Read Her Reaper's Arms Online

Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo

Her Reaper's Arms (2 page)

death. For days afterward he would be moody and bleak, his eyes filled with

alternating strata of rage and despair. When he could sleep, his dreams would be filled

with swirling smoke, the odor of burning flesh, the residual pain still carried deep

within his consciousness. He would wake sweating profusely—as though still trapped

in the heat of the conflagration—and his throat would be parched, his lungs feeling

seared. When he was forced to relive that horrendous day, his flesh crawled, his body

shuddered, his belly ached, and today was such a day.

The Cherchocreechi medicine man raised his buckskin-clad arms skyward, the

fringe on his sleeves waving in the wind, and called out to the Great Spirit to look with

favor upon the warrior who had passed from this world into the Land of the Ghosts.

Chanting the merits of the deceased warrior, the
didanawisgi
bid He Who Listens and

She Who Waits to take into account the good things the dead man had accomplished

and to overlook that which did not please Those Who Judge.

Beneath the scaffolding upon which the warrior had been laid, his family and

friends piled oak branches and bundles of sweet grass as the
didanawisgi
continued his

recitation of the warrior’s glories. As the People worked, they softly sang the burial

song that would hasten their loved one on his way. Wrapped securely in a gaily

decorated blanket tied with rope, the feet of the warrior faced south where his journey

would begin. Around him were his most prized possessions, which would accompany

him into the afterlife.

Standing apart from the mourners, Bevyn marveled at the mix of religious beliefs

that had been incorporated into the Cherchocreechi tribe’s rituals. He knew at one time

there had been four distinct tribes but the Burning War, disease and myriad other

calamities had struck to devastate the People until only a hundred or less were left from

among the Four Nations. Some of their customs had been abandoned, forgotten,

morphed from one belief into a new one that better served its worshippers. He knew

that had happened for many of the natives of Terra.

“You look very sad,
danitaga
,” Chief Amaketai said as he came to stand beside the

Reaper. “You should rejoice for Onisca. He will soon be with Those Who Have Gone

Before.”

“Although I am saddened by your son’s passing, that is not what haunts me this

day,
oginalii
,” Bevyn replied. “It is the sight of the pyre that disturbs me.”

“Ah,” Amaketai said. The old man had sat many hours with the Reaper before the

campfire, hearing tales of lands far beyond the green hills of Armistenky. He knew how

8

Her Reaper’s Arms

the young man had met his end in that alien world so unlike his own. “It is the burning

you dislike.”

“Only because it brings back memories,” Bevyn admitted.

“I understand,” Amaketai said. He gave the man beside him—the man his people

called
danitaga
, blood brother—a gentle look. “Life has not been kind to you, has it, my

son?”

“Life has kicked my ass, old friend,” Bevyn said with a faint smile. “Many times

over.”

Onisca’s widow was given the honor of lighting his funeral pyre and she placed the

burning sweet grass sheaf to the bundles intertwined with the oak branches. A loud,

trilling ululation rose up from the throats of the mourners as the fire took hold and the

flames rose. The bitterly sweet odor of burning flesh rose in the air.

Bevyn turned away, unable to watch the body catch fire. The stench was more than

he could bear as well and his hands were trembling, his shoulders hunched as though

he expected the fire to reach out to ensnare him. Bidding a hasty farewell to Amaketai,

he strode purposefully to his horse, grateful the chief did not try to stop him. Grabbing

a handful of Préachán’s thick mane, he swung up into the saddle and dug his heels into

the horse’s black flanks. He needed to put distance between him and the burning man

who had been like a brother to him.

He needed a drink, he thought as he raced his mount across the plains. He needed

something strong, something that would numb the memories, something to erase the

feeling of impending doom that had reached out to entrap him. Sometimes the only

way he could make it through a week of loneliness, the isolation of his job, was to

drown himself in whiskey and attempt to sleep it off.

The trouble with his kind was they had trouble sleeping. Even with a full bottle of

rotgut sloshing in their bellies, the nightmares always hovered close by to claim them

and to torment their rest, to drag them hissing from the land of Nod. Past deeds rose up

to jeer at them and the cries of the dead they had dispatched haunted their restless

slumber.

It was a hell of a way to live.

As Préachán—his big black stallion—raced over the ground, Bevyn thought of the

balgair
, the rogue, he had executed for murdering Onisca. He had hunted the bastard

down, driven him to ground and had used his laser whip to slice off pieces of the

rogue’s body a little at a time until there was nothing left but mush on the blood-soaked

ground. He had reveled in the man’s screams, had inhaled his fear and agony as though

they were perfume. He had taken out his wrath in painful increments that had lasted

for hours until his whip arm grew numb and heavy and his energy flagged. Still he had

slashed at the body—long after he had sliced the head from the corpse with an expert

flick of his wrist—until the killing rage had finally passed, and he had been stunned to

see what he had wrought.

9

Charlotte Boyett-Compo

“I have avenged you,
diganeli
,” he had offered up to Onisca’s ghost, calling him his

blood friend.

But it had been more than vengeance he had meted out upon the rogue. It had been

frustration and disappointment and an attempt to alleviate the bitter loneliness that was

slowly driving him insane. The devastation he had perpetrated against the
balgair
had

been excessive and he knew it but it had felt good—at least at the time—to vent.

For the last five years he had carried out the assignments the High Council had

handed to him, never once questioning what was expected of him, never balking at the

deeds done that were necessary to do what was required. He had killed in the name of

justice without a shred of conscience staying his lethal hands. His anger over his own

death was still a raw wound in his mind and a dark blot on his soul and nothing

seemed to be able to calm the fury riding him with bloodied spurs.

The sun was low on the horizon and spearing into his eyes. Ahead of him was the

town of Orson and a saloon where there was a bottle with his name on it. He licked his

lips at the thought of the liquor burning its way down his throat, the promise of

oblivion, the siren call to forgetfulness. The town wasn’t much, the people dispensable

in the grand scheme of things. He hadn’t been there in quite a while, and the last time

he’d passed through, he had spent two days in a drunken stupor he wished to

experience again. Perhaps while he slept, a
balgair
would sneak in and take his head and

the pain would finally stop.

Riding into the rundown town with its beaten-down citizens, Bevyn smiled grimly

as those civilians scattered, rushing to hide behind locked doors and pulling draperies

rather than garner the notice of a Reaper. Dismounting in front of the saloon, he glanced

around, not surprised to find himself alone on the dirt street, to hear the eerie silence as

breaths were held and lips mumbled in silent prayer that he would not stay long in

their town.

Hitching up his gun belt, adjusting the dragon claw handle of his laser whip in its

thin leather sheath, he tied Préachán to the hitching post and stepped up on the

boardwalk, his spurs jangling against the weathered gray boards. Putting his hands on

the batwing doors leading into the saloon, he was keenly aware that all noise inside the

establishment had ceased and knew those inside had either scrambled out the back

door or were waiting for him with trembling knees. Out of habit, he swept the interior

of the building with his psychic powers and detected no threat to him. He pushed the

doors open and went inside the smoke-filled, stale-smelling, darkened interior.

Lea Walsh stood beside a sticky table she’d been cleaning when Luke Desmond had

come rushing in to tell them a Reaper was headed their way. She’d glanced at Mable,

the saloon owner, who had hastened to tell the working girls to stop what they were

doing and stay put. She winced at the noise of chairs scraping across the floor as the

patrons of the saloon had run for the back entrance, not wanting to be there when the

Reaper came in.

10

Her Reaper’s Arms

Mable was behind the bar and Lea could see her trembling, her red lips quivering.

She had snatched up an unopened whiskey bottle and a shot glass and put them on the

bar. The white feathers adorning her silk gown were fluttering at the neckline as the

older woman swallowed convulsively.

The other saloon girls—Merrilee, Keesha and Su Lin—stood flanking the roulette

wheel, their faces drawn, their bosoms rising and falling rapidly. Their eyes were

locked on the saloon entrance.

“He ain’t a bad sort if you leave him to what he wants,” Mable said quietly. “Most

likely he won’t ask for one of you but if he does, don’t look him in the eye, don’t speak

to him lest he asks you a question and do whatever he tells you. Do it quickly and you’ll

be all right. I ain’t never heard tell of him hurting a woman but with his kind, you never

know what might set him off.”

Lea had not been at the White Horse Saloon the last time the Reaper assigned to the

Armistenky Territory had come through town. In her twenty-three years, she’d never

seen one of the infamous lawmen, and she had hoped she never would. When she

heard the clink of his spurs on the boardwalk, she began twisting the bar rag between

her hands, her heart pounding fiercely in her chest.

The saloon doors opened and the black-clad warrior came striding in as though he

owned the place. His six-shooter was strapped low on his right hip and the handle of

the fabled lightning whip lay strapped to the other. His black felt cowboy hat was

pulled low over his forehead, the silver concho band on the crown catching the light.

He walked with a swagger that was unmistakable as he bellied up to the bar.

Bevyn’s gaze flicked to the woman standing off to one side, swept over the three

huddled together and then settled on the blowsy tramp behind the long, rough bar. He

strode purposefully toward her, ignoring the tremulous smile of greeting on her

painted face. He glanced down at the bottle then back into her frightened face, waiting

for her to pour the rotgut. She was quick to oblige him and he picked up the shot glass,

knocked back the potent liquid and then set the glass down for another round.

“Be about your business, ladies,” he said quietly to the other women, not liking that

they were behind his back. He could see them in the long sweep of mirror behind the

bar but he was never comfortable with anyone lurking at his back.

Merrilee, Keesha and Su Lin made themselves scarce, taking the stairs to their living

quarters without a backward glance at him. Mable stayed where she was like a deer

caught in a spotlight.

Bevyn propped a foot on the tarnished brass rung that ran along the bottom of the

bar and hunched over with his elbows on the nicked top, pushing his once again empty

glass toward Mable to refill. “Anything I need to see to while I’m here?” he asked the

saloonkeeper.

“I think there might be, milord,” Mable said as she poured his third whiskey. “I can

send for the sheriff.”

11

Charlotte Boyett-Compo

He nodded, swept his glance past her to the mirror to watch the girl behind him as

she moved to another table with her bucket and rag. “I don’t remember her being here

last time,” he said.

“She wasn’t, milord,” Mable said. “If you want me to send her upstairs…”

“Leave her be,” he said, and continued to watch the girl as she worked. It surprised

him that she’d stayed and it intrigued him that she didn’t cop furtive looks at him as

she went about her job. His curiosity was further piqued that she was dressed for what

she was doing and not decked out in whore finery as the other women.

Lea could feel his eyes on her from the mirror. His steady stare was unnerving. She

knew if she left the room, Mable would dock her for the day’s work and she desperately

needed the pitiful wages she got for cooking and cleaning at the White Horse.

Thankfully the men in town left her alone and she wasn’t expected to turn tricks like

Merrilee, Keesha and Su Lin, although she’d had more than her share of men groping

her since she’d been working for Mable.

“I’ll need a room,” she heard the Reaper say.

“Of course, milord,” Mable readily agreed. “Lea, get upstairs and make sure our

best room is made ready for Lord Bevyn.”

He had not taken his eyes from the girl as he spoke. Despite the faded blue calico

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