Read My Reaper's Daughter Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“Glyn?” Mystery called, and put out a shaking hand to touch his leg.
His eyelids fluttered open and he stared at her—past her—and he smiled.
“Milady,” he mumbled, holding his hand out. “Come to me, milady.”
Mystery looked on in horror as Leilani shed her clothing in the bat of an eye and
slithered onto the bed, sliding her naked body over the Reaper’s. His arms enfolded her,
his hips arched to meet her.
“No,” Mystery whispered, shaking her head in disbelief. She backed away from the
bed with her hand still out.
“Tell her to go away, Glynnie,” Leilani said against his lips.
“Go away,” he repeated.
Leilani twisted her head around and looked at Mystery with a gloating smirk. “You
heard him, slut. Go away so he can fuck me.”
Mystery did not see the glazed look in the Reaper’s eyes or hear the expressionless
way he spoke. She did not notice that his movements were jerky—controlled. All she
saw was the man she loved embracing her worst enemy and slanting his mouth over
Leilani’s. When he reared up and flipped Leilani to her back, shoving the whore’s legs
wide with his knees, Mystery let out a strangled cry and fled the cabin, running blindly
into the pelting rain.
142
My Reaper’s Daughter
Chapter Thirteen
Glyn woke with a horrible taste in his mouth. He sat up to thrust a trembling hand
through his damp hair. Looking about him, he had no idea at all where he was but the
overpowering smell of rat droppings and dust told him wherever he was, the place
hadn’t been inhabited by humanoids in quite some time. Groaning for his muscles were
cramping, his body aching from lying on the hard, dirty floor, he drew his knees up,
trying to make sense out of where he was and how he’d gotten there. It was pitch black
inside the hovel but his Reaper night vision revealed a broken chair, a table missing a
leg, assorted debris that told him whoever had lived in the structure had long since
abandoned it.
“Where the fuck am I?” he asked aloud, and became aware of the drumming rain
upon a metal roof.
He couldn’t remember anything. Try as hard as he might, he had absolutely no idea
what had happened to him. The last thing he remembered was having coffee with
Anthony Simmons. Everything after that was a complete blank.
Getting to his feet, he stumbled for his head spun crazily for a moment. He had to
reach out and brace himself against the wall to keep from pitching forward. His
stomach roiled and sour bile rushed up his throat. He turned his head and puked, the
smell of his vomit so vile he could barely stand it. Over and over he wretched until
there was nothing left inside and he thought he might well have strained something.
His head was filled with a blinding pain that sent slivers of agony down his neck and
into his back. Leaning his head on the wall, he clung to the weathered boards as though
his life depended upon it, his fingernails digging into the wood.
“What the hell happened to me?” he whispered.
Quivering as though he were standing encased in ice, he turned his back to the wall
and slumped there with his head down and his hands clasped above his knees, hoping
the pain and the trembling would pass. His vision was skewed as well, and that didn’t
help the nausea that refused to go away even if there was nothing left within him to
dredge up. Throat burning, eyes watering and refusing to stay still—vision skittering
like an eel, head pounding, he was afraid whatever had ailed him a week or so past had
returned.
Pushing away from the wall, he stumbled to the door, and with some difficulty,
managed to pull it open. The darkness of the night greeted him amidst the silver streaks
of pouring rain.
“Won’t this fucking shit ever stop?” he yelled, and wished he hadn’t for his head
felt as though it might well explode. Slapping his hands to his ears, he gagged, the
nausea racing up his throat once more.
143
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
At least his mount was standing stoically in the rain, though the poor beast gave
him a mean look when he staggered to it and missed getting his boot in the stirrup three
times before he was able at last to mount. Sitting astride the steed, he realized he was
not only hatless he was slickerless as well.
“Bloody fucking hell!” he hissed, and after five tries was able to fashion a hat,
though it appeared backward on his head. The slicker took more doing. By the time he
had the garment on, he was soaked through to his skin and shivering uncontrollably.
“I could gods-be-damned shoot somebody,” he mumbled then gasped.
He put a hand to his hip and was relieved to find his gun in place, though the strap
was not tied around his thigh as it should have been. The handle to his laser whip and
the dagger that was sheathed beside it were where they were supposed to be and he
heaved a thankful sigh.
Nudging the horse into motion, he hung on to the reins and saddle horn for dear
life for he feared he’d fall off if he didn’t. With every hard step the animal made, the
Reaper ground his teeth as the agony flared between his temples and the nausea kept
burning a hole in his esophagus.
By the time he reached Phelan Kiel’s house, his teeth were chattering and he was so
ill he simply slid off the horse’s back and into a waiting mud puddle.
* * * * *
“Hey.”
Glyn had trouble focusing his eyes when he woke to find Phelan leaning over him.
He grunted.
“You know my beds aren’t that hard, Reaper, that you need to wallow in the
fucking mud in the middle of a downpour,” Phelan told him. “And we really didn’t
appreciate having to clean you off before we brought you in the house.”
“What happened?” Glyn mumbled.
“You passed out,” Kasid informed him, and Glyn’s gaze shifted to another head
that suddenly appeared in his line of vision.
“From two cups of coffee?”
Kasid and Phelan looked away from him and at one another then down at him
again.
“What was in the coffee, Kullen?” Phelan inquired.
“Not a gods-be-damned thing,” Glyn said, struggling to sit up in the bed. He
plowed a hand through his wet hair. “At least I didn’t think there was at any rate.”
“What’s the last thing you remember?” Kasid asked.
“Leaving Simmons’ house.”
Phelan frowned. “And this was when exactly?”
“This morning.”
144
My Reaper’s Daughter
Once again his fellow teammates exchanged perplexed looks then lowered their
attention to him.
“Do you realize it was after midnight when we found you snoozing in the mud?”
Phelan questioned.
“I stopped somewhere,” Glyn muttered.
“Obviously.” Phelan folded his arms over his chest. “Where might that have been?”
Glyn remembered waking in the musty cabin but he had no idea where it was
located. He remembered climbing atop his horse but he couldn’t for the life of him
picture the route he’d taken to arrive back at Phelan’s house.
“Did you go see your lady?” Kasid queried.
Glyn nodded. “Aye, but that was before I went to Simmons’.” He swung his legs off
the bed, glancing up at Phelan as he got to his feet. “I’ve no fucking idea where I was
from midmorning until just now. It was a cabin but I don’t know how I got there or
where the fuck it was.” When his teammates looked at one another, he hissed. “Stop
swapping those gods-be-damned looks. I’m not losing my mind here.” He waved a
hand to fashion a pair of leather pants to cover his nakedness.
“The people who have come up missing and lived to tell the tale couldn’t tell me
where they’d been either, Glyn,” Phelan said softly.
That sent a chill down Glyn’s spine as he plodded wearily over to the washbasin
and dug his hands into the water to splash his face. He felt detached, numb, out of it,
and though his head no longer ached and the nausea was gone, he ached all over.
Drying his face on a towel Kasid politely handed him, he scrubbed vigorously at his
face.
“You want your tenerse now?” Phelan asked, and at Glyn’s nod, produced a vacsyringe. “Can you do it or you want me to?”
“I’m not a fucking invalid, Kiel,” Glyn grumbled as he held his hand out for the
injection of tenerse.
“Mayhap we should ride over to Sagewood and see what we can find out,” Kasid
suggested.
“Did you find out anything at Fox Hill?” Glyn countered.
“There is an old woman who the workers go to for spells and medicines and the
like. I spoke with her at length about the zombie beings and she assured me such things
really exist. She tells me there are none at Fox Hill but swears both Burnt Pine and
Sagewood have more than their share.”
Glyn’s eyebrows shot up. “Sagewood?”
Phelan hooked a leg over the arm of an overstuffed chair that sat by the window.
“It’s amazing what you can learn when you ask the right questions,” he said. “I’ve been
friends with Tony Simmons for years but up until a few days ago, he’d not mentioned
the creatures to me.” He narrowed his eyes. “Then out of the blue he asks if I’d ever
heard of them. According to him, Tolliver over at Burnt Pine brought them to his
145
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
attention, yet from what I learned from Tolliver’s people, both plantations have always
had zombie workers.”
“And now all of a sudden Simmons is bringing this to your attention,” Glyn said.
“Why would he do that?”
“Because before now, there was no problem,” Phelan surmised. “One man I spoke
with said the plantation owners have used the ceremony for making slave workers from
long before the Burning War, as far back as the Terran fifteenth century. It wasn’t
considered truly evil until bokors or dark sorcerers—priests who practiced black
magic—began to use it for their personal gain or to punish someone they didn’t like.”
“And by punishing, it is meant for the one they turned into a zombie or someone
upon whom they set the zombie,” Kasid added. “Such creatures ruled by a bokor are
truly evil and have been cursed to eat flesh because that is a grave sin among the people
of color.”
“So somewhere out there is a bokor who is responsible for the bone yard you
found,” Glyn stated.
“Aye, and from what I also learned at Burnt Pine, there is at least one houngan and
one mambo practicing their magic at Sagewood,” Phelan told him.
“Houngan being a male practitioner of the art and the mambo being a female,”
Kasid explained. “The old lady at Fox Hill is a tenth-generation mambo and proud of
her heritage. She says the one at Sagewood—whom she would not name—is from a
long line of magic-sayers.”
“Something else I learned that sure as hell didn’t set well with me is that whoever
this bokor is,” Phelan said, “he’s one of Raphian’s minions.”
“Which means he has unlimited power at his disposal,” Kasid stated.
“And has to be stopped before he makes more of these zombie things and the
territory is overrun with mindless killing machines,” Phelan declared.
Glyn glanced in the mirror, frowned at his beard but didn’t have the energy to
shave. “Well, since I don’t have the urge to snack on either of you, I don’t guess it was
the bokor who had me.” Once more the Reaper waved his hand to create socks, boots
and a shirt.
“He might have, Kullen, but then found you resistant to whatever drug he gave
you.”
Turning his head to give Phelan a steady look, Glyn felt another chill go down his
body. He thought about how his body ached and how sick he’d been the day before.
“You think someone gave me something?”
“I believe it’s highly possible,” was the reply. “I also think we need to do as Kasid
suggested and go over to Sagewood.” A muscles clenched in Phelan’s jaw. “Together
and not separately from now on.”
“There is safety in numbers, you mean?” Glyn asked.
146
My Reaper’s Daughter
“If we’re alone, we might conceivably be vulnerable. Something we don’t
understand happened to you. I’d just as soon we stick together.”
“Simmons did invite us to return so we have an excuse for going back this
evening,” Glyn remarked.
“We’ll make a day of it instead,” Phelan said. “Have him take us around to the
elders among the workers and see if we can glean any impressions when they are
around him.”
Kasid started to speak then stopped, holding up a hand for the other men to be
quiet. “Aye, Lord Naois?” he said.
“Two drones have finished their recalibrations and are on their way to you. One drone has
been programmed to seek out the possible locations of cybots and destroy them. The other drone
will be searching for super beings those ’bots might have created and marking their location for
you men to go after and take out. That drone will also begin taking DNA samples from the
populace,”
said the Shadowlord.
“Do you have anything to report on the disappearances?”
As Glyn and Phelan listened, Kasid explained what had transpired the day before.
“We concur,”
Lord Kheelan interrupted.
“You should stay together. Keep us informed. If
we need to send reinforcements, we will.”
“Ask him how Owen is doing,” Glyn said.
“How is Tohre, Your Grace?”