Authors: Tessa Dawn
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Five hours later
M
ina Louvet slipped
into the shadows beneath the cover of a thick maple tree, careful to remain concealed from the radiant moonlight above her. It had to be at least two or two thirty in the morning; she was weak and exhausted, in desperate need of sleep; and every muscle in her body ached to give up and go home.
But she had come too far to turn back now.
Having switched clothes with her maidservant, Jacine; having waited patiently to meet Jacine’s sister, Anna,
and
to
hold her desperate hand
; having watched the vulgar guards consume enough spirits to become sufficiently inebriated, Mina had finally donned a hooded cloak, presented the maid’s traveling papers to the main sentry, and strolled right out of the tent under the guise of fetching water for her mistress.
None had been the wiser.
Now, after walking westward for an hour beneath the benevolent cover of darkness; turning inland for another hour, traversing much rockier and slower terrain; and finally coming to the narrow, dry ravine that marked the entrance to the traders’ camp, she was utterly and completely exhausted as she surveyed the site from the shadows and tried not to collapse.
She pressed her hand to her lower belly and took a deep, fortifying breath—she couldn’t give up that easily. Raylea’s life might depend upon her perseverance. Fortunately, she had managed to avoid all manner of hazards, pitfalls, and dangerous encounters thus far—
perhaps the gods were with her
—and by the distant, echoing sounds of the battle taking place on the beach, feral roars and snarls, clashing steel and iron, the cries of predators—
birds of prey?
—screeching overhead, and the unmistakable glow of bright orange fire flickering like distant candles in an ominous night sky, she knew the Realm’s soldiers would remain busy for some time. No one would be looking for a wayward, wandering maid.
She also knew that the princes were leading the fateful battle: Damian, whom she hated and feared with all her heart; Drake, whom she prayed would keep the commoners safe; and Dante, whom she simply refused to think about, at all.
Until now…
Reaching beneath her cloak to fetch a small piece of dried venison, she chewed it slowly and forced herself to swallow in spite of her queasy stomach. She needed the sustenance. She needed to maintain her strength. Chasing it with a hearty drink of water from a deerskin canteen, she leaned back against the trunk of the tree and finally allowed the forbidden thoughts to creep into her mind:
Dante Dragona
, the king’s eldest son…
The one who had claimed her the first day she had arrived at Castle Dragon.
The one who had let her go without so much as a serious protest.
As she shuffled to the side to avoid a knobby outgrowth in the bark, she absently placed her foot in an uneven divot and nearly twisted her ankle. “Damnit,” she grumbled beneath her breath, looking down at the ground to secure her footing. She was angrier with Dante than she had let on.
Not that it was Dante’s fault.
Not that it was anyone’s fault, the way things had turned out.
But still…
Mina’s future was doomed.
Damian would surely break her—body, mind, and soul—if he didn’t outright kill her before the month was through; and if knowing that wasn’t enough to unsettle her stomach, there was something else disturbing her, too.
Something that tore at her heart.
Something that made her feel uneasy.
She could still see Dante standing in her bedchamber, presenting her with a lopsided doll. She could still envision those haunting eyes, the firm set of his jaw, and the way his broad shoulders enhanced his dominant, implacable frame. She could still hear his deep, throaty drawl echoing in her ears, that first day in the courtyard when she had asked him
why
—why had he requested her company. “Because you are the Sklavos Ahavi I have chosen for my mate…your hair is like mine, as dark as the midnight sky.” He had swept his thumb along the side of her jaw. “Your eyes are the color of emeralds, as rare as they are exquisite.” He had clasped his hands behind his back and studied her from head to toe, without apology. “You are beautiful,” he had whispered, “and our sons will be strong.”
Mina shivered at the memory.
She had been so very afraid; yet now, looking back, there was a deep, aching chasm in the center of her chest.
Blessed Nuri, lord of fire, what had she been so afraid of?
Dante was the epitome of justice and benevolence when compared to his brother Damian, who had brutalized and tortured Tatiana without a moment’s hesitation. The male didn’t have a conscience—he didn’t have a soul.
She sighed.
Damian.
Hadn’t he already threatened to do the same thing to Mina in so many words?
A bitter tear escaped her eye as she tried to wrap her mind around this vicious twist of fate, as she struggled to make sense of her inexplicable grief, her deep
sense
of loss, when it came to the reality of Damian and the
absence of Dante
. For truth be told: Her sorrow went much deeper than her fear of Damian; it went much deeper than the substitution of one tyrannical master for another. If Mina was being honest—and at this point,
why not
?—then she had to admit that, despite her best attempts to avoid it, despite railing against it, she had somehow become
attached
to Dante Dragona.
On some subtle, hidden level that she couldn’t explain, she had come to look forward to those midnight-blue eyes, to watching the dark, haunted soul within gaze back at her with so much passion—
so much hunger
—and she knew that, despite all his warnings, his endless admonitions about service, duty, and obligation, wanting nothing more from her than her obedience, she had still hoped, if not believed, that he would one day grow to love her.
Mina Louvet had fallen for the eldest dragon son without even knowing it.
And while it may not have been love—and it certainly wasn’t mutual—the seeds of possibility had been sown.
Trust had not fully blossomed…
yet
.
Honesty was still emerging…
slowly
.
And their tenuous foundation was still so deeply mired in the thorns of fear, inequity, and obligation that it rarely rose to the surface. Yet and still, Dante had somehow stolen her heart.
And now, all of that—whatever had been possible between them—was as dead as the soldiers and Lycanians who were falling on the beach. Like the fleet of unsuspecting vessels still sailing this way, those who would meet the wrath of a dragon with the dawn, Mina’s hidden hopes and dreams were as good as dead, soon to be burned to ash.
Two deep, husky voices jolted Mina out of her musings, instantly bringing her ears to attention, her thoughts to the current situation—there were two males crossing the ravine, and they were headed her way, sauntering in the general direction of the maple tree.
Acutely aware of the imminent danger, she quickly scurried behind the trunk, ducked down into a squat, and peeked around the base to watch the men approach.
Blessed Spirit Keepers
, they must have come within seven paces of the tree before stopping, checking their surroundings to make sure they were alone, and then resuming their conversation.
“Ten coppers for the slave,” a tall, skinny shadow said, his chapped, reedy lips drawn back in a smile, his nearly translucent skin gleaming pale, due to the hour.
“Exactly ten,” the other male replied. This one was clearly a warlock—his dim, witchy eyes gave him away, not to mention the long brown cloak fastened at his neck.
The shadow clapped the Warlochian on the back. “You’re a fair man, Sir Robert.”
Mina’s breath hitched in her throat.
Sir Robert Cross?
Then this was him?
She leaned forward to take a better look, careful not to rustle any leaves on the ground or jostle her canteen, praying that the moonlight wouldn’t cast a shadow beyond the tree.
Sir Robert held out his filthy hand and waited patiently as the shadow retrieved a leather purse, counted out ten coppers, and dropped them in his palm.
“When do I get the girl?” the shadow asked.
Mina’s ears perked up.
“You will have her soon enough,” the warlock answered. “We do have to be a little bit…discreet.”
The shadow snarled, clearly disliking the answer. “You wouldn’t cheat me, would you?” The warlock’s eyes glowed red, and the shadow took a cautious step back, raising one hand in supplication. “No offense intended.”
Sir Robert smiled then, his sorcerer’s eyes dilating with artificial mirth. “Do think before you speak, Rohan. I would hate to see a pleasant transaction turned into something less civilized.” He smirked, and it distorted his already unpleasant features. “Besides, you are this close to having a fresh young bedmate to do with as you please. Why spoil that now?”
Mina’s stomach clenched in nauseating awareness:
Great Nuri, these men were foul.
The shadow gulped and extended his hand, instantly appeased. “Of course, of course,” he muttered, nodding his head like a dolt.
The two shook hands and turned to depart, heading back toward the narrow ravine, and Mina’s heart nearly jumped out of her chest.
No!
No, no, no, no!
Sir Robert Cross was right there!
Standing directly in front of her.
She couldn’t let him vanish.
She had to know what he knew; it might be Raylea’s only chance.
Turning the various outcomes over in her head, Mina quickly assessed her options: If she confronted the warlock directly, it would be to her peril. For all intents and purposes, she was a traveling maidservant, a commoner, alone in the forest—she would become Sir Robert’s next available slave. If she stayed to the trees and bushes, tried to follow him and listen, she would only make it so far before they approached the hub of the camp, and she would never remain undetected in the midst of so many travelers. If she tried to attack him and restrain him—
well, yeah, that wasn’t going to happen
—she would die in some horrific manner, right there beneath the maple tree. And if she somehow got detained, was not able to make it back to the beach before dawn, Damian would discover her hoax, and he would probably have her head.
She didn’t know what she had expected when she had set out for the camp. Perhaps she had hoped to stumble across a group of captives; to run into Raylea, herself; or to meet up with a lesser foe or an ally, perhaps a sympathetic human who would discreetly share information or intervene with the slavers on Mina’s behalf—pretend to purchase a slave in order to gain information.
None of that mattered now.
This was the fate she’d been handed, and she had to make a choice
right now
.
Recognizing that the only true weapon she really possessed was her identity—she was the Sklavos Ahavi to one of three princes of the Realm, and Sir Robert Cross, as well as the shadow, certainly feared Damian Dragona—she removed the hood from her head, stepped out from behind the tree, and took a confident step forward, ignoring how she really felt. “Greetings from the province of Umbras,” she said in perfect Warlochian.
Robert Cross spun swiftly around, and it was immediately evident that he was a sorcerer of tremendous power: His eyes flashed red, his cloak began to float behind his back, and his feet rose several inches off the ground. He was prepared to strike at the intruder.
Mina held up a graceful hand, careful to keep her voice both steady and calm. “You would be wise to think before you act, Warlochian. You don’t yet know who I am.”
The warlock narrowed his malevolent gaze on Mina, even as the shadow began to slink back into the shade, blending in with his surroundings.
How incredibly creepy
, Mina thought.
“You look like my next twenty coppers,” Sir Robert snarled boldly.
Mina’s expression darkened with anger. “Well, then you’d better look again.” The Warlochian tongue flowed so smoothly from her lips that the mage tilted his head in surprise, leaned forward to angle his ear, and then furrowed his brows, as if he were trying to make out her accent.
“A commoner does not speak with such a fluent tongue.” Sir Robert floated back to the ground. “Who are you?”
Mina took three confident strides forward. “I am the mistress of Umbras, the Sklavos Ahavi of your royal prince, Damian Dragona, and I understand that you have my sister.”
This caught the warlock off guard. His cocky demeanor lessened and he smoothed his brow as if erasing all hints of emotion. “Yet you speak Warlochian?”
“I speak all your vile tongues,” Mina replied, without hesitation. This time, she answered in Umbrasian before repeating the phrase in Warlochian.
Rohan hissed from the shadows in acknowledgment, and Sir Robert nodded his head. “I see.” He crossed his arms over his chest and narrowed his already scrutinizing gaze. “And my lord,
the prince of Umbras
, has sent a
woman
to the traders’ camp to confront a powerful mage of his
brother’s
kingdom…alone? Hmm.” He pursed his lips and sneered. “What’s wrong with this picture?”
Although she was a bit surprised to hear how fast news from the castle had spread, reaching the major players in the Realm, Mina held her ground. So Sir Robert knew about the provincial assignments already?
Good.
That meant he also knew about the Sklavos Ahavi, who each female had been given to. He knew Mina was telling the truth. “Doesn’t matter,” she snapped. “Anything and everything could be wrong. I could be acting on my own. I could be a rebel or a recalcitrant mate—’tis really none of your business. But what is truth, and what does matter, are these three simple facts: As the Sklavos Ahavi to the prince of Umbras, you are forbidden to touch me. In fact, you are not even supposed to look into my eyes.” She stiffened her spine and raised her voice. “And don’t fool yourself into thinking no one’s watching; you and I both know it would be a simple task for Wavani the witch to cast a seeing spell in order to find out what happened to Prince Damian’s
consort
. Now then, the second fact that should concern you is this: The slave trade is illegal, and your king does not support it, which you already know. So I’m sure he would be quite eager to hear that Sir Robert Cross, a citizen of Warlochia, and Rohan, a disloyal
shade
, exchanged coppers in the forest for the purchase of a fifteen-year-old girl, and at the battle of Dragos Cove, no less, when they were supposed to be serving the Realm. Hmm. I don’t believe that is something you would like me to repeat, which brings me to my third and most salient point: You took my sister, and I want her back. We can either make a trade—my sister for my silence—or we can split hairs over the details and both get caught, in which case we all die at the hands of our beloved prince. The choice is yours, and I don’t have a lot of time.” She tapped her foot on the ground to demonstrate her point.