Authors: Tessa Dawn
“I did not touch her before I left the castle for the battle of Dracos Cove, nor have I lain with her since, and she is growing restless, defensive, and desperate. She’s been sidling up to the king, and he is starting to respond with curious glances, not-so-innocent touches, and inappropriate innuendos. If she were to be given a vial of elixir at just the right time…if I were to leave her alone with my father…I believe he would sire her offspring, albeit unwittingly. From there, it would be a simple task to manipulate her memories, to convince her that the child was ours. I have already instructed my cook to put a few drops of the elixir in her morning tea at the start of each day.”
Mina gasped, stunned by the revelation. “And you would do that for me?
For us?
”
“I would,” Dante answered without preamble, “and that brings me to my original proposition.” He stood once more, brushed her hair out of her eyes, and bent to grasp both of her shoulders in his hands. “As for my side of the trade, I would offer you immortality, Mina Louvet. As soon as the child is born, as soon as it’s safe to transform you, I would make you immortal.”
Her jaw dropped open, but she didn’t speak.
She couldn’t.
Her head was still spinning in circles.
“If you would consent to be my lover, to come to me of your own free will, I would give you back the power of choice. You need only come to me when you choose to; you need only welcome me out of desire; and you need only surrender to my touch when you desire to share my fire.” He reached down to take her hands in his, raised them to his lips, and pressed a beguiling kiss into the center of her palms, each one in turn, his passionate sapphire gaze never leaving hers. “And in return, I will give you my fealty, as both your prince and your lover. I will be yours and yours, alone.”
Mina almost gasped. She nearly staggered where she stood. “W-w-why?” she murmured reflexively, stammering the word. “For what purpose? I mean, what would compel you to offer so much? Immortality, just to be your lover? Especially when you could just command it at any time?” She shook her head, knowing there had to be more to the story. After all, she had poured out her heart to him just minutes ago, and the prince had glossed right over it.
He hadn’t even responded.
He didn’t want her love. He didn’t want her heart. But he still wanted her body.
Why?
“What else would you ask of me, my prince? What else do you want in return?”
Dante cupped her face in his hands and stared into her eyes until it seemed like he might just drown in their depths, and then he buried his face in her hair and whispered huskily in her ear. “The gods know, until this very moment, I was prepared to ask you to be the mother of
all
my sons, to agree to fulfill the Omen. Yes, Mina, you are meant to be the mother of this realm, the one who helps me fulfill the prophecy, and I was prepared to ask you to do it for your people, to do it for justice, to do it for Dragons Realm,
but
…” He drew back, turned to glance at Desmond’s grave, and slowly exhaled. “But in truth, there is so much more that I want.
Teach me to love
, sweet Mina. Bring me back to life. Show me once again how to dream. Wait for me, my Ahavi, for thirty-one years. Live as you must, survive as you will, and one day, rule this realm beside me as my queen.”
Mina felt the air rush out of her body, and she was certain her heart would jump out of her chest. She drew back, wresting her body away from his, and struggled to catch her breath. “Dante, I…I…” She felt like she was hyperventilating. “I hardly know what to say.”
He stepped forward, brushed the pad of his thumb along her quivering bottom lip, and bent low to taste it. “Tell me you don’t love me,” he breathed into her mouth, “and I will never ask this of you again.”
She savored the hot, wild flavor of his kiss, reveling in the smoke that tinged his breath. After several heartbeats had passed, she murmured, “I cannot.”
“Cannot agree?” he asked.
“Cannot tell you I don’t love you.”
He nodded, and his smile illuminated his eyes. “A long time ago, I told you that I wanted you because your hair is like mine, as dark as the midnight sky.” He ran his thumb along the side of her jaw, just as he had done that first day in the courtyard. “Your eyes are the color of emeralds, as rare as they are exquisite.” He clasped his hands behind his back and studied her from head to toe, without apology; once again, repeating the familiar actions. “You are beautiful,” he whispered, “and our sons will be strong.” Only this time, he didn’t stop there. “What I didn’t say that day—
what I couldn’t say that day
—was here is a woman who could capture my
heart
. Here is a woman who is worthy of the same.” He took both of her hands in his and squeezed them, careful not to press too hard. “You understand duty and sacrifice, Mina—you are as brave as you are intelligent. You have the courage to lead, the strength to follow, and the wisdom to know the difference. You just need to live for a purpose. You have already proven that you can survive in a world full of warlocks,
shades
, and shifters; a world built by commoners, yet ruled by kings; and you have the tenacity to change it. You are a true daughter of this realm, just as I am its true son.” He drew her into his arms and held her close to his heart. “I will always live for my duty and my people. I will always put the welfare of the Realm first. And I will
never
betray my royal blood, the
core
of my father’s traditions, or the lineage that makes me a dragon. But I don’t believe I have to…not with you.” He regarded her sheepishly then, crooking his neck at an unnatural angle so he could clearly see her eyes, and the gesture was uncharacteristically boyish. “I will never be soft-hearted, sweet Mina, or gentle, or even tame. But I will be just and honest. I will be true and faithful. And I will be yours, my Ahavi, as much as I belong to the Realm.” His voice dropped into a deep, languorous cadence and practically hummed with conviction. “A dragon requires fire to reanimate, and a king requires a queen, not a slave, to temper his calloused heart. You have never been the latter, so choose now to be the former, even if it’s thirty years away. Teach me to love, sweet Mina. Raise my son—
our sons
—to be brave, to be strong,
to defy what isn’t worthy of obeisance
. Let me be your Keep, and come to me because you wish to learn, to live…and to love.”
Mina felt like she had fallen into a liquid pool of magic, of dark midnight-blue eyes, like she had been swept away by the current of a mystical fire, and she was softly, sweetly drowning beneath the swift, graceful undertow of the dragon’s heartfelt words—and she wanted to just let go. She was utterly and completely lost in Dante’s savage soul. Everything she had ever wanted was standing right in front of her, and she couldn’t help but wonder at the sacrifice it would take to pull it off, the cunning it would require to be
this
dragon’s queen, the obedience and the danger that would come with his possessive arms.
But it didn’t matter.
Not at all
.
If anyone could do it, she could.
She was a Sklavos Ahavi, after all, a woman born to serve the Realm.
“Yes, my prince,” she whispered sweetly, her tears falling freely. “Oh, yes, Prince Dante…
yes
.”
CHAPTER THIRTY
The throne room
I
t was late
when Prince Dante and Mina returned to Castle Dragon, and the king, the other Ahavi, and Dante’s brothers were waiting for them in the throne room. Since Dante had borrowed Mina under the guise of giving her several antiquated scrolls to update and transcribe into Warlochian for him, and since the majority of the scrolls were kept in a secure, hidden outbuilding, a mile or two away from the main castle library, no one seemed too concerned about where they’d been, except…
perhaps
…for Cassidy. In truth, the king could not have cared less if his eldest son had taken Mina Louvet out to the pasture to feed her to the wolves, just so long as he kept her alive long enough to birth Damian’s child, and if there had been some sort of improper dalliance between them—
so what?
—just as long as it did not create friction between the brothers or political unrest in the Realm.
Slaves were slaves, after all.
King Demitri scooted eagerly to the edge of his throne, the moment they entered the hall, and bellowed, “Well, it’s about time! Are the two of you done exploring the grounds?” He narrowed his eyes in boredom and impatience.
“Forgive me, Father,” Dante offered humbly, offering no further explanation.
The king turned his attention to Damian Dragona, who seemed utterly unfazed as Mina hurried to his side and curtsied apologetically. Demitri quickly harrumphed. “Very well.” He gestured with his hand to indicate the other members who were present. “We were just concluding our business for the evening, discussing the importance of going forward with the Autumn Mating, if only for the kingdom’s morale. I think it’s important that we maintain our sense of tradition and provide a formal presentation of the matrimonial selections and district appointments, give the people something to celebrate.” He sat back in his throne and shrugged. “The battle of Dracos Cove was so…anxiety-producing for some. They could use a pleasant distraction.” He said it with such emotionless triviality that it gave Dante chills—
good lords,
the male had slain thousands of enemies, yet he spoke of that day like it had merely been a walk in the gardens.
“Of course, Father,” he said, stepping forward to the base of the dais, just below the throne, and taking his rightful place at the head of his brothers. “As always, I will do whatever the Realm requires.”
King Demitri nodded, seemingly appeased. “Good.” He waved his hand to dismiss the entire subject, clearly done with it, and turned his attention to Prince Drake. “Your brother can fill you in on the details later.” Prince Drake inclined his head, and the king stood up to stretch his legs, his long purple-and-gold robe brushing against the floor at his feet. “If that is all, then you are all dismissed.”
All three Dragona sons bowed their heads, even as Mina and Tatiana curtsied, and then Cassidy Bondeville cleared her throat and took a brazen step toward the throne. “Excuse me, Your Majesty, but I have something I would like to announce.”
There was a soft collective gasp at her unadulterated gall, and Dante placed his outstretched hand between his Ahavi and the king in a mock gesture of concern in order to usher her back. The king raised his eyebrows, and Dante waited, unable to discern whether the dragon was amused or incensed, whether he would laugh at the prima donna’s antics or scorch her where she stood.
“What is it, wench?” King Demitri said with a sneer, publicly reminding her of her place.
Cassidy blanched. “Forgive me, Your Majesty: I know it is improper for a slave to speak in the presence of her king, but”—she turned to gaze at Dante, and her eyes were filled with such false worship and contrived affection that it almost made him retch—“since Prince Dante is your eldest son, I thought you would be pleased with my news.” She raised her chin and drew back her shoulders, virtually beaming with pride. “I am with child,” she said smugly.
Mina’s eyes grew wide, and Dante bit his tongue, not knowing whether to growl or chuckle. He stared at his all-powerful father, still hovering beside his throne, and swallowed his anger. He knew it was a possibility. He knew things were heading in that direction. And he had even helped them along.
But
, it was still jarring to know that the king held him in such little regard, that after all these years, Dante had failed to earn even a modicum of his father’s respect.
So King Demitri had bed his consort.
Unbelievable.
The king turned a pale shade of green, and his eyes darted nervously around the room like a guilty man’s: So, he wasn’t a fool, after all. The last time he had inquired about Cassidy’s condition, Dante had said she wasn’t pregnant, and the king had commanded him to take care of the matter as soon as they returned to Warlochia. Since a Sklavos Ahavi can recognize her pregnancy within a matter of hours—
there was some deep intuition in their makeup
—something had to have happened within the last thirty-six hours,
something named King Demitri
, and the monarch was just now realizing that if both he and Dante had bed her, then he might just be the father. Dante was at least appeased that the male looked sick.
Cassidy hurried to Dante’s side, ignoring his outstretched hand, and curtsied low before him. “My prince.” She offered him her cheek, ostensibly for a kiss, and he snarled.
“Are you sure?” he asked in a surly tone.
“Oh yes,” she whispered, looking curiously confused by his reaction.
Dante’s dragon reared its savage head, and for a moment, he felt the urge to scorch her right there, to burn her flesh from her bones, melt her cartilage to ash, and watch as she disintegrated into so much refuse…as a pile of waste on the floor. It had nothing to do with her as a person—or a woman—truly, he could not have cared less. As far as he was concerned, she would bear an incredibly powerful dragon, one he could now rear as a loyalist. However, his beast was not that cerebral or rational. It only knew that the female had disobeyed him, that she had strayed from her submissive role, and that she needed to be corrected. He restrained the impulse and gestured toward the throne-room doors. “Then I suggest you go to bed and get your rest.” He narrowed his eyes in command, and she quickly scurried away, darting out of the throne room.
Drake gave Dante a questioning glance, and Damian pierced the silence with derisive laughter. “Nothing better than a wayward bitch in heat,” he drawled rudely.
Dante spun around and glared at him, stunned by the unexpected outburst as well as the uncanny resemblance to the dragon he had known all his life. Prince Damian was indeed King Demitri’s son—even Mina looked taken aback. Before Dante could spit out a retort, the throne-room doors swung open once more, and the temperature in the room dropped twenty degrees. For a moment, Dante thought it might be Cassidy returning to stage a scene, in which case he was going to have her head, but it wasn’t Cassidy Bondeville.
Oh great lords of fire
, it was not his Sklavos Ahavi, but Wavani the witch, instead. And Rafael Bishop, the high mage of Warlochia, was close on her heels.
The couple looked incensed.
*
The witch was dressed from head to toe in deep raven black. Her stiff, five-inch-high collar was turned brusquely upward; the tails of her petticoat flapped behind her like wings; and her harsh leather boots clicked noisily across the marble floor as she strode angrily toward the throne. “Your Majesty!” she called in a shrill, witchy voice, extending a long, gnarled finger to point at his guests. “This entire visitation is a travesty, and these matings are a hoax.” She glared at Mina Louvet, and the Ahavi winced with fear.
The king looked absolutely stunned by her brazen entrance as well as her cryptic words, and in true Dragona fashion, his first and only reaction was anger. “What is the meaning of this!” He threw up his hand in an offensive gesture and sent Rafael Bishop spiraling through the air, slamming into a column, and dangling above the floor, pinned by invisible stakes. There was no way he was going to tolerate such a bold advance from an inferior male. Then he turned his attention back to Wavani. “Have you lost your mind,
my counselor
?” reminding her of her place.
The witch shook her head
and smiled
as she continued to approach the throne, and Dante’s heart constricted in his chest. “No, Your Highness,” she said with arrogant assurance, “but perhaps you have lost yours if you trust what you see.”
Dante’s dragon roared inside as his fight-or-flight instincts kicked in.
Son of a Jackal!
The sorceress knew, and she was going to tell the king!
In the space of a heartbeat, he surveyed the great hall and took inventory of all the players: Drake was standing beside Tatiana, about thirty paces from the throne, and they were in the king’s direct line of vision, but they were far enough from the dais to escape if they had to. The prince would not understand what was happening, and he would not have time to react as an ally. Hopefully, he could save his unborn child.
Damian and Mina, on the other hand, were standing to the monarch’s far right. They were at the bottom of the dais, maybe twenty paces away from the king, and he could reach them in the span of an instant. Beyond their proximity to the lethal dragon, they were three seconds too far from the doors, and two seconds too far from the nearest window, assuming that Damian could react
instantly
and use his preternatural strength and speed to get Mina out of the hall.
In all reality, the king’s anger and his grief might be so great that he would strike at Damian first,
strike at Matthias Gentry
, and if he did, Mina would be caught in the crossfire.
But Dante didn’t believe that was how things would play out.
From where he stood, he believed the monarch would eliminate any potential vulnerability, first. He would strike to his left instinctively, because that was his weak side, his blind spot, and Dante was his greatest threat. If Prince Dante wanted to derail the hazardous situation, he would have to strike at King Demitri first.
The moment he thought it, he dismissed it.
The idea was utterly
ludicrous
.
It was crazy and suicidal.
King Demitri was damn near a deity: all-powerful, nearly omniscient, and practically indestructible. Dante would never stand a chance. The king would shred his throat, disembowel his innards, and wrench out his heart in an instant, before Dante could even react. Not to mention, there would be a high mage and an angry witch at his back.
No
; the only way to diffuse this situation was to go after Wavani and Rafael, to take them out before they could expose his treason. He sought Prince Damian’s eyes, knowing his brother could easily read his mind, and tried to alert him with a nod—but the witch was already speaking.
“My lord.” She bowed her head deeply, and then she snarled like a fiend. “Do not attack the messenger. The child isn’t his!” In her frenzy, her eyes darted around the room haphazardly, and she screeched, “Hell,
he
isn’t
him
! The soul!
The soul is all
wrong
!”
Somewhere in the background, Mina let out a petrified whimper, even as Dante tried to lunge in Wavani’s direction, but his feet never left the ground.
So that’s why she had brought the high mage with her.
The witch and the warlock were combining their powers in order to cast a spell about the room—the air had congealed into mystical quicksand, and the only being unaffected was the king, who was much too powerful to succumb.
Dante could still move, but it would require an enormous effort.
“What the hell are you saying, Wavani!” the king shouted, leaping down from the dais in one fell swoop. He glared at the hag with feverish eyes, his dragon riding perilously close to the surface.
The witch threw back her head in frustration and howled: “The boy is a bastard—”
“Shut your mouth!” the king shouted over her, and in the blink of an eye, he had the witch by her throat. Fuming, he hoisted her off the floor, and his enormous sculpted muscles bulged with unrestrained fury.
What the devil?
Dante wondered, trying to make sense of the scene.
And then it suddenly dawned on him:
Blessed goddess of mercy
, the king thought Wavani was about to reveal
his
secret, the fact that he had impregnated Cassidy. After all, she was in charge of the Sklavos Ahavi, the mating, and the assurance of sacred offspring—and she took her role quite seriously.
The
matings are a hoax.
The child isn’t his. The soul is all
wrong…
The boy is a bastard.
At this juncture, her words could still mean anything.
They still had a narrow window of
time.
For a split second, Prince Dante wondered if he should let the scene play out, stand back and watch things unfold, see if his father would kill Wavani on his own, but it was far too much to hope for…
Rafael Bishop was already clearing his throat.
“My king…” the high mage drawled, using his considerable power as a warlock to descend from the post, in spite of the telepathic restraints. His eyes glowed demonic red, and his cloak fluttered behind him as he floated to the ground like a specter.
“You need to listen.”
His ethereal, malevolent voice reverberated throughout the hall like a chorus of moaning ghouls. “There is an enormous deception taking place in this room.”