Authors: Tessa Dawn
The third soldier snickered and cocked his head in Mina’s direction, as if she couldn’t read his roguish body language. “Screw the ten-year-old: What would you pay for a turn with that one?”
They all turned in unison toward Mina and looked her up and down, careful to avoid meeting her eyes, and then the first guard shivered as if he had suddenly caught a chill. “Watch your tongue, shadow,” he said to the third guard, “before the prince cuts it out.
That one
is off limits.”
The toothless idiot picked at his nose and then quickly changed the subject. “So where can we find Sir Robert and
Rafael’s
…girls?”
“They’re camped on the far western end of the cove, about a mile and a half inland from the beach, on the other side of a dry ravine. All the traveling merchants and laborers are there.”
Mina stepped back into the shadows.
So…
Sir Robert Cross had sold a ten-year-old virgin about three weeks ago for fifteen coppers?
Could it possibly be her Raylea? She wanted to confront the abhorrent, despicable guards, to demand that all three males drop to their knees, grovel in the dirt, and choke on their apologies; and as Prince Damian’s Sklavos Ahavi, she actually had the right to demand just that—though the prince would surely frown upon her slanted abuse of power. Just the same, she needed to be wise. These males, as revolting as they were, were speaking of the illegal slave trade, of
Rafael Bishop’s chattel
, and they had clearly named his dealer. If this Sir Robert Cross was the man to trade with, the one paid in exchange for selling
Rafael’s
illegal slaves, then one way or another, the bastard would know what became of Raylea, whose possession she ended up in.
Waiting for the soldiers to pass, she spun on her heel and regarded her maidservant squarely. “Jacine, how badly do you want to help your sister?” It was a shameless and selfish tactic, especially in light of the fact that Mina didn’t even believe in the midwives’ superstition; however, it was clear that the servant girl and her sister, Anna, did. And if Mina was going to risk Damian’s wrath by disobeying a fundamental regulation, stepping farther and farther outside the lines of demarcation, chancing the forbidden, then there had better be a worthwhile exchange in the end: a valuable reward to offset the invaluable cost.
A price she may very well pay in blood.
“Excuse me, mistress?” Jacine answered, appearing all at once confused. “I don’t understand—”
“You may bring your sister to my chambers, and I
will
take her hand in mine—but there’s a price.”
The girl visibly wilted as if Mina had just asked her to slay an imperishable monster. She pressed the back of her thumb against her lower lip and bit down on her nail, appearing to absorb the statement. “But of course,” she finally mumbled, and then she forced her spine to straighten. “I swear by all the gods of the eternal realms; if we can pay it, we will.”
“Not
we
,” Mina whispered.
“You.”
She gestured toward the maid’s shift and her skirt, and then nodded at her shoes. “I want you to switch clothes with me; give me your traveling papers; and then bring me your sister. I will hold her hand as you’ve asked, and then afterward, the two of you will remain in my bedchamber, sealed off from the rest of the tent. From that moment on,
you
will pretend to be me, whilst your sister will pretend to be your maid.
My maid
. Do you think you can do that?”
Jacine’s face turned a ghastly shade of green, even as her slate-gray eyes grew cloudy. “My lord would have my head.”
“Yes, he would,” Mina said truthfully. “That is,
if
he caught you. If he caught me. But I will only be gone for five or six hours, and he will be fighting long into the night, likely until the early hours of dawn.” She steadied her resolve and amplified her persistence. “I know it’s risky, and I’m asking a lot—but that is the price.
That
, your secrecy, and the secrecy of your sister. The three of us must take this deception, this temporary ruse, to our graves.”
In this callous and shameful moment, Mina hated what she had become. Her palms were beginning to sweat, and her insides were turning to jelly. This was not her way; this was not her character. And yet, what choice did she have? What power did she wield? She was as much a servant and a pawn as Jacine or Anna, and her life was in just as much jeopardy, if not more.
There were all kinds of dangers lurking in the dark between the tent of Umbras and Sir Robert’s camp, not the least of which were her master’s loyalists, Umbrasian rapists, and Warlochian thieves, the whole depraved lot of them. Suddenly, Prince Dante’s words made a whole lot of sense:
We have all made many sacrifices for the Realm, Mina.
Truer words had never been spoken…
Yet she knew, deep down in her heart, that the sacrifice she was making—the one she was asking—was more for herself than the Realm.
It was for Raylea.
It was for Mina’s conscience.
It was far more selfish than she cared to admit.
She crossed her arms over her chest and stared impassively at the trembling girl, all the while feeling increasingly horrid with every second that passed. Just the same, she would not give in. The maid had asked Mina to disobey the prince on behalf of the child’s beloved sister, to take a calculated risk on Anna’s behalf…
This wasn’t that different.
The stakes were just much higher.
When it seemed as if the maid would never answer, Mina cleared her throat and tapped her foot on the floor—
gods help her, she felt like she had turned into Pralina
. “Well, Jacine? I’m waiting. What will it be?”
Chapter Eighteen
“
W
here is Drake?”
Dante barked, coming face-to-face with Damian for the first time since the fiasco in the throne room. He adjusted his preternatural vision to see his brother’s features more clearly in the moonlight.
“So nice of you to show up,” Damian grunted. He met Dante’s seeking stare with a scowl of his own before whirling around to stand back-to-back with the prince, all the while raising his sword and shield.
“Drake?” Dante repeated, falling easily into step with his brother.
“He hasn’t made it to the beach yet,” Damian clipped. Since Drake had to travel
to and from
the southernmost district in Dragons Realm, he had a lot further to go.
“So it’s just you, me, and our soldiers?” Dante asked.
Damian angled his chin toward the various soldiers who were amassing nearby, adjusting their armor, drawing their swords, and nocking deadly arrows into tautly drawn bows. “Indeed. Two dragons and their faithful minions.” Damian turned his attention to the ocean.
The first of five encroaching Lycanian ships had anchored about fifty yards from shore, and the wild, supernatural easterners were not waiting for their companion vessels or the bulk of the remaining fleet, which was still at sea, to attack. At least ten Lycanians leaped from the deck, vaulted into the air, and shapeshifted as they dove, transforming into every manner of predatory fowl: giant hawks, enormous eagles, and huge prehistoric raptors with razor-fine talons and sharply edged beaks. At the same time, another twelve warriors dove into the sea, shifted into sharks, stingrays, and sea snakes, and darted toward the beach. Yet another eight or so males, with caches full of weapons strapped to their backs, remained in human form and jumped into the water before hitching a ride on a fin or a tail, shouting mortal war cries as they rapidly advanced.
Dante squared his shoulders, dropped down into a crouch, and rocked gracefully onto his toes, ready to pounce. Only the gods knew what the pagans would shift into once their bellies, feet, or talons made contact with the sands. If there were thirty males on the first vessel, which could easily carry ten to twenty more, then they needed to be ready to ward off up to 230 enemies in this first brazen attack. As it was, Dante could only pray to Nuri, the lord of fire, that the bulk of the fleet would not reach harbor before dawn, and the other four encroaching vessels would take their time anchoring in the bay. While Dante and his brother could see clearly in the dark, the same could not be said for their brave and loyal soldiers.
He could hear the heartbeats of the humans, shadows, and warlocks thundering all around him: swelling, pounding, and beating furiously in their chests. He could smell the acrid tang of the commoners’ fear and the Umbrasians’ hunger, as well as the sulfuric taint of the Warlochians’ magic. All were as smoke, rising from a sodden fire, billowing into the air.
“Air, water, or both?” Dante shouted to Damian, knowing that the soldiers would wisely wait to see what appeared on the beach: The archers would step forward with a frontal assault on the invaders, while the others would form semicircular clusters in defense of their princes, aligning their shields as a wall. The warlocks would cast spells and wield magic, targeting their enemies, one by one, even as the shadows would follow on the warlocks’ heels, waiting to devour the weak and absorb their dying souls.
“Both!” Damian snarled, releasing an ear-shattering roar.
It was all Dante needed to hear.
In the breadth of a second, he sprang to his feet and hurled twin bolts of lightning from his fingertips at two massive birds of prey, charring them in the air. He then focused his attention on a gigantic raptor and an enormous eagle, which were coming in low and fast, and seized their wings with telekinesis, crushing the hollow bones. As the wounded creatures plummeted toward the sea, he called his inner dragon and heaved a sweltering breath of fire, incinerating them both as they plunged.
Damian arched his back and stiffened, sending a blazing arc of flames into a narrow channel of the sea in an attempt to boil the water. Dante joined his cause, and together, they burned another seven shifters before the males could reach the shore.
“I hope you fed well, dear brother,” Damian snarled, using the full power of his mind to sling a charging shifter backward, spiraling through the air, before impaling him on the mast of the anchored ship. “Father is still eight and a half hours away.”
Dante formed an imaginary circle around the skull of a distant invader, and then he began to rotate the palms of his hands in slow, deliberate circles. He continued to twist, turn, and tighten his fist until, at last, the enemy’s head imploded, and the Lycanian’s corpse slumped to the ground. “Worry about yourself, Prince,” he scolded.
And then all hell broke loose.
Predators dipped down from the sky and attacked the soldiers en masse: They gouged out eyes with their talons and severed arteries with their beaks, even as the archers released wild, panicked arrows in a frenzied attempt to drive them back.
The bulk of the arrows missed their targets.
Sharks leaped out of the water, shifting into giant wolves and marauding cats, even as snakes rose up on their tails and began to stalk forward as beasts. Dante and Damian donned their armor, but it wasn’t a manmade shield. Rather, they withdrew into their inner dragons and coated their flesh with scales.
“Behind you!” Dante shouted, as a serpent the size of a small windmill coiled behind Damian and drew back to strike.
Dante didn’t have time to watch: A raptor swooped down from the sky, slashed him across the cheek with a talon, and then instantly shifted into a primitive beast, some sort of hybrid between a lion and a bear.
Dante released his solid form and lunged at his opponent, passing right through the shifter’s torso as if stepping through a wall. He spun around behind him, solidified his hand, and plunged a clawed fist through the creature’s back, deftly extracting its heart. He tossed the bloody organ to the side and turned to check on the others’ progress.
The prince was still wrestling with the giant serpent, one hand anchored about its upper fangs, another clasped to its lower jaw, and he was about to tear the mouth in two. A pair of warlocks had turned a werewolf into a dog, and they were ripping the snarling creature to shreds. The archers had littered several Lycanians with arrows—three, who had remained in human form—and the shadow-walkers were devouring their souls as they cried out in horror from the pain. Still another soldier had impaled a man-sized cat with his sword; the injury had only managed to anger the beast, and the feline was
this close
to shredding the soldier’s throat with its wicked canines.
Dante covered the distance between himself and the soldier in a flash.
He pounced on the werecat’s back and sank his own lethal fangs into its haunches. The cat spun around with a snarl, swiped at the unwanted weight, and thrashed wildly, trying to toss the two-legged rider from its nape. The two clashed like a pair of otherworldly demons, each one vying for supremacy, each one trying to serrate the other’s throat. Sand shot into the air; spittle dotted the sands; and blood soaked both fur and flesh, until at last, Dante released his feral bite and scorched the beast with fire, melting away its enormous teeth just moments before they sank home.
Dante tossed the creature to the side and scrambled back to his feet just in the nick of time. The Lycanians had regrouped. Sensing the futility of the battle, they had withdrawn from their individual attacks against the soldiers and were pursuing Prince Damian as one cohesive unit, all ten of the remaining shifters joining forces, ascending from land and descending from air.
The humans, warlocks, and
shades
rushed to Prince Damian’s defense. They surrounded the prince and the Lycanians with lances, swords, and clubs, striking and spearing the enemy as best they could, but the battle was moving so swiftly—the supernatural shifters were changing shape and position so rapidly—that it was hard to track the fury of their movement with a naked, mortal eye, let alone in the dark of night.
Damian fell onto his back, and Dante knew it was up to him to intervene.
And quickly.
Not that Damian couldn’t hold his own in any position; but hell, no one could ward off ten Lycanians at once—save, perhaps, their father Demitri, in his full primordial form.
Just as Dante began to rush forward, to dive into the fray, the strangest thing began to happen: For reasons he could scarcely explain, he began to see everything in double images. Distant memories flashed before his eyes, exposing painful glimpses of the past, just as current events continued to unfold, revealing the perilous battle before him.
As a husky Lycanian shifted into a wolf and pounced on Damian’s chest, Dante saw a flashback of Thomas the squire being bludgeoned with a club—he saw Damian toss the bloody stump into the river, along with the innocent boy, leaving a six-year-old Thomas to drown…
Forcing Dante to dive in and save him.
One of the
commonlands
’ soldiers speared the wolf with his lance, even as another two Lycanians, still in human form, retrieved sharp, jagged daggers from wet leather sheaths and lunged in the prince’s direction, but Dante couldn’t follow the trajectory of the blades. He could only see
Tatiana Ward
—broken, beaten, and terrified—lying on Mina’s bed, following Damian’s rape.
Right before Drake had healed her.
Prince Damian flung the daggers away using basic telekinesis, and then he flattened his back to the ground and tucked his knees to his chest in an effort to keep the invaders from advancing. A cruel smile distorted the features of one of the two Lycanians, and then it quickly morphed into another insidious grin, far more familiar, yet no less toxic—only, Dante saw Damian Dragona standing in the throne room, choosing Mina’s lash. He saw the delight in Damian’s eyes at the prospect of Mina’s whipping, and he saw the immense pleasure the prince had taken in choosing the most lethal implement he could find.
Damian cried out in surprise.
Someone had just landed a blow, and Dante blinked several times, trying to bring the present scene into focus. Yet all he could see was another place and time, an image of Damian seared into Dante’s memory: The merciless prince was standing on Desmond’s grave, spitting into the dirt and proclaiming for all the world to hear that Desmond had been “too weak to survive.” If Dante hadn’t known better, he would have sworn Damian had
celebrated
Desmond’s suicide.
Why hadn’t he noticed all of this
before?
Or had
he?
Perhaps he had just buried it, tucked it away like the myriad of shells beneath his feet, hidden in the moonlit sands.
The
sands.
Dracos Cove!
The
beach!
The battle…
Dante sprang into action, determined to make his way to Damian’s side. What difference did it make if his brother was cruel, weak of spirit, or dead of heart?
He was still a dragon prince.
He was still King Demitri’s son.
A child conceived in violence, carried in madness, and born of rape—a soulless creature, to be sure, but one whose knowledge, skill, and lineage were very much needed in defense of the Realm.
The grinning Lycanian managed to land another blow, and Damian grunted.
Only Dante heard
Mina
scream…
He heard her plaintive wail in the throne room, just moments after the king had pronounced her fate: “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.”
Why the hell had Damian requested
Mina?
As the Lycanians continued to land blow after blow, overwhelming the beleaguered prince, Dante shook it off.
Why
didn’t matter!
What was done was done.
He was just about to come to his brother’s aid when Damian regained his advantage. He drew back both fists, plunged them forward with preternatural speed, and broke through the breastplates of the two attacking Lycanians, seizing their still-beating hearts from their chests and tossing them onto the sands.
Dante didn’t wait for the rest to advance.
There were still seven Lycanians left.
He lunged forward, dove into the fray, and in a wild clash of fangs, fire, and claws, he fought like a demon possessed on behalf of his wicked, unredeemable brother. He fought on behalf of the Realm and all its innocent, helpless inhabitants, and he refused to come up for air until Damian was no longer in danger, until
together
they had dispatched the remaining seven barbarians.
Silence settled over the scene like dew on the morning grass as Dante and Damian finally rose—
as one
—to survey the ensuing carnage and enumerate the dead. A trumpet blasted, interrupting their count, and Dante turned to see the third point of the dragons’ triangle, his brother, Drake Dragona, riding toward them with his army behind them and his flag before him.
He was just about to step forward and greet him, make some sort of snide remark about being late to the party and riding in like a girl, but there wasn’t any time: The remaining four ships had just anchored in the harbor, beating the bulk of the fleet by at least eight hours, and just like before, the Lycanians rushed to attack.