Dragon's Baby
Page 10
He had secretly hoped that the king would have forgotten about this nonsense, or at least moved onto something else, but it seemed that Rui was more hellbent than ever to proceed.
“Firstly, we will take out their president,” Rui explained. “We must ensure we strike at a time when we know he is there. From that point, the Pentagon and Congress.”
“Why the United States?” Cassius demanded. “Why should we start there? Here would make much more sense.”
“Why must you question everything?” his father retorted. “The United States, despite their current political and civil unrest, is considered the most powerful country in the world.”
Cassius was not certain that was so any longer, but he waited for his father to continue.
“We will take hold of America and wait for the rest of the world to fall into place.”
“Father, how can you possibly know what the other powerhouses are doing while you sit in the States?” Maximus questioned. Cassius turned to his brother, and he recognized the expression on his face: he wanted to do this, too.
How can they all be so cold to the world in which we live? he wondered.
“I will have you to ensure they do as they are told,” Rui reminded him. “We will concoct a proper plan and take action in the upcoming months.”
Cassius’ brothers exchanged glances among themselves, slow smiles appearing on their lips. A charged excitement hung in the air, replacing the dubiousness that had been there before.
“I assume you are all on board with my plans,” Rui said to his sons, and Cassius watched in horror as his brothers nodded slowly, accepting his plan as their own. Then his father fixed his rigid stare on him. “Cassius, I did not see your nod of consensus.”
Cassius gazed around the room, each one of his brothers giving him an encouraging look. He wanted no part of this war. How could the rest of them agree to such a thing?
Titus nudged him, and Cassius cleared his throat. If he went against his father, he would have to fight not only the king, but also his brothers. If he needed to, could he take them all on at once? He doubted his own abilities.
“Yes, Father,” he answered in the end. “I am with you.”
And for two months, he had waited, agonizing over how to stop or at least prolong the impending war.
Cassius put the tumbler on his desk, slipping back into his chair. He could feel the time was coming closer, the call from Misty Woods about to reach his ears.
His fingers flew over the keyboard of his computer, his hands trembling slightly as he searched through pages upon pages of Misty Woods history. Someone somewhere knew how to stop a dragon—someone somewhere had to know how to stop a dragon.
I have to find out who, he thought grimly, pouring through ancient documents, his eyes scanning the information, although his gut was crying out for him to run away and forget about it. After all, the knowledge put Cass at risk also.
But there was no running from the king’s plan. He was a crucial part of it, and if they succeeded, Brooklyn would be in grave danger.
And that was something Cass could not accept.
13
Brooklyn dropped the paintbrush back onto the tray and admired her handiwork.
Lilac is perfect. Boy or girl, purple is a royal, beautiful color.
The woman at Home Depot had tried to convince her to buy a warm, pea green for the nursery.
“It’s gender neutral and a very popular color among expecting parents,” she recited in a tone that told Brooklyn she had probably uttered the same words a hundred times that week.
“No,” Brooklyn replied. “No green.”
She did not want any reminder of reptiles or dragons in her house or surrounding her baby. Whatever her baby’s… father was must be the result of some kind of freak accident. It wasn’t genetic, and it certainly wouldn’t affect her child. She repeated this statement in her head over and over, hoping that it would eventually become true if she said it enough times.
And if she was wrong, well… she would deal with that when the time came.
“Everything looks good,” the doctor had assured her. “Whatever they think they saw on that ultrasound doesn’t exist.”
“But I saw the pictures!” Brooklyn had insisted. “There was a tail and…”
She had fallen silent, bile choking her as she vividly remembered the gruesome image.
“There was something clearly wrong with the machine,” Dr. Amory-Silver had insisted. “The last thing a first-time mother needs is more stress.” She had turned the screen to show Brooklyn the photo, the wand firmly on her belly. “See? A perfect baby. No abnormalities. No disfigurements. I am still having some difficulty determining the gender, though. This one likes to keep its legs together very properly.”
But Brooklyn didn’t care about gender as long as the child was healthy and perfect. She had exhaled and nodded as she stared at her innocent baby floating around in her womb. There had been no sign of the monster she had seen in the hospital’s ultrasound.
You are expecting the worst because of its father, she had thought. Even though she had seen nothing wrong with the ultrasound, Brooklyn hadn’t been able to shake the sense that something about her child was going to be different.
Her hands touched the bump along her abdomen, and the baby instantly responded, kicking her furiously, as if she was invading its space. Brooklyn chuckled, her heart racing slightly as she walked from the nursery. She made her way into the kitchen and opened the fridge, eyeing the beer bottles on the top shelf.
Did Ryan drink eight beers last night? Brooklyn thought, mentally calculating how many had been there the night before.
Since her hospitalization, she had felt the tension increasing between her and Ryan.
“You’re pregnant?” he had asked her, and Brooklyn had sighed, hearing the heaviness in his voice.
“I just found out,” she had lied, guilt flooding her as the words left her lips.
Even though he had cheated on her and humiliated her, she needed to tell him the truth. Maybe Audrey was right. Maybe Brooklyn should just go back to Burlingame and stay with her until she got back on her own two feet. But the more she thought about it, the more she realized how long it would be before that happened.
I quit my job, I have no apartment, virtually no savings, she had reminded herself. I can’t contact the father of the baby because he’s some otherworldly monster. How am I going to provide for this child?
“We should get married before he’s born,” Ryan had announced, and the words had surprised her. She had been expecting him to be put off by the news, not eager to move forward.
“Yeah?” she had asked, and he’d nodded.
After Brooklyn returned home, she couldn’t help but feel there was an unseen shadow lurking over their heads. Sometimes she wondered if Ryan suspected that the baby wasn’t his. When he had asked about her due date, Brooklyn had found herself adding a month, and Ryan had never questioned her, which only added to her shame. And now his drinking was becoming ridiculous.
Brooklyn pulled a pitcher of water from the top shelf and poured herself a glass, one hand caressing her stomach. She and Ryan were scheduled to be married in a month, but as the date neared, all of her old doubts seemed to start resurfacing.
I have to tell him the truth, she thought, sighing as she sat on a stool at the island.
Though it had grown slightly less over the past three months, Brooklyn’s yearning to see Cass still lingered, and sometimes, Brooklyn wondered if she wasn’t trying to sabotage whatever manufactured happiness she had wrangled because she secretly hoped to see him again. Then she found herself wondering if he also thought of her, and she hated herself for it.
As Brooklyn sipped on her water, a distant ringing met her ears, and she blinked, gazing around the kitchen in confusion. She perked up and rose from the island, following the sound. As she stepped into the hallway, she heard the unmistakable tinkle of a cell phone from the back bedroom.
&
nbsp; Did Ryan forget his phone today? she though as she made her way into the bedroom. She frowned at herself—she had texted him earlier in the morning, so it couldn’t be Ryan’s phone. She touched her pocket to make sure that she still held hers (she did), and when she arrived in the bedroom, the ringing had stopped.
Brooklyn began searching in obvious spots for where the ringing phone may have been. She didn’t see it on the dresser or on the nightstands. The walk-in closet had a small table, but it wasn’t there, nor was it in the bathroom.
Less than a minute later, the ringing started anew, and Brooklyn was able to determine that it was, in fact, coming from the master bedroom’s closet. She dug through the laundry hamper, her hands closing in around a phone she recognized, and a burst of heat tinged her face: it was Ryan’s old phone, the one he’d had in Burlingame. Why was it still active?
Her eyes fell onto the screen, and for a moment, her breath was knocked from her as a familiar name flashed before her face.
Elena.
Brooklyn willed herself to be calm. Maybe Ryan had just forgotten to disconnect his phone. The idea made her scoff as soon as she thought of it. No one forgets to disconnect a phone for almost six months, especially when Ryan must have still been paying for it. And it was fully charged. No, he wanted this phone, and it was still being used.
Immediately, she thought of how the hospital had been able to find him despite his change of phone number. Maybe he wanted to keep in touch with his friends in Burlingame.
Brooklyn was consumed with the memory of Ryan’s own words echoing through the recesses of her mind. What had he said the day he had waited for her outside her job, begging her to forgive him?
“I’ve applied for a transfer. The force is what has been dragging me down. The guys are all a bunch of party-hard, misogynistic asses. I am removing myself from the scene, leaving all this behind. I want to forget about everything in Burlingame. Everything but you.”
The call went to voicemail, and Brooklyn leaned against the wall, carefully pondering her next move. She did not have to think long before the phone rang for a third time. Taking a deep breath, she took the call, careful not to say anything.
“Hello? Ryan?” Elena called.
Brooklyn did not speak, her heart hammering in her chest.
“Baby? I can’t hear you! I’m waiting for you at the Double Tree Hilton on South Los Angeles Street. I can’t check in because the room is in your name…” Elena trailed off. “Ryan, can you hear me? I just want to make sure I got the right Hilton. Ryan?”
Elena grunted in frustration and disconnected the call.
Brooklyn’s hand shook as she waited for the woman to call back. She scampered toward the kitchen, where she had left her laptop, and plopped down before the screen, her fingers conjuring the contact information for the hotel.
The phone began to ring again, and Brooklyn answered it again.
“Hello, Elena,” she sighed. “Ryan left his phone.” There was a deep, ominous silence on the other end. “Now I can’t hear you, hon,” Brooklyn told her scathingly. “Are you there?”
To her anger, Elena began to laugh.
“Did you think that trapping him into marrying you would make him stay away from me?” she purred. “He was never going to let me go, Brooklyn.”
“He can have you,” Brooklyn replied easily, and as she spoke, she realized she meant it.
“Whatever,” Elena chortled. “You’re seething, all fat and pregnant right now. He’s only staying with you because you’re knocked up, but he’ll leave you like he did before.”
“I am pregnant,” Brooklyn agreed. “But he won’t leave me again.”
“Oh, look!” Elena suddenly giggled. “There he is now, pulling up in his squad car. Should I tell him you said hi?”
“No,” Brooklyn said. “But you can tell him something else for me.”
“What’s that?”
“Tell him not to contact me again.”
In the background, she heard Ryan’s voice asking Elena who she was talking to.
“He’s right here, sweetie,” she cooed. “You can—”
“And tell him the baby isn’t his.”
Brooklyn hung up the phone and turned it off, so she wouldn’t hear it ringing again. To be certain of what she was going to do next, she dialed the number of the hotel from her own phone.
“Double Tree Hilton, how may I help you?”
“Hi, my husband booked a room for us, but we’re running a little late. I just want to ensure it’s still being held,” she quickly improvised. In her ear, the phone beeped, indicating another call was coming through.
“The name, ma’am?”
“Shilling. Ryan Shilling.” She heard the clack of keys.
“Oh, yes, Mrs. Shilling! The room is still being held. There should be no issue.”
“Thank you so very much,” Brooklyn said. She hung up and glanced at the incoming number, a small smile on her face. She felt as though a huge weight had been lifted off her shoulders. She pulled herself off the counter and wandered toward the bedroom, yanking a suitcase out of the closet.
Ryan had lied to her. Then she had lied to him. Then he had lied to her again. That was quite a dangerous pattern to keep in a relationship. By walking away from this, she was saving herself and her baby a lifetime of pain. It seemed like the universe worked in mysterious ways.
Her phone rang again, and Brooklyn blocked Ryan’s number before throwing everything she needed into her bag. When she had finished, she made one more phone call.
“Hey,” she said. “It’s me.”
“Are you all right?” Audrey immediately asked. “Is the baby okay?”
“Yes,” Brooklyn responded. “We’re both fine. I just wanted to let you know…” She made a small pause as she tried to find the right words.
“What?” Audrey screeched, venom pouring from her tone. “What did that asshole do now?”
“I wanted to let you know I’m on my way home,” Brooklyn told her. “For good.”
14
I am betraying my entire family by being here, Cassius thought miserably as he trudged farther into the forest, a dozen scenarios dancing through his head. His heart thudded in his chest. This is ridiculous, he chided himself. Even if this is legit, it is a long shot.
But it was the only shot he had.
Last night, the call had finally come, with Maximus on the other end of the line to deliver the news.
“We will proceed on New Year’s Day,” he had informed a dread-filled Cassius, though the news had permitted him some relief. That meant he had six weeks to prepare. “Father wants us under his roof to enact strategy on Christmas Day. He feels it poetic to start our new lives in a new year.”
Cassius didn’t care what his father’s reasoning was—all he cared about was finding Ruby and hoping she could give him the answer he required.
The brush grew thicker before him. He pushed the bramble bushes aside, his eyes narrowing as he fought through the scratching branches. Could anyone truly, genuinely live out here? It seemed highly improbable: even in the milder temperatures of autumn, a frost covered the bed of the forest. He could only imagine what the winters brought in the northern part of Rochester, on the Scottish border.
The winter will be the least of her worries, Cassius thought as he continued forth. No matter how hidden she is, she cannot escape what is coming. No one will be able to, unless she can help me.
For over three hours, he moved through the dense forest, and as he felt the temperatures drop, he wished he could continue flying overhead. But there would be no way for him to find her from the sky. Despite his fear that he was going on a wild goose chase, he went on. After all, there was only one way to know whether this would work.
As the sun’s rays weakened, a spark of nervousness tweaked through Cassius’ bones. He was starting to think that there couldn’t possibly be anything out here—it was far too remote—when he suddenly saw a cabin in the distance.
Cassius blinked several times as he stared at it in wonder. Like a fairy tale, it just sat there, a moss-covered structure made of thick wood. Smoke billowed from the dual chimneys, and a brown picket fence enclosed two sheep and a handful of chickens on the wide, square lawn. It did not look like much, but Cassius had the sense that it was much bigger than it appeared, and whoever lived inside surely knew a thing or two about survival.
Cautiously, he approached, ignoring the bleating sheep. A cow appeared, startling him, mooing at him questioningly. Cassius opened the gate and allowed himself inside.
“Hello?” he called out. “Ruby?”
If the cow had startled him, the tiny woman that suddenly threw the door of the cabin open scared the daylights out of him.
Cassius’ mouth dropped in shock.
“Opal!” he gasped, stepping backward as the witch stared at him with intense black eyes.
“I am Ruby,” she said, and his heart hammered wildly in his chest. Her resemblance to Opal was uncanny, but as Cassius regained his composure, he saw the subtle differences between the woman before him and the sage who had cursed them all those years ago.
“Are you all right?” she asked. “How did you find me out here?”
“You are Ruby?” he asked, forcing a note of authority into his tone. He did not want to explain the embarrassing avenues he had gone through to locate the living relatives of a witch from the fourteenth century.
“We have already established that,” Ruby retorted. “It’s cold out here, and you’re letting out all my heat. Are you coming in or not?” She spun as she waited for him to make up his mind, and Cassius found himself staring at her again, doubt creeping through him.
You shouldn’t be here, something yelled at him. You are putting everyone at risk. He silenced the warning, reminding his conscience that his father was the one putting everyone’s lives in peril.
“Would you like some tea?” she offered, and Cassius swallowed his reservations, following her inside the cozy cottage. The door slammed in his wake, and he whirled to see what had caused it. Ruby chuckled. “The wind,” she said without turning from the stove. “Which one are you?”