Savage Thunder

Read Savage Thunder for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Savage Thunder for Free Online
Authors: Johanna Lindsey
job, but he’d done it anyway. That job had brought a posse after them that wouldn’t let up.
    They’d been chased into Mexico, where they were safe at last, or thought so, until a lousy band of hill bandits had left them with barely their lives and not a cent to their names. The Englishman had been a godsend, coming along when they were at the bottom of the barrel, so to speak, working just for bread and board in a dirty little cantina where they didn’t even understand the lingo. The months had passed by, and Clydell had come to think he’d be dying down there.
    He really shouldn’t complain or think twice about it. Dewane was right as usual. Those four boys they picked up in Bisbee, two of them ex-rustling partners they’d known in New Mexico, hadn’t even blinked when told what needed doing. Clydell was the only one who felt it just wasn’t right, killing a woman. And the way it had been decided she’d be killed, that kind of made him sick to his stomach. Of course, it might not work out that way, and thank God he wasn’t one of the two assigned to go after her if the boulder didn’t manage to smash her to bits. A piece of lead was a much cleaner way to go if someone had to go. But he was one of the four who would be shoving that boulder over the bluff, which was why he groaned inwardly when the Mexican, who had been stationedfarther back in the hills to watch for the victim’s arrival, showed up to say it wouldn’t be long now.
    Elliot Steele opened his pocket watch to check the time. It was nearly noon. The duchess was late—as usual. But then she always managed to do something to disturb his well-laid plans. Why he should think this time would be any different, he didn’t know. But the hour, fortunately, was of no importance. There was only one trail and she was on it. There was no place else she could go except forward, directly into his trap.
    How many times had he said that before, and yet she was still going about her merry way. The girl had the luck of the Gods. How else could she have escaped his traps time and again?
    Elliot was good at his line of work, or had thought he was, until the Duke of Eaton had hired him. He had made a small fortune over the years working for the gentry in whatever capacity was necessary, no matter how unsavory, so he had been good at what he did. And what Maurice Fleming wanted done had been so simple. Just find the girl and return her to England, where he would then have complete control over her and her money, which was all Fleming had wanted.
    Elliot had contacts in other countries, men in the same line of work. And he knew how to go about hiring the kind of men who came cheap and didn’t ask questions about what they were told to do. The job should have taken no more than a few months, just long enough to find out where the Jocel came to port. And yet for nearly two years, the length of timethe duke continued to pay all of Elliot’s expenses, his men had only once gotten their hands on her.
    It was preposterous, because she was so easy to locate wherever she went—if not her ship, then her large entourage of coaches and wagons and mounted guards. It was not a caravan that could pass unnoticed, and she never tried to conceal it or change it or leave it behind. Her coach alone was the finest made, large, bright teal blue, and pulled by six high-stepping mares all a matched gray in color. She might as well have the ducal crest emblazoned on the doors, the vehicle was so memorable.
    Yet no matter how many times he was able to locate her, it was never an easy matter to actually get to her. In point of fact, her small army of servants and guards made it frustratingly difficult, and she was never, ever, very far from them. The one time his men had been able to steal her away, she had been found and rescued the very same day, with his four men dying and not one of hers even wounded.
    But those days were over. Now that the girl had come of age, Fleming would no longer

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