Captive

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by Heather Graham




  SAVAGE…

  He moved. Striding toward her, where she lay.

  She leaped up at last, standing defensively beside the bed. But it made no difference. He reached out for her, caught her wrist, wrenched her into his arms. His chest was bare and she felt the fevered heat of it burning through the thin white fabric of her nightdress.

  “You’ve no right,” she began brokenly. “You can’t come here like this—”

  But he had. And he didn’t speak a word, just captured her face between his two palms, found her lips with his own. Forceful, passionate.

  Savage …

  “You were just in my room,” he told her huskily. “What did you come for?”

  “To say good-bye,” she whispered.

  “No. The truth.”

  “I came …”

  “For me. For this…” His mouth covered hers again. Demanding, heated, passionate, undeniable.

  Give a gift to yourself or someone you love…

  A Magical

  Christmas

  Heather

  Graham

  On sale in October in a beautiful Topaz hardcover edition. Be sure to look for it at your favorite store and enjoy an additional special bonus gift of a free paperback of your choice with the purchase of A Magical Christmas

  Heather

  Graham

  CAPTIVE

  A TOPAZ BOOK

  TOPAZ

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Books USA Inc., 375 Hudson Street,

  New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

  Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane.

  London W8 5TZ, England

  Penguin Books Australia Ltd. Ringwood,

  Victoria. Australia

  Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue,

  Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2

  Penguin Books (N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road,

  Auckland 10, New Zealand

  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices:

  Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England

  First published by Topaz, an imprint of Dutton Signet,

  a division of Penguin Books USA Inc.

  First Printing, August, 1996

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Copyright © Heather Graham Pozzessere, 1996

  All rights reserved

  EISBN: 9781101576052

  Topaz Man photo © Charles William Bush

  REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA

  Printed in the United States of America

  Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  BOOKS ARE AVAILABLE AT QUANTITY DISCOUNTS WHEN USED TO PROMOTE PRODUCTS OR SERVICES, FOR INFORMATION PLEASE WRITE TO PREMIUM MARKETING DIVISION. PENGUIN BOOKS USA INC., 375 HUDSON STREET. NEW YORK. NEW YORK 10014.

  If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”

  To Kate and Chris Ryan, Linda and Dean Ryan, Sharon Spiak and Carl Litwin, and Kathryn Falk and Kenneth Rubin—thanks for lobster at Chum-ley’s, steak at Le Bar Bar, brown beer at Jekyll & Hyde, coin-op machine parties, and so many other great times. Thanks for making business pleasure, and for giving me one more reason to be so very grateful for what I do for a living.

  CAPTIVE

  Table of Content

  Prologue

  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

  Chapter 28

  Epilogue

  Prologue

  The Hostage

  The Florida Territory

  Early fall, 1837

  She was dead. Almost dead. So close to dead that she could nearly taste the metallic silver of the blade that threatened her throat, feel the hot stickiness and choke on the pulsing red spill of her own blood …

  But then a harsh, deep cry went out, shattering the air. The warrior about to murder her paused. The blade did not touch her throat. The cry, the shout of command that had broken through the carnage, had been so fierce that it stilled even the jubilant sounds of pillage, murder, and glory from the savages who had so recently won their battle and now set upon their victims, some stealing rings and trinkets, some giving the coup de grace to maimed and anguished men, some seeking murder, some seeking scalps.

  The shouted cry stopped them all. It had all been cacophony; the day was suddenly and incredibly still. Teela stared up at the warrior, who seemed to have frozen in motion. A fierce warrior, one with blunt-cut ink black hair, an all but naked bear-greased body, and mahogany eyes that impaled her with hatred One who had wanted her life. She stared back at him, hating him equally.

  Enough. She didn’t know quite what was going on—why the sudden ringing command of one warrior should stop this carnage—but she had endured enough. She’d not been part of a U.S. Army war party. She had only been on her way to leave this savage place. So savage, even in its beauty. Even now, as the sun fell, the sky was streaked with a rainbow of golden colors, yellows, oranges, crimson. The sun would fall soon, and the moon and the stars would rise and cool breezes would blow away the heat.

  And she would most probably still die as the darkness blanketed the wild, raw, beautiful land …

  Perhaps she was in this wretched danger because most of her escort had been chosen from men who had often served beneath her stepfather—hardened, ruthless soldiers who had prowled these swamps for endless months now, and battled the Seminoles and others on their own wild lands. Not perhaps—most certainly it was so. Few whites were hated by the Indians as much as Michael Warren. That hatred extended to the men who served him.

  And, so it seemed, to his daughter.

  And perhaps she knew full well in her heart that the soldiers had often been as cruel and rapacious as any “red” man could be. Perhaps she could not even blame the Indians for their hatred of her father and anything and anyone that he had touched.

  But she had brought them no harm. And a few of the men on this escort service had been nothing more than green boys, too young, too innocent, to deserve such a death in the wilderness. Dear God, she did not deserve such a death in the wilderness!

  “Bastard!” she cried suddenly to the warrior who still held her by the waves of her hair. She kicked into his gut and groin with all of her strength, desperate to be freed from him, even if it would be for nothing more than the last few seconds in which she might draw breath.

  He gave out a cry. A furious cry of deep masculine pain, and to her relief and fleeting pleasure, his hand eased its death grip from her hair as he doubled over with pain.

  She tried to rise from the place where she had fallen against a cypress. Tried to run. But the Indian was screaming again, reaching for her. Her arm was caught, and she was thrown back to the ground. The brave’s knife,
already deep, dark red with the life’s blood of so many of the men who had fallen around her, was rising above her breast.

  Then that powerful voice of command that had stilled the action of the massacre before rang out again. Even as she blinked and gasped for air, Teela saw that the muscled warrior was wrenched from atop her. She didn’t dare wonder why. She rolled over, struggled to her knees and to her feet, and started to run again. She wouldn’t die without fighting, without trying.

  Fingers tangled into the length of her hair. She cried out in agony as she was determinedly dragged back. She struggled fiercely, catching hold of her hair yet not managing to free it from the firm grasp of that large bronzed hand. Even as she tried to kick and flail again, she found herself spun around, plucked up by the waist, and tossed back to the ground. She thought, fighting hysteria, that she was back where she started.

  No. This was worse. Much worse.

  For this man now straddled her, capturing her wrists, pinning them to the ground high above her head with the use of just one of his wickedly long-fingered hands. She was blinded by the blanket of sun-torched auburn hair that fell in a tangled sheath over her face. Twisting brought the merciless pressure of his thighs closer about her hips. Each gasp for breath, every effort to scream, all but caused her to choke and strangle upon her own hair.

  Then it was swept from her face. She felt those fingers stroking her cheeks, sweeping away the wild and tangled strands. She opened her mouth to scream, and yet the sound never left her throat, and for shattering moments, still moments, moments in which she could feel or hear nothing but the pounding of her own heart, she stared into the eyes that seemed to pierce into her and through her, pinning her to the ground with every bit as much strength as the arms and legs that held her so fiercely….

  They were blue eyes. Shockingly, vibrantly blue. A blue that could burn cobalt with anger, lighten like a summer’s sky with laughter. A blue that had haunted, compelled, fascinated, and drawn her before, perhaps for the very bronze of the face they shone from within.

  Running Bear.

  They had a name for him here in the dark green shadows and dangerous rivers of grass in the swamplands. They had a name for him among his people.

  One that fitted him, one that had become his on the day he had left childhood behind within his tribe and taken the black drink. It was a fitting name for one who would be both fleet and graceful and powerful as well. She knew about him because she had made a point of knowing about him; her fascination had been complete. Today he was half naked, clad in doeskin breeches, silver necklaces, hide boots, and nothing more. The fantastic, ripple-muscled strength of his chest and shoulders was plainly visible. He wasn’t heavy; she was certain that he would have shared his portion of food with any man, woman, or child of his people in need, but despite that, the raw force used in his expeditions through the land had apparently kept him honed like a razor, and enemy or not, white man, red man, he was an extraordinary example of the male physique. His hair was ebony but rich, and with a wave that betrayed his white heritage, the same as the majestic blue of his eyes. His face combined his races; it was an exceptionally strong face with high, broad cheekbones, a stubbornly squared chin, long, narrow nose, wide, full, sensual lips, high forehead, arched ebony brows, and those eyes.

  She closed her own against them, her heart racing. She knew those eyes, knew them too well, had felt their blue fire before.

  He was Running Bear now.

  But he had been James McKenzie that first night she met him. So savage here with his bared flesh and simple silver adornment. She’d seen him first in a white frilled shirt, black breeches, crimson waistcoat, and black boots. She’d seen him in the white man’s world, seen the elegance of his movement across the dance floor, heard the eloquence of his arguments when he’d spoken. Feminine hearts had fluttered excitedly, for that aspect of danger had somehow remained about him. There was a vitality, a tension, a heat, that seemed barely contained within him. Yet his appearance had been that of a civilized gentleman. Indeed, she had met him as one.

  No. He had been neither civil nor a gentleman that night, either. He had taken on the guise, and he had played the white men’s games, and that had been all. And the blue fires had blazed in his eyes because he had raged with bitterness already, for though white guns had not taken his family, a fever caught within the swamps where they had ventured to escape the white settlers had done so with equal precision.

  He had hated her that night. Hated her for her father. Yet even then, to his own great horror she was certain, he had …

  Wanted her. And no matter how he had infuriated her, she had felt that wretched fascination. Almost beyond her own power, something that compelled her to walk to him when she should have been running away. He wasn’t of her world. Even as she longed to cry out that she wasn’t part of the things her father did, she wanted to hate him for the very way he assumed that she was, despise him for the very contempt he seemed to feel, and cast so ruthlessly her way. But even then—

  “Look at me,” he commanded her, and laughter seemed to bubble up within her again, for she was surrounded by savages, some of them half dressed and glistening bronze in the sun, others clad in doeskin breeches and colorful cotton shirts, feathers and ornaments. All of them armed with knives and axes and guns.

  And still, his English was so perfect, his voice so cultured. Look at me. He might as well have commanded that she pass the tea.

  Her eyes flew open and she met his again, and she wondered if his coming would mean that she should live, or just die more slowly.

  Even he couldn’t change the fact of whose stepchild she was, or all that her father had done.

  She gritted her teeth hard, fighting the trembling that had seized her. She wouldn’t cower before him! His bitterness had always been great; he had never loved, perhaps he had not even liked, her. He had even hated her, and perhaps himself sometimes, because she had been white. And still, a strange wild fire had burned between them, and she knew that he had been entangled in it as well, and at times even, perhaps, she had drawn his admiration. She had never cowered before him, not yet. She had never betrayed her fear, and she suddenly vowed to herself that she would not do so now.

  “So you are a part of a war party. Kill me, then, and have done with it!” she challenged him. “Slaughter me, slice me to ribbons, as your people have done with these men.”

  “It was a fair fight,” he warned her, eyes narrowing.

  “It was an ambush.”

  “The captain leading your party ordered the direct annihilation of two entire tribes, Miss Warren, men, women, and children. Babes still within their mothers’ wombs. Yet to you these soldiers should have been shown mercy?”

  “I know there is none within you!” she cried. She hesitated. She knew that he spoke the truth about their captain. She knew it; she had seen him in action. What good did it do now to admit that white men and red were merciless, brutal, and cruel? “There is no mercy to be found in this wretched hell, I am well aware, so do whatever you will! End it!”

  He arched a brow, then leaned down closer to her. “End it? But we savages do so enjoy torturing a fiesty victim!”

  Her blood seemed very cold. Ice within her. Yet where his body touched hers, it seemed she was still afire. She closed her eyes again, listening as the warriors rummaged through the soldiers’ belongings. They sought food, she knew, above all else. It had been a military tactic to attempt starving the Indians into submission.

  “What were you doing with these men?” he demanded.

  Her eyes opened again upon that set of blue ones that so determinedly pinned her to the ground as the pillage went on around them. It didn’t matter. She didn’t want to look. He had power among his people. Enough to stop another from carrying out her murder But no chief could stop hungry men from seeking food or whatever other spoils of war they might now seize.

  Thank God the darkness was coming to cast its cover over the men who had perished. Over
the Indians who searched the corpses so desperately for any small morsel of sustenance.

  She couldn’t even blame them. She’d been ill when she’d first heard her stepfather describe with relish his exploits against the Indians. The Americans who complained of brutal tactics didn’t realize that they dealt with “subhuman” people he believed. The Indian question really needed to be settled permanently. Wretched little Indians grew to be wretched big ones, and they were much more easily dispatched when they were small.

  Not all the soldiers were monsters. She’d met many good ones. Fine men, courageous men, kind men. Men who longed to leave the Indians in peace, to learn to live together.

  But under the circumstances they would all pay for Colonel Warren’s military prowess, as he described his maneuvers.

  “What were you doing with the men?” James repeated angrily.

  Her eyes went directly to his. “Leaving,” she told him.

  “For where?”

  “Charleston.”

  He arched a brow again, and she thought that she sensed anger within him. Yes, she’d been running away. She’d had no choice. She’d never be able to make any-one realize that she despised Warren as deeply as any enemy might.

  But damn it, since she’d met James, he’d been telling her to go away!

  He was suddenly up, on his feet, having pounced there with the speed and agility of a graceful great cat. Again she thought to run, to escape them all, to hide somehow, to make it into the swamp and to St. Augustine. She twisted with her swift speed to rise, but she didn’t even manage to turn. His hands were on hers, drawing her up, suddenly slamming her close to his own body. Once again his eyes knifed into her, impaling her, and had he held her or not, she could not have moved at that moment.

  “Fool!” he charged. “You will not be going anywhere now!”

  “You’re the one who has always told me to leave,” she reminded him fiercely. “You’d have thrown me off your precious land were it possible. You told me to go—”

 

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