Dragon Temptation (Crimson Dragons Book 1)
Page 1
Table of Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Dragon Temptation
Crimson Dragons Book 1
By Amelia Jade
Dragon Temptation
Copyright @ 2017 by Amelia Jade
First Electronic Publication: December 2017
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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Dragon Temptation
Chapter One
Elin
The aide found her on the range, where she always was.
“Major Mara!”
Ignoring the call, she pulled the M-16ZR Advanced Infantry Weapon into her shoulder, sighted it, and stroked the trigger gently, sending bursts of triple rounds downrange as fast as she could reset from the recoil. Eventually the magazine clicked empty, forcing her to finally acknowledge the calls that had grown in volume. Safetying the weapon and setting it down on the flat surface in front of her, she turned at last.
“Yes, Lieutenant?” she ground out, unhappy about being interrupted.
“Ma’am, I apologize for the interruption, but the colonel has requested your presence in his office immediately.”
Mentally she sighed, keeping her outward look neutral and unexpressive. “Thank you, Lieutenant, I’ll head on over.”
The aide handed her an envelope. She took it, then returned the offered salute with precision before cleaning up her weapon and returning it to the locker. It wasn’t her personal weapon. Major Elin Mara didn’t have a personal weapon, besides the pistol on her belt. Only the combat teams were issued assault weapons, and only a very certain subset of those had been issued the brand new ZR variant. There were, to her knowledge, only three of them on the base at all, strictly for training purposes.
Which was good, she thought. With what was coming, they were going to need all the training they could get.
Striding across the grounds toward the base commander’s office, she wondered just what it was he wanted to see her about. The two of them had a professional relationship. The base was small, and along with one other major they were the only ranking officers present. Opening the envelope, her eyes went wide at the contents. The first thing she noticed was the big black stamp that read TOP SECRET – MAJOR MARA’S EYES ONLY. There was a lot of mumbo jumbo military jargon, lettering and the like that followed. But she skipped over that until her eyes settled on the one sentence that mattered.
Major Elin Mara is hereby reassigned effectively immediately. She is to depart Fort Potts within the day for Fort Stark using civilian transportation.
There were vouchers within the paper to cover the cost of transportation, accommodation, and food. Wherever it was the military was sending her, they thought it somewhat important. A sliver of hope ran through her. Could they finally be sending her to a combat post? She’d never heard of Fort Stark before, though that didn’t mean a whole lot. The military had bases all across the world. She couldn’t be expected to know each and every one of them. Especially if they were classified for some reason.
Which most combat bases were!
Feeling giddy, she increased her stride, covering the distance as fast as she could without looking like she was in a hurry. While the idea of combat was terrifying, the ideal of helping to protect her fellow citizens was what had pushed her to sign up in the first place. But year after year, despite working her hardest, she’d always been shuffled off to rear-echelon locations. The military had turned her into a paper pusher against her most stringent objections.
Elin had seen the video. She knew what was going on out there, even if the government wasn’t sharing with the civilians. Oh sure, a few conspiracy theorists had noted that the “training” exercises that had occurred in the mountains nearly eight months earlier near the northern border had been far more realistic than they had any right to. But other than that, the general populace was in the dark about the horrors found deep within the mine. She wasn’t, however, and Elin wanted to do her part. Maybe she was finally getting her chance.
She rapped on the door to Colonel Afer’s office and was swiftly admitted in.
“Major Mara reporting as ordered sir,” she said, coming to attention.
“At ease, Major,” the colonel said with a wave before pointing at a chair. “Sit.”
It wasn’t an offer. She sat.
“You’re being reassigned.”
“Yes sir. To Fort—”
“Don’t finish that sentence, Major,” the colonel’s voice whipped out, cutting her off instantly.
Elin frowned. “Colonel?”
“Whatever that paper says, it was for your eyes, and your eyes only. I was given very strict instructions to that point. All I know is that you’re being reassigned. Here are the rest of the orders; they came in after the fact.” The colonel stared down at the next envelope, which had her name scrawled across it. “Whatever’s going on, they want you on the move, and quickly.”
She took the next envelope, her curiosity piquing. What could be so urgent they would send out two sets of orders so quickly? Opening them in silence, she read through it.
Major Mara,
You are hereby ordered to relinquish your post at Fort Potts immediately, and travel with all speed to Fort Stark whereby you will take up the position as base commander.
Her jaw dropped open. They wanted her as a base commander? What the hell? She was years away from that sort of position. What the hell was going on? Forcing herself to focus, she continued reading.
Your mission will be outlined to you in full detail upon arrival. The contents of this envelope will serve to give you a brief overview of the mission.
She flipped through the papers, her spirits sinking. Boot camp. They were sending her to boot camp? Everything spoke about training, about bringing the new recruits up to speed as fast as she could, and ensuring that
they were both ready and willing to fight on the side of humanity when the war resumed.
Well duh, of course they would fight. They were soldiers in the army, were they not? It’s not like they would be given an option. Some of the language was weird, making her wonder just who the new recruits were, but it was so vague that she couldn’t piece it together.
“Sir,” she said at last, folding the papers up and setting them back into her lap. “This is classified Black.”
“I’m aware of that, Major,” he said grumpily, obviously not happy about being kept out of the loop.
“Are we sure this isn’t a mistake? I’ve never been issued a security clearance level this high. I…obviously don’t want to say what’s on the orders sir, but I didn’t even know that the level they’ve included existed. This must be a mistake. I requested a combat posting, sir.”
“I’m aware of that, Mara,” Afer said, this time in a gentler tone. “But I suppose you’re still atoning for whatever sins you committed in a previous life.”
He meant it as a joke, but Elin felt her insides wrap themselves into knots. Or just a previous rank. It was another dead-end assignment. She just knew it. Security clearance be damned, she was going to train new recruits. That was all it was. The classification was just to get rid of her, to put her somewhere they didn’t have to deal with her anymore, which they’d been trying to do ever since…since…before. But Major Elin Mara hadn’t been willing to let them do that. So she’d worked her ass off at every posting, proving that they needed to give her more responsibility, and slowly but surely she’d worked her way up the ranks.
Now they had finally found a way to “lose” her in the system, by assigning her somewhere so secret that she probably would be denied any sort of transfer out. It was endgame.
“Everything okay, Major?”
She looked up sharply. The colonel was not the most perceptive of men when it came to emotions, so for him to ask that sort of question meant that the mask had slipped from her face. “Yes, of course, sir,” she said, staring into his dull green eyes and forcing a smile onto her round face. “Just sad that I’ll be leaving here,” she lied.
“Well, we’ll miss you too, Major. But I’m supposed to get you out of here ASAP, so you’d better get packed and move on out. Your new post awaits you, wherever it may be.”
She smiled weakly and rose with him, shaking his hand firmly. “Of course. With your leave?”
“Dismissed.”
Elin left the office, still reeling from the fact that the army was sending her back to boot camp.
She’d endured a lot in her time in the military, including the incident that had set this all off. But she’d never been so dejected before. They wanted her out of the service. That much was clear to her. Maybe she should take them up on the offer. Just quit, walk away and go find a job where her superiors weren’t out to get her for doing the right thing! It would be so easy…
Even as the thought entered her brain, she straightened her spine in defiance. Fuck those assholes. They could mistreat her all they wanted, she was going to show them. She would become the best drill instructor they’d ever had. Her recruits would be the best of the best, and they would be forced to send her elsewhere, once again acknowledging that she’d bested them, even if they weren’t willing to admit it.
Fuck the assholes. She didn’t back down. Not back when she was a staff sergeant, and most certainly not now.
Chapter Two
Kallore
His eyes blinked open slowly, peeling the gummy feeling away from the lids as they receded into his skull, revealing the gray-walled room around him. Everything was gray, including the ceiling he was staring at.
“Ah, you’re awake.”
Something about the male voice sounded familiar. A slight turn of his head revealed the owner of it. A warm face with curious whiskey-brown eyes that were tinged with high amounts of orange flecks stared back at him. Silver hair bounced slightly as the head bobbed up and down.
“This is a nightmare,” he muttered as he finally recalled who the features belonged to.
Kyen, an old dragon, and an oddity as far as their kind were concerned.
“What’s a nightmare?”
“You.” Kallore groaned and closed his eyes, willing the face away. But when he opened them, it was still there off to the side, surrounded by gray everything. “This is the worst kind of nightmare.”
“There are different kinds? What makes this one so bad?”
“This one is real.”
The other dragon laughed. “Oh come now, Kallore, it can’t be that bad.”
“Kyen, I don’t know what’s going on, but you are the last face I wanted to wake up to.” He opened his eyes, taking in the gray-walled room again, this time also noticing the metal bars behind Kyen that seemed to be containing them inside. “Where am I? What’s going on? Why am I awake?”
Everything was kind of foggy. He vaguely recalled himself falling into a darkness after—
He slammed the door closed on that thought. Not right now. Figure out what was going on, where he was. Those were the important things.
“Well, Kyen?”
Another voice spoke. A female voice, in a tongue he didn’t understand. Kallore sat up, trying to locate the source of the voice.
“Ooooh,” he groaned as the world spun around him.
“Easy Kal, easy. Take your time,” Kyen urged, reaching out one hand to steady him.
“I’m fine,” he snarled, ashamed at having shown any weakness. “What is she saying?” he asked, finally locating the voice. It was coming from outside the cell, the owner blocked by Kyen’s large mass.
“Her name is Lianna, she’s a scientist here and my assistant. She’s asking how you are doing.”
“Why can’t I understand her? What language is she speaking?”
“English.” Kyen turned and said something quickly to the human woman in her own language before turning back to him.
“What is going on here?” he asked, getting more frustrated as his confusion increased instead of the opposite.
“Relax,” Kyen urged. “I’ll tell you everything, I promise. But it’s a long story, and first I need to make sure that you’re okay. How do you feel?”
“Mostly fine. My head is dizzy, but it’s subsiding now.” He frowned. “Why?”
“Well, you’d been asleep so long that you’d turned to stone, my friend. We had to use an innovative process to awaken you, and truthfully, we had no idea how well it would work.”
Kallore’s mouth opened, then closed. “To stone?” he asked softly.
“Yes. But everything seems to have worked out okay. Even your memory is here. You remember me.”
“Barely. It’s been decades since I last saw you.” He paused. “Plus whatever time has passed since I was last awake.”
“A lot,” Kyen informed him. “Can you stand?”
He rose to his feet easily, the spinning in his head almost completely passed by now. “I’m fine, I told you.”
“I can see that. But we didn’t know. Had to make sure. Standard procedure and all that,” Kyen said with a smile, sitting up straight and pushing his hair back behind his ears. Almost immediately it fell forward again, but he didn’t seem to notice.
“What’s with the white coat?” he asked.
“Standard scientific wear, or so Lianna has told me.”
“Lianna.” Kallore repeated the name, looking over at the human woman who was making marks on a hard tablet sort of thing. “What is she doing?”
“Writing observations, I would presume.”
“About me?”
“Well of course. We have nothing else to go on, you see. You’re the first.”
Kallore wasn’t sure he liked where this was going. “The first what, Kyen?”
“The first dragon to be awakened of course!”
“Kyen, maybe your memory is failing you or something. But unless I’m mistaken, you are a dragon too. A wuss, perhaps
, but you’re still a dragon, and you are definitely awake.”
The silver-haired man just grinned at the jab. It was a well-known fact in their world that he was an extreme oddity. A pacifist, he was an oxymoron to the core. A dragon who wouldn’t fight. Nobody knew why, but he was vehement about the fact. Over time people had come to accept it, though none understood it, and Kyen never gave a reason.
“Ah, but you see, I never went to sleep!” He shrugged. “But I’ve been trying to convince them to awaken others for years now. It seems they finally changed their minds and listened to me. Unfortunately, they chose you first.”
Kallore laughed, a loud barking sound that filled the little chamber. It helped to push away the guilt that was resurfacing. The guilt that had been too much for him to stand, that had sent him into the deep sleep in the first place. Memories started to awaken within him, and he fought them down. He’d slept for too long already it seemed. Now was not the time for more.
“Why am I awake?” He finally asked the question that had been bothering him since it became obvious he’d not awoken of his own actions, but rather forcefully at the hands of Kyen and Lianna.
The pacifist dragon sobered immediately. “Because you are needed.”
“For what?”
Kyen ignored the question. “You’re going to go through some lessons. Mostly mental, though we will need to ensure that you regain your strength as well. They will bring you up to speed with humanity.” The silver-haired dragon paused. “There have been…a few…changes, since you were last awake, my friend.”
He wasn’t totally sure the two of them were friends, but he doubted they were enemies either. Kallore looked around his cell. The walls were of an odd material, but the floor was rock, the bed made of wood and straw, and the bars made of steel.
“Really?” he asked. “It looks like what I might expect.”
“We did this to make you feel at ease. This is considered ancient and old-fashioned now.” A thick hand clapped him on the shoulder. “It’ll be okay though.”
“There’s a lot you haven’t told me, isn’t there?”