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An Excerpt From: PRINCE OF THE WIND
CHARLOTTE BOYETT-COMPO, 2006.
All Rights Reserved, Cerridwen Press
The world was shutting down on Riain
Cree.
Suzanna was somewhere
behind him in the gathering darkness. He could hear her calling his name in
that wicked purr—part caress, part curse, a whisper of evil that chilled
what soul he had left.
“Riain.”
God, how he hated her
voice. Hated everything about her. Not even the thunderous deluge of icy
rain through which he stumbled could drown out that horrible voice and all
that it promised.
Overhead lightning
flared, but he barely noticed. The light in his world was nothing more than
a far-off tunnel toward which he struggled, a pinpoint of hope he needed to
reach before she caught him. He moved toward that saving light as fast as
his dying body could take him.
He hoped he would make it
this time.
“Riain.”
A whimper of stark terror
escaped him. He looked back, knowing she was gaining on him as his strength
failed.
“God, please. Not this
time,” he begged, and strove all the harder toward that blessed light.
But he sensed God was not
with him this night. He knew the Divine Being had turned away His face
long, long ago.
Riain’s foot caught on an
exposed tree root. He fell to the ground, landing face-down in the thick
red mud. It was all he could do to lever himself out of the suffocating stench,
coming to his knees in an unconscious attitude of prayer as he looked to
the heavens.
“Why?” His soul ached for
a salvation that would not come. “What did I do wrong this time?”
For a moment he knelt,
too heartsick and weak to do anything else. He could feel his life ebbing
away, feel the cold settling deep in his chest, the warmth draining from
his body. His life would soon be over. Why was he bothering to run? What
more could she do to him?
She can put her filthy
hands on you one more time, he thought with a shudder of revulsion. The
image of her cold, white hands on his flesh spurred him to his feet.
“Riain?” Her voice came
at him through the night like the searching tentacle of something hellborn.
She was close—too close.
He could smell her, and
her scent drove him mad with fear.
To his left, Riain could
hear the gurgle of the river. He staggered toward it—away from the
redeeming light—and felt only a momentary tug of resistance as that last
contact with possible redemption faded away.
Vast spreading live oaks
draped in Spanish moss sheltered him from the rain as he made his way from
one thick trunk to another—feebly hanging onto the rough bark in an effort
to stay on his feet. Pine needles and decaying leaves crunched underfoot.
Occasionally, a night creature scurried furtively away at his stumbling
approach. He would be—as he always had been—alone in his dying.
“You cannot escape me!”
Suzanna called.
But he could try.
Again.
The smell of the Flint
River was sharp in his nostrils. He moved toward it, ignoring the
blackberry brambles that tore at his jeans and drove vicious barbs into his
flesh. He waded through the bushes and gasped with pain as he came up
against a waist-high barbed wire fence. He snatched back his hands, the
palms cut and stinging, and almost screamed his frustration.
There was always
something to block his freedom.
Always something.
“Riain!”
He recognized all too
well the threat in her tone. How many times through the centuries had he
heard his name snapped out in that way? As it had many times before, it
drove the fear of her deep inside him, making him nearly oblivious to the
wicked wire spikes driving into his palms as he scrambled madly over the
fence, gouging deep furrows in his arms and thighs.
There was a slight
descent leading from the fence. It took what little reserve of strength he
had left to keep himself erect and move away from the barbed wire, putting
it between Suzanna and him.
Maybe just this once…
The roar of the river
came to him up ahead. He groaned. If there was a roar, there had to be
rapids of some sort and quick-flowing water. Running water. Water that was
as much a barrier as a stone wall. But if he could just follow the river,
find a bridge…
One moment he was moving
steadily toward the rushing water, the next he was sliding down a steep,
slippery embankment, his arms cartwheeling as he tried to stop the rapid
descent. He cried out as his heel skidded over something hard and threw all
his weight to his right ankle. The joint twisted inward. Sharp,
excruciating pain shot up his leg. He began to tumble, rolling sideways,
trying desperately to grab something to break his fall, but the small roots
and dead grass he snatched pulled free of the mud. When a fallen log
arrested his downward momentum, he rolled one last time, over the
waterlogged tree and slid into the frigid January waters of the Flint
river.
He came to rest on his
back, up to his waist in the murky water. The shock of the ice-cold river
filling his ear canals as it lapped up his back brought an anguished gasp.
He somehow managed to snatch up his head and roll to his belly.
“Water!” he whimpered.
“No!”
He was frozen by his fear
of the lapping death spreading over him. The cloying mud seemed to suck him
into the liquid death.
Rain pelted his back,
dripped down his sodden hair and along his cheek. He was growing weaker by
the moment and knew he had to get up, had to try one last time.
Wearily, he dug a boot
into the silty river bottom and pushed himself out of the water. He scrambled
up the bank with his hands and left knee, dragging his broken right foot.
But the effort took its toll on what little stamina he had left. He
collapsed at the top of the incline, unable to go on. His left cheek
pressed into the mud while his fingers dug deep into the dark red Georgia
clay.
Tears joined the rain
washing down his face. It was over, he thought. He had failed again.
A hard shudder ran
through his body when he heard her footfall.
“Did you really think you
could escape?” she purred, kneeling beside him.
He refused to look at
her.
“You should have known
better by now.”
She smoothed the wet
curls away from his forehead.
“You are mine, Riain
Cree.” Her voice was a whisper. A caress. A deadly vow.
He closed his eyes and
the only thought in his darkening mind drowned out the sound of her hated
voice—What would it be this time? What would she do to him tonight?
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