise, Lords of Action
Oath, Lords of Action
Of Valor & Vice, Revelry’s Tempest
Of Sin & Sanctuary, Revelry’s Tempest
Of Risk & Redemption, Revelry’s Tempest
To Capture a Rogue, A Logan’s Legends Novella, Revelry’s Tempest
To Capture a Warrior, A Logan’s Legends Novella, Revelry’s Tempest
The Devil in the Duke, Revelry’s Tempest
The Iron Earl, Valor of Vinehill
The Wolf Duke, Valor of Vinehill
The Steel Rogue, Valor of Vinehill
The Heart of an Earl, Box of Draupnir
The Blood of a Baron, Box of Draupnir
Paranormal Romance
Flame Moon #1, currently free!
Triple Infinity, Flame Moon #2
Flux Flame, Flame Moon #3
Dedication
—For my favorite Ks
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 }
{ Epilogue }
{ Chapter 1 }
Waters off of Barbados
August 1814
Home.
Home to his wife. To his child.
The child he never met, the child born seven years ago. A boy. A girl. He didn’t know.
All of that—all of that time—robbed from him. Ripped away from him by battles that bloody well weren’t his to fight.
Desmond Phillips stared out at the waves cresting, salt spray cutting into the air with the brisk wind that had caught the sails. Just beyond the tip of Barbados, the land retreated behind the ship.
Good riddance.
He spun to the railing behind him, bending over as his right fist clenched, the mangled knuckle of his ring finger bobbing awkwardly under his taut bright white skin. The knuckle that had never mended properly.
His look lifted and he forced his stare on the horizon—on eastward. Forward. He needed to concentrate on that. Forward to home.
Out there, only weeks away, his family was waiting for him.
“Lord Troubant, Lord Troubant.” A cabin boy called his name, dodging busy sailors as he ran across the main deck to the forecastle where Des stood.
The lad waved a letter sealed with black wax as he ran. With the hop of youth, the boy scampered up the ladder onto the forecastle deck and skidded to a stop in front of Des.
“What is it?” Des stepped away from the railing.
“For you, m’lord. Captain Youngling told me to give it to ye. They found it in the bundle from the gov’ner’s office.”
Des’s eyebrows drew together. He’d been pressed into servitude on an American warship for the last seven years. No one was sending him mail.
“You are certain?”
The boy nodded. “Captain said the gov’ner’s note mentioned it had been in his vault.” He thrust the letter out to Des.
With a nod, Des took the folded missive with his name on it from the boy’s grip.
Weathered, the edges were crinkled, the paper crisping during the days—probably years—that it had sat in the vault. But the seal was still in place, uncracked. “Thank you…your name?”
“Georgie, sir.”
Des managed a forced smile, the motion foreign to his lips. “Thank you, Georgie.”
The boy nodded and scampered down to the main deck, disappearing toward the captain’s quarters. Captain Youngling had had the lad running from place to place since they had set sail—too many passengers and not enough cabin boys to serve them.
Des looked at the cream vellum clutched in his hand. The seal. Black. Insignia of a wolf head imbedded deep into the wax.
Wolfbridge.
His brother-in-law had to be wondering where in the hell he was. He’d probably been chasing after Des for the last seven years and had sent letters to all corners of the empire.
He was coming.
Finally.
Home.
The very first thing Des had done once he’d stepped foot into Bridgetown was to find a ship leaving for England. Off one ship and onto the next. Luck had been on his side for the first time in forever, a passenger ship leaving Bridgetown within the same day on the tide.
Des hadn’t even had time to eat. One quick stop at the governor’s office, new clothes, and then onto the Primrose.
Des cracked the black seal, a shake setting into his hand. He’d hoped against hope that they hadn’t declared him dead. That Corentine hadn’t found a new husband. A new father for their child.
But she was beautiful and full of life and it was only right that she would have moved on with her life. He’d known when he married her that she would always catch other men’s eyes. Her sparkling wit alone had him constantly fighting off other suitors. It was why they had married so young—he couldn’t stand the thought of travelling to the East Indies and leaving her behind with the jackals.
Des sucked in a deep breath, the thick humid air sponging into his lungs. He had to steel himself against that possibility. His wife with another man. Wolfbridge could very well be reporting that eventuality to him.
He unfolded the letter, focusing on Wolfbridge’s scrawling script.
Dated: June 1807
Des—Where in the hell are you?
Simple. Direct.
The tone changed.
I am devastated, as I know you will be as well. Corentine has died in childbirth.
His b
reath, his heart stilled. His eyes running over the line again and again and again.
No.
Not his beautiful wife. Not his love. Not Corentine. She couldn’t be dead. No.
No.
His legs dropped out from under him, the world spinning.
He staggered to the railing, collapsing against it, sliding down to the wood planks of the deck, the letter crushing in his hand.
He was on his way back. Home. Finally. On his way back to her.
And she was dead.
Pain swept through him in a tidal wave, crushing, suffocating him to the deck until there was nothing but numbness in his bones, in his heart, in his soul.
Nothing but a dull buzz in his ears filling his brain.
He didn’t hear the first canon shot.
Or the second.
Or the third.
It wasn’t until a sailor running past him tripped over Des’s leg and his cutlass clattered to the deck by Des’s hand that Des looked up. Slowly. His eyes unable to focus.
Panic—panic on the sailor’s face as he shuffled onto his hands and knees, the fear of the devil approaching in his eyes. The sailor scrambled to get the handle of his cutlass back into his hand and he scampered to his feet.
Des’s eyes bleary, he watched in a haze as the man leapt down onto the main deck.
A boom thundered in his ears just as wood splintered in the air to his left, the railing exploding.
Des jerked, his hand shielding his face as he spun around onto his knees.
Bloody Judas.
A schooner. So close, so fast there could only be one purpose for it.
Pirates.
Hooks swung out, latching onto the railings of the Primrose, pulling it closer. Closer. Ropes dangling. Men swinging across. Planks lowering into place.
The crew of the pirate ship advanced across the gap of water, cutlasses swinging, daggers flashing, pistols firing.
Grabbing what little was still sturdy of the wooden railing, Des yanked himself to his feet, looking to the main deck.
Hell.
Men were going down all over the deck. Sailors. Captain Youngling.
Des’s hands ran across his waist.
Nothing. No steel.
He’d put down his blades and walked away from them the moment they landed in Bridgetown. He’d thought he’d been done. Done for good.
And now he had nothing on his person to defend himself, the ship. Nothing.
His vision came into focus. There were plenty of blood-splattered blades scattered across the decks with owners no longer alive to carry them.
It didn’t matter now. Nothing mattered. Corentine was dead.
He moved down the ladder onto the main deck, thick with smoke and the last clanks of resistant steel from the Primrose’s men.
Screaming. Women’s high-pitched squeals as the passengers from below were dragged out onto the main deck.
The blackguards were rounding them into a line on the far railing, going through their pockets.
Through the thick of the pirates and smoke, Des’s look dipped to the boards of the deck and he counted the skirts and the impossibly shiny boots, lined in a row. Twelve women. Four men.
On the opposite side of the deck, Des slipped alongside the main mast and the bodies strewn about.
More screams as the air cleared. Crying. The pirates huddled in a wide arc around the remaining passengers as a man—tall and filled with pomp—walked along the row of passengers, looking them over one by one. The pirate captain, Des could only assume.
Des leaned forward, his hand outstretched to a cutlass wedged into the wood of the mast. He couldn’t take all of the pirates out. But he could take at least four. Maybe five if he was quick and lucky.
Four or five might give the remaining men on board a chance. Maybe.
“What move do ye think to make, ye fine nob?” A black-toothed snake of a sailor appeared to his left, his long dagger full on Des’s throat.
Damn his new coat. Damn that he’d stopped to buy proper clothes before stepping onto the ship. Damn that he’d wanted to be presentable for Corentine.
Where a moment ago he’d been ready to have a blade run him through, self-preservation appeared in full force and Des’s palms whipped up as he leaned away from the dagger at his neck. He eyed the snake sailor.
He could take him. A spin to the right and a swinging heel to the man’s knee and the brute would go down. Des knew he was that quick. But the line of pirates standing along the deck—swords at the ready—behind this brute made Des reconsider.
The pirates had dispatched the defenses of the Primrose in short order. Too short, for the rabid looks in some of the men’s eyes. They were looking for more sport and one more death would mean nothing to them.
“Into the line with the rest, ye coward.”
The dagger at his neck prodding him along, Des moved to the railing, stepping into line with the rest of the passengers.
Des glanced over his shoulder at the sea lapping along the side of the ship.
Steal the rest of the valuables and then toss them over one by one?
His hands clasped behind his back, the captain strolled back and forth along the line of women and the few men interspersed among them. All the remaining men were older and none of them were in any capacity—by age or body type—able to fight.
The captain, a tall man, but not wiry or fat—with muscle under his red coat, Des presumed—had a short black beard that made him look years older than what his eyes revealed. He ambled along the line of passengers again, moving closer to Des, but then he stopped three people away.
Directly in front of a young girl—eighteen at the most.
“Yer name, lass.” A good foot and a half taller than the auburn-haired girl, he leaned over her, the raw edge of his voice digging into her, making her cringe.
“No, not my daughter.” The woman next to the girl grabbed her daughter about her shoulders, trying to shove her child behind her.
The back of the captain’s ring-filled fingers cut across of the woman’s face without warning, sending the mother flailing to the deck.
“Mama. Mama,” the girl screamed, collapsing to her knees, her arms and body wrapping around her mother, shielding her from the captain as best she could.
The captain had none of it, grabbing the girl’s upper arm and ripping her up from her mother. “Yer name, lass.”
The girl looked to her right at the portly man standing next to her. “Papa—”
The captain gripped her mouth between his thumb and forefinger, dragging her face to his. “No. No papa. No mama. Yer name. To me. Ye look at me.”
Her father made no movement, his eyes on the boards of the deck.
Lily-livered coward.
But the girl met the pirate’s stare. Silent. Challenging.
About to get herself killed.
Des jumped to his left, wedging himself between the girl and the captain, breaking the man’s hold on her, his voice a growl. “She’s just a child. Pick another. Pick none. She’s just a child.”
The captain shifted his look to Des, having to look slightly upward to meet Des’s eyes.
For a long second his cold dark eyes, a gateway to hell, seared into Des’s soul. He sneered. “She’s a full-grown woman. And yer a full-grown fool.”
The swing of a boot from one of the pirates came from Des’s left side, knocking his left knee inward just as the heavy hilt of a sword banged into his temple from the other side. Des dropped to the ground and the captain’s heel was on his neck before he could even think to breathe.
“What’s this?” The captain chuckled to himself and leaned over, the pressure of his boot cutting off all of Des’s air.
“What ye got in yer hand, fine sir?” The captain twisted his boot, grinding the heel into Des’s chin. He plucked out the letter from Des’s grip.
Folding it open, the captain stood straight, his boot keeping Des in place on the deck as he smoothed the wrinkles from the
vellum far above Des’s eyes.
Air, he was losing air. No air. Losing light. Black spots dotting in his eyes—expanding, shifting.
An acerbic chuckle cut through the air, but distant. So distant from his ears.
Des twisted his head upward, his hand stretching up toward the paper.
“Listen to this, ye bastards.” The captain waved the paper in the air to his crew. “It says his wife died.” The captain cackled, a vicious raw bark that echoed across the silent waters. “That’s a kick.” He laughed again. “This one—this one we leave alive, boys.”
The captain looked down at Des for a long second, his top lip snarled high, then his head snapped up and he glanced about at his crew still going through the pockets of the passengers standing along the railing. “Be sure to jab him on the way off, though.”
The captain leaned forward, his full weight on Des’s neck.
All air in his lungs gone. Crushed.
The girl set her hand on the captain’s chest, her voice shrill. “Stop. Stop. I’ll go. I’ll go willingly. Just leave the man be.”
The captain stared at her for a long second, then grabbed the back of the girl’s head, yanking her over Des’s body to him. “I’ll know yer name, girl.”
He kicked off of Des’s neck and dragged the girl across the deck.
The last image Des saw before his world slipped into blackness—the swish of the girl’s peach-colored skirts along the deck, her boots struggling to not step forward.
Resistance.
Even though she’d just promised willingness. Resistance.
Resistance was going to get her killed.
{ Chapter 2 }
Six years later, September 1820
West Indies
Steel cracked close to his temple. Too close.
He shoved up on his blade, sending the attacker stumbling. Battling men back from Captain Folback’s side was always tenuous—the captain liked his red coat, which made him all the better a target in a skirmish.
With a heave of breath, Des ducked the blade coming at him from a second attacker and swung out his left hand with his dagger, slicing the man directly in front of him across the thighs. The brute doubled over and Des brought a knee up into his skull. The man dropped, dead weight to the boards of the deck.