by Shawnee Moon
“Set me free and I’ll give ye somethin’ sweeter than a kiss,” Lacy flung back.
He leaned forward to kiss her, and a mounted guard rode close enough to give the apprentice a swift kick in the backside. The boy let out a yelp, to his friends’ delight, and jumped off barely avoiding being run down by the horse.
The pirate swore under his breath, and Lacy glanced back at him again.
“Damned if I thought to make a mummery for every jack to gape at,” he murmured.
His scarred hands knotted into tight fists and she noticed that for all the dirt, his fingernails were close cut. His hair was as dark as ebony and braided into an untidy queue that hung down his back. Despite the pirate’s size, his features were finely drawn, not coarse, his teeth even and white. “A gentleman,” she said out loud, then started as those hot black eyes bored into hers.
“What did you say?” he demanded.
His speech was as precise as any lord’s. She’d have noticed from the first, if her mind hadn’t been otherwise occupied by the fix she was in. She offered him a faint smile. “A gent,” she repeated. “Hanging here with common folk when most noble bloods have their heads sliced off all tidy like.”
“The end’s the same.”
“Nay,” she answered saucily. “I’ll not believe it, for none’s been there and back. For all I know, there’s one hell for us and a fancier one for the likes of you. No doubt the gentry has a breeze and runnin’ water beside their fiery pit. Not even Lucifer himself would let me sit beside ...”
A familiar face appeared in the crowd and Lacy’s heart skipped a beat. Toby! The wrecker’s cadaverous face was as mocking as any other that shouted taunts to the passing Newgate cart, but she’d have to be blind to miss that fish hook of a nose or those ears that clung to his head like barnacles on a ship’s bottom. Toby. If he was here, then Ben and Alfred had sent him to give her warning.
“... my betters,” Lacy finished lamely. She let her eyes flick back to Toby one last time as the cart lurched sideways. Her mind was racing. Alfred had promised they’d not let her swing.
“Daddy would gut us like fresh herring, did we fail ye,” her brother had said, the last time he’d visited her in Newgate. “Remember that, and don’t lose hope, no matter how close ye get to the noose!”
She braced her feet, then lost her balance and staggered against the pirate again as the left wheel dropped into a deep rut. She gasped. Hitting him was like smacking into a stone wall; broad as he was, the man was all sinew and muscle, without an ounce of fat on him. She felt her cheeks grow warm as indecent thoughts invaded her mind. Lordamighty! James Black might stink like a week-old fish, but if a woman had a mind to sin, he’d be a terrible temptation.
He glanced down at her and his fierce countenance softened with compassion. “All right?” he asked.
She nodded but didn’t answer. It’s yer lucky day, freebooter, she thought. Being chained to me is goin’ to save yer neck—at least for a while. Once her iron collar was off, the corsair would have to look after his own skin.
“I hope you’re mistaken about there being more than one hell,” James said. His voice was as deep and smooth as fresh cream. “If I’m to spend eternity on the banks of Lucifer’s fiery sea, I could find no prettier wench to sit beside me.”
He winked at her mischievously and she grinned back, hiding her concern. Could she trust him? Trusting strangers brings an early grave, her father always said. Time enough to let this salty rogue in on her plan for escape when she caught sight of her brothers ... or was there?
Lacy nibbled at her lower lip in consternation. She’d no way of knowing what Alfred had plotted or when she’d have to use her wits to break free. There’d be but one chance, and that was God’s own truth. She sighed, not knowing how much to trust the man beside her—or if she could trust him at all. Still ... a rat would leap at any crumb of cheese, no matter how small or dry. She waved at a hooting tanner and sidled against her companion suggestively.
The crowd caught her gesture and roared with approval. James grinned and matched insult for insult with the onlookers. “I know not what game you’re playing, but I like your moves,” he murmured to her.
They were passing through an area devastated by the Great Fire six years earlier. The buildings here were mostly new, and some were still under construction. Brick dust filtered down around the oxen and cart, and Lacy could hear the sounds of hammering and sawing. People clogged the thoroughfare; craftsmen, merchants, and customers, all doing a brisk business amid the din of barking dogs and shouting children. Just ahead of the deputy-keeper a stout butcher dumped offal into the open gutter. Blood splashed up to stain the deputy’s boots, and he cursed the butcher soundly.
Lacy couldn’t help laughing. Soldiers, prison officials, and condemned prisoners—none of the lot intimidated the gray-haired butcher. He shook a thick fist and countered the deputy-keeper’s profanity with threats and even fouler vilification.
A beer wagon blocked their path at the corner of Leather Lane, and the ox cart rolled to an abrupt stop while the soldiers argued with the carter.
Through an open gate, Lacy caught sight of a massive copper lard kettle suspended over a fire. A woman stirred the boiling contents with a long-handled dipper. A spotted cow skin, complete with head and glazed eyes, lay heaped by the gate. Lacy wrinkled her nose. The strong odor of the lard-making nearly—but not quite—masked the stench of the rotting cowhide.
“Tyburn trash!” a one-legged beggar cried.
“Aye, necks will stretch today,” a red-nosed drunk agreed. Almost as an afterthought, the drunk bent and picked up a broken cobblestone and threw it at the cart. “To the devil with the lot of ye,” he shouted.
Lacy noted the sudden tide of ill will that rippled through the citizenry. An egg struck the side of the cart, and Annie the Acorn squeaked in fear. A pox-faced woman selling fresh fish hurled an insult at the prisoners. Instinctively, Lacy knew that the crowd needed a diversion.
She lifted her chin and looked into the pirate’s eyes. “Kiss me,” she ordered.
He hesitated for no more than the blink of an eye. “Gladly,” he said, bringing his bearded face down to hers.
His mouth was firm and hard, his breath as sweet as new-mown clover. Despite herself, Lacy’s senses reeled as his lips pressed hers, and once again the air seemed charged with pent-up lightning.
“Maybe it’s worth going to the gallows for some of that!” the fishwife jeered.
The butcher laughed. “Give her another buss!”
As quickly as the onlookers had turned hostile, they began to grin, some making lewd jests and others giving whistles and catcalls. The beer wagon moved forward a few yards, clearing the intersection, and the execution party continued on toward Tyburn.
The cart rattled as the wheels began to roll. The oxen grunted and plodded on. No one moved to throw anything more at them, and Lacy sensed the immediate danger was past. She felt as light-headed as if she’d just come out of the ocean after a deep dive.
What was there about this pirate that affected her so strangely? One part of her mind acknowledged the logic of what she had done in asking him to kiss her. She’d put on an act for the crowd to save their skins. But one kiss was enough. There was no need for more.
Daring possessed her and she strained up on tiptoe, offering her lips for another delicious taste, but ready to nip his tongue with her teeth if he took intimacies she’d not offered. God, but this freebooter was no stranger to kissing! His mouth scorched hers with laughing desire that made her wish they were anywhere but in this condemned cart in full view of half of London. Shivers raced down her spine and turned her knees to pudding.
Breathlessly, she pulled free, her mouth all puffy and aching with wanting him to do it all over again. Wide-eyed, she stared up at him.
“Thanks, darlin’,” he said. “I’m not sure why you—”
Shouts of encouragement from the passersby nearly drowned out his words.
/> “Hist!” She cut him short as reason surfaced in her mind and she remembered where she was and why. “Hist and listen well,” she whispered urgently. “’Tis not your touch I yearn for. I’ve no intention of hangin’ this day, and if ye heed me, mayhap I can free ye as well.”
“Sing on,” he replied. “Your lips are like honey, but I like this song better with every note.”
“Be ready,” she said. “My brothers have a boat waiting on the Thames. Once we’re loose, we’ll have to run for our lives.”
James looked at the heavy chain that bound them together. “I’ll be right behind you, lass.”
“Lacy is my name.”
“Lacy, then. Are you certain they’ll not forsake you?”
“Certain?” she scoffed. “What’s certain in this life? I’m sure as hell not certain of you, but it’s run together or hang together this day, and I’ve no wish for the taste of rope.”
“Nor I. Lead on, woman. I’ll follow you, right willingly, though you see us to the gates of hell.”
They rode on without speaking for some time. The houses along Holborn were no longer so tightly packed, and Lacy began to notice open patches of garden and meadow. A few larger homes of brick were scattered among the more modest dwellings, and they passed more farm wagons loaded with produce and livestock heading east into London Town.
The crowds, however, had not thinned. Nearly a hundred spectators trailed after the three felon carts. Gangs of ragged children ran in and out of the congestion. Some snatched rotten vegetables or handfuls of mud from the side of the road and hurled them gleefully at the prisoners.
Suddenly, Annie the Acorn let out a howl as a rotten egg struck her in the head. She was still wailing when a window opened in the second story of a farmhouse and a serving girl dumped a bucket of slops. “Wash ye clean, deary!” the maid cried.
Foul water streamed over Annie’s hair and ran down her back, splashing on Lacy’s shift. “Come down here, slut,” Lacy yelled. “Come down and let us give ye a taste of our good will!”
The laughing throng surged close to the cart, and a dog yipped in pain as a wheel rolled over the animal’s foot. A group of students were chanting a bawdy ditty, and Lacy caught sight of a cutpurse plying his trade. The mounted guards were hard-pressed to keep beside the condemned cart as more and more people spilled out of the alleys and choked the narrow road.
“Tyburn Hill,” the deputy-keeper called out as they turned a corner. The place of execution stood on a slight rise in the middle of open fields. Several hundred people were already gathered there, all eager and waiting for the free show.
Lacy strained her neck to see the gallows looming against the bright blue sky. She swallowed hard as the severity of her situation hit home. Her stomach churned with queasiness.
Cuds bobs! If Alfred and Ben didn’t think smart, she’d soon be dangling from that ghoulish tree with crows picking at her eyes and stray dogs chewing her toes. Bloody rotten! She’d no wish to meet her maker that way.
A light breeze was blowing and not a cloud marred the sky. The sun was warm on her face; she caught the scent of fresh-baked gingerbread amid the smells of unwashed wool and stale beer. On the far edge of the press, two lovers kissed and laughed, then kissed again. Lacy clenched her eyes shut and swallowed the lump in her throat. Not today, she cried silently. I’m not ready to die on such a beautiful day.
She sighed and opened her eyes. Alfred had promised they’d come for her. Losing her nerve now would cost her the game. It would mean not only her life, but also that of the man beside her.
Soldiers stood around the base of the gallows. With threats and brandished weapons, they cleared a path for the deputy-keeper and the condemned cart. Lacy felt beads of sweat break out on her forehead, and the salt stung the brand still hidden by her hair. She fixed a wooden smile on her face and scanned the mob for sight of her brothers.
James leaned close to her. “Well?” he demanded. “Where are your friends? Late won’t cut it. We’re deep in shit, woman.”
The cart wheels squealed as the road grew steeper. The prisoners in front of Lacy were sobbing, and above the clamor of the crowd she could hear someone praying behind her. Off to Lacy’s left, a woman was selling hot meat pies, and beyond her, a man on stilts was hawking miniature gallows complete with dangling nooses. One enterprising farmer had brought a cow to Tyburn and was selling cups of fresh milk straight from the teat. Fathers held their children high to see the condemned, while mothers nursed babes and gossiped with strangers. A single black crow circled the gallows tree, then settled squawking on the topmost crossbeam.
Lacy stiffened her spine and tried to look as though she were at a country fair and not her own execution.
The oxen stopped and a guard dropped the back gate. “Out!” he ordered. One by one, the prisoners behind her climbed out of the cart and were shoved roughly toward the platform.
A black-frocked cleric opened a Bible and began to preach. “Repent!” he cried. “Eternal damnation awaits the unrepentant sinner. You will suffer the fires of everlasting hell if you die without forgiveness.”
“Black,” the deputy-keeper read from his list. “James Black.” James climbed down out of the cart with Lacy close behind and a soldier unfastened his wrist and ankle manacles. “Bennett. Lacy Bennett.”
Lacy suppressed a groan of relief when her own heavy restraints were removed. All that remained was the iron collar and the chain that bound her to James’s neck collar.
The nearest mounted guard used his staff to prod James in the direction of the gallows. Soldiers beat back the crowd. The man on the horse stayed right beside them, so close that Lacy had to avoid the animal’s hooves.
“Abbott, Alice Abbott. Acorn, Annie Acorn.” The deputy-keeper’s voice was nearly drowned out by the din of the onlookers. Annie wailed and clung to the cart, but the guards dragged her down and carried her to the steps of the gallows. “A’s first,” the keeper reminded the guards. “Abbott and Acorn.”
The black-hooded executioner waited motionless on the top step.
“Repent!” urged the minister. “Repent and seek the mercy of God.”
Alice Abbott spat at his feet and climbed the stairs with all the nerve of a fighting cock. The throng cheered as the executioner tied her hands behind her back and settled the first rope around her neck.
The next woman, Annie, dropped to the ground at the cleric’s feet and begged for her life. Lacy swallowed the bile that rose in her throat and forced herself to keep her eyes open as they carried Annie up the steps, secured her arms, and put the noose over her head. Both women were hooded, and a military drummer played a tattoo.
The deputy-keeper tried to read something from his warrant, but no one could hear him above the roar of hundreds of throats. James caught Lacy’s hand and squeezed it as the executioner released the traps and the two women dropped. Annie screamed and thrashed for a few seconds before going limp, but hardly anyone noticed. All attention was on Alice Abbott.
Alice had hit the end of her rope, jerked, and fallen free to the ground. She rolled around choking and gasping for air. Above her, the frayed ends of hemp swayed in the breeze. The crowd went wild.
“It’s God’s judgment!” someone shouted.
“Free her!” another cried.
“She’s innocent!”
For an instant, Lacy caught sight of her half-brother Ben standing on top of an undertaker’s wagon. “For God and England!” he yelled. “Free God’s chosen innocents!”
Howling like a single-brained demon, the mob charged the gallows. The soldiers’ line wavered and broke. Guards, soldiers, cleric, and prisoners scrambled for their lives.
“My brother!” Lacy shouted to James and pointed. “Over there!” But the black funeral wagon and plumed horses were ten yards away beyond several score of stampeding men and women. Lacy realized the distance might as well have been ten leagues for all the chance they had of reaching Ben without being trampled to death.
&
nbsp; A wheel-lock musket fired and a horse reared up. “To me! To me!” the deputy-keeper cried.
A dozen men and women seized hold of the condemned cart and toppled it. “Free the prisoners!” a slattern shouted, climbing on the upturned cart. “Free God’s chosen!”
A man lunged between Lacy and James and struck the chain. Lacy’s head snapped back just as a woman shoved past her. Lacy went down on one knee as James backhanded the man and caught her shoulder, pulling her to her feet. The guard on the horse loomed above them. He raised his musket and Lacy screamed.
James threw his shoulder against the horse’s neck, and his right fist closed around the animal’s bridle. As Lacy watched in disbelief, the pirate gave a heave and a twist, and the gelding went down on its front knees, tossing the guard over its head. Before she could utter a sound, James grabbed her, threw her over his shoulder, and leaped into the saddle.
“Hellfire, woman,” he gasped as he pulled her down in front of him. “What do you weigh?”
Her reply was lost in the horse’s snort as James gathered the reins in one hand and drove both heels into the beast’s sides. Another musket fired, and Lacy was certain she heard the lead whistle past her ear.
The soldiers formed a line in front of them, and James yanked the gelding up hard and wheeled it around and whipped it back down the road toward the city.
Lacy caught sight of the minister high on the platform clinging to one of the posts as the crowd tore at the wooden supports. The entire gallows swayed back and forth, threatening a terrified Alice Abbott who crouched beneath it, forgotten by the mob. Annie’s body no longer hung from the gallows, but who had cut her down or what they had done with her body, Lacy didn’t know.
“The pirate’s getting away!” the minister screamed. “Shoot him! Shoot the pirate!”
Lacy knotted her fingers in the horse’s mane and crouched down, trying to make herself as small a target as possible. James seized a rake from a farmer and whirled it around his head, all the while howling like an enraged bear.
A man in Lincoln-green blocked their path with a longbow, but James gave him a look of such naked malevolence that the bowman paled, dropped his weapon, and ducked back into the throng.