Authors: Judith Leger
Tags: #Wild Child Publishing Fantasy Romance Novel, #fantasy, #romance, #novel, #dragons
from the water and carried her to the bed. With efficient
strokes, he dried her before he pulled a light sheet over her.
Tears burned his eyes. In the middle of the night, his son
had stopped fighting. He sensed no movement, no life force
from him at all, yet the heat continued within Seren. After
effects? Had the babe given up or had his strength ebbed?
He studied the agony etched on Seren’s pale face. He
eased onto the bed beside her, pulling her into his arms. For
the first time since she’d fallen onto the deck, her restless
battle against the heat ceased. He tensed, waiting for her
next breath. He counted each one, hoping she would survive.
The door swung open and his first mate approached the
bed, alone. Paladin realized before his friend spoke what he
would say.
“They have no mage here, Sire. The nearest one is a day’s
flight to the north. I’ve ordered our immediate departure.”
Paladin curved tighter to Seren, holding her closer. She
would not make it to another morning. Her body might live,
but her mind would not.
“Very well,” he muttered. His gut felt like he’d swallowed
a hundred dragon stones. The heaviness wouldn’t abate. The
weight of this night sat on his shoulders and it became
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heavier as the guilt loomed closer. He could not escape it and
did not try. Seren’s condition was his responsibility alone. He
was the one who’d brought her here. He should have had
better control. What kind of monster was he to do this to
her?
His damnable wish. He desired a son, but not at the cost
of murdering the child’s mother. He groaned. If he had not
drunk so much, had not made his wish, the door would never
have appeared. But he had, and now he must pay penance
for his carelessness.
He laid his palm against her lower abdomen. A faint
stirring came to him. He waited. There—a slight movement.
He tilted his head toward Calis. “Leave us.”
The older man tripped over his feet in his hurry. Once the
door shut, Paladin turned his attention to his son. He
narrowed his eyes, his vision becoming all-seeing and
magical, a gift born of his dragon flesh. Focusing on the spot,
he saw past Seren’s skin and muscles to where the babe lay
attached to her womb. His son’s diminutive form resembled
more the namesake of his clan than anything human.
Paladin studied the fast beat of his tiny heart. The babe’s
head turned toward him. A pulse of supplication surged to
Paladin. In one beat of his tiny heart, Paladin understood
what the unborn child tried so desperately to do.
Without considering, Paladin centered his power to his
small son. He sent him the strength he needed to erect a
barrier between his dragonfire and Seren. The barrier
thickened and became wider. The babe swirled in the vortex
of magical dragon flames, but the fire remained contained
within the shell of his birth sack.
After several minutes, Paladin sensed the babe dozing.
The heat, which had flared nonstop in Seren, ebbed to
normal. He allowed one sob to escape before he shifted to his
human sight.
Exhausted, he rolled from the bed and called for Calis.
When his friend arrived, they set about cleaning the room.
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Once Calis departed with the tub, Paladin washed the sweat
from Seren, hoping to make her more comfortable.
Under clean sheets, she lay still. Hands trembling, he
tucked the edges against her. So pale, fragile, she had not
wanted a child. Once more, guilt slapped against his
conscience.
Calis returned, carrying a chair to the side of the bed.
“Here ye go, Sire, sit. Rest. Ye deserve it.”
Paladin suppressed an urge to laugh. Deserve a rest? No,
not he. He deserved to suffer the same way Seren had for
what he’d done. He sat in the chair and turned to look at
Calis. “Head for Dene. I want this ship there in one day. Use
all of the dragonstones if you must.”
A quick nod and Calis was gone. Paladin shouted to his
first mate as his footsteps faded, “And rest. That’s an order.”
Seren frowned, stirring, her eyelids fluttering. He
straightened in the chair, regretting the shout. Her eyes
opened, and she looked at him. Without saying a word, she
shifted onto her side with a groan, curling into a fetal
position. He remained silent, motionless. She drifted off. He
sighed in relief. Now, he would wait to see if her mind
survived the ordeal with the dragon’s fire. He rested his head
against the back of the chair and closed his eyes.
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Quiet footsteps approached the bed. Seren opened her
eyes. Paladin stood over her, blocking the rest of room. The
beauty of his face took her breath away. She stretched.
Sensitive muscles screamed silent messages throughout her
entire body, forcing a gasp to escape.
“Careful. You have been sore ill,” he said, taking her
hand.
She stared at him while she tried to bring the pain under
control. “What happened to me?”
Before he could answer, memories of the drac at the
window rushed forward—the burning agony, her flight from
the room, her need to find him. He would help her. Only
him.
“The babe,” he murmured.
At his soft comment, a sharp flash of fear shot across her
chest followed by a wave of grief. She frowned, her hands
moving to cover her abdomen. “I lost it?”
“No, our son lives. He helped save your life.”
She studied him for several moments, trying to
understand what he meant. A slow dull pounding set up
behind her eyes, against the back of her head and radiated
down her neck. Right now, she didn’t want to hear an in
depth discussion on the baby’s abilities. She wanted to find
out what put her flat on her back with so many aches she was
afraid to move. “That beast—the dragon—did something to
me when it came to the window. It cried out. I felt like a fire
was cooking me from the inside out.”
Paladin nodded and eased onto the bed next to her. “He
called out to our son. In turn, the babe responded.”
“By trying to kill his mother?”
“That was not his intention. If you die then he dies. No,
instinct caused him to answer the drac’s call.” He leaned
toward her, and his hand brushed across her brow. “I am
thankful you are whole.”
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She stared at him for a long time. “Me too. I want to go
home”
“I’ll not have your death on my conscience.”
She grunted and shook her head. “If carrying your child is
going to cause me this much pain, then why did you touch
me?”
A sad, mischievous smile flittered over his lips.
“Uncontrollable passion?”
Another grunt and shake of her head. “I’m to blame too.”
He brushed a finger over her lower lip. “You came to me
so I might help you. Why? That is the reason you went above
when the pain began. To find me. You knew I would help
you?” His eyes held a spark of wonder. The light dwindled
after a moment. He continued, a gentle smile returning to his
lips. “You do need me.”
His soft words evoked a rush of heat up her neck to her
face. How dare he insinuate she needed him? The constant
agony in her head increased. She clenched her hands into
fists to keep from slapping his cheek. She narrowed her eyes
and glared at him. “I don’t need anyone.”
“If this is so, why did you seek me out?”
Seren sighed, unable to remain furious with his quietly
asked question. She lifted a hand to her pounding head. Even
that small motion caused her pain. Every muscle in her body
ached fiercely. She couldn’t think. Her brain refused to come
up with any other reason for her action other than the truth
which she blurted out with her last bit of defiance. “You’re
my stability here. There, are you happy?”
Paladin didn’t crack a smile. He didn’t even look pleased
“Is this all I am to you?”
She gritted her teeth, determined not to reveal how much
she wanted him. Never again. The pain was too fresh in her
mind. When she didn’t answer him, he shifted away and
stood.
“We dock in Dene in an hour. Your clothes are there,” he
said, pointing to the foot of the bed. “Once we arrive, I will
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come for you.”
After he closed the door, she laid there for a long time,
her body refusing to relax. This wasn’t her world. Her life.
Why was this happening to her?
Her entire body ached worse than when she’d had the flu
a couple of years ago. He said she’d almost died. If she died,
so would the child he claimed she carried. She placed her
palm on her abdomen. The fluttering came again. She bit her
lips and squeezed her eyes shut, trying to control the sudden
rise of tears.
A surge of warmth mingling with a sense of peace raced
through her. Her eyes shot open and she clasped her belly
over the spot from where she sensed the emotions rising.
Her vision blurred, blackening along the edges. The first
physical sign of her psychic abilities. Her mind floated away,
and then, just as fast, returned with a jolt.
She glanced around at the white marble walls and
columns lining the portico. Sunlight slanted between the
columns to produce a ladder effect. Broad slants of shadows
interspersed with light on the floor and the back wall. Pulse
throbbing, she realized she stood inside a tomb. She touched
the side wall. Upon contact, she jerked away. Smooth cold
stone, solid and real, surrounded her.
Dream of a death meant news of a birth.
The old meaning appeared in her mind. But whose death?
Why was this vision so real? She actually felt the solidness of
her body. Was that wind coasting over her skin? She rubbed
her hands over her bare arms, and took a step toward the
entrance. The soft cloth of a simple white shift covered her
body, leaving her arms and calves bare. She tingled at the
gentle caress of the material against her skin.
“Why do you not want me?”
A bolt of fear zagged up her spine. Her skin erupted with
goose bumps. She glanced over her shoulder and saw the
bottom half of a tall stool in the far corner of the tomb. Boot
heels hooked over the last rung. A man sat in the shadows,
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facing her. She saw nothing of his face except for where the
light cut across his eyes, revealing the clear, bluish-gray hue.
The shock of color in the white place surprised her. She
returned his stare, trying to comprehend who and what he
was to her.
“Oh, God,” she muttered, “I’m psycho. I just know I am.”
Light-hearted laughter came from him. She shivered. The
sound of his laughter reminded her of someone, but she
couldn’t quite place it. Years ago, Mandy’s laughter always
brought a smile to her face. This strange man’s joy made her
want to smile too. But why? What was it about him that put
her at ease when she should have been tense?
She wanted to leave this place, to return to the present,
but as with all her visions, she had to stay until the end. With
her fear lessening, curiosity sparked. Her hand slipped to her
abdomen, tightening over the spot. Unsure what to do, yet
unable to stop, she whispered. “Can you see me?”
“Yes.”
She gasped, her eyes wide, at the clear voice ringing
within the cold white walls. A touch of joy edged his answer.
Seren waited, hoping the vision would end soon. Clouds
streamed by, casting sunlight followed by lighter shadows
across the floor. After several minutes, she took a deep
breath and asked, suspecting who the man was, but not
wanting to know for sure. “Who are you?”
“Your son.”
A laugh of disbelief escaped. Oh, yes, she had lost it. More
so now than when she’d first arrived in this place. This
wasn’t possible. She had never had a vision so real before.
She had always been the observer not the participant.
Helpless and unsure, she shook her head. “No.”
“Why do you deny my existence?”
Seren balled up her fist, fury followed on the heels of
helplessness. “What am I supposed to think? It’s impossible
for me to know I’m having a baby this soon, and it’s