Authors: Tessa Dawn
Dante bent to the old man’s ear, and in a voice so low it was barely audible, he whispered, “Have a courier bring the doll to Castle Dragon in the morning.”
The old warlock looked surprised, but he stared after the departing mother and child and nodded profusely. “Yes, yes, of course, milord.”
Dante nodded, waved him away, and then turned in the direction of the tavern. He suddenly felt the need to have a stiff drink with his brothers, and he wanted to get on with his day. It wasn’t like the execution had bothered him; actually, not at all. And he didn’t feel as if he had truly gone against Drake’s wishes, either—at least not in a way that really mattered. After all, he had no intentions of repeating his father’s mistake or his twin’s tragic recklessness: A Sklavos Ahavi was not meant to be made immortal, nor was she born to be a queen. And desiring a woman, any woman, so much that a prince would sacrifice his duty to the Realm in order to keep her affections, that he would take his own life in her absence, was unfathomable to Dante on every level.
No
, Dante Dragona would not make the same mistakes his father and his twin had made.
He would
feed
as a dragon must; he would produce the required heirs; and the Realm would always come first.
Still…
What harm could there be in giving an Ahavi her sister’s doll?
CHAPTER FOUR
Castle Dragon
M
ina Louvet gingerly
climbed out of the slippery bath in her private bedchamber, careful to maintain a sturdy grip around the edge of the tin basin. She reached for a woolen towel, planted both feet solidly on the wooden floor, and began to dry off as quickly as possible. Shivering from the cold, she angled her body toward the hearth for warmth and glanced toward the doorway.
There was someone in her
room.
A figure in the shadows.
A murky impression, like a waif or a ghost, and it flickered in the reflection of firelight, dancing in her peripheral vision.
Gasping, she quickly wrapped herself in the towel, turned in the direction of the shadow, and strained to take a second look.
It wasn’t a shadow at all.
It was Dante Dragona.
And he was standing in the doorway like a notch in the frame, utterly melded and silent, as if he simply belonged there, as if he were part and parcel of the woodwork itself.
Mina cursed beneath her breath even as she exhaled in relief.
Thank the Spirit Keepers it wasn’t an actual specter
, yet what it was—
who it was
—was far more daunting. Her heart began to race from a different kind of fear, and she struggled to steady her nerves.
As far as Mina knew, Dante was supposed to be away from the castle.
Just yesterday morning, he had traveled to Warlochia on important court business, and she was surprised to see him back so soon. Just what his business had been, Mina had no idea—the Ahavi were not privy to such matters—but by the weary look on his face, it must have been something grave. His eyes were haunted with subtle shadows. His jaw was set in a hard, implacable line, and his usual discernable expression was inscrutable.
“Milord?” She spoke cautiously, still wondering how he had entered her bedchamber without making a sound. She hadn’t heard the telltale creaking of the large iron doorknob, nor had she heard the panel settling back into the frame—and the realization unnerved her. Dante was far too predatory for her liking.
“Mina.” Her name was a mere whisper of breath on his tongue.
She unwittingly clutched the towel, bunching it up in her fist as she pressed it closer to her racing heart. “How did you—”
“Shh.” His eyes grew dark with subtle reflections of mystery, and then he took a graceful step forward, his movement as subtle as the flutter of a butterfly’s wings. “Come to me, Ahavi.” His iron chest rose and fell in deep, even breaths.
Mina bowed her head and forced an uncomfortable curtsy:
By all the Spirit Keepers, she was trying to be obedient
. “Of course.” She took a bold step in his direction and then halted. “Just give me a second to get dressed.” Her eyes darted across the room to the enormous four-poster bed and the pale linen nightgown laid out so neatly on top of it. “I’ll only be a moment.” She tried to shuffle forward without meeting his gaze, hoping he would allow her this small indulgence.
A harsh, guttural growl brought her up short. “I said,
come to me
,” he repeated, his voice like an icy wind.
Mina froze in place.
She got it.
She did
.
The prince expected nothing less than immediate submission and absolute obedience from his servants, and she was no exception. Although she had no desire to oppose him, it was just so hard to jump at the snap of his fingers. And right now, she would have given her right arm to be properly dressed, to not feel so incredibly vulnerable. She linked her hands behind her back in an act of submission and peeked at him through mollified lashes. “My prince, I only wish to—”
“Silence.” He shot her a clear, unmistakable warning with his eyes. “Not another word.”
Mina stood motionless, awaiting his next command. She couldn’t help but notice that the flames in the nearby hearth were flickering wildly in response to the dragon’s rising ire; the crescents were swaying to and fro as if tossed about in a turbulent wind; and the macabre reflection cast a haunting red shadow against the bedchamber wall, almost as if it were decreeing a warning:
Now is not the time to defy or incite the
beast.
Mina contracted her diaphragm as she breathed, still trying to calm her nerves.
Surely, Dante understood the rules…
He had to know that there were boundaries governing the five-month introductory period when the king’s sons selected their preferred Ahavi, lines that could not be crossed, principles that must be honored. Surely, Dante understood that the princes were not to
bed
their potential consorts before the Final Choosing, not a day before the Autumn Mating. It was strictly forbidden for so many reasons: Not only was it seen as distasteful and assuming, but to do so was akin to playing a dangerous game of chance, taking a perilous and unnecessary risk, flirting with imminent disaster.
Dragons were territorial by nature.
One male could not have
carnal knowledge
of his brother’s wife, nor could he risk impregnating the wrong consort—who’s to say he would not be devious enough to slip her the fertility elixir? Should a Sklavos Ahavi end up carrying the wrong prince’s child, her rightful master would be inclined, if not driven, to destroy the illegitimate offspring, to murder his nephew in an act of dominance and territorialism.
No
, carnal relations were forbidden during the preliminary months. Unfortunately, they were about
all
that was forbidden.
Trusting what she had been taught at the Keep, Mina forced herself to meet Dante’s intimidating stare head-on. She gathered her courage and took another step forward, moving clearly in his direction.
It must have been too little, too late.
His eyes flashed amber in response to what he clearly perceived as an unhurried pace, and then they turned even darker still—heavy, shadowed, and disapproving—as he used the power of his mind to wrest her forward more quickly.
Drawn by the dragon’s power, Mina took five quick, orchestrated steps toward Dante, shuffling mindlessly like a marionette on a puppeteer’s strings, until she finally stood before him, her toes nearly touching his. It was the same thing he had done that first day in the courtyard, and she felt utterly frustrated by the all-too-familiar situation.
It wasn’t as if she couldn’t learn.
Quite the contrary, really. She got it. She was just having trouble with the
immediate
part of obedience.
Holding her breath, she practically cowered before him.
“Why do you insist upon trying my patience, Mina?”
She sighed, feeling like she just couldn’t win, knowing there was no acceptable reply. After all, what could she say? Dante had no idea what this was like for her, what it was like for a mortal to stand in a dragon’s presence. And why would he?
How could he?
To him, her lame attempts at compliance were measly at best. To her, they were Herculean feats of bravery. She held her tongue, hoping to appease him with silence.
He stared at her exposed shoulders, unconsciously licking his full bottom lip while revealing the slightest hint of fangs, his mouth turning down in a scowl. “Ah, I see…silence.”
Mina trembled as he openly appraised her from head to toe, as if doing so was his gods-given right, and truth be told, it probably was.
“Turn around,” he commanded, subtly inclining his head.
Mina froze. Her heart began to race in her chest, and she instinctively clutched the towel above her breasts. She wanted to obey so badly it hurt, but his request was just so terrifying. Surely, Dante would not force himself upon a Sklavos Ahavi like a drunken commoner with a tawdry barmaid. Surely, he would not take
a virgin
in such a barbaric manner.
Dearest Ancestors, be merciful!
“W…why… milord?” she asked sheepishly.
Dante’s perfect brows creased in frustration, framing his harshly beautiful face like an angry crown as he waited for her compliance. “Have I not warned you, dear Mina, about questioning your lord?” He lowered his voice and whispered, “About challenging
the beast
?” His eyes fixed on the towel, the way she was holding it just above her breasts with white-knuckled fingers, and his voice practically vibrated with heat. “Do you really want to challenge the dragon’s dominant instincts
now
—in your present state of undress?”
Mina shivered. She drew in a deep breath and slowly turned around, clutching the towel even tighter, if that was possible. She could hear his breathing—it was shallow behind her—and the feel of his warm breath pulsated against her ears.
“Better,” he said. And then he spoke so quietly, she had to strain to hear him. “At the Keep, you were schooled in all the ways of the dragon, were you not? You were taught when and how to submit?”
“Y…y…yes, milord,” she whispered.
“Good. Then you understand our various appetites?”
Mina no longer just shivered. She literally quaked where she stood, her slender knees knocking together. She opened her mouth to reply, but no sound came out. She was terrified, beyond humiliated, and utterly speechless.
Dante reached out to touch her, although whether or not he meant to comfort her or threaten her, she had no idea. He slowly ran his fingers through her hair in a chilling caress, stopping to twirl several damp tendrils between his thumb and forefinger before letting them drop to her shoulders. And then he swept the lot of her hair away from her neck, placing it gently over the left side so that her right shoulder stood completely bare.
Her skin tingled beneath his ministrations. Her neck felt overly sensitive and unnaturally exposed, yet there she stood, frozen like a statue, submitting as a good Ahavi should.
Lowering his head to whisper in her ear, he said, “I am weary, Mina. Tired and famished. My dragon wishes to reanimate his fire.”
Mina blinked back tears and bit her bottom lip. She didn’t dare utter a word. She couldn’t if she tried. A dragon’s
fire-lust
was all-consuming once it began to burn. She knew this. All the Ahavi knew this. And if she tried to extinguish it now, she would only make matters worse, perhaps succeed at inciting another need altogether, a much more primitive, carnal hunger. She tried to brace herself for what was coming next, but her legs felt weak beneath her, and she had to take a quick shuttle-step to the side to keep from losing her balance.
Dante stiffened and stood up straight. Whether or not he had taken her silence as an affront, she didn’t know. Whether or not he was feeding on her fear, she didn’t want to know. She purposefully let her shoulders drop, just as they had been taught to do at the Keep, and then, in order to relax, to ease her rigid posture, she began to count her breaths, one after the other, silently in her mind. She paid careful attention to her diaphragm. She focused on the way her chest rose and fell. She visualized the air moving in and out of her body as a golden ray of light, and she concentrated on circulating it in smooth, even waves. She did everything she had been taught over the last six years.
Relax. Let yourself go. Drift away in your mind.
Just breathe.
“Good girl,” Dante whispered, and he genuinely seemed to approve. He encircled her shoulders with his powerful arms and lightly fingered the top of the towel. “Let go,” he commanded.
Mina swallowed hard and tried to comply, but her hands would not obey.
He gently pried her fingers loose from the fabric. “Do not fight me, Mina,” he warned as the thin towel began to slide down her waist.
Mina gasped as the towel fell to the ground and her body was instantly bared in the firelight, exposed to the dragon’s gaze. Dante drew in a harsh intake of breath, and she clenched her eyes shut, trying to recall her training, struggling to remember her duty, endeavoring to return to the rhythm of her breathing.
When he took a step back, moving several inches away, she nearly collapsed with relief, but then he placed both of his hands on her shoulders and began to slowly massage her muscles. It was almost as if he were a potter and she were a lump of clay as he kneaded her arms, slowly ran his palms down her biceps to her elbows, and then gently traced the outline of her forearms to the junction of her wrists. He lifted his hands and repositioned them at her waist, measuring her slender midriff with ten splayed fingers, cupping her belly with his outstretched hands. When his palms brushed over the curves of her hips and his thumbs slid absently over her buttocks, she panted in near desperation, trying to dispel her fear.
He knelt behind her, and Mina’s eyes grew wide.
Dear goddess of mercy
,
she was
naked!
What was he about to do?
Her eyes flitted across the room as she desperately searched for a focal point, an object to fix her attention upon. She quickly settled on a brass oil lamp, situated next to a tattered tome on the fireplace mantel, and she could practically hear the governess at the Keep whispering in her ear:
When you’re standing before him, and he is touching you; when the pain is too intense, or the degradation is too severe; when the demands he makes of your body feel too extreme, like you cannot comply, find a focal point or an object across the room and place your full attention upon it. Study it. Memorize it. Name its various parts in meticulous order. Count down the seconds, the minutes, or the hour; and do it in measurable increments.