Authors: Ella J. Phoenix
Dragon Heat
By
Ella J. Phoenix
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are
products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to
be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales,
organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Dragon Heat: Book One
Copyright© 2012 Ella J. Phoenix
ISBN: 978-1-60088-743-7
Cover Artist: Fiona Jayde
Editor: Jana Hanson
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced
electronically or in print without written permission, except in the case of
brief quotations embodied in reviews.
Cobblestone Press, LLC
To my amazing mother, who is my catalyst, my fantastic husband,
who is my inspiration, and all my dearests—Aluisia, Margaret, Tiffany,
Kate, Sarah, and Helen—for their support and constructive feedback.
Love you all,
Ella
Glossary
Apa Dobrý group of five gods, creators of life on Earth and the
universe
Apa Sâmbetei the land of the souls; the afterlife
calathor someone who can cross to the land of the souls and return
unharmed
draco a dragon in human form
Hiad the Underworld
inimă the soul
razbians lizard people known for their lack of intelligence
Soartas the three witches of Destiny
sujha a non-pure being; offspring of the union between two
different races
Terhem Viahta the land of the living; Earth
Ucidhere god of death, lord of Apa Sâmbetei
Zmyzel goddess of life
Romania, 1800
Tardieh realized he must have passed out as he could feel that the
sun was in a different position now. It was almost sundown.
I must not lose myself to panic.
He opened his senses to his surroundings. He heard the faint sound
of water dripping and someone breathing a few feet away to his left. They
had left him with only one razbian
to guard him.
Hmm, interesting.
They must have thought he was very weak to have done it so. Not
that they were mistaken. He had lost a lot of blood, and his body ached all
over.
Breathe, breathe
,
he thought. He decided to open his eyes but just a
fraction. He didn’t want the guard to know he had awakened. The first
thing he noticed were the dancing shadows on the walls casted by the dim
light of a single candle placed somewhere to his right on the ceiling.
On the ceiling?
No, he realized, the candle was on the floor. He was the one on the
ceiling—hung upside down. The dripping sound had not been from
water; it was his own blood dribbling onto the floor. He was suspended
by his ankles with thick silver chains. His hands were bound behind him
in the same fashion. His head pounded from being upside down for so
long.
Inhale, exhale.
He could smell piss, excrement, and something else, something
worse. Fear. He could smell the fear of previous prisoners who had
suffered in that room before him. Their terror had been so tangible it had
tainted the air, the walls, the floor.
‚So yer awake, then.‛ The razbian guard stood up and placed
himself in front of Tardieh. He could see the guard’s sharp blackened
teeth and smell his putrid breath. ‚We thought yer was gone. But yer a
mulish one, ain’t yer?‛
The razbian was of average height, much smaller than a draco or a
vampire, but one would consider him bulky. The green leathery skin and
bulging far-apart yellow eyes were the only things preventing them from
walking among humans like vampires and dracos did. Thank Apa Dobrý
for that otherwise the pricks would have turned the world upside down
by now.
Tardieh felt the air change around his face before the blow hit him.
He was so weak, he didn't even try to duck or defy the guard. All he could
do was close his eyes and welcome the pain. He heard the bastard’s
high-pitched laugh. How long had he been in this piss-smelling prison?
Another blow. This one hit his stomach with such force that
Tardieh’s body swung back and forth. ‚Hey, I’m talkin’ ter ye!‛ More of
the high-pitched laughter.
Tardieh tried to say something, but he couldn’t make the words
come out. He tried again. ‚Water.‛
This time the guard, taken by curiosity, bent down to try to hear
what he was saying. The warrior inside Tardieh took over. His fangs
extended smoothly, and with the last ounce of energy he had, he bit the
motherfucker’s ear. His brain registered the razbian’s screams as if from
afar, but fresh blood had already hit Tardieh’s lips. The delectable warm
liquid oozed into his mouth. He forgot where he was or that his body was
aching. There was only the metallic taste and the life energy spreading
inside him. Razbian blood was a far cry from a humans’. It was more
leaden and colder—razbians were distant descendents of the lizard people
from the east. But at that moment, it was the best elixir Tardieh had ever
tasted.
‚Yer sunufa bitch! Yer ripped off my ear!‛ If Tardieh had had the
energy, he would have laughed. His ecstasy was cut short, however, by
another series of punches to his face.
The door opened, and another guard stepped in the room. He was
taller and leaner than the razbian guard. While the later had obvious
evidence of his race, the former could have easily passed for a human.
Tardieh recognized who it was by the strong odor of decaying meat.
Vrajitor was his name, so-called the ‚magician.‛ He had politely
introduced himself when Tardieh had been brought to that cell weeks
before—or maybe it had been months already; he had lost track of time
long ago. ‚Not that I have more magic than the others,‛ Vrajitor had
explained on their first encounter. ‚It is just that I am known for magically
making my guests speak.‛ Despite human folklore, dragons could unleash
their magic when in human form, although it was never as powerful as
when they were in their true nature. So Tardieh had not been surprised by
the remark.
‚Has he awakened?‛ the draco asked the razbian guard, not
wavering his glare from Tardieh. That was not a good sign.
‚Da, sire, the leech bit my ear!‛ the guard said, still holding what
remained of his left ear. His ugly long scaled hands shook.
A faint twitch that could have been mistaken for a smile appeared
on Vrajitor’s face. ‚May that serve you well for underestimating your
enemy.‛ He took a few more steps into the room. Tardieh noticed the
bastard’s eyes scrutinizing his naked body. Tardieh held his gaze, trying
to show no fear of what was coming.
‚You are either stronger than I have anticipated or more stupid,
bloodsucker. But you will tell me what I want to know sooner or later.‛
And there it was again, the face twitch. But this time it came with a slight
show of his shark-like teeth. ‚Bring me the scula
,
‛ Vrajitor barked to the
razbian.
The guard hurried out of the room and came back with a trolley
covered by a long, stained cloth. Tardieh was now well acquainted with
what they called the scula. The instruments were made of pure silver, of
course, so as to enhance the prisoners’ pain. Tardieh tried to suck in a gulp
of air, but his lungs ached too much. He must have had a few ribs broken
in the never-ending punching sessions. He didn’t mind the punches,
though. They had always kept him awake. Throughout his years of
training to become the leader of his people, he endured endless sessions of
ruthless practice. His father, the vampire king, had made it clear that just
because he was his heir, he was not to receive any special treatment. More
so, Tardieh’s training had been even more callous than the other warriors.
He was the prince and needed to be stronger than the others, more
prepared to deal with any battles that the Soartas
imposed on him. Such
as this one.
Vrajitor lifted the sheet to reveal his most loved torture apparatus.
‚Which one should we use today, leech? Would you like another session
with my gheara?‛ He raised a blood-stained silver device that looked like
a claw with four sharp fingers attached to a short handle. Tardieh
swallowed dry. He could not stop the dread which came with the
memories of that claw ripping his flesh open. Vrajitor had used it on his
abdomen, his legs, and his back. In the beginning, he had healed
immediately, but in the last couple of visits from the magician, Tardieh
had noticed that his healing abilities had been slower. The wounds from
their previous session were still bleeding.
‚Or maybe you would like to meet my newest invention, the para.‛
With the now familiar twitch on his face, Vrajitor raised a strange, long
device. It had the shape of an oversized pear with an extensive handle on
its narrowest end and a pointed prong at the other, where the bottom part
of the pear would have been. Vrajitor’s grin got broader as he twisted the
device’s handle. The bottom part opened up in three slices revealing a
lengthy, thick screw. The more he twisted the handle, the more the slices
opened up and the broad rivet was drawn out in the middle. ‚You see, my
stubborn guest, my first para was developed to punish the ones who
dared lie to me. These wedges can do quite a damage when inserted down
someone’s throat.‛
Tardieh could imagine the pain such a thing would cause.
Expanded by the force of the screw, the maximum aperture of the
segments would mutilate the victim’s esophagus while the elongated
middle section would continue ripping through the gullet’s channel.
‚But since you have not exactly lied to me—you refused to utter a
word, and that’s not technically lying—I think I will apply my para in
another cavity in a lower part of your beautiful body.‛ Taking his time,
Vrajitor positioned himself behind Tardieh. With a sickening dread,
Tardieh noticed the bastard was aroused. ‚Tell me where your coward
king hides and I will spare you.‛
Tardieh knew that was a lie. The fucker enjoyed his torture sessions
too much to deprive himself of a good one. Tardieh felt the deceivingly
smooth touch of the silver device burning his left gluteus. It was making
its way down his buttocks. The strong smell of burned flesh invaded his
nostrils. He had to fight the bile rising in his throat, but he would not fail
his people. He would endure trials, torture, and suffering, till the Soartas
decided it was time for him to meet his maker, but he would not betray
his father’s location.
‚Tell me where your armies hide, bloodsucker!‛ Vrajitor bellowed,
tracing another painful path down Tardieh’s lower body, dangerously
close to his anal orifice.
Tardieh could not contain the yelp; it came out like a bark.
Struggling to keep his sanity, he gathered some strength. ‚Fuck you,‛ he
said in a dark, low voice. It was all he could muster.
He saw Vrajitor’s eyes narrow and become even more yellow. The
fanatic look on his torturer’s face was so intense Tardieh thought it would
expel fire at anytime and burn him to death right there and then. Death
would have been most welcomed. Vrajitor raised his hand and leveled the
device to its intended destiny. ‚Let’s see who is going to fuck whom
tonight, bloodsucker.‛
Tardieh braced himself for the pain.
‚Excuse me, sire?‛ A female voice came from the open door.