Authors: Tessa Dawn
The girl laughed amidst her tears. “I made her for you. All by myself.”
Mina pulled her into another fierce hug. “I know you did. And thank you so much! I absolutely love it.” She ran her hands up and down Raylea’s arms and stared at her with concern. “Are you all right? Are you hurt? Do you need a physician?” She eyed her from head to toe before turning her around in order to check her back, her neck, and her shoulders. She was just about to start discreetly undressing her when Raylea slapped at her hands and smiled.
“I’m fine,” she insisted, linking Mina’s fingers in hers. “Well, I mean, it was awful. It was scary. The shadow who bought me was horrible, but I don’t really remember. Prince Dante said I can spend the rest of the week with you, and then he’s going to have his own castle guards escort me home, back to Arns, to see Mama and Papa. But I can visit whenever I want.” She giggled with joy, and her dark brown eyes lit up like twin russet flames. “He saved me from the monster.”
Mina’s bottom lip began to tremble, and she felt like a child herself, wholly overwhelmed by her emotions and completely unable to speak. As Prince Dante stepped forward, ostensibly to explain what had happened—or to tell her what he expected her to do—she collapsed from the intensity of her grief,
her relief
, and her gratitude, and she shrouded his boots with her hair.
He bent down to place a gentle hand on her shoulder. “I told you I would bring her home,” he murmured in a deep, sonorous tone.
Mina raised her head to regard him squarely beneath tearstained lashes, and he offered his hand to help her up. She took it between both of her palms and pressed it to her cheek, angling her head with affection. “My prince,” she whispered softly, wetting his skin with her tears. “Thank you.” Her entire body began to shake. “I have no words.”
She bowed her head in the purest gesture of reverence she had ever shown, wanting to demonstrate her appreciation, and then she brought her forehead down to his feet—slowly, and with great veneration—and kissed the tips of his boots, each one in turn.
Oddly enough, she had never felt more like his equal.
“Thank you,”
she whispered again.
Chapter Twenty-nine
Castle Dragon ~ one month later
“
C
ome with me,”
Dante had said, offering no explanation, making no justification, and just like her first day at Castle Dragon, Mina had followed him into the courtyard, mounted the same white gelding, and cantered quietly beside him along the same familiar path.
In the weeks that had followed Raylea’s rescue, life in the Realm had moved forward very quickly: All three dragon princes had been summoned to meet with King Demetri; they had conferred about the battle, discussed their roles going forward, and briefed him on the state of their districts.
And each one of them had managed to pull it off.
As of yet, Prince Drake did not know about the
great deception
, and Dante was waiting for the right moment to tell him, for
necessity
to warrant the admission. He wanted to bring his youngest brother into the fold, and he believed it was necessary, that he could definitely trust him; however, he was hesitant to place another innocent soul in danger, especially when they still had time.
Meanwhile, Raylea had returned to the
commonlands
, and Mina’s parents had been positively elated to discover that both of their daughters were still safe and alive, that they had actually spent a week together at Castle Umbras, and that Mina would invite them
all
to visit soon, within the next couple of months.
They were, however, grieving deeply, along with Callum Gentry, over the news of Matthias’s death, the fact that he had been captured at Castle Dragon and executed by the king.
Damian and Dante had given the matter a great deal of consideration—whether or not to inform the blacksmith that his son was still alive, at least his soul was—but in the end, Prince Damian had made the call. The danger was just too great. The secret was far too volatile. And there was always time to retract the decision later, once things had settled down.
Mina’s heart ached at the thought of Mr. Gentry’s suffering, but she understood the princes’ reasoning: The fewer people who knew, the less chance there was of a leak. As it stood, Prince Dante was practically beside himself with concern over Wavani the witch. On one hand, he absolutely could not execute the king’s closest advisor and hope to get away with it—King Demitri would leave no stone unturned in the search for her killer—but on the other hand, all it would take was an uneasy feeling, a haphazard toss of her runes, or a reason to consult her looking-glass, based on a passing suspicion, and the king would slay them all for their treason.
Wavani the witch and her lover were two perilous loose ends that needed to be closed.
Mina shivered, not wanting to imagine the worst…
Rather, she turned her attention to better news: They had recently learned that Tatiana was also expecting a child. She had become pregnant the first night of the war, and Prince Drake could only be described as smitten at best. For all intents and purposes, the Ahavi seemed to be happy, whereas Damian and Mina had fallen into an awkward yet familiar routine at Castle Umbras, lending each other support, learning as they went along, and making it up when they were clueless.
Mina’s pregnancy had begun to show. She was nauseated in the mornings; the smell of food made her queasy, and she required more sleep than ever before—yet she really couldn’t complain. The king was satisfied with his sons and their Ahavi, he had no reason to question his choices or appointments, and the Realm was moving forward, day by day.
Life was resuming as it should.
Now, as Prince Dante reined his stallion to a halt beneath the branches of an aged sycamore tree, Mina followed his lead and dismounted. The afternoon was positively stunning: The sun was shining in a clear blue sky; the birds were singing happily in the trees; and there was a gentle summer’s breeze rustling the leaves and lightly licking their skin. It was truly a beautiful afternoon.
Prince Dante tethered his horse to a fallen log, waited for Mina to do the same, and then extended his hand in her direction. “Come to me, Mina.”
She couldn’t help but remember that first day in the courtyard when the prince had ordered her to do the same; only this time, her arm wasn’t bleeding and his dragon wasn’t riding the edge—there was no hesitation or fear. Yes, she still felt intimidated by his presence, at the sheer breadth of power projected by his dragon, and her stomach still quivered with butterflies at the mere resonance of his voice; but she knew he wouldn’t harm her, not indiscriminately, and she would never provoke his beast.
She curtsied. “My prince.”
He smiled,
truly smiled
, and then he led her to a rise in the hill, still beneath the tree, and squatted down to remove a carefully placed bushel of branches concealing a lone gold cross behind them. The cross stood just above and beyond a flat bronzed placard, and Prince Dante burrowed his fingers into the grass. “This is my twin’s final resting place.”
Mina drew in a sharp intake of air. “Desmond’s?”
“Yes.”
The silence was palpable. She didn’t know what to say.
“What does it make you feel? Seeing it, that is?”
Mina looked away. “It makes me feel sorrow…and regret. It makes me feel compassion for you and anger toward your father.”
He stood up, turned around, and placed the palm of his hand over her heart in a surprisingly intimate gesture. “Don’t lie to me, Mina. What does
this
”—he swept his arm around the meadow, indicating their physical surroundings as well as the two of them standing beneath the tree, and nodded—“what does
all of this
make you feel? I need to know.”
Mina let out a slow, measured breath and consulted her heart.
Since the day she had first met the prince, they had been thrust into an elusive cat-and-mouse game, always testing and straining the balance of power between them. Dante had made it abundantly clear that he had to have her obedience—his dragon required the affirmation of dominance—yet she had tried to change him. And in the end, they had both fallen into their expected, prescribed roles anyway.
She bit her lip and wiped a sweaty palm against her skirt. Did she dare speak from the depths of her heart? Was that really what he wanted?
Truth be told, they were too similar to keep from clashing on occasion: They were both headstrong and proud; they were each defiant to a fault; and they were so determined to remain in control, if only of their stubborn free will, that neither one had ever truly revealed their hand, at least not entirely. And that’s how Mina knew Dante’s question ran much deeper than his words.
He wanted to know how she felt…
about
him
.
“My prince,” she murmured, her voice growing all at once subdued. “I belong to the Realm…and to Prince Damian…just as your father decreed, so it is difficult for me to speak too freely.”
He placed two fingers beneath the curve of her chin and lifted it gently upward. When her gaze met his, his eyes were so intense—so dark and so full of curiosity and longing—that she couldn’t hold her tongue.
Reaching into a deep well for courage, she spoke softly. “As a child, before I was taken to the Keep, I could have answered you easily: I would have said I feel like crying because a great tragedy has happened in this place. I feel like reaching out to you because you suffered.” She braced her heart, refusing to allow any tears. “As a slave—as an Ahavi—the answer would be different: I feel like it is my duty to assist you, to somehow place things in order, and I wonder how I may serve you. What does he need?” She closed her eyes and steadied her breathing before she slowly ventured forward again with both eyes wide open. “But as a woman, as Mina Louvet…”
“Yes?” Dante encouraged. “As a woman?” He locked his gaze with hers, refusing to look away, and she almost staggered back, jarred by the power of the current that flowed between them:
Oh hell, what was the point in pretending?
“As a woman,” she pressed on, “I can’t help but wonder who Desmond was—what was he like as a boy? What were the two of you like,
together
, back then? I can’t help but wonder if you laughed, or played, or dreamed anything different than you dream today. And I think, perhaps, that your bond was so tight, so unbreakable, that it survived the passage of time and the transition of death—and I’m so very jealous.” He angled his head to the side, regarding her intently, and she frowned, feeling somehow ashamed. “I wonder if you loved him, and I ache inside because I know I would give all that I am to just once have you love me that deeply.”
Dante absently took a step back, visibly surprised by her answer. Although he had asked her to be honest, he obviously had not expected such a confession. He wet his lips in a rare gesture of discomfort, and then he parted his mouth to speak. When nothing came out, he cleared his throat and tried again. “Why, sweet Mina? What would be different?”
At his cold, indifferent question, she wished she could just disappear.
What was the point of this banter?
As if he understood her need to pull back, he took a generous step forward, toward Desmond’s grave, and glanced down at the cross. “My twin was a visionary,” he said softly. “He danced to his own drum. He walked to his own mysterious beat. And he answered to a higher calling, something only known to him, something buried within his soul. He opposed my father, my mother, and his duty to the Realm because he fell in love with a commoner, and despite all the repercussions, he could not be dissuaded from that path.” He knelt down to touch the placard, absently tracing the letters in Desmond’s name with his forefinger. “I used to dream, Mina, a long,
long
time ago.” He paused as if remembering. “I used to laugh, and feel,
and want
until my father reared it out of me…until the Realm demanded that I relinquish each and every reverie. Until I grew into a man and put away my childish longings.” He looked off into the distance, and Mina approached him slowly, tentatively, pressing her thighs against his back as she reached down to place a hand on his shoulder.
She didn’t utter a word.
She simply stood there, offering a sympathetic touch, and the contact brought his attention back to the present.
“I have a proposition for you, Ahavi. I would like to propose a trade. There is something I want you to consider, something I could simply require of you if I wished, but I would much rather seek your consent.”
Mina stiffened, trying to find something meaningful or affectionate in his words. It was true: Dante Dragona did not have much to give—he did not have much
give
in him—so his desire to seek her
consent
in any matter, however insignificant, was no small thing. At least there was that… “Yes, my prince?”
“As you already know,” he said, “I will be able to shift in thirty-one-years, and many things will change.” His expression grew distant, yet resolved. “I will take over the governance of this realm, whether by diplomacy or force, and I will require the support of those who are closest to me, those I know I can trust. I do want you beside me, Mina, and I do need your help…but until such time as I am at the head of this country, you must remain at Castle Umbras with Damian. There is truly no other way.” His dragon stirred, and his voice grew clipped, even as his nostrils noticeably flared. “I have made it implicitly clear that he is never,
ever
to touch you, not in
that
way, not if he desires to live.” Before she could respond or react, he pressed forward, as if the statement were a mere supposition of fact. “However, I also let him know that I understand—Damian is a sovereign prince of Dragons Realm, and his dragon has many hungers. He will not be stable if he doesn’t feed…all of them. There isn’t a female in this kingdom who would refuse his advances, nor a maiden who would choose to deny him. He doesn’t have to be alone. He may still find love or affection, albeit in the shadows, in secret, just like Desmond did. And I would look away—
I will look away
—and so will Prince Drake, once he understands.”
Dante seemed to be rambling.
Yet and still,
he
had brought up the subject, and now, she had a few questions of her own: “And Cassidy,
my prince
? Where does she fit into this picture?”
Prince Dante flashed a cautionary smile, his dragon asserting his dominance. “Do you really wish to know, sweet Mina?”
“I do,” she said, refusing to back off. What was good for the goose was good for the gander, assuming the gander wasn’t a slave…
He sighed. “Cassidy is only too willing to fulfil her required duties, and I can’t fault her for that—she was raised, trained, and
conditioned
to bear children for the Realm, and it is my solemn obligation to take care of her.
But
…” He shook his head, showing the first real sign of compassion. “But I do not want her to rear—or carry—my sons. She is not moral, nor is she worthy.” He angled his head to look directly at Mina. “And I wouldn’t do that to
you
.” He glanced at her belly and then averted his eyes out of respect. “Still…at some point, if she does not become pregnant, the king will press the issue. And if I tell him I think she’s barren, he will simply replace her with another Sklavos Ahavi, although we both know such females are rare. Still, I cannot make you any promises;
however
, it may not be a problem.”
Mina raised her eyebrows, almost afraid to hope.