Authors: Tessa Dawn
Chapter Eight
D
ante Dragona stiffened
his spine and bit down on his tongue, leaving a deep indentation in the flesh. He was trying
hard
not to react to the sight of Mina Louvet, the Sklavos Ahavi he intended to claim at the Autumn Mating, being dragged into the royal hall by an angry Malo Clan guard.
Part of his reaction was territorial, a dragon’s instinctive dislike of any other male touching his female, but another part of his reaction was sheer irritation—he had just about had it
up to here
with the slave’s disobedience.
What the hell had she been thinking?
Didn’t she know that the king would never suffer her insolence?
Not for a microscopic second.
He bristled inside, feeling his inner dragon awaken in the form of rising heat. It was itching to command his outer, living flesh to wrench the girl from the sentry’s paws and thrash her himself.
“Well, well, well. What do we have here?” Damian cackled, sauntering away from the dais toward the center of the floor, where the guard now stood with Mina. He strolled up to the Ahavi with blatant arrogance and gripped her harshly by the jaw. “Your suite of rooms is on the
second
floor of the castle,” he spat. He peered over his shoulder to make eye contact with Drake and snickered. “And I believe the rest of the castle is off limits after dark.” He locked eyes with his father, who was now leaning forward on the throne, watching the entire scene with increasing interest. “And the royal hall,
my father’s throne room
, is always off limits to the likes of you.” He removed his hand with an insolent flick of the wrist, causing her head to snap backward from the dismissive gesture.
Mina gulped, and Dante restrained a growl. He prayed that the impulsive girl would
just this once
hold her impetuous tongue, at least with Damian. He crossed the floor in five long strides to join them. “What is the meaning of this, Mina?” He held her gaze in an iron stare, commanding her absolute attention.
She gulped again, and her knees rattled together as if they might just buckle beneath her. “I…I couldn’t sleep. The fire went out in my hearth, and it was so incredibly cold in my chambers, I thought I might catch my death.” She fidgeted nervously with her hands, apparently hearing the double connotation in her words. “I couldn’t get it restarted, so I decided to search for another blanket—and to see if I could find some fresh kindling.” She averted her eyes, clearly recognizing the fragility of her story.
Damian glowered at her. “You’re lying,” he snarled. “There are plenty of blankets in the upper wardrobes, and if an Ahavi requires more of
anything
, she need only yank on a chain at the end of a hall and call for a servant.” He narrowed his gaze in disapproval. “Apparently, the only chain you are yanking tonight is ours.”
Dante nodded. It was the truth, and there was nothing he could say at this juncture to mitigate the situation or substantiate the lie. It was pitiful, and Mina knew it.
Mina blinked, trying to think fast on her feet. Apparently she agreed with her captors—her story was pure, unadulterated rubbish. “Yes, yes, I know. That’s true, but as I said: I couldn’t sleep. Insomnia, I think.” She bit her lip, like she knew she was drowning, and then she took another breath and pushed on. “So I thought a stroll might do me good, perhaps even warm me up.” The last word was spoken with an inflection, more like a question than a statement, and Dante shut his eyes and dropped his head, slowly shaking it from side to side.
“Enough,” he said, resurrecting his gaze in order to glare at her. He was trying to say
shut up
in so many words—the silly girl had no idea just how close to death she was standing. Taking a deep breath, he raised his chin and asked, “So you sought out a storage closet on the main floor, just beyond the
throne room
?” The question was going to be asked, so he may as well be the one to ask it. Maybe then, he could direct her answers.
Mina shook her head with vigor. “No.
No
. Not on purpose, anyhow. I just got lost, turned around. I wandered many halls before I stumbled across the back staircase, and then, when I turned to the left, I guess I just—”
Dante narrowed his eyes at her in a harsh, unambiguous glare:
Stop talking…now!
She immediately bit her lip again and waited, even as Damian began to laugh.
“Father?” Damian turned to regard the king, no doubt in an attempt to incite the monarch’s anger, and Mina took immediate advantage of the moment.
She reached out with a crooked finger and quickly hooked it inside Dante’s sleeve to get his attention, and then she just as rapidly pulled it back, stared right at him, and leaned slightly forward, raising her eyebrows in determination. She was speaking volumes with her expression and angling her head
just so
as if to say…
something
: desperation, fear, and urgency.
Dante took a step back.
What was she trying to tell him?
When Damian started to speak again, Dante held up his hand to silence him, still staring intently at Mina. “Tell me, Ahavi,” he said, “this insomnia, the conditions in your room; were they really that
urgent
?”
Mina squared her shoulders and raised her chin. “Yes. I felt that they were.”
At this, Damian lost his patience.
He spun around and sauntered toward the throne, wisely stopping before taking the first stair. He bowed his head. “Father,” he repeated coolly, “it may have felt urgent to this woman, but I think we all know better. She’s lying. And what’s more, a small indiscretion today will only lead to treachery and betrayal tomorrow. Rules are rules for a reason.”
Talk about going straight for the jugular.
The king was no stranger to the treacherous, manipulative ways of a Sklavos Ahavi who was allowed too much leeway with the rules, who had been given too much room to roam.
Dante said nothing.
The king would either seek more information or render a premature judgment.
Just like that.
And there was no bargaining with Demitri Dragona once he had chosen a course of action.
The king stood up, and the entire hall fell silent.
Drake leaned back against one of the six enormous pillars that lined the center of the hall and crossed his arms in front of him, even as Damian took a cautious step back, awaiting their father’s word.
“Which one are you?” the king bit out, pointing at Mina, his hard expression otherwise unreadable.
Mina turned toward the king and curtsied. Apparently, she at least had that much sense. “Your Majesty, I am Mina Louvet, a Sklavos Ahavi from the southern district of Arns.” She bowed even lower. “And I meant no disrespect.” She froze in that posture, her eyes plastered to the floor.
The king turned toward Drake, perhaps because he was often the most reasonable of the three princes. “She was chosen among the Ahavi, why?”
Drake cleared his throat. “They say she can speak many languages, that she has an intuitive understanding of foreign cultures. In that way, she yields us some advantage. She can act as a translator with our neighbors and an unlikely spy with our enemies.”
The king harrumphed. “Hmm.”
“And she’s supposed to be unusually bright,” Drake added. His voice neither rose nor fell, absent of conviction, either way.
The king chuckled merrily. “Apparently, not too bright.” He took a step forward, but he did not descend the stairway. “Our rules are not optional, Miss Louvet.”
Mina didn’t reply. She didn’t dare.
“Do you even understand the rules?” the king asked.
Dante hoped she understood the question: His father was testing her intelligence, her memory. If she said no, he would scorch her where she stood.
“Yes, Your Majesty,” Mina replied, continuing to hold her body and her head in a subservient posture.
“Yet, you broke them?”
Mina choked back a sob. “Yes, Your Majesty.”
“If I let you live, will you break them again?”
Mina stumbled to the side, clearly caught off guard by the bluntness of his words or the severity of her offense. Perhaps, now, she finally understood just how fragile a precipice she was standing upon—
if I let you live…
She caught her balance and groveled even lower. “No, Your Majesty.” Her face was the color of a pale harvest moon, yellowish white and absent of lucidity.
The king eyed Damian. “Son?”
He shrugged one shoulder in a gesture of disdain. “I say dispense with her. She’s only a woman. We can replace her, and I have no patience for insubordination.”
The king turned once again to Drake. “Prince?”
“Your will is my own,” Drake said, smart lad that he was.
It wasn’t that Prince Drake was cold and unfeeling, quite the contrary: The dragon had more compassion in his heart than most, but he had also lived for 146 years. And like the rest of them, he knew his father well. Any show of mercy would be seen as weakness, and more importantly, it wouldn’t further Mina’s cause. Demitri would ultimately do whatever he felt like doing, and more often than not, his choices were based solely on his passing moods.
“Dante?” the king asked, offering a seeking gaze.
Dante felt the moment like a heavy weight bearing down on his shoulders. Not unlike Damian, he took every incident of insubordination, every potential threat to the Realm, quite seriously, and a subject who could not follow the most basic rules was a loose cannon, an unpredictable element, something to be removed simply on principle. However, unlike Damian, he was not a sadistic egomaniac, and he would derive no personal pleasure in seeing a young female executed for such a petty offense.
Beyond even that,
this was Mina
.
He had fed from her, felt the inaugural stirrings of carnal desire for her body, begun to adopt a familial responsibility for her well-being, based on their potential future roles. He still believed she would give him strong sons and prove to be an ally one day, and he did not believe she was a threat to the Realm.
She could be tamed…
Or, at least, she could be corralled within reason.
He sighed, knowing that Demitri was merely a heartbeat away from incinerating the girl as she bowed, even as she continued to genuflect before him.
She would never see it coming.
And even a lengthy pause in Dante’s answer could set the volatile king off, illicit the sadistic reaction.
“She should not be allowed to display such impertinence before the throne,” Dante said firmly. “I think she should be soundly punished, succinctly taught a lesson, and if,
after that
, she commits another infraction, then her death will be on her own head.” He held his breath, waiting, trying to appear more nonchalant than he felt.
“I see,” the king replied. For all intents and purposes, he was probably trying to
gauge
his mood:
Do I feel like killing? Do I feel like watching? Would I rather go to bed?
His eyes flashed with resolution, and Dante knew the decision had been made. “Give her fifteen lashes with a spiked whip. If she lives, she will get another chance. If she dies, we will replace her. Perhaps, in this way, the gods will decide her fate.” He sat back down on his throne and gestured toward the elaborate, archaic cabinet on the eastern side of the room: The lavishly carved chest was twelve feet high and nearly eight feet wide. It sat flush against the interior wall like a statue of a feudal knight, and it contained various ornamental boxes and hidden compartments inside, all housing the king’s sadistic treasures, his favorite instruments of torture and amusement. “Do it now,” he said to no one in particular, sounding almost as bored as he did resolute.
Damian’s face lit up with zealous anticipation.
He strolled across the room to the massive cabinet, flipped open the ornamental doors, and chose a particularly gruesome but effective lash: It was a multilayered, braided leather strap, about ten feet in length, the thong protruding from a smooth wooden handle with the dragon’s crest carved into the stock. About every three to four inches along the leather, there were barbed spikes made of iron, each one embedded in the belly like a spiny thorn. He cracked the lash in the air, just for amusement, chuckling as it echoed throughout the grand royal hall, and then he grabbed a handful of leather ties to bind her wrists and ankles and headed straight toward Mina.
The Ahavi jolted.
She gasped, whimpered, and started to run.
Dante caught her around the waist and held her in place. “Do not,” he whispered in her ear, knowing the king would slay her as she fled before she ever reached the door.
Her eyes were as wide as saucers, and there was a deep primal fear radiating out of her pupils. She was utterly terrified and aghast. “Dante,” she whimpered piteously. “Oh gods, please.” Her beautiful, deep green eyes were shadowed with tears and haunted with desperation.
“Please.”
She gaped at him like she had never seen his face before, like he was more than a stranger, more than an enemy, like he was a mythological monster, something to be dreaded and feared. Her knees gave way to their trembling, and she crumpled to the floor, doubling over in anguish and grasping at his shirt, his trousers, his boots, as she fell. “Please,” she cried even louder. “My prince?” She sobbed. “Dante, I’m begging you.” She pleaded with her eyes, and in that solemn moment, Dante saw only a helpless little girl who would have rather died than face the torture awaiting her. “You can’t let him do this, my prince.” Her lips literally quivered. “I know I’ve displeased you, but…but
this
?” She gestured to the side, indicating Damian and the lash with her hand, unable to turn her head in such a terrifying direction. Her eyes grew even wider, and her thick lashes sloped beneath the weight of her tears. “Please.
Please.
” The last word was a pitiable question. “Dante?”