Lucien's Khamsin

Read Lucien's Khamsin Online

Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo

Tags: #Romance, #Erotic, #Paranormal

LUCIEN’S KHAMSIN

An Ellora’s Cave Publication, July 2005

 

Ellora’s Cave Publishing, Inc.

1056 Home Ave.

Akron, OH  44310

 

ISBN MS Reader (LIT) ISBN # 1-4199-0166-4

Other available formats (no ISBNs are assigned):

Adobe (PDF), Rocketbook (RB), Mobipocket (PRC) & HTML

 

LUCIEN’S KHAMSIN Copyright © 2005 CHARLOTTE BOYETT-COMPO

 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission.

 

This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locales is purely coincidental. They are productions of the authors’ imagination and used fictitiously.

 

Edited by
Mary Moran.

Cover art by
Syneca.

Warning:

 

The following material contains graphic sexual content meant for mature readers.
Lucien’s Khamsin
has been rated E–roti
c by a minimum of three independent reviewers.

 

Ellora’s Cave Publishing offers three levels of Romantica™ reading entertainment: S (S-ensuous), E (E-rotic), and X (X-treme).

 

S-
ensuous
love scenes are explicit and leave nothing to the imagination.

 

E-
rotic
love scenes are explicit, leave nothing to the imagination, and are high in volume per the overall word count. In addition, some E-rated titles might contain fantasy material that some readers find objectionable, such as bondage, submission, same sex encounters, forced seductions, and so forth. E-rated
titles are the most graphic titles we carry; it is common, for instance, for an author to use words such as “fucking”, “cock”, “pussy”, and such within their work of literature.

 

X-
treme
titles differ from E-rated titles only in plot premise and storyline
execution. Unlike E-rated titles, stories designated with the letter X tend to contain controversial subject matter not for the faint of heart.

Lucien’s Khamsin

Charlotte Boyett-Compo

Trademarks Acknowledgement

 

The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction:

Queen Mary 2: Cunard Line Limited Corporation

Mack Truck: Mack Trucks, Inc.

 

Prologue

13
th
Century Hungary

 

Lucien Korvina’s dreams were crimson-filled—the color streaking down walls, splashing upon doors and windows and floors, pooling upon the cobblestones, seeping into the earth.

Scenes from the village where he had been born and had lived the first thirty-two years of his life passed before him in a collage of painful memories—the bell in the church tower slowly ringing soundlessly for Sunday Mass, a kindly priest leading a quartet of alb-clad altar boys, little girls in white dresses and veils marching behind little boys dressed in ties and suits handed down from older brothers, parishioners silently laughing as they brought up the rear of the procession.

In his dreams he relived the entire Mass in which First Communion had been bestowed upon his daughter Lilly, his only child. He attended once more the all-day parties held at the homes of his cousins, his friends, his fellow workers whose children had partaken of the Holy Bread and Wine for the first time in their young lives. And into the early evening, he rejoiced once more with his wife Magdalena as they stood over Lilly’s bed and watched the pretty one sleep.

But then sound had returned with a roar of wind, a shriek of lightning, the thundering of horse hooves in the night. The ground trembled and the sound of breaking glass filled the night.

His dreams became prolonged with sound—a piercing scream here, a gurgling moan there, somewhere a pitiful cry of horror cut off in mid-vibrato, a frightened child’s whimper as her life was taken.

With hands arched into claws, Lucien grasped the blanket covering him and rent the fabric as his hateful dreams continued on unabated. It wasn’t until his own scream reverberated through the stone chamber that he woke with eyes flared, nostrils distended and mouth opened wide as he fought for breath, sucking in gasps that were loud and fluid-filled.

Throwing aside the blanket, Lucien rose and went to the window where thick drapes covered the small opening. He put trembling hands upon the fabric with the intention of throwing the panels aside, but a violent tremor overtook him so that all he could do was fall to his knees, the draperies closed tightly in his fists.

“Why won’t you let me die?” he whispered. “Why must I relive the horror every day?”

Off in the distance the angelus bell began to chime. The old priest would be up in his tower bidding what was left of his flock to repeat the trio of Hail Marys that would hopefully help to save their souls. The only trouble was there were no parishioners left in the village and certainly none in the mountain abode where Lucien resided. They were all long gone with only the feeble old priest to genuflect before the altar on arthritic knee, his mournful entreaties to his god unheard by any human ear save his own.

Lucien hated the sound of the bell and slapped his hands over his ears to block out the lonesome tolling. Three times a day the angelus rang—at six of the morning, at noon and at six of the evening. Though Lucien never heard the morning and midday tolling, his body—and what was left of his soul—absorbed it where he lay and the pain was nearly unbearable.

“Stop!” he shouted and bloody tears filled his eyes. Sinking to the floor in a fetal position, he writhed in agony until the last echo of the silver bell stilled over the valley.

Sunset was yet an hour away but already many of the inhabitants of Modartha Keep were rousing from their day-enforced slumber. The encroaching night beckoned like a sultry lover as the wind died down and nocturnal creatures ventured from their dens to scrounge. Soon, the thick draperies that covered the keep’s small windows would be thrown aside and the night air breathed in deeply.

And death on black-clad wings would streak across the land once more.

* * * * *

21
st
Century America

 

The missiles hit New York City on June 21, 2045 decimating the entire city and the entire eastern seaboard from Maine to South Carolina. Simultaneously, bombs exploded all over Europe, completely destroying England, France, Germany and Spain before the first retaliatory strike was launched into the Middle East from whence the destruction had rained.

Within a matter of hours, the world as it was known at that time was no more. Millions of people lay dead or dying, wondrous landmarks lay toppled in ruins or had been disintegrated upon impact. Rivers and reservoirs were contaminated with bodies and chemicals. Power stations had simply vanished with a push of a button. Those lucky people aboard airplanes or taking their ease upon cruise ships were spared the first wave of terror only to land at their destination and find their world destroyed by power-hungry men with no thought to the future.

Left homeless, the remains of humanity wandered from seaport to seaport, town to town in search of uncontaminated water and food. Many starved, many committed suicide for they could not endure the hardships facing them, and many simply vanished never to be seen again. Disease was rampant and one horrible, deadly virus sprang up to infect a third of the world’s remaining population. Simply called the plague, the disease spread from continent to continent and in its wake, bodies were left to rot where they fell.

There were amid the chaos of wandering survivors, those who had hidden for centuries—keeping to themselves lest their own sub-world be discovered and destroyed. They came slowly from their hiding places and ventured out to eke out their own existence.

Among those who made themselves known after the world had been thrust into nuclear winter and worse were the Revenants, a race of people who needed to consume blood to survive. Unlike their vicious counterpart—the vampires—the Revenants looked after their human herds, keeping them safe, taking only enough blood to keep themselves alive, providing food and shelter and food so the humans would—if not thrive—at least go on.

Chapter One

 

“We had a new shipment come in tonight,” Lord Petros Demakis informed Lucien. He consulted his clipboard. “Nine women and four men.” When his friend did not answer, Petros looked up.

Lucien was leaning against the window frame, staring out at the moonless night. His arms were folded across bulging pectoral muscles that strained his fine white shirt. Midnight black hair fell in waves to well below his shoulders and shown thickly from the deep V of the shirt. Though the pale green eyes could not be seen, Petros knew they would be cold as ice and filled with a bitterness nothing seemed to be able to alleviate.

“Do you want one of the women?” Petros asked.

A vicious snort began Lucien’s answer. “Do I ever want one of them?” he snapped.

“It has been many years, my friend,” Petros said quietly. “Surely you…”

Lucien turned his face toward Petros and the fury that tightened his handsome features flashed in the depths of his verdant eyes and in the white teeth that shown from behind lips pulled back in a snarl.

Petros bowed his head. “Your pardon, my Prince. Sometimes I forget myself,” he said.

Lucien rolled his eyes then returned his attention to the window. “What news of Stavros?” he asked.

“There is nothing to report at this time. They have been quiet of late. Nikos’ last raid depleted their herd so they’ve been required to go hunting for strays in the hills.”

“If he finds one stray, he’ll be doing good,” Lucien stated.

“Oh, yes. One of the new arrivals tested positive for the antibody,” Petros informed Lucien.

“Male or female?”

“Female.”

“Has it been cut apart from the others?”

“Aye, it has. Christina is very careful with her lab specimens.”

Lucien pushed away from the window and walked to his desk. “Any word from Sibylline?” he asked in a casual tone that belied the muscle grinding in his lean cheek.

“None.”

“She’s still pissed at me,” Lucien said then shrugged. “She can hold a grudge longer than any Volakisian bitch I’ve ever met.”

Petros smiled. Lucien and Sibylline had once been lovers but that had been nearly a hundred years in the past. Today, they were friends but it had taken decades to reach a calm plateau between them. In the past, their relationship had been a feast of unbridled sex as Lucien tried to bury his painful memories in the willing body of beautiful Sibylline. When the memories persisted and grew even more agonizing, the Prince of Modartha turned completely away from his mistress and withdrew into a strict state of abstinence.

“That is unnatural, Korvina!” Sibylline had shouted. “You need the release sex can give you.”

“You need the release, Pretty One,” Lucien had replied. “I don’t.”

Furious that her lover would deny her the use of his powerful body, Sibylline had withdrawn from Mordatha and had not been seen in many years.

Sitting down behind his desk, Lucien reached up to rub at the headache that had been plaguing him for several days.

“The pain is no better?” Petros asked.

“Worse if anything,” Lucien replied. “It wouldn’t surprise me if it was Sibylline hexing me again.” He frowned. “That’s something she would take great delight in doing.”

“Have you consulted with Christina?”

Lucien flung out a negligent hand. “She’d just tell me to get laid,” he complained.

“Isn’t that what cured the last bout of migraines?” Petros inquired.

Lucien’s frown deepened. “Aye, but I’ll be damned if I’ll give into that bitch’s punishment this time. I’ll endure it despite her.”

Petros had been lifelong friends with Lucien, having been the only other survivor of the massacre in the valley centuries earlier. Though they had played together as children, loved the same woman as young boys, and gone through the same torment as grown men, there was always the dividing line between he who had become a prince and the son of a lowly shepherd to stay Petros’ tongue. But the terrible pain reflected in Lucien’s eyes emboldened Petros for he hated to see his friend suffer.

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