Book Read Free

Faire Justice

Page 1

by Pillow Michelle M.




  Faire Justice

  By

  Michelle M Pillow

  Faire Justice © copyright 2009 – 2013 Michelle M. Pillow

  Second Electronic Printing April 2013, The Raven Books

  First Electronic Printing April 2009

  Cover art by Natalie Winters © Copyright 2012

  ISBN 9781625010391

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  Published by The Raven Books at Smashwords

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  All books copyrighted to the author and may not be resold or given away without written permission from the author, Michelle M. Pillow.

  This novel is a work of fiction. Any and all characters, events, and places are of the author’s imagination and should not be confused with fact. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or events or places is merely coincidence. Novel intended for adults only. Must be 18 years or older to read.

  Published by Raven Books

  www.ravenhappyhour.com

  Raven Books and all affiliate sites and projects are © Copyrighted 2004-2013

  Faire Justice

  By

  Michelle M Pillow

  Faire Justice

  Paranormal Romance

  Finding herself undercover as a serving wench at a Renaissance Faire, FBI Agent and mild psychic Leda Williams isn’t planning to partake in any role-playing games. She’s there to find a mace-wielding serial killer, which isn’t easy with everyone around her pretending to be in character. Not only does the entire village fit the Medieval-obsessed profile, but she’s already been propositioned by a few of the knights. Clearly, sexual harassment wasn’t around in the Middle Ages. But, when she sees the delectably gorgeous, magically seductive tournament champion, Sir Calum, Leda realizes there might be one knight she wouldn’t mind getting into character for.

  Rating: Contains graphic sexual content, adult language, and violence.

  Also by Michelle M. Pillow

  If you like this book, you might enjoy…

  Call of the Lycan Series

  Call of the Sea

  Call of the Untamed

  Call of Temptation

  Dragon Lords Series

  The Barbarian Prince

  The Perfect Prince

  The Dark Prince

  The Warrior Prince

  Lords of the Abyss Series

  The Mighty Hunter

  Commanding the Tides

  Captive of the Deep

  Chapter One

  Renaissance Faire, Tuxedo, New York

  “Mmm, I see great change. It’s good. You need change. You’re too involved with work,” Madame Serilda, or whatever her name was, said. “You work too hard.”

  Leda turned her eyes briefly to the woman dressed like some gypsy out of a bad historical documentary. The fortune teller’s Romanian accent was worse than her outfit, which was amazing, considering the cheap imitation velvet of her dark red and green medieval gown was trimmed in white gauze and gold cording. Her dark hair looked like it hadn’t been washed in weeks as it frizzed about her head.

  Leda tried to hide her rueful smile. The smell was the most authentic medieval thing about her. Wryly, she insisted, “Oh, really, go on.”

  The woman waved her hands in haphazard patterns through the air and Leda knew she thought she looked mystical by doing so. Sadly, the fortune teller wasn’t out of place. She was just as extravagant as the rest of the re-enactors walking around the fairgrounds.

  People really got into this Renaissance Festival thing. The makeshift village looked like something from the 1500’s with stone siding and tightly woven thatched roofs on the few permanent buildings. Tents and booths formed haphazard rows, creating winding trails through the village. The dirt paths were rutted, as if someone intentionally had driven a cart through the mud just to make it more genuine, and each person seemed to stick to their role within the fake caste system.

  Vendors sold everything from leather boots to swords and horseshoes, flower wreaths for the hair to custom clothing, roasted nuts to sticks of lumpy, suspicious meats. One woman walked around as if she were mad, screaming at the heavens in her muddy gown, crawling around in puddles. Another stopped her to talk about dragon footprints she saw “yonder”. There was even a procession of royal couples representing many European countries. They rode horses and Leda was a little put off by the piles of the manure some of the wretched creatures left behind for the rest of the crowd to walk through.

  All the women wore period dresses, from peasants to nobility. The gowns hugged along chests and flared from waists in a sweep of lightweight linen. The embroidered edges were simple to nonexistent on the peasants, with more elaborate decoration for the fine noble ladies. Some of the noblewomen even had jewels, glass bead belts and hair pieces over upswept locks, which twisted into a complicated series of plaits and coils.

  The men were no different in their commitment to their roles, though they did have a more rugged appeal. Some were dressed in armor, others in breeches and tunics, ranging from the poorest of villains to the richest of noblemen. Leda only knew what she did about this time period from reading her mother’s historical romance novels in high school.

  She looked down at her own noblewoman’s gown and frowned. Tugging uncomfortably at the long sleeve of her overtunic dress, she fidgeted to make it more comfortable. The gown hugged her chest to flare from her waist in a sweep of lightweight linen. It would have been cool, but for the undertunic beneath. Embroidered edges lined her sleeves and squared neckline. Along her waist was a chain belt of glass beads. The emerald green was beautiful, she had to admit, but she didn’t belong in it. Leda couldn’t understand those who thought they did. Sure, life could be boring, but what kind of person lived like this? Day-to-day, on purpose?

  However, regardless of how she felt, today she was a freak too. How did her boss ever talk her into this? Who ever heard of going undercover in a Renaissance Faire as some sort of serving wench? Already she’d been propositioned by a few of the knights. Clearly, sexual harassment wasn’t around in the Middle Ages. Though, if she were honest, there were a few knights she wouldn’t mind harassing a bit herself.

  Actually, she was here for a very important purpose—to catch some mace-wielding psychopath who had been killing innocent women. Being that she was female, her boss didn’t like her working on this assignment. Leda wasn’t one to let the fact she had boobs interfere with what needed to be done.

  A team of men, just as uncomfortably dressed as she, also roamed the campground. She’d seen them several times in her area and knew that their director had told them to keep an eye on her. Most days she would’ve hated their over-protectiveness, but she’d seen the photos of what the killer had done and she was lucky to have such devoted co-workers.

  At first, the murders had baffled them. What kind of object could inflict so much damage? But, thanks to the help of FBI intelligence, they’d narrowed the weapon down to a medieval mace—a stick with a chained ball of spiky metal on the end of it. Luckily, the man in charge of the scientific team was into role-playing games, otherwise it might have stumped them longer. After that, it was a matter of narrowing down known makers of such period weaponry, matching metal content with shards found on one of the victims, and here they were ready to catch a very bad guy.

  And Leda was the b
ait—unofficially, of course. She fit the profile perfectly—athletic in build, green eyes and long red hair. All the victims even had a sprinkling of freckles over their noses like she did. But, there were a few things she had that the victims didn’t—Federal training, a gun and the innate ability to “feel” the future. She wouldn’t call it foresight so much as a natural instinct that allowed her to be in the right place at the right time. Beyond that mild psychic ability, she also could read people—not their exact thoughts, but impressions of what they were thinking and it wasn’t often that those impressions were wrong.

  They have been a little off lately, though, her brain reminded her.

  Shut up, she answered herself. A few bad calls don’t mean anything.

  Tell that to the pizza guy you drew a gun on last week.

  “Yes, yes,” the fortune teller droned, her eyes lifting in her head as she made a whirling noise. The annoyance successfully drew Leda from her thoughts.

  Leda tried not to be too aggravated. She knew there were tellers out there who didn’t act like this at all, and would probably be offended by the way this woman was representing them, but it didn’t make her a believer in such divining arts as tarot cards. Leda’s sister had been into them as children, but the cards were merely a waste of time. Both of them were much more in tune with the future without the use of visual aids. Psychic ability was just something inside a person, a gift. It couldn’t be taught or learned, though it could definitely be suppressed or nurtured.

  The woman flipped over another card. “The swords are strong with you. Very strong.”

  “Ah, thanks.” Leda glanced down at the strange spread of cards all neatly placed in a jumbled pattern. She hummed softly, trying to remember what the swords were. Some distant memory made her think nature, but she couldn’t be sure beyond that. Although, looking at the layout, she saw a lot of the cards had swords on them. Too bad she was looking for a mace.

  “Hmm,” the woman shook her head and tapped the table. “But look at this one. Not a sword.”

  Leda glanced down, but the card didn’t mean anything to her.

  “The ace of cups is with the ace of swords.”

  Blackjack! She thought, wondering if the lady would appreciate it if she said the joke out loud. Somehow she doubted it.

  “Oh, yes, I feel it. Yes. Yes. Yes.”

  Leda drew back as the woman’s voice grew. If she kept it up much longer the passersby were going to think she was playing footsy with the woman’s crotch under the table cloth. Leda drew her legs to the side so they were within view.

  “Mmm, can you feel it? So much energy.” The fortune teller began to sway.

  “And that means …?” Leda prompted, hoping the woman would stop the theatrics. The Bureau better reimburse her for this job-related mental distress. The only reason she was sitting for the reading was that the tarot sorceress had set up her booth next to the knights’ tent. It was a perfect position to watch the weapons that went in and out of the place.

  “Mmm, the Ace of Cups and the Ace of Swords, together like this means a new force will be entering your life, a spirit—one of justice, yet love.”

  I want to bring justice to the women, and psychopaths often kill out of a belief of love. Hmm, maybe this woman is gifted, Leda mused doubtfully. Her mother and grandmother would be rolling in their graves if they knew she was even listening to Madame Whatever-Her-Name-Was. They taught the females in their family to cherish their gifts and not exploit them for cash—unless it was like Leda using them for a good cause in her day-to-day work.

  “Ah, love,” the woman repeated, smiling as if she’d just predicted next week’s lottery numbers. Now that was something Leda could use. “Love.”

  “Let me guess, tall, dark and handsome,” Leda said dryly.

  The woman glanced to the side, her smiling widening. “Mmm, yes, I’d say so.”

  Leda followed her gaze. Her heart nearly stopped in her chest—a reaction that wasn’t exactly the most favorable in her line of work. Only instead of the sharp pain of a bullet, it was the sharp stab of instant attraction. Dark, sinful eyes were surrounded by a sea of wind-swept hair. Deliciously thick muscles formed the most attractive body she’d ever seen. It took her a moment to even distinguish that he was wearing chain mail and breeches. He was one of the knights ready for a mock tournament.

  She’d seen the man before, walking the grounds, and this wasn’t the first time he met her gaze. Though they had yet to speak, they exchanged smiles and a crystal-clear sexual energy a dead man could pick up on. The man was definitely interested in her and she had to admit she was interested in return. He was one of the fine specimens she was thinking of harassing. What was he doing near her yet again? Was he following her?

  “Yes, the swords are strong with you,” the fortune teller said, her words a low hum to Leda’s ears.

  Leda couldn’t pull her eyes away. A man joined the knight, drawing his attention from her. She watched him laugh and nod, before pointing in the opposite direction toward the tournament grounds. He had a great laugh, so rich and full and happy, and an even better smile.

  “But this Ace, it has a very strong vibration near you. Can you feel that humming?”

  Leda glanced over. The woman had her hand out expectantly and Leda reached forward to put her hand in the woman’s. The fortune teller placed it over the card. “There, feel that? This is the symbol of opportunity. I feel that it’s close. If you stay open, it might even happen today.”

  “What might happen today?” Leda asked, glancing back to discover the man was staring at her, his friend gone. All she felt beneath her hand was a flat surface and if she, a mild psychic as she referred to herself, couldn’t feel anything then there was a good chance there was nothing to feel. A slow smile curled the knight’s mouth as she watched him, making her thighs tighten in response.

  “Truth. Justice—”

  “Sanity?” Leda broke in wryly, unable to help herself.

  “No,” the woman said, letting go of Leda’s hand. “Clarity.”

  “Ah, my mistake.”

  The fortune teller kept talking, but Leda stopped listening. How could she pay attention when the man licked his lips like he could taste her? Several knights passed behind him into the tent. Leda glanced at them. Seeing a glint of a metal sword, her mind was instantly brought back to her task. She was here to work, not stare at knights in shining armor in hopes that he’d strike up a conversation.

  Or perhaps she could do both .…

  Glancing at the fortune teller, she pushed up from the round barrel she sat on and said, “Thanks, Madam Saline, this has been really… umm … insightful.”

  “That’s Sabena,” the woman corrected. “Madame Sabena.”

  “All right, then.” Leda didn’t care. She set her eyes on the knight, her heart thumping violently in her chest, a combination of nervous tension from approaching a man she liked and the anticipation of going into “battle”. It was the same rush she got moments before taking the bad guy down.

  “My lady,” the knight bowed as she went straight for him.

  Leda’s step faltered. She didn’t expect a Scottish accent. Too bad he didn’t have the kilt to go with it. She imagined his legs would’ve looked good in a kilt. And was reminded of the very naughty email picture her sister forwarded to her showing what Scotsmen did, and did not, wear under their kilts. It would’ve been fun to see if it were true. Now there was a sword she wouldn’t mind seeing. It was her “card” after all.

  She would be the first to admit that she didn’t understand, nor get into, the whole Renaissance Faire, role-playing thing. But seeing Mr. Knight towering before her was quickly changing her mind. The weapon was a particularly nice touch to the fantasy world.

  Fantasy world?!

  Leda wanted to hit herself upside the head. She was supposed to be here looking for a murderer, not entertaining men in armor. Doing her best to focus on her assignment, she knew the best way to get an escort into the ver
y private knights’ tent was to flirt.

  Hoping her butchering of an Old English accent was adorable and not annoying, she said, “My lord, ‘tis a really big sword thou have … hast … uh, there.”

  He smiled good-naturedly and she was glad he wasn’t as snooty as some of the others she’d run into at the fair. Didn’t they know it wasn’t real? Jeesh! She’d even had one lady refuse to sell her a hairpiece because she didn’t know the “proper” name for it and didn’t want to stand around long enough to learn. The flower wreath had been for her baby niece’s birthday, anyway. It’s not like she had time to go to a toy store with the hours she’d been keeping lately.

  “My enemies think so too, lass,” he answered, lowering his chin. Her heart flipped a little in her chest.

  ‘Leda, you got something?’ Bret asked, his voice coming from the earpiece hidden by her hair. She lifted her hand to the side, knowing his binoculars were on her. Lifting her hand, she stretched her wrist in what looked to be an absentminded movement, signifying that all was well and she couldn’t really talk at the moment.

  “Is my lord—?” she began.

  He leaned forward and whispered. “Sir. I’m no’ a lord, merely a knight, and those who are noble might take offense to ya saying so.”

  “Ah,” she said. “Is my sir …?”

  He grinned, a completely enchanting, heart-thumping look.

  “Oh, forget it,” she grumbled, losing the accent. “I can’t flirt with you and concentrate on my horrible accent at the same time.”

  He arched a brow, as if surprised by her forthcoming statement.

  “Hi, I’m Leda,” she held her hand out to him. “You may call me Lady Leda, as I so christened myself this morning when I was getting dressed.”

 

‹ Prev