All the Sweet Tomorrows Read online




  “Sweet Skye, let me love you. Let me adore the perfection of your beautiful body. For tonight at least, you belong to me!”

  He lowered his head, and with his hot tongue began an encirclement of her nipple. Around and around and around until she began to whimper deep within her throat, and he took the entire nipple in his mouth, sending a knife-sharp pulse of rapture through her body.

  Taking one of her slender feet in his hands, he kissed it, then began licking it sensuosly. His hungry mouth kissed, his tongue lapped tenderly in the hollows of her ankle, and when he reached her knee he began again with the other foot. Pulling himself back up level with her, he licked her chest and his tongue slid easily over her torso, not missing an inch of skin as he moved along.

  “Adam! Stop! You will drive me mad!” Skye gasped.

  “Then we shall be mad together, sweet Skye,” he said, and lowered his head once more, this time his tongue snaking out to touch her in her most sensitive place …

  By Bertrice Small:

  THE KADIN

  LOVE WILD AND FAIR

  ADORA

  UNCONQUERED

  BELOVED

  ENCHANTRESS MINE

  BLAZE WYNDHAM

  THE SPITFIRE

  A MOMENT IN TIME

  TO LOVE AGAIN

  LOVE, REMEMBER ME

  THE LOVE SLAVE

  HELLION

  BETRAYED

  DECEIVED

  THE INNOCENT

  A MEMORY OF LOVE

  THE DUCHESS

  THE DRAGON LORD’S DAUGHTERS

  PRIVATE PLEASURES

  FORBIDDEN PLEASURE

  SUDDEN PLEASURES

  The O’Malley Saga

  SKYE O’MALLEY

  ALL THE SWEET TOMORROWS

  A LOVE FOR ALL TIME

  THIS HEART OF MINE

  LOST LOVE FOUND

  WILD JASMINE

  Skye’s Legacy

  DARLING JASMINE

  BEDAZZLED

  BESIEGED

  INTRIGUED

  JUST BEYOND TOMORROW

  VIXENS

  The Friarsgate Inheritance

  ROSEMUND

  UNTIL YOU

  PHILIPPA

  THE LAST HEIRESS

  The World of Hetar

  LARA

  A DISTANT TOMORROW

  THE TWILIGHT LORD

  THE SORCERESS OF BELMAIR

  THE SHADOW QUEEN

  Copyright © 1984 by Bertrice Small

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.

  BALLANTINE and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  eISBN: 978-0-307-79481-9

  www.ballantinebooks.com

  v3.1

  This book is dedicated with much love and great

  respect to the first hero I ever had, my father,

  David Roger Williams. You’re still my hero,

  Daddy!

  Contents

  Cover

  Other Books by This Author

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Prologue

  Part 1: England

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Part 2: Beaumont de Jaspre

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Part 3: North Africa

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Part 4: France

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Part 5: England and Ireland

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  The world has laid low,

  and the wind

  blows away like ashes

  Alexander, Caesar, and all who were

  in their trust;

  Grass-grown is Tara,

  and see Troy now how it is—

  And the English themselves,

  perhaps they too

  will pass!

  —Anonymous Irish poem, 17th or 18th century

  The Players

  THE O’MALLEYS OF INNISFANA ISLAND, IRELAND

  SKYE O’MALLEY known as the O’Malley, chief of her clan

  SEAMUS O’MALLEY her elderly uncle, Bishop of Mid-Connaught

  ANNE O’MALLEY Skye’s widowed stepmother

  EIBHLIN O’MALLEY Skye’s elder sister, a nun and a doctor

  MOIRE, PEIGI, BRIDE, AND SINE Skye’s other sisters, all older

  MICHAEL O’MALLEY Skye’s full brother, a priest

  BRIAN, SHANE, SHAMUS, AND CONN Anne’s sons, Skye’s half-brothers

  THE HUSBANDS OF SKYE O’MALLEY

  DOM O’FLAHERTY her first, the Master of Ballyhennessey

  KHALID EL BEY her second, known as “the

  (Diego Indio Goya de Fuentes) Great Whoremaster of Algiers,” a Spaniard turned Moslem

  LORD GEOFFREY her third, the Earl of

  SOUTHWOOD Lynmouth, known as the “Angel Earl”

  LORD NIALL BURKE her fourth, and Skye’s first love

  THE CHILDREN OF SKYE O’MALLEY

  EWAN O’FLAHERTY born March 28th, 1556

  MURROUGH O’FLAHERTY born January 15th, 1557

  WILLOW MARY SMALL born April 5th, 1560

  ROBERT SOUTHWOOD born September 18th, 1563

  JOHN SOUTHWOOD born December 15th, 1564, died April 15, 1566

  DEIRDRE BURKE born December 12th, 1567

  PADRAIC BURKE born January 30th, 1569

  THE STEPCHILDREN OF SKYE O’MALLEY

  SUSANNE SOUTHWOOD betrothed to Lord Trevenyan

  GWYNETH AND JOAN twin sisters, betrothed to

  SOUTHWOOD Skye’s sons, Ewan and Murrough O’Flaherty

  SKYE’S FRIENDS

  SIR ROBERT SMALL Skye’s business partner

  DAME CECILY SMALL his elder sister, a widow

  ADAM DE MARISCO the Lord of Lundy Island

  DAISY Skye’s tiring woman and faithful confidante

  SIR RICHARD DE GRENVILLE Skye’s old friend, a sea captain

  THE IRISH

  THE MACWILLIAM Niall Burke’s father

  CAPTAIN SEAN MACGUIRE the senior captain of the O’Malley fleet

  CAPTAIN BRAN KELLY an O’Malley captain

  CLAIRE O’FLAHERTY Dom O’Flaherty’s sister

  SISTER MARY PENITENT the former Darragh O’Neil, Niall’s first wife, marriage annulled

  THE ENGLISH

  ELIZABETH TUDOR the Queen of England, 1558 to 1603

  WILLIAM CECIL, LORD BURGHLEY the English Secretary of State, and the Queen’s greatest confidant

  ROBERT DUDLEY, THE EARL OF LEICESTER the Queen’s oldest friend, and favorite

  SIR CHRISTOPHER HATTON another of the Queen’s favorites, and Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners

  LETTICE KNOLLYS, COUNTESS OF ESSEX the Queen’s cousin

  THE ALGERIANS

  OSMAN a famous astrologer and Skye’s old friend

  ALIMA his French wife

  Prologue

  THIS is all your fault, you meddling old man!” Skye O’Malley Burke shouted at her father-in-law, the MacWilliam of Mid-Connaught. Her blue-green eyes flashed fire, and her marvelous long black hair, unbound and unruly, swirled about her shoulders as she paced furiously about the room. “You’ve gone and widowed me! Wasn’t it enough that your wicked machinations kept Niall and me separated all those years? Now you’ve wid
owed me! God curse you for it, old man! I’ll never forgive you! Never!” Then she burst into tears, collapsing onto the carved oak settle by the fireplace.

  The old man’s face disintegrated under her fierce attack, and he seemed to shrink in size, as if seeking to escape the terrible, harsh truth of her words. “How could I stop him, Skye lass? Niall is a man long grown,” his voice quavered. “He would not listen to me. How could I stop him?”

  She looked at him scornfully, and he withered further under her look of contempt. “You knew that Darragh O’Neil was a madwoman for all her religious calling, old man. You knew! Still you let my husband ride off to her, and to his own death!” She closed her eyes a moment, and more tears spilled down her cheeks. “Oh, Niall,” she whispered brokenly. Niall! Niall! Niall! came the mocking echo in her mind.

  The old man sniffed piteously as he wiped his nose on his sleeve, then said, “At least we’ve got the children, Skye lass. We’ve got Niall’s son and daughter.”

  “You have nothing,” she told him coldly. “I will take my children and leave this place. I will go home to Innisfana. I have always hated Burke Castle, but for Niall’s sake I lived here. Now my husband is dead, and I will stay no longer!”

  Suddenly the MacWilliam grew angry, a bit of his old spirit coursing back through his tired veins. “You’ll not take Niall’s children from me!” he thundered at her. “They are my heirs, the boy in particular. You cannot take them!”

  Her fair features darkened with outraged fury, and he could have sworn that sparks shot from her blazing blue eyes. “Do you think that I would let you have my babes?” she hissed angrily at him. “I’ll see you in Hell first!”

  “You’ve no choice, Skye lass. Padraic is my heir with his father gone, and wee Deirdre after him. I’ll not let you take them from me!” For a brief moment he felt sure and strong again.

  “Old man, you’ll not stop me from whatever I choose to do!” Skye O’Malley declared. Then she rose from the settle and stormed from the room, not seeing his tired shoulders slump forward, defeated by the knowledge that she would leave him if she chose, taking his only grandchildren with her.

  He coughed deeply and, turning, spit a clot of black blood into the pewter basin on the table. The blood had been coming up for several weeks now. His instinct told him that he did not have a great deal of time left to live. Until now it had not worried him particularly, for his son had been a strong, wise man, mature for his years. Now, however, Niall was dead, and his only living male heir was six weeks old. The babe was strong, but anything was possible. If the child died before reaching his majority the English would eat up his holdings as they had so many in the past several years. They might anyway.

  Where had the time gone? the MacWilliam wondered. It only seemed a short time ago that he had been a young man in his full vigor, ready and eager to bed a hot-blooded wench. Now he was but a broken old man, clutching his faded memories and shattered dreams about him like a tattered cloak; his thin white hair lank upon his bony shoulders.

  The MacWilliam sighed sadly. God help Ireland—for surely no one else would. The Irish stood quite alone, England to one side of them, the open sea on the other. In a way it was their own fault, for they had no one ruler to rally them, but rather a thousand petty, bickering chieftains, each jealously guarding his own holding, and each making the alliances best suited to himself, not necessarily to Ireland. It was no wonder that the English with their one strong ruler could overcome the Irish. Irishmen, ’twas true, would not be conquered by war, but rather by their own weaknesses.

  Still, and here the MacWilliam smiled a dark, grim smile, his beautiful and willful daughter-in-law was a very powerful woman in her own right. In Ireland Skye was the chieftainess of the wealthy, seagoing O’Malleys of Innisfana. Even though the O’Malley brothers were grown, they showed no great hurry to take the familial responsibilities their late father had bequeathed them, far preferring, as he had, to stay on their ships. Skye was the one with the head for business. In England she was the Dowager Countess of Lynmouth, a fine old English title. Her son from that union was the current earl. True, the golden-haired lad was but six years old, but he was the English Queen’s godson, and quite in her favor. Even now he was being raised at court, and was Bess Tudor’s pet page. The Queen had a weakness for attractive males, even little ones. Yes, the MacWilliam thought bitterly. Whatever happened, Skye O’Malley would survive. She had more damned lives than a cat!

  A solitary tear ran down his worn and wrinkled face. If his son had had her blessed luck he might be alive today. Darragh O’Neil! He silently cursed the day he had ever forced his son into marriage with that cold bitch! Niall had originally been betrothed to her older sister, Ceit. That lass had died in an epidemic, but as both the O’Neils and the Burkes were eager for a match between their families, the younger sister had been brought from her convent as a substitute bride. Darragh O’Neil had been within a few hours of taking her final vows, and she was a born nun. She had not wanted Niall Burke. She had not wanted any husband, but after a good thrashing from her father she had done as she was told.

  The marriage had, of course, been a disaster. Niall had been wildly in love with Skye O’Malley, then the O’Flaherty of Ballyhennessey’s wife; and when she was widowed he was unable any longer to hide that love. His own marriage had been conveniently annulled by Skye’s uncle, the Bishop of Connaught, and Darragh had hurried gratefully back to her convent. Niall and Skye were then betrothed, but once more the fates had playfully separated them. Skye was captured by Barbary pirates, lost her memory, and endured much before they were finally reunited. Then, however, she was again another man’s wife, and had not even recognized Niall. He, too, had another wife, the unfortunate Constanza, who mercifully died. As for Skye, she also lost her new husband to death, her English husband whom she had loved deeply. By then her memory of Niall had returned, but she had remained true to her Geoffrey, and the MacWilliam admired her for it. She was a remarkable woman, and he deeply regretted the years she and his son had lost.

  At last Skye and Niall had been married. Not, mind you, in any fancy ceremony with gladsome feasting afterward, but by proxy. The bride still mourned her English husband in her English castle, not even aware that her wily uncle, the Bishop of Connaught, had taken advantage of an old law that made him technically head of the family, and used that tenuous authority to marry her off. The MacWilliam chuckled hoarsely, remembering the deception he and Seamus O’Malley had used to wed the reluctant pair. His son had gone off to England expecting a warm welcome. He had not received it. The stubborn wench had led Niall a merry chase, almost driving him to violence.

  In the end, however, their love had won out as Niall had accepted that his wife was no longer the unworldly girl he had once adored, but rather an intelligent and passionate woman who had been the beloved of other men. She had been on her own long enough to learn to wield the great responsibility that was hers, and she was not about to give up her power to anyone, even a loved husband. What was hers remained hers. When he had accepted Skye for what she was, the marriage had flourished, and been blessed with two healthy, strong children within thirteen months of each other.

  The MacWilliam shook his head sadly. It had all been going so well. The Burkes had pledged their fealty to England’s Queen in hopes of gaining a measure of peace, in hopes of surviving. Many of the noble Irish families had done the same in order to save their lands and their people. Most had been betrayed, for the English were not only incredibly savage when they chose to be, but insatiably greedy for the sweet green lands of Ireland. Still, they had so far left the Burkes and their own alone. Baby Padraic’s inheritance was intact, and the MacWilliam knew that he could trust his daughter-in-law to keep it that way. Had she not fought so valiantly for her English son’s lands and title? She would fight as fiercely for her Irish son also, he knew. The wench knew her duty as well as any man, and often did it better.

  Skye O’Malley. She was a beautiful and gall
ant woman, and he wondered if she would ever be allowed any peace. She seemed destined to find love only to lose it through no fault of her own. Damn Darragh O’Neil! Damn her mad soul to Hell! He began to cough again, and his blood, bright hot crimson, streamed and steamed into the polished pewter basin as his tired heart hammered against his thin chest. His son, his handsome fine boy, was dead, and their immortality rested with a suckling infant not even old enough to lift his head up.

  Another bout of coughing wracked his ancient frame, weakening him so that for a moment he did not hear the door to his private chamber reopen. There was a gasp, and then Skye’s voice said resignedly, “Old man, will you stop at nothing to force me to remain? Will you even die on me now?”

  He grinned wanly up at her. “I’ve had my way in this life almost as much as you have, Skye lass.”

  She would have laughed, but the sight of his bright blood in the basin sobered her. Instead, she put an arm about his shoulders. “Ah, Rory,” she sighed. She used his Christian name only rarely. “Why did you not tell me of the blood?”

  “If I’m meant to die now then I’ll die,” he said fatalistically.