Authors: Tessa Dawn
Sir Robert Cross stirred uneasily, his upper lip twitching with disdain. He opened his mouth to comment, but a horrible snarl brought him up short: a terrible rumbling from within a nearby cluster of bushes, a roar so ferocious that it clapped like thunder, striking terror into the wicked mage’s heart…and Mina’s, too.
In the blink of an eye, two enormous feline beasts sprang forth from the bushes, their almond-shaped eyes ablaze with fury, their sharp, lethal fangs protruding from their gums like twin polished blades, their saliva-soaked lips twisted back in matching, maniacal snarls.
Lycanians!
Shifters had escaped from the beach.
“
Oh dear goddess of mercy
,” Mina breathed. They had broken through the soldiers’ barricades—they had breached the princes’ final line of defense.
She spun on her heels to run, her heart thundering in her chest, and everything happened at once: The first beast sprang toward the elusive figure in the shadows, toward Rohan the
shade
, and the second deadly creature sprang at Mina’s back.
Chapter Twenty
T
he battle at
the beach had waged on for five harrowing hours, leaving a bloody trail of carnage in its wake: humans missing their limbs and heads; shadows deflated into mere husks of their former selves; and warlocks withered from the inside out as their magic consumed their organs at the moment of their deaths.
Dante, Damian, and Drake had fought like wild things alongside their faithful subjects, struggling to keep the Lycanians at bay, desperate to contain them in the cove, needing to buy
just a little more time
until the king’s feral dragon could awaken at dawn to destroy the last of the initial invaders as well as the remaining fleet.
The sun typically rose at 6 AM, and by 2:30 AM, the battle had become precarious at best—the ferocious Lycanian beasts had attacked, pursued, and hunted their prey as if they possessed no fear of death. And in a fleeting, chaotic moment, when Dante, Damian, and Drake had been surrounded by the enemy, two feline shifters on the outskirts of the scuffle had bounded away from the beach, scurried into the night, and headed swiftly inland toward the provisional encampments, bent on wholesale slaughter.
And still, there were countless ships sailing their way.
Noticing the breach in the defensive battle line, Damian had called frantically to his brother for help: “Dante! Go after them! Don’t let them get away! If they reach the settlements, they’ll murder everyone in sight, and other shifters will follow. I’m fine.
We’ll be
fine!
”
Prince Drake, who had been facing off with a ten-foot serpent, its powerful tail coiled around his legs, had nodded with fury. “Go, Dante. You’re faster than me.” He hadn’t needed to say the rest:
and Damian is better equipped to control our
shades
and warlocks
.
Although Dante hadn’t liked the idea of leaving his brothers alone, he’d had no other choice. Damian had been right. If the shifters made it to the temporary encampment—or worse, if they made it to the actual settlements—there would be a night of mourning like nothing the Realm had ever seen. The dead would be too numerous to count.
Hesitating just long enough to see Drake dispatch the serpent, Dante had slowly nodded his head. “Father will be here at dawn,” he’d reminded his brothers, as well as the courageous soldiers, and then he’d slipped into the night.
Now, as he broke through a thick patch of brush and entered a small circular clearing, just yards away from the traders’ ravine, a shocking and terrifying sight drew his attention away from his quarry.
Mina
Louvet!
Damian’s Sklavos Ahavi.
Standing beneath the low-hanging branches of a maple tree, wearing a simple, dark brown doublet cross-laced with black threads, over a plain white underskirt, the attire of a house-servant, and she was facing off with a warlock and a
shade
.
What the hell was going on?
“You took my sister, and I want her back. We can either make a trade—my sister for my silence—or we can split hairs over the details and both get caught, in which case, we all die at the hands of our beloved prince. The choice is yours, and I don’t have a lot of time.” She was nearly trembling with barely leashed rage, yet she held her chin at an authoritative angle and tapped her foot on the ground with impatience. She was clearly desperate and channeling her fear.
Before Dante could make sense of the strange meeting—
how the hell had Mina made it to the traders’ camp, and what the heck did she hope to accomplish, other than losing her life?
—the two escaped shifters sprang from behind a nearby bush, one of them lunging toward the shadow, the other charging at Mina.
Dante sprang into action as if he had been born for this moment, careening into the werecat’s side and knocking him off target, pitching him away from the Sklavos Ahavi. The cat shifted position in midair, rotated its flexible spine so it could lunge at Dante’s throat, and forced them both downward toward the ground. The moment they hit dirt, the shifter sank its lethal fangs deep into Dante’s neck and began to tear at his flesh.
Dante stiffened and let out a roar, his inner dragon consumed with rage.
Shocked by the ferocity of his own feral nature, Dante jolted and bucked as a spiked tail shot forth from the base of his spine, crackled through the air like a brandished whip, and wrapped around the shifter’s neck with lethal dexterity and ease. Dante tightened his grip on the Lycanian’s throat, choked off the beast’s air, and yanked the werecat backward with his tail as he dislodged the wicked fangs. Wielding his tail once more, this time as a lever, he coiled it around the werecat’s waist, spun him onto his back, and pounced on top of him, glaring into his eyes with a matching bestial stare. He sucked in a deep breath of air and sent it back as a blistering column of fire, scorching the werecat’s features from the surface of his face.
Dante’s own wounds healed instantly, even as the werecat’s skull began to melt.
Yet it wasn’t enough.
Not nearly enough…
The beast had to die!
He had threatened the dragon’s
female.
“
Mine
,” Dante snarled in a red delusional haze, and then he dipped his head down to the shifter’s chest, released his own lethal fangs, and tore out the Lycanian’s heart with his teeth. In the space of a moment, he shot into the air, coiled like a serpent about to strike, and hurled his body at the second Lycanian, who was now devouring the
shade
. With one angry swipe of his claws, Dante punctured the beast from the side, wrapped his fist around the knobby spine, and yanked, removing the vertebrae from the shifter’s body.
The Lycanian sank to the ground, eyes still open wide in death, and the dragon whipped his head around in a daze, unconsciously retracting his tail.
Humans were rushing from the encampment, heading toward the fray, gawking in fear and surprise, even as the warlock sidled up behind the female, trying to conceal something in his right hand.
A
knife
?
Was he going to stab
her?
“Go back!” Dante roared at the crowd, his voice bellowing like thunder. “The next human who so much as glances this way goes up in flames!” As the ferocity of his wrath shook the ground, and the crowd took off running in the opposite direction, Dante took three long strides toward the Warlochian, crushed the hand that was holding the blade, and sank his fangs deep into the thick, ridged collarbone, just beneath the warlock’s throat.
The dragon’s female screamed as he drank, inhaling blood, heat, and essence.
“My prince, please, stop!
Don’t kill
him
.”
The dragon dismissed her pleas, intent on destroying this
thing
that had dared to threaten what was his.
“Dante!” Her voice was growing louder—
frantic
—more insistent. “Oh gods, Dante, please. He took Raylea! He has my sister! Or at least he might know where she is. The girl who gave you the doll—
he made her a slave
. If you kill him, I’ll never find her. Please, Dante; stop!”
The dragon snarled with displeasure and sucked even harder.
The female groped at his arm. “Oh, my prince, please…
please
…please stop.”
The dragon allowed the prince to listen, but only for a moment, and then he drank even faster.
Raylea.
The little girl with the doll.
The warlock’s skin was turning blue, his body beginning to tremble. His flesh was the temperature of ice, and his heartbeat was slowing…diminishing…rapidly shutting down.
He has my
sister.
He made her a
slave.
If you kill him, I’ll never find
her.
“Dante, please!
I’m begging you
.” The female was on her knees, yanking on his trousers. She was sobbing in desperation, but the warlock’s essence, his terror, and his power—
Great Master of Vengeance and Fire
, it tasted
so
good
.
As the body went limp in his arms, and the heart began to stutter, Dante lapped his tongue over the gaping wound and sank his fangs in deeper. He wanted it all. He needed it all. The moment of death would be utter bliss.
And then he felt the female’s hand pressed against his chest, quivering over his heart. “If you ever felt anything for me…if
any
part of you ever cared…then I beg of you, my prince, please help me save my sister.” She sounded so piteous and forlorn.
As the dragon took one final drugging pull from the warlock’s vein, Dante seared his consciousness into the warlock’s mind and sucked out his memories, transferring each vile transgression to his own lucid awareness.
The warlock’s body froze into a block of ice.
The dragon withdrew its fangs.
And Dante Dragona shoved the corpse forward, watching as it struck the ground with a thud and then splintered into a thousand brittle, irretrievable pieces.
*
Mina gazed at the frozen shards in shock.
Sir Robert Cross was dead, and Dante had killed him.
She would never find Raylea.
She took an unwitting step back, dropped her head in defeat, and let her arms fall to her side, simply trying to come to grips with the gravity of the moment.
Simply trying to reconcile the fact that Raylea was gone…forever.
A deep, angry growl rose in the dragon prince’s throat. “
Mina. Louvet. What the hell are you doing
here?
”
Her head shot up and she gulped. Dante was staring at her like he had half a mind to drain her dry as well. His mouth was coated in blood; his throat was convulsing with need; and his claws were still extended, adorning hands that were covered in hard leather scales. Yet and still, he looked deathly calm—his eyes were two vacant caverns—tranquil in a way she had never seen him before.
And Dearest Bringer of Rain
, the prince had grown a tail!
It was gone now, but still…
She took a second, cautious step backward and screamed as Dante opened his mouth, hurled a sweltering ring of fire in her direction, and caged her within the dancing, circular blaze. Turning to the left and then the right to appraise the fiery fortress, she wrapped her arms around her midriff and trembled. “My prince?” Her voice was a mere whisper of a sound.
He cocked his head to the side like some kind of animal, rather than a man, like he was straining to make sense of her words, like the
human
language was a foreign tongue. “I have no time for your games,” he spat in a gruff, guttural clip. “What are you doing here?”
Mina was about to curtsey, but the flames were much too close. Eyeing them through her peripheral vision, she nodded. “No games, milord. Life and death. The warlock that you killed was named Sir Robert Cross. He works for the high mage of Warlochia, Rafael Bishop, and several weeks ago, the day you rode to the district to execute the traitors, their band of slavers attacked my mother and my sister. They took Raylea prisoner and—”
Dante waved his hand through the air to silence her, and she instantly shut up. “I know this,” he grunted. “I absorbed his memories.”
Mina’s mouth dropped open in surprise, and she nearly shuddered with relief…
and hope
. “Just now? Before you killed him?”
Dante nodded coolly.
Her eyes filled with tears and she bit down on her lip. An emotional whimper still escaped, and she clasped her hand over her mouth to contain it. “Thank you,” she whispered into her own trembling palm, which was now quivering against her face.
He sighed, seeming to regain his composure. “You came here in the middle of the night, without Prince Damian’s permission, to do what? Confront a warlock? Provoke a
shade
, a
soul eater
? For what purpose? To try to somehow rescue your sister?”
Mina gulped, trying to hide her fear. “I know it sounds crazy, but I was desperate. I thought maybe, just maybe, Raylea might be here…in the traders’ encampment.”
“And you would somehow…what? Just stumble upon her?”
Mina shook her head. “I know it was a long shot, crazy, maybe even suicidal, but so what? What do I have left to live for, anyway? A life with Prince Damian? A life of torture, rape, and humiliation? Yes, Prince Dante, I risked
everything
to come here, including your brother’s wrath, which has already been promised to me, for a snowball’s chance in a dragon’s fire of saving my ten-year-old sister.” She took a cautious step forward, careful to avoid the dancing flames, and raised both hands in supplication. “How far would you have gone to save your twin?” The moment she said it she regretted it. “Oh gods, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean that. I—”
Dante waved his hand through the air, extinguishing the fire with a slight and simple gesture, and then he stepped forward into the space where the flames had just been and glided closer to Mina. He moved with the grace of a predatory animal, and he didn’t stop coming until his broad, powerful frame towered over hers.
Despite her resolve, Mina took a cautious step back—he was just too intimidating, his supernatural presence completely overwhelming.
“Sweet…rebellious…Mina,” he crooned, reaching out to stroke her jaw.
She flinched before settling her nerves and allowing his touch—as if she had a choice.
Tracing her cheek with the pad of his thumb, he whispered, “Raylea is in a cabin in the mountains of Umbras with a shadow named Syrileus Cain. The warlock who made the sale is dead.” Before she could speak, he pressed his forefinger over her mouth. “Shh. I will find her, and I will bring her home, return her to your parents. I promise you this.” He narrowed his gaze with conviction. “But you; you have to promise me that you won’t grow weary of serving the Realm.” His eyes scanned her visage as if he were
drinking her in
: first, her dark green eyes, and then, her raven-black hair. And his own sapphire-blue reflection deepened with some emotion that Mina couldn’t quite name. “Gods, you are so beautiful,” he said. “You always were.” The corner of his lips quirked up in the barest hint of a smile. “And smart. And crazy. And stubborn.” His smile turned into a frown. “And I do regret,
deeply
, what my father has done, but you cannot take such foolish chances, Mina. Whether he knows it or not, my brother needs your influence. He needs your gifts and your tenacious will. The Realm needs your strength.”