Dragonbane

She shook her head. “Are you turning gallu?”


“I don’t think so.” He hung his huge tongue out the side of his mouth like a dog that was playing dead. “But at this point, I wouldn’t mind so long as it stopped hurting. Ugh! Braaaiiinsss. Me neeed…” He paused to stare at her. “Ah, crap. I’m here with you. If I need brains for sustenance, I’m going to starve.”

Rolling her eyes, she shoved at his claw. He had a twisted sense of humor, but she appreciated him trying to cheer her in the midst of their dire predicament. He was always good at that. Always precious to try and make her see the better side of things when it definitely wasn’t her nature to do so.

It was why she loved her brother so much. Why she would kill or die for him.

Thank the gods Hadyn was all right and still Hadyn, not some horrid gallu slave.

Oddly enough, when the gallu had gone to feed on him, instead of becoming one of them, the feeding had thrown him into his real body in spite of the collar he’d worn. Something he’d needed badly since being trapped as a human for so long had been slowly killing him.

Little had they known, her brother was a Katagari Drakos – like their father – who needed to be in his dragon form more than his human one. A secret the two of them had kept from everyone, even their own mother, for fear of what their tribe might do to Hadyn should they ever learn the truth. Both of them had grown up with the horror stories of how their father had been driven from their tribe over his animal birth.

She would kill before she allowed them to drive her brother away. Or harm him in any way.

And as they lay there, she realized how ragged and raspy his breathing was becoming. Instead of clearing, it was worsening.

Edena cupped his dragon cheek. “Slow your breathing before you hyperventilate.”

“I’m trying.”

“Hade? Look at me.” She stroked the scales of his snout to soothe him. “Focus and breathe. In… out… in… out.” She repeated the steady and slow rhythm until his ragged breathing returned to normal.

Since the hour of their birth, he’d always had trouble with his lungs. No one was quite sure why. And the condition had only worsened when he became a dragon at puberty. It left his voice very deep and raspy. Barely more than a whisper that required others to listen very carefully in order to hear him whenever he spoke.

Nala had wanted their mother to abandon him to the elements and not waste valuable resources to raise such a weakling. But their mother had refused and fought a hazard to keep him with them. He was her son and she refused to let anyone harm him.

Over the years, Seraphina had taken the heads of any who went after or insulted Hadyn in any manner.

At least, whenever she heard it.

Only Edena knew the real heartaches her brother endured on a daily basis. Since there was nothing their mother could do, he kept most of it from her, and begged Edena to do the same. He was far stronger than anyone knew.

Even stronger than she was. Without him, she doubted she would have made it through the misery of their lives.

Coughing, he rolled to his side so that he could breathe more easily.

She patted his back, taking care to avoid the cuts the demons had left behind. “Where do you think we are?”

“I don’t know.”

It was so dark here. And cold. But at least they were no longer frozen in stone. They finally had movement again.

“Should I try to call Matera?”

He wheezed and shook his head. “It could alert the others where we are.” He wrapped his tail around her and sent a wave of warmth through it for her.

Pressing her cheek against his scales, she smiled. “Thank you.”

He tucked his wings in around her to make a leathery blanket. “Are you warm now?”

“Yes. How did you know I was cold?”

“You’re always cold. There’s not enough fat on you to keep you warm.”

She laughed. “I’m big enough to whip you.”

He snorted a rude sound of denial. “Only because I let you win.”

Suddenly, there was a loud, fierce sound over their heads. Something that rumbled like vicious thunder. Bright lights danced across the landscape.

“What is that?”

Hadyn immediately returned to being human, even though it was extremely difficult for him to do so. “I don’t know. But I doubt it’s good.”

She took his hand in hers as they stepped back into the shadows and watched the strange things that flew in the sky over their heads. Worse? They could hear voices as others searched for them.

What’s a military installation? she projected silently to her brother.

I don’t know. But I don’t think we’re supposed to be here, and I’m pretty sure that if they catch us, they’re going to put us in another cage.

And that she couldn’t argue against either.

Keeping to the shadows, they ran along a wall of some sort, away from the sounds and machines they didn’t understand. Looking at the vegetation, she guessed that they were in a desert. But she had no idea where.

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