Authors: Tessa Dawn
“What choice do they have?” Mina said.
Cassidy frowned. “Makes that womb of yours—
of ours
—a bit more precious, does it not?”
Mina pressed her hand to her stomach and fought not to puke, and that’s when she saw the human male at the end of the line, dressed in prisoner’s rags. His legs were hobbled and bleeding. His wrists and his ankles were chained, and his eyes were hauntingly familiar:
Matthias
Gentry
.
Her childhood friend.
The boy she was supposed to marry before the entire world had flipped on its axis.
“Oh gods,” Mina blurted as her vision swam. She stared up at the dais, trying to lock eyes with Dante. He had to do something. About all of it. The feeding, the soon-to-be slaughter, the inevitable war. She knew her thoughts were jumbled, that none of it made sense; after all, what could Dante possibly do to stop it, any of it?
Yet and still, everything inside of her was crying out against the injustice…
And that’s when the bugler sounded his horn once more, and the king commanded the court’s attention. “Silence!” he bellowed into the clamoring hall. “We are not done with our most important business.” And just like that, he had dismissed the presence of the slaves, the meaning of their sacrifice, and the visual reminder of what was to come.
The king ushered his scribe forward, and the young man hurried up the dais with the tray containing the vials, the quill, and the scrolls. Demitri reached for the first of the two cylinders and unfurled the parchment. Without preamble, he began to read. “On this, the twenty-fifth day of May, in the 175th year of the Dragonas’ Reign, the season of the diamond king, I Demitri Dragona, one and the same, hereby set forth into law for all perpetuity the following decrees: First, to my eldest son, Dante Dragona, I bequeath the province of Warlochia, the castle, the court, and all the lands therein, and I place him at the head of the Warlochian army to lead his subjects in battle as he sees fit. Effective today, this decree shall supersede the autumn coronation. Second, to my next-eldest son, Damian Dragona, I bequeath the province of Umbras, the castle, the court, and all the lands therein, and I place him at the head of the Umbrasian army to lead his subjects in battle as he sees fit. Effective today, this decree supersedes the autumn coronation.”
The king continued to read the proclamation, bequeathing the
commonlands
to Drake, his youngest son, and also placing him at the head of the corresponding army. It was clear to Mina that he wanted each of his sons to have absolute sovereignty for the upcoming battle, and he was willing to circumvent the autumn ceremony in order to make that happen. So what did that mean for them, the Sklavos Ahavi?
As if the king had read her mind, Demitri Dragona stepped forward to the very edge of the dais, his long brocade robe flowing down the top two steps as he scanned the crowd and briefly locked gazes…
with Mina
. Turning back to the general audience, and ignoring the doomed slaves before him, he raised his imperial chin and gestured lavishly with his right hand. “I will not send my sons to war, where they may die at the hands of perilous shifters, without first bestowing upon them their birthright
and
their selected mates, the chosen Sklavos Ahavi. Both their castles and their females are now theirs to claim, and they may take them to the port of Dracos Cove as they see fit. Should the Bringer of Rain choose to claim one—or any—of my children, may He first bless them with a dragon son.” He nodded at the scribe, who glanced down at the vials on the velvet-lined tray, and Mina knew—
oh gods, she knew
—they were indeed the fertility sacrament.
The scribe opened the second scroll, which was apparently unmarked, raised a quill, and dipped it in ink, waiting for the king’s final proclamation. King Demitri then turned to face his sons and nodded at Drake. “From this day forth, until death shall part them, I bestow upon my youngest son, Drake Dragona, the Sklavos Ahavi known as Tatiana Ward. May she faithfully serve her lord, Castle Commons, and the Realm, and may the gods bless them with many sons.”
Tatiana swayed on her feet with relief, and Mina had to reach out to steady her—her own heart was beating like a clay tambour in her chest.
Gods of the underworld
, the princes had not had a chance to petition their father for their chosen mates…
Or had they?
Wavani, the king’s witch, had yet to make a recommendation.
Or had
she?
Maybe that was good.
Mina held her breath and waited as the scribe finished penning the first matrimonial proclamation, and the king turned his attention to Dante. “From this day forth, until death shall part them, I bestow upon my eldest son, Dante Dragona, the Sklavos Ahavi known as Cassidy Bondeville. May she faithfully serve her lord, Castle Warlochia, and the Realm, and may the gods bless them with many sons.”
Mina’s face flushed with heat, even as her arms and her legs began to tremble.
Wait…
What had she just
heard?
Dante and Cassidy?
No, that couldn’t be right.
That wasn’t
right.
Time seemed to stand still, and everything around her spun in befuddled circles as the king continued to speak: “From this day forth, until death shall part them, I bestow upon my second son, Damian Dragona, the Sklavos Ahavi he has requested, known as Mina Louvet. May she faithfully serve her lord, Castle Umbras, and the Realm, and may the gods bless them with many sons.”
Mina’s jaw dropped open, but she couldn’t form an articulate sound. She stared up at the dais, her gaze desperately seeking Dante’s. Was he trying to say something to his father? Was he asking for a private word?
Yes—
yes
—of course he was, and surely the king would hear him out.
There was a short exchange between the two Dragonas, and then King Demitri held up his hand, cutting Dante off, abruptly. The monarch flicked his wrist in sharp dismissal, and that was…that was…what?
The end of it?
No! It couldn’t be the end of it.
“Noooooo!” Mina’s soul was screaming. “Dante, please…help me.”
Nothing was real.
“Be quiet!” A sharp slap.
Cassidy’s hand? On the side of Mina’s
cheek?
“Mina.
Mina!
Can you hear me?” Tatiana bracing Mina by the shoulders?
“We’re wanted on the dais!”
Cassidy, again?
For the life of her, Mina could not make sense of all the random words and sensations, the pain in her face, the pressure on her arms, the words…
the words
…the faraway words.
And Dante?
What just
happened?
At someone’s insistence Mina took a tentative step forward toward the dais, and then, the next thing she knew, she was lying on the floor, cocooned in darkness.
Chapter Fifteen
D
ante Dragona was
seething inside, still stunned by the recent proclamations, but he couldn’t process it now. He couldn’t feel any of it. There just wasn’t time. The Warlochian army—
his army
—was marching from the east toward the northern shore, toward the port of Dracos, and he wanted to catch up with them before they got to the sea. While the warlocks and their gargoyle pets might be formidable foes, far more dangerous than their human counterparts, they were still no match for preternatural shifters, for the Lycanians hordes. They would need a dragon by their side, even if Dante couldn’t fully shift.
He stormed down the upper hall of Castle Dragon, gathering the last of his important belongings: his heavy lance, his great sword, and a series of strategic maps. As he rounded the hall to descend the grand staircase, he glanced over his shoulder toward Mina’s bedchamber and stiffened. Gods, he could still see her beautiful face, the glazed-over tears in her emerald eyes, the shock that widened her pupils, and the trembling in her bottom lip as fear took a firm and inexorable hold on her heart. He could still hear that piteous scream:
“Noooooo! Dante please…help me.”
He cringed at the memory. She had cried out in such despair—
in front of the entire castle court
. She had recoiled at the mere thought of being mated to Damian, and her strong, tenacious mind had literally shut down rather than embrace the reality of her fate.
Damian would beat her bloody for the public insult.
A deep, primal snarl rose in Dante’s throat, and he clenched his fists at his sides. His father had gone too far—perhaps for all the right reasons, perhaps not—but it just didn’t make any sense. Why had King Demitri done it? Why had he chosen Mina for Damian, and Cassidy for Dante; and why had he been so closed off to opinions? Yes, there were much more important matters to attend to, things that couldn’t wait, but the king had made the call. He had chosen to conduct a lesser rite of the Autumn Mating,
now
. The least he could’ve done is hear his sons’ opinions.
All
his sons’ opinions.
“Dante.
Dante
!” Cassidy Bondeville came prancing down the hall, hurrying in his direction, her thick blond hair brushing the tops of her shoulders and swaying like a pendulum in response to her eager motion. “Ah, I’m so glad I caught you, my love.”
He planted his feet and squared his shoulders. “My prince,” he snarled.
“Excuse me?” she drawled in that infuriating, sugar-sweet voice.
“
My prince
,” he said coolly. “Don’t ever call me your love. That is not what we are.”
The Ahavi blanched, clearly taken aback by his blunt words. She opened her mouth to protest, but apparently thought better of it. “Oh, yes, of course. Forgive me.” She curtsied…perfectly.
“I don’t have time for this, Ahavi. What do you want?”
“Cassidy,” she said softly, smiling. “You may call me Cassidy.”
Dante bristled from head to toe. He took a menacing step in her direction, allowing his dragon to heat the pupils of his eyes, and then he leaned forward. “Think carefully before you
tell me
what to do. What. Do. You. Want?”
Cassidy took one wary look at his glowing eyes and stole a cautious step back. “I…I simply wanted to see you off, and I had hoped”—she bit her bottom lip like a petulant child and tried to bat her bright blue eyes—“I was still hoping you might take me with you to the cove.”
Dante was finished with the conversation.
He had not lived 169 years as an immortal dragon to explain himself to a foolish human who wore a ball gown to a war conference, Sklavos Ahavi or not. Ever since that insignificant, regretful night when he had passed her in the hall—the one and only time he had fed from her because he was on his way to spar with Drake and didn’t care to bother Mina—Cassidy had acted like she had some clandestine claim on him, like he had some carnal interest in her. She had acted brazenly and wantonly every time she saw him, as if
she
were the monarch and
he
was hers to command…
As if every female in Castle Dragon—
nay, all of the Realm
—was not his to take at will.
He knew he couldn’t stand her then, and he couldn’t stand her now. As for the fact that she was his mated female, well, he would sort that out later.
Much
later.
Perhaps when it was time to procreate.
He turned on his heel and began to descend the staircase, dismissing her with a sidelong glance.
She ran after him.
“Dante.
My prince
.” She caught up to his side and reached out to take his arm.
He spun around and snatched her by the throat, moving so quickly she never saw it coming. He was hardly aware of what he was doing—his dragon was teetering on the edge. “Is this what you want,
Cassidy
?” he snarled, digging his claws into her delicate skin until the tips scored her flesh and her neck trickled with blood. He released his fangs and hissed. “If I bite you, you
won’t
enjoy it.”
She was no longer his Ahavi.
She was his prey.
“My prince,” she whimpered plaintively, her eyes wide with fright. “Forgive me if I’ve displeased you.”
He snorted and fought to release his angry grip. “The sands of port Draco are no place for a woman.” He softened his savage tone on purpose, calling back the beast. The scent of her fear was heady; her heart was pounding in her chest; and her blood was swirling like a siren’s song in her veins, just calling…calling…calling…
Take me.
Drain me.
End me.
In an effort not to harm her—
not here, not now
—he retracted his claws, grasped her by both arms, and tossed her to the top of the landing, away from his beast and his rage.
She froze, uncertain, as if she had no idea what to do next: Should she run, try once more to appease him, or beg for his mercy? And Dante knew—
oh, great dragons of old, he knew
—if she moved even an inch, he’d strike.
“My prince?” she whispered cautiously.
He cocked his head to the side, pressed his finger to his lips, and growled deep in his throat. “Shh. Don’t speak.” She scooted backward on her rear, and he held up his hand to stop her. “Don’t move.”
She froze.
“Good girl,” he finally whispered, and then he took a deep, steadying breath. He would unleash his dragon soon enough—on his formidable enemies, the Lycanians. There was no need to attack one piteous, misguided, self-important woman. “Cassidy,” he said evenly, finding his voice as a man.
She sniffed. “Yes?” At last, she was completely submissive and without guile.
“Your place is not at Dracos Cove, and it is not by my side. Never by my side. Don’t ever test me like that again. You may be mine, but I am not yours. Do you understand the difference?”
As she slowly nodded her head, he wondered at the cruelty of his words: Setting boundaries was one thing—and this female needed it,
badly
—but there was something else inciting him, something just beneath the surface, something larger than one woman’s careless behavior. Something—
no, someone
—with hair the color of a raven’s wing and eyes the shade of piercing emeralds. Someone whose defiance once infuriated him; whose stubborn, implacable will needed to be broken; someone who hovered on the verge of insanity and the edge of
walking tragedy
because she didn’t know how to constrain her heart, to live in the eye of the storm with her gaze fixed on her duty, or to see herself—and her role—as simply one or many threads in a much larger tapestry…someone he could neither love nor let go.
His dragon wanted to roar with defiance: to hunt, maim, and destroy.
Damian might claim her. He might take her, use her, and destroy her. But he would never have her.
He would never own
Mina’s
soul.
She had already given it to Dante.
That first day in the courtyard…the night he had given her Raylea’s doll…
And yet again today, not less than an hour earlier, when she had cried out
Dante’s
name in the throne room before all of Castle Dragon, before Damian and the king.
Yes…
Whether she knew it or not, Mina had ceded her soul to Dante Dragona, despite all of her stubborn will…
Despite all of his perilous warnings to do the opposite.
She had led with her heart, yielded to her emotions, and now she was paying the ultimate price.
Indeed, she had always been a walking tragedy.
*
“Get up!”
A cold splash of water to the face, followed by a boot to the ribs, sent Mina jack-knifing off the floor and scrambling into a seated position.
What?
Where?
Oh
gods…
“Get the hell up!” Damian shouted. He sounded insane.
Mina arched her back to appear even taller. “I’m up,” she panted, shielding her waist with her hands.
“I’m up.”
She glanced anxiously around the room, trying to regain her bearings.
Where was she? What had happened?
“Well, it’s about time,” Prince Damian snarled.
What the heck?
Why was she here…in her room…and with Damian of all—
Oh
gods…
They were
mated.
The king had made the decree in the Great Hall.
“Prince Damian,” she whispered, desperate to subdue his anger, hoping to make reparations. “I…I…forgive me. I don’t know what to say. How may I serve you? What can I do?”
“I should kill you,” he drawled nastily, and then just like that, his voice grew chillingly calm: “Right here. Right now. I should take your life. But I don’t have the time.”
She looked up into his dark, ominous eyes as he lorded over her with that massive six-foot-four frame and shivered. There was nothing behind those pupils, no soul in their depths, no spark of empathy, just two empty orbs: deep brown, hollow, and demonic.
He meant what he said.
“Shouldn’t you be on your way to Port Draco?” she asked, almost wishing he would just get on with it—his fury—and her death.
He grinned like a proverbial cat, toying with its prey. “I should. Yes, I should.” He looked around the room and turned his nose up in disgust. “My brother, Prince Drake, is on his way to Castle Commons to meet up with his cavalry and head to the cove with Tatiana. I believe Dante is leaving Cassidy here, but he’s probably already on the road.” He gestured regally, and then held up his hands. “But me? I’m standing in the bedchamber of a
slave
, trying to awaken the poor swooning wench so we can get on with the business at hand—
the imminent
invasion
of our lands
.”
Mina sucked in air and tried to avoid direct eye contact.
“A slave,” he continued, still speaking in that falsely tranquil, utterly petrifying voice, “one who howled my brother’s name in front of all Castle Dragon’s courtiers. A
slave
who fainted at the mere thought of being mated to me. A
slave
who begged
Prince Dante
to save her.”
Mina shut her eyes.
Goddess of mercy; just get it over with.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered. What else could she say?
“You’re sorry?” he repeated, the echo coming out as a hiss.
“Yes,” she whispered. “I’m so very sorry.”
When he didn’t respond, she peeked at him through barely raised lids. He was terrifying in his placid fury: On one hand, he was obviously riding a razor’s edge, demonstrably unstable, yet his voice remained
so calm
—so entirely controlled—when every pore of his being radiated madness. “If I thought you could still ride a horse, I would break every bone in your body,” he purred.
Mina winced, but she didn’t reply. When he took a sudden step toward her, she flinched like he had struck her and curled into a ball.
He laughed, a humorless sound, and then he reached into the pocket of his breeches and withdrew a small vial—the fertility elixir from the velvet-lined tray—and snorted. “The high priest administered this to Tatiana and Cassidy, but I guess we’ll just have to do it our own way.”
This couldn’t be happening.
This just wasn’t happening.
In a series of long, supple strides, he stepped over to the mantel and smashed the tip of the bottle against the heavy, broad stone, sending tiny shards of glass scattering in all directions, and then he strode back toward Mina, squatted down in front of her, and grasped her harshly by the hair, yanking her head backward. Forcing her mouth open with his fingers, he barked, “Drink this!” And then he poured it into her mouth.
The concoction was bitter, and she had to force her throat to swallow.
When the contents were all gone, he tossed the flask into the fire and strode to the door. “The house servants will pack our trunks and other necessities. As for you: one minute; three items; pack, so we can be on our way.”
Mina jumped to her feet, rounded the corner of the bed, and grabbed her woolen satchel from atop a nearby chest. She snatched a heavy cloak for warmth, tucked Raylea’s doll into the bottom of the bag, and, for reasons she couldn’t comprehend, grabbed an ivory-and-bone hair comb off the dressing table and stuffed it in her pocket. She tried to slink by him as she rushed through the door, but she wasn’t that lucky. His heavy, muscular arm came around her, encircling her from behind, and without warning or initiation he tugged her firmly against his chest, bit her in the throat, and began to siphon her essence, taking her warmth and her blood in a furious, continuous gulp. When he had finally had enough—and frost began to form on her skin—he withdrew his painful fangs and blew a thin stream of blue fire over the bite to seal the wound. “Do you speak Lycanian?” he asked, completely out of the blue, spinning her around to face him.