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Authors: Dee Brice

Courting Kel

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Courting Kel

Dee Brice

 

Abducted from her homeworld,
Amazonian warrior Kel finds herself imprisoned on Ondrican, a sexual slave to
its heir, Prince Aren. Being older than most Amazonians are when they take
their first lovers, Kel is more than willing to discover pleasure in his
embrace. But when Aren announces taking her virginity has made them husband and
wife, Kel vows to escape him and return home. She wants his wooing but not the
wedding.

Aren has known for years he must
marry and produce a legitimate heir. He finds Kel’s untutored lovemaking a
sensual delight, but her refusal to acknowledge their marriage stuns him and
hurts his pride. Determined to win her warrior heart, he takes his reluctant
bride to the country and weaves a spell of sensual pleasure around them both.

Behind the lovers’ backs, their
parents are plotting to keep them together. Only the marriage of their hearts
will end centuries of feuding between their worlds.

 

An Ellora’s Cave Romantica
Publication

www.ellorascave.com

 

 

 

Courting Kel

 

ISBN 9781419925863

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Courting Kel Copyright © 2010 Dee Brice

 

Edited by Meghan M. Conrad

Cover art by Syneca

 

Electronic book publication July 2010

 

The terms Romantica® and Quickies® are registered trademarks of
Ellora’s Cave Publishing.

 

With the exception of quotes used in reviews, 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 44310-3502.

 

Warning: The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this
copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be scanned, uploaded or
distributed via the Internet or any other means, electronic or print, without
the publisher’s permission. Criminal copyright infringement, including
infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is
punishable by up to 5 years in federal prison and a fine of $250,000. 
(http://www.fbi.gov/ipr/). Please purchase only authorized electronic or print
editions and do not participate in or encourage the electronic piracy of
copyrighted material. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

 

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.

Courting Kel

Dee Brice

Dedication

 

To my editor, Meghan Conrad, who read this manuscript so
many times she must have been sick of it—just because she believed in the
story.

 

Chapter One

 

“Put that one in with the chocolates, her with the
caramels.”

Prince Aren of Ondrican watched his cousin and spaceship’s
commander sort through a bevy of women according to… “Candy, Tage?”

“Eye candy, yes. The blonde goes with the white truffles,”
Tage shouted above the din to a crewman with two lush females clinging to him
like limpets.

“Aye, Captain, if I can make ‘em understand they aren’t
necessarily for me.” He continued down the gangway, winking as he passed Aren
and Tage standing on the pier.

Stroking his chin, Aren watched as more women of every size,
shape and hair color debarked his flagship,
The Herald
. “You could group
them by eye color,” he said.

“Could sort them like fruits and vegetables as well. But
then where would you put
her
?” Tage jutted his chin at the last woman in
line. Two guards flanked her.

“Strawberries,” Aren said without hesitation. The sun turned
the tall woman’s hair to red-gold flames. “Why is she restrained?”

“Easier to put one in the brig than the whole shipload.”

“Tage,” Aren said, sounding as impatient as he felt.

Tage said, looking rather irritated himself, “She claims she
was drugged, kidnapped and sold. Demanded to be returned to her homeworld.
Tried to convince the other women to mutiny.”

“As Storr and I have told you, Tage, none of the brides were
to be forced.”

“I don’t know where she came from, Your Majesty, and the
others weren’t forced.”

“Where’d you find her?”

As if Aren should recognize her, Tage sneered.
Ah. My
bride
, Aren thought. Although he’d been expecting her, he had not
anticipated her arriving with a shipload of… But King Storr was noted
throughout the galaxy for his frugality. Why send a special ship when Tage and
The
Herald
were collecting brides for The Choosing?

“She found me. Marched right up to me on the flight deck.
Claimed she’d been abducted and ordered me to turn the ship around. ‘This
minute,’ she said, like she was in command.”

“And?”

“I had put her in with the other women. Two days later, a
delegation of brides…requested she be moved elsewhere.”

“Requested?”

Tage’s face turned red all the way to his hairline. “That’s
the word the brides used.”

“And you’re sticking to it, eh?”

“’Til I’m dead and buried.”

Rubbing his chin and hiding a smile, Aren studied the woman
who’d rattled Tage’s composure. Taller than the other immigrating brides, she
carried herself like someone who expected to be obeyed. And while the other
women wore garments that showed off their assets, the redhead’s simple tunic
concealed as much as it revealed. A hemp rope defined a slender waist and
accented her narrow hips. Beyond that, he couldn’t say much about her figure.
Given her height, however, he imagined her legs were long. Unbidden, his shaft
swelled. He pictured her legs wrapped around his waist as he pumped into her
heat. Distracting himself from that image, he said, “I don’t suppose you
questioned her.”

“I tried. She threw her dinner at me.”

“At which point you threatened to starve her.” Had she
really been abducted? That didn’t augur a happy beginning to their marriage.

“Yes. Kept her on bread and water the entire week,” Tage
said. “Blasted woman only drank the water. Said warriors were accustomed to
going without food.” Tage focused puzzled blue eyes on Aren’s face. “She could
have had the best food in the entire galaxy, but she refused to eat. Now…”

“What?”

“She exercised instead of eating. Worked out several times
every day. And now stinks like guanshit.”

Clapping Tage’s wide back, Aren laughed, drawing the woman’s
gaze. Her dark eyebrows rose—a dismissive expression that hit him like a slap
to his face.

“Have her taken to my quarters.”

Tage sputtered, a sure sign of protest but said, “Yes
m’lord.”

Aren watched him stride away and heard Tage muttering, “Your
rooms will stink for a week, m’lord. And if I were you, m’lord, I’d hide my
weapons. Plan to keep my jewels, m’lord. Can’t say the same for yours.”

* * * * *

After weeks in space, Kel wanted to kiss the ground before
she fought with her guards. No matter how great the temptation to maim them,
with her hands bound and her feet hobbled like a horse that would bolt as soon
as it was free, she was helpless. Moreover, if they hurt her badly she’d have
to wait until she recovered to make her escape. She’d bide her time and fuel
her strength. For now.

At massive carved doors, the guards pulled her to a stop.
One freed her hands and feet while the second kept a firm hold on her elbow. A
third opened the door and the fourth shoved her through it.

Stumbling, barely catching her balance before she careened
into a marble tub, she heard the door lock slam into place.
Free yet still
imprisoned
, she thought resentfully.
Barbarians!
The men who had
taken her from her homeworld had treated her with more respect than that
spaceship captain or these ruffians.

“M’lady?” A timid voice came at her from across the room.

Instinctively, Keleos reached for her dagger. Her knife was
the first thing the kidnappers had taken from her, she remembered now, her hand
falling to her side. Empty.

“Stand where I can see you.”

A girl of perhaps fourteen summers stepped from the shadows.
Pale blonde curls fell over her small bosom to her waist. From this distance,
her eyes seemed blue. She carried a shiny green fabric that cascaded over one
shoulder to the floor.

“If you wish to bathe, m’lady, I can fill the tub for you.”

Kel firmed her lips against a smile of pleasure. A bath was
the last thing she’d expected from her new jailers. But this probably was only
the opening gambit in a war of wills. A war she intended to win, no matter the
cost.

Still… Her indrawn breath reminding her she’d gone without
bathing for nearly two weeks, she said, “Do so.”

The girl shot her a sullen look before carefully laying the
fabric aside on a padded bench. Perhaps servants here were treated with more
courtesy than Keleos had given. Softening her tone, she said, “Please fill the
tub. And if you brought me fresh clothing, kindly see this is burned.” Untying
her belt, she let the homespun tunic fall around her feet. Gratified at being
free of the rough, itchy gown, she kicked it away. The clothes she wore at home
didn’t make her itch like this one did.

“What scent would you like, m’lady?” She still sounded
resentful.

“My name is Kel. What’s yours?”

“D-Drew, m’lady.” She smiled shyly, apparently willing to
forgive Kel’s earlier high-handedness.

“Tell me, Drew, what scent do you recommend?”

“There is sero and chiord and caill.”

Unwilling to admit she had no idea what Drew was talking
about, Kel said, “Which do you prefer?” On Amazonia everyone smelled pretty
much the same. Sometimes of the unpleasant odor of swamps and muck. At others,
the aroma of roasting meat if the wind blew over them. She resisted shaking her
head at her hunger the thought of roasting meat aroused. A warrior—

“Caill’s my favorite.”

“Caill it is then. The soap is scented?”

“Yes m’—Kel. And the bath oil, shamwash and lotion too.”

“Until I learn how much of each to use, I’ll just use the
soap and—the shamwash is for my hair?”

“For your hair, which is a lovely red.”

Kel eased out a sigh at the girl’s accepting tone. She
couldn’t afford to alienate anyone. Especially not a potential ally to help her
escape. “I am named for its color. Although certain people, like that ship’s
captain, would think it for my temper,” she added with a grimace.

“Tage has a bit of temper himself.”

“No guanshit.”

Covering her mouth, Drew giggled.

Well, there’s one word we both understand.
“Ahh,” Kel
groaned as she eased into warm water.

“If you wish it warmer, just say the word.”

“It’s perfect.” Leaning back, Kel submerged completely.

“The tub will remember the proper temperature for next
time,” Drew told her when she surfaced. “Shall I scrub you?”

“No, tak.” Pouring shamwash into her hand, Kel inhaled the
light floral fragrance then poured more over her head.

“Do you like it?”

“It, too, is perfect.”

Drew beamed. Kel decided to see just how quickly and how far
she could push her young friend. “Please bring me something to eat.”

The request wiped the grin off Drew’s face. Her turquoise
eyes shone with regret and a hint of fear. “That I cannot do, m’lady.”

“Why not?”

“B-because—”

“You are to dine with me,” said the tallest, darkest man Kel
had ever seen, his voice startling her. She’d been so focused on Drew, she
hadn’t heard him enter. She recalled a man of similar build and coloring
watching her leave the spaceship that had brought her here. Since he resembled
no one aboard the spaceship or on this guanshit world, she’d assumed him a
visitor. By Drew’s reaction, he belonged here.

Bobbing a curtsy, Drew fled.

Kel stayed absolutely still. Stiller than when she patrolled
for invaders on her homeworld and reconnoitered from grass barely high enough
to cover her flattened body.

“Better rinse off before the shamwash gets in your eyes. It
stings.” His black eyes swept over her then moved elsewhere.

Captured men on Amazonia had ogled her and licked their
lips, as if Basalia would ever allow her to mate with someone of common blood.
This man’s dismissal, his pointed ignoring of her, rankled. Taking her time,
Kel scrubbed her hair, rinsed it, then took up the fragrant soap bar. Sniffing
it, she ran it down her arms and over her breasts. She could feel his gaze
follow the bar as she moved it over every inch of her body. Ignoring him as
best she could, she managed to cleanse her labia without blushing. Pale skin
made hiding temper—or embarrassment—impossible.

A towel dangled before her eyes, an order if she’d ever seen
one. After rinsing, she stood and lifted it off his fingers. She exhaled a
soundless sigh and wrapped the towel around her dripping body. She refused to
let him watch her dry herself, his dark eyes intense upon her as if memorizing
every line and curve of her.

Only then did she look at him fully.

Despite her standing on a thick marble slab, he was several
inches taller than she. Hair as black as a moonless night fell in waves over
his high forehead and curled around his ears. His nose looked as sharp as the dagger
he casually twirled between long, tanned fingers. His powerful arms were bare,
his equally powerful body covered by a loosely belted black robe.

“The towel is damp.” He traded it for the shiny material
Drew had put aside earlier. With practiced ease, he encased her in fabric,
tying the ends so they covered her breasts. “That’s better, but still not
right. Oh well.” He lifted her from the tub and kept her in his arms as he
carried her into an adjacent room.

“Put me down,” she demanded.

“Slaves on Ondrican don’t order anyone—least of all their
masters.”

Before she could box his ears, he dropped her, fortunately
onto a pillow-laden divan. She sprang to her feet. He shoved her down again,
his hands firm but surprisingly gentle.

“I am not a slave. And no
man
is my master.” If she
sprang up again, he’d only shove her down. Again. That didn’t prevent her
glaring at him, while wishing glares could kill.

“If you’re good, I’ll share my food.” Lifting the cover off
a tray, he sat beside her. The scent of roasted meat and some sort of vegetables
wafted to her.

She ached to shove every morsel into her mouth. Manners be
damned.

“First, tell me your name.”

Kel firmed her lips into a line.

He wafted a piece of meat under her nose. “Come now, I know
you’ve had only water for several days—”

“Seven days!” A warrior should starve herself before
succumbing to food. Aromatic. Succulent. Food.

“You must be very hungry. Tell me your name. I’ll tell you
mine. We’ll share my food.”

When he passed the meat under her nose again, she lunged,
but only caught his fingers between her teeth. She had no idea what he had done
with the offered morsel.

“The juices taste good, don’t they? Go ahead. Lick them from
my fingers.”

She did. Tnim—a spicy, green-leafed delicacy Amazonians used
to freshen their breath—exploded on her tongue. Smothering a groan of pleasure,
she closed her eyes so he couldn’t see how badly she wanted more.

“Your name,” he cajoled, his deep voice as soothing as her
bath had been.

“Keleos.” She eyed the bite-size chunk of meat he held just
out of reach. Even cooling, its fragrance tortured her.

“There. That wasn’t terribly painful, was it? Your name
means flame, doesn’t it? My name, little flame, is Aren, which means eagle.
Names have always fascinated me. Some are descriptive of a person’s
appearance—like yours. Others seem to define their personalities.”

She tried to think of a witty retort about eagles being
predators but she was too hungry to think. Ignoring his attempts to make her
more at ease, she opened her mouth like a chick demanding food.

“We must share the food, Keleos.” Holding the meat between
his teeth, he leaned toward her.

“You…expect me to feed from your mouth?”

He nodded.

“B-but your lips will touch mine.” Although she had avoided
looking at his lips, she looked at them now. Full. Firm. Kissable.

It seemed he grinned as he nodded again.

That simple movement brought the meat to her lips. Unable to
resist any longer, she bit the half protruding between his teeth. Surprising
her, he moved away and allowed her to chew. Oddly disappointed at the too-brief
lip contact, she held up a chunk of reddish-white flesh.

BOOK: Courting Kel
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