What a Dragon Should Know Read online

Page 9


  Forcing herself to look away, she asked, “Are you not chilly?”

  “No.”

  She handed him one of her fur blankets. “Put this on anyway.”

  He chuckled, spreading the fur out over his lap. “Did you even peek?”

  “I don’t need to. I see naked men everyday.”

  “But none as superb as I.” That was truth, but she’d not admit it out loud.

  “Why are you here?”

  “Came to see the sights. Just as you have.” Dagmar didn’t reply to his glib remark; instead she analyzed how bad this could get for her.

  He could try to use this against her, but only if she allowed him to. Her father would not be pleased, but no matter which way she examined it, it all seemed to be worse for Kikka, which could easily distract attention from Dagmar. It was Kikka who was betraying Eymund. It was Kikka who was—

  “You can stop.”

  Dagmar glanced at him. “I can stop what?”

  “Trying to figure out how I’ll use this against you.”

  “I wasn’t—”

  “Because I won’t be.”

  Dagmar closed her mouth, stared straight ahead. “You won’t?”

  “No. Is that wine?” He leaned across her and grabbed the bottle.

  “Why?”

  “Why what?” He unhooked the top, took a long gulp—and choked. “Gods in the underworld! What is this?”

  “My father’s wine. It’s not as smooth as the wines from the south.”

  “It’s not as smooth as jagged glass.” But he took another gulp anyway before handing it back to her. She started to reach for her chalice, but it seemed to be the kind of night where one drinks right from the bottle. So she did, taking several mouthfuls before she locked the top back into place.

  “So you say you won’t use this against me.”

  “I won’t.”

  “And why is that? We both know there’s something you want from me. Something I won’t give. So why wouldn’t you use this to bargain with?”

  “For two reasons. One, that would make you an enemy. And I don’t want you as an enemy. In fact, you’re the last person in all the Northlands that I can afford to have as an enemy.”

  “You’re right,” she admitted.

  “I know. Were I to use any of this, I’d get the truth, to be sure. But only part of it. Enough to make me go away, but not enough to really help me. Not enough to keep Queen Annwyl safe.”

  He was right. He was exactly right. “And the second reason?”

  The dragon smiled. “I like to watch too. It would be hypocritical of me to use that against another.”

  “I do not watch for enjoyment. I merely need to be sure—”

  “Don’t”—he shook his head, his expression serious—“don’t lie to me.” He swung his arm out, encompassing the vast lands around them. “Lie to everyone. Tell them all that they want to hear while you get what you want. But don’t lie to me.”

  “Why shouldn’t I?”

  “Because we understand each other too well, Dagmar, to bother with the smaller games.”

  She was confused by his directness. Confused and intrigued.

  “So what are you suggesting, Lord Gwenvael?”

  “Is that the dessert from tonight?”

  She glanced at the rich dessert lying on a cloth beside her. For a moment, it seemed she didn’t even remember bringing it. “Yes.”

  “Mind?” he asked while reaching over her and grabbing it. “It was really good. You have excellent cooks.”

  “We do.”

  He used his fingers to tear off a piece of the dessert and drop it into his mouth. He let out a sigh as the flavor burst against his tongue. “Just wonderful.”

  “What are you suggesting, dragon?”

  He licked his lips and said, “I’m suggesting several things. But most importantly that we not see each other as combatants.”

  “But aren’t we?”

  “Only if we want nothing out of this.” He licked delicious paste and dough from the tips of his fingers. “I’m not blind, Dagmar. These are serious defenses built on your father’s lands. There are hidden pits filled with oil just waiting to be lit, constant patrols, the lovely spikes you have built into the ground, waiting for the right trigger to unleash them. And I know those are only the few I spotted.”

  “And your point?”

  “There are basic defenses, and there are wartime defenses. Clearly war is coming here.”

  “War is here.” She let out a breath, and in that moment, all pretenses, all illusions went away and Gwenvael knew he was talking to the true Dagmar Reinholdt. The one her kinsmen never saw and didn’t want to see. And it was this Dagmar who was taking a chance on him.

  “My father earned this land when he was only seventeen. Six of his brothers are loyal to him, three of them are dead, two side with Jökull, and then there’s Jökull himself.”

  She pulled off a chunk of the dessert as he held it out for her. “Jökull is determined to get this land for himself. He and his armies raided the town and lands near the fortress a few years back. We were caught unprepared and … It was very bad. Eymund’s first wife was there and she was killed. It’s a great source of shame for him.”

  “Jökull killed her?”

  “It depends who you ask. The Code which my father and kinsmen live by, says that blood- or marriage-related females are to be kept unharmed.” She looked off, out at the lands. “The men of my family refuse to believe Jökull would stoop so low, would willingly break the Code. They prefer to believe her death was an accident.”

  “You don’t believe that.”

  “I believe Jökull follows no code but his own.”

  “And you think he’s planning to strike again.”

  “Whether he is or he isn’t, it behooves us to be ready.”

  Gwenvael pulled off another piece of the dessert. “And an alliance with Annwyl would—”

  She shook her head. “I cannot bargain with you over that alliance. You’ll have to do that with my father.”

  “Charming as your kinsmen may be, Lady Dagmar”—he licked cream off his thumb—“it is you that I trust to handle anything that requires actual thought and reason.”

  She looked away abruptly, and he knew she was trying not to laugh.

  “Allow me to handle your father, Lady Dagmar.”

  Her smirk illustrated her lack of faith in his skills. “If you think you can.”

  “I know I can.”

  Dagmar took another drink of wine and handed him the bottle.

  “Interesting,” he finally said.

  “What is?”

  He gestured toward the stablemaster’s open windows with the wine bottle. “What he’s doing to her.”

  Dagmar again lifted up to her eyes those large pieces of glass wrapped in leather. “Oh, my.” She lowered the glasses, looked at him. “Isn’t there some sort of proper preparation that’s necessary for that sort of thing?” she asked.

  “If you want her to enjoy it as well … yes.”

  “Then that’s just rude.” She brought the glasses back up. “He is all over the place, isn’t he?”

  “There is no finesse there. She’d be better off getting mauled by a bear.”

  Dagmar laughed while she kept watching. Something told him she didn’t laugh nearly as much as she’d like to.

  “Three gold pieces the mauling bear story is what she tells my brother happened to her.”

  “No, no. Three gold pieces that he believes it.”

  They watched until the bitter end, the dragon’s comments nearly bringing her to tears of laughter. Even more rewarding was that she’d made him laugh as well. She’d never really been considered entertaining before and she could definitely see the allure of it.

  When Kikka finally limped and tottered her way back to the fortress, Dagmar packed up the few things she’d brought with her and the dragon stepped off the roof, effortlessly shifting back to his natural form in midair.

/>   “Come, Beast. I will take you back.”

  “Take me back?”

  He landed on the roof of the barracks, surprising her with his lightness. In the morning the soldiers wouldn’t be wondering what shook their building.

  “Aye.” He turned a bit and lowered himself. “Climb on.”

  Flying? He wanted to take her flying?

  “I—”

  “Come on. You know you want to try.” He grinned and showed all those fangs. It worried her more that she wasn’t worried at all. “I promise I won’t drop you.”

  “Comforting.”

  “Grab hold of my long, luxurious mane and hoist yourself up.”

  “I don’t hoist, dragon.”

  “Grab hold then.”

  She put the strap of her satchel across her shoulders and grabbed onto his mane. She felt his tail slide under her rear and lift her. She gave a startled squeal.

  “Just being helpful,” he said before she could start stabbing at his tail with her eating knife. “Now tighten your thighs against my neck and hold on to my hair.”

  He stepped off the edge of the building and his wings extended from his back. The Northland winds caught him, lifting them up. He glided for a bit before moving his wings to take them higher. Dagmar stared out over the world, fascinated by what she saw. To look down on everything was amazing, to feel this free was addicting.

  He flew her around the town and lands for nearly an hour. She had no idea why he stayed out that long, but she didn’t complain. Why bother when she loved every second of it?

  He brought her back to the fortress and she pointed out her window to him. He landed against the wall, his claws holding him in place. She clung to him, terrified she’d slip off his back and fall to her death straight below. But then his tail wrapped around her waist and lifted her up.

  “Open your window.”

  She did, and the tail carried her inside. It didn’t unwind from her waist until her feet touched the floor.

  “I have to say, Lady Dagmar, that is the best time I’ve had in quite a while where I was not the one bedding a woman.”

  Dagmar placed her elbow on the windowsill, her chin resting on her fist. “I know it was hard for you not to give him direction.”

  “It was! He was a mess.”

  She curled her lip in distaste. “And messy. If you understand the difference.”

  “I do.”

  “Think my sister-in-law enjoyed it?”

  “How could she when she spent the whole time thinking about how she was fooling your brother?”

  “How do you know she was thinking that?”

  “I know. I’ve seen that look before.”

  She bet he had.

  “In the morning, Lady Dagmar, I’ll need you to trust me.”

  “That doesn’t sound very good.”

  “It will. But you’ll have to trust me.”

  She nodded, hoping that he would trust her as well—even though she most likely wouldn’t deserve it.

  He walked back toward his room, his steps light even as his talons tore into the stone face.

  Canute growled behind her and Dagmar turned, raising her hand. Canute immediately sat. “Good boy.”

  Then she felt it, sliding across her ass, briefly sliding under her dress and between her legs …

  By the time she spun around, the tail was gone. She leaned out the window and Gwenvael said, “See you in the morning, Lady Dagmar,” before he disappeared into his own room after a flash of flame and naked male taunted her.

  She closed her window and put her hand to her chest. She seriously hoped she’d gauged him correctly. If not, she could end up no better off than that idiot Kikka.

  Except that Dagmar had much more to lose than mere dignity.

  Chapter 9

  Olgeir the Wastrel of the Olgeirsson Horde spat into the ground beside his claws. He should be angry. They were on his territory. As one of the mighty Northland dragon warlords, his territories ranged from the Mountains of Suspicion in the High North Plains, to the River of Destruction in the west, straight out to the Vile Seas in the east. His territory stopped at the Outerplains, which marked the territorial lines between him and that dragon-bitch queen.

  Although he dreamed of ruling all the Northlands, it was the thought of claiming that Southland bitch’s territory that made him hard. He and several warlords had briefly banded together and declared war on Queen Rhiannon more than a century ago, but the lot of them couldn’t stop bickering amongst themselves long enough to put up a decent defense, much less a proper offense. Attacking faster than anyone thought they would, those prissy Southlanders swarmed over the Northland borders and decimated some of the finest warriors Olgeir had ever known.

  He’d tried to warn the other warlords. Tried to warn them about Rhiannon’s consort. Bercelak the Vengeful was no pampered monarch who liked to play warrior. He was one of the Cadwaladr Clan, low-born lizards the Southland royals used like the humans used their battle dogs. Calling them to duty when the royals had a war or needed protecting, tossing them scraps, and locking them outside in the cold when there was peace. But none of that lot seemed to mind; instead they spent most of their lives going from one battle to another, even fighting with humans as human when the dragons were at peace. Yet among the Cadwaladr, it was Bercelak who had the most brutal reputation in all the dragon nations.

  Olgeir still remembered what happened when one of Bercelak’s warrior-sisters was captured by Northland warlords during a war several centuries ago, when Rhiannon’s mother held the throne. Bercelak captured the eldest sons of the enemy warlords and tore their scales off, piece by piece. He sent the scales back, each batch wrapped up like a present, to the corresponding fathers. He included no written message, nor did the ones who brought the pieces back have anything to impart. But his message was clear … Either his sister was released—wings intact—or the warlords would be getting wings and limbs next as “gifts.”

  Bercelak still ruled by the current Dragon Queen’s side, but he was older now. Those prissy sons of his went into battle the last go round. They fought well enough, but Olgeir didn’t worry about them like he did their father—the Horde simply hadn’t been prepared then. Yet he still had to beware of the Cadwaladrs. Last Olgeir had heard, they were fighting in the Western Mountains, but when he decided to strike, he had to make sure they were dealt with first.

  And Olgeir would strike. He’d see that dragoness brought to heel and her land made his, if it was the last thing he did.

  First, though, he had to deal with that treacherous son of his.

  He had many sons, Olgeir did. Nineteen last count. But this one, his eighth born … he was the smartest of the lot. And could cause the most problems. He’d already turned at least two of his cousins to his cause, and Olgeir had no doubts at least one of his sons would follow the traitor. He was persuasive, that one, always plotting and planning to be warlord, as if Olgeir would simply hand it over to him.

  Olgeir had always warned that idiot’s mother he read too much, spent too much time with those mages and monks uttering the countryside. Now he thought he was better than his father.

  And, unfortunately for him, he’d have to learn the hard way he wasn’t.

  A strong claw closed over Olgeir’s shoulder; one of his many nephews leaned in. “I just received word a Southland dragon was spotted over Reinholdt territories.”

  Olgeir’s lip curled. “Anyone we know?”

  “Not sure yet.”

  He motioned to three of his grandsons. “Send them to check it out.”

  “They may have to bring him down.”

  “So? We have what we need.” And she’s perfect, he inwardly sighed as he thought of the prize safely chained inside his mountain fortress.

  His nephew sent off the three with their instructions and came back to his uncle. “And what about that lot?”

  Olgeir looked at the ones caught traveling through his territories. It was because of them he was out here be
fore the two suns rose. Their kind were rarely sighted this far from the brutal Ice Lands. But when they were seen—this time because of a tunnel cave-in—alarms went up. They were unstable, as most from the Ice Lands were, but mighty fighters in their own right. Even dragons had to be careful around them.

  There were over forty of them, all standing tall and powerful, but they were nothing more than animals, the lot of them. Yet these animals had a higher purpose. A higher purpose he had no problem supporting.

  “Take them to the tunnels near the bridge and send them on their way.”

  “You know where those tunnels lead, Uncle. Are you sure?” Olgeir grinned, entertained by how every one of the beasts had carved the goddess Arzhela’s name into their chests with knives. They hadn’t even bothered to wipe off the blood and some of the wounds weren’t healing very well. But they were zealots, and that’s what zealots did.

  “Oh, I’m sure.” He patted his nephew’s shoulder. “Let them go to her. Let them honor their dead god.”

  He headed back to his den, his guards behind him. “If they kill her, half our battle is won.”

  Dagmar was well into the middle of an odd dream involving dessert cream and a dragon’s tail when her bedroom door banged open. She sat up immediately, still caught between being awake and asleep when she yelled out, “I did not lie!”

  Three of her brothers stood in her doorway staring at her. Which ones? She had no idea. All she could see were blurry outlines.

  “What is it?” she demanded loudly over Canute’s hysterical barking. “Canute!” The dog fell to a low, threatening growl while she reached over to the small table beside her bed, her hands trying to find her spectacles.

  “Father needs you downstairs. Now.” She recognized Valdís’s voice, felt his hand press her spectacles into her palm.

  “Why? What’s wrong?”

  “Just get dressed. We’ll wait for you in the hall.”

  She didn’t have time for a bath, so she had to make do with scrubbing up at the basin and hurriedly getting dressed. As soon as she tied the scarf over her hair, she walked into the hallway and immediately her brothers pushed her toward the stairs. The moment they entered through the door into the Main Hall, Dagmar sent Canute off for a break and a chance to play with the other dogs in the side yard. Once the dog disappeared through the doorway, Valdís grabbed her wrist and dragged her to her father’s private rooms.