by Celeste Raye
“A lot of those who didn’t become dragons were still very loyal to Max’s and Blake’s fathers. They came with them. They refused to leave their side even knowing that they were dragons. I think that’s amazing.”
Christy said, “Yeah? Well, apparently Blake did something funky because if he hadn’t, they never would’ve forbade him from having kids. I mean, come on, how screwed up you have to be that they insist that you can never bear children?”
Heather leaned closer. “It wasn’t Blake at all. It was his dad. I don’t know what he did but Max said whatever it was, it was necessary. There’s a part of me, that law-school part of me, that wants to know what it is so that maybe I could, I don’t know, argue his case or something? That seems really unfair. I mean it’s a harsh punishment to begin with, never having kids, but never allowing any member of your family to have them either? That’s uncalled for.”
Christy said, “Maybe they just didn’t want Blake to breed. Can you blame them? The guy belched fire at a coffee shop. Remember that? Why are you sticking up for him?”
“I have no idea.”
She really didn’t. She had no feelings at all for Blake, but she knew that despite Max’s anger with Blake at the moment that they were not only closely related, but that Max cared for Blake. Max felt that the punishment was unfair, and he was right. Maybe that’s all it was.
Christy said, “I wonder if anyone even knows that we are gone.”
Heather studied her hands. She had a feeling that the thing that she didn’t like to talk about, that great big giant thing, was about to come hurtling at her, and sure enough, Christy said, “Do you miss your parents?”
A hard lump formed in Heather’s throat. The automobile accident that had taken their lives had occurred only days before Todd’s defection. Her brother had decided that he no longer wanted to live in New York and had taken a very prestigious job in Hong Kong. She rarely heard from him, and since he mostly ignored his social media and the phone, she doubted very seriously that he would notice that she was absent.
That she might not be missed at all brought a welter of hurt into her heart. Along with it came a longing to see her parents again and she found herself wishing that she had told Max that her parents were gone too and wondering why she hadn’t.
She did not like to talk about it. They had had something of a major fight the night before the accident, and she had yet to forgive herself for that one.
She said, “Of course I do. I guess the only good thing was that Todd left after they died so they didn’t have to be ashamed of their jilted daughter.”
Tears came up in her eyes. She was a disappointment. She had disappointed them so many times. It was a damn shame that the best thing in her life was the fact that her parents had not been able to see her cheating ex-fiancé walk out on her with her bridesmaid, who was the daughter of one of their long-time and best friends.
Before she could stop herself, she found herself sobbing out, “I never liked that bitch anyway! It was all their idea to put her in my wedding!”
Christy’s arm wrapped around her shoulders and hugged her tight. “Yeah, I never liked her either. You should’ve let me give her a good old-fashioned butt whipping like I wanted to.”
Heather said, “I guess if I was a better person I would have.”
Christy shook her head. “No, you’re the better person for saying no to it. You always were a better person than me.”
Heather hugged her back. “Oh, come on. You’re tough as nails. I always wished I was as tough as you. I mean, look at us now, sitting here in a castle, and I’m crying my eyes out and, because I apparently have no sense at all, I slept with a dragon. At least you had the good sense to say no to that.”
Christy said, “To be fair, I said no to Blake. There are a couple of really hot dragons around here that I might say yes to.” She ended that sentence with a saucy wink that made Heather’s tears dry up in laughter.
Heather cried out, “You are incorrigible!”
Christy said, “You are using words that make you sound like you’re eighty. I’m kidding, by the way. I don’t want to sleep with any of them. I want to get home and sleep with men I know won’t roast me to a crisp.”
Heather shivered a little as she remembered the exquisite and incredibly hot feel of Max’s flesh against hers. “Is it a terrible thing to say that the best guy that I’ve met lately is a dragon?”
Christy studied her carefully. “No, I don’t think it is. But listen, we are leaving here. I love you, and I know you, so I’m saying to you now that you have a tendency to get your feelings all caught up when it comes to men you are sleeping with. He’s a dragon, Heather. He lives here. You’re a human and you live in the other world, our world. Just please don’t forget that.”
Heather looked down at her hands. “How could I forget that?”
How could she have forgotten that? She had though. Max was so easy to be with, so exciting and so different, that she had somehow forgotten that they were nothing alike. What’s more, Christy was right. She did have a tendency to get her emotions tangled up in the men that she slept with. She always had. It wasn’t wise, especially when the man she had just slept with the night before wasn’t really a man, but a dragon.
A beautiful, fire-breathing and magical dragon. Oh no. Her heart sank as those thoughts kicked through her brain and she realized that she was thinking of him in a way that guaranteed that she wasn’t thinking clearly at all.
She was going to have to be very careful not to repeat last night. She was going to have to be very careful indeed. Because the last thing she needed to do at that particular juncture in her life was to start thinking that there might be a reason to stay in the land of the dragons.
Chapter Fourteen
Max looked up as Blake came strolling into the room and then paused to sniff the air. He said, in a slightly accusing tone, “You slept with the human.”
There was no way to deny it, and really, he didn’t want to anyway. “Yes. I know you’re probably mad at me. Given that you wanted her for yourself.”
Blake shrugged, “It’s fine. She’s made it pretty clear she wants nothing to do with me.”
Blake gave him a wary look. “I know you well enough to know that doesn’t mean you intend to stop pursuing her.”
Blake drew closer to the sofa that Max sat upon. “It’s not like there’s not another one of them. I’m just interested in knowing how you got her to agree. I tried everything with Christy, and she threatened to cut my balls off if I spoke to her again yesterday. I really don’t know what I’m doing wrong, Max.”
Max could hazard a few guesses, but he decided to start with the obvious. “What did you say to her?”
Blake slapped a hand down on his neck. “Well, I offered to give her weight in gold if she’d have my baby.”
Max stared at him. He asked, cautiously, “How did that work out?”
Blake’s shoulders slumped. “Not so hot. I told you she threatened to cut my balls off. Weren’t you listening to me at all?”
Max said, “I can see how that would not be the ideal way for it to work out.”
Blake said, “How did you do it?”
Max said, “Do what?”
Blake said, “Convince the human to sleep with you.”
Max said, “The same way I convinced any female to sleep with me. By not acting like a raging sex organ.”
Blake said, “No offense, but I am a raging sex organ right now. I’m in my prime, which means that I’m guaranteed to impregnate anyone I sleep with. That means nobody on this world will sleep with me.”
Max’s lips twitched upward. “I can see how that could be uncomfortable.”
Blake rolled his eyes, “You have no idea.”
Max muttered, “I don’t really want to either, thanks.”
Blake said, “Well, I have some news that will probably take my mind off my plight. I’m not sure how you’re going to take it though.”
Max’s eyebr
ows rose. “What is it?”
Blake said, “I got so tired of arguing with her this morning over breakfast that I took off for a long flight. I had to work off some steam, if you understand what I’m saying. I went a little further than usual, all the way toward the west lands.”
Max’s shoulders went rigid with tension. “You know that’s Orc territory, and that’s a really stupid thing to do. We’ve managed to keep them past our borders for a very long time, but if they see you flying over there, they may just decide that we declared war on them.”
Blake’s next words were a bombshell. “It seems that they are about to declare open war on us, cousin.”
Acid rolled up into Max’s stomach. “What do you mean?”
“They are gathering war machines. I saw catapults, fire throwers, and a few other things. Not only that: all the Orcs from that side of the known lands have gathered with the ones that reside there and are closer to us. Not only that, but yesterday, after you left us, I saw a small band of them. They were at the base of the mountain on the other side from our lands, but they were there.”
Max shot to his feet. Anger boiled through his system. “And you didn’t think to tell me this?”
Blake said, “I know I’m wrong for that. I got so distracted by everything that happened that I just set it aside, meaning to tell you in private. I never got a chance to speak with you last night. I came looking for you to talk to you but you were gone. I didn’t want to mention it in the council room, not when we had two humans in there. Two humans who saw the Orcs, by the way.”
Dammit! Heather had asked him about Orcs, and he had not even wondered how she had known of them., and had also not thought to ask her that question either.
It just figured. He had taken off with Heather and the results of that had been that he had missed hearing something as serious as Orcs gathering weapons and themselves together, and very near the dragon lands. “I was just in the village last evening. Nobody there mentioned it. So, if the Orcs are scouting out our people, they are doing it cautiously and quietly. We must move at once to ensure their safety.”
Blake stood, “That’s what I was thinking too. They have to be kept safe. I think we should bring them all here, to the castle. There’s enough in the way of outbuildings and the like to house and shelter them. The walls are high. They would be safer here. We can gather all of our weapons here, and many of the humans would be willing to help us fight as well.”
There it was. Blake, for all his faults, was a good leader. A better leader than even Max was, and Max was not so egotistical that he could not see that. His head nodded up and down. “You are quite correct. But we need to do it quietly. We don’t want to alert any Orcs that may be watching the village. If we do alert them, they may set their plans into motion sooner, and before we have a chance to actually arm ourselves and to learn what their plans might be.”
Blake said, “I will call the Council together. I will meet you in the chamber.”
Max watched his cousin walk away. His hands balled into fists, and a small little burst of steam came from his nostrils. Christy and Heather had distracted Blake so badly that he had ignored something as dangerous as Orcs. He was not the only one. How had he not seen them? If they had been there, right where he had dropped Blake and the two women, why had he not seen them?
The short answer to that, of course, was that he too had been distracted. His anger at Blake for going through the portal and his irritation at having to track Blake back through the portal along with the two human women had up-ended his ability to concentrate.
Heather also distracted him. From the moment he had seen her in that alley, staggering around with a broken heel on her boot and a wooden weapon in her hand, she had been a distraction. She was a distraction he simply could not afford. She was a human, and the portal would open soon, and she would go through it, back to the world that she belonged to.
In the meantime, his duty was to make sure that his world and the humans and dragons who dwelt within it were safe from their violent enemy, the Orcs. If that meant he had to stay completely away from Heather, then he would.
Max found his resolve sorely tested later that day. His frustration with the Council had mounted throughout the long, intense meeting that saw them arguing amongst themselves as to what to do next. Aura was, of course, in favor of immediate action, but many of the others were not. They had argued on the side of caution, to simply wait and see while Blake, Max, and Aura had argued on the side of acting at that moment in preparing for the worst while hoping for the best. In the end, it came down to a vote, and because there had been more dragons on Max and Blake’s side, they had decided to start hammering out a plan that would unfold over the next few days.
It would be a long few days for him, and when he sat down in his place at the communal dinner table that evening, he was out of sorts and determined not to let Heather distract him. Unfortunately, she decided to show up in another one of those gowns that made his fingers itch to take it off and with her hair pinned up in some arrangement of combs and pens that left her long and creamy neck exposed and revealed every contour of her heart-shaped face.
His organ, clearly not having gotten the memo that Heather was a distraction that Max could not afford, gave a heavy twitch and then stiffened immediately as she sat beside him and her legs brushed against his in a fairly innocent yet intimate way.
He immediately turned his face toward Aura, who sat to the other side of him. He charged into a conversation, low and quiet, refusing to even look at Heather. The meal came, and he picked at it, his appetite for food completely gone but his appetite for Heather increasing with every moment that went by. Even though he wasn’t looking directly at her, he could sense her presence, feel the heat of her skin and smell the combination of soap and that unique fragrance that was solely hers coming up off her skin.
That warm and satiny skin that had responded so willingly to his touch. That skin that had offered him so many delights earlier that day and the night before. That skin that he wanted so desperately to touch again, to explore with long leisurely strokes of his hands as well as the rest of his body.
His teeth gritted together as he realized that he was letting his mind wander and that he could barely keep up with the conversation that he had been so intent on having in order to ignore Heather.
Heather’s fingers grazed the skin right above his elbow, right where his shirtsleeve ended. That touch inflamed him and his head whipped toward her, his breath coming up fast and short. “Yes?”
The word was brisk, and his tone even more so. He saw her eyes widened a bit and she snatched her hand back as though he had lit it on fire. Immediate regret hit. He did not want to be unkind to her. He just simply could not afford her at the moment.
She said, very softly, “I just wanted to ask how your day had been.”
Her eyes went downward, and her head quickly averted. She stared at her plate, and he stared at her profile. Her eyelashes lay on her pale cheeks and her mouth, that lush and right curve, drew his attention. His heart softened. “It was trying and difficult. I’m sorry if I seem so distant. Things that need my immediate attention are pressing forward, and I’m afraid I do not have much to spare at this moment.”
She nodded but didn’t speak. His heart went heavy and still. That he had hurt her feelings was obvious. He had no idea how to fix that though. He wanted her, yes, but he wanted the safety of his people and his lands more than he wanted her. He had to want that more. He was a king in this world, and kings shouldered a heavy burden.
Nobody ever said being king was easy or fair.
Chapter Fifteen
Heather was miserable all throughout the meal. She didn’t know what happened to make Max behave in a way that was so rude and arrogant but it was clear that something had. It came to her that maybe he regretted what had happened between them and she found herself cursing herself for the impulse that had led her to first kiss him and then sleep with him.
When the meal was over, Max rapidly vanished, leaving her sitting there in a small bubble of silence. Christy had vanished earlier that day, off to the picnic with Blake probably. She had not returned before dinner, and it did not seem that she was back yet. Blake was not there either, so they must be together. Loneliness hit, squashing Heather’s spirits flat.
She made her way back to the room and slumped on the sofa; she felt confused and more than just a little bit afraid. Time was very strange there, and it seemed like the day had lasted forever. She wasn’t the least bit tired and yet she was exhausted. Outside the window, though, it was still daylight. The sun still sat high in the sky, and she had no idea what time it was back in her world, but her body seemed to think it was time to lay down.
Her sigh was heavy and heartfelt as she forced herself to her feet and walked to the broad windows that sat on one wall of the room. She opened the window gently and then stuck her head out, letting the wind ruffle her hair and stroke along her face.
Below her, several stories down, was a courtyard of sorts. She watched, fascinated, as several men marched toward each other and drew swords. Her brow crinkled. What was happening? She leaned further out the window, completely caught up in what she was seeing as she realized that one of the men was Max!
The men danced forward, and the swords flashed in the sun. Her breath caught as she realized that they were training, preparing themselves for some kind of battle. Max stopped where he was and lifted a hand, said something, and they reformed the lines that they were in.
A few of the others began to battle as Max called out words she could not make out. The wind tore at her again as she leaned out a little further, the sill digging into her abdomen as she watched the mock battle.
Max raised a hand in the air, and the ones fencing stopped. Max took his shirt off, and the sun rode across his rippling muscles and dark hair. Her heart fluttered, and her inner temperature spiked upward, causing a flash of heat to rise up and flush along her upper thighs.