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I lifted my bound hands out from under the covers. "When would you like me to start?"
He laughed at that.
"Michael might need help," I explained. "You wouldn't want him to run aground or anything, would you?"
"Nor would I want you to jump s.h.i.+p. I'm quite certain of Michael's eagerness to cooperate. He's in love with Trudy, and knows I'll rip her, so to speak, should he vex me. I trust him entirely. At least so long as I keep Trudy within reach of my blade. She means little or nothing to you, however."
"I don't want you hurting her."
"I shall, of course, if you cause me trouble. Nevertheless, your heart isn't bound to hers. You might choose to risk her for the sake of your own freedom."
"I wouldn't," I told him. To this day, I don't know whether or not I spoke the truth.
I surely was eager to get untied and up on deck where I could dive overboard and swim for sh.o.r.e. But if that meant cas.h.i.+ng in Trudy's life...well, I just don't know.
But I was spared the need to decide.
Whittle said, "You'll remain here in the cabin with us until we're well out to sea."
It wouldn't do to argue. Any kind of fuss from me, and he'd give Trudy a punch, or worse.
I laid back down and worked the covers up around my neck and turned my back to the both of them. Would've been a blessing to fall asleep, but I was in too much turmoil. Besides, my head hurt from the bash Trudy's father had given it.
He'd whacked me a good one, but I'd killed him just as sure as if the knife had been in my own hand. There he'd been, fixing to set sail for France with his daughter and sonin-law, and I'd led the Ripper right to him. It weighed on me. I told myself it was his own fault for knocking me senseless. If he hadn't been so quick with his club, I could've warned him. Together, we might've handled Whittle.
Well, I'd snuck onto his yacht in the wee hours, bare to the waist and a knife in my teeth. He couldn't be blamed for getting the wrong idea. Then Whittle'd rowed up, no doubt with a story about being attacked on the streets by me, and the old man must've allowed him aboard to take me off.
If only I'd picked a different boat, Trudy and her father and Michael, they'd all be on their way to Calais.
I'd done this to them.
For a spell there, I had a mighty hard struggle not to start crying. That would've given Whittle no end of amus.e.m.e.nt and besides I didn't want Trudy to take me for a sniveling boy.
I wondered if she hated me for bringing the Ripper into her life.
Right then I vowed to save her.
CHAPTER EIGHT.
Ropes "Trevor? Trevor?"
A sweet, quiet voice woke me, so I must've fallen asleep after all. Though I knew it wasn't Mother calling to me, just for a bit I thought I was home in my own bed.
But my hands and feet were bound and the bed was bouncing up against me and rocking from side to side. That reminded me, all too quick, of where I was and how I'd gotten there.
Opening my eyes, I rolled over. It was night. The cabin was aglow with murky light from an oil lamp.
Whittle was gone.
Trudy lay under covers, only her face showing.
"Where is he?" I asked.
"He went to the galley for food."
I could scarcely believe that he'd left us alone. With Michael manning the boat and both of us tied, however, he had no choice but to fetch food himself or starve. I rather hoped he would bring some for us. The mere thought of it was enough to set my dry mouth watering, my stomach growling.
"We've got to do something," Trudy said.
I sat up, dragging the bedclothes to my chest. They did little to warm my backside, but this was no time to worry about the cold. s.h.i.+vering a bit, I gave the cabin a study. It was narrow and just long enough for the two berths, with walls at each end. The wall near my feet had a door in it.
"Where does that go?" I asked.
"Aft," Trudy said. She sat up, too. Her covers tumbled down to her lap. I could see she was still tied, arms pinned to her sides by ropes wrapped around her middle. "We're in the forward cabin. The galley's aft."
"Through that door?"
"There's the head, then the main saloon, then the galley."
I didn't know what she meant by some of that, but figured she was trying to tell me that Whittle'd gone pretty near to the other end of the boat.
"He quizzed me about our supplies," Trudy said. "He wants a hot meal. So he's bound to be away for a while. Come over here and untie me."
"Well..." I said.
"Quick!"
"Is there a way to get out out of here?" of here?"
"We shan't know that until we try. Now, don't argue."
"I'm not wearing a st.i.tch of clothing, ma'am."
"Do as I say."
Some of my sympathy for Trudy leaked away. For a poor helpless damsel in distress, she seemed a trifle bossy.
But I gave it some thought and saw how this might be a chance to save ourselves. It'd be a shame to miss it on account of my modesty. So I swung myself off the bed. I stood up. Cupping my private parts, I hopped across the s.p.a.ce between our beds. Before the jumping floor got a chance to throw me down, I dropped to my knees.
The air fairly froze me. I clenched my teeth to stop their clicking, and reached up for Trudy.
The way my hands were bound at the wrists, I had free use of my fingers. I used them to pluck at the knot in front of Trudy. It was tight against her belly. The twisted bundle of hemp felt hard as iron. My shaky fingers picked at it, slipped off, and tried again.
"Use your teeth."
I pushed my face in against her and clamped my front teeth on the knot. She was nice and warm through her gown. I could feel her press against me when she breathed. I tried to pay her no mind and only think about the job.
The knot gave some.
I kept on tugging. It made my teeth ache, but I could feel it loosen. I pulled my head away and tore at the knot with my fingers until it came open.
Trudy pulled her arms out of the ropes. She flung her covers aside and leaned forward to work on her ankles. While she was busy with that, I gnawed on the knot at my wrists. I undid it some, and got my hands free.
Sitting on the cold wood between the beds, I struggled with the rope around my ankles.
It seemed like some kind of a race to see who'd get done first. But the race was really to get clear of the ropes before Whittle came back through the door.
Not that I had a notion what we'd do once we got ourselves untangled.
Likely as not, we'd only accomplish getting ourselves killed a little quicker than otherwise.
Trudy beat me at getting free. I was still unwrapping my ankles when she stepped down off her bed and rushed to the door. She tried its handle.
"Drat," she said. "He locked it."
"He'd be a fool not to." I kicked the rope away and got to my feet. While Trudy still had her back turned, I yanked a blanket off my bed and wrapped it around myself. "We might be able to bash through it," I suggested.
"He'd hear the ruckus."
She came toward me. I retreated a few steps, and watched her stretch for something that looked like a trap door in the ceiling. She unlatched it and pushed up against it.
"Where does that go?" I asked.
"It's the hatch to the forward deck." She shoved again, grunting.
"Let me have a go at it."
"It's no use. It must be latched topside."
"Shouldn't Michael be able to open it for us, then?"
She didn't answer that, but commenced to knuckle the hatch with both fists. For a gal opposed to the ruckus of breaking through a door, she was raising a mighty racket.
I doubted it would do much good, though. Even the way we were closed away below the main deck, I could hear all kinds of noise from outside: waves slapping against the hull, sails whapping, the mast creaking, wind whistling through the rigging, all manner of other groans and rattles and clanks. Unless Michael had his ear to the hatch, I didn't hold out much hope of him catching the sound of Trudy's whacks.
But Whittle wasn't likely to hear them, either.
While she kept on punching at the hatch, I knelt on her bed and checked a porthole. It wasn't big enough to squirm out through, so I didn't even try to get it open. But I pushed my face against the gla.s.s.
All I could see were rough waves, not a blink of light anywhere from a boat nor sh.o.r.e.
"I don't believe we're on the Thames any more," I said.
She paused in her banging long enough to say, "Of course not, silly. We're out in the Channel."
I sank inside with the news of that. It wouldn't do, now, to jump s.h.i.+p and swim for land.
Trying to perk myself up, I thought how the True D. Light True D. Light was bound to have a lifeboat or dinghy of sorts. That didn't accomplish much in the way of perking, though. Even if we could get outside, Whittle would surely be on us before we could lower such a craft. was bound to have a lifeboat or dinghy of sorts. That didn't accomplish much in the way of perking, though. Even if we could get outside, Whittle would surely be on us before we could lower such a craft.
I reckon Trudy hadn't thought that far ahead, for she continued thumping the hatch.
She stopped when the boat gave a sudden pitch that banged my forehead against the gla.s.s and flung her onto me. She pushed and shoved and got herself off, and stumbled backward and dropped onto the other berth.
I turned myself around.
"He's bound to come back soon," Trudy said.
"I'm afraid so."
She shook her head. She sighed. Then she said, "You'd best tie me up."
"What?"
"Tie me up up again." again."
"We just finished getting ourselves un untied."
"But there's no way out. We can't let him know we tried to escape." She flung herself back across the aisle, bent over beside me and s.n.a.t.c.hed up one of the ropes. "Get off."
I stood up. With one hand, I kept the blanket on my shoulders. With the other, I grabbed the handle of the hatch to keep myself from being tossed off my feet.
Trudy sat on her bed and stretched out her legs. She reached the rope toward me. "Be quick about it."
"No."
"What did you say?"
"No. I'm not going to tie you up."
"You'll do as I say, boy."
It goes against my grain to argue with women. Besides, it's generally a great waste of time. But Trudy was starting to irk me with her bossy ways. I told her, "If you had no better scheme in mind than hoping we might slip out a door, you shouldn't have insisted that I untie you in the first place. Since we are are untied, however, we're no longer entirely at Whittle's mercy. We'll have the element of surprise in our favor. And it'll be two against one." untied, however, we're no longer entirely at Whittle's mercy. We'll have the element of surprise in our favor. And it'll be two against one."
"Don't be a fool."
"I say we put up a fight."
"What do you know? You're a child. child."
"I fought him once before and made a good showing. It was me who cut off the blighter's nose, you know."
"And a lot of good that did. If you'd left him well enough alone..."