Stephanie Laurens
The Elusive Bride
The second book in the Black Cobra Quartet series, 2010
Prologue
The battle cries of their pursuers faded momentarily as Emily Ensworth and her escort thundered around the next bend. Gaze locked on the beaten surface of the dirt road, she concentrated on urging her mare even faster-on fleeing down the mountain road as if her life depended on it.
She suspected it did.
They were halfway down the hill road from Poona, the monsoon capital for the upper echelons of the British governing Bombay. Bombay itself was still hours of hard riding ahead. About them, the usually serene beauty of the hills, with their majestic firs and cool crisp air, was again fractured by the ululations of the riders pursuing them.
She’d got a good look at them earlier. Clad in traditional native garb, their insignia was a black silk scarf wound about their heads, long ends flying as, swords flashing, they’d charged wildly in their wake.
Their pursuers were Black Cobra cultists. She’d heard the grisly tales, and had no wish to feature in the next horrific installment.
She and her escort, led by young Captain MacFarlane, had fled at a flat gallop, yet somehow the cultists had closed the distance. She’d initially felt confident she and the troop could outrun them; she was no longer so sure.
Captain MacFarlane rode alongside her. Her eyes locked on the sharply descending road, she sensed him glance back, then, a moment later, he glanced at her. She was about to snap that she was an accomplished rider, as he should by now have noticed, when he looked ahead and pointed.
“There!” MacFarlane waved at his lieutenant. “Those two rocks on the next stretch. With two others I can hold them back long enough for Miss Ensworth and the rest of you to reach safety.”
“I’ll stay with you!” the lieutenant shouted across Emily’s head. “Binta and the others can carry on with the memsahib.”
The memsahib-Emily-stared at the rocks in question. Two tall, massive boulders, they framed the road, with the sheer cliff face on one side, and an equally sheer drop on the other. She was no general, but while three men might delay their pursuers, they’d never hold them back.
“No!” She glanced at MacFarlane while they continued to thunder on. “We all of us stay, or we all of us go on.”
Blue eyes narrowed on her face. His jaw set. “Miss Ensworth, I’ve no time to argue. You will go on with the bulk of the troop.”
Of course she argued, but he wouldn’t listen.
So complete was his ignoring of her words that she suddenly realized he
He’d accepted that.
His bravery stunned her, rendered her silent as, reaching the rocks, they pulled up, milling as MacFarlane snapped out orders.
Then he reached over, grabbed her bridle, and drew her on down the road.
“Here.” Drawing a folded parchment packet from inside his coat, he thrust it into her hand. “Take this-get it to Colonel Derek Delborough. He’s at the fort in Bombay.” Blue eyes met hers. “It’s vital you place that in his hands- his and no others. Do you understand?”
Numb, she nodded. “Colonel Delborough, at the fort.”
“Right. Now ride!” He slapped her mare’s rump.
The horse leapt forward. Emily shoved the packet into the front of her riding jacket and tightened her grip on the reins. Behind her, the troop came pounding up, forming around her as they again fled on.
She glanced back as they rounded the next curve. Two of the troop were taking up positions on either side of the rocks. MacFarlane was freeing their horses, shooing them on.
Then they swept around the curve and he was lost to her sight.
She had to ride on. He’d given her no choice. If she didn’t reach Bombay and deliver his packet, his death-his sacrifice-would be for naught.
That couldn’t be. She couldn’t let that happen.
But he’d been so young.
Tears stung her eyes. Viciously she blinked them back.
She had to concentrate on the godforsaken road and ride.
Emily fixed the sepoy guarding the fort gates with a steady direct gaze. “Captain MacFarlane?”
As the niece of the Governor of Bombay, visiting her uncle for the last six months, she could ask and expect to be answered.
The sepoy blanched, olive skin and all. The glance he bent on her was sorrowful and compassionate. “I am very sorry, miss, but the captain is dead.”
She’d expected it, yet…looking down, she swallowed, then lifted her head, drew breath. Fixed the guard with an even more imperious gaze. “I wish to speak with Colonel Delborough. Where may I find him?”
The answer had been the officers’ bar, the enclosed front verandah of the officers’ mess. Emily wasn’t sure it was acceptable for her-a female-to go inside, but that wasn’t going to stop her.
Idi, the Indian maid she’d borrowed from her uncle’s household, trailing behind her, she mounted the shallow steps. Moving into the dim shadows of the verandah, she halted to let her eyes adjust.