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Devon Wakefield
Mary
Devlin
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Devon Wakefield only
wanted to escape the unwanted attentions of her
lustful stepfather. Yet her hiding place proved to
be a doorway to a new life. Having inadvertently
stumbled onto a convict ship bound for New South
Wales in 1787, no one would believe her when she
said she didn't belong there. So, like it or not,
she was on her way to a new home.
On
the banks of Sydney Harbor, Devon found strange
new animals and people who would become her
friends. She learned that she had an extraordinary
talent and love for farming. And above all, she
discovered the love of her life: Lieutenant
Jonathan Lake of His Majesty's Navy. The first few
years in Australia brought nothing more pleasant
than poverty and starvation. However, as the
colony grew more prosperous, so did Devon.
Yet
as successful as she was as a farmer, Devon's
heart was broken. For Jonathan was gone, and she
had been forced to marry another man. Sometimes it
seemed as though Devon would never find love
again-that all life promised her was work, work,
and more work. Then, back in London, Jonathan
makes a bizarre discovery that sets him and Devon
back on the road to reunion and to true love.
PROLOGUE
Portsmouth,
England
May 12, 1787
Devon Wakefield paused to catch her breath beside
a dark, roughly finished warehouse. She had no
idea how long she had been running, but it must
have been several minutes. The smell of saltwater
permeated the air around her; she could taste the
sea air as she panted, so Devon knew she was close
to the ocean. Heavy footsteps approached. In alarm
Devon sought refuge behind some wooden crates
piled against the warehouse.
"Come on, Devon! Come on out!" The
all-too-familiar voice echoed through the empty
docks, coming nearer along with the footsteps.
Devon crouched down lower beside the crates,
praying he would pass her by.
"It's no use, you know. I'll find you eventually!"
The footsteps had ceased-and she could actually
hear Sir Angus's heavy breathing. Was he really
that close to her? Devon shivered-and not totally
with the cold. She held her breath, making a
mental promise to herself that she would never,
never return to Sir Angus.
His footsteps started up again. Thankfully they
sounded as if he was
moving away from her. But Devon didn't dare relax.
"What are you doing?"
Devon started, shaking with fear. She could feel
all the blood leaving her face. Against her will
she looked up - then relaxed a little. It was not
Sir Angus standing over her. The person was too
straight, too strong; this was hardly the stooped
silhouette of her stepfather.
"Don't you know that respectable young women don't
come down to the docks at night?" hissed the
stranger. He shifted his position a little, and
Devon could see his face. He was young, tall and
handsome, with arresting eyes-probably blue-and
thick brass-colored hair clubbed in back. He wore
the uniform of a naval officer.
She found her voice. "Please, sir, I'm hiding from
my stepfather," she explained. "My mother died
three months ago, and he's lonely, and I came with
him to Portsmouth from London. He - " She stopped
to catch her breath.
The stranger bent closer to her. "It's all right.
My name is Jonathan Lake, I'm a lieutenant in His
Majesty's Navy, and I won't hurt you. Go on."
"We were riding in the coach, and suddenly his
hands were all over me, touching me." Devon
shuddered at the memory. Sir Angus, in the
carriage-one hand on her breast and the other
creeping up her skirt...
Defiantly she pulled herself together and gazed
into Jonathan Lake's eyes. "I'm not going back to
him!"
Was it her imagination, or did his eyes flash with
anger? "Well, you shouldn't. Do you have any other
relatives you can go to?"
Devon didn't, but she didn't want to admit it for
fear that this man would feel that Sir Angus was
her only source of protection. Men were so
irritating that way! She was barely eighteen years
old, but she was old enough to provide for
herself. If she could only find a job of some
kind... But she didn't want to tell the stranger
this.
"Yes," she lied. "My aunt lives right here in
Portsmouth. I can get a cab to take me there. But
I don't want my stepfather to find me!"
"Well, he won't if I can stop him," said
Lieutenant Lake grimly. "I'll find you a cab,
never fear."
Heavy footsteps once more approached them.
Instinctively Devon crouched down beside the
crates again. Jonathan Lake stepped away from her.
"Hey there!" It was Sir Angus.
"Can I help you?" asked Lieutenant Lake.
"Maybe. I'm looking for a young girl, brown hair
streaked with yellow, green eyes, about so tall,
wearing a yellow dress, rather pretty... “
"Sir, there are no refined young women on the
docks at this time of night." Lake's voice
replied. "There are no women here at all, as a
matter of fact. Or any men for that matter. The
docks are empty. The whores are all in the
taverns. You won't find this girl here."
"I
didn't say she was refined." said Sir Angus
suspiciously. His footsteps grew closer, as if he
were approaching the stranger.
"Well, sir, I only assumed - "
"Assumed nothing! You've seen her! Now where is
she?" His voice grew almost to a shout.
"Sir, I am an officer in His Majesty's Navy! Now I
assure you – “
But the young mans assurances weren't enough to
convince Devon. She shot out from behind the
crates, ran down past the warehouse and
disappeared from their sight, into the darkness.
Jonathan Lake turned to Sir Angus. "Now there! See
what you've done?" he shouted. "Now God knows what
will happen to her!"
Sir Angus reached out and grabbed him by the
collar. Jonathan smelled whiskey on his breath.
"You should have told me, you son of a bitch! I -
"
"Sir, you're drunk." said Jonathan, expressing a
calm he didn't feel. Deftly he removed Sir Angus's
hands from his collar. "I'll find her and see that
she gets back to you. Now what is your name, and
where are you staying?"
Sir Angus backed off. "My name is Angus Henderson,
and I'm staying at
the Golden Horse Inn," he said.
"You go back there, clear your head and wait,"
Jonathan instructed. "As soon as I find her, I'll
send her back to you."
Sir Angus backed away, staggering a little. The
stench of whiskey receded with him. "Do I have
your word on that?"
"You have the word of an officer and a gentleman,"
said Jonathan.
Sir Angus didn't seem to put much stock in this,
but nonetheless he turned away. "My carriage is
over here waiting for me," he said distrustfully.
"I'm going to go back to the inn. But if you don't
find Devon and send her back to me, I'll find you
and have your head!"
I
doubt that,
thought Jonathan ruefully. Not unless you're
willing to travel ten thousand miles to get it.
Aloud he said, "I'll find her. Now go on home!"
Sir Angus turned his back to Jonathan and walked
away, disappearing into the shadows. Jonathan
turned and looked in the direction in which Devon
had run. There was no one in sight.
Devon... The name conjured up memories of a
journey he had once made to Exeter in the spring,
through beautiful country, dotted with trees and
ponds and sheep and cows... What a beautiful name
for a girl. But where was she?
At
that point Devon was leaning against another
building, trying to catch her breath. She hadn't
known she could run that fast, or that long. Now
she could hear the lapping of the waves against
wood; she must be right on the docks. Be careful,
she warned herself. You could step off the pier
and into the water. Cautiously she walked a few
steps away from the building and gasped. Before
her loomed a big, beautiful ship, the likes of
which she had never hoped to see, even from a
distance.
Devon tripped; she then noticed that she had
stepped down onto a pier. Regaining her balance,
she slowly ventured closer to the ship. In the
moonlight, she could see its name painted on the
side: Friendship. What a wonderful name.
There was a gangplank leaning up against the side;
Devon could see no one on board. Trying to be as
light on her feet as possible, she streaked up the
gangplank and slipped under the rope separating
the plank from the ship.
The deck was covered with ropes, kegs, and other
such paraphernalia; Devon had to tread lightly to
step through them. Finally she reached an empty
area, near what appeared to be a trapdoor. A bar
stretched across the top of the trapdoor, but
Devon couldn't tell if it was locked or not. Was
this what Sir Angus and his friends had called the
cargo hold? Perhaps the hold would prove a good
hiding place until morning.
"So! Ye've escaped!"
Devon whirled. A huge, rough-looking guard in a
red coat stood over her, wielding a musket.
"Well, I don't know how ye could o' gotten out o'
there, but ye're goin' back in, as sure as
mornin's comin'!"
"Wait - you've made a mistake - "
"No, m’dear, you have, if y'think ye could get by
Will Miller! Not a word!" he snapped, as Devon
opened her mouth to speak. She froze; she had
never been threatened with a musket before, and it
frightened her. She didn't move as the man took a
key, opened a padlock and raised the trapdoor.
"Now down ye go, honey-back in wi' all yer
friends! Down the ladder, like a good girl."
Mindlessly Devon obeyed. A short ladder led into a
dark area, which was cold and musty and filled
with noxious odors. Devon could sense the presence
of unwashed bodies. Horrified, she watched as the
guard with the musket descended behind her.
"Here! Lie yersel' down!"
"But you don't understand! I don't belong here!
I'm not what you think I am!"
"Yeah? That's what they all say, luv. Get on wi'
ye!"
Devon lifted her chin high. "No. I am a
respectable gentlewoman and I'm not staying. Good
night to you, sir." Imperiously Devon turned and
walked back towards the ladder.
"Oh, no, y'don't!"
The next few moments were a blur. Something hard
struck Devon on the side of the head. Unbearable
pain suddenly permeated her entire body as her arm
was jerked practically out of its socket. She
stumbled and lost her footing, then cried out as
the man dragged her back through the bilgewater.
Devon was shoved onto a hard bunk, covered with a
straw mattress bound in worn muslin, with pieces
of straw sticking through holes in the fabric. Her
aching right arm was jerked back; a moment later a
frigid iron manacle was snapped onto her
wrist.
"Now try to escape!"
The guard climbed the ladder and vanished through
the trapdoor. Devon's spirits plummeted as the
door closed over her. A moment later she heard the sound of a key turning in the
lock.
"Where'd ye come from, dearie?" said a creaky
voice beside Devon. "Old Bridget Haney
died this morning, but I had no idea they'd fill
her bunk so soon. Did they move ye from one o' the
other ships?"
Devon shook her head wildly in response to the
question.
"Ah, well, don't ye worry yer little head, luv.
I'm Dorothy. Dorothy Handland. I'll look out for
you. They've done enough to us poor convict women,
shutting us up in these hulks and sending us off
to live with savages. If we don't look out for
each other, who will?"
The woman stretched a skeletal hand over and ran
it down the side of Devon's face. "Ay, that's
quite a blow old Will struck you. Ye're going to
have a dreadful bruise there. What a shame -
you're lovely, but don't you worry. 0l' Dorothy's
got just what it takes to fix you up.”
The old woman bent over; Devon couldn't see what
she was doing. A moment later Dorothy
raised a bottle to Devon's lips. "It's juice of
the poppy, luv. Mixed in cheap whiskey, I'm
afraid. No one here knows I've got it. It'll take
a lot for the likes of Will Miller to learn all
the tricks ol' Dorothy's got up her sleeve."
Greedily Devon swallowed the warm, bitter liquid
dribbling into her mouth. A warm feeling of
euphoria spread through her; the pain in her head
and arm really were going away. Desperately she
swallowed some more, then Dorothy pulled the
bottle away.
"Don't take too much, dearie. Too much can kill
you. Besides, we're going to need it. You just
relax and go to sleep now. We'll get to know each
other in the morning."
Dorothy squeezed Devon's hand reassuringly; Devon
squeezed back. Weariness was beginning to take
over her young body; the drug was working all too
well. Her green eyes began to close in spite of
herself.
I'm on a convict ship,
she reflected. No one
knows where I am. By morning, Sir Angus would be
long since on his way to London. They'll never
find me.
But Devon was too exhausted and drug-ridden to
even care. Perhaps things could be straightened
out in the morning. But for now, all she wanted to
do was sink into the blissful release of sleep.
Suddenly she felt warmer; a rough fabric was
tucked around her chin. Dorothy had covered her
with a blanket. A moment later Devon was fast
asleep.
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