Treasure Lane Dragons: Complete Series (BBW Paranormal Dragon Shapeshifter Romance) (9 page)

BOOK: Treasure Lane Dragons: Complete Series (BBW Paranormal Dragon Shapeshifter Romance)
3.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She knew she was supposed to use it only when she was in danger – and when was that going to happen, what with her stuck in the mansion – but an opportunity to give the self-centered dragon a taste of his own medicine was just too good to pass up. In a matter of minutes, the man would show up, hissing and grunting, sometimes with steam coming out of his nostrils and his eyes gleaming with gold, looking for whatever danger was out to get her.  Each time, he would relax when he saw that she was okay, and each time he would lecture her on the fair use of dragon stones and how dragons were not dogs to be called to heel whenever a princess was bored. To that, she just huffed.

If the dragon didn’t want to heel, he shouldn’t have made her a princess.

Other than playing pranks on the man, Gemma found herself with little else to do but think and study. She’d always loved reading, so being allowed into the Bluewing library was a real treat for her. Seldom had she even heard of books as old as the ones the dragon family had hidden away on the shelves, let alone been able to touch them.

Many were bound in thick scaly hides – dragon skin as Devon had confirmed – and adorned with gemstones. When asked about whether it wasn’t a bit odd to have books wrapped in the skin of his people, Devon had chuckled. Apparently dragons shed their skins, much like snakes, but they leave an almost intact replica of themselves every decade or so, which makes for great leather binding for books. Who knew?

Gemma ate up the information and attacked the books with great curiosity. It was a bit of a disappointment to find that ancient dragons weren’t as fond of writing in English as they were in their own tongues, but she still learned a great deal.

She spent almost every afternoon curled up in one of the large red velvet chairs in the library, poring through the ancient writings and trying to make sense of, well, just about everything. Today was no exception. After that morning’s confrontation with Devon on the roof that left her heart beating wildly in her chest, Gemma had slunk off to the library to distract herself from the dragon in the room. Her attraction for Devon was growing harder to ignore by the day, and it was starting to mess with her head.

A few times, she’d wondered if the reason she’d called for Devon when she was in a secluded spot in the mansion was because she really wanted to make him run and aggravate him, or whether it was just that she wanted to see him. Being around him and remembering the kiss they had shared that seemed both like forever and just a few seconds ago, made her stomach tense and her nerves tingle. It was the kind of kiss that stayed with a woman, wrapping her in a soft, hot cocoon of need and excitement, and Gemma was finding herself more and more hungry to recreate the moment.

No, you’re supposed to be mad at him. He’s keeping you locked up in his mansion! His servants track your every move! He’s an asshole with too much money and power to care about anything other than what is best for him. But that kiss… And the way he looks at me every time he bursts into the room, like if I was gone or hurt, his world would crumble… What about that?

Gemma shook her head, annoyed at herself. There she went again, getting all romantic. Gemma thumbed through the book – another heavy tome with ragged old pages that felt like parchment under her fingers, its covers adorned with rubies. She couldn’t read a word of it, as it was written in some dragon tongue that read like Chinese to her, but unlike most others, this one had illustrations. She was just studying an image that showed two great dragons locked in battle – one somewhat distinctly snub-nosed and dark with two silver-gold horns like Devon’s, and the other, graceful with elongated features and a particularly long face that made him look both bored and aggressive at the same time – when the door to the library cracked open.

Gemma, sitting with her back to the entrance, heard some voices speaking in hushed tones and peeked behind her chair. She frowned a little, recognizing Devon’s voice in the tin. It sounded like someone, most likely Jolly, as the man seemed to be fixed on his heels like a tiresome puppy, replied something to Devon, and then a pair of padding footsteps headed further as Devon slunk in and closed the door behind him. Immediately, Gemma felt a blush creeping up her cheeks.

He was wearing dark denim and a V-neck black tee that showed her just a peak of that perfectly formed chest of his that she’d been pressed against just a few hours ago. He walked towards her, his blue eyes glinting with mirth, and his step that of a seasoned predator, long and almost soundless. Every move he made was fit for a beast who knew his worth and power, and watching him was doing things to her that she wished it wasn’t. For instance, she wondered what he would look like without that shirt covering his muscles – a thought that did nothing to make her blush wane.

She sighed to herself, miffed at her own weakness and the effect he had on her, and turned her eyes back to the book. Her fingers had been left splayed across the illustration, tracing the body of the long, menacing looking lighter-colored dragon. The black and white image left one to imagine the colors of the animals, but she had a good enough idea, which dragon families were being depicted. Gemma tried to make herself busy with the book, but out of the corner of her eye, she tracked Devon as he pulled up another heavy, plush chair slightly across from her.

He sat down with a heavy exhale, as if the weight of the world had just been lifted from his shoulders. He leant towards her with a light smile on his lips, and she could feel herself cracking under his gaze. It was the kind of smile she liked – the nice kind, the kind that made her want to smile back, not the one that broadcasted to the whole world how he knew better and shouldn’t be messed with.

Devon peeked at the book she was thumbing through, and his expression clouded for just the slightest of moments, Gemma catching the way his clasped hands squeezed together tightly like he was trying to keep them from balling into fists. When she looked up, his face had cleared and his hands had relaxed like nothing had happened at all.

“I see you’re making your way through the library,” he said conversationally, his white teeth flashing as he smiled. She had noticed that the dragon within him was always so close to the surface. If one were to meet the man or see him on the pages of tabloids, they could never tell, but after seeing his dragon in action, the animal was unmistakable about him, just underneath the skin.

“I am. I wish your ancestors acquired more books in English, though,” she said, smiling back despite her best efforts not to do so. Damnable man, it was impossible to stay impassive when he was around.

“Well, dragonkin don’t tend to speak much English amongst themselves. Or any human language, really. You’d think we only communicate through grunts and firestorms, but we can be surprisingly eloquent,” he said, motioning at the finely written lettering, beautiful to behold even if Gemma had no idea what the words said.

“So what’s this about?” she asked, pointing at the picture of the fight she’d been looking at. “This dragon looks like you and the other one looks like the red dragon that almost knocked me off the path when I first came to see you. A Redblade, right?”

Devon chuckled a deep sound that came from his chest and seemed to rumble through her. She liked his voice, even if most of the time she hated what he was saying. There was a musical, low quality to it that made her see how he could easily have been one of the dragons singing those breathtaking songs she’d heard when Dayton Bluewing was being put to rest.

“You’re very observant. Yes, those are a Redblade and a Bluewing, but the picture’s a bit misleading. If I remember correctly, this shows one of the battles for Head of Council, back when things were settled by blood. If you notice, the feeling this image gives you is that the Redblade is winning. The Bluewing, my ancestor Daedalus Bluewing, was the one who set up the original council. It was bigger then, with more families, and the Redblades always assumed that they should be the Head of Council as they were the biggest family back then. Roman Redblade is the one shown here, fighting against Daedalus.”

“What happened?”

“Well, if you could read Dragobir, the language this is written in, then you would learn that Roman and Daedalus fought many great battles against one another to determine, who was the greater of the two. Factions formed on both sides, and it became clear that no order could be restored without one of them being the victor. But though their methods were different, they were evenly matched in most respects – both strong, capable leaders of their families.

Of course, this book would tell you that Daedalus survived the first fights because of treachery and deceit, and when he finally slayed Roman on the tenth day of battle during the gold moon, it was because he had cast a spell to make Roman blind and then ripped out his heart when he couldn’t see the attack. Killing a brother when he is defenseless is thought to be the greatest offense for dragons, and ever since, the Redblades and Bluewings haven’t been the best of allies.”

Gemma cocked a brow at him. “But that’s not all that happened?” Devon shook his head, grinning a bit.

“Well, depends on who you believe. The book you’re holding was written by the Redblades.” Devon stood up and crossed to a shelf in the far end of the room. He reached up and snaked a book out of one of the higher shelves. Similarly to the one Gemma was holding, it was covered in dragon scale and gems, but that one was blackish blue with sapphires, while Gemma’s was clad in red and sanguine rubies. He plopped back down in the chair, looking almost ridiculously at ease and eagerly flipping through the old parchment pages. It was a stark contrast to when he was at his strictest, all glares and snarls.

“This, however, is written by a Bluewing. It says that the fights were all even, yes, but Roman would retreat before things could turn against him. Finally, during the gold moon, he couldn’t retreat any longer, as doing so would have meant forfeiture, and dragons don’t give up. So when Roman tired, Daedalus overpowered him and gave him a chance to give up and stop contesting the Head of Council position or die. He chose death. Ever since, the Redblades have held it against us. And I think that because Roman died, they still think they can contest the position whenever they’re in a foul mood.”

Devon stopped on a page depicting the same battle as the one she was looking at, but the image was as if the polar opposite. The Bluewing stood proud and strong against the Redblade, who was cowering low as if surrendering. Every child in Gold Valley knew the stories of the great dragons and the way that the skies had been black with their wings when the town was first founded, the mighty beasts sometimes so numerous that they blocked out the sun.

Many families had disappeared altogether over the centuries – either died out or overtaken by others – leaving only the strongest of the dragonkin to rule Treasure Lane. But it seemed the light, wondrous stories she had read and known as a child were a far cry from the tales the dragons themselves had, spiked with blood, vengeance and the most ruthless of politics. She pursed her lips a little, peering at the picture he showed her, the words underneath it written in a similar style but reading quite differently. They must have had their own language in the family as well.

“So you don’t
really
know what happened? You can only guess? Your kin thinks that the story they have is the right one, and the Redblades believe in theirs, right?”

“That’s about the gist of it, yup. But I’d rather trust a long-dead Bluewing than a Redblade with a pulse, and I can only assume they feel much the same towards us.” Devon closed the book and put it on a small table next to Gemma that was already littered with books.

She could feel his eyes scanning her, as if searching for something, and his smile turned downward a little.

“You’re not wearing anything I’ve given you,” he said softly. Gemma looked up at him, and that blush she’d been working so hard to get rid of was back in full force. Her table in the bedroom was littered with boxes of jewelry, each more stunning than the one that came before it, and the bracelet he had given her that morning still sat in one of her pant pockets. She’d looked at each piece, admiring it with the kind of reverence it deserved, but she hadn’t dared wear one.

It somehow felt wrong to accept gifts from him, even if he had a fortune vaster than most developed countries. But the way he looked at her now, a hint of sadness in those gorgeous eyes of his, almost made her want to run to her bedroom and put them all on at once.

“No, I’m not,” she agreed with a small voice, feeling her words get stuck in her throat. She seemed to be as if hurting him in some way, and the weight of that understanding was heavier than she’d dared expect.

“I’ll try harder,” he said resolutely, standing up before she could say another word. “And please come have dinner with me tonight. I miss you at the table,” he said as he pushed the chair further, referencing to how she’d neglected to share a meal with him since the first night. She nodded meekly, wondering if her voice was ever going to return, and watched him walk out of the library, his dragon always almost visible in his gait.

 

CHAPTER ELEVEN

Gemma

 

Something felt different that night – and it wasn’t just that Gemma was wearing a dress – there was something in the air, Gemma thought, that made the mansion suddenly seem a lot less foreboding than it usually did. The dark passages and long hallways usually made her think of ancient times and hidden secrets, but tonight, the light of the setting sun that crept in through the tall windows and cast a glow on the art as she passed them, was somehow reassuring and full of hope.

Gemma smiled slightly to herself, trying to keep from twisting the end of the shift dress she was wearing. She kept telling herself that she wasn’t dressing up or anything, and
definitely
not for Devon, but as she closed in on the dining room, even she had to admit that maybe it was for him. At least a little.

Other books

Against All Odds (Arabesque) by Forster, Gwynne
My Man Michael by Lori Foster
La gaviota by Antón Chéjov
Best Kept Secret by Debra Moffitt
The Last Honorable Man by Vickie Taylor
Imagine Me Gone by Adam Haslett
The Touch by Colleen McCullough
Her Man Friday by Elizabeth Bevarly