Brides of the Kindred 9 - Chained,

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//-->Brides of the KindredBook 9: ChainedEvangeline AndersonKINDLE EDITION*****PUBLISHED BY:Evangeline Anderson on KindleBrides of the KindredBook 9: ChainedCopyright © 2013 by Evangeline AndersonKindle Edition License NotesThis ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or givenaway to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase anadditional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it,or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Amazon.com and purchase yourown copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.Author’s Note #1—First of all, please no piracy. It's not a victimless crime—I have a family tosupport so please, buy your own copy and encourage friends to do the same so I can keep writingthese books for everyone's pleasure.Author's note #2—Mostof you know I'm writing another series as well as the Kindred now—a setof paranormal books called Born to Darkness. If you haven't checked them out yet, they are onAmazon, Smashwords, and All Romance. The first book isCrimson Debtand the second one isScarlet Heat.I'm still working onRuby Shadows.I got about 30,000 words in and my muse abruptlydemanded to writeChainedinstead. So here it is and I hope to getRuby Shadowsout to you at a laterdate. Sorry!Author’s Note #3—Thisis the ninth book in the Brides of the Kindred series and there are at leastthree more to come—well, I have ideas for three more, anyway. Anyway, I recommend that you readClaimed, Hunted, Sought, Found, Revealed, Pursued, Exiled, and Shadowed before beginningChained or you are going to be completely lost.Hugs and Happy Reading to you all!Evangeline AndersonPrologueIn the Dungeons of Yonnie SixHell. I’m in Hell—one of the Seven Hells, but which one?He tried to think, concentrating on holding the thought in his head. But the thirst was too great—itdrove out everything else. His throat was parched, his mouth dry as a desert and his tongue wasswollen in his mouth, desperate for even a drop of the life-giving water which was so tantalizinglyclose.The soft rippling sound filled his ears, filled his entire consciousness. The little brook that ranright in front of him was both a torment and a desire so strong he could barely stand it. Sometimes hethought the mocking chatter of the crystal clear water as it ran over the stones at his feet would drivehim mad. Sometimes he was sure he alreadywasmad.Which Hell? Which of the Seven Hells?He tried to push his mind away from the thirst and thewater at his feet again.The Hell reserved for murderers, maybe?For hewasa murderer—manytimes over. And just because most of his kills had happened within the arenas of the Blood Circuitdidn’t absolve him of his crimes. He had been known simply as Korexiroth—The Demon—there andhe hadenjoyedsome of those deaths—especially the last one. The death of his old master, Phenras. Ithad been a pleasure to wrap his fingers around that fat neck and squeeze and squeeze until he saw thelife fading from his master’s dull brown eyes.A pleasure that had landed him in Hell.The Hell of Thirst. Is there such a place?There had to be because he was in it. How many kills did he have? How many years would he bedamned for them? Aside from the ones in the arena and the murder of his master, he’d been told thathe had killed two guards assigned to escort him to Yonnie Six. But those kills he barely remembered—they had given him some kind of drug that maddened him. Still, he supposed it made no difference.The guards were still dead and their blood was on his hands.He changed his position and the chains binding his arms behind his back clinked. The pain collararound his neck shifted with the movement, sending an agonizing jolt of electric current through hisentire body.The prisoner gave a stifled groan. That bitch, Pope’nose, had set the damn thing on the mostsensitive setting so that the slightest motion on his part resulted in a horrific burst of pain. It wasexcruciating—unbearable.Rather than subduing him, however, the painful shock seemed to galvanize him into action. Hegrowled low in his throat—a deep, animalistic sound—and thrashed recklessly against the chains thatbound him.Jolt after jolt of agony struck him but still he thrashed, fighting the thing around his neck. He sworeto himself if he ever got it off he would make his new mistress pay. He would give her pain for painuntil she regretted her foolish decision to buy him in the first place.But even a male as big and strong as he was couldn’t keep this up forever. At last the prisoner fellto his knees, panting. He would have hung his head if the damn collar would have allowed it. As itwas, the best he could do was to close his eyes and let his shoulders sag. Around his neck he felt thepain collar readying itself for the next jolt. Under it, as always, was the dull burn of another collar—the inhibitor band he had worn since the age of six cycles. But that was an old pain—one he barelyeven noticed anymore.Now that he was down on his knees, the sound of the brook was maddeningly close. How hewished he could have just one mouthful of that cool, clear water! His entire body cried out formoisture and it was so close…soclose.Slowly, ignoring the stabbing shocks delivered by the collar, the prisoner bent down. His handswere chained behind his back but he had some slack, enough to lower his face to the surface of thebrook. He knew it was no use but he couldn’t help himself—he had to try again.Taking a deep breath, he pushed his face into the clear, cold surface of the water. And he felt it—felt the chilly wetness caress his cheeks and eyelids, felt the blessed moisture at his parched lips.But while the water caressed his mouth, it could not pass his lips. He stuck out his tongue,attempting to lap at the water like an animal dying of thirst, but not a single molecule of the life savingliquid touched his flesh.The prisoner gave a low, hoarse moan. He pressed his face deeper into the bubbling, chatteringbrook but though he felt the cool chill of the water caressing his skin, not a drop of it actually touchedhim. It was as if there was a barrier—a thin but impenetrable membrane between himself and themoisture he so desperately needed.The dust. It’s the dust.He knew it was true. The fine, silvery gray dust that coated his entire body, even his hair andeyelids, was the culprit. It formed a barrier between him and the water and until that barrier was [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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