Silver (Date-A-Dragon Book 2)
Page 1
Silver
Terry Bolryder
Contents
Author’s Note
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Epilogue
Sample of Bear Claw Security Boxed Set
Terry Bolryder Reading Guide
Copyright © 2017 by Terry Bolryder
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Created with Vellum
Author’s Note
Hello!
This is the second book in my Date-A-Dragon series. Each stars a different couple and has a happy ending, but there are some common side characters and mysteries, and I highly suggest reading the first book in the series if you haven’t done so!
Gold (Date-A-Dragon) 1
Happy reading!
Terry
One
Kelsey rubbed her hands together, folding back the tips of her mittens to warm her fingers with her breath, and watched the door to the large, upscale building in front of her with narrowed eyes.
All day she’d seen a few fancy, well-dressed people come in and out of the building, though it didn’t see nearly as much traffic as she would expect for such a spacious structure.
Maybe it was used as a residence or maybe occupied by a business with very few, exclusive clients.
Regardless, it was starting to get dark, and she didn’t see any sign of anyone coming to lock the outer doors.
She’d never thought to find herself in this situation, thinking about breaking into a building.
Well, it wasn’t breaking in if it wasn’t locked, right? Perhaps someone had forgotten before going home for the day, and maybe they wouldn’t begrudge her a warm bed on the floor as long as she got out in the morning before anyone could find her.
Propelled by desperation and the increasing cold and darkness, she crossed the road quickly and jogged to the doors, pulling on the handles.
They gave easily, opening and embracing her with a rush of warm air, and she stepped inside, just a few steps, cautiously at first.
She looked out at the street, seeing certain groups of homeless people gathering up the block. Being a woman on the street led to unique challenges, but so far, by continuously moving, she’d avoided harm.
Hopefully, tomorrow she could make her way to a nearby agency and look for something temporary that she could use to apply for housing.
It sucked to be starting over again.
She went through a second set of glass doors and saw a beautiful marble staircase leading up to a second floor. She’d never even seen a marble staircase before. Shiny, white, with little silvery lines.
She crept up the stairs, quiet as a mouse avoiding a cat, and when she reached the top, she looked down a long hallway that met another hallway at the end. On the right, there was a set of elaborate, white-painted wooden doors. She walked in front of them, holding her pack over her back, and looked around her.
No light from any sources, so obviously everyone had left. The carpet along the hallway was so soft beneath her feet.
She had two options. Take a quick nap here on the carpet so she could be well rested when going to the agency tomorrow or head back out into the darkness to sleep among strangers (which could be dangerous).
As long as no one was here, as long as she packed up and left no mess, what did it hurt if she spent the night in warmth and shelter?
Letting out a sigh of relief combined with resignation, she crouched and began to unroll her sleeping bag, forgoing the sleeping pad she used outside so as not to soil the carpet. It was far too nice for that.
She sort of begrudged people who lived in or visited places as nice as the one she was borrowing. What made them so much better than her that they deserved to take such luxury for granted? She’d worked all her life, tried to overcome her circumstances as much as she could, and life just kept smacking her down.
Meanwhile, people got to walk over carpet like this, softer than anything she’d ever felt, and leave the building completely empty while others slept outside on the ground.
It wasn’t fair.
Then again, she’d given up on life being fair long ago. All she hoped for now was another day and another chance to keep fighting.
She pulled her clothing around her, more out of habit now than anything, unzipped the sleeping bag, and was just slipping into it with a sigh when she heard a noise and froze.
Footsteps.
Oh no. Someone was in the next room. In the dark. And they were about to discover her. She made a quick attempt to escape her sleeping bag, but couldn’t get all the way out before the door was flung open, nearly hitting her.
The man standing over her had pitch-black hair and bright silver eyes that flashed even in the darkness around them. His lip curled in a snarl, and she shuddered at the hatred in his expression.
She was well and truly screwed.
Adrien, silver dragon and second-in-command of the noble metals, nearly dropped his scotch as he looked down at the creature hiding outside the door to the clubroom.
A human.
His lip curled in disgust at what human females would resort to in order to snag a dragon. Even though they didn’t know Adrien and his friends were dragons, he’d had to experience their groping, their harassment, their crudeness for weeks now. All the while being told he needed to behave himself.
He was noble, from one of the best families in the old world, and no one touched him without his consent. The audacity. It would never have been allowed in his time.
The fact that it was allowed now simply reminded him that he was stuck in this time, restrained by a ring that kept him from accessing his dragon form and most of his dragon strength.
A ring that tried to ensure he would behave like a trained dog and be on the side of the humans and good shifters, even take a human mate.
As if that would ever happen.
The human in front of him was a perfect example of why.
Sneaking in here uninvited, hiding her identity with an excess of clothes, scarves obscuring even most of her face, setting up camp to ambush them in the morning. She was clearly some kind of thief.
Or spy. Or stalker.
He wasn’t sure how menacing her goals were; he only knew the great potential for human misdeeds.
So much worse than in his time.
But he had to stop thinking like that. His time was lost and he could never go back, and his endless bitterness couldn’t change that.
“What are you doing here?” he asked sharply as he pointed to her, drink in hand.
She was trying to extricate herself from some kind of soft bag made of swishy fabric, and her panic was evident as she began to pack up.
She was going to run for it.
He stepped forward, placing a foot on the bag she was attempting to stuff into her backpack, and she looked up at him, alarm in her eyes. With her face mostly covered and the darkness around him, he couldn’t make out her features or even the color of her eyes, but something about th
e panic in them, the fear, even desperation, made him release her and step back.
What did it matter if one human spy got away?
He took a sip of his scotch as she quickly shoved her things together and into her pack, staggering toward the steps.
He could go after her, question her, but she was leaving, and that was all that mattered at the moment. She could go back to where she came from and tell whoever sent her that the men (or dragons) at Date-A-Dragon weren’t so easily caught.
He walked downstairs after her to lock the doors, as he’d promised Citrine he would, and saw her look back at him with a bitter, flashing glance before hurrying across the road, pack slung over a shoulder.
It was a large pack for such a young, petite woman, though he wasn’t sure of her build, whether she was curvy or if she simply wore many layers of clothing.
It was beginning to get cold in Seattle, and the humidity in the air made it feel much colder than it was. The air tended to feel as though it were biting through your skin.
Adrien gave her one more look and then headed upstairs to continue his drinking and contemplation.
He glanced once at the spot on the ground where she’d been a moment ago and then swung open the doors and returned to the chaise lounge he’d been occupying by the window.
He refilled his scotch on the way and sipped it as he sank into the chaise, propping up his legs as he watched the street and the so-called spy. Before, he’d been watching the rain and the skyline, but this was moderately more entertaining.
She looked both ways, as if lost, or perhaps she was trying to throw him off so he couldn’t follow her and see the identification tag on her vehicle.
No matter. He was curious about this human now; he wouldn’t be telling on her. He was almost hoping she decided to come back and try again to get in, just for the slight excitement of it.
He chided himself for even thinking such a thing and sat up slightly as she walked toward a darkened alley between two buildings.
That was Ron’s territory, and Adrien often saw him and his group smoking there or panhandling. Not recently, though.
But what was a woman doing going in there? Perhaps she’d parked back there, somehow.
He stood, clutching the beautifully crafted crystal he insisted on drinking scotch from, and his eyes narrowed as he saw her stop in the entrance to the alley, look around, and then slowly remove her pack.
What was she doing? Why didn’t she drive away?
His brows lowered as a painful ache sank in his chest. He rubbed his heart with his free hand, wondering what this foreign feeling was.
She began to unroll that strange, swishy bag and set her backpack on the ground, and he realized with stunned, frozen shock that she was going to stay there. On the street. In the cold, with no shelter.
The images of a moment ago, when he’d seen her at the door, assuming the worst of her due to his suspicions of all humans, flashed through his mind.
He knew what that feeling was now, though it was so foreign he barely recognized it.
Guilt.
He felt his lip curling reflexively in disgust, this time at himself. He put a hand up to the window glass, almost as if he could reach out to her, apologize.
Still, was it his problem if she had nowhere to go? He hadn’t seen a homeless woman before, and in his day, he and his fellow dragons would never have allowed it. As leaders, they had taken care of those in their areas.
But this wasn’t his day.
So he watched her bedding down for the night, in this frigid cold, with a growing sense of unease.
It wasn’t his business. He hated this world. He hated humans.
He stepped back, sipping his scotch, hoping it would dull the razor blade of shame sawing at his heart.
Movement outside drew his gaze, and his hand tightened on the glass as he saw a group of men he didn’t recognize moving toward the alley.
His eyes narrowed farther, his face tightening, as he took in the rapidly escalating situation.
It wasn’t his problem. He wasn’t human. It wasn’t his place to get involved in their world.
The men were spread out now, blocking the entrance to the alley.
The sound of shattering glass echoed through the empty club room as Adrien threw down his tumbler and ran for the exit, cursing himself all the way.
Two
Kelsey cursed the prick who had chased her out of the building as she backed away from the men crowding the entrance to the alley.
It was easier to think of his flashing, disgusted eyes and blame him than it was to consider her current situation. The danger she was in.
So far, she had evaded roving gangs and the eyes of predators. It appeared her luck had run out on this rainy, dark, cold night.
There was a streetlight overhead, just bright enough she could make out some of the features of the men closing in.
She moved toward her things, afraid if she crouched to pack up, they’d take the moment to ambush her. “I’m not causing any trouble. If I’m in your way, I’ll leave.”
“And go where, sweetheart?” the man in front said, resting a meaty arm closed in a worn leather jacket on the brick wall and leaning against it. He was trying to look relaxed, but he and all his group appeared sharply alert. Predators closing in on their prey.
Trying to keep it from running or putting up a fight.
“We don’t mind you staying as long as you don’t mind giving us a little something in return.”
She fought the urge to roll her eyes. If only she had a dollar for every time someone had offered her basic human decency in exchange for some price she couldn’t or wouldn’t pay.
She felt her neck and chest tightening as adrenaline flooded her. She tried to walk toward a gap in the group, but they closed and one of them shoved her roughly, causing her to land on her butt on the damp ground.
“I don’t want any trouble,” she said, putting up both hands, wondering if she screamed, if anyone would hear her or care. Hysteria rose in her, mixing with fear, but she knew from experience that no one would come when she was in trouble. That the only one she could depend on was herself.
“What’s going on here?” A sharp, arrogant voice echoed from behind the men, and she looked up to see them turn around as a man walked into their midst.
They stepped back from her to greet him, and she saw the shock and confusion on all their faces as the douche from before, the one with flashing silver eyes, walked into the center of the alley, unaware or uncaring of the amount or type of men surrounding him.
His hands were in the pockets of his fancy gray dress slacks. He wore designer shoes that were surely being ruined by the mud, and he had on a tailored light-blue shirt that shone in the lamplight. He turned up the cuffs and addressed the men around him.
“I asked what was going on here. I demand someone answer.”
He was taller than she’d originally thought, at least a few inches over six feet, and significantly muscled, though in an elegant way that seemed sculpted more for looks than the raw strength needed on the street, which the men around her possessed.
“You demand?” The leader, a man with dark, stringy hair and a large, stocky build, looked at the newcomer with a sneer. “Go back to your penthouse, pansy.”
“Pansy?” The man with silver eyes raised a dark brow, and she realized belatedly that he was almost painfully handsome. The type of man that drew women like a magnet. She’d overlooked it earlier because her need for shelter and warmth had been her full focus, but watching him now, her only hope for escape, she couldn’t avoid it.
The man was beautiful.
“Pansy,” the leader said, folding his bulky arms. “Prick. Get out of here. We found her first.”
Beautiful douchebag, as she’d named him, curled up his lips in a sneer. “Found her? For what purpose?”
The leader let out a loud, mean laugh, and his friends snickered with him. “What do you think?” He made a crude gesture, and she
saw her potential rescuer’s expression darken.
“How dare you?” he said. “What a new low for disgusting behavior, and I assure you my expectations for humanity are already exceedingly depressed.”
The men stared at him, as if unsure what to make of his odd, formal speech.
The man sighed, shoving his hands in his pockets. His eyes darted to her with an unreadable expression, and then he turned to face the leader. “Nonetheless, I don’t wish to hurt anyone. So if you and your men would simply leave immediately, I am willing to let you go. But you must go quickly.”
Her jaw dropped.
Were rich people this unaware of the world? She didn’t care how big his ego was. It would be six on one, and despite his fit build, he had zero chance of making it out of a street fight with even one of them, most likely.
What on earth gave him such confidence?
The men around him laughed nervously, as if unsure whether or not he was insane.
“You’re the one who should go if you want to avoid trouble,” the leader said, and Kelsey watched the newcomer, praying he didn’t just turn around and leave her.
She expected him to, given the way he’d looked at her before.
His eyes settled on her, and he let out a wary sigh, as if hating himself silently for the situation he was in. He folded his arms more tightly.
“I’m afraid I can’t do that.”
“Fine,” the leader said. “Suits me fine.” He rolled his shoulders. “I’ll beat the shit out of his prick and take his stuff. It’ll be good foreplay.” He nodded to Kelsey. “Someone hold her so she doesn’t make a run for it.”
He circled her defender and his men joined him, except for one, who walked to her and grabbed her by the arms, jerking them behind her back.
“Stop it,” she said. “Let him go. Come on. This isn’t fair, six on one. I’ll do what you want. Let him go.” Panic rushed through her. She’d seen mean things on the streets. This guy had no idea what he’d gotten himself into.