Madelaine Montague - Nocturnal.txt

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NOCTURNAL Madelaine Montague 


NOCTURNAL 


By 

Madelaine Montague 


NOCTURNAL Madelaine Montague 

© copyright August 2006, Madelaine Montague 
Cover art by Jenny Dixon, © copyright August 2006 
ISBN 1-58608-937-4 
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. 


NOCTURNAL Madelaine Montague 

Chapter One 

Pain and fury filled Raphael as he raced through the dense brush in a mindless 
quest for freedom. Adrenaline drove him, else the pain from his wounds might have 
overwhelmed him. Fear ate at his mind, as well, but it was a distant voice, drowned by 
the frustration and anger because the fear wasn’t for himself. It was fear of failing. 

He had almost had the bastard! 

For months he had tracked the ring leader of the men that had killed his woman 
and their unborn child. Patience was not one of his virtues, but his rage had grown cold 
in the year since Concepcion’s death. His determination had hardened in the weeks he 
had lain fighting for his own life and the months after that that he had spent regaining his 
strength with an agonizing slowness that had been maddening while he chaffed at his 
quarry’s trail growing colder and colder. 

He had tracked him, though, halfway across two continents. 

His stupidity had nearly gotten him killed, but he had wanted the bastard to look 
in his eyes and know that he was going to die because of Concepcion. He hadn’t wanted 
to send the son-of-a-bitch to hell wondering. 

He hadn’t expected to be interrupted, but he should have anticipated the 
possibility. 

If they hadn’t taken him completely off guard, he could’ve finished the bastard 
before he left. Now he was wounded again, pretty fucking badly, he thought, if the blood 
he was losing was any indication. 

He couldn’t stop to examine it, though, because he could still hear them 
following, could still hear a random shot from time to time as the trigger happy morons 
spied something they thought might be him and fired at it. The darkness and the 
thickness of the woods were his only allies and he had a feeling he was running out of 
allies. 

Almost on the thought he bounded from the woods and onto a narrow, two rut 
track. Tall weeds sprouted from the soil on either side and along the narrow center strip, 
but he was exposed and he bounded across the track and into the woods on the other side. 

He paused there to catch his breath because he couldn’t do anything else. The 
adrenaline that had kept him going thus far was rapidly draining away from him now and 
he could feel weakness seeping into every muscle in his body. Panting for breath, he 
tipped his head back to look up at the trees for cover. 

He tamped the impulse. He would be too exposed. If he had been stronger, it 
wouldn’t be such a bad idea. It would give him a vantage to watch for the hunters. It 
would give him a strategic advantage if he was able to fight back, but he had a bad 
feeling he would come out the loser in his current state. 

Twisting his head to look back in the direction from which he’d come, he listened 
intently. Sure enough, within a few moments, he heard the hunters trampling through the 
brush in pursuit. 

Uttering a mental curse, he looked at the track again. 


NOCTURNAL Madelaine Montague 

It might just lead back to the compound, but he didn’t think so. He’d studied the 
area pretty thoroughly over the past few weeks and he was fairly certain that this track 
belonged to the woman he’d spotted a few times in his surveillance. 

He didn’t trust the impulse that assailed him to seek her out, but he was pretty 
much out of options unless he wanted to just lie down and let them finish him off. 

A year ago, he would’ve almost welcomed it. Hell, even six months ago. 

He wasn’t ready to quit now, though. If he died, he meant to take that bastard 
with him to hell. 

Turning without even realizing he had made a decision, he began to head along 
the edge of the track as quickly as he could. He didn’t trust the woman, not enough to go 
to her for help, but she had several out buildings on her property. If he could just make it 
to one of them, he would have the chance to rest and see about his wounds. 

The wound on his shoulder seemed to have stopped bleeding. He was fairly 
certain that had been no more than a crease, deep enough to hurt like a son-of-bitch, and 
bleed like hell, but he was pretty sure the bullet had done no more than plow a furrow 
through him and out the other side. 

He was equally certain that he did have a bullet in his hip. He’d been favoring the 
leg, trying his best to keep from jolting it anymore than necessary, but each time he put 
even a little weight on that leg, agonizing pain ground through him and the leg threatened 
to buckle. 

Hobbling now that the adrenaline had abandoned him and the pain and weakness 
was threatening to lay him out for the kill, he gritted his teeth and kept moving as quickly 
as he could, hoping he could make it to the woman’s house and hide before he passed 
out. 

Her image rose in his mind and as it did he felt his heart rate speed up just a little. 
A flicker of desire burgeoned despite all reason, his body beginning to hum with warmth. 

Wryly, he concluded that he was still a ways from death if she could get any kind 
of rise out of him at the moment. 

But then again, he had wanted her from the first moment he spied her and no 
amount of reasoning with himself had banished that. 

She was as different from Concepcion as night from day. 

It didn’t matter. 

More importantly, she was not one of the people. 

But that didn’t make any difference either. He’d tried to tell himself it did, but he 
knew better. 

Every time he looked at her cool, white skin, her light blond hair, her pale blue 
eyes, he thought of ice, hard, cold. 

And still he thirsted for a taste of her. 

He hadn’t stopped mourning for Concepcion and the babe. He still carried an 
ache that nothing could eradicate, not even his revenge. Having them wrenched from his 
life so abruptly and with such finality had been like having a part of himself torn away 
and he could never get that back, never get them back. 

He would see that they had justice, though, blood for blood, if it was the last thing 
he ever did. 


NOCTURNAL Madelaine Montague 

He had not intended that it be the last thing he ever did, though, because he had 
realized when he saw the woman that there was a reason to live, something to live for 
besides fulfilling the need for revenge. 

He didn’t trust her. She wasn’t one of the people, and she lived too damned close 
to his enemy for his comfort in an area that was so remote that the next neighbors were 
miles away. 

He couldn’t completely rid himself of the suspicion that it was more than a 
coincidence that her land bordered his, that her neat little house and farm was little more 
than two miles from his compound as the crow flew. 

But that didn’t matter either. 
In the back of his mind he knew that he had already decided that, once he had 
done what he had come to do, he fully intended to have her. 
* * * * 

The first gun shot woke Alaina. Still groggy with sleep, she lay still on the couch 
trying to figure out what the noise was. As it came closer it became clear what the loud 
popping noise was. Her heart skipped several beats. She glanced sharply at the clock on 
top of her TV set. 

“My god! It’s two in the morning! What the hell would they be hunting at this 
time of night?” 

Rolling off the couch, she scrambled on her hands and knees toward the phone, 
grabbed it up and dialed the sheriff’s office. It seemed to ring forever and finally 
switched over. He’d forwarded his calls. 

He was probably at home in bed! 

“Sheriff Wilson,” said a voice on the line just about the time she’d given up. 

“Hank, it’s me, Alaina. They’re out shooting up the woods again.” 

There was a momentary silence. “What the hell are they hunting at this time of 
night?” 

“Well, god knows, I don’t,” Alaina said sharply, “but it sounds like they’re 
moving in my direction. I’d just as soon not have any more bullet holes in my damned 
house!” 

“I’m about fifteen minutes from you. Stay on the floor.” 

As if she had any intention of getting up! 

The thought had barely formed in her mind when her wall exploded and then the 
couch as a stray bullet pierced the wall of the living room. Tufts of stuffing flew up in 
the air and drifted downward. 

Alaina gaped at it in stunned disbelief for a split second feeling cold wash over 
her as she realized she’d been lying within inches of that bullet only a few moments 
earlier. Adrenaline surged through her then and, instinctively she began to scramble on 
her belly toward the back of the house. “Shit! Oh shit!” she muttered, with no clear 
destination in mind beyond trying to get out of range. 

She’d never had a bullet actually enter the house! She’d heard shotgun pellets 
rain down on her roof like hail. She’d even found a couple of places on the outside walls 
where a spent bullet had cracked the siding, but she had never really believed she was in 
danger of actually getting shot in her own living room! 


NOCTURNAL Madelaine Montague 

She’d already gone out the back door and made a dash for the storage shed in the 
rear before it occurred to her that they might decide she was a deer or whatever it was 
they were hunting. 

They were on the front sid...
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