Free Read Novels Online Home

The Savage Dawn by Melissa Grey (39)

Caius knew the halls of Wyvern’s Keep as intimately as if a map of the fortress had been etched into his bones. He had come to know its labyrinthine corridors as a child, chasing his sister and being chased in return. He had carved his name into the foundation, like so many young nobles before him, hoping to steal for himself a slice of its timeless strength, its eternal solidity.

That knowledge served him well now as he slunk through the keep’s halls, silent as a mouse, danger humming through his veins.

“That was easy,” Echo said, trotting to keep up with Caius’s long strides. The corridor leading from the central gateway was empty, but their run of luck would not be infinite.

“It won’t be, going forward,” Caius said. “If they’d been Firedrakes, they would have sounded an alarm and put up a fight. We were lucky. Astonishingly so.”

“And we won’t be for much longer,” Dorian said. He stopped and tilted his head, listening. “Boots. Three pairs. Heavy armor.”

Firedrakes.

Caius drew his knives and strained to listen. He could hear them now, approaching from one of the service corridors branching off the main hallway. They were walking slowly, in no great hurry, unaware that the most wanted Drakharin in all the land was yards away. They would be in for an unpleasant surprise. “Echo, Ivy, stay out of the fight if you can.”

His words were met with an unladylike snort. “Yeah, okay,” Echo said. “Sure. No problem. I’ll just pull up a chair and watch you slice and dice your way through the keep. Maybe make some popcorn. You don’t happen to have a microwave in this musty castle, do you?”

She was rambling. She did that when she was scared. Caius wasn’t sure she even realized it.

“Defend yourself if you must,” said Caius, “but leave the fighting to us.”

Echo opened her mouth to protest – as he knew she would – but he silenced her with his best stern look. He was only a little surprised it actually worked to quell her indignation.

“I’ve seen you in battle, Echo,” Caius said. “I do not doubt your abilities, but I didn’t bring you here to shed Drakharin blood. This has to be done a certain way.”

It wouldn’t do to have the firebird’s formal introduction to his people involve her cutting them down with a magic they had believed was the stuff of fairy tales.

An unhappy frown stole across her face, but she nodded. “Got it. Consider this bird’s wings temporarily clipped.”

The trio of guards rounded the bend. Red cloaks. Golden armor. Firedrakes indeed. They charged, and Caius was ready.

They were disarmed easily enough. One fell beneath Caius’s knives, the second succumbed to Dorian’s brutal strikes, while the third threw down his sword and clasped his fist to his chest once he had seen Caius’s face.

“She is in the throne room,” the guard said in a quiet, tremulous voice. Fear flickered through his eyes. “Help us.” And though begging was not the way of his people, the guard added, “Please.”

Caius had simply nodded and accepted the man’s surrender. With Dorian, Ivy, and Echo following close behind, Caius traversed the halls he knew so well, the guard’s words an unnecessary guide.

Crumpled bodies – wizened with age and depleted of magic – lay strewn throughout the corridors and slumped over in stairwells. Servants and soldiers. Peasants and courtiers. His sister had not discriminated in her cruelty.

She had taken what she craved and left in her wake the empty husks of the people she should’ve protected.

Dorian whispered a prayer for the dead under his breath. Echo and Ivy fell into a sickened silence. Caius could only hope that when they reached their destination there would be someone left to save.

 

The throne room was awash with blood.

The bodies of the dead lay scattered about like a child’s toys after a violent tantrum, while the living huddled against the walls, as far from the dais as they could get.

A trail of corpses led from the door to the gilded throne upon which Tanith sat, her bare arms crimson with blood, her smile as sharp as a blade. A figure knelt at her feet, its back to them. All Caius could see was a head of black hair and the red cloak of a Firedrake. Tanith raked her nails through the kneeling man’s hair, the way one would absently pet a dog. A dozen Firedrakes stood at the foot of the dais, their faces hidden behind golden helmets.

“Hello, Brother,” she said. It wasn’t Tanith’s voice. Something lurked behind it, something dark and awful. “Fancy seeing you here.” She threw her arms wide. “Do you like what I’ve done with the place? I always thought it needed a splash of color.” She canted her head to the side, her smile ticking farther up. “And you’ve brought friends. How lovely.” She waggled her fingers in a mock wave. “Hello, little dove. Did you miss me so terribly that you simply had to come back?”

To her credit, Ivy didn’t shrink from Tanith’s unnerving gaze. Shadows shifted in Tanith’s eyes, overwhelming the red of her irises. The monster within was chipping away the last vestiges of Caius’s sister; it wouldn’t stop until there was nothing left. Soon, Tanith would be as much of a husk as the broken bodies she’d left around the keep.

Tanith stood, sweeping her scarlet cloak to the side as she descended the dais steps. The hem was darker red than the rest of the cloak, and damp. Blood, probably. The Tanith Caius knew wouldn’t have been caught dead in soiled armor off the battlefield. But now she was unkempt. Her hair was a tangled mess of bloody blond curls, her armor scuffed and stained. “How heroic you must feel, Caius. Coming to the rescue of this lot like some valiant prince straight out of a children’s story.” She stepped over the crumpled form of their former treasurer, Oeric. The medal of office still hung from his neck, resting against the fur lining of his tunic. They’d been a pair once, Tanith and Oeric. Now she moved around his body – Caius couldn’t tell if the man was dead or just close – as if he meant nothing to her. “I had a feeling you might come.”

“Is that so?” Caius tightened his grip on his knives. His magic had been returning slowly, but he was nowhere near fully recovered.

“Indeed.” Tanith toed Oeric’s boot. His foot flopped limply to the ground. “I knew there were holes. Places where information leaked. Spots where it filtered in, like an annoying drip that won’t stop drip, drip, dripping. I tried to find out who our traitor was, but no one wanted to talk.” She gazed at the mess she had made in the hall, at the lives she had ended in a fit of pique. “And I tried so hard to be persuasive. Fortunately, I had help.”

She continued her approach and Caius stood his ground. The crowd behind Caius shifted in expectation. Anticipation clogged the air like a heady scent. When Tanith was about fifteen feet from him, she stopped, her brow furrowing. “It was a mistake to leave you there. To let you be found. Weak. Weak, weak, weak.”

She turned away, raking her hands through her unruly hair. “But I couldn’t do it. Wouldn’t do it. Shouldn’t do it. But it must be done. My last distraction. The final thread. The anchor. Not right. Wrong, all wrong.”

“She’s not talking to us, is she?” Dorian wondered aloud.

Caius shook his head. “Tanith!” he called.

Her head snapped around and she blinked, as if she’d forgotten they were there. Her eyes narrowed.

“Come here, pet,” she said, snapping her fingers. A gold chain dangled from her other hand, a pendant swinging slightly with every movement she made. The kneeling figure, who had remained by the throne when Tanith had risen, stood and turned to face them.

Dorian let loose a string of curses in Drakhar, vicious enough to scald. Helios kept his eyes lowered, but there was no mistaking him. There he stood, in full Firedrake regalia. Those proud shoulders slumped in shame, and he refused to meet Caius’s gaze. In the rush to leave for the keep, Caius hadn’t given much thought to Helios’s absence. There had been other things to consider, far more important than the whereabouts of a single soldier. When had Helios departed? How had no one noticed?

The same way you didn’t, Caius’s mind supplied. You thought he was insignificant.

“Helios?” Ivy’s voice was so small, she doubted it carried far enough for him to hear her, but his head bowed, eyes closed, as if he had. “Tell me it’s not true.”

Helios opened his eyes and raised them to meet Ivy’s. The guilt in his expression was unmistakable. His mouth opened and closed, but no sound emerged, as if he was too much of a coward to offer a response.

That unbelievable bastard. 

“I trusted you,” Ivy spat.

A cruel laugh erupted from Tanith. “That was rather the whole point,” she said, her sharp voice slicing through the heavy pall of betrayal that had settled over Caius. “Do you think I was stupid enough to simply let you waltz out of my fortress with nary a scar to show for it? Did you honestly believe I was that startlingly incompetent?”

Tanith turned to Helios. A black-veined hand stroked his hair as if he were a well-behaved dog that had just performed an impressive trick. “You must have done an even better job than I anticipated. I had made it through only half the courtiers when he showed up, fresh from the little Icelandic hideout you thought I didn’t know about, and told me everything.” She held up the small pendant Dorian had sent Ivy into the keep with all those weeks before, one side mirrored and smeared with blood. “He even used this trinket that the little dove smuggled in to send you that message.” She cupped Helios’s cheek with one hand, her nails digging into his flesh. “Perhaps I was wrong to doubt you.”

“No,” said Helios, shaking his head. He shuddered at her touch, and even from a distance, Caius could see the resolve harden his yellow eyes. “You weren’t.”

Caius saw only the briefest flash of steel in the dim light before a knife plunged into the vulnerable sliver of exposed throat above the collar of Tanith’s armor. Helios held on to the blade even after it sank to the hilt.

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Flora Ferrari, Lexy Timms, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Leslie North, Madison Faye, Frankie Love, Jenika Snow, C.M. Steele, Michelle Love, Jordan Silver, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Zoey Parker, Piper Davenport, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Road to Love (Lessons in Love Book 1) by Nicole Falls

Claiming His Princess: A Beauty and The Beast Romance (Filthy Fairy Tales Book 4) by Parker Grey

Family Ties: Bartlett Boys Book One by Poppy Dennison

Relentless (Benson's Boys Book 2) by Janet Elizabeth Henderson

Until the Sun Sets: A Grayson Novella by Tara Wyatt

Sassy Ever After: Sassy Switch (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Tina Donahue

Royals (Shifter Royalty Trilogy) by S. Dalambakis

Dirty Scoundrel: Roughneck Billionaires 2 by Jessica Clare

Tempt Me (The Wolf Hotel Book 1) by Nina West

by Ava Sinclair

Seduced by the Dragon (Fated Dragons Book 3) by Emilia Hartley

Dallas Fire & Rescue: Igniting his Flame (Kindle Worlds Novella) (First Responders Book 2) by Jen Talty

Mend Your Heart (Bounty Bay Book 4) by Tracey Alvarez

Scarlet's Dilemma by Zenina Masters

Sweet Southern Secrets (Georgia Peaches Book 1) by Colbie Kay, Chianti Summers

Dangerous Fling: A Rock Star Romance (Dangerous Noise Book 4) by Crystal Kaswell

When the Dark Wins by Addison Cain, Jennifer Bene, Cari Silverwood, Zoe Blake, Yolanda Olson, Dani René, Eris Adderly, Michelle Brown

Edge of Darkness by Karen Rose

Becoming Bella by Sarah Hegger

Racing Toward Love: A Second Chance Romance by Everleigh Clark