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The Dragon's Spell: A Dragon Romance Special by Bonnie Burrows (7)

 

“Are you sure you can’t tell us what’s going on?”

Nina squirmed under her adoptive parent’s gazes. Nat had her hands on her hips, and Desmond was crossing his arms and peering at her with his one good eye.

“No, Mom,” she mumbled. “I promised Eli. You know how dragons are.”

“Rachel said this is dangerous,” Nat pressed. Her fire engine red hair was much shorter than Rachel’s, cut in an asymmetrical bob that favored her oval shaped face. “You know you can always come to us for help, or even to talk.”

“Or even to ask a favor,” Desmond said in his gravelly voice. “No questions asked.”

Nina laughed. “You guys, it’s not like I have a body to bury or anything. I just want to use the space under the center for a while.”

“With two strange men you just met,” Desmond added. “You can’t even tell us what that’s about?”

“I can tell you they’re dragons,” Nina said. “But that’s it. I’m sorry, but it’s dragon business.”

She felt a stab of regret; confiding in them might not help them figure out where the Rose Quartz Heart was, but it would lighten the crushing burden she felt. For a second, she wondered if her parents had told them about the prophecy; a moment later, she realized they couldn’t have, because Nat and Desmond would have told her by now. But they looked so concerned that she was having trouble convincing herself. She was on the verge of blurting out the truth to her mom’s worried face when Desmond finally heaved a sigh and nodded.

“Okay. You can use the space. Just be careful and let us know the moment things get to be too much.” Desmond squeezed her shoulder. “We love you, Neenee. We’d do anything for you. Remember that.”

The guilt swelled inside her until she felt like she was choking on it.

A few minutes later, she led Eli and Pryce down the set of cobblestone steps and into the cavernous space below. The steps opened out to a huge space lined with glittering black walls, bisected by heavy white curtains suspended by magic at odd intervals.

“The walls are enchanted hematite,” Nina said, gesturing to the onyx colored stones lining the room. “It protects our energies, meaning no one can track us here, even if you’re bonded. To the left is a bathroom, and to the right is a kitchen. Those spaces over there—” Nina pointed ahead of her to where several curtains sliced the space into four near rooms, “—are bedrooms. Already furnished. The big space is obviously meant to be a living area, but the couches can be moved easily to make a gathering space, too.”

Rachel was sitting on one of the couches, smiling beatifically at the looks of surprise on the dragon’s faces. “Beautiful, huh? These vaulted ceilings make this place look like a church.”

Eli moved to the nearest curtain. “Are these magical?”

“Yes,” Rachel said, rising and walking over to her sister. “Can’t see through them, can’t move them without magic.”

“Soundproof?” Pryce asked curiously.

Rachel raised an eyebrow. “Uh, yeah. They’re magic, so…”

Pryce shot a wry look at Nina. She blushed, and he smiled that maddeningly slow smile, this time letting her see the wealth of heat behind it. “Good.”

Eli looked at Nina, expression unreadable. She gave him a defiant look and turned away. So now I can’t flirt in front of him?

She tried not to think about how much she really wanted to test out those beds with Pryce.

“So, what’s the game plan?” Eli said loudly. “Nina, you said you had ideas.”

Nina ignored Rachel’s confused look and waited for everyone to walk back to her. “I think we should start with Joey. It may be enough to just ask him if he can show me my prophecy.”

“Didn’t you say he might be a plant?” Rachel asked anxiously.

“It’s unlikely,” Eli said. “Plants aren’t usually from the High Horde, and Joey’s a horde leader. It’s much more likely to be someone in the ceremony class, or someone she hasn’t met yet.”

“Wouldn’t be the first time you were wrong, though,” Pryce said lightly.

Eli frowned, but didn’t say anything.

Nina looked between the two of them nervously. “We’ll be careful, but I think we should have a backup. That’s where Rachel comes in. As a witch, she’s better with tactical magic. I can try to brute force a security system, but she can actually fool it or disarm it.”

Eli looked impressed. “Is that true?”

Rachel laughed. “You don’t know much about witches, do you?”

“Okay,” Nina said as Eli frowned again. “Pryce, you obviously have to stay here.”

“Why obviously?”

“You’re unbonded,” Nina pointed out. “Won’t he know something’s up?”

“Not if he doesn’t see me,” Pryce said smoothly. “I’d like to be there with you. As a backup to your backup. Please.”

Nina smiled. “Okay. You don’t have to beg.”

“Never hurts,” he said, grinning.

Eli rolled his eyes uncharacteristically. “When are we doing this?”

“As soon as possible,” Nina said. She looked at her watch. “It’s likely he’s over at the center now, actually. What do you say?”

There was a long silence as everyone looked at each other.

“Well?” Nina repeated.

Pryce spoke up first. “Are you sure you want to do this?” he asked. “Are you sure you trust Joey? What if he’s a plant and he attacks you? He’s older, so he has an advantage, training-wise. He could do a lot of damage, to all of you.”

“Joey wouldn’t hurt us,” Nina insisted. “He’s always talked about how much violence against other dragons disgusts him, and besides, he helped me so much.” She felt a rush of gratitude thinking about how much she’d grown under his leadership. He was so much like the fatherly dragon archetype that she’d felt close to him immediately. He even seemed worried for her the day before her reading. “I trust Joey. Eli says he’s not likely a spy.  And besides, we have no other leads.”

“We could wait a few days,” Pryce said. “I could get in touch with some of my fellow Outcasts, track down someone who can get into the system for us. Or track down those people who are trying to hide from the world and make them tell us about the original prophecy.”

Nina tried to hide the shudder that ran through her at the idea of putting her faith in a bunch of Outcasts. She knew the Greater Horde had misled them about their true nature, and she knew that Pryce wasn’t bad, but something was still stopping her from seeing them as true dragons. They were still painted in negativity for her, though she was ashamed to admit it. We need real dragons, she thought. Not rejects.

“No,” she said to Pryce. “I trust Joey. He checks out. Let’s start there.”

Rachel and Pryce exchanged a look so quickly Nina couldn’t read it.

“What?” Nina asked, annoyed. “What are you two thinking?”

Rachel shook her head. “Nina, I admire how trusting you are. I could never be so open with my emotions.”

Pryce smiled, but it was bitter, and Nina wondered why.

It didn’t occur to her until after they were all in the car that Rachel hadn’t really answered her question.

***

“Wait.”

Eli stopped outside the building where Nina’s ceremony prep class was held, holding an arm out to stop her from moving further.

Nina looked at him quizzically, watching him fiddle with the topmost button on his crisp white button-down.

“What’s up?”

“Before we go in,” he began, “I need to do something.”

“What?” Nina asked. “Do you need me to point you to the bathroom?”

He was silent at first. His dark blue eyes held hers in an intense gaze, and she felt the air between them shimmer with energy. She couldn’t tell what he was feeling, because he seemed to be trying hard to cloak his essence. For a moment, she thought he was going to run away, but then he grabbed her waist and pulled her against him for a kiss.

Nina melted into his embrace, realizing, for the first time, that she’d missed his touch. She wondered how that could be possible when they’d only made love twice and she’d known him for less than a week; then she pushed the thought away in favor of cradling the back of his head and gently separating her lips to invite his darting tongue into her mouth. His lips felt like they were made to mold to hers, and he was holding her so tightly she knew he’d missed her touch, as well. Impossible, she thought. He just misses being inside you.

Eli pulled away to plant hot kisses on her neck, murmuring in her ear as he laid a trail from her collarbone to her jaw. “I don’t know what I would have done if that explosion had taken you, Nina. I can’t stand the thought of being away from you.”

How’s that for possible?

She didn’t know what to say. Thankfully, he started to kiss her again, and she let herself drift back into the blissful hold of his lips.

Again, she felt her essence stir beneath her skin, and this time she felt his essence straining for release as well. Eli’s hands curved around to her backside and squeezed the cleft of her cheeks, prompting a moan of surprise from Nina as she pressed her body more tightly against his. She could feel his own desire waking, his shaft hardening beneath his dark slacks; without even trying, she pictured them fully nude, writhing together on her bed as they covered each other in kisses. The image was so vivid that she could almost feel him plunging between her legs, his rigid shaft penetrating her swiftly and sending lightning bolts of ecstasy streaking through her supple body. Nina’s moan wasn’t surprised this time—it was lustful, and more than a little frustrated.

Eli broke away, breathing as heavily as Nina was.

“I’m sorry,” he said, his dark green eyes glittering brightly. “Nina, I just—I need you to know, in case something happens... things have gone more wrong here than with any other dragon I’ve been assigned to.” He paused. “But I wouldn’t trade this time with you for anything. Not a single thing.”

Nina felt her heart swell with tenderness. She thought of how secure she felt with him, and the pride that coursed through her when she considered his talent and accomplishments. He was exactly the kind of dragon she’d always pictured herself with, she realized; intelligent, noble, and dedicated to their people.

“Eli... I feel the same way.”

A breathtaking grin lit up his face, and Nina felt herself smiling too. “Really?”

“Really,” she whispered, craning her neck to kiss him again. “Now let’s go before I start tearing your clothes off, huh?”

A lone student was leaving Joey’s room as Eli and Nina approached. Nina caught the door before it closed and slipped in to find Joey sitting at his desk, computer screen reflected in the lenses of his large glasses. The familiar room felt incredibly different, and Joey even looked a little different. Nina assumed it was because she thought she’d never be there with him again. He didn’t look up until she and Eli were abreast of his desk; he yelped as his eyes met Nina’s, then he covered his mouth with one hand, embarrassed.

“Nina,” he said in a hushed voice. “I heard your apartment exploded! Oh my God, is your sister okay?”

Nina smiled at his concern. “Yes, Joey, she’s fine.”

“What’s going on?” he asked as he got to his feet. “Was it a gas explosion? Were you there? Did you get hurt at all? I heard that the apartment next to yours wasn’t damaged, though.”

Nina held up her hands. “It’s all fine! They’re still investigating, I think.”

Joey looked relieved. “Good.” He smiled and turned to Eli, his smile widening. “And I know a High Horde member when I see one! Who might you be?”

“Eli Nelson, Level Gold Reader,” he said, sticking his hand out for Joey to shake. “Pleasure to meet you.”

“Joseph Campbell,” Joey said, beaming. “Horde leader. What can I do for you both?”

Eli took the lead. “I’ve already sent back my Reading equipment, but Nina here insists on one more look at her prophecy.” He smiled affably. “I remembered that Horde leaders have records. I hate to bother you, but—”

“Of course!” Joey broke in. “Trust me, I understand. I was the same way with my prophecy. I wrote it down so that I could read it over and over. My mom went crazy hearing me read that thing aloud.” He bent over his computer and typed something in, bringing up a dark grey box before typing in something else. Finally, the screen was taken up by a photo of Nina and a wall of black text. “Here you go. I’ll just finish gathering my things.”

Eli sat down in Joey’s chair and focused his eyes on the screen. Nina could barely feel the flux in his energy as he tried to worm his way into the computer system. He’d told her he’d done it before, but that the computers at the Council headquarters were different, so it was going to be a little harder with normal computers.

“Well?” Nina asked after a moment, eyeing Joey across the room.

Eli sighed. “I don’t think it’s going to work, Nina, we need another approach.”

“Try again,” she hissed. “Come on. Maybe it needed a push.”

Eli focused, and again Nina felt the gentle ruffle of energy as he lashed out at the system again. He waited for thirty seconds, then exhaled again, a bead of sweat appearing on his forehead.

“No,” he said firmly. “It won’t work. I’m sorry.”

Nina nodded. “That’s why we have a backup.”

Eli smiled as Joey turned around and started heading toward them, satchel slung over his shoulder. “You’re right.”

“All set?” Joey asked amiably.

“Yeah,” Nina said, straightening up. “We’ll walk out with you.”

Nina and Eli followed Joey out of the room. “Where are you headed?”

“Home,” Joey said. “My wife is making her famous meatloaf, and if I don’t get there soon, my in-laws are going to make sure I don’t eat tonight.”

“Then we won’t keep you,” Eli said.

Joey walked toward his little red Ford Fiesta and Nina and Eli curved away toward his Porsche. They got in slowly, watching Joey back out of the parking lot and head down the street before unbuckling their seatbelts and hurrying back toward the classroom.

Rachel, who had been waiting by the back door, was already at Joey’s computer when Nina and Eli slipped back in through the front. Pryce was standing next to her, his arms crossed, looking solemn as he watched her work.

“Are you in?” Nina asked eagerly.

“Not yet,” Rachel muttered, holding her hand over the computer’s tower. “Its security system is really sensitive. I want to circumvent it, not trigger it and disarm it. Even a short alarm would alert the owner that something happened. He might not see it until he gets back, but I don’t want to tip him off at all.” Rachel looked over at Nina briefly. “I still don’t get why we can’t just get one of those gem finders.”

“The Heart could be anywhere,” Eli said as he bent over Rachel’s shoulder. “We wouldn’t know where to start.”

“And you think the original prophecy would tell you?”

“It might,” Nina said shortly. “Like I said, we don’t have any other options.”

She ignored the look Pryce was giving her; she didn’t think telling him she didn’t trust Outcasts would go well.

Rachel’s hand began to vibrate in its position above the tower. “I think we’re getting somewhere! Yeah, I’m almost in. I can feel that we’re near the older files, the ones that have been erased from the main interface.”

“What does that feel like?” Eli asked curiously. “Is it just like sensing energy for you?”

“Not exactly,” Rachel said. “It’s like feeding my energy through a series of mazes that may lead me nowhere. I try not to crash into the walls because I could break them, I try not to cross over my own energy too many times... it’s a little like a game.” She laughed dryly. “It’s not as fun when the stakes are so high, though.”

Eli looked impressed. Pryce moved away from the computer and started to look around the classroom.

“Why isn’t this place enchanted?” he asked with a frown. “It seems like most gathering places are, even temporary ones. It stops non-magical dragons from wandering by and catching a whiff of what’s going on.”

Nina looked up sharply. “What? Of course it’s enchanted.” Then she looked around, sending her energy out into the room until it reached the boundaries. She found no resistance, no answering push of energy telling her that the walls were insulated against her power. “It was definitely enchanted the last time I came in here.”

Pryce narrowed his eyes. “Hey, guys? Maybe we should leave.”

“No!” Nina said. “We’re so close!”

A low pitched buzzing noise started to sound through the computer’s speakers. Rachel’s eyes widened in fear. “Guys, something is wrong. I think I pushed it too far.”

Pryce and Nina rushed over to the screen. A red box was superimposed over the desktop, flashing black block letters as the buzz droned on.

LOCKED FILES, TURN BACK

LOCKED FILES, TURN BACK

LOCKED FILES, TURN BACK

Rachel pulled her hand back, her face as white as a sheet. She looked sick.

“It hit me with some kind of energy,” she whispered, pressing a hand to her stomach. “I don’t feel so hot.”

“What happened?” Nina said, panicked. “Rachel, are you okay? How could the computer hit you with energy?”

“It was programmed that way,” a soft voice said behind them.

Nina spun around to find Joey standing in the doorway again, eyeing them all with a mixture of disbelief and sadness.

“J-Joey!” Nina stammered. “We were just—we were—”

“Breaking into the computer systems to find your original prophecy,” he answered, taking a few steps toward them. “I know. Someone headed me off, and I didn’t buy it, but I knew it was true when you walked in. Why do you think I lifted the enchantment?”

Nina felt her stomach drop. Pryce was right. “So you could sense our energy from outside,” she said dismally.

“Yes. And there’s quite a bit of energy in this room,” he said coolly, looking at Rachel and the three dragons. “A witch, two dragons, and an Outcast.” He laughed, and it was wild and unhinged. “I didn’t believe it when they told me a Reader was going to be helping you, but I definitely wouldn’t have believed that you’d ever join up with an Outcast.” Joey shook his head. “Nina, don’t you know what you’ve gotten yourself into?”

Fear flooded her veins. “Who’s they, Joey?”

Joey’s smile slipped. “Don’t you know?”

Rachel started to moan in pain behind her, but Nina felt too afraid to look away. “No, Joey, they haven’t introduced themselves yet.”

He laughed again. “You always were clever, Nina.” His voice softened and became sickeningly paternal. “You know, you were always my favorite. I knew that you were special, and I was hoping you would be like a protégée to me. But now that you’ve gone down this path…” He trailed off, his voice laden with sadness. “I’m going to have to stop you. All of you.”

Pryce moved in front of Nina. “The fuck you are, traitor.”

Joey’s eyes widened so much they looked like they were about to jump out of his skull. “Me? Are you serious, Outcast? You’re calling me a traitor?”

“Yes,” Pryce snarled. “Your duty is to help and protect your students.”

“My duty is to my superiors,” Joey countered. “And the people I’ve made a deal with.”

Nina tried to move Pryce, but he was far harder to budge than she anticipated. “Who is it, Joey? Tell us. Tell us before you try to kill us.”

Try,” Joey repeated. “You seem very sure of yourself for an unbonded dragon.”

“You seem sure of yourself for a traitorous piece of shit!”

His expression was angry now. “I won’t have you call me a traitor, Nina. You’re the traitor. You’re breaking into my computer for information that isn’t yours.”

“It is mine!” she screamed, trying to dash out from behind Pryce. “It’s my fucking prophecy, you wacko!”

“It was changed for a reason!” Joey shouted back, voice growing hysterical. “You weren’t meant to hear it! You weren’t meant to know about it at all!” He took a step back, then appeared to steel himself, his face wiping itself of emotion so quickly it was like seeing him become a different person. “Listen, I have to do this, Nina. I’m sorry. Besides, knowing who’s after you won’t help you any. You’re about to die. You were going to die anyway.”

“How are you going to kill all of us at once?” Pryce snarled.

Joey was backing away again, and before he reached the door, he flung his hand out and sent power zooming around the room. The enchantments sprang back up, lining the room with its old magical boundary. Then he reached into the pocket of his satchel and pulled out a small silver ball.

“Fairy bomb,” he said grimly. “I’m sure you know how effective these are.”

“No!” Nina screamed. “You guys, attack him, do something—”

“I’ve pulled the pin,” Joey said. “If you hit me, we all go. Just sit there quietly, and it will go off a few seconds after I shut the door. You won’t move fast enough to get out the back door.” He looked at them for a moment. “Not all of you, anyway.”

Nina was shaking with rage and disbelief. “Joey, please! Don’t do this! Let us go, report us to the Council, call the cops, anything but this!”

Joey made eye contact with her as she was trying to move Pryce’s body from in front of her. His eyes were filled with sorrow—real sorrow, it seemed. How can he do this? How can he do this to us?

“I’m sorry,” he said again. “I have orders.”

Then he threw the ball into the room, slipped past the frame, and closed the door behind him.

Nina stared at the ball, feeling like it was rolling to the center of the room in slow motion. Stop, she thought desperately. A storm of energy was whirling around inside her, a cluster of emotions she couldn’t name or direct anywhere useful. Please stop, don’t let it go off, let it be a dud, whatever, just stop this! She didn’t know if she was begging God or appealing to the fates, but Nina couldn’t sit and do nothing in the last moments of her life. Please stop this. Please.

When there was no answer from God or fate, Nina closed her eyes and pressed her face against Pryce’s broad back. His arms reached behind him automatically and wrapped around her waist, holding her to him as tenderly as he could. It was unbelievably comforting. She inhaled, breathing in his scent, and she felt a dizzying mixture of nostalgia and yearning as her lungs were filled with his aroma. Where do I know that scent?

Suddenly, it occurred to her that more than a few seconds had passed. She raised her face and peered around Pryce’s shoulders. The silver bomb was in the center of the floor, sitting there as innocently as a child’s marble.

“Why didn’t it explode?” she asked the silent room.

Pryce let out a deep breath she hadn’t known he was holding. “I don’t know, Nina. It just stopped there, in the middle of its roll.”

She felt Eli take a step forward and stop at her side. “It just stopped?”

“Yes,” Pryce said, his tone clipped. “It froze. As if by magic.”

Eka’s words from the day before flashed into her mind. We will regain lost powers; clairvoyance, immortality.... and manipulation of time and space.

She felt Eli’s eyes turn to her, and Pryce dropped his arms and turned toward her, too.

“Nina,” he said urgently. “Did you do this?”

“Not on purpose,” she whispered. “I just... begged for the bomb not to go off. And it stopped, I guess.” She swallowed. “Eka said... he said we’d be able to control space-time. Is that what this is?”

Eli looked dumbfounded. “I would say it can’t be that, but I thought you weren’t clairvoyant, either.”

“How long is this going to last?” Nina said to the room at large.

“I don’t know,” Pryce said. “But we need to get rid of this, fast. Is there some way we can remove it? Send it somewhere?”

Nina looked at Rachel and hurried to her. Her color was returning, but she still looked sick. “Are you going to be okay? How do you feel?”

Rachel nodded. “Peachy.”

“I need a favor,” Nina said, kneeling next to her sister. “I’ve seen you send objects across distances as long as you know where you’re sending them. Can you send an object to a person?”

Rachel looked confused for a second, then understanding dawned on her face. “Oh, yeah. I can do that.”

They watched her climb to her feet and wobble over to the bomb, holding their breath collectively as she knelt and stretched her palm over the small silver sphere. She concentrated, closing her eyes, and the space around the ball started to waver like a mirage in a desert. The air in the room was thick with her bright energy, and for a second it didn’t look like it was working. Then there was a slight hiss and the bomb disappeared.

Rachel looked at them with a triumphant grin. “Now that’s why you have a witch on the team!”

They all laughed, and Pryce gave her a tight, lingering hug as Eli and Rachel high-fived. As she was in his arms, Nina was very aware that this was the first time since they’d met that he’d touched her for so long; like Eli, his hold was familiar and comforting, but there was also a scent to him that tugged at her heartstrings. She pulled back from him, aware of the press of his body against hers but strangely unselfconscious about it.

“So,” she said. “You saved my life, I save yours. How about that?”

Pryce smiled. “How about that?”

“Guys, let’s go!” Rachel called. “I don’t want to know what’s going to happen if that shithead told his friends about our break in before he arrived.”

Nina pulled away from Pryce’s grasp, slightly disappointed that she had to stop touching him. He looked just as reluctant as she did to break the embrace.

“Do you think the bomb went off?” Rachel asked as they piled back in the car.

Eli watched an ambulance streak past them on the street, closely followed by a police car and a firetruck, all sounding their sirens. In the distance, a plume of smoke rose above the trees, and a man wearing orange was diverting traffic toward an alternate route. A white news van was just beyond, its giant satellite dish pointed toward the sky.

“Yeah,” he said softly. “I think it did.”

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