Authors: Tessa Dawn
She moaned in contentment, and he began to explore her body with his confident hands: first, her back, then her shoulders, then her arms; next, her waist, then her hips, and her thighs; finally, her buttocks, then her stomach…and her breasts. His exploration was both gentle and strong; his mouth was both hungry and sweet; his body was equal parts dominant and acquiescent—taking, giving, exchanging—until she found herself virtually groping at his masculine form, stunned by the strength of her need.
Sensing her growing desire, he growled in her ear, rolled them both over, and pinned her beneath him.
Mine.
He mouthed the word, and Mina shuddered.
Tugging at the laces of her bodice, he at last freed her breasts and drew a taut pink areola deep into the cavern of his mouth, where he began to suckle, taste, and tease, tantalizing each and every nerve she possessed with the skill of a philanderer and the mastery of a god.
The heel of his hand found her heat, and he rotated it in maddening circles, causing her to cry out in astonishment, shock, and awe. She writhed beneath him and arched her back in offering:
Sweet goddess of mercy
, the dragon had set her on fire, and he’d yet to breathe a single flame.
“Oh, gods, Dante…”
She let the cry of passion slip, and the entreaty called his beast. His eyes flamed red; his head fell back; and his manhood jerked against her stomach, growing massive and engorged. Before she could react to the strange sensation, he was bunching up her skirts, tugging at the ties of his breeches, and sliding out of his trousers.
She blinked three times, and her undergarments were being tossed to the ground, even as he rose above her and locked his gaze with hers. “Mine,” he growled again, sending her entire body up in flames. “I want to hear you say it.”
Mina gasped in fear and anticipation as he rocked forward, positioned his hips between her thighs, and nestled the head of his desire against her core. She panted, trying to keep from groaning, and her eyes latched onto his, like a moth to a flame.
“Say it.” He froze: waiting…watching…trembling with need.
“Yours,” she whispered softly, and from the very depths of her heart, she meant what she said.
A wisp of smoke wafted from his nostrils, and he looked positively magnificent in his raw, primal need, cloaked in pure, primordial hunger. And then to her stark surprise and wonder, a pair of pitch-black leathery wings punched through his back, enfolded her in a midnight embrace, a satin cocoon, and he thrust his powerful hips forward, making them one.
With patience and adept perception, Dante led her beyond the pain, taking her to new heights and sensations, until at last, they rose together to the Land of Enchantment, climbing greater and greater peaks until they hurtled over the edge—
together
—and slowly drifted back to the Dragons Realm.
Part Three:
Dragons Lair
“Unless a serpent devour a serpent it will not become a dragon. Unless one power absorb another, it will not become great.”
~ PROVERBS QUOTES
Chapter Twenty-two
I
t was around
five AM when Mina thanked the trader-camp guards for their escort, ducked into the tent of Umbras, and quickly hurried to her bedchamber. It had been a simple and effortless feat for Dante to enter the traders’ minds, convince them that the Sklavos Ahavi from Umbras had been sleep-walking in the night, and compel them to return her safely—
and quickly
—to the tent of Umbras, where she would remain securely tucked away until the end of the battle. They had even traveled by horseback in order to make up for lost time.
A sly smile tugged at the corners of Mina’s mouth, and she pursed her lips to keep it from showing: While the story may have been implausible—in fact, it was a bit ludicrous to believe a sleeping woman could’ve traveled such a distance—mind control was an amazing thing. The three traders had bought Dante’s lie hook, line, and sinker; and in their conviction, they had convinced Damian’s guards of the same, using a very persuasive argument. It didn’t hurt matters
at all
that the Umbrasian guards were terrified of Damian. In fact, they had been so horrified upon learning that their mistress had slipped away into the night, so fearful of Prince Damian’s reprisal, that they were more than eager to settle the entire affair, swiftly, and in secrecy, without ever alerting their prince. Now, as Mina dismissed her maidservant and her pregnant sister, Anna, she truly only wanted one thing…
Sleep.
She was mentally exhausted and physically spent, completely overwhelmed by an inner cauldron of conflicting emotions, and totally drained by the gravity of what had transpired between her and Dante. She absently pressed her hand to her lower belly and shivered, heading toward her bed…toward
Damian’s
bed.
She shook her head to dismiss the morose thought.
She would think about that later.
Dimming the wick on the lantern atop the bedside table, she crawled beneath the covers, snuggled against the soft feather-stuffed pillow, and was just about to close her eyes when she saw something move in the shadows, a figure, crouched low, behind a heavy wooden trunk.
She gasped and sat up straight.
The guards knew better than to enter her chamber without first announcing their presence.
“Who’s there?” she called into the darkness, and just like before, the faint hooting of an owl echoed three times outside the apron of the tent, and the hairs stood up on the back of her neck.
Three owls.
Three appearances.
Three omens?
First, when she realized that Raylea was in Umbras; then, when Dante decided to give her a child; and now…
what
?
The lean, preadolescent figure of a young boy hastened forward, scurrying from behind the trunk like a startled mouse. “It’s just me, mistress. Thomas. Thomas the squire.”
Mina rubbed her eyes, reached for the lantern to turn up the wick, and strained to get a closer look. “Thomas?” She pulled the covers up to her chin. “Whatever are you doing here?”
The youngster sighed. “Apologies, mistress Ahavi. I…I have…news.”
Mina slid from beneath the sheets, tucked her toes into a pair of waiting slippers, and donned a nearby robe. She stood anxiously at the side of the bed. “What kind of news?”
Thomas averted his eyes. “It might be easier to just show you.” With that, he waved his hand toward the deepest pocket of shadows, a triangular cavity behind a heavy armoire, and a tall, familiar form stepped out.
Mina jolted. “Matthias!” At first, she could hardly believe her eyes, but after scrutinizing the male a half-dozen times—his wavy blond hair fastened in a leather thong; his lean but muscular frame, carried with informal confidence; his deep blue eyes sparkling in the lantern light—she knew without a doubt it was her dear friend and childhood playmate, Matthias Gentry.
But how?
“Dearest goddess of mercy,” she mumbled absently, “is it really you?” She brought her hand up to her mouth. “I thought you were dead. I thought the king…executed you.”
Matthias stepped further into the heart of the light and nodded his head. “He did,” he said in a calm, steady voice. “But…I didn’t stay dead.”
Mina shivered. She padded to the edge of the bed, wrapped her trembling arms around his shoulders, and hugged him with all of her might. And then, as a sudden wave of dizziness came over her, she sat down on the edge of the mattress and just stared blankly ahead, her mouth gaping open in shock.
Matthias smiled. “I assume, because you are a Sklavos Ahavi, you were taught everything of import at the Keep?” Mina nodded warily, and Matthias continued. “So you must know that when a dragon is born, his father
awakens
his powers through the exchange of saliva and blood—it is called the dragons’ kiss—and it is in that moment that he becomes an immortal being.”
Mina cocked her head to the side in confusion, much like a bewildered canine, and stared blankly at Matthias, waiting for his words to make sense.
“King Demitri
fed
from all the prisoners. He drained us as he executed us, consuming the core of our essence, and it destroyed everyone…but me.” He let out a slow, deliberate breath, waiting for her to fully comprehend his words.
Comprehension didn’t come.
Mina looked quizzically at Thomas, and then she cocked her eyebrows, feeling more than just a little sense of dread. “I don’t understand,” she whispered, still trying to process the cryptic words. “Why didn’t it destroy you?”
Thomas the squire cleared his throat and dove into the conversation with blunt objectivity. “Because Matthias is the king’s own son.”
Mina swayed backward, catching herself on the bed with both arms anchored like tent spikes behind her. She pushed forward again and cocked her head to the other side. “Come again?”
This time, Matthias spoke plainly. “King Demitri is my father.”
She wet her lips with her tongue and furrowed her brow. “You’re…Demitri’s son?” she echoed, nodding her head dumbly as if she were willing to play along for a time. “But…how can that be? I mean, I’ve known you all my life. You’re the child of Penelope Fairfax and Callum Gentry—I know your father, and the two of you walk…and talk…alike.”
Matthias sighed, understanding. “That may be true. After all, he raised me, but my mother was already pregnant when my father married her.” He began to share the story about the lost Sklavos Ahavi, explaining how the beautiful young maiden became a subject of controversy between the high priest, the witch, and the king. He went on to describe Penelope’s time at Castle Dragon, the scrutiny she was under for three days and nights, and why they suspected King Demitri of taking her as a lover, how she had ultimately escaped…or the king had let her go.
And then he waited quietly for Mina’s reply.
Mina let out a nervous chortle, feeling like a fool. She was still having trouble making sense of the truth. “I’m sorry,” she explained, “but it’s just…I’ve known you all my life. You are a gifted hunter and a skilled fighter, to be sure, but a dragon? Matthias, I’ve never seen you say or do anything that might imply—”
Just then, the boy she had known all of her life stepped back from the edge of the bed, held out his hands, turned them palms up, and began to extend his claws, ten perfectly serrated talons. He sniffed in defiance, and a faint hint of smoke filled the room, even as his deep blue eyes began to glow a dark, fiery red. And then he retracted his claws, released a cavernous breath, and watched as a small orange flame trailed in the wake of his exhalation.
Mina gasped. She opened her mouth to speak, and then closed it, completely at a loss for words.
And that’s when Thomas the squire stepped in. “Mistress Ahavi, we need your help.” He glanced at Matthias and inclined his head. “We need your protection. If the king finds out…if he notices Matthias’s body missing, he might put two and two together. At the least, he’ll hunt him down and kill him.”
Mina practically recoiled—at both the danger and the request. “My protection?” she scoffed, not meaning any disrespect. “You want some kind of protection
from me
?” Her heart sank as she reached out to take Matthias by the hand. “I have no power in Dragons Realm. None, whatsoever. In fact, I am hardly safe myself.” She turned to regard the squire directly. “And you of all people should know this. I belong to Damian now—do you remember what happened to Tatiana?”
The boy nodded. “I do. Of course, I do
.
But I also have eyes, and I know that someone healed her.” He began to fidget with his hands, for the first time showing his youth. “I know that the eldest prince favors you, Prince Dante. And I also know that Mistress Cassidy cannot be trusted, but perhaps if you appealed directly—”
Mina held out her hand to silence him.
This was a dangerous game they were playing.
All of them.
And the stakes had just grown higher.
How would she get to Dante…
again
? When? Where? And what would she tell him?
What could she tell
him?
And why would he be inclined to help a half-brother—a bastard son of the king—whom his father would likely detest?
Dante also had a precarious role to play in the Realm, more so now than ever, and all of them were balancing on a razor’s edge.
She unwittingly placed her hand on her stomach and sighed. “I don’t understand what you think I can do…or say,” she argued, feeling her heart constrict at the untrue words, “but even if I did, why would Dante get involved?”
The squire lowered his lashes and averted his eyes, glancing at the floor. “Because…because he is my friend.”
Mina leaned forward with expectation, even as Matthias regarded Thomas sideways.
“Explain,” Mina prompted. She didn’t mean to sound so abrupt, but the three of them were literally playing with fire, and if there were any unknown or pertinent details, then she needed to know them all.
The squire raised his chin and drew back his shoulders, as if donning a cloak made of manufactured pride; he swallowed something akin to fear—
or maybe shame?
—and then he began to speak in a soft, rote manner, almost as if he were reciting from a scroll. “Many years ago, when I was only six summers old, the king asked me to accompany him and his sons on a pheasant-hunting trip—they were to practice their archery, and I was to carry their bows, their arrows, and his ale.” He shrugged. “I can’t explain it: the king enjoys his petty tortures, mocking those he thinks are weak.”
Mina started to squirm, and she had to force herself to sit still.
At six years old?
Thomas clenched and relaxed his fists in a barely noticeable effort to control his emotions and pressed on. “Anyhow, we walked many miles into the woods, and needless to say, I grew tired, too tired. The weight of all that gear was just…too much.” He gulped several times, and Mina wanted to say something to comfort him, but she restrained the impulse, held her tongue, and remained deathly quiet, instead. “We came to a fairly deep stream, and the king commanded me to get the princes a drink of water and him some ale, but he wouldn’t let me set the hunting gear down.” He bit his lower lip, and his eyes clouded with moisture, but other than that, he showed little emotion. “I dropped Prince Damian’s bow, and it broke—so the king told Damian to teach me a lesson.” The squire could no longer look Mina or Matthias in the eyes, and he slowly turned away. “I thought he would beat me with the bow, but he found a piece of wood, like a club, and he just…he wouldn’t stop until I was nearly unconscious.” He smiled then, and it was the most incongruent, paradoxical grin Mina had ever seen. “But he didn’t stop there. He tossed me in the river, and I was too badly injured to swim. I would’ve drowned, but Prince Dante dove in and saved me.” A single tear escaped his eye, and he brushed it away with an angry swipe, clearly upset that he had let it fall. “I don’t remember anything else that happened that day; except, I learned later on that the king was so enraged that he broke both of Dante’s arms, and then he made him carry me—and all the equipment—back to the castle. And apparently, Dante did it without a single whimper.”
Mina brought both hands to her face and cupped them over her mouth, trying to choke back a sob—that was the last thing this brave little squire wanted or deserved—and she wasn’t about to diminish his courage with pity. Still, she knew there was something else churning in her gut, something she could no longer deny: She was both grateful
for
and proud
of
the new life she was carrying inside her. And she would cherish this child with all of her heart, almost as much as she would delight in defying the king and Damian. Thomas had been an innocent, helpless little boy, and Dante, well, he had been a lion. A brave and defiant dragon.
He still was…
He still was.
“So, you see…” Thomas’s words snapped her out of her musings. “Prince Dante has always been more than my lord. To me, he is a friend, and he knows that he has my undying loyalty…even unto death.”
Mina sat taller. She stiffened her spine and nodded her head, even as her heart still wept from the story. “I see,” she mumbled softly. She was just about to add that she would do whatever she could to help both Thomas and Matthias, even if it meant trying to talk to Dante, when a gale-force wind swept through the barracks, battered the posts beneath the high arches, and sent the heavy armoire sliding three feet back. A sound, so furious and ferocious that it pierced the ears, rocked the ground beneath them, and she jumped up from the bed. “What was that!” she cried as a chorus of voices began to rise outside on the beach:
The king! The king! The dragon is
coming!