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Dragon's Bane (Dragon Guild Chronicles Book 5)

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by Carina Wilder




  Dragon’s Bane

  Dragon Guild Chronicles, Book Five

  Carina Wilder

  Contents

  Also by Carina Wilder

  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

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Epilogue

  Also by Carina Wilder

  Also by Carina Wilder

  If you’d like to be informed of future releases, exclusive deals, reader contests and special offers, please sign up:

  Carina Wilder's Mailing List

  Carina’s Books:

  The Dragon Guild Chronicles:

  Dragon Hunter

  Dragon Seeker

  Dragon’s Lover

  Dragon’s Curse

  Dragon’s Bane

  The Alpha Seekers Series:

  Sought by the Alphas

  Seeking Her Mates

  Illusions

  Sorceress

  The Plenty of Shift Choose Your Own Sequel Shifter Dating Series begins here:

  Miri: Plenty of Shift, Book One

  Naomi and Tyler, Book Two

  Naomi and Quinn, Book Three

  The Wolf Rock Shifters Series (these are complete stories and can be read out of order):

  Wolf Rock Shifter Box Set

  Winning the Alpha

  Bearing Up In Wolf Rock

  The Right to a Bear's Arms

  To Lie With Lions

  Alpha’s Hunt

  The Single Ladies’ Travel Agency (Contemporary Romance)

  Gettin’ Hard

  Going Hard

  Loving Hard

  The Billionaires and Curves Serial:

  Billionaires and Curves (Taken With You) Trilogy

  Taken With You

  Crazy About You

  The Way to You

  www.carinawilder.com

  Carina Wilder’s Facebook

  Chapter 1

  Warkshire Forest,

  13 Years Ago

  “Oi! Lunatic! Hold on a minute!”

  The voice barrelled through the air, breaking through the peaceful silence of the woods and sending a distant bird flapping into the night sky.

  “You know perfectly well that’s not my name, you manky twat,” Luna replied as she swung around to face the speaker. Despite her gruff tone, a smile landed on her lips as she spoke. Lunatic. Her brother, Silver, was the only one who ever used that old nickname on her.

  He was also the only one who was allowed to get away with it.

  Luna clenched her jaw as she waited for him to catch her up. Much as she adored her brother, she was itching to set her Wolf free, and had no patience whatsoever for whatever late-night lecture he was about to throw her way. No doubt he was going to tell her not to wander off into the forest on her own, just as he’d done a million times.

  Bossy thing should have known by now that her only likely response to such a command would be to tell him to piss off. In a friendly way, of course. She and Silver had always been close, and since the death of their parents two years earlier, they’d only grown tighter.

  Nothing brought two siblings together like the shock of sudden orphanhood.

  “Where do you think you’re off to, then?” asked Silver when he’d pulled up in front of her. Casually, he leaned against the trunk of an ash tree, his nineteen-year-old frame tall and confident, a mischievous smile on his lips. The mess of silver hair for which he’d been named sat in a pile atop his head, reflecting the dim moonlight and giving him the look of an elven prince.

  It was nearly eleven p.m. by now, but Luna’s keen shifter’s eyes allowed her to study her sibling clearly in the dark. As she looked at him, she was struck by how much he’d altered in the past year. Their parents would have been so pleased and proud, had they lived to see him like this. His body had filled out, broad shoulders topped by a handsome, square-jawed face. He was turning into the sort of man who was admired by young women and envied by young men for his physical prowess and charisma.

  The sort of man who might challenge the Pack’s Alpha for supremacy one day.

  “Come on, then,” he said again as she sized him up. “Tell me where you think you’re off to.”

  “I was just taking my Wolf for a quick run,” she replied, grinning. “I—we, rather—had an urge to get rid of some pent-up energy.”

  “Oh, riiight,” said Silver in a mocking tone as he leaned forward. “More like you had an urge to stalk your secret crush again.” His words were playful, but his expression was more accusing than joking, more concerned than amused.

  “I believe you meant to say admire him from afar,” Luna grumbled, crossing her arms in defiance.

  “You know what Ripper says about the Dragon,” Silver replied. “He’s told us stacks of times that the wanker’s bad news. He’s dangerous.”

  Silver always insisted on calling him the Dragon, like there was no humanity in the man whatsoever. But damn it, he was just as human as they were. Just as human as all shifters. “Kirith, you mean,” she retorted. “Kirith Sigurdsson. The Dragon has a name. As for being dangerous, you say that like it’s a bad thing.” Luna tossed her hair haughtily behind her shoulders. “Maybe I like dangerous men.”

  “Or maybe you’re too young to be thinking about any men whatsoever.”

  Narrowing her eyes, Luna replied, “I’m eighteen. Technically I’m an adult, thank you very much.”

  “You’re also a Wolf shifter. He’s a Dragon shifter. He has no interest in you, plus he’s married with children, which is a wee detail you seem keen to overlook, you little home-wrecker.”

  “I know all of that. Hence my admiring from a distance. Besides, who’s to say I was going to go anywhere near him tonight?”

  Silver snorted. “Because every time you go into the woods you end up at his cabin, that’s why. Anyhow, just be careful. I heard some of the men saying the Dragon’s likely to be in a foul humour tonight.”

  “Oh? Why’s that?”

  Silver shrugged up a shoulder. “Dunno. They never tell me anything.”

  Luna jumped at the opportunity to steer the subject away from her not-so-secret obsession to Pack politics. Much safer. “Yeah, well, they ought to start including you in their talks soon. You’re old enough to be taken into Ripper’s confidential fold.”

  “I’m not so sure.” Silver grabbed one of the tree’s branches above his head and swung lazily from it, bending his legs below him. “Ripper’s never warmed to me. I don’t imagine that he’ll start now, just because I’ve technically aged sufficiently to be considered a grown-up.”

  “Ripper’s a twat-faced turd-monster,” Luna snarled, “and a shite Alpha.”

  Immediately Silver released the branch, landing hard on his feet, and looked around nervously. “Don’t talk like that,” he said. “If he hears you…”

  “Oh, what? He’ll reprimand me severely?”

  “I don’t know what he’ll do. But surely you haven’t forgotten what he did to Denn.”

  Several months earlier, their Alph
a had punished a Pack member for attempted desertion by dragging him back to his cabin and burning the soles of his feet until they bled. Not only had Denn’s chances of escape disappeared, his Wolf had suffered by painfully losing the pads of his hind paws. It had taken months to heal enough that he could walk again, let alone run.

  “The idiot Alpha won’t hurt me,” Luna said, twirling a strand of hair around her index finger. She knew that such girly behaviour drove her brother mad, but it was good fun to watch him wince. “He thinks I’m special.”

  As soon as the words had come out, she knew she’d lied to herself.

  Special?

  No.

  No one in the Warkshire Pack was special.

  She turned her right hand over and stared down at her palm, her eyes picking up the mark on its heel. A small triangular tattoo stared back at her.

  The symbol of their Pack. Permanent proof scrawled in ink that she was nothing special after all.

  Each shifter in their group received such a mark before their third birthday. Luna and Silver had always assumed that it was commonplace among Wolf shifters to be marked in a similar way; a sort of territorial badge. It was only when Luna had hit her teenage years that she’d learned from a member of a neighbouring Pack that not all Wolves were deliberately scarred with the possessive mark of a psychotic Alpha.

  Now, more than ever, the tattoo looked to her like the brand of some rancher who wanted to keep track of his herd of cattle. It was nothing more than a permanent symbol of possession, of submission. Ripper had long since made sure that the Wolves of Warkshire Forest would never be anything other than indentured servants.

  Reason number one that she had to escape the Pack with Silver one day, if they could ever find the means to do so. Some day, when he was a little bigger, a little stronger…

  “Anyhow, be careful,” he said, apparently failing to pick up on her moment of inner turmoil. “Stay away from that beastly Dragon.”

  A low growl emerged from somewhere in Luna’s chest. “Kirith.”

  “Kirith, then. Whatever. If you put a name on the devil, he’s still the sodding devil. The fact is, he’s a BHD.”

  “What the hell’s a BHD?”

  “A Big, Horrid Dragon. I named him that in my head eons ago.” Silver chuckled, no doubt proud of his rapier wit.

  “Pfft,” said Luna, blowing out her lips so they vibrated against one another like a horse’s. “Horrid? You’re mad. How can anyone so phenomenally good-looking possibly be horrid?”

  Her brother’s smile quickly flipped upside down. “Just because you think he’s dreamy doesn’t make him good, you know. If he’s angry, there’s no telling what he might do tonight. Don’t forget, Dragons breathe fire, and the forest is rather full of kindling, to say the least.”

  Luna waved her hand dismissively. “I don’t give a toss if the Dragon’s got his knickers in a twist. I’m not worried.”

  Silver lowered his chin and glared at her.

  “Fine, I’ll stick by the river then,” she groaned. “But he’s not a monster.” She was getting properly agitated by now. Silver just didn’t get it, did he? Well, she did. She’d seen the Dragon shifter’s eyes more than once, albeit only from a distance. Still, she’d seen enough to know that he was a good man. Kind, gentle. He wasn’t a beast by any means, and if anything, he was far nicer than their tosser of an Alpha. “Besides, if he is, he’s an incredibly handsome monster with big muscles and a winning smile.”

  Silver shot another dubious glance at his slightly younger sister.

  “I’ll stay away,” she murmured in a withering tone.

  “See that you do, or I’ll tell Ripper on you.” Silver’s lip ticked back up into his signature smile, which always began on the left side, revealing a dimple that had been with him since he was a baby.

  Luna stuck out her tongue as she’d done so many times over the years. “No need. I’ll be back soon, I promise,” she said. “I’ll tell you what—come find me if I’m not back in an hour, okay?”

  “Fine,” said Silver. “Meanwhile, I’ll go make a voodoo doll in the shape of a Dragon and poke it with sharp sticks.”

  “Don’t you dare, you wanker!” she replied as she spun around and jogged in the direction of the forest’s core, shifting into her copper Wolf’s form to sprint away from her brother, away from the Pack.

  Her déor was headed deep into her woods for the thousandth time, the cool autumn air streaking through her fur, and she couldn’t have been more content.

  As she eased gracefully between the labyrinth of tree trunks that littered the wild woods, she told herself that she hadn’t lied to Silver. Not entirely, at least. She really did want to take a look at the forest, to inhale its wonderful scents. She’d been raised here, learned to shift between these trees. This was her home; the only home she and her brother had ever known.

  But she had allowed herself a small white lie about her destination. Even if her sibling hated the idea of it, she was determined to look at the shifter known as Kirith tonight, to remind herself what a real man looked like. She’d spent her whole life surrounded by the Pack’s males, and while they were nice enough—except for Ripper, who was a right pisser—they’d never excited her to the point of romantic interest. She was an adult now, as she’d said. She had needs, desires.

  She also happened to have a crush on a man who was both inaccessible and unapproachable. Wasn’t that how most eighteen-year-old women spent their time?

  Kirith wasn’t really hers, of course, and he would never be. But she liked to imagine that he was.

  He was enormous; bigger than Silver, bigger, even, than Ripper. With piercing green eyes, light brown hair, and arms that looked like they could lift a freight train off its track. She’d often wondered what his Dragon must look like. Was he as beautiful as the man himself, or as terrifying as Ripper and the others claimed?

  Kirith and his family lived in a cabin at the centre of the forest, so isolated from society that Luna couldn’t help but think that they’d hidden themselves there on purpose. Perhaps he was concealing something; a dark past, or worse. But sod it. If he was, she didn’t care. All she knew was that when she’d stumbled upon the house one day and watched him from afar, something had happened to her. She’d kept her eyes on him for an hour as the hulking man chopped wood in nothing but a loose-fitting pair of jeans that hung low on perfectly carved hips.

  It was when she’d first inhaled his deeply masculine scent that the young woman had realized for the first time what it was to be attracted to a man.

  At eighteen, she was too young, perhaps, to be with such a man, even if he had been single. But it didn’t stop her from dreaming about him. Somehow, he made all Wolf shifters seem weedy and weak in comparison. A girl—no, a woman—needed something to fantasize about. Pack Wolves were dull, submissive. They abided mindlessly by the rules set by their ruthless Alpha.

  Where was the fun in that?

  Kirith, on the other hand, was his own man who played entirely by his own set of rules. Not to mention that he was probably a far more noble creature than Ripper would ever be. So whatever his inner Dragon was angry about tonight, he was probably being perfectly reasonable. He looked too rational, too kind, to fly off the handle without provocation.

  It didn’t matter anyhow. All that was important was that Luna get a quick look at him tonight, to satisfy her craving, then she’d turn right around and run home. One little glance, that’s all I want, she told herself as she charged forward, her long legs pushing her Wolf through the woods at a rapid sprint. Then I can go home and sleep…and dream.

  After a time she realized that she must be getting close to the hidden cottage. She slowed her pace to a walk, savouring her mounting excitement. Searching out Kirith always sent a sea of happy butterflies circling around inside her belly. His hulking form was better than the sight of presents on Christmas morning. No doubt he was much more fun to unwrap, too.

  But as she moved closer to the clearing, t
he normally euphoric flock of butterflies quickly took off for safety, morphing instead into a swarm of agitated wasps.

  An odd aroma had met Luna’s Wolf’s nose, stopping her in her tracks and sending a shudder of warning through her body.

  It’s all right, she told herself. You’re more excited than usual, that’s all. Must be the hormones.

  Did hormones make the air smell like a bonfire?

  Smoke clouded the air, and the scent of meat wafted to the Wolf’s nose, sending a strange, horrified shudder down her spine. She told herself to be calm. Kirith’s family must have been preparing some sort of late dinner out of doors. It was the only logical explanation for the smell. So why did the aroma fill her with fear?

  He’s grilling, her inner voice insisted. He’s just making a nice, late dinner for his family.

  Slowly she pulled forward, hoping to catch a glimpse of Mr. Perfection himself, to convince herself that all was well. Maybe she’d spot him flipping meat on a fire out back, wearing nothing but an apron, tied at the back. Oh, the thought of it.

  But as she neared the clearing, she began to spot flames dancing off the tree trunks ahead. They weren’t from any grill; they were too big, too hot. A strange red glow had begun to colour the very air around her, driving its way high into the treetops.

  It was then that Luna noticed that an eerie quiet had stilled the night. No crickets were chirping. No owls hooting. This was no family cookout.

  Something was terribly wrong.

  Instinct told her to turn and to run. To flee for her life, never to look back. She should escape whatever incident was unfolding ahead, because whatever it was, it wasn’t going to be good.

 

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