book title Page 3
A stable hand came running up to them and darted off again
almost immediately to fetch Tevra's horse as requested. Several
minutes later they were off, with Tevra on his horse, Barkus in his
wolf form, and Najlah taking the lead, alert for even the slightest hint
of suspicious scent or sound or movement.
They made it into the city without issue, but really, getting
there was the easy part. As they had no idea what they were facing,
they had no idea what to be braced for. An attack could come from
any direction and take any form. Their unknown assailants had
already used weapons and magic to achieve their ends, so they had
an impressive skillset.
Not impressive enough, but not to be dismissed either.
Najlah growled as they made their way through the streets,
falling back to let Barkus, who had shifted back to human, take the
lead. All around them people stared and pointed and whispered.
He'd come into town before, in dragon and human-like form, but
there was always the gawking. Whispers of demon in that tone he
hated, like they really did believe he was some stupid myth and not
just a being from a drastically different environment.
He ignored them, as nothing he said or did would change their
minds, and he was working anyway. A distracted hunter was a dead
hunter.
We say it, 'the rabbit that stops paying attention becomes
dinner.'
"Stop here," Tevra said abruptly, as they came up to a building
that had one of those signs indicating it was a sleep-over. No, that
wasn't the word they used here. What was it?
"Inn," Barkus said.
Najlah rumbled in thanks and entered the inn first. There were
the usual startled noises at his appearance, but he ignored them,
focused entirely on smelling.
There. That stardust smell again. Faint, very faint, not coming
from the dining room or someone currently smoking.
Growling, barely noticing the way people nearby scattered, he
prowled up the stairs, following the weak scent. He could hear Tevra
and Barkus behind him. From his thoughts, Barkus was expecting
trouble. Najlah hadn't smelled or heard anything out of the ordinary,
but he trusted Barkus's instincts.
As they drew closer to the source, which seemed to be the
last door on the right at the end of the hall, Najlah could smell magic
as well. Faint, but sharp and acrid, not magic he'd ever smelled
before. He growled, and Barkus said, "Najlah says he can smell
magic, and something about it is strange."
"I can feel it," Tevra said. "Only barely. It's masked, so we
don't know it's there. I think someone has set a trap, but I've no idea
if it was laid by Verin, the dead agent who was staying here, or by
someone who came after they killed her. Allow me."
Najlah growled and blocked the door.
"Lord Najlah, I can disarm the spell. My tattoos are not for
show, I promise. Your job is to protect me, I respect that, but I know
magic like you know fire. It's literally been carved into my flesh."
That, Najlah couldn't really argue with, especially with the way
some of the tattoos had started to glow, as though they were backed
by lamplight, save that he'd never seen lamplight come in so many
colors. He wanted to taste them.
Barkus laughed, and Najlah shot him a glare before putting
his attention fully back on the matter at hand.
Tevra's right arm shimmered and glowed with a rainbow of
colors as various marks across it lit up, sometimes just one,
sometimes in pairs or threes, then several of them all at once as he
rested his hand on the door. "Nothing on the door," he said as the
glowing faded away. "Whatever it is, it's elsewhere in the room."
Najlah growled and shoved him out of the way, then swung
and slammed his tail into the door, shattering it. Knocking away
some of the pieces, he stepped over the rest as he prowled into the
room, spikes coming out, the tips gleaming with venom.
The room was empty but smelled of recent occupation—and
stardust.
"High— Tevra, did the woman who resided here smoke
stardust?"
"No," Tevra said. "Stardust can warp the senses. It's not
something Verin would use, even in her off hours. Too risky, given all
the secrets she knows, all the deadly skills she's mastered."
"Then someone else was here before us, and they do smoke
stardust. We found a used cigarette in the field behind the palace."
"It's a common practice in Gormestia, though the wealthier
use pipes more often than cigarettes." Tevra ventured further into the
room, more of his marks glowing softly. Najlah wanted to know how
they worked but refrained for the moment. Curiosity could be sated
when the hunt was finished.
Tevra walked the perimeter of the room slowly, fingers of his
right hand following the wall but not quite touching it, his left at his
side as though poised to attack. There was a look of concentration
on his face that said he would be oblivious to anything else that
happened, at least until too late.
Well, good thing he had a dragon and a wolf with him.
Barkus chuckled, amusement and fondness and a smug
knowing rolling through the bond.
Najlah hissed at him but didn't argue.
Tevra stirred briefly from his work to cast them a confused
look but went back to it when Barkus gave a slight shake of his head.
Muttering to himself in what Najlah assumed was Gormestian, he
moved to the center of the room and knelt. Frown deepening, he
rose and threw his right hand back so the flat of his palm was
parallel with the ceiling. Some of his sigils glowed yellow, then pink,
then red. On the ceiling, a large, intricate looking sigil glowed the
same shade of red. Tevra let out a smug, "Got you."
"What, precisely, do you have?" Barkus asked.
"The spell Najlah smelled and that I sensed. Once I found and
negated the masking spell, there it was. Better still, it's an alert
spell."
Najlah growled and thwacked the floor.
Tevra smiled at him. "An alert spell lets the caster known
when someone in a different location has stepped into the room,
unlocked a box… whatever they set it for. It has a limited range,
though, approximately a quarter mile or so. It's used frequently by
thieves and the sort. My people would not use something like this—
too risky if there's a competent enough mage involved."
"I assume you're competent enough?" Barkus asked with one
of his amused snorts.
"I'm far better than that," Tevra replied. "We'll need to move
quickly once my spell is cast, though. There's nothing I can do to
prevent them from knowing it's tripped, and they'll likely either make
a run for it or come at us braced to kill. Either way, we must be
ready."
Najlah growled. Finally some fun. He jerked his head, baring
his teeth briefly.
"Here we go, then," Tevra replied, and once more lifted his
hand to the ceiling. This time his sigils glowed green, then blue, then
/> purple—and with a flash of purple light, the sigil vanished from the
ceiling, the light coalescing into an orb. "Now!" Tevra said, as the orb
shot from the room, giving chase immediately.
Najlah bolted after him, Barkus right on his heels.
People swore and screamed and shouted as they tore
through the inn, barely dodging out of the way in time, calling threats
and colorful crudities after them.
The chaos was even worse on the streets, all three of them
running like they were fleeing an eruption.
An eruption of what, Barkus asked, but then his attention was
wholly back on the hunt as they turned a corner so sharply Najlah
nearly ran into a wall.
As they burst from the far side of the narrow street they'd run
down, Tevra bellowed, "Down!"
In the very same moment, Najlah smelled fire. As the other
two dropped to the ground, Najlah surged forward, charging into a
blast of scorching blue flames. For a few seconds, he almost felt as
warm as he would back in Tahjil.
Beyond the flames was a man who realized his stupidity the
very moment he saw Najlah. Not that it mattered, because in the
very next breath Najlah had crunched his head like a firebird egg.
Wasn't nearly as tasty. Spitting out the remains caught in his teeth,
he turned to the next threat.
He made short work of two more, but as he rounded on a
third, suddenly there was a great many more than that, an entire
circle, and they radiated so much magic that it stung his nostrils.
Growling, Najlah moved so he was back-to-back with the other two,
forming a defensive circle. What's going on? Because it felt a great
deal worse than a standard ambush.
"They're going to break us," Tevra snarled. "Both of you, hold
on to me, and draw blood when you do it. If you can mix yours with
mine, all the better."
Even as he spoke, the circle of people seemed to almost
vibrate in place, or was it the ground? Their eyes glowed a sickly
red-brown color, and Najlah felt like he was going to heave up his
stomach.
He did as Tevra had ordered, sinking his teeth into his calf,
holding tightly without clamping down so hard that he'd do serious
damage. He could smell more blood as Barkus acted as well.
Tevra screamed, and blinding yellow light consumed them at
the same time that the sickly red-brown color seemed to explode in
all—
*~*~*
Najlah woke with a snarl, but before he could lunge, he
registered he was in fire. Then the smells struck him.
His room. He was in his fireplace in his room in the palace.
How in the world had he gotten here? What had happened? He
growled as the memories wouldn't come. Not past the ambush.
Biting Tevra.
Pain sliced his head, and the memory of using too much
magic too fast, exactly the way he knew he shouldn't.
Najlah rumbled in confusion. That wasn't his thought. It wasn't
Barkus's thought either. What in the flames was going on?
The question was answered as someone sat up in his bed as
frantically as Najlah had woken up a moment ago. Not Barkus,
though, but Tevra.
Where am I? Tevra asked, looking around the room. The
palace. This isn't my room, not my old one or new one. Did they
move me again? How did I get back here?
Najlah growled. He could hear Tevra's thoughts like he could
Barkus's. How was that possible. What was going on?
"Who said that!" Tevra looked around frantically again, then
pressed a hand to his forehead. "I think I'm losing my mind."
You're not, Najlah said, growling again. You're mentally bound
to me, and presumably Barkus.
"Lord Najlah?" Tevra gave the room yet another sweep.
"Where are you?"
Rumbling and chittering in amusement, Najlah uncurled and
slithered from the fireplace, shaking off embers.
Tevra's eyes widened. "You—were you in the fire."
I'm a dragon of Tahjil, Najlah said with a snorting snuff. Sitting
in fire is the only way I get remotely close to the temperatures to
which I'm accustomed, the only way to keep my blood suitably
heated outside of the pack bond I share with the Lukos and before
that, an amulet.
Brow furrowing, moving to the edge of the bed, Tevra asked,
"Why don't you just use sigils?"
Najlah rumbled, eyes turning pink.
"Like mine," Tevra said, standing and slowly approaching him.
He extended his arms, and his tattoos seemed to gleam in the light.
"You could permanently embed a spell for heat. It would require a
constant use of energy, but bound to a pack, it would be a negligible
drain at best, and it would also draw upon natural heat in an area. So
long as you were close to a fire or out in the sun or whatever, it
would keep you well and have reserves to draw on when you're
thrust into cold unexpectedly."
I… did not know that was possible. Restuel does not use your
markings. Magic is done or not done; it shouldn't require fancy
scribblings.
Tevra laughed. "Fancy scribblings let you do much more than
a single person can with only their own energy. Sigils draw energy
from the world around them, requiring less of the caster and enabling
greater strength and power. It has its own costs and drawbacks, as
anything does, but the benefits outweigh them, at least for me. Here,
these are the ones we'd need for you." He touched several of the
runes on his arms and two on his face, causing them to glow the
color of burning embers. "The trick would be where to carve them, as
those scales don't lend themselves well to the process. They couldn't
be burned in, either." He laughed again. "Not in someone who sleeps
in fire the way the rest of us do a bed."
Najlah chittered, eyes swirling green, and flicked his tongue
out.
He wasn't prepared for the lust-laced curiosity that filled his
mind, or the way Tevra's face went red the moment he realized that
thought had slipped out.
"Sorry!" Tevra burst out. "I'm not used to this at all. Mind-
sharing is a Lukos thing. I've never heard of a human brought into
the bond, save the rare few who marry into the pack, which hasn't
happened in decades. I don't know how this happened."
Najlah hissed playfully, crawling toward the hastily retreating
Tevra. But you have theories.
Tevra stilled briefly, distracted, and Najlah used the
opportunity to turn and swing out his tail, deftly sweeping Tevra off
his feet so he landed on the thick rug nearby. Then Najlah crawled
over him, lust tingling along his spine, turning his eyes red. He
rumbled softly, close enough that Tevra would feel it in his own body.
"Call me crazy, but I don't think you really care about my theories
right now."
Do you? Najlah asked, flicking his tongue out to finally get a
proper taste. Tevra tasted like blood and the bitter, acrid flavor he
associated with magic.
"I'm more baffled why you're… doing this. You've made your
contempt of humans pretty cle
ar."
Najlah licked him, dragging his forked tongue across Tevra's
cheek, then took the softest nip of his jaw. Shock and pain and
pleasure jolted through the bond, so he did it again—and nearly
jumped himself when hands glided along his scales, firm enough to
really be felt.
"Is… is this okay?" Tevra asked.
Don’t ask stupid questions.
I still am not certain why you would… with me.
You're as much a hornless brute as a human can be, Najlah
replied.
Tevra laughed, the sound delightfully low and husky. That
doesn't really explain it, but I think I get the general idea. You'll have
to tell, or I suppose, show me, what to do for you. I've never worked
with anything but a human body.
Najlah wasn't certain how to respond to that, except with a
quiet happiness he didn't quite know what to do with. Barkus didn't
mind when he stayed in this form when they fucked, but he'd never
encountered a single human who continued to smell like lust when
they saw him this way. Let alone one who simply accepted it as a
given, instead of taking it for understood that he'd shift.
He got his teeth on the loose shirt Tevra was wearing and
tugged at it. Off.
"All right, all right. You'll have to get off me, though; you're
heavy."
Rumbling in amusement, Najlah obeyed, waiting impatiently
as Tevra hastily discarded his clothes. He glanced briefly toward the
bed, where Barkus still slept like the dead. He won't mind?
Why would he mind?
Aren't you lovers?
Najlah growled, eyes swirling pink and blue. We don't ascribe
to your stupid human conventions. Are you only allowed one family
member? One friend? Of course not. So why would you only be
allowed one lover?
Tevra laughed. It seems so obvious when you put it that way.
All right, you bossy dragon, what do we do now?
Najlah pushed him back onto the rug, and finally got his
tongue on the rest of that long, lean body, going over each and every
scar, wounds he had healed, that he had tasted. He knew the weight
and flavor and smell of Tevra's blood, had consumed enough that it
was in his blood.
"Bossy and possessive," Tevra said with a laugh, the words
anything but a complaint.
Najlah rumbled approvingly and kept going, until he finally got
his long, smooth tongue around Tevra's cock. They could do the
slow, leisurely thing later.