Read Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1] Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
New Concepts Publishing
Copyright ©2006 by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
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2
Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Seasonal Winds:
© copyright March 2006, Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Cover art by Eliza Black, © copyright March 2006
New Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, GA 31636
www.newconceptspublishing.com
This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places
are of the author's imagination and not to be confused with
fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely
coincidence.
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Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
"Fucking cops," Striker grumbled as he increased his
footsteps. His hands were thrust deep into the pockets of his
scrub pants and his shoulders were hunched defensively. A
scowl drew his features taut, making his eyes appear smaller
than normal.
"Just keep walking," the woman at his side said in a low
voice. "Don't give them any reason to suspect us."
"I hate fucking cops," Striker stated.
"Well, none of my best friends are cops, either," Bailey
MacKenna said. She gave Striker a quick glance. "You look
guilty, Nate. At least wipe that expression off your face."
Making an attempt to relax, Striker carefully watched the
two policemen strolling along the sidewalk across the avenue.
So far, neither of them had looked Striker's way. In his
position as diener—the person responsible for handling,
moving, and cleaning the bodies at the morgue—he rarely
came into contact with the authorities and he wanted to keep
it that way. He especially disliked the Portal Patrols who
maintained the exits points on Vardar-7.
"Uh, oh," Bailey MacKenna whispered.
Striker looked to where she was staring and felt the blood
drain from his face. "I knew it," he said. "I knew we were
going to get caught." He lowered his voice. "I told you we
were going to get caught!"
The tall man walking toward the policemen wore the
dreaded steel gray uniform of the Modartha, the ultra-secret
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Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
police responsible for the Slándáil Phoiblí, the National
Security. The people of her world were terrified of the
Modartha for the elite law enforcement officers were not only
deadly assassins but during full moons, changed into gray
wolves—the most dangerous of their kind.
"We're going to hang," Striker said with a moan. "Sure as
shit, we're going to hang."
"Shut the hell up, Nate!" Bailey said. So far the Modartha
agent had not looked their way. He had stopped to speak to
the policemen who appeared as rattled by his appearance as
did Striker.
"We're going to end up in the Doinsiún hanging by our
thumbs," Striker muttered.
"We're not going to the Dungeon," Bailey hissed at him.
"We've done nothing wrong."
"You don't think providing aid to the Resistance is doing
anything wrong?" Striker demanded. "Bailey, if we are
caught, we'll be jailed and I've no desire to be some bull's
cow!"
Bailey rolled her eyes. "We haven't been aiding the
Resistance and we haven't done anything to warrant being
sent to the Dungeon. We've simply been attending their
secret rallies just as hundreds of other people have. If every
curious citizen was jailed, there wouldn't be anyone left to do
their everyday jobs. There is nothing with which the Modartha
could charge us."
"Not yet," Striker reminded her. "You know what they say
about curiosity and the cat."
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Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
It was at that moment the Modartha agent turned his head
and looked right at Bailey. She could feel her stomach do an
odd little flip and she drew in a breath. Quickly, she looked
away from his probing stare, lowering her head with the
proper respect one showed a man of his position.
"Oh, Sweet Morrigunia, Bailey," Striker whimpered. "He's
crossing the street and coming straight at us."
"Keep walking," Bailey told him. Sweat was gathering in
her palms, her heart was thundering—blood pounding—and a
cold finger of dread was scratching down her spine.
"Halt!"
Immediately both Bailey and Striker did as they were
ordered. They stood stock still, waiting for the Modartha to
reach them. With heads down, eyes on the sidewalk, they
assumed the required position of hands clasped behind their
backs in an attitude of subservience.
"Identify yourselves," the Modartha demanded. He came
to stand directly behind Bailey and it was she who spoke first,
the senior of the two.
"Cróinéir Second Class Bailey MacKenna, Milord," she said.
"Diener Class Nathan Striker, Milord," Striker replied.
"A coroner," the Modartha said with a snort. "Not a typical
feminine occupation."
Bailey said nothing for she'd not been asked a direct
question.
"Do you enjoy playing with dead things, wench?" he
queried.
"It is my job, Milord," she answered.
"Assigned?"
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Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
"Yes, Milord." She drew in a breath for he was so close to
her she could feel his breath on the nape of her neck and his
body warmth radiating toward hers.
"Don't you like playing with live men?"
She didn't know how to answer that. Her knees felt as
though they would give out beneath her at any moment and
she was trembling violently beneath his scrutiny.
"Do you prefer playing with live women, then?"
Bailey closed her eyes. "No, Milord. I am not of that bent."
His voice was low, a sultry caress but steel-hard as she felt
his lips against the column of her neck. His body made
contact with hers. "Step into the alley, wench," he ordered
her. He gave Striker a nasty look. "You stay right where you
are, diener."
Striker was trembling too, but he managed to bob his
head. "Yes, M ... milord," he stammered. He was breathing
heavily and perspiring copiously with sweat glistening on his
pale face. He kept his eyes squeezed tightly shut as he
sensed Bailey moving away from him.
Terrified of the man behind her, Bailey walked the few feet
into the shadowy alleyway that ran between two tall
buildings. She stopped.
"I didn't tell you to stop, wench. Keep walking," he told her
in a gruff voice.
Her mouth dry and her palms slick, she continued deeper
into the alleyway until he bid her stop.
"Turn and face the wall," he said.
Bailey faced the wall.
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Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
"Put your hands above your head—palms flat to the stone,
fingers spread—then lean into the wall."
She obeyed him, wincing at the cold and slimy feel of the
wall.
"Spread your legs."
Her bottom lip trembling, she did as he ordered and when
she felt his hands on her hips she flinched. He used his foot to
move her legs further apart, his fingers tightening on her hips
then put his right foot in front of hers making ankle-to-ankle
contact.
Standing so his chest touched her back, he put his hands
over her hands and ran his fingers between hers. His palms
were dry and warm as they slowly moved down the backs of
her hands and onto her wrists. He encircled those wrists for a
moment then released them, dragging his palms down her
forearms, over the insides of her elbows, along her upper
arms then turned his hands so his fingers dipped into her
armpits. He did not just pat the material covering her, he
crushed it so she felt his fingers exploring under her arm.
"You're sweating," he said quietly. "I wonder why?"
His hands slid slowly down her sides then moved toward
one another at her waist. The sides of his thumbs grazed the
undersides of her breasts with just enough force to draw the
globes together and lift them. When the base of each of his
hands pivoted on her lower chest and his hands turned, she
knew he was about to cup her. She bit her lip to keep from
making a sound. With his palms hefting her flesh, he moved
his hands back and forth under her breasts several times—his
thumbs not touching her. He squeezed her breasts together—
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Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1]
by Charlotte Boyett-Compo
held them that way for a moment or two—then ran his
thumbs down her nipples.
"Oh," Bailey said, unable to keep the groan from escaping.
"You like that, wench?" he whispered, his lips at her ear.
He pushed against her and she felt the hard bulge at the front
of his uniform trousers.
"Milord, please," she said, tears forming.
Through the thin material of her red government-issued
thigh-high gown, he rolled her nipples between his thumbs
and index fingers, grinding his erection across her buttocks.
"Do you know what they do to prime sweetness like you at
the Doinsiún, wench?" he asked and clamped his teeth onto
her earlobe.
Bailey shuddered and sucked in a startled breath.
"Every man there gets a good, long taste of the women
brought to that hellish place." He swirled his tongue into the
spiral of her ear. "A good ... long ... taste that can last for
hours."
Tears were sliding down Bailey's cheeks.
He pinched her nipples just hard enough to make her cry
out then slid his hands down over her abdomen and ran them