Miss Ridgeway's Privateer
Page 21
Epilogue
Several weeks later Lucy stood on the deck of the brig holding Patrick’s hand and watching the land grow closer as they approached Boston. There were so many vessels in the harbour that she wondered how the steersman was able to pick his way among them.
The voyage had not been easy. Two bad storms added days to their long journey. Lucy had been terrified during the first one, which broke as they edged out into the Atlantic just hours after leaving Belfast.
Patrick tried to reassure her. “It’s bad, but not bad enough to sink us,” he told her, holding her close. “I know the sea and I’ve survived worse than this.”
Nevertheless, Lucy felt battered and bruised when the storm was over. Some of the other passengers had more serious injuries. Patrick stepped forward and offered to help tend the wounded. The ship carried no surgeon and so his offer was gratefully accepted. He set the two broken legs and bound up the sprains and gashed heads. The captain gave him a small area where he could attend to these patients and those who presented themselves later in the voyage. Lucy was pressed into service as Patrick’s assistant and surprised herself by overcoming her feelings to do what she had to do. She was thankful that her earlier travels had given her some useful skills. If this had been her first taste of seaboard life, she would have been unable to help.
One by one the patients improved and went back to their families. In the end only the two with broken legs remained and on a calm evening, Patrick dosed them with brandy he obtained from the captain. He slung up a piece of sacking between these men and a dark area piled with straw.
“This is your bridal bed,” he whispered into her hair. “They won’t hear us and we’re far enough away from the others. Come to me now, I want my wife.”
She was a little frightened but she let him undress her and lay down beside him. He fondled her breasts just as Dupré said her husband would do. This time she experienced sensations she had never felt before. Patrick went deeper. Pain, a gasp and he was inside her. She writhed for a moment and he waited for her to be still, kissing away her doubts. He stroked and caressed her while he explained what he was doing and what he needed from her. An overwhelming sense of warmth and release flooded through her and she cried out, totally unaware of where they were. Afterwards she thought that either he was an excellent teacher or she was an apt pupil.
“Is it always like that?” she asked as she lay beside him.
“With me it is,” he murmured sleepily.
“Then let’s do it again, please.”
After that, they seized their privacy whenever they could. Some of the other passengers did not have that opportunity and Lucy came to realise what all the grunts and cries and movements meant. She was glad that Patrick’s profession had gained them a place of their own away from the crowded decks to enjoy each other. It was towards the end of the voyage that Lucy began to be sick. Her breasts hurt when Patrick touched them and she moaned.
“Oh, ho,” he said, sitting back on his heels.
“What is it? What’s wrong?” she asked in alarm.
“Let me look at you and then I’ll tell you,” he replied.
His hands crept over her body but this time he did not caress her. He probed and pushed asking her if anything hurt.
“Have you missed your courses?”
“Yes, no, I don’t know when they were supposed to be. Am I ill?”
“No, Alannah, you aren’t. Our baby will be born in the new world.”
She sat upright. “A baby?”
“Which do you want, a boy with bright red hair like me or a girl with your black curls?” He laughed.
“Either. Am I really having a baby?”
“Yes you are.”
Patrick held her and kissed her while they spoke about the future. By the time they approached Boston, she had accepted the fact that she was going to become a mother in a new country.
“If it’s a girl, can we call her Helena Caroline, after my cousins? Nell for short.”
“Another Nell,” he mused, “that’s a good thought, and if it’s a boy?”
“Patrick?”
“No, I’d prefer to name him for my father, a far better man than me. What do you say to Michael Hugh O’Rourke?”
“I like it.”
A little while later she said, “Do you remember that day I bumped into you in London? I never thought that in a few short months I could have so many adventures and my life would change so much.”
“Are you sorry that it did?”
She caught the gleam of anxiety in his eyes and hurried to chase it away. “No. Love is more important than childhood dreams. I want to be with you for the rest of our lives.”
He stooped and kissed her. “I love you too.”
Lucy clasped his hand, a determined look in her eyes. “I can face anything if you’re by my side, even America.”
“Then let’s go and find out what the New World holds for us.”
Copyright © 2016 by Michèle McGrath
All rights reserved
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of the author.
All characters and events in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
My books are fiction set in history.
Front cover artwork:
Copyright © Sheri McGathy 2016
All rights reserved
No part of the cover image may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the illustrator.
Written in English (UK)
Published by Riverscourt Publishing
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In memory of the real Lucie.
My Golden Girl
About Michèle McGrath
Award winning author, Michele McGrath, was born on the beautiful Isle of Man in the middle of the Irish Sea. She has lived in California, Liverpool, France and Lancashire before returning home. Living in Paris and Grenoble taught her to make a mean ratatouille and she learned the hula in Hawaii.
Michele is a qualified swimming teacher and manager, writing self help books on these subjects. Although she writes in many genres, her real loves are historical romance and fantasy. She has won numerous writing competitions, had second places and been short-listed many times. She has had tens of thousands of sales and downloads.
**Visit her blog at http://www.michelemcgrath.co.uk/blog
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What others are saying about Michele's books:
"From the very first and magical sentence, I was hooked on this novel."
Eddie on Kindle, reviewing Manannan's Magic.
“Set in post-revolutionary France, Duval and the Infernal Machine captures the atmosphere of suspicion and intrigue that reigned in Paris at the time. The author does a splendid job of immersing the reader into the darker corners of the city." Simon on Kindle reviewing Duval and the Infernal Machine.
“I have been terrified of the water ever since nearly drowning in Lake Michigan. My wife has tried to teach me to float - with no success - for 40 years. The techniques outlined in this book are easy to follow. Maybe finally, after all these years, I'll be able to swim and NOT be afraid of the water. Thanks Michele, wish you lived in the States so I could get private lessons." Steven on Kindle reviewing Learn to Swim, even if you are terrified."
“An intriguing and haunting short story, which the author says is based upon a real wartime experience. The fitting and satisfying ending will stay wi
th me for a long time. An excellent story."
Gunnar on Kindle reviewing Five Lamps.
“Beautiful! Just 12 short pages, but it left me in tears. The author has such a delicate, lovely way with words that the sentences and sentiments were whispered over the pages. I will save this on my kindle to read again."
Tina on Kindle reviewing The Carpenter's Bench.
Books by Michèle McGrath
Novels
Regency Belles & Beaux
Lady Alice’s Dilemma: Lady Alice is enjoying her first London Season until her disgraced brother appears in disguise.
Miss Ridgeway’s Privateer: Following her father’s death, Lucy is sent to her grandmother in Ireland, where she is to be presented at the Viceroy’s court. These plans are interrupted when the ship she is travelling on is captured by French privateers. Lucy is held for ransom. One of her captors is the Irishman Patrick O’Rourke, the ship’s surgeon whom she has met before in unusual circumstances. How can she possibly fall in love with a pirate?
Lord Philip’s Christmas: More adventures of Lady Alice’s errant brother culminating in Brussels at the time of Waterloo.
Regency Belles & Beaux: Box set of three books.
The Manannan Series (Historical Fantasy)
Manannan’s Magic: Manannan McLir flees from a blood feud in Ireland and finds a tragic love with a young Celtic girl, Renny. Betrayal, a Viking invasion and a narrow escape all feature in this novel.
Niamh of the Golden Hair: Niamh is captured by Viking raiders and unexpectedly falls in love with her captor. When he is badly injured, she must find her father, Manannan, who may be able to cure his wound.
Emer’s Quest: Emer, Manannan’s granddaughter, dreams that her father will be shipwrecked. She rides after him to prevent him leaving but she is too late. She persuades friends to follow him. On her journey she meets Atli, a trader who offers to rescue her father if she will marry one of his sons. Unfortunately his son Hari does not want her.
Manannan Trilogy: Box Set
Duval Series (Napoleon’s Police)
Duval and the Infernal Machine 1800: Rookie police agent, Alain Duval investigates the attempted assassination on Napoleon Bonaparte. The book features romance, terror and an unexpected ending.
Duval and the Empress’s Crown 1804: Police Agent Alain Duval is tasked with finding the crown but time is very short and his suspects many. Present when the crown disappeared are Napoleon's sisters, Princess Elisa, Princess Pauline and Princess Caroline. Are they involved or merely witnesses? Aided by his wife Eugenie and his friends Lefebvre and Fournier, Duval sets out to unravel the mystery.
Duval and the Italian Opera Singer 1805: Carla Cortini arrives in Paris claiming that her son is Napoleon’s child. She relates the story to Duval and enquiries seem to confirm that it is true. When Duval goes to tell her and take her to the Emperor, he discovers that the mother and son have been kidnapped.
Duval at Waterloo 1815: The last Duval book. Duval travels to Paris and gets caught up in the preparations for Napoleon’s last battle.
Napoleon’s Police: Box set of the first three Duval books published.
Short Story Collections
Bible Women: Five short stories of women in the New Testament, starting from the birth of Christ until his death.
Baker’s Dozen: Thirteen short stories in a range of genres including romance, fantasy, crime and history.
Books for Children:
A Night at the Manx Museum: Meet Manannan, a Manx cat, the great deer and many more characters.
Stories for Seven Year Olds: Three stories in one. A magical harp takes Shannon far away to a land of magic carpets and evil viziers. Rory is scared of heights, which is a problem because he is a robin who needs to learn to fly. Sun Sun Lau is a Chinese dragon who wakes up to find himself in the British Museum and has to escape from those who want to put him in a zoo.
Non Fiction
Learn to Swim even if you are Terrified
Teach your Child to Swim: The Easy Way.
Easy Business Skills Box set
Easy Self Confidence
Easy Time Management
Easy Assertiveness
Easy Communication Skills
Easy Presentation Skills
Look out for free days and promotional offers on my website.
Gigi’s Guardian, A Night in the Manx Museum and Manannan’s Magic are available in paperback through Amazon and booksellers on the Isle of Man.
Find out more on:
http://www.michelemcgrath.co.uk
I would love to hear from you:
email: riverscourt@gmail.com