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Burned
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Table of Contents
Blurb
Other Books By Jennifer Blackstream
Title Page
Copyright
Acknowledgements
Dedication
Burned
Sneak Peek at MASTERED, Book Two in the Revenge in Vein series:
About the Author
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BURNED
“He came for revenge . . . and she was waiting.”
For almost two hundred years, the vampire Aldric has waited for a chance to get revenge on the sun goddess, Saule. Once a loyal servant of the sun, he traded his soul for eternal life after his prayers for the goddess to save his village went unanswered. When he receives a letter from the queen of the dark faerie, it seems almost too good to be true. Saule has taken a mortal form and is being held prisoner in the Unseelie Court. The eccentric queen invites him to her sithen, eager to have a front row seat for Aldric’s vengeance.
The sight of a golden-haired mortal Saule, naked and bound in silver chains, is almost too delicious for Aldric to bear. His plan for retribution is as erotic as it is carefully planned. Intent to get every drop of pleasure from the revenge he’s waited so long for, he forgets that the sun in its simplest form is a giant ball of fire. And when you play with fire, you risk getting . . . Burned.
Books in the Revenge in Vein Series
Burned
Mastered
Bitten
Converted
Other Books by Jennifer Blackstream
Aphrodite’s Hunt
Under His Skin
Burned
Jennifer Blackstream
Skeleton Key Publishing
http://www.skeletonkeypublishing.yolasite.com
Copyright
Burned
ISBN #
©Copyright Jennifer Blackstream 2012
Cover Art by Kim Killion © Copyright May 2012
Edited by Julia Kanno
Skeleton Key Publishing
This is a work fiction. All characters, places and events are from the author’s imagination and should not be confused with fact. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, events or places is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form, whether by printing, photocopying, scanning or otherwise without the written permission of the publisher, Skeleton Key Publishing, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in the context of reviews.
This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this ebook with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. In all seriousness, if you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should delete it and purchase your own copy or else be faced with an irate pixie and a snarling dragon. Thank you for respecting the hard work of all people involved with the creation of this ebook.
Applications should be addressed in the first instance, in writing, to Skeleton Key Publishing. Unauthorized or restricted use in relation to this publication may result in civil proceedings and/or criminal prosecution.
The author and illustrator have asserted their respective rights under the Copyright Designs and Patent Acts 1988 (as amended) to be identified as the author of this book and illustrator of the artwork.
Published in 2012 by Skeleton Key Publishing, Norton, Ohio, United States of America
Warning: This book contains sexually explicit content, including forced seduction, which is only suitable for mature readers.
Acknowledgements
A thousand blessings on my mother for watching my son so I could write.
I don’t know what I would do without you.
Dedication
For the Dragon,
my amazing crit partner and friend. May our following
years together be as crazy as our first.
Burned
“Master, I would beg you one last time, please reconsider.”
Aldric slowly turned away from the towering mound of earth and faced his lieutenant. In the shadow cast by the great hill that housed the sithen of the Unseelie Court, the other vampire’s face glowed with unearthly paleness. Anton met his gaze without flinching, though the tightness around his eyes gave away his discomfort with challenging his master.
“You question my sanity, Anton?” Aldric asked quietly, letting his eyes carry the unspoken threat. “Or has your fear seized control of your tongue?”
Had it been anyone else to question him in such a manner, Aldric would not have hesitated to strike him with enough force to smash his jaw and half of his face. But Anton had been his right hand man for over a century, and that earned him a modicum of leeway.
Anton’s jaw twitched, but he stood firm. “Master, you know I will follow you anywhere. No danger is too great.” His gaze flickered to the harmless looking mound of dirt and grass before them. “I mean only to say that entering the mound of the Unseelie Court, the source of all nightmares . . . all for a woman—”
The sound of Aldric’s hand hitting Anton across the face shattered the peaceful silence of the night. Bones cracked beneath the force of his punishment and any lesser vampire would have cried out in pain. Anton fell to the ground in silence, cradling his face as the unnatural healing ability of the undead frantically worked to repair the damage.
“You go too far, Anton,” Aldric growled, not a hint of sympathy in his voice. “My motive is irrelevant. The only thing that should matter to you is that entering the Unseelie Court is the course of action I have decided to take.” He flashed his fangs. “I killed you once. Do not make me do it again.”
Anton bowed his head in submission, keeping his eyes on the ground as he cradled his rapidly healing jaw.
“Does anyone else wish to venture an opinion?” Aldric looked at the other three guards, meeting the eyes of each one in turn. “Bron? Vincentas? Kurt?”
They shook their heads, none of them hazarding a glance at Anton. Not even his own brother Kurt risked drawing Aldric’s attention. Aldric nodded in grim satisfaction. In his almost two hundred years, he had learned emotions were a weakness no leader could afford. He respected Anton. The man had been at his side for over a century. But disrespect and disobedience were completely unacceptable.
He turned back to the sithen of the Unseelie and narrowed his eyes. In her invitation, the queen had told him where to find the fairy mound, but beyond that she’d given him no clues as to how one actually managed to gain entrance. He wasn’t certain if this was a test of some sort or not, nor did he care.
An unlocked door is not worth opening, he thought to himself, examining the earth with cool and calculating eyes. He caressed the grass, the tender green blades tickling his palm. As he searched for a method of entry, he let his mind wander to the prize that lay inside.
Saule. For the first time in centuries, the sun goddess had taken on a mortal form. For the first time in his undead existence, he had the chance to get his revenge on the deity who had betrayed him.
An image of the sun goddess’ mortal form floated before his eyes. Long golden hair, blue eyes like a spring sky, and skin the color of the sun’s first morning rays. Centuries ago, thoughts of her had inspired him, her beauty nearly moving him to tears. Now the image brought nothing but pain and hatred. He had waited a long time for this revenge.
A brush of power flowed down his arm. He froze, concentrating on the sensation in an attempt to determine its effects. No pain met the energy and he felt no change in his body to cause him alarm. Staring harder at the mound, he noticed a parting of the earth. Intrigued, he stepped back, watching as
the earth opened up to reveal a doorway.
A soft breeze tickled his skin, a subtle reminder of his nudity. He was unclear if Queen Dubheasa’s instructions for both he and his men to arrive naked was a result of tactical precaution or pleasure. Certainly, she may have intended it to prevent him from inconspicuously carrying a weapon into her home, but the rumors he’d heard of the Unseelie queen’s erotic entertainments made him wonder if she did not have a more . . . interesting motive.
One story in particular, featuring a centaur and a wood nymph, flashed into his mind and Aldric paused. In all his afterlife he had avoided dealing with the sidhe. They had a gift for manipulating space and time, a penchant for creative tortures he was certain he would’ve never thought of. Add to that their notoriously fickle tempers and the conclusion was an enemy that was better avoided altogether.
He frowned. Perhaps Anton was wise to question this course of action. Had he truly lost control of his vengeance? Were the cries of one woman worth risking the torments of the Unseelie Court?
A mosaic featuring a beautiful goddess pouring golden sunlight from a vase hovered in his mind. Time seemed to flow backwards in a wash of nostalgia and bitter hopelessness.
For a moment he was back in his small village in Lithuania, kneeling at the altar of the sun goddess, Saule. In the distance he could hear the Russians getting closer. He could feel the pressure of the stone beneath his knees, still hear the shots fired by the invaders as they approached his village. He turned eyes filled with betrayal up to the mosaic before him. She wasn’t supposed to be just a beautiful picture. She was supposed to be their goddess, their mother. Where were her copper chariots full of golden skinned warriors? Where was she?
More gunshots, the metallic clash of blades, the crackle of fires and burning houses all mixed with the cries of his people as the Russians fell on their village. He stared out at the carnage from his altar on the hill, watching with horrified disbelief as the sun set, putting an end to whatever hope he’d had that his goddess would come. He stood there, shocked and numb for what felt like an eternity. It was then that the vampire had found him.
Cold hatred infused his silent heart, ripping him back to the present. All doubt about entering the sithen shattered. He would not lose this chance. Saule had left herself vulnerable. She had taken a human form, a form that could be touched—could be hurt. He raised his eyes to the moon glowing above him. She had no power at night.
He stepped through the doorway into the Unseelie mound. The shiver that raced down his spine didn’t concern him, didn’t make him hesitate. The memory of Saule’s betrayal steeled him against any emotion that might deter him from his goal. His guards walked on light footsteps, the barest disturbance of earth beneath their feet letting him know they were behind him. Even without the sound of the earth shuffling beneath them, he wouldn’t have worried. He trusted them at his back.
The walls to either side of him moved. Aldric froze, his hands going out to the sides as his brain scrambled to figure out if it was him moving or the sithen itself. The walls of the passageway hissed by him like grave dirt raining down on the dearly departed. Before he could properly regain his bearings, the walls vanished altogether and Aldric found himself standing in the center of a large room.
A quick glance behind him assured him his men were still there. He gestured for them to move back to back in a circle, facing every direction. The doorway they had come through seemed to have vanished, as if the entire sithen had slithered forward and left them in a completely new location. He let his gaze travel around him, searching for signs that they were not alone.
The room stretched out like a cavernous cathedral all around them. Enormous black tree trunks lined the walls like colossal pillars leading up to a raised dais. Eerie silver light came from no discernable source, illuminating a black throne. Like polished ebony, it gleamed in the ethereal light, mocking him with its emptiness.
The monarch was nowhere to be seen.
Aldric frowned. He had not come to the Unseelie Court without taking certain precautions. His mind traveled back to the yard at the inn where the pisky he’d managed to trap waited for his return from within his iron-barred cage, half buried in the earth. The little imp had said nothing of a living sithen, nor had he mentioned any royal penchant for sneaking up on invited guests. Had the little fey deliberately withheld information to leave them vulnerable to Unseelie torment? Had any of the information he’d offered been true?
Aldric gritted his teeth as anger burned up his spine. Impossible. He’d seen the burns on the fey’s flesh where the iron cage had touched his skin before he stuffed the silk handkerchief inside the prison. There was no way he would risk being left in there any longer than necessity dictated. Aldric had been clear that if anything happened to him, no one would be coming to free him from his deathly prison and the little pest couldn’t stay wrapped in the silk forever.
He glanced around again, the weight of the iron bar braided into his long red hair a comforting weight against his back. At least he knew iron was truly an effective weapon against the fey—the pisky’s burns had proved that. As long as Dubheasa didn’t try to run her fingers through his hair, he would have a last recourse should matters go badly. He took a deep breath and tried to force the worst case scenario from his mind. Perhaps the queen just enjoyed making a dramatic entrance.
Turning his mind to the comfort of tactical analysis, he studied the room again. Between the columns of tree trunks, thick red curtains hung over what must be small alcoves carved into the earthen walls. The queen could easily have tucked herself away in one of those. He narrowed his eyes. That would hardly be much of an entrance though. He tilted his head in thought. With all of them facing different directions, it would be impossible to sneak up on them. Unless . . .
Aldric jerked his attention up, his shoulders tensing in anticipation. The tree trunks that lined the walls continued to grow up and up until their branches slithered across the ceiling in a thick canopy of rustling leaves. The strange light that permeated the room didn’t pierce the heavy boughs hanging overhead. Aldric’s eyes twitched as he strained to see into the darkness.
Even with his vampire sight, he could not see anything above him. It wasn’t just the absence of light. The shadows in the branches seemed to eat the mysterious glow around the cavern, consuming it until it became a black hole of nothingness. Pins and needles pressed against his flesh as though hundreds of tiny eyes watched him from that impenetrable gloom. Waiting.
“Ah, Lord Aldric, you have arrived!”
Shocked by the jubilant voice shattering the silence, Aldric ripped his attention from the ceiling just in time to see Dubheasa, Queen of the Unseelie, emerge from one of the red-curtained alcoves. The first thing that caught his eyes was the white column of her neck, bared by the way her long dark hair had been pulled up in a high ponytail on top of her head. Over the centuries, Aldric had noted that most women who knew what he was chose to leave their hair down, covering their throats with their tresses—often in addition to a high collar. Aldric wasn’t sure if the queen was trying to demonstrate a lack of fear or deliberately taunting him. He suspected both.
As the sidhe royal moved forward, her black and grey ball gown swirled about her in a dance of fabric. Aldric had to try not to stare too hard at the material or it wavered and moved, playing tricks on his eyes. The pisky had said that the Queen of Air and Darkness often clothed herself in shadows. He wondered how much of the garment was actually material at all.
Dubheasa smiled brilliantly as she sashayed toward him, something thick and heavy hanging from one hand. The scent of blood wafted over him like a wave of perfume and his nostrils flared. Hunger stabbed at his belly and his gaze locked onto the mysterious object, his eyes widening with interest as it twitched in her grasp.
“There is no need for the title, your majesty,” he murmured, silently shoving away the intense hunger brought on by the scent of fresh blood. “Aldric is sufficient.”
 
; “No title?” The queen tilted her head, her black eyes glittering at him like the stare of a raven. “What do your men call you?’
“Master.”
The queen threw back her head and laughed, the sound coming from her belly and echoing throughout the room. The branches overhead rustled and Aldric had to fight not to look up, trusting his men to stay alert. The pisky had been very clear on one thing: all attention must go to the queen unless she directed it elsewhere.
“Oh, my, Aldric. You are a delight.”
He hadn’t said anything funny. Unease began to curl at the base of Aldric’s spine. In his experience, people who laughed at things that were not funny tended to have a somewhat skewed vision of the world. They were unpredictable. And dangerous.