Authors: Judith Leger
Tags: #Wild Child Publishing Fantasy Romance Novel, #fantasy, #romance, #novel, #dragons
impossible for you to talk to me in a vision. Someone is
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playing with my mind. I don’t like it.” Her words were laced
with venom. She shook with her inability to regain control
over her emotions.
Suddenly peace coursed through her, stronger than
before. Wanting to fight against the calming influence, she
panted for a second, and then cried out. “I don’t want
another child.”
He never moved. His eyes remained calm, serene. “I am
not your lost one.”
Seren froze. His words struck a hard blow to her heart.
She relaxed her hold on her lower belly and stood straighter,
her muscles no longer tender. “I know that. There’ll never be
another like her.”
“No, never. But I am not her. I am myself.”
She tried to suppress a sob, but failed. Her mind refused
to face what this young man demanded she accept. She
didn’t want to experience the torture of her loss any longer.
“Don’t do this to me. I loved her so much. The pain I went
through when I lost her...I don’t ever want to feel that way
again.”
“Do you fear you will love me more than her?”
His question surprised her. She frowned, considering, but
failed to find an answer she wanted to admit. “I don’t know.”
“Yes. You do. You have nothing to fear. I will never leave
you. You have been chosen by the seven great dragons to be
the vessel for my creation.”
Seren frowned in confusion. “What? I don’t understand.
How do you know this? How can you appear to me like this?
This isn’t possible on Earth. I would be declared insane if
anyone knew I was speaking with my unborn child, and he, a
full grown man, was answering me.”
His eyes crinkled at the corners with his unseen smile.
They lit with an internal joy and acceptance. “I am who I am
from the moment of creation, thus my spirit became instilled
within this form which is my body. Through the magic of the
dragons, I have been allowed to release my power sooner
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than a normal dragonseed, thus at this time, I can speak to
you through your ability to see visions.”
Seren frowned while she considered his answer. Speech
in the form of coherent language needed time to learn. Was
the magic he spoke of powerful enough that even an unborn
babe had the knowledge needed to communicate with her?
When she didn’t respond, he continued.
“I am here for a purpose, just like you. The dragon’s
magic opened the door to this place for one purpose. My
creation.”
Seren remained silent for several minutes, mulling over
this new information. “Why would the dragons want you
created? Why are you so important to them?”
“They fear the coming times. With me, all dragons will
unite. They will become one power. Without me, chaos will
reign. This world will end in a firestorm of war and plague as
in the past. History repeated.”
“And your father—me? What will happen to us?”
“My father is expendable. You are not.”
An image of Paladin bleeding, dying, came to her. A sharp
stab of regret sliced through Seren’s chest. She hadn’t
expected this reaction. Only a few days had passed since she
arrived on Avaris. Had she grown to feel more for the tall
captain than she’d realized? She shoved those thoughts away
and caught hold of the last part of his comments.
She laughed, bitterness filling her. “What makes
me
so
unique? My wonderful ability as a mother? I couldn’t save
my child. So why is he expendable and not me?”
“He is the White Dragon King. The one to bring the seven
great and powerful dragons together, but I will rule over
them. Their blood will be one in me, never in him.”
Relief flowed through her for a brief second. His answer
pleased her. For some reason, she didn’t want to examine
why she didn’t want anything to happen to Paladin too
closely. Not right now. “So he won’t die anytime soon?”
“I cannot say. There are other forces plotting Avaris’
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future besides the dragons. If all goes the way the seven
desire it to, my father will live to see me on my throne. I
would have it no other way.”
She nodded, satisfied. “You can talk to me, but can you
read my mind?”
“I am a part of you.”
“I don’t want to love you...please, understand.”
Silence passed between them while his eyes remained
locked on hers, and then he looked down. Sadness edged his
brow. He shook his head. “I understand many things, but
this is one I do not—you are my mother.”
She took a deep breath, squeezed her eyes closed, but the
tears still managed to escape. “If I love you, I’ll never want to
lose you. If I do, I know it’ll be a million times worse than
with Mandy. That’s what I fear the most.”
When she finished speaking, thick blackness coated her
vision. She jerked, and Paladin’s quarters reappeared around
her.
A wave of peace washed over her. Her tense muscles
relaxed. He comforted her, sweet baby. Her son. She patted
her lower abdomen and smiled through her tears.
* * * *
either side of the city of Dene. The white strips showed stark
against the gray cast of the sky along with the dark green
foliage further inland. Stone buildings stood in staggered
heights along the slopes and ridges of the coast.
Paladin paced back and forth on the bow, gazing at the
land. His tension increased with the ship’s approach, coming
in low to the churning bluish-green sea, to the pale wooden
docks sticking out into the water.
Lightning illuminated the deep charcoal clouds racing
across the sky. The bolts streaked toward the trees just
beyond the city. Sparks shot out from the smoke rising from
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the spot. The wind increased, bringing a singed odor with it.
Paladin waited for the cool downpour.
Seren worried him. Not her ordeal with their son’s
dragon fire or even her strange beliefs, but how she affected
him. The memory of how she felt under him remained,
teasing, tempting him. Every time he shut his eyes, he saw
the passion on her face when she...
He clenched his jaw. No, he refused to dwell on the
matter. She made her decision. Far be it for him to argue, but
he wanted to. He wanted more from her than she seemed
willing to give. With their departure and her illness, he put
the memories of their night from his mind. Now, they rose
up to haunt him.
The sky roiled, roaring for all to hear the news of the
approaching storm. The turmoil in the air called to the baser
side of him, the part controlled by the beast—his dragon
blood. With the call, his blood warmed with the need for a
woman, but not just any woman. He wanted Seren, desired
the soft curve of her hips, the plushness of her inner thighs,
her lips and tongue driving him wild. He closed his eyes,
remembering how she felt beneath him—her body, small and
slender, cushioning his while her inner muscles clasped him.
He had not wanted to pull out of her. She had created an
unquenchable thirst in him for her which was now multiplied
by the fact that she carried his child.
He tried to understand what she was going through, but
he failed to comprehend the depth of her pain, her fear. He
had lost a child, yet he had no desire to isolate himself from
the world. No matter how he looked at her situation, he was
lost because she gave him no real reason behind her refusal
to have another child.
“Cap’an.” Calis spoke from behind him.
Paladin pivoted to his first mate. Calis stood with his
hands clasped behind his back. The barrel-chested man
nodded toward the door leading below deck. Paladin shifted
his glance and saw Seren, dressed in her boy’s clothes,
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leaning against the doorframe, looking around.
Unobserved, he studied her, watching for any signs of her
recent ordeal. Her eyes rounded with curiosity. The noise
and bustle picked up with several of the sailors calling
greetings to her. She had said there were none like the
Felerians in her world. Now, she surveyed the males with
intensity. Jealousy reared in him.
He took a step toward her before he realized what he’d
done. He stopped, hands balling into fists. She did not
belong to him. They had shared one night with no resulting
bond but their child between them. Seren was well within
her rights to look at other males if she so desired. He
clenched his jaw. She didn’t have to do so in front of him.
“Fetch two cloaks,” Paladin barked at Calis. He stiffened
in frustration over his reaction to the off-worlder. He turned
toward the shore, eyes focused on the wall of rain
approaching the ship.
“Aye, Cap’an” Calis replied, and then his gruff voice
softened. “Uh, should she be up so soon after her illness?”
Paladin refused to allow anyone, even his good friend, to
hear any concern from him about Seren. He responded in a
level tone, “She is fine, besides I do not believe she would
listen should I order her to remain abed. Go now, the storm
draws nearer.”
Thunder boomed, silencing the thud of Calis’ retreating
footsteps. Lightning flashed, illuminating the white-tipped
waves. Paladin waited, confident she would seek him out.
The wind gusted, shoving the loose strands of his hair away
from his face. He breathed deep, his eyelids drooping as the
weather’s power flowed around him.
“Is this the place where the man from Earth lives?”
The question caused him to close his eyes. She had raised
her voice so he would hear her above the storm. Desire to
turn and gather her into his arms threatened to overpower
him, but he managed to stamp the need down. He spurned
the thought of her knowing how much he craved her.
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“It is. Dene, City of Storms. The climate here is unstable,
but the land is rich. The ground fertile to crops. Those who
live here have learned to adapt.” He glanced over his
shoulder toward the doorway leading below. Where was
Calis? The rain wall, dark and thick with ascending moisture,
moved forward at a fast pace.
His first mate stepped from the passageway. He hurried
toward them. When Calis handed the dark cloaks to him,
Paladin nodded.
“Here ye go, Sire.” Calis bobbed his head. Without
another word, he spun on his heels and left them.
“Put this on. The rain here is thick enough to drown a
human,” Paladin said, ignoring Calis’ slip, handing her one of
the bell-sleeved, hooded coats. Silver threads woven into the
black fabrics glinted in the dimming light.
Her eyes rounded and her mouth formed a very enticing
little O, her surprise was extremely becoming. His body
stirred, the tingling beginning of need making him
uncomfortable not being able to touch her.
“Drown? Are you serious?” She slipped her arms into the
long sleeves, pulling the sides together in the front. He cast
an admiring gaze down her slender body. The material clung
to her every curve.
“It has been known to happen.” He slipped his own over
his shoulders, keeping a close eye on her. He watched,
transfixed by the graceful movements of her lifting the hood
over her head and pulling the thin protective veil down
across the opening.
Her hand brushed the material, a frown marring her
smooth brow. “What’s this made of? It’s not velvet.”
“Sea drac scales. The ones that do not survive to become
dragoons wash ashore. The clans of Bae harvest them. They
weave the scales together into a cloth. Their clothing is made
of this.”
Through the veil’s dark tint, her cheeks held a small
measure of dusky pink. He fisted his hands to keep from
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slipping one under the material and touching the satiny skin
there. With his jaw clenched, he faced the shore in time for
the rain.
The sharp sting of the water against his skin helped take
his mind off his raw desire for her. He hesitated to lift the
protective hood. Once certain he controlled his actions, he
flipped the hood forward.
She brushed her fingers over the cloth. Her voice rose