Authors: Tessa Dawn
As Damian drew closer, the king cleared his throat. “Damian,” he said brusquely. “The lashing was your brother’s idea, and this slave seems to expect mercy from
him
. Give him the whip.”
Mina shuddered, and her mouth gaped open in shock.
Dante showed no reaction whatsoever.
He had expected as much to happen.
Damian declined his head in deference and extended the lash and leather ties to Dante, smiling as his older brother gripped the handle and slid the wrist-loop around his arm. “As you will, Father,” Damian said. He winked at Dante and took a casual step back, copping a lean against a nearby post.
Dante held the ties in his left hand and tested the weight of the lash in his right.
His father was watching everything.
As always…
Such endless tests of obedience.
He cracked the whip soundly, sending it sailing overhead through the air. He measured its movement, felt for the subtle motion of the fall, and memorized the
pop
of the crack. Satisfied, he then looped it over his shoulder and bent toward Mina, flexing to lift her from the ground.
Chapter Nine
M
ina tried desperately
to scurry away from Dante.
She kicked her feet in a useless, backward motion, sliding helplessly against the floor. She twisted this way and that, hoping to break free of his iron grasp, to no avail. And she tugged frantically against his powerful arms before she finally ceased her struggling and went limp at his side.
She simply could not believe this was happening.
It was too horrific for
words.
Yes, she understood that she had taken a risk when she chose to seek him out, especially near the throne room; and yes, she knew that the king might kill her if she got caught. But this archaic torture? It was impossible to comprehend. Being ripped apart—flesh, muscle, and bone—by a barbaric lash, like some sort of animal, some sort of seditious traitor; it was more than her mind could process.
And Dante?
The prince who would one day claim her—wed her, lie with her, father her children—he was going to do the evil deed with his own hand.
Oh, Great Spirit Keepers
, Mina wanted to die then and there.
She had always been strong. She had always had a high threshold for pain. She had always been able to endure the unendurable, or at least she thought she had, but no woman could withstand a punishment such as this: the feel of the lash biting into her skin, the insult of the barbs grasping her muscles, flaying them free from her bones.
And over and over…and over?
Fifteen
times?
He would kill her.
There was no question in her mind.
She felt like she was drifting far away in a tunnel, like blackness was overwhelming both her and the room, as Dante’s strong, firm hands, the ones she had almost trusted just days ago,
the ones who had given her Raylea’s doll
, grasped her by the shoulders, tugged her onto her feet, and began to drag her toward one of the tall imperial columns in the middle of the hall.
No.
No!
Oh dear Spirit Keepers in the afterworld, no.
She didn’t know if she was screaming. She didn’t know if she was crying or fighting or clawing for her freedom. It all felt so surreal. She only knew that she could not bear this—she could not survive this—and she had to make it stop.
She had to make it stop.
“Dante…Dante…
Dante
…” She heard his name coming from her lips like a mantra or a prayer, as if from some great distance, floating through an ever-darkening channel of disbelief. “No, Dante;
please
.” She was sobbing like a baby. She had never felt so helpless, or desperate, or terrified in her life.
“Mina.” His resilient voice cut through the fog, even as he secured her arms around the post and began to bind her wrists with the thongs, tying them high above her head. His weight felt oppressive against her back, yet she prayed it would never leave, that he would never leave, for once he stepped away, the whipping would begin.
No!
“Mina!” His voice was harsh now, almost angry, unyielding.
Her head fell back and she managed to peek at him from beneath tear-drenched lashes, her lips quivering, her eyes leaking like a sieve, mucous dripping out of her nostrils.
He tightened the bindings on her wrists and secured them swiftly to a notch in the post so she couldn’t pull away. She tugged against them and tried to kick backward in his direction, which was the worst thing she could do: He unhooked the ties, raised them another several inches until she was standing on her tippy-toes, almost hanging off the post, and then refastened her wrists against the higher notch to keep her from gaining leverage. “Oh gods, Dante…” She was panicking now, beginning to hyperventilate, ready to come apart.
Dante pressed his sturdy upper body against her back and anchored her head from behind with his powerful hands, as if to demand her full attention. He bent his head forward, and his thick black hair fell about her shoulders and chin, shrouding them in a dark silky curtain of madness.
She was going to go insane. “Please, please…please.”
He slid his hand forward and covered her mouth, nearly brushing his lips against her left ear. As his warm breath wafted across her lobe, she shivered.
This was really
happening.
This was going to happen, and there was nothing she could do to stop it.
“Mina,” he whispered in her ear. “Why did you come to the throne room? What were the
urgent
conditions in your bedchamber?”
She blinked several times, trying to gather her wits. She couldn’t think. She couldn’t reason. She was about to die, but then there was…there was…
Tatiana.
And the Sklavos Ahavi was still upstairs, lying on Mina’s bed, suffering and probably dying as a result of Damian’s cruel machinations.
Oh gods, that’s why she had made this sacrifice to begin with.
For Tatiana.
Somehow, a strange clarity enveloped her; it descended upon her from nowhere, and she was able to find her words in the midst of her terror. “Tatiana,” she whispered.
“What?”
“Tatiana—the other Ahavi, the one with auburn hair.” She winced from the stretch in her back. “Damian beat her. He raped her.” She drew in a ragged breath. “She’s in my room, and she’s dying.”
Dante froze against her. He almost seemed to quit breathing, and then he slowly stepped back, looked down toward her feet—she could only see his profile—and waved Drake over to the column. “Hold her feet while I remove her dress.”
Mina screamed.
That was
it.
This was utter insanity, and she was beyond despondency.
Within moments, Drake appeared at the post, and she could have sworn Dante bent over and whispered something in his ear,
something about
Tatiana
. But then she heard the back of her dress tearing, ripping open. Her chemise was swiftly removed, and the cold, stale air of the Great Hall kissed her bare skin like a brutal lover, her flesh now bared to the room.
She began to scream in earnest, over and over, like a wounded beast.
Dante stepped forward one last time and wrapped his hands around her throat. He didn’t tighten his fingers or try to choke her. He just bent once more to her ear. “Listen to me, Mina.” His words were guttural and imposing, and the force of each syllable felt like stiff, unseeded cotton being stuffed into her ears. “You need to scream like you are in the worst agony of your life, like you wish you could crawl through this post and disappear. I want you to hang from this column like you are dying, and you’d better make it convincing—
like your life depends upon it
—because it does.”
*
Dante took ten measured steps back from the column, exactly the amount needed to wield the whip with lethal efficiency, and then he waited for Drake to address their king.
“Father,” the youngest dragon prince said in a lackadaisical tone of voice.
The king acknowledged him with a slight tilt of his head.
“If it does not offend, I have no interest in the outcome of this proceeding.” He gestured casually toward the post where Mina stood on the tips of her toes, trembling and panting in fear, waiting for Dante to begin her beating. “I am not particularly interested in this specific Ahavi.” Now this was a risk. He was giving away his preference for the Autumn Mating—
was it Tatiana or Cassidy
? Dante wondered—and while the statement might very well backfire in the future, he had to sound convincing now. “At any rate,” Drake pressed on, “I would rather continue working on the figures, on the taxes, if you please.” He bowed his head in silent obeisance. “May I take my leave?”
The king pursed his lips together in thought, and then he grunted, not seeming to care one way or the other. “Very well.” He dismissed his last-born son with a flick of his wrist.
Dante waited until the dual heavy doors to the hall opened and closed behind Drake, knowing that he would head directly to Mina’s chambers to see about the other Sklavos Ahavi, Tatiana Ward. Once Drake was gone and his footfalls could no longer be heard receding down the corridor, he resumed his aggressive posture. “At your command, Father.”
The king sat back in his throne and nodded, and just like that, Dante drew back the whip, cracked it bluntly in the air, and pitched it forward toward Mina’s back.
The strike was deafening.
The leather sliced at an angle, making initial contact with Mina’s upper right shoulder and then angling down across her slender spine to pare her narrow waist. She jolted and screamed, her entire body shuddering from the violent contact, and Dante drew in a deep, steadying breath, braced his feet further apart, and struggled not to stagger.
Do not wince. Do not cry out. Do not show a reaction,
he told himself, biting down so hard on his tongue that he drew his own blood.
Fifteen, fourteen, thirteen
…
He counted the piteous lashes down as he wielded them, one after the other, throwing all the strength he had into their sting.
At ten, he almost faltered.
His vision grew blurry, and he wondered if he could continue. He clenched his eyes shut, but only for a moment, and then he forced them open, determined to press on.
Nine, eight, seven, six…
Mina dangled, limp against the post. She still continued to scream, but her cries had changed to guttural moans and whimpers, her body swaying more than trembling with each strike of the lash. She was doing well; whereas, Dante felt the magic slipping—he had to maintain just a little bit longer.
Focus
, he told himself.
Hold the
spell.
Five, four, three, two…
He was going to vomit. The pain was unbearable.
Every lash, every spike, every bite of the whip had been transferred from Mina’s flesh to his own. Every ounce of pain and agony, every moment of terror and disgrace, was mystically contained, not in her delicate flesh, not biting deep into her trembling muscles, not tearing away at her shoulders—but at his.
Dante Dragona had transferred the lashing from Mina’s back to his own. The whip might have seemed to strike her skin, but it was his that was flayed to the bone. The illusion of crimson anguish, the sight of so many ghastly rivulets of blood, might have appeared on her back, but it was his flesh that was oozing, seeping, and broken. Thank the gods, he was the only Dragona born with the sacred magic, and the only one with occasional second sight.
His knees began to buckle beneath him, and he stiffened his spine once more, almost passing out from that single, vertical gesture.
One more.
He could endure one more.
Thwack!
The whip crackled through the air, and his fist began to tremble. Turning to face his father, he inclined his head in a gesture of deference—or at least he thought he did;
he hoped he did
—and then he began to make his way to the column.
He untied Mina’s wrists as if in a dream, working the knots like someone in a fog. He caught her body as it slumped from the pole and fell into his arms, and then he groaned inwardly as her weight pressed mercilessly against his battered flesh. He forced his powerful hamstrings to contract, his calf muscles to flex, as he pushed himself upward with all his strength, in order to heft her into his arms. No longer knowing which way was up, he somehow managed to toss her over his shoulder and stroll forward out of the throne room.
Bless the Spirit Keepers, his father let them
go.
Even Damian simply stood and watched his retreat.
The moment the doors closed behind him, he stumbled, groaned, and dropped Mina from his shoulder onto her own two feet. “Help me up the stairs to your room,” he grit out between trembling lips. “And hurry.”
Mina gasped, momentarily speechless. She seemed utterly stunned that her body wasn’t damaged, that her skin wasn’t raw, and she instinctively placed her hand on his back as he bent over in agony. When she drew back a palm covered in blood, the realization began to set in. “Oh Dear Ancestors,
Dante
…how…
why
?”
He snarled, unable to speak, not wanting to get caught before they made it down the main corridor, through the receiving hall, and up the grand staircase to the second floor. “Now, Mina,” he growled.
She nodded brusquely and quickly slid her slender shoulder beneath his arm, pressing hard against his side in order to sustain as much of his weight as she could on her diminutive frame.
She opened her mouth to speak and then closed it.
What could she possibly say?
Even Dante understood that words were wholly inadequate.
Finally, as she struggled to help him up the staircase and down the upper hall, she murmured, “Lean on me, my prince. I’ve got you.
I promise.
Just hang on.”