This story was originally posted, unfinished, some time ago under my Frederick Carol nom-de-plume, but I withdrew it until I could finish it off and offer a complete tale. That plan was somewhat scuppered by the loss of my beloved wife, very suddenly, in November 2019, when writing suddenly seemed trivial. However, my wife was a writer herself, although not on Literotica, and I think she would have encouraged me to continue. Be that as it may, I have now finished it and offer it again, hopefully, for your reading pleasure. It is a novel-length offering and I plan to submit it in segmented form, in eight parts, four chapters or so at a time.
Orphan
Chapter 1
She was lost, she knew that now. A wrong turn taken somewhere in the unfamiliar lanes, the track under the mare's hooves little used, certainly not by wagons, not any time recently. The trees had closed in on either side, and she had two choices. Forward, or back. From the sun, forward was her best option. If she could find the creek again, she could follow it back to the village, and once there, she knew the road well enough to find her way back.
Back, she mused. There's no going back, because there's nothing to go back to. Her home destroyed, her parents killed in the flames. Thank God for Uncle Silas, she thought. She almost laughed. Never married, her uncle was uncomfortable with young people, especially so with girls, but he was unfailingly polite to her, and she knew that she owed her present state in its entirety to the generosity of her mother's brother. She'd barely even known of his existence until Thomas Marget, the lawyer, had read her father's will, and she found that in the event of her parents' death before she reached her majority, her uncle had agreed to provide a home for her until she was one-and-twenty. The journey to join him had been long, first the long journey south to Devonport from her Tyneside home, and then the trip to Guernsey, to her uncle's house.
Silas Le Tessier had made her welcome, but had passed her quickly on to his housekeeper, Mrs Trevelyan, wife of his steward, John Trevelyan. In her middle years, her children married and moved away, she was glad to fuss over Silas Le Tessier's orphaned niece, and had quickly made her welcome. The mare had been a nineteenth birthday present from her uncle, and he had made it clear that a simple 'thank you' was enough.
Through the trees, Roxane caught a gleam of light. The creek! Pray it was so. She urged the mare forward, emerging from the trees onto a little promontory overlooking the water. She couldn't see far up or down stream, but she never even looked, for there before her in the creek was a schooner. A little battered, paint a little faded, she could see that even so the vessel was well maintained. Consequences of being a boat-builder's daughter and only child, she supposed, for her father had always welcomed her to his workshop after her schooling, answering her childish queries with patience and humour.
She could see no presence on board the schooner, and she found herself wondering what it was doing this far up-stream. Hiding, almost. A sudden thought struck her. Smugglers! If they saw her? She reined the mare around, and drew her to a stamping halt.
"You're not thinking of leaving now, are you, my dear?" Ragged, scar-faced, tall, there was an air of contained brutality about the figure.
"Would you make way, please? I wish to leave here." She kept her voice controlled, but inside was fighting the urge to scream, for there was no mistake, the man frightened her.
Surprising her, he laughed, but the momentary surge of optimism she'd felt faded when he took the mare's bridle. "You can't leave yet, my dear. We haven't been introduced."
"Nor will we be," she said, coldly. "I do not wish to know you, sir, so kindly release my horse and let me leave."
Any trace of humour that may have been in his face vanished instantly. "No, I don't think so. Know me you shall, and I shall know you." Still holding the mare's bridle, he moved to her side and with a quick lunge, had lifted her foot from the stirrup, continued the lift and she found herself falling, falling with a thud that took her breath away, flat on her back. Now, he released the bridle and yelled, and the mare, startled, bolted. She looked up, and hope drained from her, seeing him removing his belt, and begin to unfasten his breeches. She braced herself, trying to roll away, to get to her feet, looking wildly around for a way to escape, but his foot on her stomach stopped her. She screamed, as loudly as she could, knowing it was hopeless even as she did it. That it was the man's thought, too, was apparent from the amused smirk on his face.
"Now, why make so much noise, girl. There's no-one but me to hear you, for now." He laughed. "You never know, you might even enjoy it."
"Never, not with you," she hissed. "I'd rather die."
The smirk faded. "That can be arranged," he said, "and I can amuse myself with your corpse, but it's so much better when the girl co-operates, you know?"
"Never!"
He knelt between her legs, his breeches falling, and she stared, appalled, frightened, at the sight of his erection. She couldn't help herself, she whimpered, and he laughed again, reaching for her skirts, to raise them, to reveal her. She was startled when he paused, wondering at the look of terror on his face, until she saw the blade at his neck, and heard the chill in the quiet voice.
"You were warned, Josiah Scrogg, warned that the next time you touched a woman who spurned your touch, I would hang you. Do you remember, Josiah?"
"Mercy, Captain," her attacker whimpered, not daring to move because of the weapon at his throat. She raised her eyes, meeting the cool, level gaze of a pair of cold, grey eyes.
"He attacked you, madam?" the man asked, his voice courteous, educated, a hint of an unknown accent. His hair was dark, unruly curls escaping from under the crown of his battered tricorne, his face saturnine. She managed to nod, unable to give voice to her agreement. "You did not invite his advances?"
"No," she managed to whisper. "He struck me, knocked me from my mare."
The man nodded. "My bosun will fetch it for you in a moment. Your mount bolting free, and then your scream, were what alerted us. As well we returned earlier than we had planned. Can you stand?"
Roxane scrambled to her feet, trembling, looking around in alarm as two more men came into the small clearing, one of them leading her mare.
"Help the lady to her horse, Jenkins."
"Aye, Cap'n," said the one addressed. He turned an open, friendly face to her.
"Ma'am? Cap'n says to help you. Will you take the reins, ma'am?" She did so, moving almost numbly, and the man, Jenkins, smiled again. "Right, ma'am," he said, cupping his hands, "You put your foot in there, and I'll lift you." A moment more, and she'd settled into her sidesaddle. She looked again at the scene before her.
The dark man spoke again. "Jenkins, Tabor, take this - scum - away. Hang him."
"No!" It was a piteous wail from her would-be rapist. He turned a tear-strewn face to her. "Miss? You won't let them, will you?"
She stared at him, then turned to the dark figure holding the blade. "He has raped before?"
"Aye."
"And the woman? Women?"
"Women. Ruined."
She nodded, a cold conviction in her that the dark man told only the truth. She took a deep breath, and when she spoke her voice was cold, controlled. "Hang him."
The man gestured with his free hand, and Jenkins and Tabor dragged the rapist to his feet, and away, disappearing into the undergrowth. The dark man sheathed his blade, a knife, but long enough almost for a short-sword, she realised, a longer blade in place on his hip, and turned to her, doffing his hat.
"Allow me to introduce myself, ma'am. Alexander Gilroy, captain of yonder schooner, the
Pelican
."
"Tyne-built?" she said, immediately berating herself for the inane question, but Gilroy looked at her, with a surprised smile.
"Aye, ma'am. Harrison's yard."
Unbidden, the tears sprang to her eyes, and she fought a sob. Gilroy stepped forward, alarmed.
"Ma'am, what is it? Have I offended you?"
She shook her head, dashing tears away with the back of her hand. "Nay, sir, not so. Harrison's yard was destroyed by fire three months ago. John Harrison and his wife perished in the flames. My parents, sir. I am Roxane Harrison."
There was instant concern on his face, distress, too. "Ma'am, my condolences, my sincere condolences. He built a fine ship. But ma'am, what do you here?"
"Lost, sir. I am staying with my uncle, Mr. Le Tessier, and I do not know the lanes as yet."
"Silas?" There was surprise in Gilroy's tone.
She nodded. "Aye, sir." Surprise in her own, that Gilroy should know her uncle.
"The lanes not known yet, eh? Did you take a right turn in the woods back there? And ended up on this bank?"
"Aye, sir, I did."