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When Two Souls Meet (Dragons of Paragon Book 2)

Page 14

by Jan Dockter


  You released my shackles.

  Only your hands. You needed them.

  Yes. I did.

  Astrid raised her head and pressed her lips to his, enjoying the feeling of his body against hers. But his muscles grew hard and bunched as if he was trying to defend himself.

  Tem?

  I shouldn’t have done this. Lord, what have I done?

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  Tem

  The shock of what Tem had allowed jettisoned him from the sexual haze that had snared the dragon when Astrid walked into his cell. Astrid gazed at him with hurt and trepidation and he hated it. He was old enough, damn it, not to be drawn into mating on instinct alone.

  Tem?

  He couldn’t bear the look in her eyes. Every piercing shard of doubt and fear revealed in those beautiful green globes shredded his heart like little knives.

  What did you do, old man? What possessed you to let her touch you like that?

  Ah, what didn’t possess him. Common sense. Decency.

  There were other dragons that had no compunction about using their wiles on human women. Dragons, at any time, were a powerful draw to a human woman.

  He wanted to reassure her, but he had no good words. Confusion washed over her face and he sensed her rising panic that she had done something to displease him.

  It’s not your fault.

  Four little words. They were so useless, so inadequate. She blinked and he felt her disbelief.

  I- she started.

  I— broke in Tem— knew. I knew as soon as you walked into my cell that you should turn around and leave and never come back.

  She shook her head stubbornly.

  We don’t have time for this.

  She bent and released the shackles on his ankles and finally the collar on his neck.

  What are you doing, human?

  Getting you out of here.

  You can’t do this. Danger. Danger to you!

  You can argue or you can help me get Calvin. I’ll release Evan.

  And then what are we supposed to do?

  “You’re the dragon,” she said aloud. “I’m sure you have dragon tricks up your sleeve. But we don’t have much time. The technician will return to his station eventually.” She smirked at that and rude images of what the technician was probably doing in the bathroom filled his head.

  Please. No visuals.

  Sorry.

  Astrid tossed his shirt at him and he pulled it on while she went to Evan’s cell. Evan gave a whoop and ran out of his cell, looking extremely pleased.

  “How about my girl?” he said.

  Tem pursed his lips. This was not the time to explain what had happened between him and Astrid.

  “No time for chit chat,” said Astrid. She entered Calvin’s cell and released his shackles. His limp body fell into Tem’s arms.

  Harsh klaxons rang and Astrid sprinted to the outer door. She swiped her key card but the door refused to budge.

  “Oh, hell!”

  Astrid’s alarm sent shock waves through Tem and the urge to shift gripped him. He needed his dragon form and strength, but not here in this tight place. Tem handed off the unconscious Calvin to Evan and rushed to Astrid.

  “What are we going to do?”

  “Stand back.”

  It was a matter of whether his human form was strong enough to do what he planned. He couldn’t fully shift here, but he could pull what strength he needed from his dragon form, or at least try.

  Otherwise, not just him, but Astrid, Calvin and Evan would be dead meat.

  The klaxon continued its raucous noise as he raised his leg and kicked.

  Astrid’s eyes grew very wide and she gasped as he flung his foot into the metal door. If he were a mere man he would have shattered his foot or ankle, possibly both. Drawing from his dragon form, the strength of dragon sinew and bone wrapped around his human form and flung a massive force into the steel. It shrieked and crumbled, until the metal hung at on odd angle from the frame.

  “Go!” he yelled as he took Calvin from Evan. “Run.”

  At once the lights in the hallway shut down, leaving them in darkness.

  “I can’t see,” said Astrid.

  “I can,” said Evan. “Take my hand.”

  Tem’s dragon eyes allowed him to watch Astrid and Evan flee down the hallway, but his dragon sense of smell told him that there were humans standing at the end. The acrid odor of gun oil told him they held rifles.

  “Stop!” yelled Tem.

  Their footfalls faltered in the dark and then were silent.

  “I need,” said Tem, “to know where this hallway is positioned in relation to the outside. Where is the closest outside wall?”

  “This is the basement,” said Astrid. “The outside walls are up.”

  “Then the hard way. Evan, take Calvin, Astrid stay behind them.”

  Evan took Calvin and hefted him over his shoulder.

  “Who’d have thought he’d be heavy,” the younger man groused.

  But Tem didn’t have time for conversation. Humans were stunningly good at gathering forces and he could imagine a good size one was forming up now. Calling on his dragon body for strength, he also formed an energetic shield that he hoped would protect all of them from flying bullets.

  It had been a long time since he had summoned what humans called magic. The electric force of the shield danced around his body, making his skin itch and crawl.

  He flung his body down the hall to face the human soldiers that jammed the doorway with their bodies. It was a choke point, meant to head off the dragon’s escape. But it was the point of their defeat as well.

  Tem did not have time to be subtle or gentle. He flung the force field at the armed guards and they fell backward into each other and to the floor.

  “Come,” he said urgently. This was surely just the first wave of defenses; there would be others.

  “Wow,” said Astrid, as he helped her over the pile of humans. He lifted her with one hand and easily swung her over. “Are they—?”

  “Unconscious. Where to?”

  “The lift?”

  “Lead on.”

  Their feet slapped against the cement floors of the basement hallways as they twisted and turned through different corridors. They made the entrance of the lift but found the doors were shut. Again, the humans must have thought this would be a barrier.

  “It won’t open,” said Astrid in distress when her key card failed.

  “No worries, sweetheart,” said Tem. “Back away”

  Tem rammed his foot into the door of the elevator several times and at the last good shove of his foot it crumbled under the force of the blow.

  “You’re terribly good at that,” Astrid said. She peered inside. “But what now?”

  Tem looked over her shoulder and noted that the elevator car had settled at the sub-floor below. He cast his glance skyward and followed the cable. It would have to do.

  “As you said, I’m the dragon.”

  Tem put his hands-on Astrid’s arms, pushed her gently aside and kicked off his slippers.

  “What are you going to do?” said Evan. “And are you doing it soon? No disrespect, but Calvin here—” He shifted the man on his shoulder and huffed for emphasis.

  Tem checked the elevator shaft one more time, and then pushed off, launching his body at the thick cables. And as he did so he shifted.

  Behind him Astrid gasped as his human body stretched then twisted into wings, tail and claws. It was a fearsome sight at any time and he worried what Astrid would think.

  It was one thing to be attracted to a dragon and another to face the reality of his form.

  With a metallic ring Tem’s claws clutched the cable. He glanced over his shoulder. Both Astrid’s and Evan’s eyes were wide at the sight of him.

  He extended a forepaw to Astrid.

  Come.

  And all hell broke loose.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Astrid

  Astrid stared at
Tem in his true form and gasped. He wasn’t just beautiful; he was gorgeous. Usually dragons came in different colors, from a dusty gold to rusty brown or occasionally green, but the coloring of Tem’s scales sparkled in an iridescent deep amethyst.

  His wings and forepaws deepened to ebony at their tips, while his claws glittered in the emergency lighting like onyx knifes. His gold eyes blinked at her, reptilian in shape but sparkling with intelligence.

  It was the first time she had seen a dragon up close and she was awed.

  The dragon extended his forepaw.

  Come.

  It was Tem’s voice in her head and this comforted her, but still the sight of Tem as a dragon froze her feet in place. It wasn’t that she didn’t understand what he wanted. She got that she was supposed to climb on his back and help the others there too. He meant to break jail by hauling all of them onto his form and she couldn’t for the life of her see how it could be done any other way.

  But when she reached for him, a gunshot whizzed past her hand, and then another. She jerked her hand back.

  Ping. Ping. Ping.

  The shots grew more frequent, peppering the air with whizzing hot pieces of metal meant to harm.

  Tem raised his beautiful triangular head and roared. It was a sound so loud and deep that the walls shook around them. The shots stopped briefly, but when Tem began the climb on the lift cable, they started again. But then whatever he had used to stop the bullets at the first rally point of the guards, he started using again. The shots glanced off him and clinked against the walls of the lift.

  Evan pulled Astrid’s arm and jerked her away from the opening, which was entirely sensible even if she wanted to watch Tem. It was an unreasonable desire to keep an eye on the dragon, because logically Tem was far better equipped to deal with the threat to their lives than she was.

  But she was finding that when it came to Tem, unreasonable desire was the order of the realm.

  Human screams rent the air and bodies fell to the roof of the car below with a horrible thud. Tem roared again, a challenge and warning to whoever would stop them, and the walls shook with the force of thunder.

  Beside her, Calvin twitched and he groaned. Astrid didn’t know what to make of this, but it seemed that each time Tem roared it drew a response from the unconscious man.

  Evan slung the man off his shoulder and held him against the wall.

  “Calvin!” he called. “Calvin! Wake-up!”

  The older dragon opened his eyes slowly and blinked.

  “Tem?” he rasped.

  “I’m Evan. Evan Waters. Tem is trying to get us out.”

  “Tem,” the man said as a heavy sigh. He closed his eyes again as if utterly exhausted and Astrid gripped his hands.

  “Please,” she said. “Stay with us.”

  Tem boomed again and rattled the cable, daring the humans to come after him.

  Calvin’s eyes flew open again. “It’s not a dream?”

  “No. Tem is fighting for us,” said Astrid.

  “Good. At least I won’t die here.”

  You aren’t dying anywhere, old man.

  In a day of surprises, Astrid was shocked again. Tem spoke not just to her, but through her to Calvin.

  “What?” he said, just as surprised as Astrid.

  Can you shift? asked Tem.

  Calvin groaned and even Astrid could see the dragon was too weak to be helpful.

  That’s okay, old man. Save your strength. Get ready. I’m coming.

  Tem’s claws clinked on the cable and soon his dragon head poked through the lift opening. He shook his head, like a puppy shaking off water from its fur and gave a throaty purr. Astrid could almost swear that he was grinning.

  Now.

  He pushed through his forepaw and shoulder, extending them into a bridge to his broad shoulders. Astrid navigated Tem’s limb first, and was astonished to find his skin, though it looked like hard scales, was smooth, silky and elastic.

  Of course, darling. Hard scales would provide too much wind resistance.

  After scrambling up his leg, Astrid settled on his neck where she could sit astride, and helped pull Calvin up while Evan pushed. With Calvin seated, Evan followed.

  Hang on, declared Tem. Clutch my hide.

  Astrid dug her hands into Tem’s skin.

  I’m not hurting you?

  Sweetie, you’d have to do a lot more than that to hurt me.

  “He said to grab his skin,” she called over her shoulder.

  “He’s talking to you?” asked a stunned Evan. “How? I don’t hear him.”

  But Astrid shook her head as Tem began his climb. His powerful shoulders moved between her legs, causing her to remember their brief time in his cell.

  “Steady, sweetheart. We’ve a ways to go before we can get distracted again.”

  She heard Calvin curse and Tem rumbled with displeasure behind her.

  Later, later, old man. Job one is getting clear of here.

  Pull by pull, moving with unholy speed, Tem took them up the length of the cable. They passed several floors where Astrid spotted men laying on the floor beyond half opened lift doors, but she couldn’t tell if they were injured or dead.

  But at the topmost floor the door was flung wide open and a defiant Mrs. Parks stood there, rifle in hand. She wore protective goggles but Astrid did not see the ear plugs. Behind Mrs. Parks stood the commandant, unarmed, but he had an expression on his face that declared he should be feared. Astrid had seen his picture hanging in the hall, but this man’s face was far thinner and weaselly than his official photo indicated.

  Parks pointed the rifle at Tem. It wasn’t a normal rifle but was fitted with tranquilizer darts.

  “Halt, you abomination!”

  Tem howled, but it wasn’t in fear. It was amusement.

  “You should move away, Mrs. Parks,” called Astrid. “He’s not in a mood to be generous.”

  Mrs. Parks turned a contemptuous glance to Astrid.

  “I knew it. Dragon lover. We’ll hunt you down, and prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law.”

  “There’s a problem with that,” called Astrid. “You’ll have to catch us first.”

  Tem rumbled and it sounded like agreement with her words. Then, in one fluid move, he launched from the cable and straight into Parks and the commandant. They landed with a hard oomph on the floor and Tem scrambled over the keepers. Astrid could have sworn that he was chuckling.

  The dragon prowled the hallway, swiveling his head, and looking for an opening to escape the building. Astrid had not been to this part of the castle yet, but it looked like the administration wing of the building. She caught glimpses of people peeking over the tops of their desks, looking fearful and awed as they moved down the hall.

  They should, she thought. Tem is awesome.

  Thank you, sweetheart.

  Clattering on the floors alerted them to another imminent danger. Astrid gripped Tem’s skin harder when she saw the beefy men in military uniforms stretch across the corridor. One held a grenade launcher pointed at them.

  “You can’t be serious,” groaned Evan.

  To their left was a set of closed double doors.

  Tem. To the left.

  Yes!

  Tem burst through the doors as a grenade shot over his tail. The incendiary hit a wall and exploded, blasting shock waves that rattled the walls and furniture in the offices to the side. But Tem kept steady on his feet as they surveyed their situation. They had entered a conference room with a table that stretched its length. The far-left wall held a wide window that overlooked the peaceful valley beyond the Hawthorne Facility. The sound of the soldiers’ boots stomping on the floor told Astrid it was a matter of seconds before they had to face this new threat.

  Tem studied the window and pressed a paw against the glass. He shook his head.

  I need heat, he mused.

  In a swift motion, he turned to face the door, just as the soldiers appeared.

  “Surrender!�
��

  Tem snarled and slashed the air with his claws. He took one threatening step toward them.

  The soldier with the grenade launcher leveled it at Tem. He fired and Astrid shrieked.

  But Tem moved his head and opened his jaw wide, swallowing the grenade whole.

  “Oh God, no!” cried Astrid

  She felt the explosion within him, and she feared the worst, that he would be harmed or killed by the explosive. But he belched like a man who had one too many pints on a Saturday afternoon and chuckled. Then he opened his mouth and spewed a scorching line of actual fire before their attackers. Absolute fright possessed their faces as these soldiers found, to their horror, that they faced a threat for which they were not prepared.

  “Retreat!”

  Astrid had never seen men move so fast as they poured out the door back into the hallway.

  CHAPTER TEN

  Tem

  “Retreat!”

  Tem had never seen men move so fast as they poured out the door back into the hallway, almost falling over each other to gain their escape from the fire breathing dragon.

  Any other time he’d be laughing, but the after effects of the grenade rumbled in his gut. He wasn’t supposed to eat incendiaries and because the explosives in them weren’t sulphur, he was sure he’d suffer some heartburn for this. But it was a small price to pay if they could escape.

  Cover your faces!

  Tem not only shared this thought with Astrid but he thrummed it to Evan and Calvin as well.

  Flame spewed from his mouth, pouring on and stressing the glass. It cracked, then shattered, shards flying in all directions. Glass struck his hide, but he couldn’t worry about that now. His sharp ears had caught the sounds of additional boots filling the hallways. They didn’t have long.

  Hang on! Keep your faces covered.

  He fervently hoped his passengers could keep their seats. He found to his relief that Astrid was burying her face into his neck. The last thing he wanted was for her to get hurt.

  Tem hopped to the ledge of the ruined window and looked out onto the land and airscape. It didn’t look good. Troops massed on the ground, a helicopter spilled a searchlight on the ground. But they had few options and just this one chance. They were doomed men anyway, and it was better to die in flight, than at the end of an executioner’s blow.

 

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