as theyâd pushed their way toward certain trouble, Jacko whistling Billy to heel.
The rest of that evening remained a partial blur in Ainsleyâs memory, although the chipped tooth in the front of Jackoâs mouth was one reminder. By dawn, the three of them had been nursing their wounds, some greasy bastard named Angelo who stood behind the small serving bar had been made the richer by ten gold pieces, Edmund was short three of his crew and Ainsley had acquired a brat. Heâd thought it an amusing bit of justice that heâd put Billy in charge of the boy.
How old had Chance been when heâd come to the island? Eight? Ten? And a man nearly grown by the timeâAinsley closed his eyes, let the pain roll over him, not as crippling now, but still there to remind him, then finished the thoughtâby the time theyâd all died and gone to England.
âItâs good to see you, boy.â
Chance paused with his right foot on the stone floor of the wide entrance hall, then moved again, turning to his right, following the sound of Ainsleyâs voice. âSir,â he said, then held out his hand to the man. Nearly five years had passed since theyâd spoken, communicated in any way. âThank you for not sending Jacko to the door with a brace of pistols.â
âAnd why would I do that? This is your home, Chance. Alice is welcome here. Come along, Iâve got brandy warming by the fire in my study.â
âYes, sir,â Chance said and followed Ainsley down the dimly lit hallway, secretly pleased to see that Ainsley continued to dress all in black, but that he still walked like a man who owned the world while gracious enough to share it with lesser mortals.
Heâd been a god to Chance, his savior from a fate Chance hadnât really understood until Billy had taken him aside and explained in graphic detail what the sailor had wanted from him that night in Angeloâs pub. His savior in all things.
How Chance had worshipped Ainsley, the tall, deceptively powerful man, his tanned face lean and strong, his sharp eyes missing nothing, his voice quietly commanding respect, his smiles rare but wonderful to behold.
He was still strong and straight, but there was some silver scattered now in his black hair, and the lines in his face had carved deeper, especially across his brow. Time does that to a man. As does pain.
Strange. Chance had never thought about Ainsley growing old, being anything but invulnerable. Even that day, that last day, heâd been the one whoâd kept his head, whoâd held them all together. Chance had hated him for that.
They entered the study, Chance following behind Ainsley.
Books. Ainsleyâs study was filled with books. Books on shelves that lined every wall and disappeared in the dark as they climbed toward the ceiling. Books piled on every surface, stacked on the floor. A newspaper not more than three days old was spread out on one of the tables, along with several maps.
Chance walked over to the table, taking hold of one of the maps at one corner and pulling it around so he could better see it. Several areas were circled with thick black ink, on both land and sea. âYouâre following the battles?â
âOther peopleâs wars are often interesting, although nothing has been quite so intriguing since Trafalgar. England lost a good man in Nelson.â
Chance dropped the corner of the map. âYes. Maybe one day theyâll raise a monument to him somewhere. In the meantime, theyâre allowing his beloved Emma to starve. I heard sheâs been imprisoned for debt, actually. Ainsley, itâs been a long day and Iâm really rather tiredâ¦.â
âOne drink, Chance. Just one. And some conversation.â
The fire in the grate had been freshly fed, as if Ainsley had planned on a long night, a plan Chance didnât share. He waited for the man to take his seat in one of a pair of wing chairs in
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