Read Claiming Their Maiden Online
Authors: Sue Lyndon
Claiming Their Maiden
By
Sue Lyndon
Copyright © 2013 by Stormy Night Publications and Sue Lyndon
Copyright © 2013 by Stormy Night Publications and Sue Lyndon
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any
means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information
storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
Published by Stormy Night Publications and Design, LLC.
www.StormyNightPublications.com
Lyndon, Sue
Claiming Their Maiden
Cover Design by Korey Mae Johnson
Images by The Killion Group and Bigstock/Victoria Kalinina
This book is intended for
adults only
. Spanking and other sexual activities represented in this
book are fantasies only, intended for adults.
Amelia gagged at the smell of blood. She backed away from the gruesome scene,
clamping a hand over her mouth. A scream built in her throat, but no sound escaped. Shock set
in, causing her whole body to tremble. A chill rolled through her and she struggled to make her
legs work. After a few forced steps, she was moving, and fast.
She ran out into the foggy morning to see a dark form drifting through the mist, heading
straight for her. Amelia blinked, recognizing the woman who approached by her ridiculous
flaring skirts. Only one person in the village dressed so outlandishly.
“Beatrice?” Amelia squinted and her pulse increased.
Sure enough, Beatrice emerged from the fog, a smug smile painted on her face. A sharp
sense of foreboding pierced Amelia. This was no ordinary encounter, so early in the morning,
and so soon after discovering a crime had been committed. A murder.
“Good morning, Amelia,” Beatrice whispered in a conspiratorial tone. “I trust you found
Mrs. Embers’ body?”
Amelia felt ill. “Yes. She’s dead. How—how did you know?” She couldn’t believe the
elderly seamstress she’d worked for was dead, let alone brutally murdered in her own shop.
Beatrice grinned and played with a ribbon in her hair. “I entered her shop to see if my
new dress was finished and witnessed you attacking the poor woman. I managed to get away and
outrun you—barely. I’m lucky to have escaped with my own life.”
Realization dawned, and it was as cold as the mist swirling around them. “You’re setting
me up,” Amelia hissed. “Mrs. Embers would’ve been your mother-in-law. Why do this?”
“She’s meddlesome and has long insisted Rayson take two or three wives. I refuse to
share him, especially with you.”
“With me?”
“Yes,” Beatrice spat. “Mrs. Embers convinced Rayson to include you in our marriage
ceremony next week. He was supposed to ask you today. You see, Amelia, I killed a few nasty
birds with one stone this morning. Some nastier than others.”
Amelia glanced up and down the street. The fog was beginning to lift, and she could
make out the outline of shops and houses from behind the thick white blanket. The church
steeple stood out at the end of the street, reminding Amelia that her word wouldn’t hold up
against Beatrice’s. Amelia was an orphan, and she’d been in trouble with the village elders
before for committing petty crimes over the years. In stark contrast, Beatrice was the priest’s
youngest, beloved daughter, and she’d never been in trouble a day in her life. Amelia had heard
rumors that Beatrice was a backstabber, but she would’ve never guessed the girl was capable of
coldblooded murder.
“You’re horrible,” Amelia said, her temper rising. “Mrs. Embers was a kind woman. She
didn’t deserve this. And if Rayson wants to take ten wives, it’s his right to do so!”
“I hear voices,” Beatrice smirked.
Amelia froze, holding her breath. The village was waking up, and the fog lifted more
with each second.
“I’ll give you a two-minute head start before I scream,” Beatrice said, winking. “Run
fast.”
Amelia had no choice. If she didn’t run, a noose would tighten around her neck before the
rising sun burned away the last of the fog. Survival instincts kicked in, and she bolted between
houses and out of the village. The huge forest swallowed her after a few minutes of running. She
stumbled over roots and underbrush, but didn’t stop once.
Entering the forest brought her a small amount of relief, taking the edge off her terror.
The forest was thick and dark, providing plenty of hiding places. Even though there were lots of
places to hide, the more space she put between herself and the village, the better.
Sickening thoughts swirled in her head as her heart pounded and her chest ached in
breathless agony. Poor Mrs. Embers was dead. The villagers thought Amelia was a murderer,
and Rayson Embers would unsuspectingly wed his own mother’s killer. Amelia was an outlaw,
and a price had probably already been levied on her head. The Head Elder would rush outside
and yell, “Ten pieces of gold!” or “Twelve pieces of gold!” Justice was served swiftly in the
village, and in Amelia’s opinion, almost never fairly. She shuddered to think how many pieces of
gold would be put on her head, and how many bounty hunters would trail her through the forest.
She prayed to the Goddess for their failure, muttering her plea in between heavy gasps.
Branches tore at her arms and scratched her face. She ran blindly, having never been
inside the forest. Deeper and deeper she ran straight into the unknown, tearing her way through a
darkness that promised eventual horrors. Try as she might, she wasn’t able to push away the
frightening stories about the forest she’d heard her whole life. She’d always yearned to leave the
village, but the only escape was through these woods, these reportedly haunted woods that huge,
deadly beasts called home. Wolves, bears, large cats, and possibly, a race of barbarian men
banished from the villages of civilized men long ago. Were the stories about the forest and these
terrible creatures true? She had a feeling she’d find out soon enough. Much too soon enough.
She ran and ran. In her imagination, death was chasing her as she barreled ahead into a
place no human belonged. If only people lived in the woods, if only she knew in which direction
to run to find an opening in the forest that would lead to another village. A vision of a huge,
hairy barbarian man flashed in her mind, and she again wondered if such creatures really lived
amongst the trees. Amelia had seen proud hunters swagger down the street with bears, wolves,
and cats, but never a barbarian man. Perhaps if they existed, they avoided village folk like her.
She sincerely hoped they were a myth. Contending with the four-legged predators was a bad
enough prospect.
When running became complete anguish, Amelia paused to lean against a massive trunk.
She fought for air and tried to get her bearings. Shadows danced around her, and she imagined
they were the ghosts of the forest, here to give her a new fright. She didn’t know how to stay
alive here, in the wilderness, but she didn’t know how to stay alive if she left either.
Beatrice had sentenced her to death, despite the head start.
The aching in her chest gradually lessened, and she glanced around warily. A few rays of
sunlight pierced through the trees in the direction she’d been running from, bringing her hope.
The forest would be less frightening with a little more light. Just as she latched onto this new
hope, a noise stopped her breathing cold.
A rustling in the underbrush. Footsteps and—
oh, no
—a deep growl rumbled through the
air, stirring the leaves and shaking the ground. Amelia’s heart leapt to her throat, and she
continued to hold her breath, listening and praying. And praying some more.
Anger and fear combined in her chest. She wasn’t ready to die so soon. Glancing around,
she spotted a large tree with numerous branches spaced close together, leading up to treetops
concealed by darkness and mist. She swallowed hard, took a deep breath, and lunged for the first
limb. The terror of more growling reached her, propelling her to the second and third branches,
and up and up. Maybe the Goddess would turn her into a bird once she reached the top. It was a
beautiful idea, to be able to take flight at the first sign of danger. To be able to fly out of darkness
and into light, into hope.
Enough daydreaming
, she thought.
Keep climbing. Don’t stop.
She reached for the next branch, but touched something sticky. Instinctively, she pulled
away, yanking her hand out of a web with a pop.
Oh, Goddess
. A web. Not just any web—a
freakishly huge web. She wasn’t an expert in wild forest creatures, but any idiot knew a giant
web meant a giant spider.
A hiss floated down from above, and a split second later another growl from below shook
the tree. She cursed at her bad luck. An unknown beast on the forest floor and a presumably huge
spider wanted to eat her. Bounty hunters were probably chasing her too. And the Head Elder had
probably already called for her hanging. Her day couldn’t possibly get any worse.
The spider wasn’t visible through the branches above, but it hissed again, louder this
time. Amelia reached for a small branch, hoping to break it off for use as a weapon. But just as
the limb broke free, the tree shook with so much force that she lost her footing.
Falling fast, she screamed and closed her eyes. She landed. Except she didn’t. Not really.
It wasn’t a hard, bone-crushing impact. The air didn’t rush from her lungs, but panic had her
gasping as she tried to make sense of what had happened. She tried to open her eyes, but the
whole world faded and she slipped into darkness.
* * *
Amelia drifted. Voices reached her ears, but she couldn’t discern a single word, let alone
a complete sentence. She was warm and surrounded by feathers. Or so it seemed. She had to be
dreaming. She saw the village, the little houses and shops passing by. A flash of a woman’s face
with eyes blue and more radiant than the sky on the clearest summer day. Her mother? Alarm
flickered in those magnificent blues, and pain followed. The eyes closed. Forever. The woman
was gone. Dead. Amelia reached out, as if to bring the woman back, but black, fur-covered
appendages came into focus next, crawling closer. Hissing.
The spider. Was Amelia trapped in its web?
She began to kick her legs and flail her arms, and more voices approached, deep and most
definitely male. Bounty hunters? Was she to be hanged in exchange for a few wretched pieces of
gold?
“Beatrice,” she tried to say. “It was Beatrice.”
The hissing faded with the image of the spider, and the sound of slamming replaced it,
like a door being shut hard. A door!
A door meant a room. A room meant a house. And a house meant people. What was
happening? Her mind raced to keep up with events she had no control over. Images and sounds
that left as rapidly as they came.
She was falling to the forest floor once more, and when she expected to hit the bottom,
her eyes shot open as she jolted to wakefulness. She expected to see bounty hunters, or a spider,