Dragon Her Back (Entangled Covet)

Read Dragon Her Back (Entangled Covet) Online

Authors: Susannah Scott

Tags: #Las Vegas, #Susannah Scott, #contemporary, #secret love, #Covet, #Dragon Her Back, #dragonshifter, #paranormal, #Dragon, #romance, #Entangled, #PNR

BOOK: Dragon Her Back (Entangled Covet)
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How To Claim Your Dragon...

As the head of security of Vegas’s Crown Jewel casino—and its hidden dragonshifter sanctuary—ice dragon Darius Dachien commands respect. Unfortunately, that respect isn’t always reciprocated. In fact, when it comes to the stunning Mei Chen, hostility might be a better word. Which makes things even harder for Darius, since Mei is his dragon mate. Without her, his dragon form is fading fast...and once lost, will be gone forever.

Mei can’t deny the fierce chemistry that simmers between them. If Darius were ever to discover who—or rather, what—she really is, she wouldn’t just lose him, but her place with the dragonshifters. The moment Mei’s past comes crashing into her present, she realizes her time for secrets has ended. Now she must reveal her true self...and risk both her life and her heart with the one man who could destroy her.

Table of Contents

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2014 by Susannah Scott. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

Entangled Publishing, LLC

2614 South Timberline Road

Suite 109

Fort Collins, CO 80525

Visit our website at
www.entangledpublishing.com
.

Covet is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.

Edited by Kate Fall

Cover design by Curtis Svehlak and Kelley York

Photography by Shutterstock

ISBN 978-1-63375-157-6

Manufactured in the United States of America

First Edition December 2014

The author acknowledges the copyrighted or trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction: Foreigner, “Urgent” lyrics.

For my Street Team, who twisted my writing arm (hard) until I wrote Mei and Darius’s story.

Enjoy! Xo, S

Chapter One

It occurred to Darius on Tuesday that his strategy with Mei was flawed, yet again.

By Wednesday, he’d read five relationship-guru bestsellers, re-read the psychology masters, and studied the top ten love blogs. He drew the line at watching a chick flick to help him find his
inner
empathy
.

Over the years, he’d tried many different approaches to impress Mei: waiting, cajoling, attempts to make her jealous. Nothing swayed her. Asking his friend Alec, the King of the dragons, to talk to her on his behalf had failed so epically that after Alec’s chat with her, she wouldn’t stay in the same room with him. Although Mei was an ice dragon, like him, and loyal to the king, private relationships were private.

And enough was enough. It had been five years, ten months, and twenty-eight days since she’d been in his bed. He was determined to not hit the six-year mark without their bond completed. His dragon form was starting to wane without his bond with Mei, and he didn’t want to risk losing his dragon form forever.

Hence, the new approach.

Darius strode to his office on the catwalk of the Crown Jewel Casino’s high-tech surveillance center. His notes from his online research on winning over Mei sat ready for him to parse in digital folders on his computer.

He frowned as he sat in his leather chair, picked up his stress ball, and squished it between his fingers. On his computer, he reopened a popular blog on love. It was mostly useless drivel: all love-is-the-answer, love-will-set-you-free, yada, yada. It wasn’t that he didn’t believe in love. His parents had been mated for over fifty years. Their partnership was solid, based on compatibility and mutual goals.

He wanted that with Mei, but also with the back-in-his-bed part thrown in. After their one night together, he knew they had the hot sex part covered. So hot, the memory of it still scorched the back of his eyelids when he dreamed.

He scanned to the blog’s comments section. One poster, FoundMyTrueLOVE—obviously a woman—went on and on about how she’d tried an online dating service and found her
True
LOVE!!!! Whoa. Someone should tell her caps and four exclamation points just made her seem…unstable.

His interest perked at the description of an online service written by a more literate poster. Supposedly, for a small fee, the fine folks at LoveMatch used an algorithm to calculate from sixty questions with whom in their database their clients were most compatible.

Interesting. He should have thought of it himself.

Mei was compatible with him, whether she admitted it or not. She had his dragon mark on her hand to prove it, which meant she was his destined mate. She covered it with makeup, but everyone knew she was his. If she remained unconvinced, maybe he could put her preferences into the algorithm and figure out the best way to approach her—become her perfect match.

Brilliant new plan.

He liked it.

Ten minutes later, he used his NSA-ready-computer skills to hack into the LoveMatch mainframe and found the questions and the mathematical weights given to each answer. As expected, the questionnaire funneled the responses, with the first questions carrying the highest weight.

How would Mei describe herself in five words?

How would he describe her, no problem: sexy as hell, secretive, and ambitious. Those choices weren’t listed, and none of the typical answers fit Mei.

He squeezed his stress ball until it oozed between his fingers. Would she consider herself dragon or human first? It was an existential question long argued by their people, the whole which-came-first: the reactionary dragon or the rational human. No one really knew the answer.

It galled him that he’d never seen her ice dragon form. There was nothing a dragon loved better than the dragon form of their mate. Mei stayed away from all the dragon-focused social events at the casino and kept to herself when she was hunting. He figured she withheld her dragon from him on purpose as a punishment—or because she worried she couldn’t resist him in her more bestial form.

Right. Keep dreaming
.

He looked at the next question.

What is the first thing people notice about you?

Her lips. She wore red lipstick that accented her bow-shaped mouth. He loved her lips. He could imagine them wrapped around his cock even now, leaving a red circle…a brand. A red brand on his cock.

God, he was bad at this.

He was going to need some help.

Darius tapped on the executive office door, not surprised to find Leo’s wife, Tee, at work there. “Hey, you got a minute?”

Tee straightened from her perusal of building plans on the conference table. She was Paiute Native American, and when she smiled, her angled cheekbones softened. “Sure, Come on in.”

“How’s the new site coming?” He entered the window-lined executive office and peered over Tee’s shoulder. The new site was a joint venture project between the Crown Jewel Casino and Tee’s Paiute Tribe. While the Crown Jewel was located on the swank Vegas strip, and secretly housed a dragon sanctuary in its top floors, this new site would be on tribal land and wholly human. The added revenue would do much to help the reservation’s depleted infrastructure.

“Good.” Tee smiled. “The tribe’s in agreement with the placement of the golf course, and we’ve found a low-impact builder. We should break ground this spring.”

“That’s great.” He rolled the paper with the list of questions he’d written from LoveMatch in his right hand, unsure how to ask about Mei.

Tee shifted her gaze to his hand. “What’s that?”

Darius sat in a conference chair, swiveling on his heels, back and forth. Tee was one of Mei’s best friends despite being a human and not a dragon. But, after the fallout from the time she’d advised him to try and make Mei jealous, she’d maintained a strict you’re-on-your-own attitude to helping him with Mei.

Tee put her hands on her hips. “What is it? One of my old players acting up?” She referred to the impressive list of casino high rollers she used to hostess before she married Leo, the king’s right-hand man and the casino’s CEO of Operations.

“No. It’s Mei.”

“Lord have mercy.” Tee threw her hands up. “Not this again. I’ve told you a million times, talk directly to the woman.”

“I’ve got a new strategy.”

“Uh-huh.” Tee turned back to the plans, giving him her profile. Her long black hair swept a curtain between them, which he guessed was deliberate.

“I’ve just got a few questions about her that I can’t answer.”

“Why don’t you ask her yourself?”

“You know why. I haven’t actually seen her, in person, in months.”

Not since Alec had tried talking to her. She hadn’t even given Darius the satisfaction of a big blow up. She’d just gone ice princess on him. As an ice dragon himself, he knew something about frigid.

Mei made frigid look like a balmy day on the equator.

“Whose fault is that?” Tee met his gaze, and her dark brown eyes were solemn.

“Just a few questions.”

“All right,” Tee said. “Fire away.”

Relief coursed through him. “What five words would you use to describe Mei?”

“Loyal. Tidy. Focused. Driven. Funny.” Tee rattled them off without glancing up from blue prints for the Paiute Tribe development.

He compared his mental list. “Funny?” He supposed driven and ambitious could mean the same thing, but he never would have said funny.

“Yeah. She’s hysterical. You didn’t know that?”

He shook his head. He tried to remember if he’d ever heard her laugh.

Nope.

Dismay that understanding Mei was forever beyond him coursed through his system. He had to change her mind. Failure was not an option. His strength was fading in a way that spoke of waning and not just a bad day at the gym. If he didn’t connect with his mate—Mei—soon, his dragon would disappear forever, leaving him mortal, weak, and alone.

He had to keep trying. “Her favorite food?”

Sushi. Had to be sushi. He’d watched her order it from the casino chef direct tons of times on the surveillance cameras.

“Yellowtail tuna sushi.”

He smiled wide. “What does her dragon look like?”

“I’ve never seen it.”

“What?” Surprise made him look up from his notes.

Tee gave him her full attention. “You haven’t, either? I just figured it was because I was a human and all.” She shrugged. “You could ask Jane.”

Maybe it wasn’t that odd for Tee not to have seen her dragon form. It was discouraged for them to shift except on the casino’s rooftop dragon sanctuary. They didn’t want the humans to guess the “mechanical” flying dragons that circled the fifty-two-story casino weren’t mechanical at all.

“I’m not one to give relationship advice…” Tee gave him a concerned look.

Classic. People always said they
weren

t
something—as if it nullified that they actually
were
the very things they disavowed. Tee was most definitely a busybody. It was why he came to her instead of Mei’s other best friend, Jane. Jane, a storm dragon, was the Fort Knox of sisterly solidarity. Tee was too soft to let him suffer in silence.

“Those questions,” Tee said. “They don’t tell you anything about Mei that really matters.”

“Thanks.” He stood, anxious now to add the information to the algorithm. “I’ve got it from here.”

“Sure you do.” Tee’s voice was sarcastic. “How many billions of people are there in the world?”

“A little over seven,” he answered easily. He also knew the exact breakdown of humans versus dragon-shifters country by country.

“I bet at least a hundred thousand people would answer your questions the same way I just did, but they’re no where close to being the same as Mei. People are complex. I know you’re used to dealing with codes and numbers that add up, but people aren’t a zero-sum equation.”

He nodded, straightening the edges of his paper before re-rolling it. “Thanks for your help.”

He headed back to his office, ready to feed the answers into the hacked algorithm to see what kind of man was Mei’s perfect match. When he opened the door to the security center, his hand shook, stopping his forward momentum. He stared for a second at the offending tremble, fury at his waning form making him clench his fists and stride forward. There was no option this time. He would win Mei over or lose his dragon form forever.

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