Home > What a Dragon Should Know (Dragon Kin #3)(26)

What a Dragon Should Know (Dragon Kin #3)(26)
Author: G.A. Aiken

“You need to set us down,” she yelled over the roaring wind.

“When I get you home,” he promised. “Any idea where that is?”

“How the hell would I know?”

“That’s a bit of a problem. ’Cause right now I can’t see too well. Maybe I can borrow those spectacles of yours.”

“Blasted reason! Set us down then!”

“That would be a good idea, but …”

“But? But what?”

He didn’t answer her, simply dodged to the left, lightning strikes grazing his wing.

“Someone’s behind us!”

“I sensed that,” he said. More Lightnings, but not the ones who’d helped him from the tunnels. Who were those Lightnings anyway? And why had they helped him?

And maybe he should worry about that later when he wasn’t in the middle of a fight with a different set of Lightnings bent on killing him.

“I need you to hold on,” he told Dagmar. “Don’t let go.”

“What do you mean ‘don’t let go’?”

Again, he didn’t answer her, simply jerked around and raised himself up. Dagmar screamed in panic, and he unleashed his flame on those behind him. The Lightnings scrambled out of the way and Gwenvael moved forward, slamming himself into the closest one. Once he made contact, Gwenvael rolled against the other’s body until he felt the sheath against his arm. He reached out and grasped the blade attached to the dragon’s back. Yanking it free, he swung forward and then back. The blade, perfectly maintained and delightfully sharp, cut through the owner’s neck.

Lightning was released from another, and Gwenvael tucked his wings in. His body dropped and he was glad to hear Dagmar’s healthy scream again. That meant she hadn’t fallen to her death yet. He was quite relieved.

The Lightnings moved in closer and Gwenvael’s wings snapped out from his body, quickly lifting him. He let loose another round of flame and dove through it—fast enough, he hoped, to keep Dagmar unharmed—while arcing the sword up and across. The blade lodged into a Lightning’s body and stayed there, but at least the damage had been done. He let go, and the sword and body fell to the ground below.

“Gwenvael!”

He moved based merely on the way her voice sounded, twisting to his side and reaching out. His claws wrapped around the shaft of a spear but not before it tore into his chest, just below his collarbone.

Gwenvael roared in pain and fury, the spear twisting in deeper. Keeping one claw gripped onto the spear, he used his other arm and snapped the shaft in the middle. The Lightning tried to drag the broken shaft from him; Gwenvael knew well enough that would be the end of him and Dagmar. So he used what strength he still possessed and yanked the shaft from the purple claws desperately clinging to it. Once he had it in his grasp, he turned the broken end out, lowered it, and brought it up again in one swift jab.

The shaft pierced the Lightning’s soft underbelly, Gwenvael silently thanking the gods his challengers didn’t have their battle armor on.

The Lightning bellowed in pain and grabbed hold of Gwenvael’s shoulders. Desperate, Gwenvael twisted the broken shaft again and again, digging it in deeper until the Lightning dropped against him.

His strength gone, Gwenvael couldn’t even push the big oaf away from him and together they plummeted to the ground. The Lightning on top, Gwenvael underneath him.

But he somehow heard it. As his eyesight went dark and his brain struggled to think, he heard it. Screaming. A woman screaming.

Dagmar.

He was mere feet from the ground when he rolled over, the Lightning now beneath him. His tail lashed out, winding around her waist and lifting her seconds before they all crashed into the hard, unforgiving earth.

Brastias woke the second Morfyd’s body jolted beside his. He reached for her but she was already scrambling across the bed.

“No, no, no, no,” she kept chanting over and over.

“Morfyd?”

She stumbled nak*d to the door and pulled it open, standing there as if waiting for something. Knowing she must be freezing since she was often chilled in her human form, he grabbed a fur from the bed and moved in behind her, wrapping it around her.

“What is it, love? What’s wrong?”

The door to Annwyl’s room opened and Fearghus stalked into the hallway. For Morfyd’s sake, Brastias would normally move out of sight, but the look on the dragon’s face pinned him to the spot. The siblings stared at each other until Briec jogged up the stairs, stopping on the landing and gazing at his kin.

“Well?” Briec demanded.

Morfyd pulled away from Brastias, tugging the fur tight around her. “I don’t know.”

“How could you not know?”

“Don’t bark at her.” Fearghus went to his sister, pulled her into his arms. “I’m sure we’d all know if Gwenvael was …” He closed his eyes, kissed the top of his sister’s head. “I’m sure he’ll be fine.”

“The pain, Fearghus. He was in so much pain.”

“I know. I felt it too.” He scowled at Briec in warning, and his younger brother walked over and patted his sister’s shoulder.

“Don’t worry. He’s Gwenvael. He gets into trouble, he gets out of it.”

“All right?” Fearghus asked softly.

“Aye.” She stepped back, rubbed her forehead. “And now I’ve got Mother screeching in my head. I need some wine.” She walked past her brothers and down the stairs.

Leaving Brastias there alone, forgotten … and nak*d.

Fearghus noticed him first. Brastias had only seen that glower on the dragon’s face once before. When Annwyl had gone off to Devenallt Mountain for the first time and had told the dragon nothing. Brastias didn’t like the glower then, and he hated it more now.

Briec’s frown was much more threatening, somehow. Maybe because he looked so astounded as well as angry. Not a good combination. Startling anything that breathes fire was always a bad idea in Brastias’s estimation.

“Our … sister?” Fearghus growled.

“Our baby sister?” Briec snarled.

“She’s two-hundred-and-fifty-two-years old.”

“Our innocent baby sister?” Briec went on, ignoring him.

Innocent? No. Probably best not to dispute them on that point.

Brastias shrugged. “I love her.”

Briec shrugged back. “Then we’re just going to have to kill you.”

Talaith walked up the stairs, stopping in the same place Briec had. She studied the three of them before asking, “What’s going on?”

“He’s defiling our sister,” both brothers said.

“Of course he is. And from what I understand, she’s enjoying every second of it, so leave him be.”

Briec glared at his mate. “You knew?”

Understanding he only had one chance, Brastias quickly cut in, “Did Briec mention he’s ready to release Izzy for combat duty?”

The brothers went rigid. Fearghus’s eyes wide, while Briec closed his own and cringed.

Talaith gaped at the three of them as her mind tried to understand his words. “They … you … uh …” She shook her head. “I’ m sorry. What did you say?”

“You bastard,” Briec whispered.

“You drove me to it.”

“Briec?”

He let out a breath and faced Talaith. “I know you’re not ready to hear this, Talaith, but—well, don’t walk away!”

After Briec disappeared in pursuit of Talaith, Fearghus said, “Nicely played, human.” He headed back to the rooms he shared with Annwyl. “But once Talaith is done giving Briec a brand new anus with her fist and we know whether Gwenvael is dead or not … we’ll be back.”

Brastias didn’t doubt that for a moment.

It was his strange and invasive tail that had saved her life, holding Dagmar up and away as they crashed into the ground.

Even now with the two dragons nothing more than a big ball of bright purple and gold scales, Gwenvael’s tail still held her tightly around the waist and she struggled to get it off. When she finally did, she fell a few inches, her rear slamming hard into the thick root of a tree.

She winced in pain but still managed to crawl over to Gwenvael. Up close, she could see his face and brushed the hair from his eyes. “Gwenvael?”

He didn’t move and she wasn’t even sure he was breathing. She gripped his claw with both hands, careful of his razor-sharp talons. “Gwenvael, please answer me.”

Dagmar had no idea how long she stood there, holding on to Gwenvael. She knew she needed to do something, but for once she was at a loss. She couldn’t move him, afraid to leave him alone for even a moment. She had no idea where they were and knew more dragons could be lying in wait anywhere.

There was a part of Dagmar that wished she hadn’t left her home, still living safely under her father’s protection, blissfully ignorant of the truth around her.

“There you are.”

Startled, Dagmar dropped Gwenvael’s claw and reached for her eating dagger. She whirled around to face the threat, prepared to protect Gwenvael with her life, when the dagger slipped from her hand and skipped depressingly along the ground, landing at the intruder’s feet.

“Hhhm. Not much of a fighter then?” The woman in witches’ robes picked the blade up and trudged over to Dagmar. “Shouldn’t bring this out unless you really know what you’re doing.” She handed Dagmar the blade. “Because nothing could be worse than getting killed with your own weapon.”

Dagmar gawked at the woman. “Who are you?”

“Esyld.”

“Esyld who?”

She didn’t answer Dagmar’s question, but leaned over Gwenvael. “Poor thing. I was afraid he wouldn’t make it this far, but he has much strength in him.” She glanced at Dagmar. “And much passion to protect you.”

“I’ll ask you again. Who are you?”

“A friend. I’m only here to help. But we need to get both of you inside where it’s safe.”

She motioned Dagmar back, and raised her hands over Gwenvael.

“What are you doing?”

Again there was no answer, but the woman began to chant.

Flames rose over Gwenvael’s body and then receded, leaving him human.

“Much easier to handle this way for me.”

“How did you … ?”

The witch grabbed hold of Gwenvael’s arm and leg and lifted his body onto her shoulder. “Come on then.”

Even in his human form, Gwenvael was a mighty weight. No human witch her size could pick him up.

“You’re a dragon.”

“That I am.”

“Your kind is everywhere,” Dagmar couldn’t help but sneer. “I never seem to know when I’m dealing with one.”

“But you’re learning,” the female said with a laugh. “I can tell.”

Chapter 15

Dagmar followed Esyld to a small house deep in a copse of trees. To be honest, it was a charming little place. Smoke puffed from a chimney, with an herb garden right out front and a stone walkway that led to the door. Large trees surrounded the house, the branches and leaves providing cover.

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