Page 6
Story: Stilettos & Secrets on the 7 Seas (Jennifer Cloud #7)
Six
“T hree hundred years?” Angel’s eyebrows shot up under her new sweepy bangs.
“You don’t look a day over thirty-five.” Gertie gave a flirty laugh but sent me a concerned glance.
“You’re almost right. I’ll be thirty-eight next month. But I appreciate the compliment.” Alex chuckled, and those blue eyes twinkled. “My family had its start in the banking business thanks to a loan from a pirate.”
I swallowed hard. “A pirate?”
“My great, great, well, lots of greats, but I’ll refer to him as my great-grandfather. He started as a poor Scottish farmer trying to give it a go in the New Providence colony of the Bahamas. He was good at math and hiding bootlegger’s rum.” Alex shifted the bag in his lap.
“The Bahamas?” Jake sent me an uneasy look.
I looked away and tried to hold my shit together, praying Marco didn’t send a three-hundred-year-old message in a brown shopping bag.
Alex cleared his throat and continued. “My great-grandfather befriended a pirate. Together, they sailed the Caribbean and discovered a treasure.”
“A Scottish pirate,” Caiyan grumbled behind me.
“My great-grandfather was killed during the recovery of the treasure and never had the chance to make something of himself. Lucky for me, the pirate delivered his share to my pregnant great-grandmother.”
“Oh, she was pregnant?” Angel’s face fell. “Poor thing, losing her husband to piracy.”
“Yes, well, thanks to this sudden wealth, my great-grandmother returned to Scotland, remarried, and my great-grandfather’s son received a top-notch education. Unfortunately, the son was a complete idiot and fled with a married woman to Saint Kitts. Of course, you know that his grandson persevered and opened the First National Bank of the United States, passing the legacy down the pipe to me.”
“Alexander Hamilton.” Gertie bounced up and down on her chair.
“Yes. The pirate also left this with my great-grandmother.” He lifted a small chest from the bag. “It’s all that’s left of the treasure.”
Gertie frowned at the box. “If there’s a treasure inside, it’s not a very big one.”
My stomach churned, threatening to empty. I was glad Caiyan had caught me before I’d eaten my share of the buffet. I’d left Marco in Nassau hours earlier. The box couldn’t be from him. He’d return next month. My stomach settled slightly as I stared at the chest.
Alex pushed it toward me. “The only caveat was that it be delivered to Miss Cloud on this date, at this location. My great-grandmother, filled with Scottish superstition, believed if she opened the chest, it would be the ruin of her family. It’s been passed down through generations until I, the last of my name, have the privilege of delivering the chest to you. Unfortunately, there isn’t a key.”
The rusty old lock looked its age. “Thank you.” I ran my fingers over worn leather strips that crisscrossed a sturdy wooden box. “What was the pirate’s name?”
“I don’t know. The name of the pirate remained a secret.” Alex’s smile broadened. “I believe my great-grandfather’s wealth came from a portion of the gold from the lost Spanish Fleet of 1715.”
Another wave of nausea slapped against my stomach lining. I glanced nervously at Jake.
“I’d like to stay while you open it. If you don’t mind.” Alex looked hopefully at me. “Generations of my family have fought to keep the chest safe during wars, sickness, family squabbles, and political corruption. I’d like to see what was so important that we risked our lives keeping it safe.”
Jake’s serious brown eyes locked on mine, his plate of food forgotten.
Somehow, Marco sent me this chest, and Jake knew it meant things didn’t go as planned. He reached up and interlocked his fingers with Angel’s. A move of comfort if the chest revealed the unexplainable. He gave me a slight nod.
“I guess that would be OK.” I pulled a bobby pin from my hair and held it out to Caiyan. “Can you open the lock, please?”
I glanced at Alex. “He has a knack for opening locks.”
Caiyan didn’t need the pin to open the lock. His gift included opening locks with the touch of his hands. But for the sake of Alex’s presence and any wedding guests who might be eavesdropping, he took the pin from me and jiggled it in the lock. When it tumbled open, he removed the lock. I reached up, and with a bit of force followed by a creak of hinges, opened the lid.
Three hundred years of dust puffed into the air like a toppled bottle of baby powder. Everyone coughed, and I waved at the air until the dust cleared. Inside was a yellowed envelope and one silver coin.
“That’s it?” Gertie leaned in to look at the coin. “One coin isn’t something I’d spend three hundred years protectin’.”
I picked up the letter, turned it over, and ran my finger across a red wax seal with the letters JS. I took a deep breath, broke the seal, and with trembling fingers opened the letter.
A drawing was scribbled on the parchment in the same way that someone would draw directions on a cocktail napkin. The only written word was Sea Storm . A torn piece of a news advertisement floated from the letter onto the floor.
Caiyan picked it up. “’Tis notice about the hanging of a pirate in 1718.” He paused. “Shite.”
“Show me.” I tried to act nonchalant, like it was an odd gift, but hiding my horror left me stony-faced and sounding robotic.
He hesitated, then slid the clipping onto the table in front of me. It was a notice of the hanging of Long John Silver. The drawing of the infamous Silver looked exactly like Marco. And he wasn’t wearing his key. My heart stopped beating for a full second.
“Which pirate?” Angel asked.
The color drained from Jake’s face.
Alex leaned over and read the name. “Long John Silver.”
“That’s an odd thing to keep in a treasure chest.” Not paying close attention to the drawing, Angel scooped up a forkful of potatoes. “Everyone knows Long John Silver was gibbeted and hung in the entrance of Nassau for weeks to warn others from piracy.”
I shot Gertie an angry look for leaving that information out of her recollection of Silver.
“Oh yeah, I forgot that part.” She looked down, suddenly interested in a spot on the tablecloth.
I snatched up the clipping. The date set for August 10, 1718, and details of the location of the hanging were typeset under the drawing. We only had one moon cycle to save him. I swallowed the swell of bile that rose in my throat.
“Why would the hanging of a pirate be kept locked away for so many years?” Alex looked down and sighed. “I was hoping for a treasure map or, at the very least, the revelation that we were part of some crusader’s bloodline. I’ve always felt this need to go on an adventure. Like Indiana Jones digging up artifacts instead of investing other people’s money.”
I was in the loophole. They wouldn’t know. Jake understood because he knew Marco stayed behind. And Gertie because I told her.
Breathe. Breathe. Breathe.
Tears pricked, threatened to spill. I blinked them back, pretending the dust had caused an allergic reaction.
Caiyan placed a hand on my shoulder, and his warmth soothed. I looked up at him and, somehow, he knew.
Alex pushed back from the table. “It’s been a pleasure meeting all of you. I can’t say I’m not disappointed. My great grandfather died hiding it from the Germans during World War II.”
“I’m sorry.” I choked out the words. “Maybe Silver was the pirate who gave your grandfather the loan.”
“I guess I’ll never know.” Alex stood and looked down at me. “Anyway, I have a plane to catch. I can say I’ve done my due diligence and paid my family’s debt.”
I placed the clipping and the paper back into the treasure chest, stood, and extended my hand. “Thank you.”
He took it and wrapped his other over mine. “Good luck, Miss Cloud. Seems you have good friends.”
“The best.” I smiled at him, and he left. I sat hard into my seat and stared at the chest.
“Too bad.” Angel cut into her shaved meat. “Going on a treasure hunt would have been a real hoot. Marco would have loved the challenge.”
Caiyan moved toward me. “Let me take ye home.”
I couldn’t speak so I just nodded. Hugging the chest into me, I stood to follow Caiyan.
Jake jumped to his feet. “No way in hell are you leaving, McGregor. And not with that chest.”
“Jennifer has jest returned from a travel. She needs rest. And yer no takin’ me in withoot a fight. Is that what ye want?” Caiyan gave a raised eyebrow glance at the wedding guests.
Angel moved from her seat and cut between the two men. Her petite frame, long dark hair, and floaty summer dress gave the impression of a fairy standing sentry between two snarling trolls. “Jake, look at Jen. She’s as white as a bleached bedsheet. Let her go with him. You can sort this out tomorrow.”
“I’d like to take a look at that chest.” Jake motioned toward the box, and I hugged it tighter. He studied me for a long minute. “I’ll examine it tomorrow.”
“Tomorrow.” I managed to squeak out.
Jake focused on Caiyan. “And I’d like to have a few words with you, McGregor.”
Gertie held out the brown shopping bag. I placed the chest inside. She handed me the bag, and I looped the handles over my shoulder. “Thanks.”
“Here.” She gave Caiyan her car keys. “They haven’t cut the cake yet. I’ll catch a ride home with Cousin Darryl.”
“Tomorrow.” Caiyan’s tone carried a stern warning. Jake took a step back, allowing us to pass. Caiyan placed a firm hand on the small of my back, steering me away from the table.
We exited the wedding, not saying a word. The music and laughter and excitement of love’s first celebration sounded as if it played from the depths of a bottomless ocean.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6 (Reading here)
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43