LENGTH: Three Author Anthology
SENSUALITY: Spicy/Carnal

Cover art (c) Eliza Black
Trade Paperback ISBN 1-58608-712-6
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Darkest Desire by JC Grey: Used to being in control, Morgan suddenly has to contend with a very stressful job plus two men in her life--the earthily attractive Hunter Riley and the warrior-god who invades her dreams....

The Djinn by Marie Morin: Dark, dangerous, exotic, and all too irresistible, the djinn, Raheem wreaks havoc on Elise Beauchamp’s ordered, uncomplicated life the moment he appears. There’s no doubt in Elise’s mind that he can create a fire in her blood, but can he grant her the one wish her heart truly desires?

Gypsy Nights by Mandy M. Roth: Feared, forbidden, foretold … can love conquer all?

Rating: Contains mature situations, graphic violence, strong language, explicit sex, a threesome, anal sex, and oral sex. It is not intended for the faint of heart.


DARKEST DESIRE

By

JC Grey

 


© copyright by JC Grey
Cover Art by Eliza Black
ISBN 1-58608-136-5
New Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, GA 31636
www.newconceptspublishing.com

 


This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the author's imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely coincidence.

 

 

…and the great horned man-beast led his wild and ghostly hunt through the night sky….

 


CHAPTER ONE

His short ivory horns gleaming, a feral snarl on his lips, he drove his frothing horse forward. The stags, wild boars, wolves and snakes of the forest converged in his wake. Their howls and roars sounded louder now, and Morgan turned to look back in panic over her shoulder.
He was just two arm's lengths from her and she pushed herself on in frantic desperation, using every ounce of strength she could summon to try and elude him. She heard his harsh breath in her ear, the panting of his horse and then she stumbled over the hem of her long, white nightgown, tumbling into the bracken that carpeted the forest floor.
Stunned, gasping for air, she scrambled to all fours as the man-beast leaped from his horse. Then he was behind her, his teeth gripping her neck, hard hands pushing her nightdress up to her waist, brutally parting her legs as he prepared to mount her.
And the cries of the hunt quieted as the great man-beast overwhelmed his prey.…

* * * *
In the silence just before dawn's first glimmers began to lighten the sky, Morgan McClellan's eyes opened wide in terror. Gasping for air, she lay face down on her bed, her black hair spread on her pillow, her sweat-soaked nightdress gathered around her waist. Between her legs, an unsatisfied ache throbbed, making her bite her lip against a moan.
Damn it, not again!
It was the third time in the last week that the dream had awoken her, so real that the
terror it evoked sent her hurtling from sleep to wakefulness in a fraction of a second, leaving her disoriented and so confused that she barely knew who or where she was.
Morgan looked at the old-fashioned alarm clock next to the bed. Just after five. She rolled over cautiously, wincing at the soreness between her thighs, raised herself on her elbows and looked around at the room. In the early morning gloom, the sparse furniture was dark and shadowy but familiar: the old armoire in the far corner; her grandmother's intricately-carved oak stool in front of the antique dressing table that was to be her next restoration project.
Methodically, Morgan reviewed her bedroom and assured herself that nothing had changed, that everything was right in her world. Her breath slowed and her pulse regained its natural rhythm. She slumped back down on her pillow and flung an arm over her eyes, groaning. Right now, she really needed an extra hour or two of sleep but there was no way she would be able to doze off again before her alarm went off at seven. Her job was exhausting enough at present but these early morning wake-up calls were killing her.
She lay in bed for a moment, going over all the things she had to do today. It was just eight weeks until the exhibition opened. She was at a stage where she needed to finalize the text for the displays and the accompanying catalogue. In some ways she hated this part of the job as much as she loved it. It required her to interpret the information about the significance of the exhibits in order to prepare meaningful and interesting context for the displays. The problem was that her passion for her subject often led her on speculative and highly personal journeys that tended to provoke controversy and leave her open for criticism.
Countless visitors to the exhibition would read her every word, and her text needed to be as accurate as she could make it, while saying something that would shed fresh light. With just six months at the museum, it was her first major project and she needed to make an impression to ensure her contract would be renewed. She couldn't afford a slip-up that would bring her own, or the museum's, reputation into question.
It was hardly surprising that she was feeling the pressure, but it was unusual that it should keep her awake at night. And, she thought, feeling her private parts continue to throb, it was most unusual for her dreams to feature such vivid sexual overtones.
While she wouldn't describe herself as frigid, Morgan was honest enough to admit she had little interest in sex, and none in screwing around. A couple of sweet but lukewarm experiences at college and in her early working days had failed to fire her imagination in the same way her job did, and for the past few years she hadn't bothered with intimate relationships at all. At thirty-one she supposed it made her a bit of an oddity in a world that seemed obsessed by the sexual antics of young upwardly-mobile urban women. Not that she cared at all. Most of the time she was absorbed in the romance of the far and distant past where the adventures of knights and ladies and other-worldly-creatures seemed more real to her than anything out of Sex and the City.
"Too real," Morgan muttered to herself, throwing back the quilt. If her recent dreams were anything to go by, she needed to restore some balance in her life.
Sighing, she shuffled her feel into the lamb's wool slippers under her bed. The chill dawn air quickly cooled the drying sweat on her body. In the bathroom down the hall, she hastily splashed water on her face and then sat on the curbed edge of the aged bathtub as she reluctantly lifted her nightie.
"Shit!"
Grabbing a face towel, she ran it under the hot tap for a few moments and then rubbed vigorously until the drying stickiness between her legs had disappeared. For a woman who prided herself on being so coolly controlled, it was embarrassing to admit to being brought to orgasm simply by a dream, but the evidence on her thighs was irrefutable. Momentarily she wondered if she should see a doctor but then discarded the thought. It wasn't the sort of problem one saw a GP about. What the hell would she say? "I'm having sexy dreams that make me come!" Anyway, the problem would resolve itself once she was through this stressful time, wouldn't it?
Pushing her thoughts aside, Morgan returned to her bedroom, hastily slipping into a sports bra and panties before grabbing the hooded sweat top and fleece-lined running pants from her chair and pulling them on. With well-used running shoes laced firmly on her feet, she was ready for her morning jog. The floorboards creaked in the usual spots as she made her way down the rickety staircase of the old terrace house to the kitchen. She drank a long glass of water at the sink and gazed out over the large overgrown garden. The first fingers of sunlight were beginning to peek over the horizon.
At the front door, she tugged on a warm cap, tucking her hair underneath. While she hated rising early, Morgan loved pounding the pavements at this hour. The air smelled fresh and clean, and the streets were empty save for a few early joggers or dog-walkers. On the steps of her house, she stretched her cold muscles and jogged easily down the street, picking up pace until she joined the tow-path along the harbor. An early morning mist gathered over the still water, its ghostly presence obscuring the far side from view.
Its spectral presence brought the dream of the past few nights--and the identity of the central figure, the ghostly man-beast who pursued her through the night--to the forefront of her mind.
The horned one.
Lord of the night hunt.
Cernunnos.
The great man-beast of Celtic legend was occupying not only her dreams, but all her work hours at present. Ever since the renowned archaeologist Hunter Riley had agreed to lend his latest find to the Southern History Museum's prestigious exhibition "More than Myths" four months ago, Morgan had thought about little except the lord of the hunt.
Riley's find in northern France was one of the few items ever discovered thought to relate directly to Cernunnos, a little-known Celtic god. He had unearthed the heavy, intricately worked silver torque--a necklet usually worn by a warrior--while on a dig in Brittany. The weight and craftsmanship of the piece indicated it was likely to be the ornament of a famous warrior but the thing that got the historians most excited was that it appeared almost identical to the torque worn by an engraving of Cernunnos on the famous Gundestrup Cauldron. The whispers among the academic fraternity began almost immediately. Could it be that a mortal was the inspiration for the divine figure?
From being a footnote in the exhibition, the lord of the hunt had suddenly become the star, with the torque featured larger than life on all the promotional material. Under wraps until the launch, it was the piece everyone wanted to see. Historians were openly debating the possibility that Cernunnos was more than simply a character of legend and the media were clamoring for expert opinions on the matter.
And if Riley approved of Southern History Museum's exhibition, there was talk that he might even donate the piece permanently to the museum. The museum board had almost slavered at the thought.
Morgan shivered as a sudden blast of cold air whipped across her neck, and she noticed her pace had dropped. She picked up her pace along the banks of the harbor as a watery sun gradually rose from its resting place, sending soft spears of light across the gloomy city. Her feet found their usual rhythm and gradually she blanked all thoughts from her mind but the thud of her feet on the path. After three-quarters of an hour, she branched off from the main towpath, circling round toward home, picking up the pace until she turned into her street.
On the steps of her house, she bent over with her hand on her knees, shoulders heaving for a moment while she caught her breath before she unlocked the door. It was barely six-thirty--still early. She could have a leisurely breakfast and still get to the museum shortly after eight. Hopefully it would give her an uninterrupted period to work on finalizing the copy for the Celtic section of the exhibition before most of her colleagues began arriving.
The museum was quiet when Morgan arrived at the staff entrance. As always, she took the long way round to her office, through the exhibition halls where the towering ceilings and exquisitely-tiled floors made her footsteps echo as though she walked in a prehistoric cave. She loved this time alone in the halls, wandering through the exhibits. She saw something new and fascinating every time, once a Roman coin with a face almost obscured by age, another time a section from the wall of an Egyptian tomb. She would press her nose to the glass as though she was five years old and imagine the piece whispering its story to her.
The front doors didn't open until ten, and most of the staff arrived around nine, although Augustus Waugh, her boss and Director of Displays--a title that conveniently allowed him to fuss over every small detail--was inevitably at his desk early.
Morgan waved good morning at him as she passed his office and got a cup of coffee from the machine before steeling herself to approach her desk. Awash with documents and books--three tomes even balancing precariously on top of her computer monitor--it filled the usually neat Morgan with dismay. She had worked so late last night that she hadn't been able to face tidying up her workspace before heading for home. It would have to be the first job on the agenda this morning.
As she filed papers and stacked books on shelves, Morgan didn't even notice the shabbiness of the cramped first-floor office. The window was tiny and the glass not particularly clean, letting just a sliver of gray light into the room, and the furniture had certainly seen better days. It was hardly surprising. The museum relied largely on a less-than-generous government grant as well as private donations and legacies to keep operating, and there was rarely spare cash to spend on furnishing the offices of staff. The only vaguely contemporary items were the computers and phones, and even they weren't new.
When she had first arrived from Great Western Museum, where she had begun her career, Morgan had been secretly appalled at the uninviting office. While she accepted the need to direct as high a proportion of the museum's funding as possible into new acquisitions and display projects, she saw no need for herself and her assistant to work in an office devoid of character. She needed color, inspiration around her. Morgan had immediately set to work on brightening up the space with posters and postcards, painting the bookshelves bright red and installing a glossy-leafed indoor plant. Now, at least it possessed some pizzazz.
She turned as footsteps sounded in the corridor outside her door.
"Good Lord, someone had a rough night." Augustus Waugh's slightly critical tone immediately set Morgan on edge. She looked at him as he tugged nervously at his short salt-and pepper beard. His hazel eyes looked worried, as usual.
"Thanks, Gus. You always know how to make a woman feel good."
"Sorry, but you look like death dished up. Are you sure the exhibition isn't getting to you?"
Gus had asked the same question all week and it was starting to irritate as well as worry her. She got the distinct impression that her boss was starting to question her ability to do her job without falling to pieces. Not that she took it personally. Not only was Gus a worrywart but he had a deep-seated and unshakable belief that women were likely to throw a hissy fit or burst into tears at the first sign of pressure.
Morgan couldn't say she hadn't been warned about Gus. When she had taken the job, her previous boss, Mary--who knew simply everyone in the field--had been up front about Gus's blind spot about women. Nothing he had done in the past six months had led her to believe that Mary had exaggerated.
"Gus, I'm just busy that's all." Morgan deliberately kept her voice calm, expressionless. "With the torque coming into the exhibition relatively late, it's meant a complete change to the thrust of it and a lot more work for everyone. As soon as we've finalized everything, I'll start to relax again, I promise."
"OK." Gus hesitated. "But if you need some support, just let me know."
Yeah, right, if she wanted a big black mark against her name-- woman who cracks up when the heat's on.
"Thanks but everything's under control." Morgan turned back to her desk and started gathering books into a pile for return to the library shelves. She hoped Gus would take the hint and leave her alone.
"Oh, by the way, about the meeting with Riley … he's finally back from France. I'll take him over the museum and show him the plans for the exhibition, and I really need you there to talk about the approach to the torque."
"Yes, it's in the calendar, Gus. Two-thirty, right?"
"Actually, he phoned late last night when he got in and asked if we could move it to eleven this morning. I said I'd check with you and get back to him if there was a problem."
Damn. She obviously wouldn't get as much work done prior to the meeting as she'd hoped, but maybe it was as well to get it out of the way this morning and then she might get an uninterrupted afternoon to work on her copy.
"Fine." Morgan nodded. "Just give me a call when he arrives."
"OK. Morgan… ?"
"Yes?" Morgan raised her eyebrows at Gus. She wished he wasn't such a fusspot. Everything had to be discussed a million times before he was happy. It drove her crazy.
"Look, I just wanted to make sure you understand how important this is to the museum. If the exhibition is as successful as we hope, it has the potential to really give us the momentum to compete with the big boys." He paused to tug again at his beard. "The board is adamant that we keep Riley happy. They don't want any dramas."
Morgan nodded in sympathy at her boss. He was getting a lot of pressure from the board. After all, it was the biggest project the museum had ever undertaken, with a huge commitment in terms of resources at all levels.
"Yep, I know. I really do understand, Gus."
"Excellent. Well, I'll see you later."
His short, suited figure disappeared around the door and Morgan breathed a sigh of relief. Squaring her shoulders, she returned to tackling her desk, devoting the next half-hour to catching up on long-ignored filing and replying to critical emails. When her assistant Andrea arrived late at nine, she was reviewing the Celtic Exhibits file with a critical eye.
"Love the suit but the bags could do with some work." Andrea sat her plump behind in her chair and waved at the shadows beneath Morgan's gray eyes. "Someone didn't get much sleep last night." She raised her pale eyebrows and smirked suggestively. "Or perhaps you weren't allowed to get much sleep."
"If only," said Morgan, dryly. Andrea, at twenty-four, assumed everyone led as full a sex life as she did. Since Morgan had joined the museum, Andrea had waged an ongoing battle to uncover the "mystery men" in her boss's life, assuming that, as her manager, Morgan was just being circumspect in keeping her private life to herself. She would probably faint from shock if she knew the sad truth about Morgan's celibate life.
"Big day today," Morgan said, turning Andrea's attention to work matters. "Riley's coming in at eleven, and I really want to get our approach clear before then so I can talk to him with authority. Can you please answer my calls this morning, and just take a message if anything really critical turns up?"
"Sure, and by the way Morgan, that suit really does look great on you."
Morgan smiled her thanks and brushed her hands self-consciously down the tailored black pant suit, which she wore with a fine lavender wool scarf and high heels. Her long black hair was pinned neatly in a knot behind her head and she wore small pearl earrings. She had dressed carefully this morning, conscious of the necessity of making a good impression at her meeting, although God knew why. Hunter Riley would be far more interested in what she said than how she looked. His assistant, Suzie, had made it abundantly clear in their email correspondence over the past few weeks that, having loaned his find to the exhibition and considering making the donation permanent, he was expecting a rigorous approach to the museum's presentation of the torque and its potential links with the lord of the hunt. It was up to Morgan to convince him that she knew what she was talking about!
The next two hours flashed past as Morgan prepared notes for the meeting, and considered answers to some of the curly questions she was expecting from Riley, and by eleven she was as ready as she could be for the meeting. That didn't stop the adrenaline rush when Gus rang just after the hour to ask her to join them in his office.
Morgan quickly dabbed a little more concealer beneath her eyes, grabbed her files and her notebook and walked straight into Gus's office without knocking. Gus smiled at her as she entered, and indicated her presence to the tall man standing with his back to the door. Riley turned to face Morgan and shock waves resonated through her body as her gray eyes met his amber ones, framed by glasses.
"Ms McClellan?" He seemed as shaken as Morgan and hesitated for a moment. "Do I know you, perhaps?"
The faltering smile on Riley's handsome face was replaced with a frown as he reached a to shake her hand, taking his glasses off to look at her intently. Morgan barely touched her fingers to his, but instantly an electrical pulse of connection seemed to arc between them. She did know him, but from where she had no idea. Withdrawing her hand quickly, she smiled up at him with as much serenity as she could muster.
"I'm not sure, Mr. Riley. Perhaps I just have one of those faces. But I'm very happy to meet the man responsible for bringing Cernunnos's torque to us, if that is indeed what it is. Either way, I've heard it's a magnificent piece." No point beating about the bush, Morgan thought. Whether or not the discovery of the torque indicated that the god had been a real person was something that needed to be discussed.
Riley's amber eyes studied her from a height of just under six feet. "I can't agree that yours is 'one of those faces'. You have a memorable face, Ms McClellan. Please, call me Hunter."
His eyes seemed to devour her, taking in every one of her features and recording it indelibly on his memory. Morgan knew she was reasonably attractive--her pale-skinned, black-haired looks were striking enough and her morning runs kept her 5'4" frame in reasonable shape, although she sometimes thought she was a little top-heavy--but Riley was looking at her as though he'd never seen a woman before.
Morgan blushed and looked away, glad when Gus finally intervened with a cough and motioned Riley to a seat.
"May I say again how thrilled we are, Hunter, to have the torque as the focal point of the exhibition?"
Morgan cringed as Gus's congratulation quickly turned obsequious. She tuned him out as he babbled on about how he hoped it was the start of a long association between the archaeologist and the museum, her eyes straying to the man who sat next to her. From where she sat, she could study him out of the corner of her eye while still appearing to be looking at Gus, and it was well worth the effort.
To her admittedly inexpert eye, Hunter looked like one of the rare men who had no idea of his own appeal. Dark brown hair flopped untidily over his brow and his well-won tweed jacket and cord jeans gave him a rumpled, academic appearance, but his warm, brown eyes, broad shoulders and low voice were seriously sexy. A very enigmatic package, she decided.
With a start, Morgan realized the two men were looking at her, Gus with bushy eyebrows raised as though expecting an answer to a question.
God! What the hell had they been talking about?
Morgan tried in vain to stop a pink tide of embarrassment from rising in her face as she desperately searched her mind for a sufficiently vague response that wouldn't reveal her as a complete fool.
"I believe Ms McClellan is prepared to stick her neck out and speculate that the lord of the night hunt may well have his origins in fact."
Out of Gus's line of sight, Hunter winked at Morgan. She could have kissed him for putting her on the right track, but she settled for a shy smile of thanks.
"Thank you, Hunter." Morgan moved seamlessly into the argument she had prepared this morning after re-reading her notes. "I certainly do feel it would be a wasted opportunity to ignore some of the more sensational implications of your find." She held up a hand to Gus, who opened his mouth to interject. It was high time some of the living fossils in the museum got a shake-up.
"Gus, I know your thoughts on this, but we need to adopt a position that history isn't about dusty old relics that sit in equally dusty glass cases. We have to breathe life into history, and the suggestion that this incredible part human-part beast deity was once a flesh and blood man … well, people will love the story.
"They will identify with a man much more than some mystical figure, especially if he was a warrior who, through his amazing feats of courage and skill, earned himself a place among the legendary figures of Celtic culture. People will be breaking down the doors to see the exhibition."
Gus choked on his glass of water. "Oh, the enthusiasm of youth." He looked at Hunter as though sharing a private joke about the impetuosity of young women in particular. "Morgan, I do appreciate your point, and we certainly want to do whatever we can to encourage the general public to visit the exhibition, even those who are not usually patrons of ours.
"However, I am concerned that the museum may be rather exposed should we stick our neck out too far on the matter of the origins of the find. It's still very much a matter of debate, you know. There's nothing that proves conclusively that Cernunnos was a historical figure.
"The last thing I--or the board need--is well-known historians claiming that we've taken liberties, or worse misinterpreted, the facts. Could be disastrous for the museum's credibility."
Morgan knew she needed to tread with care. It was a matter that was very open to debate, and with discovery of the torque so recent, debate was ferocious as to whether Cernunnos was rooted in reality.
"My suggestion would be present both sides of the case." She spoke softly but confidently, her eyes bright with enthusiasm. "Show why the discovery of the torque has fired up so much excitement--but stop short of confirming any real-life links. Leave it as a mystery still to be solved."
Hunter nodded. "Good idea. People love a mystery." He looked at Gus. "I'm more than happy with Morgan's approach, Gus. The torque must have belonged to someone, presumably a high-ranking warrior. The Celts were famous for their warrior mentality, rushing fearlessly into battle. There could well have been a celebrated warrior who, over time, became worshipped as a god.
"It's a mystery that maybe future generations will solve. Every kid at the exhibition will dream that he or she might be the one to solve it."
Gus stood up, and shook Hunter's hand. "Well, as you're happy with Morgan's approach, I'll leave you in her capable hands. She can show you the plans for the exhibition and answer any questions you have."
Morgan closed the door to Gus's office behind them, and breathed a sigh of relief. She looked wryly up at Hunter. He smiled in sympathy, understanding her battle to make history passionate and exciting.
"I hope you'll be gentle with me, Morgan, now that Gus has placed me in your hands." He was standing so close she could smell the fresh, citrus scent of his cologne.
Morgan blushed again. She sure as hell wouldn't mind getting her mitts on the nice, sexy Hunter Riley, and if she did she wouldn't be at all gentle. But getting romantic with someone who was so closely connected with the museum was a recipe for conflict and wouldn't help her get her job done. She sighed. Life could be so cruel.
"I'm always gentle with our benefactors, especially one who goes out of his way to be so helpful." Morgan felt she had to get them back on a more professional footing. "Seriously, thank you for your support. I feel very strongly about this exhibition and particularly about the Celtic component, which is my particular area of interest, but I'm aware that I do sometimes get carried away so if you feel the need to disagree with me I'll try to keep an open mind." She indicated her office. "Would you like to see the plans?"
"Love to."
"Sorry about the mess." She shifted a pile of magazines from the visitor's chair and praised heaven that Andrea had gone out to lunch. Had her assistant been there, she would doubtless have flirted outrageously with the handsome archaeologist.
Morgan pulled out the diagrams showing where each of the key exhibits would be placed, and unrolled them on her desk. The exhibition was focused on Celtic legends and myths, but touched on links with other major cultures outside the key Celtic strongholds of Ireland, Scotland, Wales and France.
From time to time, Hunter nodded and asked questions as Morgan explained how each of the exhibits contributed to the program, and how they would be presented to the public.
Morgan raised her head from the plans to look at Hunter, a question forming on her lips. At the same time he lifted his amber eyes to look at her and her question was never uttered. Their gazes caught and held, their breathing paused and deepened, and Morgan felt as though she was falling into a void, the office spinning wildly around her.
For as much as a minute there was silence, except for their breathing and the hum of Morgan's computer. Finally Hunter moved. Lifting his hand, he smoothed a loose strand of silky black hair where it had come adrift from the knot at Morgan's nape.
"I feel I know you," he whispered.
"Yes." The word was no more than a breath on Morgan's lips.
"How?"
Morgan shook her head. "I don't know, but I feel --"
The office door rattled and Morgan instantly tore her gaze from Hunter's as Andrea breezed through the office to her workstation. She looked at them, her pink lipsticked mouth open in surprise, her highlighted blonde hair windswept.
"Oops, sorry. I didn't know … I can make myself scarce if you're in a meeting. Would you like a coffee?"
"Uh, no thanks," Hunter murmured, straightening. "I have to get going, need to … uh, Ms. McClellan, I will need to approve the final captions and credits for the display. Perhaps you would get in touch with my office to discuss the timing?" He put a card on Morgan's desk.
Morgan's mind felt foggy. She couldn't think of a thing to say and watched speechlessly as Hunter left the office.
Andrea looked at her and raised her eyebrows. "Well," she said. "I did interrupt something, didn't I?"
Morgan composed her face into an expressionless mask as she met her assistant's inquisitive gaze. "Not really. Just going over the plans for exhibiting the torque."
"Sure. Anything you say." Andrea smiled at her disbelievingly and Morgan sighed, not surprised.
Andrea had definitely interrupted something, but just what that something was, Morgan had absolutely no idea.



The Djinn
by
Marie Morin

© copyright by Marie Morin, November 2003
Cover Art by Jenny Dixon
ISBN 1-58608-377-5
New Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, GA 31636
www.newconceptspublshing.com

 


Chapter One



It had a strange, pungent odor. It wasn't unpleasant, just powerful, particularly considering the phial appeared to be empty. Elise Beauchamp wrinkled her nose, jerking away from the tiny bottle she'd just opened and waved beneath her nose.
"Some love potion," she muttered under her breath. Not that she'd believed any of that malarkey the vendor had spouted. It had sounded good, though, and it wasn't as if the old trinket had cost that much.
Still, she didn't know why she'd bought it. She didn't particularly care for jewelry. She'd only picked it up to study it because of the tiny, cunningly wrought, glass bottle secured to the chain like a charm. Noticing her interest, the vendor had immediately begun to weave tales about it's history, asserting finally that there was a love potion inside the bottle that would bring her true love to her.
That alone had almost been enough to make her put it right back, because she'd already found her true love--and lost him, but she supposed, maybe, in the recesses of her subconscious, hope still dwelt that she was not destined to live the remainder of her life alone, and she hadn't been able to leave the charm because she couldn't leave hope behind.
She'd brought very little money with her and had had to resort to counting the last of her change just to pay for it. She'd told herself that she would just wander around and check out the wares the flea market merchants were hawking, just so she didn't have to sit at home and think about the fact that today would've been her second anniversary ... if John had only stayed home that day, instead of rushing off to work ... or if they hadn't overslept ... or if they'd only slept just a few minutes later.
It tortured her almost as much to think life without John could be counted in minutes as it did having to learn to live without him. If he hadn't arrived at that particular intersection at that particular moment....
Sadness filled her, but the tears had all been cried long ago.
Slowly, the memories receded and she became aware of her surroundings once more, aware that a dark shadow had fallen over her. She looked up. Comprehension wasn't immediate. Sluggishly, her brain assimilated the fact that there was a person standing before her--a man.
Her first impression was 'naked'. He wasn't, of course. Just the next thing to it.
Must be some displaced Yankee, she decided. They might be in Florida, but natives still considered February winter and dressed accordingly. They certainly didn't go around in public places bare chested.
It was Gasparilla, though, not nearly as wild as Louisiana's Mardi Gras, but some people went a little overboard.
He wasn't even wearing pants! Not what she'd call pants, anyway. It looked more like those filmy things belly dancers wore, fitted at the waist and ankles, but baggy everywhere else. Since she was sitting on a bench and he was standing, his 'package' was practically nose level.
It was an impressive package.
It occurred to her that she'd been staring at 'it' transfixed for several moments. Even as her gaze jerked upward in the direction of his face she felt blood begin to pound in her cheeks.
She forgot all about being embarrassed, however, when her gaze reached his face.
He didn't look at all pleased. His lips were drawn into a tight, thin line, his dark brows arched but pulled into a sharp v above the bridge of a noble blade of a nose.
It wasn't the scowl on his face that stunned her, however. It wasn't the wicked looking, neatly trimmed 'Fu Manchu' that framed his hard mouth. It wasn't even the scalp lock of silkly black hair fluttering from the crown of his head, or his eyes, more gold than brown, glittering with intelligence, curiosity--animosity.
The moment she gazed up into his face, it was almost as if she'd been struck a physical blow. A shaft of pure animal lust shot through her, right down to her toes, something so alien to her that she wasn't even certain of what had happened at first. It was almost as if she'd been struck by a bolt of lightning.
She noticed his lips were moving. It took an effort to still the quivering in her belly in response to those lips. Frowning, she tried to hear past the clamoring din her heart was making in her ears and discovered she still couldn't understand a word he was saying. "What?"
"What is your wish?"
Elise stared at him uncomprehendingly. "Look. I'm sorry. I don't know what you're selling, but I'm not interested."
He looked surprised and then irritated. "You summoned me. I have offered to grant a wish."
Elise gaped at him. She had summoned him? Of all the nerve! She'd been sitting on the bench, minding her own business, completely oblivious to everyone around her. How could anyone, even the most obnoxiously conceited male, interpret that as a come on? "I did no such thing!" she said indignantly. "Now, go away, or I'll call the cops."
"This is your wish?" he demanded, sounding as indignant as she felt. "That I go?"
"Didn't I just say so?"
He frowned. "You must be more precise. Where am I to go?"
Elise gave him a look, tempted to tell him to go to hell, and then cast a glance around to see if there were any cops nearby. Not a glimmer of a uniform, and wasn't that always the case? Fail to come to a complete stop at a stop sign and there was a damned cop right on your tail. Need assistance, and there wasn't one of them in sight. "What do you want?"
He crossed his arms, studying her thoughtfully for several moments. "To give you what your heart desires."
Pain, unexpectedly sharp, lanced through her. What her heart desired? John ... but no one could bring him back to her. The pain cost her her patience. "Who do you think you are, anyway, Santa Claus?"
He frowned. "I am the djinn, Raheem. My patience grows thin, Mistress. Tell me your wish and I will grant it most gladly so that I may return to my own concerns."
Elise glared at him. "Your patience?" she echoed. "Look, mister. I don't give a damn who you are, if you're expecting to get something from me, just don't hold your breath."
He frowned. "Why would I do that?"
"What?"
"Hold my breath?"
Elise rolled her eyes. She would've gotten to her feet and stalked away, except that he was standing so close it unnerved her. He'd said, though, that he was anxious to go about his own concerns, he just had to hear her wish before he could go.
He was a lunatic, of course. But if it was the only way to get rid of him, why not? "If I wish for something, you'll go away?"
Something gleamed in his eyes, something wicked. "Yes, mistress," he said, a slow, tantalizing smile curling those lips in a way that made her heart trip over itself.
Elise wished she could ignore the effect he had on her, or at least convince herself it was fear that made her heart hammer with excitement at the sound of his voice, the curl of his lips, the gleam in his eyes. She'd never been terribly good at self-deception, however.
She pasted on a smile, though she was neither amused, nor tempted to flirt with the man. "Fine. Good! I wish you'd go away!"
His lips tightened with annoyance. "I must have a destination."
Elise pursed her lips. "Fine! Go find Santa Claus and tell him I want him to bring me back what I lost Christmas before last," she said tightly, wishing he could bring John back.
The Djinn frowned, but, to her relief, he straightened, as if prepared to leave. "Where would I find this Santa Claus?"
"North pole," Elise said with a cold smile, then turned away, reaching for her purse. If he wasn't going to go away and leave her alone, she decided, she would leave, and if he tried to follow her.... To her surprise, when she looked up again, the strange man had vanished. She glanced around, expecting to see him striding away. She didn't, which was really odd considering the bench was set in a very open area.
Frowning, she got to her feet, looked around again and finally shrugged. Who'd have thought a man that big could move so fast?
Shaking off the strange encounter, she tucked her 'love potion' into her purse and headed for home. There were just too many weirdos out for her peace of mind.


* * * *


Wind driven sleet pelted Raheem from head to toe the moment he materialized. Shuddering, he looked around, narrowing his eyes against the blowing ice crystals. He had never cared for this world, but, as bad as much of it was, within sixty seconds he was convinced that he had discovered the worst it had to offer. There was no dwelling within sight. He would have been surprised if he had seen one. As simple as humans tended to be, they didn't seem so witless as to choose to live in such a place as this.
The female had said he would find Santa Claus here, however.
Summoning a cloak of heavy animal hide, he wrapped it tightly around him and began his search. After two days he was forced to conclude that the female was either wrong--which would not surprise him in the least--or she had sent him upon a fool's errand.
He laughed aloud at that thought, though there was no humor in it. No puny man of the species had ever outwitted a djinn, and certainly no weak minded female could do so.
Finally, deciding she was probably just too ignorant to know where the person lived, he summoned the winds and moved through the skies, searching for signs of human habitation. He was many miles from the north pole when he at last spotted a tiny community.
Materializing on the ground once more, he looked around and finally strode towards the building from which music emanated. It appeared to be a tavern. Thrusting the door open, he strode inside and looked around as he shook the snow from his cloak. All conversation had ceased at his entrance. He ignored the curious stares of the humans. He was accustomed to such.
The man behind the bar was the only person present who's mind seemed unlikely to be fogged by spirits. Raheem strode to the bar.
"Can I help you?"
Raheem nodded. "I have been sent to seek out Santa Claus. Tell me where to find him."
The man sitting on the stool beside him snorted in his beer, then commenced to coughing. Raheem glared at the oaf. The men grinning beside him lost their smiles and returned their attention to the beverage in their mugs.
"You missed him by a couple of months, buddy. He won't be back until next year," the bartender offered, struggling against a grin.
Raheem's eyes narrowed. "How many days until this man returns?"
The bartender scratched the whiskers on his chin. "I never was too good at math. He comes around every December, though, regular as clock work ... you're a foreigner, aren't you?"
Raheem frowned. Time meant little to him--in the way of things--but he had no desire to cool his heels in this place for months. "I can not wait that long. I must know where to find him."
"Try the north pole," someone called from across the room and then snickered.
Raheem turned, his gaze zeroing in upon the man. "I have been there. No humans dwell there."
"Well, he ain't exactly human," someone else volunteered. "I think he's an elf."
Raheem looked at the man. "Elves are woodland creatures. No elf would dwell in such a wasteland as this."
The bartender cleared his throat. "Don't pay him any mind. He's just teasing. He ain't real, you know."
Raheem turned to look at the man again. "Who is not real?"
"Santa Claus. I don't know who sent you to find him, but there ain't no such thing. He's just a holiday myth ... for fun, you know."
Rage filled Raheem. "This is the truth? The man does not exist?"
The bartender shook his head. In the next moment, however, the doors to the tavern burst open in a swirl of mist and ice. By the time the patrons had managed to close the doors again, the mysterious stranger had vanished.


* * * *


Mondays were always the worst, Elise reflected as she sank into the hot, pounding water of her whirlpool. It felt heavenly. Singing under her breath along with the song playing on her headset, she settled back to enjoy her soaking massage. She had just begun to drowse when an icy cold wind brushed her bare shoulders. Her eyes popped open.
She would've screamed, but she couldn't seem to find her voice.

 

 


GYPSY NIGHTS

by

Mandy M. Roth

 


© copyright November 2004, Mandy M. Roth
Cover art by Eliza Black, © copyright November 2004
ISBN 1-58608-360-0
New Concepts Publishing
Lake Park, GA 31636
www.newconceptspublishing.com

 

This is a work of fiction. All characters, events, and places are of the author's imagination and not to be confused with fact. Any resemblance to living persons or events is merely coincidence.

 


Dedication:
To Shane, for all that you do to help me do what I love. Thank you.

 

 


Chapter 1

Gitana divided the mint rhizomes out carefully on the countertop. She glanced at the parent plant and bent down to take in a deep breath. The scent of peppermint never got old. She concentrated on cutting the runners into the sizes needed to replant them. She was just about to make another snip when the bell, which signaled that a customer was in the shop, dinged. Dusting her hands off, she gave them a quick swipe across her smock before reaching up to adjust her falling hair.
Hours had been dedicated to trying to unlock the secrets of keeping her unruly hair up, but after twenty-nine years, it was still a mystery. It was hard to fight the gift that Mother Nature had given her, wavy dark brown locks that seemed to grow faster than a weed. She shrugged and gave up.
Oh, well, you can't flaunt what you don't have.
Leaving the greenhouse, she headed into her tiny herb shop. It provided her with enough income to pay her bills and she enjoyed it. "Be right with you," she called out, hurrying to hang her smock on a hook and adjust her hair--again.
"Take your time," a deep male voice said, rolling over her, through her, before finally settling in the apex of her thighs.
Gitana glanced up, and drew a deep breath in, ceasing to fidget with her smock. Every now and then she'd get a health conscious hot guy who wanted to jump on the homeopathic bandwagon, but never had she had a man as stunning as this one walk in before. The tall stranger stood smiling at her just inside the doorway. His onyx hair hung in loose curls over his shoulders and blended in with his black leather jacket.
He slid a pair of leather gloves off his pale hands. His long fingers seemed to caress the shell they'd been enclosed in. Whoever he was, he'd managed to turn the simple task of removing a glove into an erotic moment. She'd never wished to be a pair of Italian gloves before in her life, but now she did. The thought of having his long fingers sheathed inside of her was almost too much.
"Umm, hello…is there anything I can do to you…I mean for you? Can I help you?" Gitana rolled her eyes slightly, embarrassed by her slip of the tongue. A slow devilish smile crept onto his handsome face and she reddened.
Great, blush a little more, why don't you.
He took a step toward her. "Oui, I was told that you were the woman to see if I wanted to start my own herb garden." His voice was laced with a heavy French accent.
She gave him a sideways glance. He didn't look like the gardening type. No, he looked more like the millionaire international playboy type. Jet setting and yachts came to mind when looking at him--not herb gardens. But, if he really wanted one, she'd help. "Sure, what size garden do you have in mind...?" She didn't have a name to address him by, so she let her question just fade away.
"Je m'appelle," he said, stopping quick and shaking his head slightly. "Pardon, I did not mean to be rude. My name is Sebastian Rolle. I purchased the house across the way." He pointed out toward the woods. "I am thinking of having several gardens put in."
Yep, just as she thought, he wasn't the gardening type. He probably already had a crew of twenty men waiting for him to tell them where to dig. "You can have your landscaper call me. I'd be happy to help him out with what he needs."
His brow furrowed. "Je ne comprends pas--I do not understand. I have no landscaper. I will be handling all of this on my own."
She let out a tiny laugh and covered her mouth, hoping that he wouldn't notice. Much to her dismay, he did. "Do you find that amusing, Madame…?"
"Gitana," she said, walking out from behind her counter and extending her hand to him. "Sorry, no…I don't find it funny. It's just that you don't strike me as the type who'd want to get dirty."
"Getting dirty is one of my many specialties." He slid his cool hand over hers and cupped it gently. For having had gloves on, Sebastian's hands were like ice. She knew just the place to warm them, but refrained from commenting on it. Pulling away slowly, she noticed that she'd left dirt on his hand. She waited for him to try to find a place on his designer shirt to wipe it, but he just glanced down and smiled.
"Looks like I am well on my way to being an avid gardener."
Impressive, indeed, perhaps she'd underestimated him. Sebastian's shoes alone were worth more than her entire wardrobe and yet here he was in her tiny shop, wanting her assistance. The best part of it all was that he was her new neighbor. "You bought the old McGregor estate?"
Sebastian nodded. "Oui, it needs quite a bit of work, but what can I say? I fell in love with it." He brushed his hair back and exposed the most beautiful pair of navy blue eyes she'd ever seen. He winked at her and made her jump. A nervous laugh escaped her. "Would you mind if I use your restroom? They will not have my water on for some time yet. I attempted to find other accommodations for the night, but it seems that this quaint little town has none."
"Sure, umm, you'll have to use the one in my house. The one here in the shop has been acting up for weeks now. I've been meaning to call someone, but with spring just around the corner I've been too busy."

 

 

 

BOOK LENGTH:

Epic Novel = 100,000 words and up; 400 pages and up (double-spaced)
Full Novel = 80,000-100,000 words; 320-400 pages (double-spaced)
Mid Novel = 61,000-79,000 words; 244-316 pages (double-spaced)
Category = 40,000-60,000 words; 160-240 pages (double-spaced)
Novella = 20,000-39,000 words; 80-156 pages (double-spaced)

SENSUALITY RATING:

SWEET: behind-closed-doors sex and/or very mild love scenes and sexual encounters
SENSUAL: love scenes comparative to most romance novels published today
SPICY: heavy sexual tension; graphic details and more sexual encounters
CARNAL: graphic sex and language; may be offensive to delicate readers; contains many sexual encounters and can include unconventional sex not normally found in romance; may or may not be romance; typically known as erotica

 

 

 

 

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