Dragon Rebellion
Page 1
Dragon Rebellion
Ice Dragons Book 3
By Amelia Jade
Dragon Rebellion
Copyright @ 2018 by Amelia Jade
First Electronic Publication: April 2018
Amelia Jade
All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be scanned, uploaded or distributed via the Internet or any other means, electronic or print, without the author’s permission.
NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR:
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental. The author does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for third-party websites or their content.
All sexual activities depicted occur between consenting characters 18 years or older who are not blood related.
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Author’s Note
Hold on!
You should know that while this series can be read independently, it is part of a large world that was started with the Crimson Dragons series. You can continue through, as each book contains a full story arc with happy endings for the characters, but to get the full experience of the Outsiders Universe, you should really start at the beginning with Dragon Temptation.
I hope you enjoy! - Amelia
Crimson Dragons
Dragon Temptation
Dragon Seduction
Dragon Devotion
Onyx Dragons
Dragon Fixation
Dragon Obsession
Dragon Addiction
Ice Dragons
Dragon Eruption
Dragon Redemption
Dragon Rebellion
Dragon Rebellion
Chapter One
Caine
In hindsight, he wouldn’t have chosen a graveyard in early evening as the place to go for solitude.
Nobody is going to bother me out here, though.
That might be true, but then again it made for a bit more somber of a mood than he’d intended. Hopping up onto the hand-laid brick wall that wound around the perimeter of the church and its local graveyard, he eyed the nearest gravestone, wondering just who Harold Ajee had been.
Was he a good man? A great man? Or maybe just a nobody who lived alone at the end of the street. The tombstone said he’d died almost a century and a half earlier. It was unlikely that anyone even knew who he was, except perhaps a descendant with an interest in family trees.
Is that the way he was going to go out? Unremembered and unrecognized? It was possible, though he certainly hoped not. And with the extra-long lifespan of a dragon, it would be ages yet before he had to worry about being six feet under.
That didn’t mean he wasn’t worried about other things. His place in the ground would come, but it was his place in the world around him that was currently bothering him. Mainly because he wasn’t sure he had one. Both his brothers did. They had found their mates and were building lives together.
Even now inside the church his youngest brother Cowl and his mate Andria were preparing to get married. Or preparing to practice getting married. A rehearsal, they called it, to ensure that they got it right tomorrow. Apparently getting married required practice. When he’d first heard of the tradition, Caine had teased Cowl relentlessly, asking him if he needed to practice anything else about married life some more first. Andria had replied that no, he was quite good at all other facets. She was a good woman, and he was happy for his little brother.
Caine knew that none of the trio had planned on things working out the way they had. Life had taken an unexpected turn when an avalanche had buried the three of them, trapping them in sleep for nearly six centuries. Upon awakening, they’d been told they were needed to help prepare and fight in a war against beings from another world, possibly even dimension. Saying that it was a lot to take in was an understatement.
He wasn’t adjusting to it well. At first he’d been ready to stay and fight, to do his best to help defend humanity. But as time had moved on, he’d begun to wonder if humanity was worth saving, and whether or not his place was with his brothers. Both of them were going to stay—having established roots with their mates—and ready to do whatever it took to fight the evil Outsiders.
Not Caine. He liked knowing his brothers were happy, and he wanted it to stay that way. Which is why he was likely to move on. The last thing he wanted to do was ruin their lives. Again.
Deep in his thoughts, Caine’s attention wavered and slackened. It was the only way the person skulking through the forest that lined two sides of the church’s property could have come so close without him noticing. His first clue was the scent that reached him. It was woody, perhaps mixed with some leather grain and something more modern that he couldn’t identify, but that definitely struck him as masculine.
He frowned. Had the crime organization from the nearby town of Barton City followed them out to the country church? He and his brothers had had some run-ins with the former head of it, but he thought after the way things had been settled there—namely he and his brothers had killed the shifters who had led it—that everyone had agreed to leave them alone.
But why else would someone be approaching his brother’s church? They didn’t seem to see him, his presence mostly obscured by the huge oak tree just a few feet from him. The sky was cloudy and the moon provided little more than a hint of light. Out in the country that meant the shadows were long and he blended in fairly well.
Cautiously Caine slipped from the wall, crouching low on the outside of the stone barrier as the person approached. They weren’t very stealthy, unused to the forest as dry leaves and twigs crunched underfoot. Whoever it was, they weren’t expecting company. Why would they? Nobody in their normal mind just hung out in a graveyard for fun. It should have been empty this far from the church itself. Only Caine’s dark thoughts had guided him out there.
Waiting for the unknown person to move right up to the wall, Caine slipped around behind them. It had been a long time since he’d had to move in the wild without noise, but old habits returned to him, leading with his toes, slipping anything that might make noise aside as he slowly shifted weight from one foot to the next. Moving like a ghost, he positioned himself between the spy and freedom.
They paused at the wall, looking over it. He heard a sigh, a sad noise that had no attempt to muffle it. He looked the figure over as best he could. They were dressed in black, bulky clothing to ward off the late fall chill. It gave away nothing about the person inside of it, obscuring any body lines that may have been visible.
Five minutes passed without further action, and Caine grew bored. Rising up from his crouch he strode forward, no longer attempting to maintain silence.
“Can I help y—?”
Before he was even finished speaking the person bolted. They didn’t run left or right, as he’d expected and prepared for. Instead the shadowy figure rolled up and over the stone wall, dropping to their feet on the far side. Short legs and arms pumped as they ran for what they perceived to be freedom.
Caine blinked one, then twice. Well, that was unexpected. His lips peeled back, revealing perfect white teeth.
The hunt was on.
Taking two strides forward he pushed off the ground, clearing the wall with ease, not even having to slow down. His feet sank deep in the soft loamy grass of the cemetery, and he accelerated forward between the rows of gravestones, silently asking for forgiveness from the occupants as he trampled over their private resting places.
“Halt!” he commanded, but the stranger didn’t listen.
Catching up really wasn’t a challenge. Whoever it was they were short, and running distances was not their forte. After his initial shock wore off and he went in pursuit, Caine needed mere moments to come up behind the runner. Then he started jogging alongside them.
“Where we going?” he asked conversationally, moving in front and jogging backward, trying to get a glimpse at the face draped in so many layers.
“Go.” Huff. “Away.” Puff.
His eyebrows rose. It was a woman underneath everything. Caine was more than intrigued now.
“Can’t do that. Need to know why you were spying on me.”
“Wasn’t.” Breath. “Spying on.” Puff. “You.”
He shrugged, lightly jogging backward still, confident in his strides. They weren’t moving that fast anymore. “You say so, but I was the only person out in the graveyard.
You were spying on me, whether you meant to or not. So, I need to know why.”
“You might.” Huff. Puff. Huff. “Want to stop.”
“That’s what I told you.”
“Okay, enjoy.”
Caine frowned a split second before his leading leg hit the stone wall. He couldn’t stop the momentum of his huge body in time, and tripped, rolled backward over the wall, and landed on his head before flopping down face-first into the wet ground.
“Perfect,” he muttered, looking up and spitting out grass, leaves and other things. “Thanks for the warning!’
“Don’t say I didn’t!”
Whoever it was they had kept running, their voice coming from farther away than expected. Maybe they hadn’t seen him eat shit at least. That would be a small victory.
Getting to his feet he cleared the wall—again—and ran after the woman. He didn’t waste any time showboating now. Instead he quickly caught up and moved in front of her, forcing her to stop.
“Show me your face,” he commanded, his voice angry.
“Why should I?” she snapped back breathlessly, bending over at the waist, resting her hands on her knees as she sucked down lungfuls of air.
“Because I said so,” he snarled, reaching forward and pulling back the hood and scarf that obscured her.
She stood up straight in outrage, revealing her full features to him. Tightened as they were in fury, he was still left awed. A mane of beautiful hair as dark as the midnight sky tumbled down around her shoulders, pooling there and reflecting the few bits of light that there were in its shiny luster. Eyes of a magnificent yellow-golden brown stared at him bitterly, filled with more anger and hatred than something so beautiful should ever contain.
Big, round cheeks and a small little snub nose were perched above a mouth with lips as red as the roses laid upon the graves they stood around. Though she flattened them into a disapproving line as he stared, Caine would never forget the sight of sheer beauty that greeted him.
Nor would he forget the stinging ring in his ears as her open hand connected with his face.
“How dare you touch me!”
Chapter Two
Annalise
Did she just slap him?
“Oh shit,” she gasped as a red mark appeared on his cheek, matching the sting in her hand.
He straightened, an imposing figure in the dark, easily twice her size and with muscles bigger wide than she was around. Annalise desperately hoped that he wasn’t the type to strike back, because she was in a world of hurt if that were the case.
“Why did you do that?” he asked, surprised and more than a little irritated.
“You put a hand on me,” she said firmly. “I didn’t give you permission to do that. Now go away and leave me alone. I haven’t done anything.”
He snorted, not going anywhere. Long hair down to his ears bounced as he made the derisive noise. It was a brilliant shade of white, visible even in the darkness. Just how old was this guy? He certainly moved well enough, though she was no speed demon.
“You were sneaking around in the dark, obviously trying not to be seen. That’s not very innocent-like.”
She looked away, unable to meet his gaze. “Fine. You caught me. Am I in trouble? What sort of punishment is there? What are you going to do to me now?”
Annalise hated this part. She hated getting in trouble when she hadn’t actually done anything wrong. But that was the way the world worked, wasn’t it? She was used to it. All she wanted now was for it to be over, so she could go back to her own life.
The big man looked confused, his handsome features becoming all screwed up. Annalise decided it wasn’t a good look on him. He went from being rather sexy, as far as she could tell in the dim light, to looking rather goofy and awkward. “What am I going to do to you?”
“Yes. You said it yourself. You caught me. What trouble am I in?”
His features became stern. “Well, that depends on what trouble you were going to cause.”
Annalise sighed. “Like I told you, I wasn’t trying to cause trouble.”
“And like I told you, that doesn’t match with the whole sneaking-around-in-the-dark part.”
She bit her lip. “That’s what you do when you aren’t invited somewhere. You sneak around.”
“A-ha! So you were sneaking around. Isn’t that the same as causing trouble?”
“No,” she said immediately, then thought about his question. “Because I wasn’t aiming to do anything bad. I just…needed to see someone.”
He had her now, and if he was security for the church or the occupants inside then there was no getting around him. They would be on watch and she would never get close again. Not with Tower of Testosterone guarding it. He’d easily seen her coming from a mile away, with that sort of height. His speed was impressive for a big man too. No, if she wanted in, she was probably going to have to reveal her purpose.
“Who is it you need to see?” he asked, sounding curious. Arms crossed, he looked down at her with interest.
Annalise thought about lying, or about blowing it all off and trying to just leave. She’d hoped to avoid any sort of publicity or attention. Being in the spotlight wasn’t her thing, and she was acutely aware of how intensely Big, Handsome and Elderly was looking at her. If she lied he would know, and that would just subject her to more of his scrutiny. Something that she didn’t want.
“Her name is Violet Walker.” She caved, telling him the truth. Maybe this way she could avoid any punishment from him for trespassing, or whatever other crime she may have committed.
“Violet? What do you need to see Violet about?” he rumbled, his voice intense and suspicious.
Despite all the questions, Annalise started to wonder about something. Although he’d chased after her and pulled her hood down, not once had he actually said she was in trouble. In fact, when she’d insinuated it, he’d been surprised. There were no restraints around her wrists, and he’d not tossed her into a cage. Nothing was holding her there.
“Nothing,” she said abruptly, backing away. “You know what, never mind.”
“Don’t start lying to me now.”
She’d expected frustration, irritation, anything like that. Annalise was used to being treated like that. What she hadn’t expected was the gentle encouragement.
“What?”
He smiled, revealing a perfect set of white teeth. He really was handsome for an older fellow. She wondered what he was like in his youth, before his hair had turned white.
“You obviously have a lot invested in this. Whoever Violet is to you, you really want to see her. Just tell me,” he coaxed. “I’m not going to laugh at you or judge you.”
Strangely enough,
Annalise believed him when he said that. Something about his demeanor was relaxing her. It wasn’t enough to loosen her tongue, but she decided to at least stop lying to him, like he’d asked.
“My reasons are my own,” she said, speaking carefully to take the edge off the words. “It’s personal. I’m not really comfortable saying why, though I can assure you that I mean no harm to her. I just…need to know something.”
Penetrating eyes looked down at her for several heartbeats, and then several more. The air around them was eerily quiet, their rampage across the graveyard having silenced any animals and other nightlife nearby. She felt bad for that, but her initial instinct was and always would be to run whenever she was confronted by someone unknown. It was just better that way. She couldn’t get caught. She couldn’t go back.
“Well, come on then,” Big and Bulging rumbled, stretching his back and motioning toward the church.
Annalise didn’t move.
“Are you coming or not?”
“Coming where?” She wasn’t going to just blindly trust him, no matter how at ease he managed to put her. No man had earned that trust from her.
“To meet Violet.” He paused, several steps closer to the church. “Is that not what you wanted out of all this?’
Annalise hemmed and hawed to herself. It was why she’d come all the way out there, yes. She just hadn’t expected it to happen so abruptly. Was she truly prepared for what might happen upon meeting Violet?
He made an inquisitive gesture, impatient with her lack of response.
“I guess.” Annalise trailed along slowly after him as they headed for the side door to the church, which she was now noticing was propped open just a bit.
They were still a solid fifty feet away when she stopped. The huge man paused a half-step later, looking around, his eyes wide, staring off behind her as he searched for the reason she was no longer walking.
“What? What’s wrong?”
Annalise sighed. “Look, I’m sorry. I don’t think I can do this.”