Chapter 2

flourish

 

Following the wedding ceremony, everyone retired to the Dangermond estate, Riverview, so named for its commanding view of the roiling, turbulent Mississippi River below the bluff upon which it sat. It was a beautiful home built nearly sixty years earlier in 1730 by a reformed English freebooter.

At that time, Riverview had been little more than a charming cottage, the city of Natchez only a huddle of wooden buildings in the middle of a vast, unexplored wilderness. The wilderness was still mostly unexplored, but like Natchez, Riverview had grown until, in this spring of 1789, it was an elegant, imposing house that the very new Sofia Dangermond would now call home.

Since she and the del Torres family had been living at Riverview these last few days before the wedding, it already had a feeling of home for her. Her personal belongings were scattered throughout the house as if she had always lived there. Knowing that Elena and Alejandro would be staying at Riverview to keep an eye on Brett and Martin while she and Hugh took a brief wedding journey to New Orleans lifted every care from her mind. Her face radiant, the love she shared with Hugh obvious, Sofia moved happily among those who had come to wish them well.

* * *

A feast had been laid out for the guests. There were punches in silver bowls, wines, and lemonade; flaky pastries filled with ham, shrimp, and chicken were piled high on silver trays; but best of all to Sabrina's way of thinking were the cream cakes and syllabubs. Seeing where her eyes strayed so often, Brett laughed at such open greed.

Sabrina was the only child present—and she was included only because she was staying at Riverview with her parents. Being an only child, she was used to the company of adults and was quite happy to remain at her mother's side watching the ladies and gentlemen in their fine clothing. But Brett, moved by an emotion he didn't recognize, made it his duty to entertain her. His mouth curved in amusement at his own actions; he held her small hand in his and ignored Morgan's cocked eyebrow and Martin's snicker as he escorted her about and saw that her plate was heaped with the delicacies that would appeal to the stomach of a seven-year-old.

Naturally Brett was teased unmercifully for his odd behavior. After the guests departed, he and Morgan appropriated a few bottles of Hugh's best wines and had stolen away to a grassy spot at the bluffs edge. Sprawled comfortably beneath a spreading oak tree, they settled down to enjoy themselves and the wine. Which they did until, a few minutes later, Brett heard some suspicious rustling in a nearby bush.

Resignedly he grumbled, "You might as well come out, Martin. I know you're there."

Brett grimaced and Morgan rolled his eyes as Martin showed himself and began to threaten. "I saw you take the bottles from the cellar. If Father hadn't left for his honeymoon, I'd tell on you!"

When Brett remained unmoved and looked at him contemptuously, Martin whined, "I won't tell, though, if you let me have some. I'm almost as old as you, and I don't see why I can't do the things that you do... or why you never let me come with you but you let that brat, Sabrina, follow you about."

Brett fixed him with a look and said icily, "Leave your tongue off Sabrina. As for telling—Father gave me permission to use the wine cellar as I wished when I turned sixteen."

His blackmail having failed, Martin scowled and started to turn away, but Brett, feeling guilty because he really didn't like his brother, called out, "Stay and join us, if you like." Martin liked, and threw himself down on the grass near the other two.

There was a companionable silence for a while until Morgan said to Brett, "You were quite the gallant this afternoon with your new cousin." His blue eyes opening very wide, he asked innocently, "Do I sense a romance? Has the family betrothed you to the young lady? Seven does seem a bit, er, soon, but I suspect you know your own mind. I wonder though, suppose she grows up to have spots and no bosom!"

Brett shot him a speaking look. "Cut line! She's only a child!" Somewhat defensively he added, "I... I felt sorry for her."

Morgan snorted, and Brett flushed. But unwilling to let his friend get off so easily, Morgan, a teasing slant to his full mouth, complained, "But you feel sorry for her all the time. I cannot think of any time during the past fortnight that Sabrina has been far from your side." Mockery dancing in his eyes, Morgan breathed in shocked accents, "Never tell me you've changed your mind about women? My God, can it be that you think to snaffle her young and train her to be the perfect bride?"

Brett's flush increased, and he appeared much younger than a few weeks away from eighteen. Martin, who had been listening to the exchange, smiled maliciously at his older brother's discomfort. Deciding to contribute to the discomfort, Martin said, "Oh, no, it isn't that, let me assure you! It's simply that he enjoys having a little slave running behind him. He can do no wrong in her eyes, and he finds playing god to an adoring audience a novel situation."

"That's not true!" Brett returned hotly, willing to let Morgan roast him but unable to bear Martin's making disparaging remarks about Sabrina. Growing more uncomfortable and defensive, he suddenly realized just how much time he had spent with the girl. Under his breath he muttered, "She's only a child. I was only being polite—anyone would have done the same thing."

Morgan smiled. "Of course... if you say so."

Throwing his companion a look of utter loathing, Brett said savagely, "Haven't you anything else to talk about? I wonder if you aren't nourishing a passion for her the way you go on!"

Morgan laughed, and the subject lapsed. They finished off the wine, and once they had escaped from Martin's company, Morgan and Brett found themselves irresistibly drawn to Silver Street. They were young and their blood was running hot, and it wasn't surprising that Brett spent the remainder of the night discovering again the pleasure a woman could give a man.

Peculiarly, Sabrina was very much on his mind when he woke the next morning with a pounding head and an odd distaste for his actions the previous evening. Morgan's teasing, innocent though it had been, had flicked Brett on the raw. Grimly he made a vow that he would have nothing more to do with his young step-cousin.

That resolve lasted for all of two days. The hurt, confused expression on Sabrina's face when he curtly told her she couldn't come catfishing with him, the quivering lip when she learned that he didn't want her company on his morning rides any longer, and the pained shadows he detected in the usually bright eyes when he reprimanded her for hanging over his shoulder in the evening while he played piquet with Morgan couldn't be borne any longer.

Rising the morning of the third day since the wedding, he sought out Sabrina. He found her sitting under one of the magnolia trees. When Brett saw the forlorn droop of her bottom lip and guessed the reason, his heart twisted.

To make her smile again was certainly worth a little teasing from his friend, wasn't it? It definitely was, he decided firmly. Approaching her, a warm smile curving his finely shaped mouth, he said coaxingly, "I spotted a quail sitting on her nest yesterday. Shall I show it to you?"

A sparkle instantly leaped into her eyes, and Sabrina turned to stare at him. "Oh, yes!" she breathed before she had time to think. But then, just a little wary after her inexplicable fall from grace, she added politely, "That is, if you don't mind."

The quail's nest was some distance from the house. They walked quietly through a tangled forest of blackberry and honeysuckle vines, wild plum trees intermingling with the pine, sycamore, oak, and chestnut trees, and eventually they came to it. Putting his finger to his lips and dropping to his haunches, Brett pointed.

It took Sabrina several seconds to discern the quail's gray, brownish-black feathers among the mottled leaves that were scattered across the forest floor, but when she finally saw it, she sucked in her breath with clear delight. "Oh, Señor Brett!" she whispered. "How wonderful! She is very pretty, si?"

Brett nodded, and together they crept away. The find of the quail's nest re-established their rapport, and it became part of the daily ritual to quietly inspect it. Each day Sabrina placed a handful of stale bread a short distance from the nest, the quail's bright little eyes watching her every movement.

"She knows us!" Sabrina exclaimed one morning. "She must, Señor Brett! She never moves off her nest or flies away when we come. Do you think she would let me pet her?"

Brett smiled down into her upturned face, his hand lightly caressing her bright hair. "Afraid not, sweetheart. She's a wild creature, and as soon as her eggs hatch, she'll be off with her chicks."

Sabrina's face fell. "Oh, I do hope we can see the babies."

"We will, don't worry," Brett promised, his dark green eyes full of affection.

It was only as they turned away that they discovered Martin had followed them. Coming out from behind an oak tree, he glanced over at the nest and sneered, "A quail's nest! Is that what you've been sneaking off to see each day?"

Earnestly Sabrina said, "Oh, but Señor Martin, she is not just any quail—she knows Señor Brett and me!"

Martin shrugged, but Brett stared at him hard for several seconds and then said softly, "You will leave the nest undisturbed, won't you?"

Martin reluctantly met his brother's green gaze. "Of course—why would I bother an old quail's nest?"

It was the end of the conversation, but for several days, Brett kept an eye out for Martin to make mischief. He gradually relaxed, however, for it seemed that Martin had decided a quail's nest was beneath his talents.

Then came a morning when the little bird wasn't on her nest. Brett thought nothing of it, assuming that the bird was out hunting, and with a light comment he turned away, heading back for the house, certain Sabrina was following him.

Sabrina had been full of anticipation this particular morning, confident that today would be the day that the eggs hatched, and she didn't immediately follow Brett but crept closer to the little nest. Seeing the broken shells, she clapped her hands with excitement and glanced eagerly around, positive her quail wouldn't have left without displaying the chicks. She had just opened her mouth to call joyfully to Brett when she spied the sinister shape coiled a few feet away from the nest. A copperhead snake. A copperhead with an obscene bulge in the middle of its sinuous length that cruelly revealed the fate of the quail and her eggs.

Horror choked Sabrina, and remembering the way the little quail had seemed to watch for her each day, she was filled with fury. A cry of anguished rage came from her, and blindly she reached for a fallen oak branch and attacked the snake.

Brett heard her cry and spun on his heels, swiftly returning to the nest. He found Sabrina, weeping and furious, wielding the oak branch with fatal efficiency.

The snake was dead long before Brett could pry the oak branch from Sabrina's clenched fingers. She was still sobbing angrily, tears streaking down her cheeks, her eyes a pure gold glitter between the spiky dark lashes when she finally released her hold on the branch and flung herself into Brett's comforting arms.

"It ate her!" she cried with furious revulsion.

"I know, sweetheart, I know. But these things happen in the wild," Brett said helplessly. Lifting her from the ground, he gently enfolded her slender body next to his, murmuring soft, consoling sounds.

Sabrina's arms were tightly clasped around his neck, her face buried under his chin, but suddenly she flung back her head and said vehemently, "But it shouldn't have happened! Not to my quail!"

Brett looked down at her, intending to say something to ease her hurt, but the words stuck in his throat as he stared at the little face just below his. Her eyes were bright with tears and anger; her cheeks were flushed pink. The wide, generous mouth was inches from his own, and Brett was overwhelmed by a surge of tenderness.

Assailed by an emotion he had no business feeling for a seven-year-old girl, he thrust her away from him and setting her on the ground, put several feet between them. Drawing a ragged breath, he forced himself to concentrate on what she had said, and unsteadily he got out, "No, no, it shouldn't have happened, poppet, but it did. You have to realize that nature isn't always kind. Life can be cruel." Ruthlessly ignoring the emotions that clawed through him, he said, "Life is cruel—you can't always have things the way you want them."

As if the death of the quail had been the death also of their re-established rapport, Brett assiduously avoided Sabrina. What he had felt for her was damnably wrong, and he convinced himself that the incident was further proof of how dangerous women could be—even very young ones.

Sabrina suffered again at suddenly being anathema to her idol. She was bewildered, hurt, and angry at the same time to be now treated as if she had committed some unforgivable offense. As the days passed, and the time grew nearer for the del Torres family to depart for Nacogdoches, Sabrina took refuge in disliking her once beloved Señor Brett. He was a beast!

There was one other incident in connection with the quail. Two days after the discovery of the snake, as Brett was dismounting from his morning ride, he happened to overhear one of the grooms scolding Martin. That Martin was aware of Brett's presence was obvious from the nervous glances he kept shooting his way. But Jem, the English groom, was oblivious of Brett as he grumbled, "Did you get rid of that snake? I don't mind you trapping animals and such, but I'll be damned if I'll have you keeping snakes near the stables—and a bloody copperhead at that! Why you keep it and don't feed it is beyond me! If you haven't let it loose or killed it by now, do so today!"

A dangerous gleam in the dark green eyes, Brett said silkily, "Oh, I wouldn't scold him anymore, Jem.... I'm certain he let the snake go, didn't you, Martin? About two days ago?"

Martin swallowed and backed away from his older brother. It did him little good. Brett stalked after him, and later that day and for several days thereafter, Martin's blackened eye and puffed, swollen face weren't a pretty sight.

Sofia and Hugh returned from their brief honeymoon in New Orleans the day before Brett's eighteenth birthday. That marriage agreed with them was apparent from the shy smile on Sofia's lips and the warmth that leaped into Hugh's eyes whenever she entered a room.

After the initial greetings had been exchanged, Sofia noticed the estrangement between Brett and Sabrina. The next morning she asked Elena, "What in the world has happened between your daughter and my new stepson? Did she do something to enrage him?"

Elena shrugged her shoulders. "I don't know, but I would like to box his ears! It was not kind of him to be so pleasant to her and then avoid her like she had the pox. Men! Never will I understand them!"

Brett's birthday present from his father arrived that afternoon, and the entire family gathered at the whitewashed stables to admire it. It was a magnificent two-year-old golden chestnut stallion, a powerful, spirited animal that Brett was to train himself.

Staring at the half-wild animal as he snorted and cavorted in the paddock, for a few minutes Sabrina forgot the gulf that had grown between her and Brett. The stallion was a thoroughbred, his Arab blood evident in the small, arrogant head and the long, incredibly slender legs, and Sabrina was enchanted.

Her antagonism forgotten, she watched enthralled as the sunlight turned the stallion's glossy coat to a fiery red when he reared up, lashing out with his hooves. Sabrina sighed. "Oh, Señor Brett!" she cried, "He is so beautiful!"

Dazed by the gift, Brett, too, for the moment, was able to put aside his grim resolve. Grinning down at her, he murmured, "Handsome, Sabrina, handsome. Males of the species are not beautiful."

Sabrina grinned back at him, her spirits lifting skyward. Wrinkling her tipped-up little nose, she retorted, "He is more than handsome. He is beautiful! Oh, see how the sun shines on his coat—he looks like a flame. A beautiful flame!" Earnestly she added, "That is what you should name him, Flame, for he is truly a horse of flame."

"What do you intend to name him?" Sabrina's father, Alejandro, asked.

Staring at the stallion, seeing the sleek, fiery coat and hearing Sabrina's words ringing in his ears, Brett said slowly, "Why not Flame? It certainly fits, and"—slanting a teasing glance down at Sabrina—"as Sabrina says, he is a beautiful flame."

Her eyes huge, her own red-gold hair flame-colored in the sunlight, she demanded, "You will truly call him that? You will use the name I chose?"

Unable to help himself, Brett flicked a caressing finger down her cheek. "Naturally. What gentleman could refuse such a lovely lady?"

There was a murmur of laughter, and then, ever inclined to press her luck, Sabrina asked eagerly, "And you will let me ride him, si?"

"No!" came from the assembled adults, Brett's answer perhaps most fierce, a horrifying picture of what the untamed Flame could do to Sabrina's small body flashing through his mind.

Surprised at the collective answer, Sabrina looked crushed, and Brett was moved to explain, "He is totally untrained, Sabrina, almost a wild horse. No one has ever ridden him, and even the grooms say he is difficult to handle. He is too powerful and dangerous for you to consider riding. I forbid it."

All of her charity toward him vanished, and there was a mutinous cast to her chin when she glanced away from him. "I could, you know," she muttered.

Remembering that he wanted to keep her at a distance, Brett spoke coldly. "No, you couldn't. You're too young, just a child."

Nothing he could have said could have wounded her more deeply. Throwing him a look of dislike, she tossed her red head and flounced away. She would show him... and then maybe he would like her again?

Sabrina's opportunity came sooner than expected, the very next morning in fact. Arising early, she discovered to her surprise that she was up before anyone else. After she had been put to bed the previous evening, there had been several toasts to Brett's good health, and with one thing and another, it had been extremely late when everyone had retired. Consequently, dressed and eager for the day, Sabrina found herself the only one of the family up. There were servants moving about, but they were busy with their tasks, and no one thought to demand that she stay indoors.

Hopping down the curving staircase of the house, Sabrina glanced wistfully in the direction of the stables, the brown roof of one of the buildings discernible through the trees. Drawn irresistibly by the lure of Brett's stallion and she soon found herself leaning against the paddock fence watching with leasure as Flame haughtily trotted over in her direction.

Cautiously they inspected one another, the big, untamed flame-red stallion and the little girl with the flame-colored hair. Eager to make friends, Sabrina yanked up some clover growing near one of the posts of the paddock and held it out to the stallion. When Flame condescendingly nibbled the offering, Sabrina thought her heart would burst with excitement. Gingerly reaching up to touch his soft nose, she sighed blissfully when he blew softly and made no move to jerk away from her caress.

Wanting something more worthy of him than clover, she dashed into the stables and quickly found the bin of oat and grain that were regularly fed to the Dangermond thoroughbreds. She dumped several handfuls into a nearby bucket and rushing back offered them up to her new friend.

She hadn't really thought about riding the stallion, but as time passed and he seemed to accept her presence, she grew bolder and climbed to the top rail of the white paddock fence. Flame seemed unperturbed by this action, and Sabrina was delighted, even going so far as to gently pet his strong, straight back while he searched the ground for the last few kernels of corn that had fallen there.

It was too tempting to resist. Flame was standing right next to the fence, barely a hand's span away from where Sabrina sat on the top rail, and before she had time to think, she leaned over and slipped onto the stallion's back.

Brett awakened not too long after Sabrina had skipped out of the house. And like Sabrina, he was drawn to the stables, wanting to reassure himself that Flame hadn't been only a wonderful dream. He arrived just in time to see Sabrina slide onto the stallion.

Startled by the unaccustomed weight on his back, Flame arched his neck uneasily, snorting loudly and dancing nervously. Having practically been born astride a horse, at his first movements, Sabrina clamped her legs to his sides and tightened her hold on his mane.

Brett froze. Aware of what could happen if the stallion decided to turn ugly, he forced himself to walk slowly toward the paddock, his heart beating with thick, painful strokes, his gaze locked on Sabrina's little figure. She looked so small, so defenseless, so incapable of controlling the stallion, that Brett felt a trickle of fright slide down his spine. Dear God, he prayed fervently, dear God, don't let her be harmed.

Growing agitated about the creature on his back, the stallion pawed the ground, tossing his head and taking little, uneasy sidesteps. Unaware of Brett's approach, Sabrina was filled with excitement and pleasure at her accomplishment and wished passionately that Señor Brett could see her now.

Moving with agonizing slowness, Brett finally reached the fence. Not wishing to alarm the horse or the child, he said with far more calmness than he felt, "Good morning, Sabrina. I see you have managed to ride Flame after all."

Her face filling with delight, Sabrina jerked in his direction and cried joyfully, "Oh, Señor Brett! I was hoping you could see me! I told you I could ride him!"

But in that instant, Flame, with a whicker of anger, reared up on his hind legs. Caught off guard, Sabrina almost lost her hold, but instinctively she clung desperately to the rising stallion.

At Flame's first move, Brett had leaped to the fence and was poised on the top rail. Horse and rider were only inches from him, and as Flame's feet hit the ground and the stallion gave a powerful buck, Brett lunged across the space that divided them and roughly plucked Sabrina from Flame's back.

Breathing heavily, beads of perspiration dotting his forehead, Sabrina clasped to his chest in a death hold, Brett slid onto the ground on the opposite side of the fence. Flame, relieved of his unwelcome burden, tossed his arrogant head and with a whistle of fury raced away. Sabrina was not at all pleased with her rescue. Twisting around to glare at Brett, she said angrily, "I could have stayed on—I have ridden many, many horses. I am not an infant!"

Relief that she was safe had barely penetrated his brain when her words hit him, and instantly he was blindly, furiously angry. "Why, you little hell-born babe! I just saved your bloody life!" And then, as his anger fed on itself, the jade-green eyes nearly black with fury, he snarled, "And I forbade you to ride him! How dare you disobey me!"

All her hurt and confusion of the past days rising up to sting her, Sabrina glowered back at him, screwing her features up into an awful face and sticking her tongue out at him.

It was the final straw. Enraged as much because she could arouse emotions within him that he didn't understand as by her actions, Brett promptly turned her over his knee and gave her a sound hiding. His chest heaving, his mouth thinned, moments later he stood her in front of him and snapped, "Let that be a lesson to you, brat—don't ever cross me again!"

Furiously Sabrina blinked back tears. The full lower lip quivering, the amber-gold eyes a startling incandescent gold, she spat, "I hate you, Señor Brett! I hate you! I never want to see you again!"

"Well, that suits me just fine!" he hurled back. Watching her stalk away, he knew an urge to call her back, an urge to mend the breach between them, but fiercely he killed that urge. What a fool he was. It was a good thing that he had discovered her real nature before it was too late—an embryonic Jezebel, practicing her wiles already on the unwary male; headstrong, stubborn, and not to be trusted an inch!