Authors: Tessa Dawn
She frowned, needing a moment to collect her wits.
Her mind was hazy, and she felt weak enough to topple over sideways in the doorway; yet she held herself together, steadied her resolve, and concentrated keenly on his question. “Northern or eastern?” she asked, wanting to answer correctly.
“Either.” He shrugged his shoulders with impatience. “Both.”
She nodded faintly. “I understand the basic northern dialect, at least well enough to get by, to translate what I’m hearing; but yes, I can speak the eastern tongue fluently.”
He seemed to go somewhere else in his mind, mulling over her words. When, at last, he met her gaze again, he was no longer a sadistic animal, but a calculating prince considering the needs of his realm. “Can you decipher and transcribe the syllabary as well?”
Once again, Mina nodded. “Yes.”
“Good. Then you may come in handy should we capture any prisoners since I can’t be in all places at once.” He snorted, apparently satisfied with her answer. “I will let my generals know.”
Mina bowed her head and averted her eyes, still trying to maintain her composure and her balance, and that’s when he leaned back in the doorway and crossed his arms over his powerful chest. “Look at me,” he growled. His voice was no longer placid.
Mina met his heated gaze.
“I am not a merciful dragon, Mina Louvet. I hurt Tatiana because I could, because she was weak and pathetic and easy to hurt, and because it simply felt pleasurable. I killed Pralina because she challenged me—and scratched me—and frankly, I was tired of hearing her voice. And I will make the rest of your life a bitter pill to swallow, one long, monotonous day at a time, because
that
is your lot in life. You will pay dearly for calling my brother’s name; you will not go unpunished for embarrassing me in public; and I
will
eventually break you—your stubborn will, your pliant body, and your independent mind. But—
and this is the part you really need to hear
—I will also keep you alive as long as you are useful, as long as you serve the Realm and give me dragon sons. And you will at least be safe from my
corrections
when you’re pregnant, so the sooner, the better…for you.” He stroked her cheek like a wistful lover, and then he grabbed a fistful of her hair. “But know this,
my
Sklavos Ahavi: If you ever defy me again, disobey one of my commands, or even hesitate to do what I say, the moment I say it, I will tear out your throat with my teeth and laugh as you expire, with your spine still dangling in my mouth. Are we clear?”
As an icy breeze of hatred and resentment swirled in Mina’s heart, wrapped around her arteries, and calcified to stone, she released every emotion other than determination—and she curtsied.
Yeah, they were clear.
Damian would spend his every waking moment making Mina’s life a living hell, and Mina, a commoner, a female, and a lowly slave, would spend every waking hour trying to solve an age-old riddle, one that had baffled the greatest of minds throughout time:
How to slay a dragon.
“We’re clear, my prince,” she whispered, waiting patiently for the evil fiend to release her hair.
Chapter Sixteen
K
ing Demitri Dragona
groaned from the pain in his gut, the fire that was searing his belly like lava, the poison that was scorching his veins. He stared at the rampant carnage before him, surveyed the bloodstained floor of the throne room, and gazed absently into the vacant eyes of the last corpse, the final prisoner he had consumed as a sacrifice.
The boy had been young.
He had been favored by the gods with a thick pelt of wavy blond hair that fell into deep blue eyes, and he had argued for his life like a seasoned counselor, rather than a powerless captive. Yet and still, he had also made a critical mistake, earlier that day: The courageous lad had dared to anger the king’s middle son, to trespass onto the grounds of Castle Dragon, uninvited, and to approach a Sklavos Ahavi.
King Demitri frowned, almost feeling sorry for the misguided lad.
Almost.
He stared closer and scowled. The boy’s forehead was still drenched with sweat, his divinely appointed crown of hair was now matted and plastered to his temples, and he didn’t look peaceful in death.
The king shoved the carcass away.
What did it matter if the youth had died a gruesome
death?
So had the three sacrificial Blood Ahavi, who had presented themselves with pride, and they had been beautiful as well. He grimaced, remembering the fiasco. Each girl had ultimately writhed in agony, groaned in delirium, and cursed the very king they served as the dragon had drained every last ounce of their essence and blood.
Still…
So be it.
They were all pawns, each and every one of them, just like the king and his sons, born to serve the greater good of the kingdom. And this day—this fateful May afternoon—would go down in antiquity, along with Demitri’s voracious sacrifice, as one of the most pivotal moments in the Realm’s glorious history. The defense of the Realm was no small matter. It required a great ransom and a terrible sacrifice. And the courage to see it through required a great and indomitable king, a ruthless servant of the people.
Hell’s fire
, it was a very simple equation: It required a
dragon
that could shift.
As King Demitri ran his thinning, elongating tongue along the tips of his still-protruding fangs, he struggled to relax his body and welcome the beast that was buried within him, to let the change come naturally. It wasn’t as if breaking every bone, transforming every cell, and growing scales, wings, and a massive jagged spine was going to be a walk in the park for him, either.
He groaned with pleasure as the serpent inside him stirred, luxuriating in all the fresh essence, heat, and blood, snarling in anticipation of the upcoming transformation.
Soon.
The change would start soon, any moment now…
And as it transpired, the king would do his best to simply let it happen, to sleep the night away if he could, and arise at dawn as a fearsome, primordial beast. He would take to the skies as a dragon of old, nearly 270 years old, and then he would lay waste to the Lycanian fleet in grand, Dragona fashion. He could only hope that his formidable sons could hold back the shifters until then, fight like the monsters he had made them.
As his eyes rolled back in his head and his skin began to boil, he shrieked to release the pain and welcome the vitality. And then, in the whisper of a moment, just a fleeting breath of time, he thought he saw something move out of the corner of his eye, something—
no
,
someone
—stirring before him.
But no; that was impossible.
The king had drained them
all
.
He had fed very,
very
well.
Falling to the floor and sprawling on his back, he extended both arms outward, like the wings of an eagle, arched into the pain, and bent his neck until his chin pointed skyward so the vertebrae could stretch. The first spasm hit him, and he began to writhe in pain.
“Come, my beloved dragon…
come
.”
*
Matthias Gentry came awake with a shout.
He punched wildly with his arms, kicked violently with his feet, and roared like a lion, an angry, cornered beast, protesting his agony from the very depths of his soul.
Oh, dark lords of the underworld,
he thought.
Make it
stop!
The king had trapped him like an animal, locked his upper torso in what had to be iron-clad arms, and tossed Matthias to the floor as if he were nothing, weightless and unsubstantial, climbing atop him like a scoundrel seeking to deflower a maiden before gnashing his teeth in warning and baring his lethal fangs.
Matthias had taken one hard look into those dark, primordial eyes and panicked. He had bucked like a wild horse; twisted this way and that; and struggled pointlessly to get to his knees—
to somehow crawl away
—before he had slid on the soppy floor and collapsed into a pile of fresh blood and gore, succumbing to the king’s superior strength. He had screamed like a child. He had begged for his life. He had argued the merits of his existence, espousing his value to the Realm, and, finally, when all of that had failed, he had prayed to the Giver of Life for a quick and painless death.
The Giver had not answered.
The king had torn into Matthias’s throat like it was a succulent piece of meat, slurping on the blood, gnawing on the flesh, worrying the bone—drinking, swallowing, gulping—devouring its very essence…inhaling Matthias’s soul.
And the pain—
was there no mercy left in the universe?
—the pain had been unrelenting…unimaginable…impossible to bear. And then, just like that, the throne room had disappeared. The world had gone dark. And Matthias had welcomed peace.
Until now…
Until he came awake with a shout and started punching furiously.
Matthias raked a wild hand, festooned with coiled claws, at the visage of those two demonic orbs, the king’s dragon eyes. He slammed his head forward, hoping to strike the king’s skull with his own bony brow, and jolted in surprise when he only struck air.
What the hell!?
He tried to land a solid punch.
He tried to knee the monarch in the groin.
He tried to bite him back, as if such a thing were possible, and once again, he came up short. Nothing landed. And nothing connected. Because there was nothing—
and no one
—there.
The room was spinning.
“Are you…still alive?”
The youngster’s voice came from behind a heavy column, sounding distant, hesitant, and utterly wrought with terror as the nine-year-old scribe seemed to rise from the ashes of the carnage and tiptoe toward Matthias, still holding his quill in his trembling right hand.
What had the king called the boy earlier?
Oh, yes, Thomas…Thomas something or other.
And he had forced the child to remain in the hall so he could record the names of the dying for posterity’s sake. He had forced the young scribe to enumerate the wretched sacrificed souls as they
fed
the dragon, believing their names would one day become folklore, epic legends, intimately associated with a great historic battle, immortalized in the annals of war.
Matthias reeled from the immorality of it all and the desecration before him.
Was he dreaming?
Reliving his death?
He couldn’t make sense of anything.
And the pain!
Dear Giver of Life,
he just wanted to make it stop!
It had
stopped.
The king was no longer before him. The pain was no longer material. And other than the trembling utterances of the young lad with the quill, the throne room was eerily quiet.
Matthias rose to his knees and patted his chest, stunned to find his bare sternum completely unblemished beneath the dried, crusted blood. He reached for his throat to feel for the gashes, and then he stared at the inside of his palms. Everything was normal—beyond normal, really—Matthias felt invincible.
Was he truly…
still
…alive?
The young squire blinked rapidly, swallowed convulsively, and started to pant. “That’s, that’s, that’s just not possible. I saw it. I saw him, the king, he…he ate you.”
Matthias rocked back on his heels, and for the first time since he’d—
awakened?
—he scanned the entirety of the macabre hall and began to retch. There were tortured, mangled bodies everywhere, blood as far as the eye could see, and at the bottom of the dais, lying on the floor and writhing in brutal agony, was the king of Castle Dragon undergoing some morbid state of transformation.
Matthias sprang to his feet. “We’ve gotta get out of here!”
The scribe shook his head furiously and scampered away, ducking behind another column. “You’re supposed to be dead,” he called from behind the pillar. His voice was hoarse with fear.
Matthias dropped down into a crouch and stared at the youngster. He snorted, snarled, and then swayed to the left. The boy dropped his quill and took off running like a bat out of hell, trying to reach the throne-room doors. At this, Matthias chuckled, deep in his unfamiliar throat.
What in all the worlds was happening?
Was this some kind of supernatural game? Was he caught between dimensions, neither dead, nor alive? Or was he at the gates of the Eternal Realm of Peace—
or the Eternal Realm of Suffering
—no longer a sentient being?
Matthias had no idea who he was or where he was
,
if anything around him was real. He only knew that he felt all at once glorious, formidable, powerful beyond reason, and as something foreign inside of him stirred—something deep, primordial, and clawing to get out—he began to see the child as prey.
The boy moved so slowly, like a mouse trying to elude a cat.
Matthias could track his every movement, predict the fluctuation of each and every muscle before it flexed or relaxed. Hell, he could hear the boy’s frantic heartbeat, measure his every breath. A sudden surge of energy pulsed through Matthias’s veins, and he snarled again, much louder this time, preparing to give chase.
In an instant, he was at the throne-room doors and on top of the mouse, pinning him to the floor by the throat…
with his
fangs
.
The boy squealed in horror, and Matthias let go.
What was
happening!
“Sweet Nuri, you’re a dragon,” the scribe gasped. “How can that be?”
Matthias shook his head.
What?
He lumbered backward into a squat, trying to create distance between himself and the scribe, trying to calm his inner…beast?
And then the boy sat upright, an awestruck look in his eyes, and regarded Matthias with reverence. His quivering mouth dropped open, and he stared beyond Matthias’s shoulders, toward the dais, and watched the writhing king. “How old are you?” he whispered, barely able to form the words.
Matthias frowned.
“How old?” the boy repeated.
“Twenty summers,” Matthias growled.
The boy’s face turned ashen and he nodded. “What is your mother’s name?”
Matthias had no idea where this was headed, but he didn’t have time to play
two dozen questions
. He had to get out of that throne room, away from that crazy king, and hopefully back to the
commonlands
, before the dragon arose.
“Her name!” The boy’s voice cracked with insistence.
Matthias turned back to stare at the scribe. “Why are you asking me this?”
The child licked his lips and tried to stop his teeth from chattering. “The king taught me to transpose all the Realm’s dialects into the common tongue, using the formal script, and I’ve been transcribing the historical rolls for two years now. This one time, I came across something I was never meant to see—like a missing page from a scroll or something—it was hidden in the wall of the archives, stuffed between two loose stones.”
Matthias frowned, more confused than ever.
The boy shook his head and pressed on. “You don’t understand. It was a missing leaf from the record of the Ahavi, the girls taken to the Keep, those who were accepted and those who were rejected. In the original scroll, there was a short entry about a dismissal, not that unusual, except…the witch rarely gets it wrong. Never, really.”
Matthias was losing his patience as the child rambled on. What the heck did any of this have to do with him—and his urgent need to get
away
from the king? “What witch? What are you talking about? And what does she never get wrong?” He peered over his shoulder and shuddered. The king was growing scales.
Thomas labored to catch his breath. “I’m sorry. I’m not making any sense, am I?”
“No,” Matthias answered bluntly.
“Please…just don’t eat me.”
Matthias shrank back.
What the hell?
For lack of anything more appropriate to say, he murmured, “I won’t.”
The boy leaned forward then, taking Matthias’s measure from head to toe, staring deep into his troubled eyes. He held his gaze for an extended period of time before coming to a decision, apparently, to trust him. “Let me try again. There was a very beautiful girl from the
commonlands
, from the lower district of Arns, who was taken to the Keep because the king’s witch, Wavani, believed she was Ahavi, one who would serve the Realm. At first, Wavani swore she was Sklavos as well, capable of bearing sons with the help of the fertility elixir, but the gate keeper disagreed. So she was brought before the high priest, and ultimately, she was culled from the ranks of the sacred. The priest said she was nothing special.” He sighed. “
But…
she spent three days and nights in the castle under the analysis of the king before she was allowed to go home, and the rumors and conflicting accounts abound: Some say the king fed from her just to be sure, to see if he could taste something special in her essence. Others say he took her to his bed to use her because she was so incredibly beautiful. But the missing page from the scroll says the king put the fertility elixir in her tea to see if her scent would change, that he waited three days and nights to be sure, and then he let her go. The truth is: No one really knows for sure if she was truly his mistress or not, but I do know this: There was a special Ahavi—
she was real
—and she would’ve been here, at Castle Dragon, twenty-one years ago.” He stared at Matthias with a shrewd, insinuating gaze. “Like I said before, Wavani the witch has never…
ever
…been wrong. What if the girl was Sklavos, after all? And the king
did
use her as his mistress before he let her go?”