Authors: Elysa Hendricks
Tags: #Kidnapping, #Fantasy Fiction, #Contemporary, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Life on Other Planets, #Revenge, #General, #Love Stories
but her limbs no longer obeyed her mind’s command.
“See to her as well. Kyne will want her alive.” Katya stalked
toward the fire.
The other men stood back, watching without sympathy.
Sianna could feel their eyes on her.
Inches from her face, the quinar’s large black hooves moved
restlessly. She cringed as the big animal picked its way over
her. A pair of boots appeared next to her nose, followed by a
man’s knees. She turned her head and looked up. The man,
Graham, leaned close. In his warm brown eyes she could read
the struggle between loathing and pity.
Grey liberally streaked the dark hair falling around a face
weathered and lined with experience. Tall and broad shouldered,
his musculature obvious despite the thick furs covering his frame,
by any standard, Graham was a powerful man. His hands rested
on his knees—hands that could easily break her neck, yet hands
that she sensed could also be gentle. Compassion tempered
this man’s great strength. His warmth of spirit called to her.
Though barely old enough, Graham was the father Sianna
always dreamed of, a haven of comfort and surety every child
needs and craves.
Tears of longing blurred his image. “Please,” she croaked.
Warmth vanished from his expression. “Don’t think you
can sway me with soft pleas. Did Aubin plead? I think not. If
he had, would his cries have touched your heart? Do you even
have one? No, do not beg for mercy when there is none in
you.”
“I don’t beg for mercy, only explanations. This Aubin you
speak of is unknown to me.” Sianna forced the words past her
dry throat.
Graham’s eyes narrowed, turning cold and flat. “Lies will
gain you nothing.”
His words shattered Sianna’s hope. Still, his hands were
gentle as he lifted and carried her to the fire.
Heat from the crackling blaze stung her icy skin, forcing
the blood to thaw and flow. The other men glared at her, and
like a frigid rain their stares doused the warmth.
She-hound! Whore! Demon spawn! The men’s unspoken
river of scorn battered her.
She fought against the current seeking to pull her into a pit
of darkness. The riptide sucked at her, draining her strength,
her will, eating away at her very soul.
She searched deep within for the strength to cope with the
harshness of the emotions her captors directed at her. Their
loathing differed greatly from the gratitude and love she sensed
from those she healed. How could she deal with their revulsion?
In the beginning, surprise and disbelief that anyone could
wish her harm paralyzed her. Now that her shock had worn
off, she knew she must escape. If she didn’t act soon, it would
be too late.
***
“Kyne would nail my hide to the castle wall if you were
injured.” Weary acceptance laced Graham’s grumbled
complaints. “He set me to keep watch over you, and the minute
I turn my back you run off and do something foolish. What do
you think your fate would be in DiSanti’s hands?”
Sianna heard no heat in his tone. She lay still, as yet too
physically and emotionally drained to challenge her captors.
Katya merely laughed without mirth. “You worry too much,
old man.”
Sianna felt Graham’s pang at the woman’s dismissive words.
How could Katya not know of the man’s devotion? His love
for this impetuous young woman rang in his voice and shone in
his eyes.
“Despite what Kyne may believe,” Katya continued, “he is
not my father, only my brother. I have no need of a keeper. I
can care for my own person.”
“A keeper is just what you need. Kyne is your brother, but
never forget he is also your Rul. As such he deserves your
respect and obedience.”
Katya’s shoulders dropped slightly at Graham’s chiding,
then her chin lifted. “While he sits planning his vengeance against
DiSanti, I have captured the means by which to obtain justice,
DiSanti’s only daughter, the heir to his misbegotten empire.”
How little they understood. Did her father truly love
anyone?
“What will he sacrifice to have her returned unharmed?
His fortune? His life? DiSanti is as flawed crystal. We will
shatter him.” Katya spat the words, her face twisted in anger.
If they planned to use her as bait to trap her father, they
had miscalculated. Other than as a pawn to be sacrificed for
something better, she held little worth in her father’s eyes. Why
else had he abandoned her with the Sisters so long ago?
And if these angry men raped her, what little value she had
would disappear. Without her innocence, she was worthless to
her father as a political pawn.
Sianna shivered despite the warmth of the sun now beating
down. She stirred, then cringed as they turned their hard stares
on her.
Katya stood and approached. “So DiSanti’s spawn
awakens.” She crouched down. “If in your black heart you
believe in the Eternal One, I suggest you pray.”
Sianna fought to block the woman’s venomous anger and
control the shudders of fear shaking her frame. “I don’t
understand. Why have you taken me?” She forced the words
past the terror clogging her throat.
“Do not play the innocent with me. You live only so long as
you are of use to us. Cause any trouble, and I will take great
delight in disposing of you. Your father need never know of
your death until it is much too late for him to escape our trap.
Once we have him, you will pay for your crimes as well.”
Sianna pulled herself up and faced the woman with as much
courage as she could muster. “What crimes?”
Katya gave a low growl and swung her hand. Sianna
flinched, but the blow never fell.
“Enough.” Graham grabbed Katya’s arm and pulled her
away. “The girl is no good to us if she dies of fright.” He paused,
his gaze running over Sianna. “Or from exposure.”
He released his grip on Katya and knelt next to Sianna.
The first rays of the sun flashed off a knife blade. Sianna shrank
back. The blade swept passed her face and sliced through the
rope around her wrists.
Feeling returned to her arms and hands like a thousand
insect stings. She gritted her teeth to keep from moaning. A
heavy fur coat, warm from the fire and the heat of the man’s
body, dropped over her bent shoulders. Before she could speak
her thanks, he placed a mug filled with a fragrant, steaming
liquid in her hands.
Features twisted into a disapproving scowl, Katya moved
to snatch away the mug. Graham stopped her.
“She is our prisoner. Would you abuse her in her
helplessness, as they abused Aubin?” he questioned softly.
Katya’s gaze locked with Sianna’s. Heartbreak flashed
across Katya’s face. Sianna felt it like a blade in her heart.
“Will you sink into the slime with DiSanti?” Graham
continued.
Wave after wave of agony held Sianna rigid. Only when
Katya whirled and fled the clearing did the anguish in Sianna’s
heart cease. She knew Katya was not so fortunate. She carried
the soul-destroying grief within her.
“For whom does she grieve?” Sianna dared to ask.
Graham’s grizzled features tightened, erasing all hint of his
gentle nature. “Cease your questions, woman. Do not try our
patience with your false show of innocence.” He turned and
stalked away.
Just what did they believe her father had done?
***
Sianna sat behind Graham, her arms around his waist as
his quinar picked its way confidently along the narrow mountain
path. To one side sheer rock walls rose toward a cerulean sky,
to the other, the ground fell away sharply. Pebbles dislodged by
the passing quinar rained down into the distant valley. Upward
they climbed. Despite the heat of the sun, the air grew thin and
cold.
“Will you tell me where are we going?” Despite herself,
Sianna’s voice quavered.
“Don’t be so eager. You’ll know soon enough.”
“But...”
“Be silent, woman, or I’ll gag you. I’ve no desire to listen
to more of your lies of ignorance and innocence.”
Though he spoke gruffly, deep within him Sianna sensed
the seed of beginning belief. She contented herself with that
small break in his hatred.
When the sun stood straight overhead, they paused at a
wide place in the path and dismounted. Her limbs ached and
trembled from clinging to Graham and from the jarring gait of
the quinar. They ate dried meat and fruit, washed down by a
sharp ale.
Sianna gulped the cold liquid, grateful for its numbing effect.
Sitting beside Graham, she dared to ask again, “Where are we
going?”
While Graham and Katya ignored her question, the other
men’s antagonism intensified. Tension made the atmosphere
thick. “Why do they hate me so?”
“Murderers are not often loved,” Katya said.
The thought of what these people might do to her tightened
her throat so she couldn’t swallow. “You think I murdered
someone?”
Hostile silence met her question. Apprehension kept her
from asking more.
She was almost grateful when they mounted the beasts
and moved on.
The path widened even more, heading downward. Shadows
lengthened and the air warmed. Where before she welcomed
the protection, she now longed to shed Graham’s heavy coat.
Fear of sliding from the quinar’s back kept her from releasing
her grip on Graham, and the men’s gazes already lingered over
long on her bare legs. Like a sullen black cloud, their lust joined
with the lightning of their hate. She was the enemy, the focus
of their anger. Would their normal moral restraints protect her?
She feared they would not.
Dark came early in the shadow of the mountains. They
made camp in a wooded valley. Quietly the men moved around,
tethering the tired quinar and building a fire to prepare a hot
meal. The tinkling sound of water cascading over rock blended
with the chorus of birds settling for the night and the rustle of
dry leaves in the evening breeze.
Once the sun dipped behind the mountain’s bulk, the air
grew chilled. Sianna wrapped her arms around her waist, again
grateful for the coat’s warmth.
Silence pounded against her abraded nerves. She could
almost hear the thoughts of the men, and her tender heart
lamented the fury directed at her. She tried not to draw attention
to herself.
Graham’s quinar nickered and nuzzled her fingers when
she fed it a piece of dried fruit she had saved from the midday
meal. Though she knew the men watched her every movement,
no one stopped her as she spoke to the quinar and stroked its
rough coat. The animal responded to her touch with low rumbles
of pleasure. She easily read the simple creature’s wants—a
scratch in an unreachable spot, a rub, a handful of sweet grass.
By giving him what he craved, she gained his trust and
acceptance.
Deju, Katya’s beast, laid his massive head on her shoulder.
She staggered beneath its weight. He sighed in contentment as
her fingers massaged behind one floppy ear. Moist and heavy
with the smell of chewed grass, his breath bathed Sianna’s
neck.
Could she mount and ride away without being caught? The
thought of escape tantalized her. Self-preservation urged her to
flee, while her training prodded her to stay and help these deeply
troubled people. But would they accept her aid?
“Move away from the animals,” a man called Je’al ordered.
Though tall, he appeared no older than Sianna. His gaze swept
over her, then lingered on the swell of her breasts beneath her
thin robe and nightdress. She clutched the coat closed.
“You think you can escape your fate?”
“I wasn’t trying to escape.” The lie tasted sour on her
tongue.
Before she could scurry back to the relative safety of the
campfire, his fingers closed around her wrist.
Like a burning brand, his touch revealed the torment
churning within him. Hate, black and ugly, and a fevered hunger
mingled until the two emotions demanded an outlet, lest they
destroy him.
Hope shrinking, Sianna knew he meant to vent his wrath
on her. Caught up in his turmoil, it was a moment before she
realized he pulled her deeper into the growing darkness rather
than back toward the others. She opened her mouth to cry out.
He clamped his hand over her face, smothering her scream.
She fought his hold, her struggles no match for his strength.
Soon she could no longer see the light from the fire or hear the
murmur of voices.
His hand lifted from her mouth. She gulped in air and struck
out. He grunted.
“Be still, she-hound.” His fingers dug into her shoulder,
forcing her to the ground.
“Let me go.”
Pinned beneath his weight, she tried to retreat from his
emotions. If she failed to separate from his passions, she feared
she would experience her rape from his perspective. To do so
would destroy her as surely as it would him.