Authors: Ella J. Phoenix
mission, they needed his help. ‚You don’t have to believe me. Just see it
with your own eyes.‛
She took a small piece of paper out of her front pocket. ‚This is
where the facility in New York is. We believe it’s a laboratory, Tardieh,
not a hospital. Someone is using vampires and dracos as lab rats.‛
Tardieh’s eyes narrowed in suspicion. He took a step closer and
was nose to nose with Zoricah once again. ‚How do I know this is not
another one of your brilliant plots?‛
Damn him! Zoricah could not believe his stubbornness. She’d had
it. If this hard-headed vampire did not care enough for his race to get past
his intransigence, she would make him. She looked straight into his green
eyes. ‚Because I saved your life once and you owe me.‛ Her voice was
dark, each word came out full of weight.
Tardieh’s eyes went wide in disbelief, but before he gathered
strength to respond, she raised her hand. ‚Look, Tardieh, it’s been over
two hundred years. Why would I want to plot against you now when you
have established yourself on the throne and your kingdom is strong?‛ She
hoped some military rationale would get through that thick skull of his.
She lifted her hand again in a second attempt of giving him the location of
the laboratory. ‚All I’m asking you is to be at these coordinates by
midnight tomorrow and see it for yourself.‛
Still scrutinizing her, he said, ‚I’ll think about it.‛ Tardieh accepted
the piece of paper, and before she could stop him, he took the pentagram
that was still in her other hand.
Zoricah knew her last strategy had worked and that Tardieh was
just playing hard to get. Fine, two could play that stupid game. She
signaled to Yara and Sam. It was time to leave the vampires to their own
thoughts but not without one last demonstration. Zoricah took a couple of
steps backward, opened her senses, and let her dragon surface. She felt the
heat start at her core and grow deliciously inside her. She did not allow it
to take over completely, just a little bit, just to give them a taste. Two huge
dark golden wings grew out of her shoulder blades. In a graceful
movement, she arched her back and extended her leathery wings fully. A
small smile crossed her lips when she noticed the vampires’ gazes glued
on her. It worked. They had completely missed her fighters leaving the
park. ‚Fine. I guess, I’ll see you when I see you, then.‛ She gave Tardieh
one raised eyebrow and flew dauntingly away.
Tardieh was flabbergasted. With a start, he managed to close his
mouth before drooling in front of his friends. She was beautiful. The
moment she stepped back, her golden honey eyes flared, and he saw two
massive wings simply grow out of her back. They had a hypnotic dark
golden shine under the moonlight. Then she arched her back, giving him
full view of her delicious body. Immediately Tardieh imagined her
arching her back out of pleasure underneath him. No, he stopped himself.
She was not beautiful; she was the enemy with an agenda, and he had to
get a grip on himself. ‚Joel.‛
‚Yes, my lord.‛ His friend’s voice came out in a gasp, as if he had
also just been woken up from a trance.
‚Are your spies active?‛
‚Always, my lord.‛
‚Then call on them. I want to know where she’s hiding, where she’s
been, and who she’s been getting her intel from.‛ Tardieh turned around
and faced his loyal guards. ‚If this is a trap, Zoricah will not live to see
another sunrise.‛
‚I don’t like this.‛ Yara’s voice came from the kitchen. Apparently
the previous four times she voiced out her opinion about the night’s
encounter had not been enough.
Zoricah locked the front door behind her. Her fighters had just
arrived back from the park, and Yara had headed straight to the kitchen.
Due to her aerial voyage, Zoricah had returned faster. She loved flying
over Manhattan, its perfectly geometrical streets lit by the fluorescent
colors of skyscrapers and car beams. She knew it was partly because of the
thrill born from the possibility of getting caught by humans, but she
wasn’t a young dragon; she knew how to conceal herself even in bright
full moon nights like this one. Tonight, however, she went straight home
to clear her head before Yara and Sam got back.
Sam crossed the living room and sat down on the leather couch.
‚Tone it down, Yara. You’ll wake Drew up.‛, she said weakly.
‚I’m already awake. I’ve been waiting for you.‛ Drew was standing
by the hallway door. Her eyes were even more sullen than when Zoricah
had left to meet Tardieh. This whole account had taken a big toll on her
friend. Drew was the main reason why they were in New York. Her twin
sister’s abduction had shaken the draconian senate. According to Drew,
they had spared no efforts to find her sister, Deirdre, but to no avail.
Zoricah, Sam, and Yara had been in Italy trying to take down a
draconian Jack the Ripper when Drew managed to find Zoricah and
convince her to help. Draconian twins were a rarity in the world and as
with most magical races were treated almost as divine beings. Rumor had
it that the bond between twins was so great they could sense each other,
feel what the other was feeling, and sometimes even read each other’s
mind. Drew and Deirdre were the perfect proof that this rumor was more
than just an old legend.
Zoricah knew the senate had allowed Drew to contact her only as a
last resort. Zoricah and the draconian high society had parted ways ever
since her mother’s death almost eighty years earlier. She despised them
for their conservative prejudiced ways. They despised her for her
revolutionary mindset that threatened their millennia-old conventions. At
first, Zoricah had agreed to take the case because other draconian females
had been abducted, too. She knew that as soon as Deirdre was
found—that is, if she was found—the senate would stop looking for the
culprit and ignore the sujhas who had also been abducted. They were, in
their eyes, the scum, the shame of their society.
After a few months together, Zoricah saw there was more to Drew
than what meets the eye. Her porcelain doll-like beauty gave out a fragile
vibe that hid an innate strength and determination. Drew had refused to
go back to the draconian lands in the far eastern mountains with the
senate’s guards and basically forced her presence among Zoricah’s female
warriors. At first, Yara and Sam had been beside themselves, but in no
time, she conquered their hearts and respect.
Zoricah looked at her pale friend by the hallway door. Her once
shiny wavy red hair was gathered on a single plait; her blue eyes were
dark with pain. ‚How are you feeling?‛
‚How did it go?‛ It was all Zoricah got for an answer.
‚Those vamps are a joke!‛ Yara started again, coming out of the
kitchen chewing on a raw chicken leg. ‚They have no idea what’s
happening under their noses and yet feel they have the right to doubt us.‛
she said indignantly, waving the poultry limb at Drew.
‚It’s understandable. I would, too,‛ Drew responded, crossing the
living room to take a seat next to Sam, who gave her a friendly smile but
stood up and went to the balcony. She had always been the quiet one
among them but tonight Sam was especially quiet, Zoricah realized.
‚If someone brought me hard evidence that my people were
getting butchered everywhere, I would listen carefully and do something
about it instead of wasting my time shooting the messenger.‛ Yara said on
her way to the kitchen—no doubt to get another piece of chow. When
Yara was frustrated, she got very predictable. She ate, usually something
raw and nasty to sate the black panther inside her, and let her Brazilian
temper fly free.
Drew ignored her Latin friend. ‚Zoricah, please. Are they backing
us up tomorrow?‛
‚Don’t worry, Drew. We’ll get Deirdre back.‛ It was all Zoricah
could promise because, by Apa Dobrý, she would bring the draconian
twin back home. It did not matter if Tardieh helped them or not; the
following night she would lead her small but fierce army on the attack, as
she had done countless times, and rescue Deirdre. Drew depended on her
twin sister, and her girls depended on their well being to continue
believing the world was not just a place where the gods dumped in foul
people with psychotic obsessions.
Maybe she should stop calling them ‚her girls,‛ Zoricah reflected.
They have grown and changed so much since she'd welcomed them in her
home. Yara continued to be a hot-headed Brazilian who had unsolved
issues with her past, but she had learned how to tone it down, control the
beast, and focus on heightening her strengths instead of blaming everyone
else for her unfortunate fate. Sam had also matured but still struggled
with her powers. Zoricah had literally
felt
her when she was investigating
strange accounts in a small town near North Yorkshire in England. Sam’s
inner energy was so great and so out of control that she had been locked
up in a human mental institution and put under 24/7 surveillance and
heavy drugs. Zoricah had known Sam was human and had no magical
heritage in her blood, but nonetheless she was intrigued by the girl’s
powers and infuriated by what the humans had done to her. So one night
she flew in and got her out. That had been almost forty years before. Sam
still looked like a twenty-something fresh-from-the-farm girl.
Zoricah met Drew’s eyes; they were filled with sadness, but they
were not dead, not yet. ‚We will need all the strength we have for
tomorrow, and that means having more than just a few hours sleep.‛ She
smiled reassuringly. ‚Why don’t you go back to bed, Drew. You too, Yara.
I want you all fresh and ready by late afternoon. We’ll go through the plan
once more before we leave.‛
Yara and Drew nodded in agreement and complied. They were
strong women but respected Zoricah as their leader.
Zoricah crossed the Victorian style living room of her Soho
townhouse and went to the balcony. She loved Soho in the summer. It was
always buzzing with people about and music could be heard everywhere.
It was the reason why she had bought that townhouse in the first place. It
was not luxurious and had only four average size bedrooms distributed
over three levels. She had decorated it with modern furniture in a classic
almost minimalist style. It wasn’t the best home she owned, but it was in
the perfect location, on Mott Street off Broome. Just seconds away from art
galleries, bars, shops, and vibrant live music venues. Humans couldn’t
discern if she was one of them or not, and unlike vampires, she had no
issues with sunlight, so she could always enjoy the best of the human
world without major worries.
Zoricah saw Sam sitting on the outdoor sofa in the balcony. The
lights had not been turned on so the place was only lit by the full moon
above. Shadows highlighted the somber expression on her friend’s
delicate features. She seemed to have taken great interest in the concrete
floor.
‚Thank you for backing me up at the park, Sam.‛ Zoricah sat down
on the armchair next to the sofa. ‚I am sorry for having to reprimand you
in front of the vampires.‛
Sam looked up and smiled, but it never reached her eyes. ‚Oh,
that’s all right. I probably deserved it.‛
‚You did?‛ Zoricah asked not believing her ears.
‚Oh, well, you had warned us about what could happen and told
us not to overreact. And I did, so<‛ Sam shrugged and let the silence fill
in the gaps.
Zoricah frowned not understanding where the guilty-your-honor
attitude was coming from. Something was wrong, very wrong. She looked
straight into her youngest fighter’s eyes and tried to read what wasn’t
being said but failed miserably. ‚Sam, what’s wrong?‛
Sam looked away, then back at Zoricah and smiled again, but once
more, it never reached her eyes. ‚I
had rescued Deirdre already. This waiting is driving me crazy.‛
She was right; this whole abduction was taking a very big toll on
them all. It had been one of the first times that someone close, a dear
friend, had been their mission. But Zoricah knew her petite blonde fighter
was not disclosing the whole truth. Unfortunately now was not the time
for therapy session; maybe later, after they finished their job in New York.