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Dragon's Oath
P. C Cast
Аннотация
In early 19th century England, long before hes a professor at the Tulsa House of Night, Bryan Lankford is a troublesome yet talented human teen who thinks he can get away with anything… until his father, a wealthy nobleman, has finally had enough, and banishes him to America. When Bryan is Marked on the docks and given the choice between the London House of Night and the dragon-prowed ship to America, he chooses the Dragon and a brand new fate.
Becoming a Fledgling may be exciting, but it opens a door to a dangerous world.... In 1830s St. Louis, the Gateway to the West, Dragon Lankford becomes a Sword Master, and soon realizes there are both frightening challenges and beautiful perks. Like Anastasia, the captivating young Professor of Spells and Rituals at the Tower Grove House of Night, who really should have nothing to do with a fledgling…
But when a dark power threatens, Dragon is caught in its focus. Though his uncanny fighting skills make him a powerful fledgling, is he strong enough to ward off evil, while protecting Anastasia as well? Will his choices save heror destroy them all?
CHAPTER ONE
Present-day Oklahoma
Anger and confusion stirred within Dragon Lankford. Was Neferet truly taking her leave of them so soon after the death of the boy and their goddesss cataclysmic visit?
“Neferet, what of the fledglings body? Should we not continue to hold vigil?” With an effort, Dragon Lankford kept his voice calm and his tone even as he addressed his High Priestess.
Neferet turned her beautiful emerald eyes to him. She smiled smoothly. “You are right to remind me, Sword Master. Those of you who honored Jack with purple spirit candles, throw them on the pyre as you leave. The Sons of Erebus Warriors wil hold vigil over the poor fledglings body for the remainder of the night.”
“As you wish, Priestess.” Dragon bowed deeply to her, wondering why his skin felt so itchyalmost as if he was covered in dirt and grime. He had a sudden inexplicable desire to bathe in very, very hot water. It is Neferet, his conscience spoke softly to him. She has not been right sinceKalona broke free of the earth. You used to feel that …
Dragon shook his head and set his jaw. Peripheral events did not matter. Feelings were no longer important. Duty was al encompassing
vengeance was utmost. Focus! I must keep my mind on the job at hand! he commanded himself, and then nodded quickly to specific Warriors.
“Disperse the crowd!”
Neferet paused to speak to Lenobia before she departed from the center of the campus and headed in the direction of the professors living quarters. Dragon barely spared her a look. Instead, his attention was pul ed back to the fiery pyre and the boys flaming body.
“The crowd is being dispersed, Sword Master. How many of us shal remain to watch by the pyre with you?” asked Christophe, one of his senior officers.
Dragon hesitated before he answered, taking a moment to center himself as wel as to absorb the fact that the fledglings and professors who were mil ing uncertainly around the brightly burning pyre were obviously agitated and thoroughly upset. Duty. When all else fails, turn to duty!
“Have two of the guards escort the professors back to their quarters. The rest of you are to go with the fledglings. Be quite certain they al return to their rooms. Then stay close to the dormitories for the remainder of this terrible night.” Dragons voice was rough with emotion. “The students need to feel the protective presence of their Sons of Erebus Warriors so that they can, at least, be certain of their safety, even if it seems they can be certain of little else.”
“But the childs pyre”
“I wil stay with Jack.” Dragon spoke in a tone that al owed no interference. “I shal not leave the boys side until the red glow of his embers turns to rust. Do your duty, Christophe; the House of Night needs you. I wil see to the sadness that remains here.”
Christophe bowed and then began cal ing out commands, fol owing the Sword Masters orders with cold efficiency.
It seemed only seconds had passed when Dragon realized he was alone. There was the sound of the burning pyrethe deceptively soothing pop and crackle of the fire. Except for that, there was only the night and the vast emptiness in Dragons heart.
The Sword Master stared into the flames as if he could discover the balm that would soothe his pain within them. The fire flickered amber and gold, rust and red, reminding Dragon of a delicate piece of jewelryunique, exquisite, tied to a strand of velvet ribbon the color of fresh blood …
As if moving of its own accord, his hand went into his pocket. His fingers closed around the oval disk he found there. It was slim and smooth. He could feel only the faintest hint of the bluebird that once had been etched so clearly and beautiful y on its face. The golden piece rested snugly in his hand. He cupped it, protected it, held it, before he slowly drew out his hand, the locket nestled within it. Dragon twined the velvet ribbon through his fingers, rubbing it with his thumb in a familiar, absentminded motion that spoke more of habit than thought. Expel ing a deep breath that sounded more sob than sigh, he opened his palm and looked down.
The light from Jacks pyre flitted across the lockets golden surface. It caught the bluebird design.
“Missouris state bird.” Dragon spoke aloud. His voice was devoid of emotion, though the hand that held the locket shook. “I wonder if you can stil be found wild, perching in the sunflowers that overlook the river. Or did your beauty and those of the flowers die out, too, along with everything else lovely and magickal in this world?” His hand closed on the locket, gripping it so tightly his knuckles turned white.
And then, as quickly as his fist had closed, Dragon released his hold on the locket, opening his hand and turning the gold oval over and over reverently. “Fool!” His voice was ragged. “You could have broken it!” Trembling fingers fumbled with the clasp, but when he final y unlatched it the golden piece opened easily, unharmed, to display the tiny etching that, although faded by time, stil showed the smiling face of the petite vampyre whose gaze seemed to catch and hold his.
“How can you be gone?” Dragon murmured. One finger traced the old portrait on the right side of the locket, and then moved to the left half of the piece of jewelry to stroke the single blond curl that nestled there over the empty space where his youthful picture had once been. His gaze turned from the locket up to the night sky and he repeated the question louder, from his soul, crying out for an answer. “How can you be gone?”
As if in response Dragon heard echoing in the night air the distinctive croaking caw of a raven.
Anger rushed through Dragon, so hard and hot that his hands once again trembledonly this time he did not shake with pain and loss; he shook with the barely control ed need to strike out, to maim, to avenge.
“I wil avenge her.” Dragons voice was like death. He looked down at the locket again and spoke to the shimmering blond curl it held. “Your dragon wil avenge you. I wil set to right what I al owed to go wrong. I wil not make the same mistake again, my love, my own. The creature wil not go unpunished. On that I pledge to you my oath.”
A gust of wind, hot from the pyre, blew suddenly strong. It lifted the lock of hair and, while Dragon fumbled unsuccessful y to stop it, the curl floated out of his reach up, up, up on the heated draft, almost feather-like. It hovered there and then, with a sound much like a womans gasp of surprise, the hot wind changed, inhaling, drawing the lock of hair down into the fiery pyre where it was turned to smoke and memory.
“No!” Dragon cried, fal ing to his knees with a sob. “And now Ive lost the last of you. My fault…,” he said brokenly. “My fault, just as your death was my fault.”
Through the tears that fil ed his eyes Dragon watched the smoke from his beloved mates lock of hair whirl and dance before himand then begin to shimmer magickal y, changing from smoke to a dusting of green and yel ow and brown sparkles that continued to curl around and around until they began to separate and form distinct parts of an image: the green sparkles became a long, thick stemthe yel ow delicate petals of a flower with the brown circling within them to become its center.
Dragon wiped his eyes clear of tears, hardly able to believe what he was seeing. “A sunflower?” His lips felt as numb with shock as his brain. It isher flower! his mind shouted. It must be a sign from her! “Anastasia!” Dragon cried as numbness gave way to a terrible, wonderful wave of hope.
“Are you here, my own?”
The image of the shimmering sunflower began to waver and change. The yel ow flowed down in a cascade that became golden blond. The brown lightened to the color of sun-kissed skin, and the green melted down within the skin, swirling and morphing into shining orbs that became eyes that were turquoise and familiar and dear.
“Oh, goddess, Anastasia! It is you!” Dragons voice broke as he reached out for her. But the image lifteda glowing tease just beyond his fingertips. He cried out in frustration and then stifled the sound of his misery as his mates voice began to spil around him like a musical stream over water-worn pebbles. Dragon held his breath and listed to the ghostly message.
Ive bespelled this locket, for you: my own, my mate.
The day has come when death forced us to part.
You must know that for you, forever, I shall wait.
So until we meet again I hold your love safely within my heart.
Remember, your oath was to temper strength with mercy.
No matter how long apart we shall be, I hold you to that oath
eternally … eternally …
The image smiled once at him before it lost its form and returned to smoke and then nothingness.
“My oath!” Dragon shouted, surging to his feet. “First Nyx and now you reminding me of it. Do you not understand that it is because of that cursed oath that you are dead? Had I chosen differently those many years ago, perhaps I could have kept al of this from happening. Strength tempered by mercy was a mistake. Do you not remember, my own? Do you not remember? I do. I wil never forget…”
As Dragon Lankford, Sword Master of the House of Night, held vigil over the body of a fal en fledgling, he stared into the burning pyre and let the flames take him back so that he could relive the pain and the pleasurethe tragedy and the triumphof a past that had shaped such a heartbreaking future.
CHAPTER TWO
1830 England
“Father, you cannot disown me and banish me to the Americas. I am your son!” Bryan Lankford, third son to the Earl of Lankford, shook his head and stared disbelievingly at his father.
“You are my third son. I have four others, two older and two younger. None of them are as troublesome as are you. Their existence and your behavior make it quite simple for me to do this to you.”
Bryan ignored the shock and panic his fathers words threatened to break loose within him. He forced himself to relaxto slouch nonchalantly against the wooden door to the stal closest to him as he beamed the Bryan Lankford smile at the Earl, that disarmingly handsome grin that women found irresistible and made them want to seduce him, and men found charming and made them want to be like him.
The Earls dark, unchanging expression said that he was wel aware of the Bryan Lankford smileand utterly unaffected by it.
“My decision is final, boy. Do not disgrace yourself further by unsuitable begging.”
“Begging!” Bryan felt familiar anger stir. Why must his father always belittle him? Hed never begged for anything in his lifehe certainly was not going to start now, no matter the consequences. “I do not beg you, Father. I simply am trying to reason with you.”
“Reason? Again you cause an embarrassment for me because of your temper and your sword, and you ask me to reason with you?”
“Father, it was only a smal altercation, and with a Scotsman! I did not even kil him. In actuality I wounded his vanity more than his body.” Bryan attempted a chuckle, but the sound was cut off by the return of the cough that had been plaguing him al that day, only this time it was fol owed by a wave of weakness. He was so distracted by the betrayal of his body that he put up no resistance at al when his father suddenly closed the distance between them and with one hand fisted the cravat at Bryans throat, ramming him against the wal of the stable with such force that the little breath left in his body whooshed from him. With his other hand the Earl knocked the stil -bloody sword from Bryans failing grip.
“You blustering little braggart! That Scotsman is a border Laird. His lands adjoin mine, which you know, as you are aware that his daughter andher bed are within a short days ride of our estate! ” The Earls face, flushed with anger, was so close to his son that his spittle rained over Bryan.
“And now your impetuous actions have given this Laird al the proof he needs to go to our prattling fool of a new king and demand reparations for the loss of his daughters maidenhead.”
“Maidenhead!” Bryan managed to choke out. “Aileenes maidenhead was lost long before I found her.”
“That is of no consequence!” The Earl tightened the strangle grip with which he held his son. “What is of consequence is that you were the dolt caught between her knees, and now that weakling king has al the excuse he needs to look the other way when thieving clansmen from the north sweep south looking for fat cattle to steal. Whose cattle do you think they wil be after, son of mine?”
Bryan could only gasp for breath and shake his head.
With a look of utter contempt, the Earl of Lankford let loose his son, al owing him to fal , coughing violently, to the dirt floor of the stable. Then the nobleman motioned to the red-coated members of his personal guard who had been blandly watching his sons disgrace, singling out the pockmarked senior member of the squad. “Jeremy, as I already ordered, bind him like the miscreant he is. Choose two other men to accompany you. Take him to the port. Put him on the next ship to the Americas. I want never to see him again. He is no longer my son.” Then he motioned at the stableman. “Bring my horse. I have wasted enough of my precious time on this foolishness.”
“Father! Wait, I,” Bryan began, but another coughing fit cut off his words.
The Earl paused only long to look down his long nose at his son. “As I already explained, you are expendable and now you are no longer my concern. Take him away!”
“You cannot send me away like his!” he cried. “How wil I live?”
His father jerked his chin at Bryans sword, which lay in the dirt not far from him. It had been a gift from the Earl when his precocious son had turned thirteen, and even in the dim, dusty light of the stable the jewels that encrusted the hilt glistened. “Perhaps that wil be of more use to you in your new life than it was to me in your old one. Al ow him to take the sword,” he addressed the guards, “and nothing else, with him! Bring me back the ships name and its captains mark as proof that he has left Englandhave him gone before sunrise tomorrow and there wil be a purse of silver waiting to split between you,” the older man said, and then strode to his waiting horse.
Bryan Lankford tried to shout at his fatherto tel him how sorry he would be later, when he remembered that though his third son was, indeed, his most troublesome, he was also his most talented, intel igent, and interestingbut another coughing fit gripped the seventeen-year-old so thoroughly that he could only gasp helplessly and watch his fathers horse gal op off. He couldnt even fight as he wished he could when the Earls guard bound him, then dragged him through the dirt of the stables.
“Its about time a little crowing cock like you was brought low. Lets see how you like being common.” Laughing sarcastical y, Jeremy, the oldest and most pompous of Bryans fathers guards, tossed him into the back of a poultry cart, before bending to pick up Bryans sword and, with a calculating look at its glittering hilt, shove it through his own waistcloth.
By the time Bryan reached the port it was dark, both in the world around him and within his heart. Not only had his father disowned him and cast him from his family and out of England, but it was becoming more and more clear that he was in the grip of some horrible plague. How soon would it kil him? Before he was free of this stinking dock, or would he die after being dragged onto one of the merchant ships that bobbed in the black water of the bay?
“Il no be taking a coughing chit like this aboard.” The ships captain held his torch higher, examining the bound and coughing boy. “No.” He scowled and shook his head. “Hel no be crossin the waters wit me.”
“This is the Earl of Lankfords son. Youl take him or answer to His Lordship about why not,” growled the Earls senior guard.
“I dont see no earl here. I see a shit-spattered boy whos got the ague.” The seaman spit in the sand. “And I wont be answering to anyone, special y no nonexistent earl, if I be dead from this brats sickness.”
Bryan tried to stifle his coughingnot to reassure the captain, but to rest the burning within his chest. He was holding his breath when the man stepped from the shadows, tal , lean, and dressed al in black, his pale skin in stark contrast to the darkness that seemed to surround him. Bryan blinked, wondering if his feverish gaze was deceiving himwas that truly a crescent moon tattooed in the middle of his forehead surrounded by more tattooing? His vision was blurry, but Bryan was almost certain the tattoos looked like crossed rapiers. Then reason caught up with vision and Bryan felt a jolt of recognition. A crescent moon and the surrounding tattoo could mean only one thing: the man was no man at al he was a vampyre!
It was then that the creature lifted his hand, palm facing outward directly at Bryan. The boy stared in wonder at the spiral that decorated that palm, and the vampyre spoke words that would forever alter his life.
“Bryan Lankford! Night has chosen thee; thy death wil be thy birth. Night cal s to thee; hearken to Her sweet voice. Your destiny awaits you at the House of Night!”
The creatures long finger pointed at Bryan and his forehead exploded in pain as he felt the tattooed outline of a crescent moon blaze brand-like into his skin.
His fathers men reacted instantly. They dropped Bryan and moved away from him, staring in open horror back and forth between the boy and the vampyre. He noticed the ships captain had left his torch to sputter in the sand and disappeared into the darkness of the pier.
Bryan didnt see or hear the vampyre approachhe only saw the guards moving nervously, grouping behind Jeremy, swords half drawn, indecision clear on their faces and in their actions. Vampyre warriors had awe-inspiring reputations. Their mercenary services were much sought after, but except for the beauty and strength of their women, and the fact that they worshiped a dark goddess, little was known by most humans of their society and inner workings. Bryan watched Jeremy try to decide whether this creature, who was obviously what they cal ed a Tracker, was also a dangerous vampyre Warrior. Then he felt an impossibly strong grip on his arm, and Bryan was lifted to his feet to stare up at the creature.
“Return to whence you came. This boy is now a Marked fledgling, and as such is no longer your responsibility.” The vampyre spoke with a strange accent, drawing out his words almost languidly, which only added to the mystery and sense of danger he exuded.
The men hesitated, al looking to the senior guard, who spoke quickly, managing to sound arrogant and bel igerent at the same time. “We need proof for his father that he has left England.”
“Your needs do not interest me,” the vampyre said solemnly. “Tel the boys father that he boarded a ship tonight, though a much darker one than you humans planned. I have neither the time nor the patience to give you proof other than my word.” Then he looked at Bryan. “Come with me. Your future awaits.” With a swirl of his black cloak the vampyre turned and began striding away down the dock.
Jeremy waited until the creature had been swal owed by the darkness. Then he shrugged one shoulder and looked at Bryan with disgust, before saying, “Our mission is fulfil ed. His Lordship said to put his brat of a son on a ship, and that is where he is going. Let us leave this fish-stinking place and return to our warm beds at Lankford Manor.”
The men were turning away when Bryan drew himself up straight. He took just an instant to inhale a deep breath and savor the relief he felt when the choking, debilitating cough did not come. Then he stepped forward and spoke in a voice that was, once again, strong and steady. “You are to leave me my sword.”
Jeremy paused and faced Bryan. Slowly, he pul ed the sword from where hed shoved it in his waistcloth. He ignored Bryan and instead studied the precious stone-encrusted hilt. His smile was calculating and his eyes were cold when he final y turned back to Bryan.
“Do you have any idea how many times your father cal ed me from my warm bed to col ect you from some brawl youd gotten yourself into?”
“No, I do not,” Bryan said flatly.
“Of course you do not. Al you nobles care about is your own pleasure. So now that youve been disowned and are not nobility any longer Il be keeping this sword, and the money sel ing it wil gain me. Think of it as payment for what a pain in my arse you have been these past many years.”
Bryan felt a rush of anger, and with it came a surge of heat throughout his body. Acting on instinct, the boy closed the distance between himself and the arrogant guard. In some part of his brain Bryan knew his movements were preternatural y swift, but he remained focused on the one thought that was a driving force within him: The sword is minehe has no right to it.
With a motion that blurred, Bryan knocked the sword from Jeremys hand and, in the same movement, caught it. As the other two guards moved forward, Bryan lunged low and stuck the point of the sword straight through the bones of the closest mans foot, causing the guard to double up and fal on the floor in agony. Bryan automatical y rebounded and, changing direction, flat-bladed the second guard across the side of his head, stunning him. Moving with a deadly grace, Bryan fol owed the motion of his sword, whirling around, and ending with the sharpened edge of the blade pressed firmly enough against Jeremys neck that his skin beaded with drops of blood.
“This sword is mine. You have no right to it,” Bryan heard his voice speaking his thoughts aloud, and was surprised by how normal he sounded
he wasnt even breathing hard. There was no way Jeremy or either of the other two fal en guards could know that everything inside him was burning with anger and outrage and the need for vengeance. “Now tel me why I should not slit your throat.”
“Go ahead. Strike me. Your father is a viper, and even disowned you are his serpent of a son.”
Bryan was going to kil him. He wanted tohis rage and his pride demanded it. And why shouldnt he kil him? The guard was only a peasant, and one who had insulted him, the son of an earl! But before Bryan could slice through the guards neck, the vampyres words sliced the air between them.
“I have no desire to be pursued and perhaps questioned by the British navy. Let him live. His fate, to return to serving those he despises, is far greater punishment than a quick death.”
Stil holding the point to the guards neck, Bryan glanced behind him at the vampyre. The creature had spoken with a voice so calm it sounded almost bored, but his entire focus was on the guards throat and the smal drops of scarlet that Bryans blade had freed. The vampyres obvious desire intrigued as wel as horrified the boy. Is this what I am to become?
Bryan shoved the guard from him. “Hes right. Your life is better punishment than my blade. Go back to it and the bitterness with which you live it.”
Without another look at the man, Bryan turned his back on him and walked to the vampyres side.
The vampyre inclined his head in a smal nod of acknowledgment. “You made the correct choice.”
“He insulted me. I should have kil ed him.”
The vampyre cocked his head to the side, as if weighing the solution to a problem. “Did his cal ing you a snake insult you?”
“Wel , yes. Cal ing me spoiled and trying to steal what is mine was also an insult.”
The vampyre laughed softly. “It is no insult to be cal ed a snake. They are creatures al ied with our Goddess, though I do not believe he was just in naming you such. I watched as you bested those three men. You strike more like a dragon than a snake.” While Bryan blinked in surprise he continued. “And dragons are above such petty insults as mere mortals might hurl at them.”
“Are there dragons in America?” Bryan blurted the first of the jumbled thoughts that fil ed his mind.
The vampyre laughed again. “Have you not heard? America is fil ed with wonders.” Then he made a sweeping motion with his hand, gesturing down the pier. “Come, let us go so that you may discover them. I have spent enough time on these archaic shores. My memories of England were not good, and nothing I have encountered during my wait for you has done anything to better them.” The vampyre started off down the dock with Bryan almost jogging to keep up with his long strides.
“Did you say you have been awaiting me?”
“I did, and I have,” he said, stil moving purposeful y down the dark pier.
“You knew about me?”
The vampyre nodded, causing his long brown hair to obscure his face. “I knew there was a fledging here I had to wait to Mark.” He glanced at Bryan and his lips tilted up in a slight smile. “You, young dragon, are the last fledgling I wil ever Mark.”
Bryans brow furrowed. “Your last fledgling? What is happening to you?” He tried not to sound worried. After al , he barely knew this vampyre. And the creature was a vampyre: mysterious, dangerous, and strangely compel ing.
The vampyres slight smile widened. “I have finished my service as one of Nyxs Trackers, and am now able to return to my position as a Son of Erebus Warrior in the service of the Tower Grove House of Night.”
“Tower Grove? Thats in America?” Bryans stomach tightened. Hed almost forgotten that his world had turned upside down in less than the space of one day.
“It is, indeed, in America. St. Louis, Missouri, to be exact.” The vampyre had come to the end of the long pierthe darkest end, Bryan noted, as he could hear the creakings of a great ship and the lapping of water around it, but try as he might he couldnt see more than a hulking shadow bobbing on the water. He noticed the vampyre had stopped beside him and was studying him careful y. Bryan met his gaze squarely, though his body felt like a tightly coiled spring ready to come loose at any moment.
“I am cal ed Shaw,” the vampyre final y said, and held out his hand to Bryan.
“I am Bryan Lankford.” Bryan paused and then managed a smile that was only semi-sarcastic. “I am the former son of the Earl of Lankford, but you already know that.”
When Shaw took Bryans offered hand, he did so in the traditional vampyre greeting, grasping his forearm and not just his hand. Bryan mimicked his actions.
“Merry meet, Bryan Lankford,” Shaw said. Then he let loose the boys arm and made a gesture at the darkness and the ship that lay hidden within it. “This is the Ship of Night, which wil bear me, and perhaps you as wel , to America, and my beloved Tower Grove House of Night.”
“Perhaps me as wel ? But I thought”
Shaw held up a hand, silencing Bryan. “You must, indeed, join a House of Night, and quickly. That Mark,” Shaw pointed at the outline of the sapphire crescent moon that stil ached in the center of Bryans forehead “means you must be in the company of adult vampyres until you either make the Change ful y to vampyre, or…” Shaw hesitated.
“Or I die,” Bryan said into the silence.
Shaw nodded solemnly. “Then you do know something of the world you are about to enter. Yes, young dragon, you wil either complete the Change some time during the next four years, or you wil die. This night you have begun a life path from which there is no turning back. Now, I told your fathers guards that you would be joining me as I make the crossing to the New World because I saw that they were set on your departure from England, but the truth is more than your fate changed when you were Marked.”
“For the better or for the worse?” Bryan asked.
“For exactly what you make of it yourself, Nyx be wil ing,” he said cryptical y, and then continued, “You cannot control whether you wil successful y complete the Change, but you can control where you wil spend the next several years. Should you wish to remain in England I can arrange for you to be taken to the London House of Night.” The Tracker rested his hand briefly on Bryans shoulder. “You no longer require your familys permission to pursue the future you most desire.”
“Or I may choose to come with you?” Bryan asked.
“Yes, but before you make your choice I believe there is something you should see.” Shaw turned to face the ship, which was visible to Bryan only as a huge, dark shadow resting ominously on the water, tethered by impossibly thick ropes. As if he had no trouble at al seeing through the thick blanket of the night, Shaw took two steps closer to the edge of the pier, and then he did something that utterly mystified Bryan. He turned so that he was facing south, raised his hands, and spoke four words softly: “Come to me, fire.”
Instantly Bryan heard a crackling sound, and felt a surge of warmth in the air around him. Then he gasped as a bal of flickering fire swirled between Shaws outstretched palms. The vampyre flung the fire, as if tossing a bal , at what Bryan could now see was a large standing torch, the oil-soaked top of which instantly took flame.
“Bloody hel !” Bryan couldnt contain his shock. “How did you do that?”
Shaw smiled. “Our Goddess has gifted me with more than the abilities of a Warrior, but that is not what I wanted you to see.” Shaw lifted the torch and held it before them so that the proud prow of the huge ship, made of wood so dark Bryan thought it looked like it has been fashioned from night itself, was suddenly made visible. And then the boy blinked in surprise, as he realized exactly what he was seeing.
“It is a dragon,” he said, staring at the carving of the masthead. It was truly spectaculara black dragon, claws outstretched, teeth bared, ferociously ready to take on the world.
“It seemed to me, after the events of the night, to be a good omen,” Shaw said.
Bryan stared at the dragon and was fil ed with the most intense flood of feelings he had ever experienced. It took him a moment to realize what they were, and then he knew: excitement and anticipation and longing al joined within him to create a single sense of purpose. He met the vampyres gaze. “I choose to enter the dragon.”
CHAPTER THREE
Tower Grove House of Night
St. Louis, 1833
“Merry meet, Anastasia! Please, do come in. It is a fortuitous coincidence that you are here. Diana and I were just discussing how happy we are to have such a young priestess of spel s and rituals join the school as ful professor, and I was going to cal for you to tel you how pleased I am by how wel you are fitting in here at Tower Grove.”
“Merry meet, Pandeia, Diana,” Anastasia said, fisting her right hand over her heart and bowing her head respectful y first to her High Priestess, Pandeia, and then to Diana, before she entered the large, beautiful y appointed room.
“Oh, come now, you neednt be so formal with us when we are not in the company of fledglings,” Diana, professor of vampyre sociology and the High Priestesss mate, spoke warmly to Anastasia as she stroked a very fat calico cat that spil ed across her lap, purring loudly.
“Thank you,” Anastasia said in a quiet voice that sounded older than her twenty-two years.
Diana smiled. “So, tel us, though youve only been here for a fortnight, are you becoming settled? Does it seem like home for you yet?”
Home, Anastasia thought automatical y, had never been filled with such beauty and such freedom. She quickly shook the thoughts away and said politely and honestly, “It is not quite home yet, but I can feel that it wil be. I do love the prairie and the lush gardens.” Her gaze went to the fat calico and then to the gray tiger-striped male that had begun to wind around the High Priestesss legs. Then she blinked in surprise as she saw that both of the cats had six toes on each front paw. “Six toes? Ive never seen such a thing.”
Diana tugged at the calicos paw playful y. “Some say polydoctlys are aberrations of nature. I say theyre just more advanced than normal cats. A little like vampyres are more advanced than normal humans.”
“Oh, my! They look like mittens! Im so hoping now that Ive found my House of Night, a cat wil choose me, too. It would be so wonderful if she had six toes!” Then Anastasia realized she was speaking her sil y thoughts aloud and added hastily, “And, of course, Im enjoying my students and my new classroom very much.”
“It makes me happy to hear you say so,” Pandeia said, laughing softly. “And there is nothing wrong with wishing for a cat, six-toed or otherwise.
Young Anastasia, Diana and I were about to take our iced wine on the balcony. Please join us.”
“I am grateful for your invitation,” Anastasia said humbly, and reminding herself not to say anything sil y, she fol owed the women and their cats as they opened the French doors and stepped out onto a lovely moonlight-bathed balcony on which sat white wicker chairs and a matching table that was laden with a crystal vase etched with a perfect crescent moon and fil ed with fragrant red roses, alongside a silver bucket brimming with ice and a carafe of wine the color of ripe cherries. Stemware etched with crescent moons that matched the gorgeous vase glistened in the silver light of the ful moon.
Roses, ice, wine, and crystal. Im accustomed to simplicity and rules, though both had been tempered with love. Will I ever get used to suchluxuries? Anastasia pondered, feeling utterly uncomfortable as she sat in one of the chairs and tried not to smooth back her long blond hair or obsessively straighten her dress. And then she shot to her feet. “II should pour for you, Priestess,” she said, smiling nervously up at the tal , statuesque, mature High Priestess.
Pandeia laughed and gently swatted her hand away from the carafe. “Anastasia, Daughter, please sit and compose yourself. I am a High Priestess, which means I am more than capable of pouring wine for myself and my guests.”
Diana kissed her mate softly on the cheek before she took her own seat. “You, my darling, are more than capable of many, many things.”
Anastasia saw the color in Pandeias cheeks heighten ever so slightly as the couple shared an intimate look. Anastasias own cheeks warmed as she witnessed the exchange, and she looked quickly away. Though shed spent the past six years immersed in House of Night society, first as a fledgling, then as a priestess in training, and now as a professor, she stil sometimes found their open sexuality surprising. Shed often wondered what her mother would think of this female-empowered society. Would she accept it in the quiet, private way she had her daughters Mark and Change? Or would it be too much for hertoo shockingand would she condemn it as the rest of their community would?
“Are we embarrassing you?” Diana asked, a smile in her voice.
Anastasia shifted her gaze quickly back to her High Priestess and her mate. “Oh, land sakes alive, no!” she blurted, and then felt her face flush ful y hot, and knew it must be flaming red. Shed sounded just like her motherand knowing that made her want to crawl under the table and disappear.
You are no longer a shy Quaker girl, Anastasia reminded herself firmly. You are fully Changed vampyre, professor, and priestess. She lifted her chin and attempted to look confident and mature.
Pandeia smiled kindly at her and raised one of the three crystal goblets shed just fil ed. “I would like to propose a toast. To your success, Anastasia, and the completion of your first fortnight of teaching as our professor of spel s and rituals. May you come to love Tower Grove House of Night as much as we love it.” The High Priestess lifted her hand that wasnt holding the goblet of wine. She closed her eyes and Anastasia saw her lips moving silently, and then she made a scooping motion over the bouquet of roses, as if she was col ecting their scent, before flicking her fingers at each of the three goblets. Anastasia watched in wonder as the wine in her glass swirled and then, just for an instant, within the swirling liquid there appeared the shape of a perfect rose blossom.
“Oh, goddess! The rose spirityou made it appear in our wine,” Anastasia blurted.
“Pandeia did not make the rose spirit appear. Spirit is her affinity. Our High Priestess made a loving request in celebration of you, young Anastasia, and the rose happily complied,” Diana explained.
Anastasia exhaled a long breath. “Al of this.” She paused and her gaze took in the table, the two vampyres, their contented cats, and the exquisite estate that surrounded them. “It fil s me with such feeling that it is as if my heart seems ready to burst from my chest!” Then she cringed in embarrassment. “Forgive me. I sound like a child. I just mean that I am grateful to be heregrateful that you chose me to join this House of Night as your professor.”
“I shal share a secret with you, Anastasia. Pandeias spirit affinity has made many vampyres who are much older and more experienced than you feel as if their hearts might burst,” Diana said. “Only they were too jaded to admit it. I like your honesty. Dont lose it as you age.”
“I wil try not to,” Anastasia said, and took a quick gulp of her wine as she tried to order her thoughtsto decide exactly how she would reveal to Pandeia and Diana the true reason she had come to them this night. Then she was sorry shed gulped the wine. It was, of course, laced with blood, and the power of it sizzled throughout her body, heightening her nerves along with the rest of her senses.
“I, too, like your honesty,” the High Priestess said to Anastasia between sips of her own wine, which seemed not to affect her at al . “It was one of the reasons we chose you to fil our professorial vacancy, even though you have only had two years of formal training in spel s and rituals. You should know that you came very highly recommended from the Pennsylvania House of Night.”
“My mentor was kind, Priestess,” Anastasia said, setting her goblet back on the table.
“I also recal she said you are closely al ied with the element earth,” Pandeia said. “Which is another reason I felt you would be a good fit at our House of Night. This real y is the gateway to the west. Here the mystery and majesty of the wonderful, untamed earth spreads in eager invitation before ussomething I thought you would appreciate and find compel ing.”
“I do, but I do not claim to have an actual earth affinity,” Anastasia explained. “I al ow that I feel a strong connection to the land and, sometimes, when I am especial y fortunate, the earth lends me some of her power.”
Pandeia nodded and continued to sip her wine. “You do know that many priestesses do not discover they have a true affinity for one of the elements until they have served the Goddess for many decades. You may yet find that the earth has, indeed, been gifted to you with a ful -fledged affinity; you are stil very young, Anastasia.”
“Please do not take offense at my question, but exactly what is your true age? You look barely old enough to have been Marked, let alone to have gone through the Change,” Diana said, tempering her rather harsh question with a smile.
“Diana!” Pandeias voice was gentle, but her look was tinged with disapproval as she frowned at her strikingly beautiful mate. “I did not invite Anastasia here to interrogate her.”
“No, I do not mind the question, Priestess. Actual y, I am becoming used to it,” she said to Pandeia. Then she turned her gaze to Diana.
Anastasia lifted her chin just a little. “I am twenty-two years old. My mentor priestess in Pennsylvania told me she believed me to be the youngest vampyre in America to be made a ful professor. It is an honor I wil try to live up to by being diligent and serious about my classroom and my students.”
“Daughter, I have no doubt you are diligent and serious, but what I would like you to be is earthsome as wel ,” Pandeia said.
“Earthsome? Forgive me, Priestess, I do not know that word.”
“To be earthsome is to take on the characteristics of the earth. Be vibrant like a cluster of wildflowers, fertile like a field of wheat, sensual as an orchard of ripe peaches. Do not simply feel connected to the land; let it infuse you with its wonders.”
“And remember that you are a vampyre priestess and professor. There is no need for you to dress like an oppressed human schoolmarm,”
Diana added.
“II do not want to appear frivolous,” Anastasia admitted hesitantly, glancing down at the high-necked, unadorned bodice and straight, long skirt shed wornand loathedsince shed joined the Tower Grove House of Night and begun teaching two weeks ago. “I am so close in age to my students that it is sometimes difficult for them to remember I am a professor.”
Pandeia nodded in understanding. “But the simple truth is that you are close to the age of many of our fledglings. My advice is to make that a strength rather than something against which you battle.”
“I agree,” Diana said. “Use your youth as an asset instead of trying to hide it behind clothes any of your elders who have decent taste would never think of wearing” She paused and gestured first at the flowing Grecian-styled gown she wore, and then at the high-waisted Spanish-style gauchos and the plunging neckline of the white lace blouse her mate wore.
“Anastasia, what Diana is trying to convey to you is that there is nothing wrong with being young,” Pandeia picked up the thread of the conversation. “I am quite sure the female fledglings feel comfortable coming to you with concerns they would not have the courage to mention to any of the rest of us.”
Anastasia sighed in relief, having been given the perfect opportunity to speak of what was foremost on her mind. “Yes, that has already proven true. It is, actual y, why I sought you out this night.”
Pandeia frowned. “Is there is a problem among the students I should be made aware of?”
“You mean one other than Jesse Biddle?” Diana said the name as if just speaking it left a bitter taste in her mouth.
“Biddle is a problem for al of us, vampyres and students alike, especial y since the misguided humans of St. Louis made him their sheriff,”
Pandeia said. Then her gaze narrowed as she studied Anastasia. “Has he been harassing our fledglings?”
“No, not that I know of.” Anastasia paused, and swal owed past the dryness in her throat, trying to order her thoughts so that her High Priestess would find value in her words. “The fledglings do not like Sherriff Biddle, but he is not the focus of their conversations. Someone else is, and in my opinion, he is creating quite a problem within the House of Night itself.”
“Who has you so worried?”
“The fledgling they cal Dragon Lankford,” Anastasia said.
Both vampyres were silent for too many beats of Anastasias heart. Then it appeared as if Diana tried to conceal a smile by taking a long drink of her wine while Pandeia cocked an eyebrow at Anastasia and said, “Dragon Lankford? But he has been away from Tower Grove competing in the Vampyre Games for the past two weeks. You and he have not even met, yet you say he is somehow creating a problem for you?”
“No, not for me. Wel , yes, I suppose the problem does have to do with me, though it isnt technical y mine.” Anastasia rubbed her forehead.
“Wait, Il start again. You asked if there was a problem among the students I know of because I am close enough in age to the fledglings that they feel comfortable talking with me. My answer is yes, I do know of a problem, and it has been created by what I can only cal an obsession with this fifth former the students cal Dragon.”
Diana didnt try to hide her smile any longer. “He is dynamic, and very popular, especial y with the female fledglings.”
Pandeia nodded in agreement. “Case in pointhe just bested al of his opponents, fledgling and vampyre alike, to win the coveted title of Sword Master at the Vampyre Games. It is almost unheard of in our history for a fledgling to have won such a title.”
“Yes, I know of his victory. It is al the girls could talk of today,” Anastasia said wryly.
“And you see this as a problem? Dragons swordsmanship is impressive already, and he has yet to have completed the Change,” Diana said.
“Though it would not surprise me to see his adult tattoos appear very soon,” Pandeia added. “I agree with Dianathere is nothing unusual about the girls being distracted by Dragon.” The High Priestess smiled. “When you meet him you, too, may understand their distraction.”
“It is not simple distraction that concerns me,” Anastasia explained quickly. “It is the fact that as of close of school this night a total of fifteen fledglings, thirteen girls and two boys, have come to me, one at a time, begging me for love spel s with which to ensnare Dragon Lankford.”
Anastasia was relieved that this time the silence of the two women was fil ed with expressions of shock and surprise instead of amusement.
Final y Pandeia spoke. “This news is disappointing, but not tragical y so. The fledglings are aware of my policy on love spel sthey are foolish and can be dangerous. Love cannot be bespel ed or coerced.” The High Priestess shook her head, obviously annoyed at the fledglings. “Diana, I would like you to teach a lesson in the coming week on what happens when obsession is mistaken for love.”
Diana nodded. “Perhaps I should begin with the story of Hercules and his obsession with the vampyre High Priestess Hippolyte, and the tragic end that brought about for both of them. Its a cautionary tale they should al know, but have obviously forgotten.”
“An excel ent idea.” Pandeia turned her wide brown eyes on Anastasia. “I am assuming your response to these inappropriate requests has been to remind those mistaken fledglings that under no circumstances wil you perform any type of love spel for them.”
Anastasia drew a deep breath. “No, Priestess. That was not my response.”
“Not your response! Why would you,” Diana began, but her mates raised hand cut her off.
“Explain,” was al the High Priestess said.
Anastasia met the vampyres gaze unwaveringly. “I, too, have no use for love spel s. Even when I was first Marked and began to show talent in spel work my instinct told me love spel s were dishonest. I am inexperienced but not naпve. I know love cannot exist with dishonesty.”
“Insightful yet not an explanation,” Pandeia said.
The young professor straightened her spine and shifted her gaze to Diana. “You cal ed Lankford dynamic and popular. Did you not?”
“I did.”
“Would you also say he is arrogant?”
Diana lifted one shoulder. “I suppose I would. But that is not unusual. Many of our most talented Warriors have a sense of arrogance about them.”
“A sense of arrogance, yes. But is it not tempered with the experience and control of an adult vampyre?” Anastasia asked.
“Yes, it is,” she agreed.
Anastasia nodded and then her gaze went back to her High Priestess. “There has been much talk of this Dragon. I have listened careful y. You are right when you say I do not know him, but what I have heard of him is that Dragon Lankford is a fledgling who relies on his sword and smile rather than his wisdom and wits. My instincts tel me that if my infatuated students saw this fledgling for who he real y is, they would soon lose interest.”
“What exactly did you tel the fledglings?” Pandeia asked.
“I told them I could not possibly break the rules of this House of Night and cast a love spel , but what I could do is create a drawing spel for each of them.”
“There is a fine line between a drawing spel and a love spel ,” Diana said.
“Yes, and that line is created by clarity, honesty, and truth,” Anastasia retorted.
“But I have a feeling each student who came to you was being clear and honest and truthful about wanting Dragon Lankfords love,” Pandeia said, looking disappointed in her young professor. “Therefore, casting a drawing spel on Dragon would work as a love spel . Semantics is the only thing that differs between the two.”
“That would be true if a spel was cast on Dragon. My drawing spel wil be cast on each of the students who came to me instead.”
Pandeias disappointment changed to a satisfied smile. “You intend the spel to make the fledglings see Dragon with more clarity.”
“It wil draw for each of them a vision of fledgling Lankford that is honest and truthful, and not tainted by childish infatuation with an inflated ego and a handsome smile.”
“It could work,” Diana said. “But the spel wil take finesse and skil .”
“My instinct tel s me our young professor has both aplenty,” Pandeia said.
“Gratitude for your confidence in me, Priestess!” Anastasia almost shouted in relief. Then she stood. “With your permission, I would like to cast the spel tonight, during the ful moon.”
Pandeia nodded in agreement. “It is the perfect time for endings. You have my permission, Daughter.”
“It is my intent to end any unhealthy infatuations tonight,” Anastasia said, fisting her hand over her heart and bowing to her High Priestess and her mate.
“You might not end al of the infatuations with Dragon tonight. Someone may stil be drawn to al that arrogance and smiling, egotistical charm,”
Diana cal ed after her.
“Then that person deserves exactly what she gets,” Anastasia muttered.
CHAPTER FOUR
The spel began utterly, completely right. Later, Anastasia could only shake her head and wonder how anything that started so wel could have ended so disastrously.
Perhaps it happened because shed taken the time to change from the dreadful y confining clothes shed mistakenly begun wearing since becoming a professor. After al , had she not been at that particular part in the spel , at that exact moment in that specific placehad one of those elements shifted just a heartbeateverything would have changed.
Wel , everything did change, just not as shed intended.
The moonlight had felt so good, so right on her bare arms. That was one of the reasons shed gone farther afield and closer to the mighty Mississippi River than shed intended. The moon had seemed to be cal ing her forward, freeing her from the sil y, self-imposed restraints shed been placing on herself, in what was in retrospect a ridiculous attempt to be someone she was not.
Anastasia now wore the article of clothing she loved most: her favorite long, soft skirt the color of blue topaz. Just a month before being cal ed to this new, wonderful House of Night, Anastasia had been inspired by a Leni-Lenape Indian maidens dress. Shed sewn glass beads and shel s and white leather fringe al around the skirts hem and the low, rounded neckline of the sleeveless, butter-soft tunic top. Anastasia did a little twirling dance step, setting the shel s and fringe in motion. I will never wear those horrible, constricting clothes again. When I was a human that was all Iwas allowed to wear. I wont make that mistake again, she told herself sternly, and then she flung back her head and spoke to the moon that hung heavy in the inky sky, “This is who I am! I am a vampyre professor, an expert in spel s and rituals. And I am young and free!”
She was going to take her High Priestesss advice. Anastasia was going to be earthsome. She was going to find strength in her youth. “I am also going to dress as I wish, and not as if Im an ancient schoolmarm.” Or a Pennsylvania Quaker like the human family I left behind six years agowhen I was Marked, she added silently. She would remember to keep the peaceful, loving part of her past without its confines and restraints. “I am earthsome!” she said joyful y, practical y dancing though the calf-high grass that covered much of the prairie surrounding Tower Grove House of Night.
It wasnt just the physical freedom a change of clothes al owed Anastasiait was the sense of freedom Pandeias confidence in her had provided that made al the difference. Add to that the fact that the night was warm and clear, and Anastasia was going to do something that brought her almost unspeakable joy: she was going to cast a spel that would actual y benefit a House of Night her House of Night.
But stopping in the field dotted with wild sunflowers had been a careless mistake. She knew sunflowers attracted love and lust, but Anastasia hadnt been thinking about loveshed been thinking about the beauty of the night and the al ure of the meadow. And the truth was shed always loved sunflowers!
The meadow was breathtakingly lush. It was close enough to the Mississippi that Anastasia could see the wil ows and rowans that lined the high, bluff-like western bank. She couldnt actual y see the river because of the trees and the bluff, but she could smel itthat rich scent that whispered of the earths fertility and power and promise.
In the center of the meadow, perfectly situated to catch al of the silver light of the ful moon, was a huge, flat sandstone boulder, just right for the altar she would need for her drawing spel .
Anastasia put her spel work basket on the ground beside the large rock, and began setting out the ingredients for the ritual. First, she brought out the silver chalice her mentor had given her as a going-away present. It was simple but beautiful, adorned only with the etched outline of Nyx, arms raised cupping the crescent moon above her. Then Anastasia unwound the green, shimmery altar cloth from around the little corked jug fil ed with blood-spiked wine and flicked it open, letting it settle natural y across the top of the rock. She placed the chalice in the center of the rock, and then freed the big hunk of waxed paper from the basket, opening it to expose the loaf of fresh bread, the wedge of cheese, and the thick slices of fragrant, cooked bacon within. Smiling, she placed the paper and the food beside the chalice, which she took a moment to fil .
Satisfied with the scents and sights of the feast, which represented the bounty of the Goddess, she then withdrew five pil ar candles from the basket. Anastasia found north easily by turning upriver, and it was at the northernmost part of the rock that she placed the green pil ar, representing the element she felt closest to, earth. While she placed the rest of the candles in their corresponding directions: yel ow for air in the east, red for fire in the south, blue for water in the west, and the purple spirit candle in the center, Anastasia control ed her breathing. She drew deep breaths, imagining pul ing air infused with earth power up through the ground and into her body. She thought about her students and how very much she wanted the best for them, and how the best meant that they should see each other clearly and move forward in their paths with truth and honesty.
When the candles were set, Anastasia brought out the rest of the contents of the spel work basket: a long braided length of sweetgrass, a tin that held wooden matches and a lighting strip, and three smal velvet bagsone held dried bay leaves, another the spiky needles of a cedar tree, and the third was heavy with sea salt.
Anastasia closed her eyes and sent the same silent, heartfelt prayer to her Goddess that she did before every spel or ritual shed ever attempted. Nyx, you have my oath that I intend only good in the spell I work tonight.
Anastasia opened her eyes and turned first to the east, lighting the yel ow candle for air and cal ing the element to her circle in a clear voice, using simple words: “Air, please join my circle and strengthen my spel .” Moving clockwise she lit al five candles, cal ing each element in turn, completing the spel work circle by lighting the purple spirit candle in the center of the altar.
Then she faced north, drew another deep breath, and began to speak from her heart and soul.
“I begin with sweetgrass to cleanse this space.” She paused to hold the end of the braid over the flame from the green earth candle. As it lit, she wafted it graceful y around her in a lazy loop, fil ing the air above the altar rock with thick smoke that rol ed in waves. “Any negative energy mustleave without a trace.” She set aside the stil -smoking braid and held her left hand out, palm cupped. Then she reached into the first of the velvet bags. While she crumbled the dried leaves into her palm she continued the spel . “Awareness and clarity come with these leaves of bay. Throughearth I call their power today.” The cedar needles came next. Anastasia breathed in their fragrant scent as she mixed them with the crushed leaves in her palm, saying, “Cedar, from you it is courage, protection, and self-control I seek. Lend me your strength so that my spell shall not be weak.”
From the final velvet bag she scooped out the tiny sea salt crystals, but instead of adding them to the other ingredients, Anastasia held up her palm, which was now fil ed with the bay/cedar mixture. She tilted back her head, loving that a warm, fire-kissed wind that smel ed of river water lifted her thick fal of blond hair, giving evidence to the fact that the elements had, indeed, joined her circle and were there, waiting, to receive and fulfil her request. As she began to speak the words of the spel , Anastasias voice took on a lovely singsong lilt so it sounded as if she was reciting a poem put to music only her soul could hear.
“A drawing spell is what I work tonight.
My wish is to cast clarity of sight.
With leaves of bay I will reveal the truth
Love should not be based on arrogant youth.
Cedar strength protects from the boys misdeeds,
Lends courage and control to fulfill their needs.”
The sea salt felt slick against Anastasias fingers as she added the final ingredient to her spel . “Salt is the key to bind this spell to me.” She moved over to the green candle, drew another breath, and ordered her thoughts. It was now that she needed to evoke Dragon Lankfords name and then speak each of the fifteen students names in turn, sprinkling a pinch of what was now a magickal y infused mixture into the earth flame, while she hoped and prayed each spel would stick and each student would see Dragon with clarity and truth and honesty.
“In this flame the magick cuts like a sword
drawing only the truth of Bryan Lankford!”
As she said his name it happened. Anastasia should have been sprinkling the first pinch of the mixture into the flame and speaking the name of the utterly Lankford-obsessed Doreen Ronney, and instead the night exploded around her in chaos and testosterone as a young fledgling burst from behind the nearest hawthorn tree, sword drawn.
“Move! Youre in danger!” he shouted at Anastasia, giving her a rough shove. Off balance, her arms windmil ed, so that the magickal mixture was tossed up, up, up, as she went down, down, down, landing roughly on her bottom. Which was where she sat, watching in openmouthed horror while the warm wind that had been present since shed opened her spel work circle caught the magickal mixture and gusted, dashing the entire palmful directly into the fledglings face.
Time seemed to suspend. It was as if reality, for an instant, shifted and divided. One second Anastasia was looking up at the fledgling, frozen in the moment, sword up like the statue of a young warrior god. Then the air between her and the unmoving fledgling began to glow with a light that reminded her of the flame of a candle. It rippled and roiled, so bright that she had to lift a hand to shield her eyes. While she squinted against the glare, the brightness split down the middle, parting on either side of the fledgling as if framing his body in tangible light, and from the center of that, juxtaposed in front of the boy, Anastasia beheld another figure. At first he was indistinct. Then he took a step forward, toward her, so that the light il uminated him and he total y blocked her view of the fledgling.
He was the same general height and size as the boy. He, too, was brandishing a sword. Anastasia looked at his face. Her first thought, fol owed quickly by shock and surprise, was: He has a kind facehandsome really. And then she gasped, realizing what she was seeing. “Youre him! The fledgling behind you. Its you!” Only it wasnt really the boy. That was clear. This new figure was a grown man, a ful vampyre with the incredibly exotic-looking tattoos of two dragons, facing the fil ed-in crescent at the center of his forehead, bodies, wings, and tails stretching down his face to frame a firm jaw and ful lipslips that tilted up in a disarmingly charming smile at her. “No, youre not the fledgling,” she said, looking from his lips up to his brown eyes, which were sparkling a reflection of his smile.
“You drew me, Anastasia. You should know who I am.”
His voice was deep and pleasing to her.
“I drew you? But I…,” her voice trailed off. What had she said just before the fledgling appeared and managed to douse himself in her spel work?
Ah, she remembered! “Id just said: In this flame the magick cuts like a sword drawing only the truth of Bryan Lankford!” Anastasia cut off her own words, staring at the vampyres tattoos … dragon tattoos. “How is this possible? You cant be Bryan Lankford! And how do you know my name?”
His smile widened. “You are so young. Id forgotten.” Holding her gaze with his, he swept her a courtly bow. “Anastasia, my own, my priestess, Bryan Lankford is exactly who you did draw. I am he.” He chuckled briefly. “And I have not been cal ed Bryan by anyone except you for a very, very long time.”
“I didnt mean to literally draw you! And youre old!” she blurted, and then felt her face warming. “No, I dont mean old old. I mean you are older than a fledgling. Youre a Changed vampyre. Not an old one, though.” Anastasia wished desperately that she could disappear under the altar rock.
Bryans laugh was warm and good-natured and very appealing. “You asked for the truth of me, and that is what you conjured. My own, this is who I wil become in the future, which is why I am, as you say, old and a vampyre, ful y Changed. That fledgling over there, behind me, is who I am today.
Younger, yes, but also rash and entirely too sure of himself.”
“Why do you know me? Why do you cal me my own?” And why do you make my heart feel as if it is an excited bird that is ready to take flight?
she added silently to herself, unable to speak the words aloud.
He closed the smal space between them and crouched beside her. Slowly, reverently, he touched her face. She couldnt real y feel his hand, but her breath stil caught at his nearness. “I know you because you are my own, as I am yours. Anastasia, look into my eyes. Tel me truthful y what you see.”
She had to do as he asked. She had no choice. His gaze mesmerized her, as did everything about this vampyre. She stared into his eyes and became lost there in what she saw: the kindness and strength, integrity and humor, wisdom and love, utter and complete love. Within his eyes Anastasia recognized everything shed ever imagined a man to be.
“I see a vampyre I could love,” she said with no hesitation. And then hastily added, “But youre a Warrior, thats obvious, and I cant”
“You see the vampyre you do love,” he said. Stopping her words he leaned forward, cupped her face in his hand, and pressed his lips to hers.
Anastasia shouldnt have been able to feel anything. Later she replayed the scene over and over in her mind, trying to decide how a conjured phantom of a man could have possibly made her feel so much without actual y being able to touch her at al . But then al she could do was tremble and hold her breath as desire for him, real or imagined, pulsed through her body.
“Ohhh,” she breathed the word on a sigh when he moved slowly, regretful y away from her.
“My love, my own, I am a vampyre and a Warrior. I know it seems impossible right now, but I believe the truth is, to become the person you see
the man of kindness and strength, integrity and humor, wisdom and loveI need you. Without you, without us, I am only a shel of what I should be; I am the dragon without the man. Only you can make the man stronger than the dragon. Remember that when the young, rash, arrogant version of me attempts to drive you mad.” He continued to back away from her.
“Dont go!”
His smile fil ed her heart. “Im not going. I wil never wil ingly leave you, my own. Il be right here, growing and learning.” He glanced behind himself at the frozen statue of a fledgling and chuckled, meeting her gaze again. “Even though that may be difficult for you to believe sometimes. Give us a chance, Anastasia. Be patient with me; wel be worth it. Oh, and dont let me kil the bear. It wasnt going to harm you. It, like me, was only drawn to you because of a spel going slightly, magickal y, awry. Neither he, nor I,” he paused and his deep voice softened, “nor even my young, arrogant self, has anything malevolent in mind this night. And my own, my love, I wil never al ow anything to hurt you.”
As he spoke those last words Anastasia felt a chil flow through her body as if some god or goddess had suddenly poured ice water into her veins. While she shivered with an odd mixture of foreboding and desire, the adult specter of Bryan Lankford, his gaze stil locked with hers, surged backward. Light blazed as he was absorbed into the younger version of himselfwho instantly began to move again.
Feeling like she had just been hit by the locomotive of one of those huge, coal-eating trains that traversed America, Anastasia watched the younger version of the vampyre, whose ethereal touch stil thril ed through her body. He was wiping his tearing eyes with one hand, while with the other he brandished the sword at the enormous brown bear that appeared so suddenly before him on its hind legs. It was so large that Anastasia thought for an instant it, like the older version of Bryan Lankford, had somehow been conjured by her spel work and was real y mist and magick, smoke and shadows.
Just then the bear roared, making the very air around her vibrate, and Anastasia knew this was no il usion.
Lankfords eyes were clearing quickly, and he was moving with deadly intention toward the creature.
“Dont hurt it!” Anastasia shouted. “The bear was accidental y brought here by my spel it has no malevolent intent.”
Bryan stepped back, out of immediate range of the huge creatures claws. Anastasia watched him studying the bear. “Do you know this through your magick?” he asked without taking his eyes from the animal.
“I do! I give you my word on it,” she said.
Bryan glanced quickly at her and Anastasia felt a strange jolt of recognition in that look. Then the fledgling blinked and said, “You had better be right.”
Anastasia had to press her lips together to keep from shouting at him: The grown-up version of you wouldnt have said that!
She doubted he would have heard her shout. Hed already turned his entire attention back to the bear.
The big creature towered over the boy, but Bryan simply reached down, grabbed the candle nearest to him from the altar, and held it up before him. The flame of the red candle blazed like a torch. “Ha! Go!” he shouted in a voice that held more command than she would have expected from someone who wasnt even a vampyre. Yet. “Get out of here! Go on! This whole thing was an accident; the priestess didnt mean to draw you.”
The bear flinched back from the bril iance of the candle, huffing and growling. Bryan moved a step forward. “I said go!”
With a huge sense of relief, Anastasia watched the beast drop to al fours and, with one last huff at the fledgling, trot sedately away toward the river. Acting purely on instinct, she got to her feet and rushed toward Bryan.
“Okay, youre al right; you are safe, now. Everything is under control,” he was saying as she ignored him and took the stil -flaming red candle from his hand.
“Dont break the circle. This spel has too much power to waste,” she said sternly. She didnt look at himshe didnt want to be distracted.
Instead Anastasia covered the flame with a protective hand and careful y placed the candle back in its place at the easternmost position on the altar, before she turned to face Bryan Lankford.
His hair was blond, long and thick and tied back, which made her remember the older Bryans hair, which had also been the same light color, long and thick, but had fal en free around his shoulders, framing his kind face. Had it been just a little gray at his temples? Somehow she couldnt remember, though she could remember the exact color of his beautiful brown eyes.
“What is it? I didnt break your circle. The candle never went out. See, its back right where it was before.”
Anastasia realized shed been staring at him without speaking. He must think Im completely daft. She opened her mouth to say something that would explain a little of the strangeness of the night, and then she real y looked at him, the young Bryan before her. He had salt scattered al over his facecrystals of it were caught in his eyebrows, and his hair was covered with bits of bay leaves and cedar needles. Her sudden giggle surprised them both.
His brows went up. “I risk my life to save you from a wild creature and you laugh at me?”
He was trying to sound stern and offended, but Anastasia could see the sparkle of humor in those brown eyes.
“Youre wearing my spel work, and, yes, that makes you look funny.” It also made him look boyish and quite handsome, but she kept that part to herself. Or at least she thought shed kept that part to herself. As the two of them stood there, staring at each other, the sparkle in Bryans eyes seemed to become knowing. When his lips began tilting up, Anastasias stomach gave a strange little lurch, and she quickly added, “Although I shouldnt laugh, no matter how funny you look. My spel work al over you means Im going to have to remake the entire mixture.”
“Then you shouldnt have thrown it on me,” he said with an arrogant flip of his head.
Anastasias amusement began to fade. “I didnt throw it on you. The wind blew it into your face when I fel because you shoved me.”
“Real y?” He held up a finger, as if testing the direction of the breeze. “What wind?”
Anastasias frown deepened. “It must have blown itself out, or maybe it has calmed because of the interruption of my spel .”
“And I didnt shove you,” he continued as if she hadnt spoken. “I moved you behind me so that I could protect you.”
“I didnt need you to protect me. The bear was an accident. It was confused, not dangerous. I was casting a drawing spel , and somehow the bear got caught by it,” she explained.
“So, it was a drawing spel .” The irritation that had begun to creep into his voice vanished, to be replaced by an arrogant chuckle and another knowing look. “That is why you cal ed my name. You want me.”
CHAPTER FIVE
Dragon grinned as he watched the young priestesss face flush a lovely shade of pink.
“You have mistaken my intent,” she said
“You said it yourselfyou were casting a drawing spel . I heard you speak my name. Obviously, you were drawing me.” He paused, thinking that it al made sense now. “No wonder I left Shaw and the rest of the Warriors and walked home by myself from the docks. I thought it was because of Biddle. Hed watched me before I left for the Vampyre Games, so I already knew he didnt like me, but tonight his stare was so hard, so strange, that I supposed itd made me feel odd, almost as if I couldnt breathe, and I needed to be out here, where there was air and space and” He broke off, laughing a little and giving her the beginnings of his famous smile. “But, no matter. The truth is I am here because you desire me.” He rubbed his chin, considering. “We havent met. I would remember such beauty. Was it my reputation for prowess with the sword that has piqued your interest, or was it a more personal kind of prowess that”
“Bryan, I dont desire you!”
“Cal me Dragon,” he said automatical y, and then continued. “Of course you do. You just admitted your drawing spel . You need not be embarrassed. Im flattered. Real y.”
“Dragon, ” she said in a way that he thought verged on sarcasm. “I am embarrassed, but not because of you. Im embarrassed for you.”
“You arent making any sense.” He wondered briefly if shed hit her head when shed fal en.
The priestess drew a deep breath and let it out in an exasperated sigh. Then she offered her hand and forearm to him, saying, “Merry meet, Bryan Dragon Lankford. I am Professor Anastasia, the new priestess of spel s and rituals at the Tower Grove House of Night.”
“Merry meet, Anastasia,” he said, gripping her bare forearm, which was soft and warm to his touch.
“Professor Anastasia,” she corrected him. Too soon, she released her grip on him and said, “You werent meant to know about this spel .”
“Because you dont want anyone to know you want me?” Including me, he added silently to himself.
“No. The spel has nothing to do with wanting you. Its the opposite, actual y,” she said. And then in a voice that sounded as if she was lecturing a classroom of fledglings, she continued. “This is going to sound unkind, but the truth is I am here to cast what amounts to an antiDragon Lankford spel .”
Her words took him aback. “Have I somehow done something to offend you? You do not even know me. How could you dislike me?”
“It isnt that I dislike you!” she said quickly, almost as if she was trying to cover something up. “Here is the truth of the matter: in the fortnight I have been teaching at Tower Grove House of Night fifteen fledglings have come to me to ask for love spel s with which to bespel you.”
Dragons eyes widened. “Fifteen? Real y?” He paused and took a quick mental count. “I can only think of ten girls who would want to bespel me.”
The professor didnt look at al amused. “I would say you underestimate yourself, but I do not think that is possible. So Il just assume you are better at swordplay than addition. Be that as it may, I came out here tonight intending to cast a spel that would draw to each of your besotted admirers the truth of you so that they could see clearly and honestly that you arent the right mate for them, which would end their sil y infatuations,”
she finished in a rush.
He couldnt remember the last time he had been so surprised. No, that wasnt true. The last time hed felt this kind of soul-deep surprise was when the night had been il uminated to reveal the masthead of a ship and a new life. He shook his head and said the first thing that came to mind.
“This is hard for me to believe. You real y dislike me. Women usual y like me. Quite a lot, actual y.”
“Obviously. That is why thirteen of them asked for me to bespel you.”
He frowned. “I thought you said fifteen before.”
“Thirteen girls. Two boys,” she said dryly. “Apparently boys like you quite a lot, too.”
Unexpectedly, Dragon laughed. “There you have it! Everyone likes me, except you.”
“What I do not like is the thought that so many impressionable young fledglings are infatuated with you. Its simply not healthy.”
“Not healthy for whom? I feel just fine.” He smiled at her then, turning on every bit of his charm.
Dragon thought he saw her stern look relax a little and those big turquoise eyes soften, but her next words dashed cold water al over him.
“If you were more mature you would care about others feelings.”
He scowled. “Real y? Im almost twenty.” Dragon paused and looked her up and down appraisingly. “How old are you?”
“Twenty-two,” she said, lifting her chin.
“Twenty-two! Thats too young to be a professor and too young to be lecturing me on being more mature.”
“And yet I am your professor of spel s and rituals, and someone should lecture you about what you would be if you acted older. Who knows, with a little guidance you might grow up and be a Warrior of integrity and honor.”
“I have just returned from games where I earned the title of Sword Master. I already have integrity and honor, even though Im not yet a ful y Changed vampyre.”
“You cant win integrity and honor from games. You can only earn them from living a life dedicated to those ideals.” Her eyes held his and he realized that she wasnt speaking to him with condescension. She sounded oddly sadalmost defeated. And Dragon had no idea why that made him suddenly want to say somethingdo something, anything that would make the little furrow of worry on her otherwise smooth brow disappear.
“I know that, AnastasiaProfessor Anastasia,” he corrected himself this time. “I am already dedicated to my Sons of Erebus training. I wil be a Warrior someday, and I wil uphold their standards of honesty and loyalty and valor.”
He was pleased to see her smile, though it was slight. “I hope you do. I think you could make an extraordinary Warrior someday.”
“Im already extraordinary,” Dragon said, his smile back.
And then she surprised him again by looking him squarely in his eyes, almost as if she was a Warrior herself, and saying, “If youre so extraordinary, then prove it.”
Dragon brandished his sword and bowed to her, hand fisted around the hilt, pressing it to his chest just as if he was a ful Son of Erebus Warrior and she his priestess. “Send me on a task! Point me at the bear I must slay to prove myself worthy.”
This time her smile was ful , and Dragon thought it lit up her already beautiful face with a happiness that seemed to glow around her. Her mouth, with its ful lips tilted up, was distracting him so that he had to blink in confusion and say, “What? Me?” when he realized she was pointing directly at him. “Even a vampyre who is too young to be a professor should be able to see that I am not a bear.”
“I was assuming you were speaking metaphorical y when you asked me to set you on a quest to prove your worth.”
“Quest?” He blinked. Hed just been kidding. What was she thinking?
“Wel , I suppose it doesnt real y qualify as a ful quest, but it is a way you can prove to me that youre extraordinary.”
He took a swaggering step toward her. Now this was more like it! “I am ready to do your bidding, my lady,” he said in his most charming voice.
“Excel ent. Then come over here to my altar. You are going to help me cast this spel .”
His swagger ended. “You want me to help you with a spel that wil make girls dislike me?”
“Do not forget the two boys. And the spel wont make them dislike you. It wil make them see you more clearly because it wil get rid of their haze of infatuation for you.”
“I have to tel you, this sounds a little dodgy to me. It seems a lot like cutting my arm off to prove that Im an extraordinary swordsman.”
“You do not have to help me.” She turned back to the altar, fussing with the element candles and then the three little velvet bags that sat beside the chalice and food.
Dragon shrugged and started to walk away. It was no matter to him that this odd young priestess was set on making his love life difficult. So what if thirteen fledglings were no longer interested in him? (He didnt count the guys.) One thing hed learned since hed first discovered the pleasures of women was that there were always women who wanted him. He had even started to chuckle to himself when her next words drifted across the distance between them.
“Actual y, pay no mind to my request. You should be getting back to the House of Night. Dawn approaches. Most fledglings are already in their beds.”
He stopped and whirled around, wanting to spit fire at her. Shed spoken to him as if he was a child! But she didnt realize how her words had affected him. Anastasia was stil puttering around the altar, her back to him, as if she had already completely erased Dragon Lankford from her mind.
She was wrong about him. He wasnt a child and he didnt lack honesty or loyalty or valor. Hed show her by … by …
And then he heard himself saying, “Il stay and help you with the spel .”
She looked over her shoulder at him and he saw surprise and something else, something that might have been pleasure and warmth in those big blue eyes. But her voice was nonchalant. “Good. Come over here and sit there, on the edge of the rock.” She pointed. “Be careful not to disturb the altar cloth or knock over a candle.”
“Yes, my lady. Anything you say, my lady,” he muttered.
As he rejoined her she raised a brow at him but didnt say anything and went back to arranging the candle and neatening the altar.
Dragon studied her while she worked. His first impression of her heldshe was a beauty: petite with long, wheat-colored hair that fel straight and thick to her waist. But even though she was smal , she stil had generous curves, which he could easily see through her sheer linen top and flowing blue skirt. He didnt usual y pay much attention to what women worehe preferred his women nakedbut Anastasias clothing was decorated with shel s and beads and fringe, making her look fey and Otherworldly, an effect that was enhanced by her tattoos, which were graceful vines and flowers, so exquisite in detail they looked real.
“Al right. Im ready to begin again. Are you?” she asked.
He blinked and shifted his attention to the altar, not liking that shed caught him staring. “Im ready. Actual y, Im looking forward to hearing the names of the fledglings who asked for love spel s.” He turned his gaze from the altar to meet hers, being sure he put a chal enge in his voice.
Anastasias look remained unruffled. “Because you are aiding me with the spel , I wont need to cal the fledglings names. Your presence and cooperation add enough strength to my casting that it wil affect anyone who has been distracted by you.”
Dragon exhaled with a snort. “It sounds like its a good thing I dont have a ladylove at this moment. What were about to do would certainly mess that up.”
“No, it wouldnt. Not if that person was truly interested in you and not some overblown image of you.”
“You make me sound like an arrogant ass,” he said.
“Are you?”
“No! Im just me.”
“Then this spel wil not affect anyone who wants just you. ”
“Al right, al right. I understand. Lets get this over with. What do you want me to do?”
She answered with a question of her own. “You have taken three years of spel s and rituals classes, havent you?”
He nodded. “I have.”
“Good, wel , Il mix the spel work herbs in your hand. Hold it up like a cup.” She demonstrated with her own. “Like this. The herbs touching you wil help lend strength to the spel . Do you think you could manage the completion of at least some of the parts of the actual spel work if I lead you through it?”
He stifled his irritation. She didnt sound patronizing. She sounded as if she hadnt actual y considered the possibility that he might enjoy class
might be good at anything besides swordplay.
Professor Anastasia was in for a surprise.
“If you have to ask, you must not have checked out my class work record from the previous spel s and rituals professor,” he said blandly, hoping that his tone would make her believe she would have found one substandard grade after another.
The young professor sighed heavily. “No, I did not.”
“So al you real y know about me is how infatuated some of the other fledglings are with me.”
Her eyes met his and, again, he saw an emotion he couldnt identify in their cornflower depths. “I know that someday you wil be a Warrior, but that does not mean you can cast a spel .”
“Al I can do is to give you my word I wil do my best tonight,” he said, wondering why it mattered at al to him what she thought.
Anastasia paused, as if she was choosing her response careful y. When she final y spoke it was just to say a simple, “Thank you, Bryan.” And she bowed her head slightly, respectful y, to him.
“Cal me Dragon,” he said, trying not to show how much that one smal sign of respect had affected him.
“Dragon,” she repeated. “Im sorry. I keep forgetting. Its just that Bryan seems to suit you.”
“You would know that Dragon suits me were you on the other side of my sword,” he said. And then realizing how arrogant that must have sounded he added hastily, “Not that I would ever attack a priestess. I just meant that if you saw me during a swordfight you would understand my nickname. When I fight I become the dragon.”
“That probably wont happen any time soon,” she said.
“You truly dislike me.”
“No! It has nothing to do with you. I dislike violence. I was raised” Anastasia broke off, shaking her head. “That has nothing to do with the drawing spel , and we need to keep focused. Lets begin. Take three deep, slow breaths with me and clear your mind, please.”
Dragon didnt want to. He wanted to ask her about how shed been raisedabout what had happened to her that had made her dislike violence so muchbut the three years of spel s and rituals training had him automatical y fol owing her lead and breathing along with her.
“The circle is already cast; we wont need to redo that,” she said, taking a thick braid of half-burned grass from the altar. Anastasia glanced at him. “Do you know what this is?”
“Sweetgrass,” he said.
“Good,” she said. “Do you know what its used for in spel work?”
He made himself hesitate, as if he had to think hard to remember the answer. “Clearing negative energy?” Bryan purposeful y made the answer into a question.
“Yes. Thats correct. Very good.” Anastasia spoke to him like he was a first-year fledgling. He hid his smile from her while she held the braided grass over the green earth candle. It relit easily. Then, wafting it clockwise around them, she turned to him and said, “I begin with sweetgrass tocleanse this space…” She paused, giving him an expectant look.
“Any negative energy must leave this place.” With no hesitation, he said the rest of the opening spel work line that completed the sweetgrass cleansing.
She beamed her pleasure in a sweet smile that made his breath catch in his throat, and Dragon was suddenly very, very glad hed always been especial y good at spel s and rituals.
Anastasia placed the smoking braid back on the altar and then she took a pinch of herbs from the first velvet bag. She walked to him and he held his hand up for her, palm cupped, as shed shown him. Anastasia sprinkled the bits of dried leaves, whose smel was familiar to him not just because hed recently had the things blown in his face but also because he actual y had spent the past three years paying attention in class. So when the priestess said, “Awareness and clarity come with these leaves of bay…,” paused, and glanced at him it was an automatic, easy response for him to complete the line with, “Through earth we call their power today.”
She rewarded him with another sweet smile before going to the second velvet bag. She returned to sprinkle dried needles over the bay leaves.
“Cedar, from you it is courage, protection, and self-control I seek.”
“Lend us your strength so that this spell shall not be weak,” he recited quickly, not waiting for her pause.
This time Anastasias smile seemed thoughtful, which made Dragon feel self-satisfied. More than a little smug, he was sitting there, smiling, knowing that the last ingredient of the spel would be salt to bind it, when the priestess shocked him completely by reaching forward and resting her hand softly on his head. He felt a jolt at her touch and his gaze went to hers. Her eyes widened and her voice definitely sounded breathless as she said, “A part of this spell should come from you…”
She paused and this time al he could do was sit there, silent, with his pulse pounding as her hand slid down toward his cheek. “So that it is caststraight, strong, and true.” Her slim white fingers wrapped around several strands of hair that had escaped from the piece of leather that held the rest of it back, out of his way. Then she tugged. Hard. And plucked several strands from his head, which she dropped into his waiting palm.
Dragon resisted the urge to yelp and rub his scalp.
Only then did she turn to the third velvet pouch and come back with the crystals of salt, but she didnt sprinkle them over the mixture in his hand.
Instead she took his other hand and led him from where he was sitting on the altar rock. Slowly, as she stil held his hand in hers, the two of them began to walk clockwise around the glowing candles. Anastasias voice changed as she got to the heart of the spel . Dragon couldnt complete the lines for her because hed never heard this particular casting, but as she spoke and they moved around the stone he could feel the power of the spel wash over them. He became caught in her words, drawn to them as if they had texture and touch.
“A drawing spell is what we work tonight.
Our wish is to cast clarity of sight.
With leaves of bay we will reveal the truth
Love should not be based on arrogant youth.
Cedar strength protects from the boys misdeeds,
Lends courage and control to fulfill their needs.”
Dragon was so caught up in the sound of her voice that it took him a moment to process what she was actual y saying. By the time he understood she was probably cal ing him an arrogant miscreant, theyd come to a halt before the red fire candle and she turned to face him. Cradling his hand that cupped the herbs, she added the salt to the mixture, intoning, “Salt is the key to bind this spell to me.”
Then she guided their joined hands over the red candle and, as she scooped out the mixture and fed it to the flame, said, “In this flame themagick cuts like a sword drawing only the truth of Bryan Dragon Lankford!”
With a whoosh! the flame ate the mixture, blazing up so high that Dragon had to pul his hand back to avoid being scorched.
At the Tower Grove House of Night, fifteen young fledglings paused. It was near enough to dawn that seven of them were already asleep, and in their dreams drifted a suggestion, scented with bay and cedar.
This then is true:
Dragon Lankfords future will not touch you …
* * *
Sal y McKenzie was giggling with her roommate, Isis, and talking about how handsome Dragon was when suddenly she cocked her head and told Isis, “II think we should change our minds.
“He is bravehe is strong
but for both of us Dragon Lankford is wrong. ”
Isis, her giggles stil ed, shrugged and nodded in agreement. Both girls blew out their bedside lights and went to sleep feeling more than slightly uneasy.
* * *
Into the two infatuated boys minds came the clear thought:
You will never know Dragon Lankfords touch;
his desires are not as such.
One fledgling wept quietly into his pil ow. The other stared at the ful moon and wondered if he would ever be loved.
* * *
Four of the six fledglings who were finishing their turn at kitchen duty hesitated at their work. Camel ia looked at Anna, Anya, and Beatrice and said:
“I am too smart
to believe Dragon would ever give me his heart.”
Anna gasped and dropped the porcelain cup she was holding. It shattered into the stunned silence.
“I would believe I found love in his bed,
but he would use and discard me instead.”
Then Anya spoke, bending to help Anna clean up the shattered cup:
“His sword is his life;
I care not for such strife.”
Next, Beatrices face lost al of its color as she whispered:
“A human consort is my fate.
With a vampyre I will never find my true mate.”
* * *
In the sumptuous living quarters of the Tower Grove House of Nights High Priestess, Pandeia was welcoming her mate into their bed when Dianas beautiful face registered surprise and she said:
“The Lankford fledglings fate will be
beyond what you or I could possibly see.”
“Diana? Are you wel ?” Pandeia touched her mates cheek and looked deep within her eyes.
Diana shook her head like a cat ridding itself of water. “I am. Ithat was odd. Those words were not mine.”
“What were you thinking of before you spoke?”
She shrugged. “I suppose I was wondering if al the Warriors had returned from the games yet, and was thinking that Dragon has done our House proud.”
The High Priestess nodded, suddenly understanding. “It is Anastasias spel . It has drawn the truth about Dragon to those who were thinking of him at its casting.”
Diana snorted. “I am hardly a besotted fledgling.”
Pandeia smiled. “Of course you are not, my love. This demonstrates the strength of young Anastasias spel . We can rest assured there wil be no obsessed fledglings trailing about after him tomorrow.”
“I almost feel sorry for the boy.”
“Do not. If any of the fledglings were meant to love him, a splash of reality wouldnt wash true love away. And anyway, what was revealed to you shows that Dragon does, indeed, have a bright future.”
Diana returned her mates embrace, saying, “Or, at the very least, hel have an interesting one.”
* * *
At the Chicago House of Night, where the Vampyre Games had recently concluded, Aurora, a beautiful young vampyre, paused mid-word in the letter she was composing to the fledgling who had warmed her bed and her heart after he had defeated every swordsman who came against him.
Dragon Lankford had claimed the title of Sword Master, along with Auroras affection. Yet now she found herself putting aside her quil and lifting the thin paper sheet to touch the flame of the closest candle to her as she realized the truthfulness of the words that flitted through her mind whispering: It was but a fling.
Another vampyre will truly make my heart sing.
What had she been thinking? Dragon had been a lovely diversion and no more.
* * *
And, final y, inside the forbidding brick building that served as jailhouse for St. Louis, Missouri, the whispers on the wind drifted down … down …
down … to the bowels of the place and the hidden room in which Sherriff Jesse Biddle paced back and forth in front of the creature he held his captive in a cage of silver. He didnt actual y talk to it so much as talk at it. “I have to learn how to use more of your power. I need to be able to stand against the vampyres. Theyre too blatant. Its like they think theyre normalthat they have a right to be here!” he shouted. “I hate em. I hate em al !
Especial y that snot-nosed brat of a fledgling. You shoulda seen him get off the boat tonight. Al big chested with his victory. Do you know what he cal s himself? Dragon Lankford! He aint no dragon. Hes the same little bastard whos been struttin round here for three years with that bright, shiny sword actin like hes better then everyoneevery human. What an arrogant little son-of-a”
The keening from the creature was eerie. It made Biddles skin crawl.
“Shut up or Il throw some of that salt water on you again. Thatl burn you up good like the proper chicken you are!”
Eyes that looked disturbingly human in the face of the enormous raven met his. Though the creature was only semi-substantial, its eyes glowed a strong, steady red.
“Through your obsesssssion with Dragon Lankford hissss future I ssssee.
He will change hisssstory.”
Biddle looked at the thing with disgust. “Why would I care about that?”
“His love issss the key
to defeat the likessss of you and me.”
“What are you talking bout, foul beast?”
“If Dragon is allowed to burn bright
he will extinguish the Dark light.”
That caused Biddle to pause. Hed trapped this semi-substantial manbeast as it absorbed the last bits of strength from a dying Indian Shaman.
The old redskin had managed to throw this strange cage of silver around the creature, but the Shaman had been too weaktoo near deathto recover from the creatures attack when Biddle had happened by the old mans shack. The old mans last words had been: “Burn sweetgrass toward it off. Weight the cage with turquoise stones. Throw it in a barrel of salt water so that it can never take anothers power…”
Biddle had quickly decided hed be damned if hed waste his time fol owing an old, dead Injuns orders. He started to go, leaving the body and the thing in the cage for the next passerby to clean up.
Then the creature had turned its red eyes on him.
Human eyes.
Almost as repulsed as he was fascinated, Biddle had moved closer to try to see exactly what the thing was.
It was then that Biddle saw them. The moving darkness within the shadows surrounding the thing.
Hed come closer to the cage.
It was then that Biddle felt it. The power that slithered from the creature, through the cage, and along the floor to the dead man, and there it paused and hovered and then descended into the blood that had pooled on the ground around his mouth.
Something about that wriggling, shadowy darkness had goaded Biddle to move, to get closer, to touch. Acting on an impulse from the basest part of his mind, Biddle stepped between the cage and the dead man, wading into the strands of darkness.
Remembering, Sherriff Biddle closed his eyes in ecstasy. The pain had been cold and sharp and immediate, but so had been the power and pleasure that had swel ed though him as some of the darkness had been absorbed through his skin and into his soul.
Biddle hadnt destroyed the creature.
Hed kept it trapped and fed it blood, but only occasional y. Because what if by feeding the thing got strongerjust like Biddle did. What if it managed to break through the cage of silver?
And now Biddle stared at the semi-formed creature of shadow and tried to convince himself he was not held as captive as his prey.
Then the thing, moving restlessly, spoke in a strange singsong with more animation than it had shown in the fortnight hed had it, repeating:
“Hear the truth this night:
If Dragon is allowed to burn bright
he will extinguish the Dark light.”
Biddle moved closer to the cage. “The Dark light. You mean the stuff youre made ofthe stuff that surrounds you.” The stuff I can sometimessiphon from you, he thought but didnt say.
The creatures red gaze met his, and Biddle knew it hadnt mattered whether hed said it aloud. The thing knew.
“Yesss, to keep the power you desire
you must kill his love, the Anastasia vampyre.”
Dragon was stil blinking bright dots of flame away from his vision when he smiled at Anastasia and said, “Your spel seems to have worked.”
“Our spel ,” she said softly, and gifted him with another smile. “Our spel was strong.” Anastasia paused and then asked, “Would you close the circle with me?”
A rush of unexpected pleasure had him not trusting his voice, so Dragon only nodded.
“Good, Im glad. Its only right that we close it together.” Anastasia tilted her head back and said, “Thank you, spirit, for joining our circle tonight.”
Then she leaned down and blew out the purple candle.
Dragon went to the green candle, cleared the thickness from his throat, and said, “Thank you, earth, for joining our circle tonight.” He blew out the flame.
In turn, together, they thanked water, fire, and air. Then the young professor faced him, took both of his hands in hers, and said, “Thank you, Bryan Dragon Lankford, for joining my circle tonight.”
It was at that moment that Bryan Dragon Lankford realized that Anastasia wasnt just a beautiful vampyre and a gifted priestess. She was the most beautiful vampyre and most amazing priestess hed ever seen. And without thinking, he bent and kissed her smiling lips.
CHAPTER SIX
His kiss was so unexpected that Anastasia was surprised into complete stil ness. She just stood there, holding his hands, while he pressed his lips to hers.
Had she realized he was going to kiss her she would have moved away.
But she hadnt realized, so she didnt move.
And then the oddest thing happened. His touch was nothing like shed imagined. He should have been too forceful or too awkward or too demanding. He wasnt. He was sweet and strong and just hesitant enough that she knew he, too, had been taken by surprise by the kiss.
Stil , Anastasia was going to pul away. She should have pul ed away. And she would have, had she not remembered the ful y Changed vampyre with the kind, trustworthy eyes and the boyishly charming smile, and a kiss that was very, very similaronly this one she could truly feel. My own …
hed cal ed her my own and her heart had responded before her mind could think to, which was exactly what was happening at that moment. Her body was responding to Bryans touch before her mind could think to stop it. So she leaned into him, and kissed him gently and completely back.
While her mind wasnt thinking and her body was busy feeling, something bitterly cold brushed the back of Anastasias skirt and lifted her hair, causing real life to intrude upon their kiss. Confused about the strange sensations coming from behind her, Anastasia was just starting to pul away from Bryan when the sound of wings exploded from behind them.
The sound terrified her like nothing before.
Pure fear pulsed through her. Anastasia stared wildly up at Bryan. “Something terrible is coming!” she gasped.
The change that came over him was instant. He went from dreamy-eyed, gentle fledgling to a Warriorsword drawn and body tense.
“Stay here, next to the boulder and behind me.” This time he didnt shove her off her feet. Instead he led her quickly into a defensive position and then turned to face whatever was lurking in the predawn.
Heart pounding, Anastasia crouched behind him, peering out at the grayish gloaming. Fil ed with foreboding, she waited for it to attack.
Nothing moved.
No malevolent creature of nightmare fel down upon them. No marauders swarmed. Nothing bad happened at al . Al around them was only the meadow and the distant scent of the river.
She saw his broad shoulders begin to relax and readied herself for his discounting comment. When he turned to her, Anastasia saw only an alert concern in his expression.
“Do you know what it was?” he asked.
“No.” She ran a shaky hand through her hair. “But I give you my word I wasnt pretending.”
“I know that,” he said. “A Sword Master is not just good with a blade. Hes good with reading bodies and judging reactions. You were fearful.” He reached out, took her hand, and helped her to her feet. Their hands lingered together for a moment. He squeezed hers before he let it go, and then Bryan reached for the chalice that sat ful and ready in the middle of the altar. “Drink this and eat some of the food. Itl help. Plus, you should ground yourself after such a powerful spel .”
As she sipped the fortifying wine and nibbled on the bread and cheese, Bryan disassembled the altar quickly, while he kept watch around them.
“Did you feel it? The cold?” she asked.
“No.”
“Did you hear the wings?”
“No.” He met her gaze. “But I believe you felt it and heard it.”
“Some Indian tribes believe birds carry bad omens. Especial y black birds,” she said.
“I like to believe Nyx wants us to make our own omens,” he said. Then he smiled and pointed at a clump of wildflowers not far from them and the bril iant blue bird with a splash of orange on its chest that fluttered there. “That is definitely not a bad omen.”
Anastasia found her smile again. “No, its a beautiful bird.”
“And its on those enormous yel ow flowers. That has to be good, too.”
“Theyre sunflowers. My favorite flowers actual y,” she said, giving them a fond look that for some reason had Dragon scowling.
“Arent they like weeds?”
She shook her head in obvious disdain for his floral ignorance. “They arent weeds. Theyre associated with love and passion. Theyre strong and bril iant and fruitfultheir seeds feed everything from birds to people.”
“So, youd say theyre a good omen, too.”
“I would,” she said.
“And on that second good omen, lets leave. Were too exposed out here, and it is almost dawn.”
She nodded and, stil sipping the wine, the two of them left the meadow. Bryan carried her basket in one hand and held his sword in the other.
“Thank you for believing me,” she said after theyd walked in companionable silence for a little while.
“You are welcome,” he said.
She glanced at him. “Youre not what I expected.”
He met her gaze and smiled. “Im shorter, right?”
Anastasia smiled back at him. “Yes. Youre definitely shorter.”
After a few moments Bryan asked, “Do you like shorter?”
She just kept smiling.
“I think you dont dislike me,” he said.
She raised a brow at him. “I already told you that.”
“Yes, but the spel proved it.”
“And how did it do that?” she said.
“Its supposed to reveal the truth of me, and al of my,” he paused, thinking, then continued, “and al of my arrogant misdeeds.”
She felt her face get warm and she looked away from him.
“So, if I was real y like thatal arrogant and ful of myself and not caring about othersyoud see the truth of that and youd dislike me.”
She did look at him then. “No, youre wrong. Just because the truth of you is revealed, it doesnt mean the person seeing it wil automatical y dislike youeven if you are arrogant and ful of yourself.”
He laughed. “I think what you just said was nice, even though it didnt sound like it.”
“And I think youre better at spel s and rituals than you let on,” she countered with.
“I think youl have to look up my records to see.”
“Il do that,” she said.
“You might be surprised by what you find,” he said.
She met his gaze. “Yes. I might be.”
The sun was just beginning to lift through the bluffs in the east when they reached the door that led to the professors quarters in the main house.
Bryan handed her the basket.
“Thank you,” she said. “Iwel I suppose I wil see you in class.”
“Not this semester. I took Spel s and Rituals last semester. But you wil see me.”
Anastasia drew a long breath and then said, “Dragon, about the kiss”
He held up a hand to stop her words. “No,” he said quickly. “Do not tel me it was a mistake.”
“Youre a fledgling. Im a professor.”
“Is that it? Is that the only problem you have with me?”
“Thats enough,” she said firmly.
Instead of being dissuaded, she watched a long, slow, triumphant smile tilt his lips. “Good, because that is only a temporary problem.” He took her hand, lifted it, and kissed her palm. Then, stil smiling, he fisted a hand over his heart and with perfect respect bowed to her and said, “Merry meet, merry part, and merry meet again, Professor Anastasia.”
Before she could respond, he smacked her cheek with a quick kiss, turned, and strode away, whistling happily.
Dragon had been rightshe was surprised when she looked up his records. “Hes practical y a perfect student,” she muttered to herself as she thumbed through the files. She was also surprised by how the fledglings treated him, especial y the ones who had come to her for love spel s.
They didnt dislike him.
Granted, none of them hung on him or fawned over him or flirted overtly with him. Wel , none of the fledglings who had come to her for love spel s flirted overtly with him. Others … yes.
Anastasia tried not to notice or care.
She couldnt help noticing, though, that in general the fledglings looked up to him. He was popular with everyone, and that included his professors. And Dragon, in turn, was charming and arrogant, witty and mischievous. And kind.
He was kind.
Anastasia couldnt even try not to care about that.
Whenever their paths crossed during the next several days, which they did frequently, his eyes found hers. His gaze lingered on her. Her gaze lingered on him.
And every morning she found a fresh sunflower in a crystal vase on her desk.
Anastasia was certain the entire House of Night would be commenting on the looks that passed between its newest Sword Master and its youngest professor. But it turned out they were completely distracted by a horrible human named Jesse Biddle.
“Its as if hes goading us,” Diana was saying as the Tower Hil Council Meeting convened in the drawing room of the professors quarters.
Anastasia, stil feeling nervous about attending a Council Meeting, hastily took her seat and tried not to look surprised when Shaw, Leader of the schools Sons of Erebus Warriors, entered the room fol owed by two of his most senior vampyres, as wel as Dragon Lankford.
His eyes met hers for a heartbeat and he nodded briefly, before bowing and saluting the High Priestess.
“Good, everyone is here,” Pandeia said. “The Council Meeting can now formal y begin.” She turned her attention to Shaw. “Explain exactly what took place last night.”
“It was just after midnight. The Dark Daughters had gone to Bloody Island to perform the Fautor per Fortuna Ritual for the Sixth Formers. As they were asking Nyx to bless them and help them to be favored by fate with the Change, Biddle stepped out of the shadows, knocking over the ritual candles and breaking the circle,” Shaw said, shaking his head with disgust. “The human forced them off the island. The High Priestess in Training said his gaze lingered hot and heavy on each of the girls, so much so that they felt tainted by it even after returning to their rooms.”
“She told me she believes him to be quite mad,” Diana said.
Pandeia spoke firmly, “I visited them today and I can tel you that I felt the echoes of fear and something dark and heavy lingering on them.” The High Priestess addressed Anastasia: “Did you smudge them?”
“I did, and almost immediately each of them reported feeling better lighter was the word they used,” Anastasia said.
Dianas gaze speared Shaw. “And why was there no Warrior present to protect our young fledglings?”
“The Dark Daughters decided the blessing would be their gift to the sixth-former male fledglings, so there were no males, fledgling or vampyre, present. You know that quite often the Dark Daughters perform rituals separate from the Dark Sons,” Shaw said, and Anastasia could see that he was trying to control his frustration. “That is why I have included Dragon Lankford at this Council Meeting. I propose that from now on, even if the ritual specifies only females be involved, male fledglings be present, if outside the circle.”
“Is that enough protection?” asked Lavinia, the literature professor. “Should our vampyre Warriors not protect our fledglings? Perhaps they should accompany them whenever they leave campus.”
Diana snorted in disgust. “Yes, if we want them to live as if they are prisoners. Our fledglings, especial y our female fledglings, need to have the freedom to come and go as they please without an armed guard.”
Pandeia sighed. “Perhaps the Dark Daughters should be directed not to hold rituals on Bloody Island until this conflict with the sheriff dies down.”
“The island is ours!” Diana said, slamming her hand down on the table. “It has been named thus because of our ritualswe shouldnt al ow an overbearing human to infringe upon the rights of our fledglings.”
“St. Louis is no longer a barbaric outpost.” Pandeias answer was swift. “Its human population has more than doubled in the past few years. It has changed from a dusty trading post on the river to a thriving city.”
“And Tower Grove was a thing of beauty and serenity when St. Louis was a filthy, uncivilized infant of a settlement,” Diana said.
“Of course it was. Vampyres have always created beauty wherever we live. But with the changing times we cannot afford to alienate those who surround us, and if that means our Dark Daughters perform their rituals here on the vast acreage of Tower Grove and the prairie that we cal home, rather than a sandy island within view of the city docks, then so be it. I hate to say it, but I can foresee a time when we wil have to hide our identity from the human populace. It is a horrible thing to imagine, but a smal price to pay for our young to be left in peace.”
“Humans wil never leave us in peace. They hate us!” Diana snapped.
“Not al of them,” Pandeia countered. “Many of them do envy and fear us, but some of them respect us. You know there is no shortage of humans who wil ingly share their blood with usthere are even several vampyres here at this very Council Meeting who have human consorts, though the current trend is for humans to pretend disinterest in mingling with us.”
“I am afraid, High Priestess, that the trend is more than simple disinterest. With Sheriff Biddles encouragement, humans may think they can act against us,” Shaw said.
“They cannot stand against our Warriors,” Pandeia said, clearly upset at the direction the conversation had taken.
“Then let us send our Warriors into town to teach Biddle that he cannot harass our fledglings!” Diana said.
Anastasia couldnt stay silent any longer. “But, has the High Council not expressly forbidden Warriors to take action against humans other than in defense?”
Diana snorted. “That is a rule created by a Council who live in Venicea place where it is considered elegante to be a human desired by a vampyre. They cannot comprehend what is happening here in uncivilized America.”
“Enough!” Pandeias voice had utterly changed, and the power of her command had the fine hairs rising on Anastasias forearms. “Diana, your words are inappropriate. My House of Night wil not rebel against its High Council. And one misguided human wil not turn an entire city against us.
We should remember that we were al once human.”
Diana bowed her head. “Forgive me. I did not mean disrespect. It is just unthinkable that our fledglings should be afraid to leave campus unless they are disguised or in the company of Warriors.”
“Which is why I agree with Shaws inclusion of our newest Sword Master in this Council Meeting,” Pandeia said. “Dragon, I would like you and the sixth-former males who have shown Warrior aptitude to be sure that our females do not leave campus without at least one of you present in each group.”
“Of course, High Priestess,” Dragon said, fisting his hand over his heart and bowing his head to Pandeia.
“I know it is not a perfect solution to this problem, but it wil ensure our girls are not so easily intimidated by Biddle, who, like most bul ies, wil probably lose interest in harassment when faced with more than young girls armed with candles and herbs. So they wil be protected, and stil have the freedom to come and go without being under a guard of adults.” Pandeia looked at the rest of the Council Members. “I am going to send a missive to Venice. The High Council should be made aware of what has been happening here.” Then she surprised Anastasia by saying,
“Professor Anastasia, I have been impressed by the strength of your spel work. I would ask that you cast a spel for the House of Nightsomething protective.”
Anastasia hesitated and almost didnt speak except to agree placidly, but her mentors firm voice spoke through her conscience:Follow yourinstinct; trust yourself. So she squared her shoulders and said what she felt she must. “High Priestess, I would respectful y like to recommend a different type of a spel .”
“Other than one of protection? Why?”
Anastasia drew a deep breath and fol owed what her instincts were tel ing her. “A protective spel is, at its very heart, focused on violence. After al , if there was no need to protect against an aggressive act, the spel would not need to be cast at al .”
“And is there something wrong with that?” Pandeia asked.
“Usual y, no,” Anastasia explained. “But in this case I wonder whether the very act of the casting wouldnt be like poking or prodding this Biddle person.”
“I think poking and prodding him sounds like an excel ent idea,” Diana said, and several of the Council Members nodded agreement.
“Not if the goal is to have him leave us alone,” Anastasia said. “That might actual y keep us in his mind, when otherwise, with the presence of Dragon and the other Warriors in Training, Biddle would, as our High Priestess said, lose interest in us.”
“You make a good point,” Pandeia said. “What would you suggest instead?”
“A peace spel . And I wouldnt cast it here on our land. Even though recent acts have aroused our anger, we have peaceful intent. It is the human who needs spel work. It would work best if I am closer to wherever Biddle finds sanctuary.”
“The jailhouse near the town green. That is definitely his sanctuary,” Shaw said.
“Then I should cast the peace spel near the jailhouse. As a side benefit it would have a general calming effect on the city, which would help soothe any human nerves Biddle has begun to fray.”
“I have to agree with Anastasia. Cast your spel , Professor. Just be certain you are escorted by a Son of Erebus Warrior.”
“It would be my honor, Professor,” Shaw said, bowing to her.
“I do not mean to insult you, but I cannot cast a peace spel while Im being guarded by a Warrior. It simply goes against the very heart of the spel .”
“But it is not safe for you to go so near to Biddles haven alone,” Pandeia said.
“Is it just the presence of a vampyre Warrior that wil disrupt the spel ?” Diana asked.
“Yes.”
Diana smiled. “Wel , then, we wil send the next best thing to protect youDragon Lankford. He is not yet Changed, so you wil not be protected by a Warrior, though you wil be watched over by a Sword Master.”
“Would that not solve the problem of your protection?” Pandeia said.
Anastasia cleared her throat before she spoke. “Yes, it would.”
The High Priestess turned to the young Sword Master. “What say you, Dragon?”
He smiled, fisted his hand over his heart, and bowed to Anastasia. “I say I am Professor Anastasias to command.”
“Excel ent! Cast the spel tonight, Anastasia. St. Louis needs al the peace it can get as soon as possible,” Pandeia said. “And this Council Meeting is adjourned. Blessed be to you al .”
CHAPTER SEVEN
“You have been frowning since we left the House of Night,” Bryan said, and then clucked to the pair of matched grays that were pul ing the buggy.
“Hey there, easy!” he soothed, glancing sideways at Anastasia. “See, even the horses can feel your frown.”
“I am not frowning. Im concentrating,” she said, frowning. “But youre right about the horses acting skittish.”
He grinned at her. “Im right about more things than horse behavior.”
Anastasia turned her body so she could look directly at him. “Has anyone ever explained to you the difference between confidence and arrogance?”
“If I say no are you going to lecture me?”
She hesitated before speaking and then said, “No, I dont think I wil .”
They rode on in silence and after a short time Dragon sighed. “Okay, lecture me. I like it. Real y.”
Anastasia opened her mouth to tel him that she didnt give a hoot about what he liked or disliked, but first he added, “Truth be told, Id listen to you say anything. Your voice is pretty.” His eyes met hers briefly. “Almost as pretty as you.”
He sounded young and sil y, but when she looked into his eyes she saw a depth of kindness that had her cheeks warming. “Oh, wel , thank you.
And thank you for the sunflowers, too. Im assuming youre the one who has been leaving them for me,” she said, looking quickly away.
“I am, and you are welcome. Did you like them? Real y?”
“Yes. Real y,” she said, stil looking away from him. Flustered at her own reaction, she tried to figure out if it was this Dragon she was responding to or the older version who stil haunted her thoughts.
There was another long, silent stretch between them, and then he blurted, “They dont hate me.”
Anastasia raised her brows. “They?”
“The thirteen girls and two boys.”
“Oh, they. And how do you know that? I didnt tel you who they were.”
He smiled. “Doesnt matter. No ones been hating me. You know what that means?”
“My spel didnt work?” she said, adding a smile so he knew she was kidding.
Dragon laughed. “You know our spel worked just fine. It means Im not so bad.”
“I never said you were.”
“No, you said Im an arrogant misdeeder.”
“I dont think misdeeder is a word,” she said.
“I just made it up,” he said. “Im good with words.”
She rol ed her eyes and muttered, “Boasting. Again.”
He laughed again. “You looked up my records, didnt you?”
“Maybe.”
“You did. And you found out Im almost as talented at schoolwork as I am at sword work.”
“Arrogant…” She breathed a long sigh and looked away from him so he couldnt see her smile.
“How is it arrogant if its the truth?”
“Its arrogant if you boast, whether its the truth or not,” she said.
“Sometimes a vampyre has to do some boasting to get a priestess to notice him,” he said.
Stil not looking at him, Anastasia gave a little snort. “You arent a vampyre.”
“Not yet Im not.”
“And you have lots of females who notice you.”
“I dont want lots of females,” he said, al teasing gone from his voice. “I want you.”
She did look at him then. His brown eyes were honest and unwavering. This night his hair wasnt tied back and it framed his face, making his firm jaw seem more pronounced. He was dressed in a simple, unadorned black shirt and pants. She knew the color was supposed to blend with the darkness around them, but to her it made him look older, stronger, and as mysterious as the limitless night.
“I wish youd say something,” he said.
Her gaze went from his broad chest quickly up to his eyes. “IIm not sure what to say.”
“You could tel me I have a chance with you.”
“Am I just a conquest? Something for you to win, like the title of Sword Master?”
He pul ed the buggy up short and turned to face Anastasia. “Thats a load of bul ocks! Why would you say that?”
“Youre competitive,” she countered. “You have a predators skil s. You chase. You catch. You conquer. Im probably the only female in quite some time who hasnt fal en at your feet to worship you. So you want me because Im a chal enge.”
“I want you because youre beautiful and smart, and beautiful and talented, and beautiful and kindhearted. Or at least I thought you were kindhearted.” He blew out a long, frustrated breath. “Anastasia, the spel we cast was supposed to draw the truth about me. So, Il admit to being arrogant.” He shrugged. “I think with my skil s a bit of arrogance is warranted. But I want you to understand that me wanting you has nothing to do with conquest or predatory skil s.”
His brown eyes captured hers and she saw hurt, not anger, in their depths. Slowly, she reached across the space between them and touched his arm. “Youre right. You dont deserve that from me. Im sorry. Bryan.” She sighed and shook her head, correcting herself, “I mean Dragon. Im a little confused about what I feel for you.”
He covered her hand with his. “You can cal me Bryan. I like it when you say my name.”
“Bryan,” she said softly, and felt him tremble under her hand. “I didnt expect someone like you in my life.”
“Its because Im a Sword Master, and going to be a Warrior, isnt it?”
She nodded silently.
“Why does that bother you?”
“Youre going to think its foolish,” she said.
He took her hand from his arm and laced his fingers with hers. “No, I wont. I give you my promise. Tel me.”
“I was raised a Quaker. Do you know what that means?”
“Not real y. Ive heard of them. Arent they religious fanatics?”
“Some are. My family wasnt as bad as the rest of our community. Theythey loved me,” she said hesitantly, remembering. “Even though the community made them shun me after I was Marked and then Changed. But I stil get letters from my mother. She sends them secretly. She stil loves me. I know Il always love her.”
“That doesnt seem foolish. That seems loyal and faithful and kind,” he said.
She smiled. “Thats not the foolish part. Whats foolish is that there are stil pieces of me that are very much Quaker. I dont think that wil ever change.”
“You mean you dont worship Nyx?”
“No, Nyx is my Goddess. For as long as I can remember Ive felt connected to the earth in a special way, a different way than my family. I think thats how I found my path to the Goddess, though my love of the earth.” Anastasia brushed the hair back from her face and continued, “What Im trying to tel you is that when I was human I was a pacifist. Im still a pacifist. I think I always wil be.”
She saw him blink in surprise, but he didnt release her hand. “I cant change the fact that Im a Sword Master. And I wouldnt if I could.”
“I know! I dont mean”
“Wait, I want to finish. I dont think me being a Sword Master and you being a pacifist is a bad thing.”
“Even when I tel you I think mercy is stronger than your sword?”
“So is love. So is hate. There are lots of things stronger than my sword.”
“I dont like violence, Bryan.”
“You think I do?” He shook his head and answered himself before she could. “I dont! The reason I first picked up a sword was because I hate violence.” His shoulders slumped and he continued with an honesty so raw it was almost painful to hear. “Im short. I used to be very short. Little, actual y. So little I got picked on. I was the butt of jokes. I was the Earls middle son who was wee and soft and blond like a lass.” He swal owed hard. “I didnt like to fight. I didnt want to fight. But that didnt matter. The violence came to me whether I wanted it or not. If Id given up, given in to it
to themI would have been broken and hurt and abused. You see, my father was not wel liked, and his smal est son was thought to be his weakest link.” He paused and Anastasia could see it was hard for him to talk about this part of his pasthard for him to go back there. “Instead of being broken, I grew strong. I learned how to use a sword to stop the violence done against me. Yes, I was good at it. Yes, I got arrogant and have probably used my sword when I didnt have to, especial y before I was Marked. But the truth is that I prefer to stop violence rather than start it.” His sword-roughened palm was cal oused and hard against her smoother one, and she felt that rough touch al through her body. “A Warrior is a protector, not a predator.”
“You live by violence,” she said, but even to her own ears her words sounded weak. “You become something else when you fight. Youve said it; others have said it. Youre even named after it.”
“I am a dragon only when I have to be and I wil always protect my own,” he said. “Try to believe that. Try to believe in me. Give us a chance, Anastasia.”
Her stomach butterflied as she recognized his words. The older version of him, that vampyre Warrior shed known she could love, had said the very same thing to herand he had cal ed her “my own.”
“I wil give us a chance,” she said slowly, “if you promise to remember that mercy is stronger than your sword.”
“I promise,” he said.
And then Anastasia surprised herself by leaning forward and kissing him on his lips. When she and Bryan parted they looked into each others eyes for a very long time, until he said, “After you cast the spel tonight, would you walk with me by the river, back to the meadow?”
“If youl protect me,” she said softly.
“Il always protect my own,” he repeated. Smiling, he tucked her arm through his and then clucked for the horses to get up and go.
Her arm was stil tucked into his as they walked along the cobblestone-lined levee. Anastasia would usual y have gazed at the steamboats, which were lined up, one after another, stretching al the way up and down this part of the river. As with some of the luxuries found at the House of Night, she wondered if shed ever get used to the majesty of the steam-engine boats. They were such a drastic contrast to the city, which was dark and quiet at this late hour. The steamboats truly were floating palaces, stil humming with activity, their gay chandeliers glowing, sounds of dancing girls and gamblers drifting over the water like magickal music. Usual y her attention would have been occupied with peeking inside the mul ioned windows.
But tonight Anastasia barely gave them a glance. Tonight she was completely distracted, and it wasnt rehearsing the upcoming spel that was the problem. The peace spel was actual y one of the simplest to cast. There were only two ingredients, lavender for calming, which would be muddled into a cup for burning by Anastasias favorite stone, an ajoite, the stone that had a turquoise phantom within its crystal depths and was always a conduit to peace and pure, loving energy. The spel was elementary: she muddled the lavender with the ajoite and then burned it over an earth candle as she spoke the ageless words of peace. It was easy, fast, and effective.
Then why did she feel so uneasy?
In the distance, over the sounds of revelry from the steamboats, she heard the distinct croaking cal of a raven. Anastasia shivered.
“Are you cold?” Bryan pul ed her closer to him. “Are you certain you dont want me to carry your spel work basket? I have before,” he said, smiling at her.
“Im fine. And I have to carry the spel work basket until after I cast the spel . I need to infuse it with my energy.” She smiled at him. “You can carry it back to the buggy.”
“Gladly,” he said.
They walked on, and Anastasia suddenly stopped, pul ing him to a halt beside her. “No, thats not entirely true. Im not fine, and since youre my protector, I should be honest with you. Something is wrong. I feel uneasyafraid.”
He covered her hand with his. “You need not be afraid. I promise you that I am more than a match for any bul ying human sheriff.” Bryan looked into her eyes. “Bul ies havent threatened me for a very long time.”
“Is that confidence or arrogance speaking?”
“Both.” He smiled. “Come, lets finish this so we can move on to better things tonight.” He pointed to a smal park-like area just ahead of them and to their left. “The jailhouse is the square stone building on the other side of the town green.”
“Good, yes, lets do get this done.” Anastasia hurried forward with Bryan, ignoring the dark feeling that had been shadowing her since the Council Meeting. Its nerves, thats all, she told herself. My House of Night is counting on me, and Im being wooed by a charming fledgling. I just need tofocus, ground myself, and do what I know I must.
“What is it you need me to do?” Bryan asked as they walked through the little park and approached the dour stone building.
“Actual y, the less you do the better.” He looked at her quizzical y and she explained. “Bryan, I know youre here as my protector, but that doesnt change the fact that youre a swordsman. You represent the opposite of a peace spel .”
“But I,” he began, but she stopped him. “Oh, I know your intention is good, peaceful even, but that doesnt change your essence, your aura. Its that of a Warrior.”
He grinned. She frowned.
“I didnt mean that as a compliment,” she said, ignoring his grin. Then she studied the stone building as she reasoned through the steps of the spel aloud. “Im going to place the candles and cast the circle around the jailhouse itself. The front faces the river, which means it faces east. Thats good. I would usual y burn the lavender over the earth candle because I feel most closely al ied to earth, but I want this spel to be carried throughout the city, so Id already decided to use the air candle this time as a catalyst for the spel . I like that the entrance faces air in the eastits a good omen,” she said brightly, trying to ignore the nagging feeling of unease that simply would not leave her be.
“That sounds goodlogical,” he said, nodding. “So, Il walk with you, but stay outside the circle?”
“No,” she said, already prodding around in her basket, being sure the smal , brightly colored tea light candles shed brought were in order. “Just stay here in the park.”
“But I wont be able to see you when youre on the rear and far sides of the building.”
“No, but youl be able to hear me,” she said absently, already beginning to ground herself and focus on the spel at hand.
“Anastasia, I dont like that youre going to be out of my sight.”
She glanced at him. “Bryan, this is a peace spel . From the moment I begin crushing the lavender, peace and calm wil soothe from me. I know youre here to look out for trouble, and Im glad you are, but the truth is, it is very rare, almost unheard of, for a priestess to be attacked during the casting of a spel such as this.” Anastasia knew the words she was saying were true, but they felt wrong, as if some outside presence was weighing them and finding them lacking. She shook her head, more at herself than at Bryan. “No, you cannot fol ow me during the spel .”
“Al right. I understand. I dont like it, but Il stay here.” He pointed to a shadowy area at the edge of the park, wel outside the meager gaslight il umination of the front of the jailhouse. “You know there is very little light around the building.”
She raised her brows at him, “Bryan, Im a vampyre. I only need very little light, and its a good thing its so dark here. Itl keep my spel work from human eyes, remember?”
“I didnt meanIm just saying that,” he started twice, and then sighed, walked over to the area hed pointed to, and said firmly, “Il be here.
Waiting for you.”
“Good,” she said. “This shouldnt take long, but I do tend to get caught up in my spel work.” Anastasia walked past him purposeful y, giving his arm an absent pat.
“I know,” he muttered, and then cal ed to her, “You wouldnt even notice a rampaging bear.”
“It wasnt rampaging,” she cal ed back, laughing.
Hed lightened her mood a little, so that she whispered Nyxs name with a smile on her lips and, feeling more confident and serene, Anastasia placed the first candleyel ow, in the east for airand cal ed the element to her circle. Concentrating completely on the spel to come, she reached into the velvet bag that held the binding salt, and as she moved clockwise around the jailhouse, inviting the elements to create a circle, she sprinkled the salt in an unbroken line over the wel -trod ground, whispering:
“Salt I use this spell to bind,
to seal intent, peace on my mind.”
Foreboding pushed aside, Anastasia moved around the jailhouse, casting her circle and thinking calm, serene, happy thoughts. And, though she had decided to set the spel with the air candle, as she worked she automatical y visualized reaching down deep into the soil below her and pul ing up rich earth magick to help ground the spel and reinforce her intent.
As it had been doing since shed attempted her first fledgling spel , the element responded to Anastasia, and strong, steady earth magick awakened beneath the jailhouse and began to flow.
The creature of Darkness and spirit that crouched in the basement felt the earth surge in answer to the gentle request of the young priestess, and it knew the time had come to do its masters wil . It began a whisper of quite a different sort.
The human, who had taken to pacing back and forth, back and forth before the silver cage long into the night, paused and listened.
“For the cold fire to survive
the vampyre Anastasia must not be alive.”
“Yes! Yes, I know.” Biddle snarled the words at the creature. Compulsively, his head twitched and he kept plucking at his shirt, as if to rid himself of imagined insects that crawled over his skin. “But I cant get to her in the middle of that vampyre nest.”
“Tonight she is near.
Kill her above, then bring her here.”
“You mean shes outside? Alone?” Biddle didnt seem to notice that the creatures voice had changed, gone from a halting serpentine whisper that was barely human to a deep melodic chant that was far too seductive to be human.
“Her protector is Dragon Lankford,
but cold fire can conquer his sword.”
From inside the cage the shadowy creature opened its maw wide and, with a terrible retching sound, sticky threads of blackness spewed forth from it, slithering to Biddle, who came forward eagerly to meet them. As if greeting a lover, he moaned in pleasure as Darkness wrapped around his legs and seeped beneath his skin, fil ing him with a power that was as addictive as it was destructive.
Swol en with borrowed might, Biddle pul ed out the long knife hed taken to carrying since hed caught the creaturesince hed been feeding it blood.
“After the vampyres blood feeds me,
more power for you there will be.”
“Yes! With more power I can get rid of those goddamned vampyres forever! Il pick em off one by one if I got to. And Il start tonight with that arrogant little bastard.” Biddle began up the narrow stairwel . Behind him the creature was stil speaking:
“Do not get distracted by the boy!
With Anastasia gone he is but fates toy.”
Biddle plucked at his shirt, laughed to himself, and ignored the creatures words.
“Deep peace of the gentle breeze to you…”
Anastasias spel drifted through the night to Dragon. He could see her silhouette in front of the jailhouse, just outside the edge of the flickering gaslights that framed the stone doorway. She spoke in the same singsong cadence shed used for her drawing spel .
“Deep peace of the warmest fire to you…”
Dragon thought her voice was probably the loveliest sound hed ever heard. It soothed him and made everything feel right in his world.
“Deep peace of the crystal seas to you…”
He had been worrying about the fact that Anastasia didnt like it that he was going to be a Warrior, but as she cast her spel , speaking the words and feeding the ajoite-crushed lavender to the fire, Bryan realized he didnt have anything to be troubled about.
“Deep peace of the timeless earth to you…”
It would be easy to convince Anastasia he wasnt real y violent. He wasnt like he used to be. He was older and wiser. He only used his sword when he had toor mostly only used it then. She would see.
“Deep peace of the shining moon to you…”
She would understand. Dragon let out a low, slow sigh and leaned more comfortably against the big oak. He was looking up at the sky and thinking that hed been real y smart to leave those sunflowers for Anastasia every day when it happened. One moment he was standing there, peaceful, fil ed with true contentment, and the next Biddle was in front of him.
Dragon stared at the man, frozen by surprise. In just the few days since Dragon had last seen him, Biddle has gone through a terrible transformation. His face was gaunt. His cheeks, hol ow. The skin under his eyes was puffy and dark. He twitched spasmodical y. This was what had broken up the Dark Daughters Ritual and run them off their island? Dragon thought he could snap the skinny human with one hand. He was obviously nothing but the pathetic shel of a man.
Dragon tried to keep the disgust from his voice when he said, “Sheriff Biddle, is there something I can do for you?”
Biddle smiled. “Yep. You can die.”
For the first time in his life, Bryan Dragon Lankford looked into the face of true evil.
Instinct had Dragon reaching down to unsheathe his sword, but he was too late. Biddle struck with a speed and strength that was inhuman. He grabbed Dragon by the throat and rammed him against the hard bark of the oak tree, forcing the air to whoosh from his body. With his other hand the sheriff knocked the sword from Dragons failing grip.
Biddle sneered into Dragons face, saying, “You blustering little braggart!”
“No!” Dragon choked, trying to struggle for air. The eerie familiarity of the sheriffs words and actions shocked him to his core, and suddenly he was back in that stable four years before, losing his home and his family and his birthright al over again.
“And you know what,” Biddle said, pressing his mouth close to Bryans ear. “I aint gonna kil her up here and take her down there. Im gonna do what I want. Il take her down there and kil her, but first Im gonna to have me some fun with that pretty little vampyre cunny.”
Dragons throat was on fire, and as everything went dark for him he heard Anastasia, much too close, scream his name.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Anastasia knew something was wrong. She could feel it like the change that happens in the air before a thunderstorm breaks. She was cal ing on the deep peace of each of the five elements when the wrongness slicked through the night, shattering her concentration and breaking the casting of the spel .
Automatical y, her gaze turned to Bryan, to see if he knew what it wasknew what they should do. Horrified, she looked in time to see the human move so quickly that her brain tried to deny her eyes. He picked up Bryan Lankford, Dragon Lankford, Sword Master of Vampyres, by his throat and held him against a tree, and then began choking the life from him.
She didnt hesitate. Anastasia ran straight at the man who was kil ing Bryan. Screaming his name, she hurled herself into the man, trying to get him to let Bryan loose.
He did let Bryan loose so that he could knock her to the ground. Head reeling, fighting to clear the specks of light from her eyes, Anastasia crawled over to Bryan, reaching for his hand.
“Bryan! Oh, goddess, no!” He was so stil , and his throat looked wrong, like it had col apsed. He wasnt breathing. She could see he wasnt breathing at al .
“Leave him be,” the human growled. He grabbed for her, but Anastasia scrambled around the tree, avoiding his praying mantis reach.
“Want to play you a little hide-and-seek, do ya?” The human chuckled. “Wel , there aint nothin wrong with a little foreplay. Biddle is comin to get ya…” And he started to stalk her around the tree.
Anastasia looked into the mans eyes and saw that the fledgling High Priestess in Training had been right. Biddle was utterly mad.
She knew she only had seconds, so instead of trying to avoid the creature cal ed Biddle, she crouched, put one hand on the thick bark of the tree.
The other she placed gently on Bryans throat. Anastasia closed her eyes and thought of the earth below the treethe rich, timeless, living strength that she believed with al her soul to be there. She envisioned it as a green fountain shooting up through the ground, to the trees roots, into the tree itself, and from there flowing into her, through her, and into Bryan.
“Come to me strong, wonderful earth;
a healing intent is the magic I birth!”
Instantly, heat surged from the tree trunk, into her hand, though her body, and into Bryans neck.
“Time for foreplay to be over. Lets us get to the good stuff. Come on. I never had me no vampyre,” and so saying, Jesse Biddle reached down, took her ankle in a grip that was like a blacksmiths metal press. As if she weighed no more than a childs dol , he dragged her from Bryan and toward the dark rear entrance of the jailhouse. Anastasia watched to see if Bryan made any movement at al even the smal est hint of breath lifting his chest again. She saw nothing but his crumpled, stil form before Biddle tossed her inside the building and slammed the door shut behind them.
“Sssshe is not dead!”
Anastasia stared at the thing in the cage. It wasnt bird. It wasnt human. It didnt even appear real. Except for the glow of its scarlet eyes it seemed unsubstantial, ghostlysomething made of nightmares and shadows.
“Not yet she aint,” Biddle said. “Im gonna have me some fun before I drain her.”
“Using her wassss not part of the plan,” the creature hissed.
“There aint no plan! Theres just me feeding you her blood sos youl give me more of what I want. What happens before to her dont matter.”
Anastasia looked from the creature in the cage to the sheriff. “What is that thing?”
“Dont rightly know,” Biddle said as his hand slid up from her ankle to her calf. “Just ignore itit aint real anyway.”
From where hed thrown her on the dirt floor Anastasia kicked out, trying to break away from him, but his rail-thin body was deceiving. The strength in his bony hands was incredible, and with a single pul on her leg he jerked her back to him.
“No! Leave me alone! Dont touch me!” She struggled against him.
“Aw, come on. Everybody knows about you vampyre women. Yal have lots a men. So, dont act like youre some kinda virgin.”
Cold fear fil ed Anastasia, freezing her. She stared at the human who loomed like an animated skeleton above her.
He smiled. “Thats right. Just be stil and itl go easier fer you.”
Keeping one hand clamped around her ankle, Biddle began unbuckling the belt to his pants with the other.
It was then Anastasia knew the truththis human was going to rape and kil her.
Oh, Nyx! Please help me! I dont want to die like this, she prayed frantical y.
Then, through the shock and chil in her blood, she felt the warmth of the ajoite crystal that shed shoved in her pocket as her spel had been broken, and beside it was the heaviness of a velvet bag fil ed with salt crystals.
As Biddle reached into his pants, Anastasia reached into the pocket of her skirt. She scooped a handful of salt out of the velvet bag and threw it into the humans face.
Biddle cried out and jerked back, blinking hard and wiping his tearing eyes. “You bitch!” he yel ed.
Hed given her al the time she needed. Anastasia scrambled backward as she lifted the bag of salt and the fist-sized ajoite, a crystal infused with phantom magick from deep within the earth. Since ancient times, priestesses had been using it to bring peace through clarity of spirit, and now Anastasia, a priestess dedicated to peace and the earth, reached deep within her spirit and connected with the element on which she crouched.
With a single motion she whipped the open bag of salt around her so that it surrounded her with a crystal circle, saying:
“Binding salt, of you I ask,
link me to earth as your task.”
Then, holding the ajoite like a dagger, she plunged it into the dirt, crying:
“Earth below, filled with might,
grant me protection this dark night!”
She felt the surge of power come from below, as if a dam had broken free. Like a thunderstorm on the prairie, green light sizzled al around her.
Pressing her palms flat against the element that had just gifted her with an affinity, Anastasia was weeping tears of happiness and thanksgiving when Biddle tried to cross the circle of salt. He recoiled with a cry of pain just as the creature in the cage shrieked, “No! The green light! It burnsssme!”
“Shut up, you!” Biddle kicked the creatures cage and the thing of spirit quieted to a keening whimper. Then he began to circle the glowing shield.
“What is this? What have you done, you damned witch?”
“Ive cal ed my element to protect me. You cant hurt me now.” She lifted her chin and met his gaze. “Im not a witch. I am a vampyre priestess with an earth affinity, and you cant hurt me now!” she repeated.
“It wont last! It wont last!” Biddle said, nervously plucking at his shirt. “When that light dies, so do you.”
Anastasia shook her head. “You dont understand. The earth is protecting me. Its not going to die or fade or fail. And Im going to sit right here and wait for my High Priestess to find me. I promise you, she wil . The House of Night knows Im here. Theyl find me and Bryan.” Her voice started to break, but she pul ed more power from the earth below her and continued, “And then youl answer for what youve done tonight.” Her gaze went from him to the pathetical y whimpering thing in the cage. “And youl have to answer for whatever youve done to that poor creature, too.”
“Dont nobody care about vampyres or ghost things,” he said.
“Thats not true,” Anastasia said, and as she spoke she felt the rightness of her words. “There are good people in St. Louis. They trade with us.
They even become our consorts. They wont like what youve done, what youve turned into, or what youve trapped down here.”
He paused and she saw a flash of something that might have been a spark of sanity in his eyes. “You know Im right,” she said. “Just leave here.
Go, before anyone else is hurt.”
Anastasia saw understanding or even regret in his eyes, and then there was the awful wet, violent sound of a sword being plunged through a body. Biddles eyes widened as he stared down at the blade that had suddenly gone through his back and sprouted out of the middle of his chest.
With surprising gracefulness, the sheriff dropped to his knees and then lurched sideways in a growing puddle of blood as Bryan pul ed his sword free of him.
The fledgling stood over Biddle, breathing hard, his throat no longer crushed but stil cruel y bruised and battered. His lips were pul ed back to expose his teeth in a feral snarl, and Anastasia saw that he was completely the dragon then. The sweet fledgling was gone, as was the kindhearted, handsome Warrior. As she watched him breathe in the heady scent of blood that lifted around them, she knew when he crouched beside Biddle that he was going to slash the humans throat and drain him as he died.
The sense of foreboding that had been shadowing Anastasia al that night flooded her, and she knew then that her intuition hadnt simply been warning her about Biddles plans. There was more, much more to it than that. Reaching deep to pul more earth magic to her, the priestess whispered, “With earths might cut like a swordreveal the truth of Bryan Dragon Lankford.”
With a green flash of light an image appeared before Anastasia. It was Bryan, a ful y Changed vampyre. He was on a battlefield, and again, he was completely the dragon. She gasped as she saw who he was slaying: brother vampyres.
What you see
is what will be
if his strength is not tempered with mercy.
The words were in her mind, but they werent her own and though shed never heard the voice before, Anastasia knew the Goddess, Nyx, was speaking to her.
Anastasia also knew what she had to do.
Bryan had drained Biddle dry of blood and, swol en with power and victory and violence, he was descending upon the creature of spirit in the cage with his sword raised.
“Bryan, stop!” Anastasia cried as she stood and stepped out of the protective circle to stand between him and the thing in the cage.
“Step aside, Anastasia. I dont know what it is, but it was al ied with Biddle. It must die.”
She held her ground and said, “Bryan, its in a cage. Biddle was keeping it prisoner.”
“I dont care!” Bryan practical y snarled at her, his breath smel ing of blood and hate. “It needs to be kil ed!”
Anastasia repressed the shudder of fear she felt at the sight of the base, violent being he had become. It is him. It is still Bryan, she reminded herself. Moving slowly, she reached out to cover his bloody sword hand with her own. “You dont care about that creature, but do you care about me?” she asked softly.
He hesitated. Through his hand she felt the tension in him release just a little. “Yes,” he said. “I care about you.”
“Then listen to me. There has been enough kil ing tonight. Im asking you to let mercy win. Be stronger than your sword. Become the Warrior I know is within you.”
Their eyes met, held, and when he final y sighed and lowered his sword Anastasia saw her future, her Bryan, within them.
“Yes,” he said, touching her cheek gently. “I choose to become the Warrior you believe is within me.”
Anastasia was stepping into his open arms when his face twisted in pain and, with a terrible cry, Bryan fel to the ground at her feet.
Frantical y, she dropped to her knees beside him. “Bryan! What has”
And then she broke off as he raised his tear-streaked face to her.
“Oh!” She breathed a long, awestruck breath. “They are so beautiful.” With a trembling hand, she reached out and traced the new tattoos of the ful y Changed vampyre beside her.
“What are they? What do they look like?” he asked.
“Dragons,” she said. “They look exactly like dragons.”
“Dragons!” he said, laughing. And then almost immediately he sobered and took both of her hands in his. He cleared his throat and on his knees beside her said, “Anastasia, I want to be your Warrior. My lady, wil you accept my pledge of my heart, body, and soul as your protector?”
“Only if you add one more pledge to that. Bryan Dragon Lankford, if you are pledged in service to me, you must give me your oath that from this moment on you wil temper your strength with mercy.”
With no hesitation he responded, “I do so pledge my oath to you.” Bryan fisted one hand over his heart and bowed his head to his priestess.
He helped her to her feet and Anastasias gaze went from him to the indistinct creature of spirit and darkness that crouched watching them from within silver bars of Biddles cage. “Please, show mercy to it,” she said simply.
“Then let my first act as your Warrior be a merciful one.” He strode over to the cage. “Creature, I know not what you are, but I warn you, if you mean harm to us, I wil protect my own.”
“Freedom…,” the thing said with its strange, whispery voice.
Holding his sword at ready, standing between the ghost thing and his priestess, Bryan reached down and opened the cage. There was a flapping sound, and then the creature faded completely away, hissing, “It is finisssshed…”
“Thank you, Bryan,” Anastasia said.
Her Warrior took her in his arms, saying, “Come to me, my lady, my own,” and Anastasia happily and naпvely stepped into what she truly believed would be their happily ever after.
At the same moment in the bowels of the earth a winged prisoner stirred and through the scarlet eyes of the creature Dragon Lankford had just released, Kalona began to hunt for another piece of the puzzle that would align the fates and bring to fruition his desires for the future.
EPILOGUE
Present-day Oklahoma
“No!” Though tears tracked down his face, Dragon Lankfords voice was like stone as he stared into Jacks funeral pyre. “I can never forget or forgive. That thing I al owed to escapeit was the spirit of a Raven Mocker, the creature who, given a body, murdered you. Had I destroyed it al those years ago, my own, my love, we might have avoided this fate, this future.” He shook his head and repeated, “No, I can never forget.”
Then, with cold, perfectly control ed movements, Dragon fisted his hand around Anastasias locket and pressed it over his heart, bowing his head and saying, “I no longer have a priestess. I no longer am bound to my oath. Without you, Anastasia, I am only the dragon, and a dragon does not temper strength with mercy.” He opened his fist and held the locket up before him, kissed it, and then threw it into the burning pyre.
Green flames blazed from the pyre and reality divided and opened, curtain-like, to reveal a ghostly vision of Anastasia. She was sobbing and her voice, echoing eerily, came to him.
“You have cut my heart with your sword,
Bryan Dragon Lankford.”
He fel to his knees in despair, reaching toward the flames as if he could pul her spirit to him, and cried:
“Your death has broken me;
the dragon is all I have left to be.”
The apparition was fading, but her voice drifted over the crackle of the fire:
“If you are not my mate, kind and true,
how will I ever again find you?”
As his hungry eyes stared at her, Anastasia, stil weeping, turned from the rent in reality and stepped into the arms of Nyx. The Goddess pressed a palm to her forehead and light cascaded into the priestesss soul.
“Nyx!” Dragon cried. “Let her remain with me!”
The Goddesss gaze was infinitely sad.
“You must be brave
to find the peace that you crave.”
The curtain to the Otherworld shivered and closed, cutting off Dragons vision of his mate and the Goddess.
“Brave!” he shouted. “That is your only answer for me before you steal away my mate? How can you be so cruel? I deny you, Nyx! I found Anastasia once on my own. Il do so again, but only after I have exacted revenge for her untimely death. Thus I do swear on my swordmy oath asDragon Lankford! ”
Dragon stalked away into the darkness, and the sickly white flanks of an enormous bul caught the reflection of the moon as the beast, pleased, turned away to pursue other pleasures.
In the Otherworld, Nyx gazed down at Anastasias fal en Warrior and wept.
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