Read My Reaper's Daughter Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“My love will come.” Though she could not see his face, she knew he would be as
handsome as a man could be. He would be a man every woman in the village would
envy her having.
And he would be entirely hers.
The cabin was dark except for the glow of the red candle in the shape of a man that
sat upon the altar covered in black cloth. Clove incense filled the air and the string with
which she worked had been dressed with the appropriate lover’s oil consisting of the
oils of cinnamon, olive, patchouli, rose and sandalwood.
“My love will come,” she said for the last time. She worked the yarn into a heart
shape then put it in the pocket of her gown. “So mote it be!”
For a moment she continued to kneel in front of the altar, staring down at the skull
and crossbones that decorated the black altar cover. Her black eyes moved over the
chalice and caldron and iron cross, the incense burner and skull candleholder and
bowls of dried flowers, the gourd rattle and the ceremonial drum and the copper bell.
There were dolls that represented the Seven Powers, statues of saints and photographs
of her ancestors. The gris-gris and mojo bags and the boxes filled with colored string
and glass beads, the various tins and bottles and saucers of herbs, oils, incense and roots
were all intricate to her spellcasting. She watched her pet black snake slither across the
altar then drop to the floor.
“Why did you do that, Ayida Weda?” she asked the serpent, following its progress
along the grass floorcloth. In her religion—that of her ancestors handed down secretly
to the initiated—snakes represented the power of lightning and the judicious deity
known as Dumballah. For one to cross the altar bore meaning, held some strong
magical purpose.
She listened for the creature to speak to her and when it did not, she rose gracefully,
shaking out the skirts of her long white dress. Her bare feet trod silently over the floor
cloth as she went to the iron cot against the wall and removed her white tignon head
covering then the pristine ceremonial dress. Beneath it she was naked, her pert young
breasts capped with taut brown nipples.
Clothing herself in the drab black skirt, binding her small breasts behind a white
cloth wound around her slender chest then donning the starched white blouse her
employer demanded she wear, she reluctantly slipped her delicate feet into the leather
sandals he had provided for her. Had she been allowed, she would have gone barefoot
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
as was the custom of her people, but in her employer’s house, it was prohibited.
Expertly wrapping a headscarf of madras fabric around her short black curls, she was
prepared to begin her day’s work as the housekeeper of Sagewood Plantation. She slid
back the bolts on the door locks and quietly left her cabin—careful to padlock the door
behind her for it would not do to have an outsider discover the secrets she kept so
carefully. With pride, her eyes traveled over the turquoise blue color with which she
had painted the shutters. It was a color that spoke volumes to the inhabitants of
Sagewood Plantation.
Following the oyster-shell walkway that led from the village to the main house, she
ignored those few who dared greet her for she considered the other servants beneath
her. Most feared her and that was the way she preferred it. To her, they were nothing
more than cattle to be led. Though they came to her for the spells and charms and magic
they knew she could provide, they cut a wide berth around her, striving not to garner
the mambo’s notice.
“Mambo,” she whispered, relishing the word, for she was carrying on the tradition
of her mother and her mother’s mother before her—back into the mists of time when
those of her tribe had dwelt in a land across the sea. She was a priestess of a religion
more ancient, more powerful than the one her employer insisted she practice in the little
clapboard church behind the main house.
John Dirk, the white man who held the coveted position of plantation foreman, was
waiting for her beneath a large spreading oak festooned with draping moss. He stood
with his back to the tree, one foot propped against the gnarled trunk. In his hand was a
sharp knife he used to whittle at a piece of wood.
“
Bonjour
, Leilani,” he called out to her, never looking up from his work.
Though she would have preferred to pass him by without acknowledging his
greeting, she dared not, for of all the inhabitants of Sagewood, it was John Dirk she
feared. She nodded to him, her eyes wary of his movements, taking in the hard grin on
his dark face.
“
Bonjour
, Monsieur Jean,” she said, granting him the correct pronunciation of his
name.
“I am watching you, wench,” he told her.
She ducked her head and hurried on, refraining from looking back at him even
when she felt his cold eyes boring into her back. She knew what he was and feared him
as she did no other.
Her heart was thudding hard in her chest when she entered the kitchen and stood
just inside the door trembling. She had learned early on that there was great evil in the
world and John Dirk was as malevolent as they came. The man was a stone-cold killer
who liked to torture those he was about to remove from this world before he finally
ended their lives. Pain excited him, drove him, and the only reason he had not come
after her, had not forced her to his bed, was because he was leery of what powers she
might be able to wield.
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My Reaper’s Daughter
Those powers he suspected she might have had not prevented him from forcing the
other women of Sagewood to service his needs, and many had come to Leilani to rid
themselves of the unwanted outcome of such brutal matings.
“Mr. Simmons says we are to have a guest this evening,” Mattie the cook informed
Leilani. “He wants everything just right for his lordship.”
Leilani looked up at the aging white woman who had worked at Sagewood since
she was a young girl. “The Reaper man is coming again?”
Mattie nodded as she continued to ply a rolling pin across a circle of dough.
“I thought he had gone to the fortress,” Leilani said.
“Aye, well, he’s back.”
Leilani sighed. She had no fear of Lord Phelan Kiel but neither did she care for the
lawman. His shrewd eyes missed nothing and she was always afraid he would look too
closely at her, ask the wrong person questions that might give away Leilani’s secret. She
stayed out of his way when he came to visit his friend Anthony Simmons.
“I’ll see that things are done properly,” Leilani told the cook. “What is on the
menu?”
“All his lordship’s favorites,” Mattie said. “Chicken and dumplings, fried okra, corn
casserole and sliced tomatoes. I’m making egg pie for dessert.” She laughed. “Reaper
men have a mighty big sweet tooth.”
Leilani thought of the only other Reaper she’d seen—Lord Iden Belial—and nodded
absently. His dark good looks had intrigued her but there had been something about
the way he’d glanced at her the one time he’d visited Sagewood with Lord Phelan that
had put a shiver down her spine.
“Oh, and you might want to know Colton Dupree’s baby sister has come home to
Charlestown,” Mattie said.
“Mystery?” Leilani questioned, her eyes narrowed.
“Ain’t got but one sister, does he?” Mattie asked with a snort. She looked around.
“She’s in the library with Mr. Simmons this very minute.”
Leilani dug her fingernails into her palm. “What for?”
“Asking for a job, I imagine,” Mattie said with a shrug. “Gotta do something to take
care of the brat she dragged home with her.”
“Where’s Odell?” Leilani snapped.
“Dead and buried.”
Shock parted Leilani’s lips. “Odell’s dead?” she asked. Tears filled her eyes.
“How?”
“Rogue got him,” Mattie answered as she began cutting squares of dough from the
circle.
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Leilani reached for a chair at the table beside the window and all but fell into it.
“Odell is dead,” she repeated. Her shoulders sagged but she refused to give in to the
sorrow that was crushing her chest.
Mattie carried the dough squares to a big pot boiling away on the stove. “Work
ain’t gonna do itself, girl,” she reminded Leilani. “Best you get to your duties and forget
about Odell Butler.”
Leilani lifted her head and gave the cook an angry look, making a mental note to
work a little painful magic into the white bitch’s already-twisted fingers that evening.
She stood and started out of the kitchen, her mouth tight.
And ran right into a woman she had hated since childhood, a woman who had
taken the only man Leilani had ever loved away from her. She opened her mouth to
curse Mystery Dupree when Mr. Simmons came out of the library behind Mystery.
“Look who’s home, Leilani,” Anthony Simmons said. The white man was smiling
broadly, his deeply tanned face alight with good humor. “And guess who’s gonna be
helping Miss Laverne up at the kindergarten.”
Leilani forced a smile she didn’t feel to her taut lips. “I am sorry for your loss,” she
made herself say.
Mystery’s own lips twitched as though she weren’t sure whether to smile or frown
at the woman standing in front of her. “Thank you, Lani,” she acknowledged.
“And she brought home a little girl,” Mr. Simmons continued. “What’s her name
again, Mystery?”
“Valda,” Mystery provided.
“Now our little Sara will have someone her own age to play with!” Mr. Simmons
stated.
“That will be nice,” Leilani said between clenched teeth. Her gaze met Mystery’s
and she knew the other woman understood there was still abiding hatred in Leilani’s
heart.
Mr. Simmons walked Mystery to the door, keeping up a running commentary of
how his daughter and Mystery’s were going to be the best of friends. “You bring her by
tomorrow before you go to the school house now, you hear?” he ordered.
“Yes, sir,” Mystery agreed, glancing back one last time at Leilani. Her gaze was
troubled.
“You’d best fear me, bitch,” Leilani said under her breath, “’cause I’m gonna make
your life a living hell from this day forward!”
* * * * *
“How is Iden?” Anthony Simmons asked Phelan, offering the Reaper a snifter of
brandy Kiel politely turned down.
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My Reaper’s Daughter
“I haven’t seen him for a while. He and Lords Cree and Coure were sent over to the
Oklaks Territory patrolled by our Prime Reaper Lord Gehdrin,” Phelan reported. “All
four of them may be there a while.”
“What’s going on over there?” Anthony asked.
“Nothing I can tell you about,” Phelan answered.
“Something that would no doubt turn my hair grayer than it is if I were to learn of
it, eh?” Anthony inquired. He swept his hand toward the settee.
Phelan smiled as he took a seat. “Anything happening around here I need to know
about?”
Anthony cocked a shoulder. “Nothing the local constabulary can’t handle, I
wouldn’t think. Just the usual robberies, attempted extortions and occasional
disturbances of the peace. I’m happy to say we haven’t had a murder in six months.”
“That’s good news,” Phelan agreed.
“Having you and Iden clean up that last batch of rogues was a relief. Charlestown
can get back to the business of becoming the city it was before the War.”
A frown shifted over the Reaper’s face. “I’m not sure we got them all, Tony,” he
admitted. “When I was at the Citadel, Lord Naois warned there may be a pocket or two
of them holed up around the Flagala outer islands along the west side of the peninsula.
When Iden gets back, he’ll be looking into it.”
“Well, hell, that’s not good, now is it?” Anthony asked with a grimace. “And here I
thought we were rid of those perverted bastards.”
“There are worse things than rogues, Tony,” Phelan said, thinking about the
Ceannus—the depraved scientists from a distant galaxy who had brought the rogues to
Terra in the first place.
Anthony slung an arm on the back of his chair and plucked at a loose string. “Have
you ever heard tell of a thing called a zombay?”
Phelan shook his head. “No. What is it?”
“Not exactly sure,” Anthony replied. “Has something to do with an old religion
that used to be practiced in these parts long before I was a gleam in my daddy’s eye.”
“You must have had a reason for bringing it up.”
“Well, you said there are worse things than rogues and if what I’m hearing from my
fellow landowners is true, these zombay things would give the
balgairs
a run for their
money in the evil department,” Anthony replied.
“Evil in what way?”
Anthony looked chagrined as he continued to pull at the offending loose string.
“Evil as in the flesh-eating kind.”
Phelan blinked. “I beg your pardon?” He looked up as Simmons’ housekeeper came
in with a tray of coffee.
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Anthony nodded. “You heard me.” He pulled his arm down and sat forward,
clasping his hands together. “One of my friends—a fellow named Frederic Tolliver,
who owns Burnt Pine Plantation just east of me—says zombays are actually the dead