Read Shades of the Wind Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
from her drinking his blood as he did from taking her life essence. The sweetness
lingered on his tongue and flowed through his body like nectar. It sang in his soul. It
warmed his cold heart.
When she had taken as much as he dared allow her, he eased her lips from his flesh
and looked down into her flushed face. Her pupils were dilated as though she’d
partaken of a strong, intoxicating drug—and in part, she had. There was a crimson
droplet upon her lush bottom lip and he lowered his head to flick his tongue across the
smoothness.
“I feel strange,” she whispered.
Khenty nodded. “I know.” He bent and lifted her into his arms to carry her to the
bed.
“Why is my head spinning?” she asked.
“I have now brought you fully into my world, my love. The Ritual is complete,” he
said softly as he sat down beside her. He put his fingertips over her eyes. “You must
sleep now.”
Catherine felt as though a warm, numbing blanket had been laid upon her senses.
She was tired—infinitely so—and her world was reeling. Khenty’s fingers were cool on
her closed lids.
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“Sleep,” she heard her husband command, and allowed the darkness to enfold her
in gentle arms.
For a long while Khenty sat beside her until he was sure she was fast asleep.
Leaning over, he placed a soft kiss on her forehead then stood.
Padding to the door, he opened it and looked down—knowing full well what he’d
find. A small smile tugged at his lips as he bent over to retrieve the neatly folded
garments lying on the floor. Dressing quickly in the soft black shirt and pants, he left
the bedchamber, quietly closing the door behind him.
There was a debt he needed to repay.
* * * * *
Rhada was standing at the hearth, staring down into the leaping flames. He glanced
around as Khenty came into the room. “Your lady is resting?” he asked.
“I brought her into my world,” Khenty replied, and saw his host nod in
understanding.
“My lady has never forgiven me for bringing her into mine,” Rhada said, “and
never allows me to forget it.”
“How is ‘Mena?” Khenty asked.
Rhada frowned. “Sticking her hairpins into the eyes of her enemies on Oceania if I
know her,” he replied in a droll voice.
Khenty reached up to rub his hooked index finger along the bridge of his nose. “I’d
heard she has a temper.”
“Temper?” Rhada echoed. “Rage is a closer description, Ben-Alkazar.”
The two psychopomps were silent for a moment then Rhada turned to offer Khenty
a seat. Once they were comfortable, the Oceanian prince heaved a tired sigh.
“I am at my wit’s end with the vrykolakas ravaging my people,” Rhada said.
“How many have died?”
“Ten that we know of,” Rhada replied. “There may be more.”
Khenty dusted a speck of lint from his pant leg. “If I remember my Oceanian
history, when the vrykolakas is destroyed, those it created in its likeness will cease to
exist.”
“That is so.”
“Have you any idea where I should start looking for it?”
“I have been searching for her during the daylight hours but so far have found no
trace of her whereabouts. I strongly suspect she’s slipped over the border into Xolotl’s
realm.”
“It’s a she?” Khenty asked, his brows arched.
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“A jilted woman who sold her soul to gain revenge on the man who wronged her,”
Rhada said. “The trouble is, after she murdered him, she liked it so much she went after
others she thought had caused her problems in this life.” He glanced at Khenty. “The
telling word there is thought.”
“She’s killed the innocent.”
“Aye, she has. One was a mere child of seven.”
Khenty—distressed at hearing that—sighed deeply. “I’ll take care of it for you.”
Stretching out his leg, Rhada fished in his pocket and brought out a scrap of
material. “This was worn by the vrykolakas.” He leaned over to give the piece of cloth
to Khenty.
Khenty brought the frayed fabric to his nose and the scent from him made him ill.
He lowered it. “Hers is a vile odor,” he commented.
“She was a vile woman,” Rhada said. “That was why her man left her in the first
place. I am in your debt for helping to rid us of her presence.”
“There is no debt,” Khenty said, getting to his feet. “You took care of my lady.
Consider the debt paid.”
“I am grateful and I apologize for bringing you into this. If I were on good terms
with Xolotl, I’d have gone to see him about this since he has powers similar to your
own,” Rhada said.
“Xolotl isn’t on good terms with anyone,” Khenty said, “but he’ll not quarrel with
me. The last time we scuffled, I took off part of his right ear.” He grinned. “He returned
the favor by giving me a bad case of fleas.”
“Be careful, Ben-Alkazar,” Rhada said. “He’s a sneaky son of a bitch.”
“We both are. Just watch over Catherine until I return,” Khenty said as he walked
toward the door. He stopped and looked around. “By the way, I stopped by your
kitchen to provide for my lady if I am not back when she wakes. Will you see to her
comfort?”
“You have my word,” Rhada pledged.
It was raining hard when Khenty went out onto the steps of Ocaleae. He waited
until the servants had shut the door behind him before stripping off his borrowed
clothing. Folding them neatly, he laid them next to the door then walked out into the
night. As he neared the gatehouse he was canine form, barking to the guards to allow
him exit. When the heavy gate was open, he loped off into the darkness.
Running with the wind against his muzzle and the rain pelting his back, he raced
up the mountainside and toward Mount Inferno, the land ruled by the Diabolusian
psychopomp Xolotl. Now and again, he stopped, threw back his head and let out a
warning howl to let his counterpart know he was not the one Khenty was seeking.
It was the rattling of bones that brought Khenty to a skidding stop. He swung his
head around to view the animal coming toward him. Sitting down on his haunches to
wait, he panted, his sides heaving, his tongue lolling out.
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The entity who sidled up to Khenty was as thin and cadaverous as any mangy dog
to be found in the poorest parts of Diabolusia. Its flesh was taut to its rib cage and the
bony legs were spindly, the feet oddly pointed backward. One ear was missing a large
portion of cartilage. When it opened its mouth, it made a mewling sound.
“The Oceanian sent me in search of a marauder,” Khenty said, taking his human
form. He sat with his naked legs drawn up into the circumference of his arms.
Xolotl whined then changed into a pathetically thin man—more skeleton than
anything else. His face was so drawn it was a chore to look upon him but it was the club
feet upon which he stood that bothered Khenty most of all and he tried not to stare at
the huge penis that hung between the psychopomp’s thin legs.
“What kind of marauder?” the Diabolusian asked, scratching his sparse chest hair.
“A vrykolakas,” Khenty replied. “A vampire.”
“Distasteful things,” Xolotl said with a sniff. “Why come here looking for it?”
“Rhada believes it to be hiding here.” He turned his head, chin raised, nostrils
flexing. “I sense it close by.”
“Is that the stench I caught a whiff of?” Xolotl smirked. “And here I thought it was
you.”
Khenty grunted at the insult.
“Why didn’t the Oceanian prick come do his own hunting?” the Diabolusian
queried.
“Would you have let him?”
Xolotl dug at his scalp for a moment before answering. “Most likely not, but he
could have had the courtesy to ask.”
“Coming here wouldn’t have done him any good,” Khenty said. “His powers are
no good after the sun sets.”
“Damned raptor has no powers to speak of anyway. So he can fly. So what? So can
a gnat,” the Diabolusian growled. He scratched at his hip. “I hate gnats almost as much
as I hate birds.”
Khenty almost smiled. “Could that be because your twin brother is half avian?”
“He’s more snake than bird,” Xolotl said with a snort. “I hate snakes too.”
“Thus you hate Quetz,” Khenty surmised.
“Never said I didn’t,” the psychopomp replied. He watched Khenty for a moment.
“I hear congratulations are in order. You took yourself a bitch.”
Khenty grimaced at the word but he knew the other psychopomp didn’t mean it as
an insult. “I Joined legally with her,” he mumbled.
“Joining,” the Diabolusian said with a shake of his shaggy head. “Unnecessary
bondage if you ask me. Now you’re stuck with her.”
“It’s a sticking with which I am well pleased,” Khenty told him.
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“I prefer fucking them, getting them with pups then leaving their ass, but that’s just
me. Well, here’s to healthy litters, Ben-Alkazar,” Xolotl said. He shifted into his canine
form, used his misshapen left rear leg to scratch at his belly for a moment then turned
and ambled off into the rain.
Khenty watched the Diabolusian until he disappeared then changed his own shape.
He shook his fur voraciously—hoping he hadn’t picked up any of the Diabolusian’s
copious fleas. He knew Xolotl would leave him be. They weren’t friends but neither
were they really enemies. They had an understanding between them few others would
understand. With both of them having their canine abilities in common, it made for a
fairly calm relationship. Now and again, they might fight but it was never serious,
never meant to do real harm to one another. Had the Diabolusian been concerned about
Khenty’s presence on Mount Inferno, his hackles would have been up and he would
have bared his fangs. As it was, the scruffy mutt had gone on his way without a
challenge just as Khenty knew he would.
Putting his muzzle to the ground, Khenty caught the scent of the vrykolakas. It was
mixed with the putrid odor of decaying flesh and rancid blood. Sniffing, he followed
the scent up the mountain trail, sickened by the smell invading his nostrils. Stopping
now and again to change direction, he began closing in on the entity.
The terrain was rocky and steep, and the higher up Mount Inferno he ran, the
colder the rain slashing down at him became. There was almost a touch of sleet in the
air and it made the going rough. Twice he slid down the sharply jutting surface of one
cliff—scraping his belly badly—until he spied a cave wind-etched into the mountain
wall. As soon as he neared the entrance, he heard the pitiful, frightened cry of a child
and without another thought, bounded into the dark recess of the cave.
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Chapter Eleven
Catherine huddled in the thick shawl that had been left in her room for her as she
slept and walked carefully down the stairs. She was still a bit lightheaded and her
stomach growled with hunger. It had been the bright light of morning pouring in
through the two edges of the curtains that had awakened her. A salty taste lurked in her
mouth, bringing back vividly to her the evening before and her taking of Khenty’s
blood. Swallowing convulsively to keep the gorge from bubbling up her throat, she
made her way downstairs in search of her husband.
“Good morning, milady.”
She turned to see Prince Rhada coming toward her with a tight smile. “Good
morning,” she managed to say.
“I hope you slept well and are rested this morn,” he told her. He narrowed his eyes
in concern at her paleness as he drew nearer. “You aren’t feeling well, are you?”
Putting a hand to her throbbing head, Catherine replied that she wasn’t. “I have a
terrible headache and my stomach is queasy.”
“You need Sustenance,” he said to her, and reached out to gently take her arm. “My
staff has prepared a light meal for us.”
Horror filled Catherine’s gaze. “Oh milord, I don’t think I could eat anything the
way I feel!”
“Trust me,” he said, leading her from the stairs and down a short corridor toward
the dining room. “I am aware Khenty brought you fully into his world, and since I
promised him I would look after you until he returns, I believe I know what will make
you feel better.”
Catherine stopped, looking up at him. “He hasn’t returned?”
Rhada shook his head. “Not yet, but I don’t expect him to until he has found the
vrykolakas and destroyed it. If I am correct, it is hiding somewhere up on Mount
Inferno and the weather was very bad last night.”
“He could be hurt!” she said, trembling. “He could—”
“Do you feel that?” Rhada interrupted her.
She stared at him. “What do you mean?”
“Milady,” he said, bringing her hand to his lips for a light, respectful kiss to calm
her. “You are fully in his world now. Had something dire happened to him, you would
have known it at that very moment. You are so connected to him that what one feels,
the other will feel.”
“But I was asleep,” she protested. “What if—?”
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“Believe me, dearling,” he said gently. “Your husband is well and will return as
quickly as he can.” He patted her hand. “Now, we need to see to your wellbeing.”
Before she could object again, he led her into the dining room and held out a chair