Authors: Tessa Dawn
Matthias crossed his arms over his chest, trying to make sense of the whole sordid tale. Despite the boy’s obvious conviction, none of it rang true. “And what does that have to do with me?”
The scribe huffed in exasperation, and then he steadied his resolve. “What was your mother’s name before she married your father?”
Matthias frowned. “Penelope.”
“Penelope
Fairfax
,” the child supplied.
Matthias jerked in surprise, growing intensely uneasy. “How did you know that?”
The boy ignored the question. “Is she still alive?”
Matthias shook his head. “No, she died in childbirth.”
The boy sighed. “Of course. They can’t birth a dragon without the help of a priest.”
Matthias snorted, his anger rising in a virulent, ascending wave. “That’s impossible!” he insisted, wholly unconcerned that the child was shuffling away. “I am
not
a dragon. As you have already pointed out, I am twenty summers old. I think I would know if I grew scales and breathed fire.” He instinctively glanced over his shoulder to check on the king and the looming beast he was becoming. The dragon’s scales were now fully formed, and the king’s spine had morphed into a tail—but for all intents and purposes, King Demitri seemed to be lost in a trance, cocooned in slumber, suspended in an unconscious state, although he still writhed in unspeakable pain.
As if emboldened by the visage of King Demetri, firmly ensconced in a preternatural shell, the squire found his courage. He raised his chin and puffed out his chest, commanding Matthias’s attention. “Ancient Lords of the Sky, Volume Five, Scroll Three:
And the dragons could only beget sons from the wombs of the sacred, and those sons could only become fully animated beasts over time, as the fire cured and ripened through the ages. But the sacred powers that made them immortal; these were gifted from father to son at birth, passed down through the dragon’s saliva through the taking of blood and heat. The kiss of a dragon father awakens an immortal son
.”
Matthias shifted uneasily, bracing his palms against the ground.
The powers were passed down through saliva, from father to son, through the taking of blood and heat
. He twisted back around in order to survey the horrendous, bloody throne room—
yet again
—and nearly recoiled at what he saw beneath the obvious, outer carnage: King Demitri has shared his saliva with each and every victim. He had taken their essence, their blood, and their heat. Yet Matthias was the only one who had survived…who had somehow arisen from the dead.
He shook his head like a rabid dog, enraged by the very implication.
No!
It simply wasn’t true.
Penelope Fairfax was not a Sklavos Ahavi whom his father had mistaken for a common maiden. She had not been the mistress—or the victim—of the king.
His father would have known.
Penelope would have told him.
Matthias’s mother—
bless her eternal soul
—was a mere mortal, a commoner, a fragile, unfortunate woman who had died in the prime of her life, unable to bring Matthias into the world because…
because
…
Because
why?
As an inexplicable panic swelled inside him, Matthias spun around to face the squire with barely concealed rage. “Don’t you ever speak those words again,
not to anyone
, and especially not to me! Rumors belong in taverns, sung by minstrels, or in the company of five-year-old girls as they play with their little dolls, not in the serious discussions that take place among men.” His voice grew in proportion to his angst. “I am Matthias Gentry, son of Callum Gentry, a blacksmith and a farmer, and Penelope Fairfax was my father’s first and only love. My
human
mother.” He stood up abruptly, sidestepped around the squire to reach for the door, and snatched the handle with a trembling fist. “I do not know why
or how
I survived this bloody massacre, but for whatever reason,
I did
. And now? I am free.” He wrenched at the large ornate handle, and the whole of the iron broke loose from the door before crumbling inside his palm. “Bloody hell!” he cursed, slamming his fist into the panel. As the thick, sturdy oak exploded upon impact, splintering into a dozen fractured pieces, a conical orange flame shot from Matthias’s mouth and singed the remaining layers of fortification, leaving a charred hole in the center of the door.
Thomas stood slowly, cowering beside Matthias. He stared up into the male’s angry eyes and pointed at the scorched, missing circle. Taking a cautious step forward, he gently shoved at what remained of the door and pushed it open. “I agree: You need to get out of here. But first, I think you need to see the hidden page for yourself, and then maybe, just maybe, you should read a little bit more about dragons…and find a Blood Ahavi. There are a couple we can trust.”
Matthias frowned, still reeling from what had just happened. “Wh…
why
…a Blood Ahavi?”
Thomas squared his shoulders and planted his feet, regarding Matthias gravely. “Because you need to
feed
before you hurt someone.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Dracos Cove
M
ina leaned against
a thick sectional tent-post at the rear of the large provisional shelter and burrowed her bare feet deep into the sands of the beach, offering a heartfelt prayer of thanks to the goddess of mercy: The tent of Umbras was about one mile east of Dracos Cove, and Mina was more grateful than words could express that Damian had chosen to meet with his soldiers immediately upon arriving at the barracks. In fact, she could have fallen to her knees and wept with gratitude at the mere fact that she was finally—well, mostly—alone.
She stared beyond the heavy regal canopy out at the bustling encampment—with all its scurrying soldiers, nervous horses, and crudely erected tents—and endeavored to fix her gaze on the dark blue waters of the northern sea. Indeed, it was as restless as the camp. She dug her toes into the sand, reveling in the feel of the soft, warm granules as they tickled the heel of her foot, and she sighed.
She couldn’t believe she was here.
Standing at the back of an enormous, magisterial tent, beneath the flag of Castle Umbras.
As a child, her dreams had been so simple, her desires so easy to define: She had loved to plant tulips in the fall and await their colorful blooms in early spring; she had envisioned getting married one day, perhaps to Matthias Gentry, and filling the chapel with the same lovely flowers that grew in the garden. She had imagined a family and a simple life, and she had cherished her life in Arns with her family. It all seemed like a lifetime ago—just a fanciful childhood story in the pages of an ephemeral book—a fleeting castle built in the sand, washed away by a tide of indifference, by all the cold, lonely years lived at the Keep.
She absently smoothed her skirts as she brought her attention back to the present, swallowed the bitter pill of her new reality, and surveyed the upheaval before her.
Here she
was…
Surrounded by shadow-walkers and Umbrasian soldiers, supernatural servants of the Realm, who averted their eyes when she passed by, genuflected when they spoke, and pretended as if her role was something sacred. If she didn’t know better, she would almost feel like royalty, someone of great importance and stature.
Oh, but she knew
better.
Damian had made her true position crystal clear.
In truth, each and every fighter on the beach was loyal to Prince Damian—and Prince Damian, alone. Their only job was to serve their master, and if their master included his new Sklavos Ahavi in that obligation, then so be it. But make no mistake; they would slay her where she stood if the prince commanded it.
Dismissing the morbid thought, Mina spun around to nod at a maidservant who had been hovering behind her for the last ten minutes, gawking at Mina like she held the secrets of the universe in her eyes, Mina forced a congenial smile. “Daughter, would you mind giving me a little space?” The familial term meant
daughter of the
Realm
.
The servant girl curtsied, causing her light brown ringlets to bounce, and took two insignificant steps back, bowing her head in supplication.
Mina bit her tongue—that wasn’t exactly what she meant. Shaking her head in frustration, she tried to ignore the servant girl’s presence as she bustled around the room, unpacked several items from her trunk, and placed them in a heavy armoire. It was mindless work and a
stupid
necessity—the fact that so many accessories had been brought to the beach and stored in the tent, just a mile away from a bloody battle.
Just the same, she could use the distraction.
She needed a moment to think.
Mina was trying desperately to hold it all together. She wanted to take each and every horrific event, all the madness from the last twelve hours, and lock it away somewhere safe in her mind. She could always retrieve the details later, when she was better equipped to look at it…to think about it…to
feel it
.
Her stomach clenched as her mind failed to obey her directive, as thoughts of Matthias and his hideous death stole into her consciousness like a thief in the night: the fact that he had been sacrificed to such an evil, barbaric king, the fact that he had expired in such a brutal, gruesome way, the fact that he had been captured while trying to bring news of Raylea…to Mina.
Bitter tears stung Mina’s eyes as she folded several useless sections of linen, slips to adorn Damian’s pillows, into neat little squares and struggled not to imagine what the king had done to Matthias. It was too gruesome to contemplate, too terrible to envision. Yet and still, the pain of it gnawed at her gut, and she knew she could not live with the outcome. Somehow—
someway
—she had to rescue Raylea. Matthias could not die in vain.
Mina shivered and quickly donned a cloak to stave off the chill. She had no idea how to find Raylea, let alone how to stage a rescue and bring her back home, especially with Damian Dragona standing watch as her new gatekeeper.
Heck, she didn’t even know if she would live to see the sunrise.
Flashing back to ten o’clock that morning, she tried to recall every single detail of Matthias’s news, to put all the jumbled pieces together in her mind. She envisioned the diagram he had sketched in the dirt and rehashed the various particulars: So Margareta and Raylea had been attacked in Forest Dragon, near Devil’s Bend, more than likely by a band of roving slave-traders. The slavers were led by Rafael Bishop, the Warlochian high mage, and they would have taken Raylea to some sort of holding station, perhaps for a couple of days, before traveling west to the shadow lands—
to Umbras
—to sell her to a
shade
. That meant Raylea was being held in Damian’s division of the Realm. She was being held in Mina’s new territory.
The Sklavos Ahavi clenched and unclenched her fists as her determination grew. A snow-white owl, perched on a nearby post, hooted three times and turned its head in her direction—a significant omen to be sure—but what did it mean? Were the hoots indicative of three major events: Raylea’s capture, Matthias’s imprisonment, and Mina’s ensuing misfortune, being given to Damian as his slave? Or did it refer to the future: three days, three months…three years?
She sighed, having no way of discerning the meaning.
She did not possess the gift of sight.
“Mistress Ahavi.” The voice of the maidservant, meek and uncertain, drew Mina away from her contemplation. The girl cleared her throat, wrung her hands together nervously, and clutched at her skirts until her knuckles turned white.
“Dear lords,” Mina observed. “What is it?”
The maid licked her lips. “Um, I…forgive me for interrupting your
space
, but I was wondering…well, I was hoping…” Her voice trailed off.
Mina relaxed her shoulders, trying to appear less intimidating. “Yes?”
The girl tugged at her skirts again.
“You’re going to worry the thread right out of that fabric if you’re not careful,” Mina said, trying to relax her. “Please, just take a breath and say what you have to say. I don’t bite.” Considering the current situation, the fact that they were both standing in the bedchamber of an immortal dragon prince, it was probably the wrong thing to say.
Nonetheless, the maid curtsied with appreciation.
Great Nuri,
Mina thought,
she’s so nervous.
“Mistress Mina?”
Mina smiled. At least she was using her name this time. “Yes,” she repeated—once again—with inordinate patience.
“May I”—the servant looked away, her nervousness getting the best of her—“May I ask you for a favor?”
Mina frowned. She was hardly in a position to grant well-wishes, let alone favors, to anyone, and she didn’t even know this girl. “What kind of favor, child?” She crooked her finger, bidding the girl to come closer, out of the shadows.
The maid reclaimed the two meager steps she had surrendered when Mina had asked her for some space. “Just something…um…I know it isn’t proper, but I was just hoping—”
“Out with it,” Mina said, hoping her voice did not reflect her growing suspicion.
The girl nodded briskly. “My older sister, Anna; she traveled with the caravan from the
commonlands
to the encampment, and she’s staying with other members of our clan. Would you…could you possibly…would you be kind enough to hold her hand? Just for a moment or two.” She rushed the last words.
Mina frowned in confusion:
Would she be kind enough to hold the woman’s hand?
She shook her head, dismissing the thought—first things first: “The caravan? What do you mean?
What caravan
? Why would commoners travel to this volatile, hazardous cove and place themselves in such grave danger? For what purpose?”
The girl seemed to relax as if she were finally faced with a series of questions she could clearly answer, a subject that didn’t make her squirm. “The caravan of merchants and laborers, those who have traveled to the beach to support the soldiers, to feed them, attend to their wounds, build weapons and repair apparatus, those who are here to support the armies and serve the king.”
Mina nodded.
Of course.
War was more than a clash of two opposing forces on a particular battlefield. It was a multi-spiked wheel, a burgeoning enterprise, and it required the efforts of many to keep the wheel turning, not just the heroes and warriors who fought on the front lines. “Are there caravans from all the provinces?”
“Yes, mistress,” she answered quickly. “All have something to contribute.”
Mina bit her bottom lip, deep in thought. “I see. And so your sister—
Anna
—she is part of the convoy from the
commonlands
? What does that have to do with me? And why would she wish to hold my hand?”
The girl shifted her weight nervously from foot to foot before twirling a lock of her light brown hair into what was surely to turn into a knot.
“Please,” Mina encouraged, “speak freely. You don’t have to be afraid. I would never harm you in any way.”
The girl let out an anxious sigh, and then she raised her chin. “My sister Anna has been wed for seven years now to a wonderful man, a shoemaker named Jarett, and he treats her so very well. But…” Her eyes clouded with tears. “She has suffered five horrible miscarriages, and the last one almost took her life. According to the midwives, there is no help for it, nothing they can do. The only cure for her malady is to hold the hand of a sacred, of a Sklavos Ahavi.” She genuflected with her hands. “I know it’s improper—and I really shouldn’t ask—but we just can’t bear to see Anna suffer again, and we certainly can’t bear to lose her. You see; she’s pregnant again.”
Mina’s heart went out to the poor girl and her family. She knew all too well what it felt like to nearly lose a sister—wasn’t that why she was willing to risk her own life and well-being in order to search for Raylea? Although she had no personal belief in the ancient superstition, she understood the power of
belief
. She smiled softly. “What is your name?”
“Jacine.”
“Even if I was willing, Jacine, you do understand that it is forbidden for me to interact with any of my lord’s subjects, unless he is present, don’t you? Outside of our private guards and my personal servants—” She cleared her throat and crossed her hands neatly over her skirts to disguise her fear. “—the prince would be displeased.” She didn’t say what she really thought:
And when Prince Damian is displeased, bones get crushed, virtue gets taken, and lives no longer have any value. He’s a
monster.
The look of instant disappointment and heartfelt desperation that swept over the girl’s face made Mina want to cringe. Jacine nodded slowly and swiped at a tear. “I understand,” she murmured sadly. “It was a lot for me to ask.”
No
, Mina thought,
it was brave and kind…and compassionate.
She was just about to follow up, perhaps offer some words of encouragement, offer to say a prayer on Anna’s behalf, when three Umbrasian guards sauntered by, about five yards from the rear of the tent.
“Sir Robert Cross is here at the encampment.” One of them spoke to the others in guttural, informal Umbrasian. “He brought the latest…catch.”
“One of Rafael Bishop’s girls? A slave or a prostitute?”
The crude, stocky guard, the one who had spoken first, cupped his groin and cackled, casting a sidelong glance at Mina and her maidservant. “A fifteen-year-old slave, not as fancy as that one, but fresh from the market.”
They all laughed in unison, feeling utterly confident that their words were unintelligible, that neither Mina nor her lowly maidservant could understand a single word they were saying. They couldn’t have been more wrong. Mina spoke perfect Umbrasian in all of its bastard forms.
“How much for a virgin?” the third sentry, who was missing half his front teeth, asked.
Mina’s ears perked up: So Rafael hired his mercenaries to catch them, various Warlochians probably hid them, and Sir Robert Cross sold them—that was important information.
And Rafael was here, close to the Dracos Cove
camp.
“Depends on whether you want to use or to buy,” the first guard answered.
“I heard he sold a ten-year-old virgin from a
commonlands
’ farm to Syrileus Cain, just a few weeks back, for a full fifteen coppers. If the untouched babes garner fifteen, she’ll probably go for ten.” The thickset guard raised his eyebrows in appreciation, and Mina bit back a reflexive gag, keeping her eyes fixed ahead: She pretended to stare at the ocean. She pretended to be utterly oblivious to the vile conversation.