Caught By the Dragon: Maiden to the Dragon, Book 1, - [ebook reader with internet browser txt] 📗
- Author: -
- Performer: -
Book online «Caught By the Dragon: Maiden to the Dragon, Book 1, - [ebook reader with internet browser txt] 📗». Author -
Heather flew around the last landing on the stairs and swooped down upon me. She flung her arms around me and took the brunt of the blow as I crashed into the wall near the door.
“You’re safe! Oh my god, you’re safe!” she cried.
I pried her off me and smiled into her tear-soaked face. “Yeah, but remind me never to look for a man again.”
She sniffled. Her lower lip quivered. “It’s because of me, isn’t it? I told you to get a guy and when you tried on your own a guy got you, didn’t he?”
I snorted. “Let’s just say I was dragged into the wrong crowd, but I’ll tell you everything in your apartment.”
She grabbed my hand and pulled me toward the stairs. “Yeah. We’ll make it a girl’s night out.”
Heather dragged me up to her apartment and plopped me in one of the chairs at her dining table. The floor apartments were fully furnished with antique furniture and my friend’s own strange taste for lava lamps. The place was alive with the floating blobs of colorful goop.
I leaned back and sighed. The old smell of the industrial, human world was wonderful to behold.
Heather sat opposite me. She looked over my clean but disheveled clothes. “You don’t look like you’ve been kidnapped for a few days.”
A small smile slipped onto my lips. “I’m not sure you’re going to believe what I’m going to tell you.”
“Try me.”
So I tried her. When I was done with my tale Heather lay her arms on the table and leaned toward me. She studied me with a hard eye. “Are you trying to pull my tail?”
I shook my head. “I’ve had enough of tails, thanks. Besides, everything I told you is true.”
“If it’s true show me the mark. The one on the shoulder,” she challenged me.
I grabbed my shirt and tugged it down my arm. There, in all its green glory, was the mark of Xander’s house.
And it suddenly hurt like hell.
I cried out and grabbed my shoulder. The pain was like a hot poker against my skin. A faint green glow was visible between my fingers. I clenched my teeth and doubled over.
Heather jumped to her feet and raced to my side. “What is it? What’s wrong?”
“Burning,” I ground out.
“L-lemme get an ice pack!” she suggested.
She raced to the kitchen. I shut my eyes and tried to block out some of the pain. A startling image of Xander in a bed came to my mind’s eye. He was covered in sweat. A crowd stood around him with Darda and Cayden among them. Their faces looked grave. I gasped and my eyes flew open. The vision vanished.
Heather returned with a bunch of ice stuffed into a plastic sandwich bag. She yanked my hand away and slapped it on my burning skin. I yelped at the opposing sensations as they clashed on my flesh.
My friend cringed. “Sorry!”
I clutched the bag to myself and shook my head. “Just shut up for a sec.”
For once Heather listened to me. She stood there in silence as the pain ebbed and flowed, driving me to clench and unclench my teeth. After a long five minutes the pain faded. My body relaxed. I let my shoulders slump as I removed the thawed ice pack from my arm.
Heather took it in her hands and bit her lip as she studied me. Her body shivered. I sighed and nodded. “You can speak again.”
Out spilled all the words she’d kept inside her those long minutes. “Areyouokay? Whatthehellwasthat? Istheresomethingwrongwiththedragon? Canyousensehisfeelings? Howbaddidithurt?”
I held up one hand and massaged my temple with the other. “I’m all right, and yeah, it hurt like hell, but I don’t know why.”
She furrowed her brow and rubbed her chin between her pointer finger and thumb. “Maybe it has something to do with your dragon husband.”
I whipped my head up and frowned at her. “He’s not my husband.”
She dropped her hand and shrugged. “It kind of sounds like you were married to him, and you two did-well, everything. Even the honeymoon night.”
“He kidnapped me and seduced me. That’s it,” I insisted. I sighed and pinched the bridge of my nose. “I could really go for a drink. . .”
Heather grinned. “Hard or knock-you-off-your-feet?”
My eyes flickered up to her. “Got any wipe-the-hard-drive-clean?”
She nodded. “Yep, but I warn you it tastes like socks and cough syrup.”
“Then I’ll take it.”
She walked over to the connected kitchen and wrangled about for some glasses and a bottle of what appeared to be tar. “I still think that burning’s got something to do with-well, you-know-who.”
I slumped in my chair. “Maybe, but I-well, it doesn’t concern me.”
Heather paused and glanced over her shoulder. A sly smile slipped onto her lips. “You sure?”
I frowned. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
She looked back at the glasses and shrugged. “Oh, I was just thinking you might-you know, kind of like him.”
I rolled my eyes. “Are you seriously trying to set me up with a dragon?”
“He’s probably got great teeth,” she pointed out.
I snorted. “Yeah, he flosses the whole lamb out of them every day.”
She whipped her head over her shoulder to look at me. “Really?”
“I was joking.” Another sharp pain hit me in the shoulder. The agony only lasted a few seconds and felt more distant than before, like the connection was weaker. I lay my hand over my mark and recalled the last memory I had of that world. That red dragon was aiming those silver talons at Xander.
“Do you know if silver hurts dragons?” I asked my friend.
Heather raised her eyes and furrowed her brow. “I never heard that it could, but I never heard of dragons turning into cute guys, either.” She glanced over her shoulder at me. “Why?”
I stared at the floor and shook my head. “It’s nothing.”
Heather walked over to the column that made up one end of the bar that separated the kitchen from the dining area. She leaned her shoulder on the column and crossed her arms over her chest. “What is it?”
I raised my eyes and glared at her. “I said it was nothing.”
She held up her hands and retreated into the kitchen. “All right, all right. Sheesh.”
I rubbed my aching shoulder and bit my lower lip. That last memory wouldn’t leave me. A knot gathered in my stomach.
“What the hell happened?” I whispered.
“Why should you care?” Heather called from the kitchen. She picked up our glasses and carried them to the table. “I mean, it’s not like you love the guy, right?”
I blushed and averted her eyes as she plopped one of the mugs down in front of me.. “I didn’t say anything.”
She sat down in the chair beside me and snorted. “Yeah, and I’m a nun who’s taken a vow of silence. Now come on, what’s really bothering you?”
“I said it’s nothing.”
She leaned close to me and studied my face. “Are you blushing?”
I cringed and turned my face away. “I’m not blushing.”
A gleeful smile spread across her lips. “You do like him, don’t you? You’ve fallen for your knight in green scales!”
I whipped my head back and glared at her. “How could I even like him? He had me kidnapped so he could keep up some kind of-” Heather let out a squeal as she plopped herself in the chair beside me.
“You wouldn’t be complaining about him if you didn’t like him so much!” she insisted.
I blinked at her. “Are you nuts? I could never-” Another white-hot pain hit me in the shoulder. I winced and clapped my hand over the tattoo.
Heather sighed and shook her head. “You gotta get past
Comments (0)