Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
An Ellora’s Cave Romantica Publication
www.ellorascave.com
Embrace the Wind
ISBN 9781419913402
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Embrace the Wind Copyright © 2007 Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Edited by Mary Moran.
Cover art by Syneca.
Electronic book Publication December 2007
This book may not be reproduced or used in whole or in part by any means existing without written
permission from the publisher, Ellora’s Cave Publishing, Inc.® 1056 Home Avenue, Akron OH 443103502.
This book is a work of fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or locales
is purely coincidental. The characters are productions of the authors’ imagination and used fictitiously.
WESTERNWIND:
EMBRACE THE WIND
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Chapter One
Three sets of very hungry eyes followed the handsome warrior as he strode—no,
the owners of those eyes decided—as he
strutted
down the hallway with his hands
shoved into the pockets of his black leather uniform pants. The flexing of the tight
muscles of his ass was a sight to see and every woman he passed turned her head to
look at him. From the black boots to the black kerchief around his neck, he was an
enticing display of maleness.
“He’s trouble with a capital T,” said the red-haired woman.
“And should be left alone,” the blonde observed.
“Or ridden until he begs for mercy,” the silver-haired woman said on a long sigh.
Her sisters giggled at the remark and giggling was something those two did not do.
It shocked them as much as it did their older sister. They exchanged glances with
furrowed brows then three heads slowly turned in unison to stare at the warrior until
he disappeared around a corner. They were silent for a long time then all three made
rude snorting noises in unison.
“We want him,” the eldest stated.
“Aye, we do,” the middle sister agreed.
“So what do we do about it?” the youngest inquired.
The silver-haired sister folded her arms over a lush chest. “We make him an offer he
dare not refuse.”
“
Maddin vie, mraane
.”
Each of the women turned to the man who had wished them a good morning and
bowed their heads respectfully to him.
“
Maddie vie
, Lord Kheelan,” they greeted the High Lord of the Council.
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Embrace the Wind
“Lady Argent, I would like to speak privately to you when you have a moment.”
“Of course, milord,” the silver-haired woman agreed.
With a slight inclination of his head, the most important man at the Citadel
continued on his way, gray robe rustling around his tall frame.
“What do you suppose he wants?” Corallin Tarnes, the red-haired woman, asked
her sister.
Argent Ben-Alkazar pursed her sensual lips. “He intercepted our thoughts and
wants to bludgeon me with his unwanted, unwarranted advice as usual,” she said of
her brother. “What else?”
“Hold firm with him, sister. It is time,” Aureolin Belvoir suggested. “We are no
longer underage maidens. We are women and deserve to know the same pleasures as
any woman does.”
“Have no fear, little sister, I intend to see he minds his own business,” Argent
replied.
“What he needs is a woman of his own,” Corallin said then lowered her voice. “One
who doesn’t belong to another warrior.”
“Shush!” Argent warned, gray eyes flashing. “We do not speak of that, Cora!”
Chastened, the red-haired woman lowered her head, her green eyes mirroring her
regret. “You are right. My apologies.”
“We have work to do, sisters. I shall see you at the
Coir Screeuee
,” Argent told her
sisters, referring to the desk at which the three of them worked.
As she made her way to the offices of the High Council, Argent began to plan what
she would say to her overbearing brother. He—along with the other two lords on the
High Council—could be very highhanded when it came to their sisters. Lord Dunham
Tarnes was Corallin’s brother and Lord Naois Belvoir was Aureolin’s. Each of the
women had the same mother but different fathers and it was their mother’s influence
Argent counted on to help her put her brother in his place.
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“We are of age, Mother,” Argent said softly.
“
You are
,” came a soft, melodious voice from beyond time and space.
“And we believe this warrior is the
Graihaltagh Reiht
, the Chosen Lover.”
“This is true. He is.”
Argent’s heart soared. “Then we can have him?”
A tinkling laugh caressed the silver-haired woman.
“Only if you can snare the wolf,
daughter. He has spent many a year running from commitment. You will need to bring him to
ground first.”
“Please don’t let Khee interfere,” Argent pleaded. “He still thinks of me as a child
despite having reached my thirtieth-first birthday and Dunny and Naois see Cora and
Aureolin in the same light. They are twenty-six and twenty-three but you would think
them still in swaddling clothes to hear their brothers tell it.”
“Kheelan has worries of his own, daughter, and both Dunham and Naois will stay out of
this. Tread carefully and your warrior will come to heel.”
The
Fer Gait Toshee
, the Primary Gatekeeper of the Citadel—the Terran fortress from
whence the Reapers were dispatched to protect mankind from evil—felt her mother, the
Ben Chiarn Mooar,
the Great Lady of the Multitude, fading away, and as she always did,
felt the nearly unbearable sadness of being so far away from the woman who had given
her life.
But she and her half sisters and half brothers had been assigned essential jobs on
this distant world so many millions of light-years from their homes. A vital directive
had been given to them from the Triune Goddess Herself to help the Reapers ensure the
continued existence of humankind. As
Breitheamhtái
, judges for the Multitude, it was up
to them to add their psychic powers to that of their brothers, the Shadowlords, to
thwart the evil that often plagued mankind.
“The Multitude will provide for you,” their mother had told them before the longrange cruiser upon which they were traveling had breached the airspace over Rysalia,
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Embrace the Wind
the home of the Ben-Alkazars. “When it is your time to find a mate, one will be sent to
you.”
Though it had been a lonely job so far away from their homeworlds of Rysalia,
Serenia and Oceania, the rewards had been great. The Multitude—the secret society of
sorceresses dedicated to the eradication of evil as well as the assurance of equality and
enlightenment of womankind—had seen to all their needs.
Save one.
Pure, untouched, the Gatekeepers had bided their time with patience and
unshakeable respect for Morrigunia, the Triune Goddess who governed them all. They
knew She would provide for them when the time was right and the stars and Fates
were in alignment. But watching the Reapers bring their mates to the Citadel, seeing the
precious fruit that had sprung from the unions of those warriors and their lady-wives,
the hunger for a man of their own had grown steadily. They wanted to know the love
between man and mate. They ached to discover the secrets of that part of life
whereupon man and woman gave and shared the greatest of gifts—themselves. They
longed for companionship and laughter. To them, it was far more than just the need to
bear their lover’s sons, they wanted to share his life as well. They wanted to make him
happy, make him theirs. Give him peace as only they knew they could give it. As the
years passed, they worried the Chosen One would never come.
Arriving at the black polished door that led into the High Council chamber of the
Shadowlords, Argent thought back to the first time she’d seen this immense fortress.
The Citadel had been built over the crumbling foundation of an older structure,
following closely the same perimeters as the original building destroyed during the
Burning War. Fashioned in the shape of a flattened star, the edifice was an imposing
brick construction five stories tall including the basement. Covering twenty-nine acres
and encompassing over six million square feet, the headquarters of the High Council
was an imposing site. There were ten sections—each dedicated to the defense and safety
of all of Terra. There was a section for each of the seven continents that made up the
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
planet, one section entirely for troops, another for maintenance personnel and workers
with the remaining section just for the use of the High Council and its Shadowlords.
Each Shadowlord had an entire floor to call his own. Behind the doors at which she
stood, the fate of mankind rested in the hands of three powerful men whose psychic
powers were immense. The most powerful of the three was the High Lord, her father’s
only son, her brother Kheelan.
“
Don’t dawdle, Argent.”
The mental command from beyond the doors rankled the silver-haired woman and
she clenched her jaw, narrowed her gray eyes and reached for the handle.
* * * * *
Reaper Eanan Tohre swung a long leg over the chair and slid down onto the seat
with a grunt. “What’s up, brother mine?” he inquired.
His identical twin Owen shot him a narrowed look. “How were things in the
Oklaks Territory?”
“Okay,” Eanan said, leaning back. He folded his arms across his brawny chest and
shot his legs out in front of him, crossing them at the ankle.
“Then why were you brought back to the Citadel?” Owen asked. “What the hell did
you do to make them recall you this quickly?”
Eanan cocked one shoulder. “How the fuck do I know? The Prime said I was to
report before the end of the month and here I am.” He glanced around the cafeteria
where he’d been ordered to meet his brother. “How does a man get a cup of coffee
around here?”
“He gets his lazy ass up and goes over to the counter to order it,” Owen snapped.
He pushed his half-empty plate away and released an irritated breath. “Why do I have
this niggling feeling that you’ve screwed up, Eanan? Arawn is ready to retire and he
needs someone out in the Oklaks to take up the slack.”
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Embrace the Wind
Eanan snorted. “Morri isn’t going to let Gehdrin retire.” He wobbled one booted