Liberating Lucius
Helena, a Thracian noblewoman, has been stolen from her home
and sold as a slave. She is determined to hate her new master
and escape at the first opportunity. She certainly doesn’t
expect to be physically attracted to the young Roman who possesses
her or to connect with him on a deeper level.
Tribune Lucius Calpurnius is taken aback when he’s presented
with a beautiful woman as a gift from a friend, yet he can hardly
release her into a camp full of soldiers. He intends to use
her as a servant and return her to her home when he is able.
But it gets more difficult every day to keep away from the woman
he desires, first with his body and later with his heart.
As they become lovers and slowly forge a bond, the outside
world threatens to tear them apart. Can Helena rise above her
slavery to save herself and the man she has come to love?
Excerpt
“I have a present for you, Lucius.” Cenurion Quintus
strode alongside his superior officer, Tribune Lucius Calpurnius
Aquila through the Roman encampment in the northern wilderness.
Mud, churned by soldiers’ boots and horses’ hooves,
had dried in hummocks and deep pits that made walking difficult.
“This is something you’ve needed for a long time
and have refused yourself. I had it delivered earlier. You can
thank me in advance.”
The older man’s patronizing tone made the young tribune
nervous. “What have you done?”
“Trust me, you’ll enjoy this.” The centurion
pulled back the tent flap for him to enter first. Oil lamps
lit the dim, smoky interior, woven mats covered the bare ground,
and meager furnishings filled the small space. It was simple
but a great deal more comfortable than the soldiers’ barracks.
As a junior officer from a patrician family, Lucius could afford
to live well.
“What do you think?” Quintus folded his arms over
his chest and grinned. “Just what you needed, eh? Clean,
well-bred and beautiful.”
Lucius’ eyes adjusted to the dim light and he stared
at the “present” waiting for him in the center of
the tent. A woman, bound at ankles and wrists, sat on the floor.
Her head was down and long, black hair shielded her face from
view.
“No! Quintus, if I’d wanted a captive, I’d
have taken one. Return her to wherever you got her from.”
“Too late. The slave trader is long gone. Besides, I
don’t believe you’ve had a woman since we started
this campaign. Six months of heavy combat and brutal conditions
with no relief for your tension? It’s not healthy for
any man.”
“I don’t want…” As he struggled for
words, a hot flame burned inside Lucius at the very idea of
having this woman at his command, subject to his every desire.
His cock stirred and thickened from the images in his mind.
More than anything at that moment, he wanted to see her face.
As if hearing his inner desire, the dark haired woman lifted
her head and stared at him.
Lucius took a step back. The rage and hatred flashing in her
dark brown eyes could surely incinerate him like the fires of
Hades. This woman had the perfectly chiseled features of a goddess
twisted into the frightening scowl of a demon.
*****
The coals of anger banked inside her flared to life as Helena’s
captors entered the tent. She examined their booted feet, strongly
muscled calves, and the hems of their tunics, but her gaze stopped
there. She listened to her buyer explain she was to provide
sexual release for his friend and bile rose in her throat. The
fury she’d suppressed during her weeks on the road in
the slaver’s caravan bubbled up inside her. Until now,
she’d maintained her composure and held her anger buried
deep within. It would accomplish nothing to lash out. The trader
would beat her or deny her food, and she would be no closer
to escaping and returning home.
Even as she was offered up to the Roman soldier’s inspection
and sold, she’d held her tongue and kept her eyes submissively
down-turned. The stocky, gray-bearded centurion had left her
in the tent of his superior officer, telling a manservant she
was meant to be a “present”. So Helena conserved
her hatred once more, and now she offered every bit of it to
the man who would dare to call himself her master.
The tribune said he didn’t want her but his eyes told
a different story. His blue gaze seemed to strip her of the
travel-stained robe she wore and see her naked body beneath.
That flash of lust was quickly hidden after he met her eyes
and acknowledged her anger. He glanced away, as if embarrassed
that she’d seen his desire.
“Come now, I understand you have some crazy ideals about
not using the female captives from the villages we sack, but
this woman is different. She’s bought and paid for, and
a lady besides. You’d be a fool to refuse such a generous
gift.”
“I can find my own companionship, Quintus. Thank you.”
“Fine, then don’t fuck her. Do what you like with
her. Pass her on to the men if you’re not interested.
They can always use fresh diversion.”
Helena hadn’t thought it possible for her anger to become
any greater. Rage, coupled with fear at the centurion’s
words, had her vibrating like a bowstring. She waited to see
how the other man would respond. There could be a worse fate
than being the whore of a Roman officer.
“Master Lucius.” It was the manservant who had
let Quintus bring her into the tent earlier. The man rose from
where he’d sat sewing a tear in a thick woolen cloak.
“I could use the extra help cleaning your clothes and
cooking meals. It would leave me more time to tend to your weapons
and battle gear. The woman could be useful in more ways than
one.”
“There you have it. Even your slave has more sense than
you. Accept my gift and use her…as you see fit.”
The pause and the centurion’s smirk told what he believed
Helena’s ultimate use would be. “Maybe…what
was your name?”
“Magnus, sir.”
“Maybe Magnus could take his pleasure of her when she’s
done helping with the work. No reason for him to abstain simply
because his master does, eh, Magnus?”
The servant’s blunt-featured face remained impassive.
“No, sir.”
All this talk of taking, having and using frightened her. Although
she’d long suspected sex was part of what her slavery
might entail, the months of traveling in the caravan with no
man molesting her had given her a false sense of security. The
trader had wanted to keep his wares clean. When the caravan
had stopped near the army encampment, Helena was sold to Quintus
as untouched as the day she was stolen from her home.
The trader had billed her as a virgin but it wasn’t true.
She was the widow of a Thracian aristocrat, and a land-owner,
having inherited her husband’s estate upon his death two
years ago. She was no blushing innocent, but neither had she
experienced sex with any man besides her husband.
Lucius shook his head as if coming to a decision. “All
right. Magnus, give her something to eat and drink. Quintus,
thank you for your thoughtfulness. I accept your gift in the
spirit it was intended. Now, if you don’t mind, I need
some time alone to write my report.”
Bowing, Quintus bid him farewell and left the tent.
Helena breathed a sigh of relief at his departure, then offered
her young owner another dagger-like stare. If she could keep
him from molesting her by the force of her furious glares, she
would do so.
Lucius met her gaze for a moment, then went toward her, pulling
a knife from its sheath at his side
“I won’t hurt you. You’ll be all right.”
He spoke slowly and loudly as if she were feeble or deaf. “You
don’t understand a word I’m saying, do you?”
He knelt to cut the rope binding her wrists. His hand holding
her clasped hands was warm and large, and he was careful with
the sharp blade, severing the cord without grazing her flesh.
After the rope fell away, she rubbed the sore, red marks on
her wrists and kept her gaze focused on her hands. She refused
to look at him although he appeared to be trying to catch her
eye. He was far too close, looming over her, his presence stealing
the air in her vicinity. She breathed easier once he turned
his back on her and walked across the floor toward the low pallet.
But it was a small tent, and he still wasn’t far enough
away for her liking.
He opened a chest and removed writing materials; parchment,
a quill, ink, a lap-size desk. Sitting down on the cot, he began
to write.
The servant, Magnus, gave her a bowl of thick stew, a piece
of flat bread, and a cup of wine. He stood watching her for
a moment, but she refused to eat in front of him. She held the
bowl and the bread until he went back to his mending.
“You can take over here when you’re done eating.
I hate sewing,” he told her.
“I don’t think she understands you.” Lucius
glanced up from his report and she felt his gaze resting on
her.
She waited until he was writing again, before she ventured
to look his way. His attention was on his scribbling quill so
she could study him without fear of being caught at it. To her,
he appeared much like all young Roman men with close-cropped
dark brown hair. He was clean-shaven, without a moustache or
fringe of beard to enhance his features, but he didn’t
need facial hair to do that since his jaw was strong. His straight,
prominent nose jutted over a deeply bowed upper lip and a full
lower one. His eyes were focused on his work, but she’d
noted their brilliant blue when he first regarded her. He wore
a sleeveless tunic and his biceps flexed as he leaned toward
the inkpot to dip his quill.
Helena dragged her attention from examining her captor to scan
the tent, assessing the possibility of escape. But there was
no place to go even if she could walk freely out the door. She
was in a foreign country, far from her homeland, in the middle
of an encampment of soldiers. She’d be raped and possibly
killed if she set one foot outside of this tent. She was as
much a prisoner as if she were shackled and chained to a dungeon
wall.
Helena stared at her handsome young “master” and
radiated her hatred of him and his people with every fiber of
her being.