Read My Vampire and I Vol 3: Blood Resurrection Online
Authors: J. P. Bowie
A Total-E-Bound Publication
www.total-e-bound.com
Blood Resurrection
ISBN # 978-1-906811-62-4
©Copyright J.P. Bowie 2009
Cover Art by Lyn Taylor ©Copyright April 2009
Edited by Michele Paulin
Total-E-Bound Publishing
Published in 2009 by Total-E-Bound Publishing 1 The Corner, Faldingworth Road, Spridlington, Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, LN8 2DE, UK.
Warning:
This book contains sexually explicit content which is only suitable for mature readers. This story has been rated
Total-e-burning.
My Vampire and I
BLOOD RESURRECTION
J.P. Bowie
To Vampire lovers everywhere
and for Phil, above all else
Trademarks Acknowledgement
The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction: People: Time, Inc.
Blood Resurrection
J.P Bowie
5
So that you don’t take me for a hallucinating idiot in some of the things I have to tell you, I’m going to let you in on a little secret. Well, not so little really—maybe quite important. I’m a vampire. Yes, it’s true. Please don’t shudder with fear. I’m really quite a nice fellow, and I promise I won’t take any bites out of your neck or suck on…your blood. Well, not unless you say ‘go ahead’, first.
My name is Bernard Fournier—yes, I’m also French, but please don’t hold that against me, either. A French vampire, I hear you saying. What else is he going to confess to us before the story’s end? Lots of things, actually, some good, some not so good, and some quite terrible—but, I must not get ahead of myself.
I was born a bastard, the product of ravishment by pillaging knights, thrown into a rubbish heap by my less-than-doting mother then discovered by an old woman digging for scraps of food. Amazingly, she didn’t eat me but handed me over to some monks who baptised me to redeem me from sin and gave me the name Bernard. They raised me after a fashion, using me as a slave to fetch and carry then when my prettiness began to show through the grime and filth I was covered in due to their neglect, they abused me. Truth to tell, I had no idea as to what I looked like or why I had suddenly become an object of lust. I had never seen my reflection. Such a thing as a mirror was not hung in the monastery stable.
Not an impressive start to anyone’s life you might say and I would have to agree. So is it any wonder that my mind was consumed with thoughts of escape, and sometimes, with revenge? Many times, I would lift my eyes and look beyond the monastery walls to the fields and forests that lay so near, and yet so far, with their promise of freedom. Escape was Blood Resurrection
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I had long since become immune to the vile advances of the monks, merely lying passively as they had their way with me, not even protesting when they would beat me afterward for being the temptation they could not resist. When left alone, I would lie on my back, staring up at the stable’s wooden roof, and imagine myself being able to fly away from this place of torment. If only I could escape, I thought, and never have to look again at the cruel and leering faces of the men who brutalised me, I would forego any desire for revenge.
To be free of them and their hypocrisy would suffice.
* * * *
Perhaps God did hear my silent pleas after all, for it came in the form of a tall and handsome man, who arrived at the monastery late one night, requesting shelter from an impending storm. The monks and I had been busy shoring up doors and windows, getting the livestock inside and bringing enough food and water indoors to last them until the storm abated. The previous year, they had been confined within the chancery walls for three days.
I watched with interest as Prior Hubert conversed with the tall man who had a military bearing and was dressed in fine clothes. Greedily, the Prior snatched the coins the tall man offered him then ushered him indoors, away from my sight. A moment later, one of the monks bade me to take the man’s horse to the stable and bed him down for the night.
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the horse down. In the distance, I head the rumbling of thunder, heralding the storm’s approach.
“That’s all right…” A deep, melodious voice behind me made me jump. “I’ll take care of him.”
I turned, and my heart quickened as my eyes met the man’s emerald green gaze. I could now see that what before I had considered merely handsome was in fact…beauty. His smile became a frown when he saw my filthy state, the ragged clothes and the rope that bound me. “By the gods, boy,” he murmured. “Who treats you so ill?” I hung my head in shame, tears pricking the back of my eyes. He put a hand under my chin and raised my face to his, staring intently at me as if seeking the answer to his question in my mind. As he gazed into my eyes, I saw his face set in a grim expression then his eyes filled with compassion.
He can do without his brushing for one night. Then come with me.” I hastened to do his bidding without question, so well schooled was I in obedience. He led me from the stable. His hand on my shoulder lent me a comfort I had known little of in my life. The wind had picked up and big drops of rain spattered down on us as we walked quickly across the courtyard. I halted at the monastery door.
“Sire, I cannot enter here. I am forbidden.”
“Not tonight, you’re not,” he said. “Tonight, you are my guest.”
“But Sire, the Prior will be angered at my presence. He will beat me.”
“And just who allows the boy to live in this filth?” The tall man’s voice had taken on a hard and icy edge. “Does he not live here under your protection, Prior Hubert?” The Prior drew himself up to cast a haughty look at my defender. “He does, and if it were not for our charity, he would have died long since. He was born a bastard and found among rubbish—”
Blood Resurrection
J.P Bowie
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“Through no fault of his own,” the man murmured.
“We took him in when no one else would,” the Prior continued, ignoring the man’s comment.
The man’s hand on my shoulder tightened. I felt his anger through the tension in his body. “An admirable action, Prior,” he said, his smooth voice belying his rage. “But surely only what your calling demands. And does your charity not extend to a clean body and clothes? The boy is pale and weak from lack of proper nourishment. Have a bath prepared for him in my room, and send clean clothes and a hot meal. He will stay with me until the storm abates.”
“He has told me nothing,” the man said quietly. “And yet, I know all.” He took his hand from my shoulder and pushed back the folds of his cloak, revealing the hilt of his sword, its gold embossment glinting in the candlelight. “Now, do as I bid, Prior, before my natural instincts to punish the corrupt ones in your brood make me forget I am a guest here.” The Prior gasped. “You dare—?”
“Come.” With a gentle hand again on my shoulder, the man led me to his room, a large space dominated by an ornate four poster bed, the likes of which I had never before seen. A table for dining, some chairs, a large oaken chest and a rug of green and gold completed the furnishings. I had not known, for as long as I had lived there, that such a room existed.
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terrible. The Prior would never forgive me for what he saw as nothing less than utter disrespect for his authority on my part.
“Do not worry, Bernard,” Marcus said, still smiling. “I have no intention of leaving you to their mercy. I know only too well the evil of which men are capable.” I looked at him, my mouth slightly open in surprise. “Sire—” Anything else I may have said was interrupted by a banging on the door, which was then abruptly pushed open. Two monks carrying a metal bath burst into the room, followed by others carrying buckets of hot water. Marcus watched with some amusement as they busied themselves filling the bath, all the while casting hostile looks at us both. “Will there be anything else, Sire?” one of them asked, his voice filled with sarcasm.