Authors: Denise A. Agnew
A rumbling and roaring vibrated through the thick foliage, and he recognized the sound of an approaching dragon. The beast would be here soon, from the sound of it. Its thunderous footsteps echoed, throbbing in the ground. What were they doing bringing it here now?
A black dragon appeared, this one smaller than the one Drakus had used to attack the castle but one of the nasty fire-breathing types that made it more dangerous to handle. The animal’s furious growls were throaty and rumbling. Dane wanted to engage the dragon because he knew why Drakus brought it into view.
The bastard wanted to use Ketera as leverage.
It worked.
Swallowing convulsively, Dane reached for his sword and drew it from his scabbard. The blade gleamed like the moons that rose full every night, their gray hue shining and clear. Unexpected emotions rushed like a river inside him, fear foremost among them. Ketera depended on him, and he couldn’t fail her.
Before he could dwell on it, two Daryk Ones brought Ketera to the edge of the jungle. His gaze snagged on her and stayed.
Run. Run. Run.
If she did, they’d catch her and bring her back, or at the least the dragon would. Though he knew Ketera wasn’t defenseless, she could only fight so much against a creature that large.
Draconus help her. Give her power and strength.
He’d never prayed to the god before in earnest, but now he did, hoping if there were a deity, that he would listen. Dane drew in a deep breath as he waited to see what happened next. The Daryk Ones surrounding Ketera took her arms and brought her to a wooden stake. They pushed her up against it, their movements not violent but no-nonsense. They drew her arms up and tied them to ropes that drew her arms up over her head. She hung there, her feet holding her up. Dane almost stepped forward, his anger as hot as the lightning that suddenly streaked across the sky.
A huge roar came from the sky. Thunderheads broke over the jungle, rising faster than he’d ever seen a storm develop. It was if the storms came by the will of Draconus, the god’s anger consuming and ready to drown them all. Dane knew that was shite, but the clouds turned purple and black, and the wind picked up. Black? He’d never seen black clouds form over the jungle. The ocean perhaps.
As Ketera hung from the trees and waited for her fate, she didn’t scream, but Dane wanted to. Oh yes. He wanted to yell, to cry for her to be released. It wouldn’t do him any good and he knew it. The Daryk Ones kept the dragon quite a distance from Ketera, and Dane was thankful. The threat was there, however, and he couldn’t ignore it. The men around him didn’t laugh or jeer or talk. He’d expected the rogues to act out their hostility, but he realized something important. The men didn’t see their revolution and a possible civil war as a reason to pillage and rape. They saw it as serious business with consequences. Only their leader didn’t buy into the philosophy, and that made his ideals and his pretensions all the more dangerous.
From the bank of tents, Drakus emerged. Dane gripped his sword hilt, ready for a fight, uncertain how or when danger would strike. Drakus walked into the makeshift arena, a sword gripped in his left hand. A fight against a left-handed man would be different, but Dane knew what to do. Training kicked in, and as Drakus walked toward him, Dane braced for whatever might come. Drakus stopped several feet away from Dane. Dane took in his half brother’s attire. The man wore an undecorated, plain black breastplate, a sleeveless tunic that ended at the knees. Unlike Dane, who wore trousers, Drakus’ legs were bare past the knee except for boots that covered up to his ankles. He didn’t wear a helmet as Daryk Ones often did, nor did he offer Dane head protection. The proof would come if the fight turned deadly. Dane didn’t know if it would—he couldn’t allow Drakus to live and save Ketera’s life.
Drakus held up his left fist, sword pointed to the stormy sky, stretching his hand high over his head. “Dane is an honored guest in this camp and his lovely mate,” he gestured to Ketera, “awaits her fate.”
The men cheered, and Dane’s blood ran as icy as a glacier in Imekland. He waited as Drakus made a cutting motion across his own throat, and the men stopped screaming and hooting, their arms high in the sky.
Drakus turned around, sword still in hand, addressing all the men. “The dragon is here to taste her blood if I so chose. If Dane should win our fight, he will not be harmed and Ketera shall not be sacrificed to the dragon.” Drakus’ eyes started to turn red as he moved around the ring, addressing the men it seemed almost one by one. “If I should win I could still sacrifice her. If not, I will take her to my bed and impregnate her as my concubine. She will bring us many children and prove once and for all that our few pregnant Magonian women are not a fluke.” He smiled in triumph. “We may be rogues, but we will prove that we’re right. Magonia will be ours, their land ours and their women ours.”
He shoved his arm upward, pointing his sword to the sky once more. The crowd cheered. Flasks filled with spirits started around the crowd. Good. If the rogue Daryk Ones became inebriated, that could prove good in one way. Or bad in another. They could become violent. Or they could become reckless and make mistakes. He hoped it was the later.
Dane’s breathing quickened, energy from the crowd adding fire to his blood. He no longer cared about maintaining civilization in the face of death. Nothing would stop him from winning this fight. He would save his woman. He would.
When the crowd stopped crowing and celebrating, Drakus turned to face Dane. “Shall we begin?”
Dane nodded and braced his body.
Drakus attacked.
* * * * *
Ketera’s body shuddered with fear as she watched Drakus hurl toward Dane. From her vantage point on an incline above the fracas, she saw the men come together in a furious tangle. Jungle pressed in on all sides around the small plateau. Her heart drummed in her ears as dragon breath puffed and a throaty roar issued with ear-splitting intensity. Thunder rumbled as inky clouds continued to pile high above the canopy. Small droplets of rain pattered on her head. She twisted in the ropes securing her wrists to opposite poles. Her feet supported her but just barely. Physical discomfort paled when she couldn’t take her gaze away from the fight below. Even the dragon’s loud huffing didn’t distract her as several Daryk Ones restrained the creature.
Dane met Drakus’ surge as their swords clanged. Sweat gleamed on their arms and legs as they moved with deftness and skill. Her heartbeat thundered in her ears as she tried to suck in one breath and then the other. Fear for Dane settled low in her stomach as if she’d swallowed a rock. Hard terror touched her at the thought of the dragon so close. God, it stank. She trembled.
Bravery. She must be brave.
Swords clashed with a loud ring as Dane and Drakus brought metal together time after time. Rain started to spatter on her body with large drops, wetting her hair and face and slapping her body. An unusually cold wind followed, flattening her tunic and pants to her skin. She shivered.
The rogue leader circled Dane, his movements practiced and as skillful as a beast on the hunt. She held her breath as Dane kept his gaze on his opponent. With a rush the men came together. The crowd roared at the same time lightning sent a jagged bolt across the sky. The men brought their swords together in a furious play of movements that moved so quickly she couldn’t keep up. The crowd’s appreciation drowned any sounds of exertion. The opponents backed away for a moment then plunged forward with brutal movements that expended all they had. Rain poured down their bodies as the storm lashed the jungle with unremitting fury. It was almost as if the storm knew the fight’s importance. A war could be settled before it started. From here she could hear their labored breaths, see their expressions. Dane was determined, and with everything inside her she willed him to stay safe and fight hard.
Oh god Magon. Keep him alive. Keep him safe. I love him.
Dane lunged with a move so quick and furious she almost missed it. A growl issued from his throat as his blade slashed Drakus’ rib cage. Drakus cried out, the sound engorged with pain. Drakus fell to his knees and clutched his side.
Dane could take his head now with one blow.
She held her breath.
Suddenly, out of the bush, dozens of voices rang from all sides, their cries angry and ready for war. Dane hesitated and the Daryk Ones surrounding the fight turned, looked and readied their stance for attack. Their leader down, they had no order.
Then she saw a familiar figure hurling from the jungle in front of the attackers.
Her breath caught. “Minilos.”
The older man threw himself into the fray.
To her right the dragon roared and turned toward her.
Her heart seemed to stop. Time stopped.
“Dane, I love you.”
Chapter Twenty-One
Dane’s mind whirled as three things happened at once. Drakus fell to his knees. Daryk Ones surged from the jungle. The dragon roared and surged. The Daryk Ones holding it lost their grip and fell to the ground.
Dane allowed all his extraordinary strength and battle fever to fill his muscles.
Dane darted away from the fight toward Ketera. She struggled against the ropes as the dragon took a step toward her. The dragon’s fury turned to its right as its wings spread and with three huge leaps, the creature was upon him.
The dragon didn’t care about Ketera.
It wanted him.
Dane charged the beast.
A huge wing came down toward Dane as the dragon’s mouth opened wide. Dane stared into the purple maw, half expecting jaws to clamp down. Dane twisted to miss the crushing wing and mouth.
“Dane!”
Ketera’s scream echoed in his mind, and as he rolled out from under the dragon, he realized she must have thought the dragon had eaten him.
Empowered by his escape, Dane ignored the men fighting nearby, his opponent prone on the ground. He’d free Ketera, but the dragon had to go first.
As he came out from under the dragon’s shadow, he pinpointed all his concentration on the beast. He drew back, and with tremendous momentum, heaved the sword toward the beast’s belly. Above Dane lightning splintered the sky with dagger fingers. Water poured down from the heavens.
The sword hit.
The dragon came to a complete stop, its hateful green eyes rolling wildly. With a cry that echoed across the jungle through the pounding rain and fighting men, the dragon started to fall. At impact the ground actually trembled beneath Dane’s feet. When the beast’s heaving breath puffed out in a great expiration, Dane ran toward the creature, grabbed the hilt of his sword and yanked it free.
Dane’s surprise at the easy kill couldn’t overwhelm his amazement to see Samhala cutting Ketera loose from her restraints. Dane charged toward them, still not trusting Samhala. As the ropes fell away from Ketera, she rushed toward him.
He gathered her against him with his left arm, his bloody sword still in his right hand. She trembled against him, and he crushed her to him, his lips finding hers in one desperate kiss. Her arms came around his neck. As he broke the kiss, the fighting nearby caught his attention.
“Where did Samhala go?” Ketera asked.
“Don’t know. But we have to get out of here.”
He grabbed her hand and broke into a run. No time to fight with Minilos or the other Daryk Ones who’d found their way here to help. No time to ask why. It was better to head for Grimnald Castle and learn the truth later. Dane half expected a rogue to come after them, but Minilos’ band of men kept them occupied.
Minilos ran to them. “Get your mate to safety. We’ll take care of this mess here.”
Dane nodded. “Thank you. I owe you one.”
Minilos laughed. “You owe me more than one.”
As they plunged into the jungle, the rain continued to saturate them. Hair flopped in his face, and he shook his head to get it out of the way. The jungle came at them from all directions, sodden leaves and mud sucking at their feet. Rain lashed at them with tremendous force. Ketera stumbled and was torn from his arms. She slid partway down a hill.
“Ketera!” He shouted into the wind. When he reached her, he lifted her into his arms and ran with her.
She didn’t protest, and he felt her shivering in his arms. So he just kept running.
And running.
* * * * *
Ketera awakened in a familiar place, her body wrapped in safety and warmth. During their headlong flight to escape, Dane had carried her a good portion of the way. She’d protested, but he wouldn’t listen. Eventually he put her down and they kept running. Finally the cave they’d taken shelter in before came into view. They’d collapsed inside, Dane gathering her close as they sat together in quiet. As she took in their surroundings, she noticed dawn had come and the relentless rain had stopped.
She shifted in Dane’s arms and took stock of his expression. His eyes opened, their beautiful intensity showing complete calm. His gaze shone with warmth and appreciation that started a tingle in her lower belly. Arousal rose swiftly. She reached up to touch his cheek and the bristly beard rasped over her palm.
“I thought I’d lost you,” she said.
His smile was slow and sensual, his eyes beautiful without the Vedic red to obscure their true color. “You could never lose me. You’re my mate.”
She sighed, peace coming over her until she thought of her father. She had cried in Dane’s arms when they reached the cave, but didn’t know if the strain of their recent experience caused her to cry. She thought of her father, her guilt searing.
“You’re thinking of your father,” Dane said.
She peered at him. “How did you know?”
He brushed a tender touch over her hair. “The same way I knew you were in danger. The rumors about a strong mate bond are true.”
“I’m so grateful you knew to come for me. I…I was trying to be strong but…”
He feathered kisses over her forehead. “You are the bravest woman I’ve ever known.”
Tears flooded her eyes but she resisted them. “Thank you. I don’t feel strong.”
A weary smile touched his lips. “You’ve had so many things happen in a short time. Give yourself time to recover.”