Max let out an irritated sigh as he saw Blaise standing outside the room, behind Fang. While his long, braided hair was white as snow, his skin was as darkly olive as Max’s, in spite of Blaise’s Albinism. At first glance, there was little that denoted them as family – something that had served them all well, as it kept their enemies from using them against each other. “Brother, you’ve always had the shittiest timing.”
Though Blaise was supposed to be virtually blind in his human incarnation, the slow smile that spread across his face said he knew Max wasn’t alone. “Is that the scent of a prime spawning dragonswan I smell? You lucky dragon, you. No wonder you wanted to be alone.”
Agitated all the more at the vulgar insinuation, Max rumbled a low growl that was unique to their breed. A sign of warning parents used to correct their errant children, it usually preceded a sound thrashing. “That is my mate you insult. Apologize.”
Even though it wasn’t in his nature, Blaise immediately backed down. But only because they were family and Max was the eldest.
Otherwise? they’d be fighting right now.
“Forgive me, Strah Draga.” Blaise used the formal term for a dragonswain’s mate. “It appears my brother didn’t share his good news with me.” Blaise tsked in Max’s direction. “I would have sent a wedding present had I known.”
“Since we were mated centuries before you were born, I’d have paid money to see you do that.”
Blaise’s jaw dropped. “And you failed to mention this to me? Seriously?”
Fang clapped him on the back. “Told you you were in for a surprise. Didn’t I?”
“Nice.” Blaise passed a vengeful glare in Fang’s direction. “Remember, wolf. Payback’s a bitch.”
Fang snorted. “What can I say? My wife’s always complaining that I’m the worst behaved of all her children. And given the fact that Dev’s one of her unruly brood, that says it all.” His grin widened to an irritating level. “And on that note, I’m drifting back downstairs to give you guys space to hash out this fresh hell. Let me know if any bodies need to be hidden later, or if there are any blood splatters I have to clean… try not to get the hemoglobin on anything that stains. I don’t want to listen to Quinn bitch about repainting.”
Seraphina glanced black and forth between the two different species of dragon before she slowly neared Blaise and sniffed him. Strange. He smelled more human than dragon.
“Hey! I bathed,” Blaise said in a playfully offended tone as he stepped away from her.
“You really are related.”
Max smirked at her stunned disbelief. “Our mother was as discriminating as an Amazon in heat, and had the morals of one to boot.”
She glared at him. “Which is the only way you could have ever been deemed worthy of one of us.”
Blaise sucked his breath in sharply. “Ouch, Max, she’s quick. I like her.”
He ignored the comment. “Why are you here, Blaise?”
“I was coming to warn you about something fairly significant… am thinking now that I might be too late.”
“For?”
“Someone accessed the power of the Emerald Tablet. It fractured a part of Merlin’s spell around Terre Derrière le Voile and almost unleashed the great evil back into the Myddangeard.”
Seraphina scowled as Max cursed under his breath over that potentially fatal near miss. “Back into what?”
“Midden-guard,” Max repeated the Old English word slowly. “You’d know it as Oecumene… the world inhabited by mankind. This realm.”
“And Merlin?”
“My boss in Avalon,” Blaise explained.
Max knew that would be meaningless to her, too, since she long predated Arthur and all the legends that surrounded the medieval fey king and his court. “It’s an alternate dimension, similar to the one you were banished to.”
Her jaw dropped as indignation darkened her cheeks. Her eyes telegraphed that familiar disdain that had once cut him to the core of his soul. “You bastard! You knew I was trapped and yet you left me there to rot for all eternity?”
The irony of her righteous anger amused him. “Again, I remind you of how we parted ways. I begged you to come with me to start our family in peace, together, away from the corrupted politics of your tribe that you knew and agreed were wrong, and what did you do? You collared me for your queen and handed me over to her tender loving care. So tell me why I should have defied your gods who punished you for her rebellion and risked my life to free you after what all of you did to me?”
Seraphina wanted to remind him that she was his mate, but that cut both ways. How could she expect him to defy the gods to protect her when she’d refused to defy her own basilinna, who had far less reaching power?