The Fiend of White Buck Hall 

 The Beast of Blackbird Manor

 

 


 

 

LENGTH: Almost Full Length

SENSUALITY: Sensual/Spicy

Cover art (c) Melody Lane 2010
Download $5.50
(s&h not included in price)

They say Thomas Hillyer, a wizard, is in league with the Devil and that the white buck roaming his estate hypnotizes people and steals their souls. Molly is a fugitive, wanted for a crime she did not commit. Seeing a want ad for a secretary in a sleepy town, she sets off for White Buck Hall but ignores the warning about the albino stag who lurks in the woods. When she meets him on the forest path, her life is forever changed.

Rating: Sensual/spicy.

Rating: Contains sexual content, adult language.

Genre: Paranormal/Fantasy/Historical Romance

THE FIEND OF WHITE BUCK HALL

By

Penelope Marzec

 

 

© copyright February 2010, Penelope Marzec

Cover art by Alex DeShanks, © copyright February 2010

ISBN 978-1-60394-411-3

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.

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

March 1897, Stony Mill, New Jersey

 

Molly Coan turned away from the window. One other table was occupied in the dining room of the Stony Mill Inn, but the man had his back to her and that was fine. She could not take any chances. What if the man had seen a drawing of her on a poster? Twisting a handkerchief in her hands, she wiped away the dampness on her palms.

The innkeeper, a wiry man with several missing teeth, brought her the tea she had ordered. She had been starving herself for more than three weeks, but once she reached her destination, there should be something more substantial for her to eat.

"Can you point out the way to White Buck Hall?" she asked the innkeeper.

The man stared at her with shock on his face. "Nobody goes there."

"But … I'm to be Mr. Hillyer's secretary."

His eyes narrowed as he stared at her. "If I were you, I'd go back where you came from." Drawing closer, he whispered. "Thomas Hillyer is an albino-and you know what they say about them. They're witches and mind readers."

She felt the blood drain from her face, but she stiffened her spine and retorted. "Mr. Hillyer is a scientist."

The innkeeper gave a dry laugh. "Ha! He is a madman or worse. He calls himself a wizard and them that works for him-why they're all peculiar. There's a dwarf, a deaf mute, and a bearded lady. Freaks, the lot of them."

Apprehension slid along her shoulders, but she primly informed the innkeeper he was merely spouting off gossip. "You should have more compassion toward those afflicted with unfortunate physical defects."

The innkeeper shrugged. "Be that as it may, mark my words about the man. There are strange happenings at White Buck Hall. There are them that say Thomas Hillyer bargains with the Devil."

She chilled at his words. A cold knot formed in her stomach and her hunger vanished as fearful images swirled through her mind, but she forced away her doubts.

"That is preposterous."

"You won't be able to reach White Buck Hall before nightfall, even if you take the shortcut through the woods," the innkeeper explained. "And it is madness to go into the woods at night for the white buck is sure to come upon you. He can hypnotize them what stares into his eyes-and then he steals their soul."

She pressed her lips together as her temper rose. "That sounds like nothing more than a horrid fairy tale."

He reassured her he had a vacancy for the night. "I've seen the creature myself. It is a fearsome beast-the very spawn of Satan."

She clutched her bag tightly so he would not see her hands shake. "You are trying to frighten me."

"There'll be no help for you once you cross into the white buck's territory."

Molly's stomach growled. She refused to listen to his warning. After wrangling directions from him, she set off for the dense woods at the edge of town.

She found the path. Quite worn and easy to follow, it paralleled a wide river. The chill of late March seeped through her thin jacket and her teeth chattered. Spring remained thoroughly hidden in the woods. The only green she saw was the thick, velvet moss carpeting the gnarled tree roots.

When the sun sank below the hill, her heart quailed within her. Though a rosy tint touched the distant horizon, above her the sky clouded to a somber violet. She pushed herself to hurry along but with starvation clawing at her stomach her limbs felt like leaden weights.

The toe of her scruffy Oxford hit a root hidden by the lengthening gloom and she stumbled onto a log beside the path. Fortunately, her eyeglasses did not fall off. She pushed herself up and sat on the log. After dusting the dirt from her wool skirt, she lifted it to examine her knee. Swelling rapidly, the joint hurt if she bent it the slightest bit.

"I should have stolen a lantern from the inn," she grumbled to herself. After all, she was already considered a criminal. The familiar ache rose in her throat at the injustice she had suffered, but she swallowed past the pain.

When she heard a rustling in the leaves, her heart beat furiously in her chest.

"Whoo who who?"

The question echoed through the woods and she realized it came from above her. Glancing upward, she saw a silhouette in a tree. It must be an owl. At least, she hoped that's what it was and not some awful demon. If the innkeeper had been trying to terrify her, he had done a very good job of it!

She got up and gingerly put her knee to the test. She could still walk, though with a slight limp. It would take her even longer now to reach her destination. But while the sky grew darker, a half moon's light filtered down through the branches and provided enough illumination for her to see the path.

Hobbling along, she soon came upon a small bridge and stopped to lean on the railing in order to rest her injured knee. The bridge crossed a stream that tumbled down the hill into the larger river. The water gurgled as it rushed over stones and fallen limbs. It might be a pretty sight in the daytime, but in the pale moonlight everything about the shadowed woods became sinister and evil.

She did not doubt that the cold shivers causing her to tremble came more from the disturbing ideas the old innkeeper had planted in her mind than from the temperature. Surely, without the innkeeper's alarming stories, she would not be so tense. She was ready to jump at her own shadow.

She barely finished that thought when she heard something crashing through the underbrush behind her. In a panic, she sought to run but she stumbled and caught herself on the railing. With her twisted knee preventing a quick escape, she fought to calm herself. She was overreacting. Surely only a large squirrel was bounding through the woods.

Slowly, she forced herself to turn toward the sound. She turned numb with terror as she stared at the creature standing on the path behind her. The snow-white buck's sleek coat seemed to shimmer in the moonlight and the red of his eyes shone like perfect rubies. The buck's height and weight far surpassed her own-in fact, she had never imagined a deer would be so huge. Each tip of his antlers looked lethal. She barely breathed as she gripped the narrow railing with hands that felt like ice inside her kid gloves.

The buck stood proud and haughty, glaring at her as if she was the unwanted interloper. He snorted and a stream of vapor flowed from his rosy nostrils like a dragon in a hideous fairytale.

The buck can hypnotize them what stares into his eyes-and then he steals their soul. In the daylight, the innkeeper's warning seemed ludicrous, but in the woods, in the dark, and alone with the beast it became entirely possible.

His gaze swept up from her Oxfords to her worn hat. His head tilted as he made his assessment, eyeing her as if she might be his next meal.

His muscles rippled in the moonlight while the breeze stirred. The primitive and musky odor of the animal wafted into her nostrils. She did not find it offensive; unaccountably it stirred her senses. An odd quiver surged through her veins.

The stamp of his hooves on the hard-packed earth of the path broke the spell. Her mind raced with alarm as he moved toward her. Would he leave her alone if she stepped aside?

"I … I'll get out of your way …." With her heart hammering, she inched backward but her awkward limp hampered her progress. The buck stepped forward, shaking his proud head. Then he lowered it so that his antlers pointed toward her.

"Please … there's no reason to attack me." She let go of the railing and turned, fully aware that she could never run faster than the buck. Perhaps I can climb a tree! However, in the pallid moonlight she saw nothing but enormously tall, straight trees with branches too far from the ground for her to reach.

As she stepped off the bridge, the heavy hooves of the buck tramped across it. Then his footsteps stopped-right in the middle of the span. Cautiously, she looked back while she leaned against a tree trunk to give her knee a rest.

Rigid and still like a statue, the buck stared off toward the river. The entire woods went silent, not even a dry leaf rustled.

The crack of a rifle shattered the hush and Molly screamed when the buck staggered backwards. A dark stain grew on his flank. If she went to help him, would he hurt her? He was a wild animal and as such should not be trusted.

But he was in pain and in need of help.

She rummaged through her bag and pulled out her mangled handkerchief thinking to staunch the bleeding with it. With care, she moved toward the buck. He did not appear to notice her as he licked his wound.

Another shot exploded in the woods directly above her head and pieces of bark flew away from a tree trunk.

"Stop shooting!" She dove behind the tree and cowered on the ground. Closing her eyes and covering her ears, she shook as she lay at the foot of the tree with ice in her veins. What madman prowled these woods?

With her pounding heart echoing in her ears, she could not hear other noises. Then something gently nudged her shoulder and she nearly fainted with fright. She dared to open her eyes, hoping the hunter had come to check on her and apologize for his poor aim.

However, she found herself staring into the unholy crimson glare of the great white buck. He gave a soft snort and the warmth of his breath fanned her face. Dark drips of blood splattered from his wound onto the dried brown leaves of the forest floor.

"I ... I have a handkerchief ... maybe I can ...."

He shook his head and nudged her again. Confused and still trembling, she reached out to touch his soft pink nose. He breathed into her hand and her gaze clouded in sympathy with tears.

"Does it hurt badly?" She had taken care of her father in his last days, but she had no idea how she could ease the pain of such a large creature.

With clumsy movements, she got off the ground. The buck sniffed at her hair and her neck before nestling his nose at her bosom.

She saw a large, clear crystal on a knotted leather string dangling from his neck.

Tentatively, she reached out to finger the crystal. Warmth pulsed up her arm at the contact. The buck lifted his head slightly to slide the heat of his tongue along her neck, gently kissing her. She did not pull away. A strange longing vibrated inside her.

"I can try to help you," she murmured. She moved to his side and pressed her handkerchief against the wound. The blood from the deep gash soaked rapidly through the cloth. Her fingers shook. What should she do next? She could pull a ruffle from her petticoat, but before she could do so, another rifle round splintered a fallen log not a yard from the buck's back feet.

She screamed again and dropped to the ground. At once, the buck bolted away. She watched as his white tail flew behind him like a flag while he bounded up the hillside. The grace and strength of the fine creature took her breath away.

But what was to become of her? Could she escape the hunter in the night that seemed to be preying on anything that moved? Drawing her arms about her, she listened. The woods lay silent again; the hush sent a shiver through her for it seemed as if every creature held their breath. Waiting ….

In the eerie quiet, she sat mulling over her choices. She had two. Stay hidden all night in the woods or get back on the path and continue to White Buck Hall. Hunger influenced her decision.

Groping about, she found a sturdy fallen branch to help take the weight off her aching knee. With it, she limped along the path in the moonlight.

Another owl hooted high up in a tree and a small creature scurried across her path, but she did not fear the animals. The danger came from a man. The bitter taste of truth soured in her throat. The deep woods were no different than the bustling city.

She struggled along until she reached the top of a crest where the woods ended abruptly. Below her, a broad lawn swept down to a large mansion sheltered on all sides by towering evergreens. The chimneys belched smoke into the somber night. She had never seen such a grand home.

From the corner of her eye, she caught sight of a dark figure walking toward her along the tree line. The rifle in his hands glinted in the moonlight. Her breath caught in her throat. As she turned to flee, she saw a flash of white on her right. The buck jumped out of the woods and tore off across the lawn headed toward the house with his bright coat an easy mark. The rifleman raised the gun to his shoulder.

"No!" She shouted in fury. The wicked man had already injured the noble beast.

In horror, she watched him swing around to lock his sight on her. She lunged for safety. The man fired and the whistle of the bullet whizzed past her ear. Ducking behind a wide tree, she tried to catch her breath. How long did it take to reload a gun? Should she try running now?

Cautiously, she peered out from behind the tree. As she suspected, the gunman's head was bent over the task of putting another bullet in his rifle. She could never make it to White Buck Hall before he finished.

Her short, hard scrabble life had come to a certain end. She closed her eyes and prayed as she heard a metallic click, but that sound was quickly followed by a hideous scream. Startled, she opened her eyes to see that the white buck had used his antlers to spear the man. After lifting him into the air, he tossed him to the ground and then with vicious intent, he trampled upon the hunter with his hooves.

She held back a scream. He remained silent on the ground. Was he dead? She did not want to get close enough to find out. The buck stood over him.

She could not blame the buck for his action-it was self-defense, and he had undoubtedly saved her life as well.

She poked around until she found the branch she needed to help her walk. Trembling badly and feeling lightheaded, she got to her feet once more. She would hurry and tell Mr. Hillyer about the incident. He could arrange to have someone take care of the hunter.

However, as she limped toward the great house, the buck turned and ran toward her. Sudden fear iced up her spine. She stood rigid and held her breath. Could she still trust the animal after the way he had brutally attacked that man?

The creature slowed as he came closer. When he was but a foot away, he lowered his head so that his eyes were level with hers. Terror wound through her. His gaze locked with hers and she could not glance away. His eyes were hard, cold, commanding, and evil.

Panic rose in her chest and the breath went out of her. He drained away the very essence of her-her soul. She wanted to scream but she could not open her mouth. Strange images whirled through her mind. It was as if she was no longer standing on the ground but running through the woods, leaping like a deer over fallen logs-free and wild.

Her heart fluttered as her pulse faded. The last of her strength failed her and she fell to the ground as all went black.

 








 

LENGTH: Mid-Category
SENSUALITY: Sensual/Spicy

Cover art (c) Jenny Dixon 2007
Download $4.99
Trade Paperback ISBN 1-58608-
Retail price $10.99
Our Price $8.79
(s&h not included in price)

Cursed by a witch as a boy, Tadeusz suffers the torment of being a 'beast' man. Unless he finds a woman who will love him, he will become a wolf on his thirty-third birthday. When he meets the woman he has married by proxy, he knows he is doomed. Victoria is beautiful--and horrified to discover she has married a monster.

Rating: Contains sexual content, adult language.

Genre: Paranormal Romance

THE BEAST OF BLACKBIRCH MANOR

By

Penelope Marzec

 

 

© copyright May 2007, Penelope Marzec

Cover art by Jenny Dixon, © copyright May 2007

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.


For Billy

 

Chapter One


Southwestern Pennsylvania,

September 1895


Victoria’s steps faltered as she rounded the bend in the road that would bring her to Blackbirch Manor. Shoving away the remnants of the old horror from her mind, she knew she must not delay any longer. Married to Tadeusz Hermanowski by proxy six weeks ago, she had insisted she needed time to settle her affairs in New York before she could journey to Taylor’s Grove, Pennsylvania. However, Tadeusz had grown impatient and her cousin, Paul’s, desperate letters convinced her to put aside her misgivings and make haste.

Despite the stifling heat of the day, an icy shiver wound its way around Victoria’s heart as she trudged onward up the hill to what had been her childhood home. Nine years ago, she had left under a cloud of suspicion, intending never to return. Now the manor no longer belonged to her family. Tadeusz Hermanowski owned the estate.

Paul had insisted upon the marriage. Officially in mourning for the death of her first husband, Giles Billingsford III, Victoria objected to her cousin’s plan. However, Giles had departed this world leaving behind a mountain of debt and Hermanowski had offered to settle all the outstanding accounts--an amazingly munificent offer.

She felt as if she had been purchased.

Still, Paul had given the man glowing praise, informing her that Tadeusz was a wealthy brewer with genteel manners who loved music and horses.

The horrible black crepe stuck to her skin while perspiration trickled down between her breasts as she toiled up the incline. With the long mourning veil, she felt nearly suffocated. The day had started off with a September chill in the air, but the afternoon had grown warmer despite the lack of sunshine. She should have waited in town for the carriage which would have been sent to fetch her, but she had longed for exercise and fresh air after sitting so long in the train.

She came over the rise and saw the lake on her right while above her the sight of the very tops of the great, gray turrets, sent her emotions into a dark tumult. Even now--after all the intervening years--her courage nearly failed her. It took all her willpower not to turn around and run back down the hill.

She stiffened her spine, threw her shoulders back, and stared out at the lake, which the close-set birches left in perpetual gloom. Her mouth grew dry and her heart thundered, but she reasoned with herself. She had to be sensible. She had no money and nowhere else to go.

The rumble of thunder in the distance shook her from her dismal musing. Glancing upward, she noticed the billowing thunderheads blackening the sky in the west. If she did not hurry, she would be at the mercy of the approaching storm. But the oppressive heat could very well have her falling into a swoon. Stopping to remove the veil, she found she could barely breathe in the saturated, humid air. Drawing out the Marcelaine silk fan from her reticule, she tried to cool the flush on her cheeks but her efforts proved fruitless.

She clenched her teeth. She certainly would not melt and she had dawdled long enough. She buoyed herself onward with the knowledge that she would soon see her cousin again after all these long years away--and she would see Ipsy, as well, the dear cook who had been closer to her than her own tortured mother.

Finally reaching the gate of the manor with its massive columns and intricate ironwork arch, she was appalled by the condition of the once imposing structure. Much of the lacy ironwork had been swallowed up by vines and the gate was unlatched. It swung slowly on rusty hinges, emitting a high squeal that set her nerves on end.

A violent clap of thunder startled her as huge drops of rain splattered around her. Within seconds, she could see nothing but gray water falling all around her. Pelted by the heavy downpour, she hiked up her skirts and ran, blinded by the deluge. Then, above the sound of the storm, she heard the hoof beats of a horse coming up quickly behind her.

“Stop!” The voice of the rider boomed out above the sound of the storm. “Who are you?”

Whirling around, she held her hand above her eyes and saw the horse--a huge, fearsome black creature nearly upon her, but worse was the beast she saw atop the saddle! Though wearing a proper riding outfit, the monster’s head was covered with the thick fur of an animal. Terrified by the sight, she screamed and the horse reared up. Trying to escape the deadly flying hooves, she stumbled backward--not realizing that she had reached the front entrance of the mansion. Losing her balance, she fell. Her head hit the granite steps.

She tried to rise but dizziness overtook her. Turning her head ever so slightly so that the world would not spin, she glanced up from her lowly position. She could see the huge belly of the horse and a pair of shiny boots but the pain in her head intensified until the entire world faded away as she collapsed into black oblivion.

* * * *

Tadeusz Hermanowski stared down at the motionless body of his new wife as she lay unconscious on the settee in the library, her face as pale as fresh cream save for the blood oozing from the wound on her head. At first, he had seen only a black blur against the gray wall of water pouring down from the sky and thought he was about to catch one of the trespassers who had been vandalizing the manor.

He should have known fate was against him--again. He should have known he could not escape his wretched doom--no matter how hard he tried.

He turned away and glared at the flames in the fireplace. Clenching his hand into a fist, he pounded the mantle. How could he have known she would walk up the hill from Taylor’s Grove? She should have waited for a carriage to be sent for her use!

He spun around again to study her face. He felt his pulse race as he noticed the delicately arched brows, the wide forehead, and the small, pert nose. Even in repose, she looked like an angel. He put his hands to his temples, closed his eyes, and tried to rub away the ache in his head.

Paul had tricked him! The wretched man had insisted there were no pictures of her. Paul’s father and Victoria’s father were brothers, so he claimed Victoria bore a strong resemblance to him--and Paul had been an ungainly man with a large bulbous nose and sizeable ears that stuck out like wings from his balding head.

Tadeusz’s gut churned. He knew he was damned. When he had been cursed, the witch had pronounced that if he had found no woman to love him by his thirty-third birthday, he would be transformed into a wolf--forever.

In only four days, he would turn thirty-three. He knew without a doubt that this beautiful woman could never love him! He felt the chill of bitter ice encasing his heart.

Opening his eyes, he gazed down at Victoria once more. Her nearly translucent skin lent her an ethereal quality while her flaxen hair reminded him of the purest gold. Her tresses had come undone and trailed across her bosom. His heart gave an ominous thud.

Guilt weighed heavily on his shoulders as he watched the cook press clean cloths to his new wife’s wound to staunch the bleeding.

What if she did not come around? Tortured by the thought, he turned, crossed the room, and stood by the window to stare out at the land he had won in a poker game with Paul. He had thought his luck had changed that day. He had truly believed then that he had a chance.

Now he knew he did not.

Exactly one month after he and Victoria were married by proxy, Paul had been found dead--and it seemed the citizens of Taylor’s Grove believed Tadeusz to be responsible. Because he was half beast already. A freak. Someone they did not trust.

A chill went through him as he remembered seeing what remained of Paul, but his temper quickly flared again as he thought of the foolish chance Victoria had taken by walking to Blackbirch Manor alone. Unable to suppress his wrath, he let out a vigorous string of curses in Polish. Slamming his fist on the windowsill caused a resounding thud that rattled the glass panes, but it made him feel no better than when he pounded the mantle.

His exquisite wife was lying unconscious on the sofa with a gash on her head--because she had seen a monster.

The smell of the ammonia wafting through the air stung his nostrils as Mrs. Difford, the old cook, continued her efforts to revive Victoria by diligently waving smelling salts beneath her nose. He had already sent William to fetch the doctor. Would the doctor be able to get to the house in this wretched weather? The main road to town undoubtedly looked like a swamp after the cloudburst.

He clenched his jaw tightly and stalked back across the room to see if Mrs. Difford had made any progress.

“There, there my sweet Miss Vicky! Open your eyes, love.” The cook patted the pallid cheeks and hands.

“Some whiskey perhaps …, ” he began.

“She’s quite insensible. You would drown her.” Mrs. Difford spoke softly and pursed her lips when she finished, but she did not look up at him. Whenever she did, he saw the fear in her eyes. Or was it loathing? He was never quite sure.

He paced back and forth, raking his hand through his miserable mane. “Perhaps, sir, if the settee was closer to the fire ….”

Tadeusz frowned. “Yes, yes. That is a good idea. She is soaked to the skin.”

Mrs. Difford dabbed at the moisture on her own face with the corner of her apron. “She is as cold as a winter’s day.”

Tadeusz felt his heart sink. Was there nothing else they could do? His chest felt weighted with lead. Gently, he pushed the settee right up to the edge of the hearth--closer than was prudent. He placed more logs on the fire, as well, until he thought he would singe the hair off his hands--not that it would matter. It always grew back thicker than ever.

“I see a bit of pink coming to her cheeks, sir.” Mrs. Difford sniffed and dashed away a lone tear.

He bent to run his hand along Victoria’s cheek. Her skin had the softness of silk and he found that gliding his rough calluses along the smooth surface sent a surge of heat pumping through his veins. He pulled away. Surely, it was only the warmth of the fire that caused such a reaction.

Mrs. Difford renewed her efforts with more enthusiasm. The smell of the ammonia had him stepping back several paces.

Then he heard a soft murmur from the woman’s throat and his heart skipped a beat.

“Miss Vicky! That’s the spirit, my love! Open those lovely blue eyes of yours,” Mrs. Difford encouraged.

Victoria’s hand reached out and shoved the smelling salts away. Relief washed through Tadeusz.

* * * *

Victoria did not want to open her eyes. Her head ached and a strange lethargy seemed to have taken over her limbs. Even the smallest movements felt too great an effort. But she did want to see Ipsy. It had been nine long years since she had seen the dear cook’s face.

She could hear the crackling of the fire in the grate though the familiar chill of the old mansion seeped into her. It had always been a gloomy place--dark and forbidding with too few windows. Someone must have carried her inside--which meant she was safe. She struggled to open her eyes, blinking several times because the room appeared to be spinning. Finally, she tried using only one eye and succeeded in focusing. She saw Ispy and the glowing halo surrounding her.

Victoria shut her eye. She had been seeing auras now for nearly a year, but she still could not get used to the phenomenon. She tried to talk, but her voice was a mere whisper.

“I-ipsy … I cannot seem to focus ….”

“You hit your noggin and have a nasty gash. Shouldn’t be giving me such an awful fright, Miss Vicky. My nerves aren’t what they used to be.”

Victoria heard the indulgent note in Ipsy’s voice and an ache started in her heart. All the years, all the miles, as well as their sorrowful parting melted away in an instant.

“I am a bit dizzy ....”

“ ’Tis no doubt due to your fall,” Ipsy interrupted.

“Please, help me to get up.” The weakness in her limbs and the ache in her head debilitated her.

“Don’t you get up just yet, Miss Vicky,” Ipsy warned. “The doctor is coming to check out ….”

“There’s no need to bother the doctor.”

“You’ll be needing the doctor this time. That cut bled more than it should have--though you can be sure that as soon as I put one of my poultices on it, it will heal up faster than you can say Jack Rabbit.”

Strangely, Victoria felt herself drifting off. The lure of slumber became increasingly strong. She did not think it was evening as yet though the only light in the library came from the fireplace. She cleared her throat and tried to force herself to stay alert. “Please send for my trunk. I left it in town, but I will need dry clothing.”

“William was going to fetch it when he called for the doctor.”

“If I rest a bit ….” Victoria could barely breathe the words.

“No!” Ipsy sounded stern. “Don’t go back to sleep. Miss Vicky, open those eyes again!”

Victoria’s lids felt heavy and she kept her eyes closed. Besides, the glow around Ipsy’s form troubled her. She had nurtured a hope that coming home would put an end to the strange malady--that perhaps it was only caused by the unhealthy air in the city--or indeed the stress of living there. Of course, she knew of those forward thinking people who preferred to think of her problem as an ability. But Victoria herself had never been quite sure about the phosphorescent clouds she saw surrounding everyone. She doubted she could explain auras to Ipsy. She could barely explain it to herself and few people understood. When she confided in friends they shied away from her afterwards.

“Oh, Ipsy.” She sighed. “Do not worry about me. Truly, I will be fine.” Victoria did not want to cause the dear cook any grief. “Would you please send for Paul?”

The only reply she got was a choked gulp--and that was rather odd. Victoria forced herself to steal another look from one eye at the cook. She felt a cold stab at her heart as she watched Ipsy bite her lip and wring her hands. Victoria’s apprehension mounted. “Whatever is the matter?”

“You must have received my telegram!” Another voice boomed out--one with a thick accent. She had heard that voice before … before she fell.

Her breath hitched up in her throat. On the verge of panic, she tried to turn so she could see who was speaking, but a shaft of agony spiked through her head with the movement and she clenched her teeth. It took her a moment to recover enough to retort. “Sir, in addition to the fact that you have not introduced yourself to me, I am very certain that I have not received any telegram from you.”

“I am your husband--Tadeusz Hermanowski.”

Husband! Victoria fought to contain the cry welling in her throat. She kept her voice as steady as she could, but she knew it sounded far more shrill than usual.

“Please stand where I can see you.”

“Begging your pardon, sir,” Ipsy broke in. “She has had a bad fall. We should wait until the doctor checks her over. She is probably in shock as it is.”

“She is warm enough by the fire.”

“B-but, sir, we do not know if any bones have been broken.”

“Stop babbling, Mrs. Difford! I have already checked her limbs!” the man insisted with impatience.

Victoria let out a scandalized gasp. Had he touched her after she had fainted?

He stepped into view. The firelight illuminated his tall figure, casting a bright orange glow on one side and the deepest of shadows on the other. She would have screamed but her mouth turned so dry she could not utter a sound. He was the Beast who had come up behind her on that massive horse! He glared at her from the end of the settee like an animal ready to pounce. While he wore a crisp, tailored riding outfit, his face was completely covered with hair. She felt the blood seep away from her face.

“I see panic has taken away your voice, madam.” Was there a note of derision in his tone, or merely resignation? “Did you expect your new husband would be just as handsome as he is rich? I can see I am a disappointment.”

Icy tentacles of horror wrapped around her. Tadeusz Hermanowski looked to be more animal than man. His features--his nose, his eyes, his ears and his mouth--appeared to be human in form as well as pleasing in proportion. But his fur was much like that of a bear--or a wolf.

Victoria blinked, hoping that perhaps the blow to her head was causing her to have a strange dream from which she would awake in but a moment. Her heart seemed frozen in her chest.

The radiant light of the Beast’s aura flowed out just as the light from a candle, but Victoria closed her eyes again. She did not have the strength to deal with it right now. She prayed that she would soon awaken from this terrible nightmare.

“Mrs. Difford, go watch by the door. The doctor should be here soon.” The cultured inflection in the Beast’s voice would have been quite pleasing to listen to if he were not so horrid to look at.

“Yes, sir.” Ipsy gave Victoria’s hand a squeeze before she shuffled off toward the great entrance hall.

Victoria felt a shiver of fear course through her. She was alone with this man-beast! Why had Paul wheedled her into this marriage? She had always assumed Paul had her well-being at heart. How could he betray her? Daring to open her eyes again, she cast another sharp glance at the Beast and watched the colored radiance clinging to his form as he moved. His wide shoulders bespoke barely restrained power. She shuddered.

“You should have sent for the carriage, madam.” His eyes appeared as dull a gray as the stones of the manor’s walls in contrast to the soft shimmering colors that suffused his body.

“I felt the need of exercise and fresh air.” Despite her distress, she noted his hair appeared as black as the coal dug from deep beneath the Pennsylvania hills.

He began pacing restlessly--his dominant presence filling the room with energy. “These are dangerous times.”

Fear knotted inside her, but she did not wish to show it and shot back at him, “The only danger to me was being trampled by your horse!”

“Madam, you should refrain from frightening horses with your ungodly screeching.” Though his focused gaze bore down upon her, a small measure of the abject terror she felt earlier dissipated. His eyes appeared soulful--quite human, in fact. Conscious of his vitality, she found his nearness set her pulse pounding, which was altogether very disturbing. She saw him staring at her lips. Then his gaze wandered down to her breasts. No doubt, the Beast had lust on his mind.

Worse, she felt herself responding to his blatant appraisal. As her cheeks grew hot, she pressed her lips together. It was absurd. She had no intention of being intimate with such a creature! She had been tricked into marrying him. It was altogether despicable and unfair! Something must be done!

“You do not favor your cousin,” he said as the silence began to lengthen uncomfortably. “You have blond hair, pale blue eyes, and a prominent--though most delicate--chin. You do not resemble Paul in any way. You are quite … beautiful.”

There was the hint of a catch in his voice … but not the least indication of flattery. He had made a mere statement of fact.

For her part, Victoria had always found her beauty more of a curse than a gift. Her first husband, Giles Billingsford III, had been so insanely jealous of her that he had made her a virtual prisoner. In truth, she grieved his passing very little. She had been glad to be free of his oppression.

Unfortunately, now she was married to Tadeusz Hermanowski. She shuddered.

“Our fathers were brothers, but I take after my mother.” Her voice wavered at the mention of her mother and the familiar dread tightened in her chest.

“Pity.” He spat out the word.

Confused by his vehemence, she did not know what to say.

He spun around to face the fire. The flames seemed to intensify the gleam that outlined his form. “When I first saw you today, I thought you were either a burglar or an adventuress.”

The chill in her veins vanished as angry heat fired through her. If she had had all her strength, she would have slapped him. “Is that why you felt compelled to test my limbs?” She did not hide the acid in her query.

“There are an abundance of women who would willingly allow me to stroke their limbs. I have no need to do it on the sly.”

She swallowed hard as she glanced at the way his tight riding breeches molded to his muscled thighs. He swung back to face her and she forced herself to look upward, but her gaze faltered. Few men had the sinews of this man-beast. When at last her eyes slid to meet his again, she glimpsed a hint of amusement in the quirk of his generous lips.

“Are you tempted to test my limbs too, madam?”

Her mouth grew as parched as grass in a drought. With difficulty, she cleared her throat. “I should like to speak with my cousin.”

His lips formed a grim line as he glared at her. “I regret to inform you that your cousin Paul is dead.”

Victoria gave a strangled cry as her mind reeled. “No! I cannot believe that! I was not informed of it!” Despite her proximity to the hearth, her entire body became encased in a glacial chill.

A change came over the Beast as if a shadow passed over him, darkening the emanation shining out from his body. The subtle alteration of shade heightened her distress. She had not seen such an odd shadow on anyone until now. Did it indicate the true nature of the monster that lurked inside the Beast?

“Obviously, you did not receive my telegram. Paul did not die a natural death.” Shock ripped through her. “Was he murdered?” She could barely fathom what she had heard. Though she lay comfortably on the settee, she felt her entire world crumble.

“He was found on the road to Taylor’s Grove.” He cleared his throat. “Some say he was attacked by animals. I am very sorry for your loss, madam.”

Victoria felt her throat close up. Sorrow pressed down upon her. Paul had been unfailingly kind to her--even at the worst of times. Especially after her mother’s death.

“Know that your cousin thought you a worthy prize, madam. When he lost this estate to me in a poker game, he thought to win it back by offering you as his next bid. It is a pity that I am quite good at the game and though your cousin had a fair amount of skill, he made some grave mistakes.” His steely eyes sliced into her, but again that curious shimmer about him subtly changed once more.

She struggled to conquer the well of grief that threatened to undo her. The ice in her veins combined with her swirling emotions caused the ache in her head to become an unbearable misery, but meeting her new husband and learning of Paul’s death had given her a violent fright. She found once again that strange lethargy returning to her, coaxing her to close her eyes and rest.

The hopelessness of her situation had the darkness closing in on her and she found she could not escape the lure of slumber. In fact, she found herself welcoming it, which was most unusual. However, in sleep there lay an emptiness where the pain could not go.