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Hunting Midnight
Emma Holly
Excerpt
Chapter One
England, the town of Bridesmere, 1370
"Thou art a sexy bastard," the woman purred, her finger
trailing lightly
down Ulric's jaw.
He dragged his cock from her body even though he was
still hard, still
vibrating with the lust his kind could never completely
slake. He had
spilled, but the lingering excitement kept him long and
thick. With
hungry eyes, the woman watched him tuck himself into his
codpiece. Her
cheeks bore spots of red within their English cream.
He had bitten her at the end. That, as much as anything
else, accounted
for her enjoyment.
"Yes," he agreed to her accolade, "I am the sexiest
bastard you shall
ever meet."
They stood in the alley behind a tavern, one of seven in
this human
town. He had taken the woman against the wall without
preliminaries:
easy--nay, eager--prey.
To be fair, Ulric was no ordinary seducer. He was a
member of the upyr,
a race of shapeshifting immortal beings who lived by
drinking blood. As
strong as they were beautiful, they had few
vulnerabilities. Most who
died did so by their own hand, out of sadness or ennui. The
touch of
iron was a danger, but far worse was the sun. To his kind
the sun was
death, a slow, honeyed poison that addled their minds as
surely as
liquor addled a human's. If they stayed in it long enough,
they would
burn. At night their powers of attraction were at their
height. With the
superior force of their minds, they could thrall their
victims into
their arms, then make them forget they had ever seen them.
If they
chose, they could use an illusion called "glamour" to
assume a human facade.
They were shadows in the mortal world, among but not of
the crowd.
The line of upyr Ulric belonged to, the children of
Auriclus, were
forbidden to interact with mortals. His sire would have
been shocked to
know Ulric was here, much less that he was drinking human
blood.
Ulric did not require it, after all. He could take his
wolf form and
feed as a beast. He had learned, however, in the nights
during which he
had haunted these winding streets, that human blood was the
sweetest
dram. For a while at least, it filled his heart with human
passions and
human joys. It strengthened him as no other creature's
could.
Even if it had not, Ulric would not have cared a whit
for Auriclus's
rules. Not today. Not tomorrow. Not until he understood why
the only
woman he ever loved, the queen to his king wolf, had chosen
a human
lover over him. The man Gillian selected did not even have
a title. He
was a mere second son. Ulric was handsomer. Ulric was
better in bed.
Ulric could make his pack members quail with a single
glare. Ulric had
everything Aimery lacked. And still Gillian had left.
She had loved Ulric, but not enough.
It passed beyond understanding. Ulric could not fathom
it. In fact, he
positively refused to.
Sensing the loss of his attention, the woman was
murmuring to him and
pawing his chest, obviously greedy for more of the
pleasures she could
already but half recall. Her hands found the bulge between
his thighs,
stroking it high and hard. Her touch went no deeper than
his skin.
"Leave me," he ordered, pushing her away.
When she stumbled and caught her weight against the
wall, he felt a
twinge of guilt. It was not her fault their coupling had
left him empty.
No human could give him what he needed, and no upyr could
except for
Gillian. He was broken, and cruel with it, but this female
was not to blame.
"Go home," he said more gently, putting the force of his
mind behind the
words. "Sleep well and wake easy of mind. You did not meet
me tonight. I
was simply a sweet daydream."
She blinked at him with glazing eyes, far more
susceptible to his thrall
than one of his own kind would have been. He was strong in
this human
world, as powerful as a god. He might have thought that was
the lure for
Gillian, but she had made her lover her equal. She had made
him upyr.
Ulric himself could not transform a human. Only the
oldest and most
powerful upyr could do that. When Gillian had discovered
the ability,
young as she was, that had seemed a betrayal, too. Ulric
was supposed to
be her protector . . . her superior, in point of fact.
"Go," he ordered the woman before his anger could rise
to lash out at her.
She went, halting and reluctant, her slippers dragging in
the dirt. Her
head turned back over her shoulder, her veil and wimple
fallen, her hair
like a bird's nest straggling down. Ulric watched her gaze
at him with
longing, but he did not really see--no more than she had
seen him.
One more night, he thought. One more night survived
without Gillian.
Though he knew his face remained impassive, his chest ached
as if the
wound were fresh. He wondered if this heartbreak would be
immortal, if
he would ever feel whole again. The prospect seemed
intolerable, but he
decided to wait and see.
COPYRIGHT 2003 BY EMMA HOLLY. IT IS ILLEGAL TO REPRODUCE
OR DISTRIBUTE THIS WORK IN ANY MANNER OR MEDIUM
WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION OF THE AUTHOR.
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