CHAPTER ONE
Lenobia
Lenobia’s sleep was so restless that the familiar dream took on a sense of reality that overstepped the
ethereal realm of subconscious outlets and fantasies and became, from the beginning, all too
heartbreakingly real.
It began with a memory. Decades, and then centuries fell away leaving Lenobia young and naïve
again, and in the cargo hold of the ship that had carried her from France to America—from one world
to another. It was during that journey that Lenobia had met Martin, the man who should have been
her Mate for his entire life. Instead he had died too young and had taken her love to the grave with
him.
In her dream Lenobia could feel the gentle roll of the ship and smell the scent of horse and hay, sea
and fish—and Martin. Always Martin. He was standing before her, gazing down at her through eyes
that were olive and amber and worried. She had just told him she loved him.
“It is impossible.” The dream memory replayed in her mind as Martin reached out, took her hand,
and lifted it gently. He raised his own arm until the two were side by side. “You see the difference, you?”
The dreaming Lenobia made a small, wordless exclamation of pain. The sound of his voice! That
distinct Creole accent——deep, sensual, unique. It was the bittersweet sound of his voice and its
beautiful accent that had kept Lenobia away from New Orleans for more than two hundred years.
“No,” the young Lenobia had answered his question as she gazed down at their arms—one brown,
one white—where they pressed together. “All I see is you.”
Still deeply asleep, Lenobia, Horse Mistress of the Tulsa House of Night, moved restlessly, as if her
body was attempting to force her mind to awaken. But this night her mind did not obey. This night
dreams and what might have been ruled.
The sequence of memories shifted and changed to another scene, still in the cargo hold of the same
ship, still with Martin, but days later. He was handing her a long string of leather tied to a small pouch
dyed a deep sapphire blue. Martin put it around her neck saying, “This gris-gris protect you, cherie.”
In the space of a heartbeat the memory wavered and time fast-forwarded a century. An older, wiser,
more cynical Lenobia was cradling the crumbling leather pouch in her hands as it split and spilled it
contents—thirteen things, just as Martin had told her—but most of them had become unrecognizable
during the century she’d worn the charm. Lenobia remembered a faint scent of juniper, the smooth
feel of the clay pebble before it turned to dust, and the tiny dove’s feather that had crumbled between
her fingers. But most of all Lenobia remembered the fleeting rush of joy she’d felt when, in the midst
of the disintegrating remnants of Martin’s love and protection, she’d discovered something that time