Read Spring Wind [Seasonal Winds Book 1] Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
had been trailing him the day before had done so without
detection, but that had been far from the truth. The Modartha
had been aware of every step his trackers had made. He also
knew Doyle had been one of the men trailing him and that
Doyle wanted him dead.
"No more than I want you dead, you treasonous viper,"
Van muttered as he kicked at the boot of one of the dead
men.
He could feel her eyes on him and glanced up at her
building. She was standing at her living area window with the
drape pushed aside. He hoped she hadn't seen him
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dispatching the men who'd been sent after him but he also
knew it might well be her who helped do the autopsies on the
men.
She held his stare for a moment then left the drape fall
back into place, cutting her off from his view.
It was more personal now, he thought as he struck out for
the street where he had parked his turbo-powered
motorcycle. Doyle wanted Bailey and that just made the
hackles rise on Van's back. Throwing a long leg over the seat,
he turned on the bike and revved it up, disregarding the early
hour and the pedestrians who covered their ears with their
hands. He heeled the kick-stand up, gave the machine gas,
and peeled out of the parking spot as the meat wagon arrived
to clean up the mess he left behind.
* * * *
Bailey looked down at the two bodies passing on the
gurneys and knew they were the ones who had met their
ends at the hands of her Modartha. That she could think of
him in that way surprised her.
"Witnesses said they jumped him outside your building and
he dispatched them without breaking a sweat," Striker said.
"I gotta ask, Bailes..."
"Don't," she said, knowing he wanted to find out why the
Modartha was at her complex.
Striker shrugged, holding up his hands. "Okay. I'm
copasetic."
For the rest of the day, she did her job and at the end of
the shift, she turned to find her supervisor, Ian Dougherty,
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standing in the doorway. He motioned her to follow him.
Wondering what she'd done now to incur Dougherty's
displeasure, she took off her leather apron and followed him
down the corridor to his office.
"Shut the door," he ordered before seating himself in the
chair behind his desk.
Bailey eased the door closed then turned to face him.
Dougherty was a misanthrope. He much preferred the dead to
the living, for the dead did not cause him grief. He especially
didn't like women and thought they had no place in the
forensic science field.
"I understand congratulations are in order," Dougherty
said though an expression of such an emotion did not reach
his black eyes.
"He was here?" she asked, a muscle flexing in her jaw.
Dougherty leaned back in his chair. "One of his men came
by with the news. The colonel was otherwise occupied. If you
will clean out your locker, we can finalize your employment. I
will, of course, have your last pay credits forwarded to your
banking institution."
It wasn't that she liked her job all that much. It was simply
a way to make money and it was better than the other jobs
her uncle had acquired for her over the years. She knew she
would never have to work another day in her life if that was
what she wanted. Modartha pay scales were off the radar.
"That will be fine. I'll come back tomorrow with a box to
get my stuff," she managed to say and stood up. She realized
that Dougherty was acting uncharacteristically polite to her.
Normally, he would be growling at her. The perks of which
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Byrne spoke were already manifesting themselves. "Is that
all?"
Dougherty nodded. "You've been a good employee and
your work will be missed," he told her, unable to look up at
her now.
"Thank you, Supervisor Dougherty," she said and left his
office. As she shut the door, she felt a giddy elation she
thought might well be freedom. It was so foreign, she had a
hard time adjusting to it.
Doyle was waiting outside the building for her again and
Bailey came to a stop, staring at him with fear. She looked
around—expecting the Modartha to step out of the
lengthening shadows of the nearby building.
"I need to talk to you, Bailey," Doyle said.
"You shouldn't be here," she said and hurried down the
ramp way.
"It won't take long," the Resistance leader said.
"Just like it won't take you long to die."
Bailey jumped and snapped her head around. Her eyes
widened for the Modartha was standing directly behind Doyle
and there was murderous rage in the man's silvery glare.
Doyle spun around, his hand going to the dagger at his
hip. He slashed out with the blade but the Modartha stepped
back casually and a lethal smile formed on his lips. He drew
his own weapon from the black leather sheath strapped to his
thigh and for the first time Bailey realized Van Byrne was lefthanded.
"You want to play, Doyle," Van said, giving the Resistance
leader a come-on gesture with index and middle fingers of his
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right hand. "Let's do it." He crouched and when Doyle sprang
at him again, the Modartha blocked the jab then Byrne's
blade flashed, slicing a long line across Doyle's tan shirt and
drawing blood.
Bailey had backed up against the wall as she watched the
two men fighting. It was obvious from the start who would
win the duel. Van moved gracefully, easily, and he parried the
wild, undisciplined sweeps Doyle sent his way with offhand
skill. As the men circled one another—looking for an
opening—she became aware of people having stopped to
watch the fight. The public transportation bus had stopped at
the curb and its riders were pressed against the large
windows. On the morgue's loading ramp, employees were
gathered. Two Portal Police cruisers had arrived and the
drivers were standing together with their arms crossed.
Doyle leapt toward his opponent and the Modartha stepped
out of the way, bringing the edge of his right hand down hard
on Doyle's wrist. Doyle's web fell out of his numb hand and
before he could go after it, the Modartha had backhanded him
viciously across the face. Stumbling, Doyle went down hard,
skidding on the pavement,and a collective gasp rang out from
the watchers. Before the Resistance leader could scramble to
his feet, his opponent whirled around behind him, reached
down to grab a handful of Doyle's sandy brown hair and then
drew Doyle's head back, obsidian blade placed at the
defeated man's throat.
"No!" Bailey shouted. She rushed forward. "Milord, please,
don't!"
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Van turned his head slowly to look at her. She could see
the bloodlust on his hard face. He growled at her with his lips
peeled back from his teeth. His hand tightened in Doyle's
hair.
"Please?" she beseeched him, hand out in pleading.
The Modartha hesitated. He glanced down at his opponent
then back up at Bailey. He was barely breathing hard but
Doyle was dragging harsh gulps of air into his lungs.
Bailey ventured a step closer. "Please," she said softly.
With a snarl of disgust, Van released his grip on Doyle's
hair and stepped back. He nodded at the Portal Police who
rushed forward to arrest the Resistance leader. Taking hold of
Doyle's arms, they dragged him toward one of the cruisers.
The other policeman began ordering the onlookers to be
about their business.
"There's nothing else to see," the Portal Policeman
snapped. "Move on."
The transportation bus released its brakes and slowly
pulled away from the curb. The morgue's evening employees
went back inside the forbidding building. Pedestrians who had
stopped scurried away, not even bothering to glance behind
them.
Watching Doyle being shoved into the back of a cruiser,
Bailey knew the man was as good as dead. The Slándáil
Phoiblí would issue his death warrant and before the week
was out, Kona Doyle would be hanged in the Central Plaza.
She saw him looking at her with hopelessness from the
cruiser's window as it drove away.
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"It's a full moon tonight," he said as he re-sheathed his
blade. "I won't come to you again until the danger has
passed."
"I understand," she said and wondered why she ached to
sweep the dark hair back from his forehead. By rights, she
should be fearful of him but she realized her unease was
slowly evaporating.
"I would like the Joining to be the seventeenth of this
month, at midnight, of course." For the first time, he looked
at her with just a trace of uncertainty. "Is that all right with
you?"
She nodded. "I've no problem with that, Milord."
"Van," he said a little too quickly.
"Van," she said and looked down at the pavement.
He cleared his throat. "Attendants?" he queried and when
she lifted her head, he shrugged. "Guests?"
"My uncle and my co-worker Nate Striker," she said. "I
would like them to be there."
"Striker?" he repeated with his eyes narrowed. "The halfman?"
"Striker, my friend," she corrected, chin raised.
His lips twitched. "Will he be your maid-of-honor, then?"
Bailey started to protest his insult, but realized he was
teasing her and that surprised her. She saw glints of humor in
his silver eyes. A faint smile pulled at her mouth. "He will be
my only attendant," she stated. "My uncle will give me away.
Who will be your best man?"
He thought about that for a moment. "My little brother
Patrick."
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"All right," she agreed.
"That was easy to settle," he said, blowing out a breath.
"Did you think it wouldn't be?" she countered.
"I really didn't know what to think," he replied. "This is all
new to me."
"Just as it's new to me," she said.
"Then we'll learn together," he prophesied. He reached
down and took her hand. "My bike is around the corner. I'll
give you a lift home."
She didn't protest that she wanted to walk, even though
she did. She'd seen him riding hell-out on his motorcycle and
wasn't that keen on climbing aboard the dangerous looking
machine. When she saw it up close, she was even less
inclined to want to take a ride on the powerful thing.
"I don't know," she said without thinking.
"I'll go slowly," he said.
"Can it
go
slow?" she countered as he helped her to sit on
the steel gray motorcycle.
"It's like me and doesn't like to, but when needed, it can
go very slow," he said in a husky voice that sent shivers into
her lower body. He put his leg over the tank then took his
seat. "Put your arms around me, wench."
"Bailey," she automatically corrected and slid her arms
around his lean waist.
"I rather like calling you wench," he said as he turned on
the potent machine nestled between his long legs.
"I'd rather you didn't," she said.
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He shrugged and leaned back so their bodies were pressed
closer together. He released the clutch and the engine shot
away from the curb like a rocket.
"Van!" she shouted, burying her cheek against his back
and squeezing her eyes shut. "That's not slow!"
She felt the rumble of his laughter coming from his back
rather than heard it. She listened as the machine went
through its gears then when it was at what she reasoned
must be its cruising speed she felt his left hand cover hers
where they rested on his belly. He caressed her fingers gently
for a moment then returned his hand as he banked the bike
around a corner.
There was power between her legs that she could feel and
it was doing strange things to her body. With her cheek
pressed to her Modartha's back, she could think of him in no
other way now, she could sense the coiled power of him. His
back was strong and as he breathed, she could feel the ridged
muscles of his belly. The two stimuli were playing havoc with
her libido.
She eased back from him so she could see where they
were. He disdained the use of a helmet and his dark hair
fluttered in the wind, a few strands flying back to tickle her
cheek as she leaned her chin on his shoulder. They were only
a few hundred yards from her apartment complex and she
sighed, wishing the ride could last longer. Almost as though