Dragon’s Fate and Other Stories

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Dragon’s Fate and Other Stories Page 23

by Kris Austen Radcliffe


  “Oh, you are a beauty,” she whispered, and extended her hand. “It’s okay.”

  She wouldn’t hurt the wolf, nor would he hurt her.

  Some Shifters morphed their bodies. Some produced calling scents—odorless, pheromone-like breaths that allowed the Shifter to control another’s emotions. Others healed with a touch of their hands.

  Daisy’s father liked to say that her bloodhound nose was an “uncommon gem” of a Shifter ability, one that only a handful of calling-scent-producing enthrallers were blessed with. Smelling everything and everyone came in handy, even if it often made her life difficult. But her nose was tangential to her real gifts.

  Daisy carried a true rarity among the wide-ranging and mercurial landscape of individual Shifter ability combinations—she enthralled and healed animals.

  The wolf snarled.

  She breathed out the ‘calm’ calling scent she used on the dogs who visited the campus veterinary clinic back home where she helped out, and followed it with another which to a human might mean ‘I will help,’ but to animals translated as ‘will soothe pain.’

  The wolf sniffed. His ears rolled toward her, and he inched forward.

  “It’s okay,” she whispered.

  His wide, massive front paws appeared as he inched himself out from under the branch.

  He was bigger than any dog she’d ever met, and she suspected he weighed at least one hundred thirty pounds, which made him large for a gray wolf. Brambles and thistles clung to his silver coat and thick neck ruff.

  A nasty, inflamed gash ran down his left haunch.

  “What happened to you?” It didn’t look like an animal bite or a horn gouge. In Wisconsin, he most likely had gotten himself shot at or caught on a farmer’s fence.

  Daisy breathed out more ‘calm’ before carefully stroking the soft fur of his head. “Here,” she said, and placed her other hand over the wound.

  The cut wasn’t deep, but it did feel hot. “I think you have an infection.” She rubbed his head again.

  Heal, she willed at the wound at the same time she breathed a calling scent she knew boosted a dog’s natural immunity.

  The wolf sighed, but raised his head. His ears perked. And he snarled again.

  Brad stood about twenty feet away where the trail crested the ridge. The blood had drained from his face. His mouth gaped open and formed a perfect circle.

  He held his hands out in front of him as if the wolf was about to leap the entire distance and rip out his throat.

  Sweet-yet-sour, surprised terror wafted from Brad as if he were a giant jawbreaker gumball attached to jumper cables.

  Brad’s fear lacked a note she couldn’t quite place. If she were a trained bloodhound, she’d probably recognize the pheromonal information Brad’s body produced. But her focus had always been on animals, and training to become a veterinarian. Brad’s random body odor pouts never seemed worth the effort to learn.

  “Jesus Christ, Daisy! What are you doing?” Brad yelled. He pointed at the wolf.

  The wolf, though, seemed to understand. He bared his teeth.

  Daisy set her hand on the wolf’s neck. “It’s okay,” she whispered, and breathed out as much ‘friend’ and ‘calm’ as her body could make.

  She was too far from Brad to give him the same treatment, not that it would have worked. She had yet to meet a human her calling scents affected.

  Brad’s father owned a chain of truck dealerships in western Minnesota even though the family lived on a lake in Wayzata. Brad hadn’t had any issues getting into his fraternity. He was mostly outgoing and friendly, and she’d been charmed. He smelled good even if he was always horny, probably because he lived a remarkably clean life for a frat brother.

  The trip had been his idea. He wanted to spend some quality time with his “Russian gangster’s supermodel daughter” girlfriend. At least he always winked when he said “gangster.”

  Shit like that was what kept her from telling him the truth about her life. Brad liked her big, raven black curls, her amber eyes, her breasts, and the idea of her family’s international money.

  Mostly, he just thought she was a regular—if physically attractive—Vet Medicine student.

  “Daisy!” Brad’s scent took on a hint of grilled meat. Just a hint, which meant that some of his surprised terror had loosened into his personal version of machismo.

  Brad liked to wear his caps backward. He also liked to balance his sunglasses backwards on the bill of his backward cap. He was well-off and really did not have to fight for anything, but he did like to pretend that if the chips were down, he could hold his own—and his pretending smelled like meat grilling a little too long at too low of a temperature.

  The wolf stood up. A wave moved down his neck to his back, and his tail fluffed out. The wolf did not appreciate the yelling or the stinks of terror and bravado rolling off Brad.

  “Don’t yell!” Daisy half-yelled.

  The wolf cocked his big head and nuzzled her arm.

  Brad screamed. He let out a high-pitched squeal that sounded like a wounded pig.

  The wolf seemed to think so, too.

  “Hey!” Daisy flooded the area with another wave of ‘calm.’ It wouldn’t affect Brad one bit, but it would keep the wolf from ripping off Brad’s legs.

  Brad screamed again and ran down the ridge. The sun hit his expensive sunglasses on the back of his cap and a flash of polarized yellow light popped in the air like an overheated fairy.

  The wolf licked her arm.

  “Sorry about that,” she said, and placed her hand over the wound again.

  The wolf’s fear didn’t seem insufficient, the way Brad’s had. The wolf smelled concerned.

  Pack, the scent said. Friend.

  Daisy looked back at the ridge. Brad would be down the hill and telling the park rangers some tale about how the big bad wolf was about to eat his personally-chosen and curated girlfriend, and how that made him sad.

  Because that was what had been missing from his scent-scape. A sense of pack and friend.

  Why did she always end up dating douchebags? Selfish men seemed to make a beeline for her. She should’ve figured out how to scent them out a long time ago.

  Perhaps her nose wasn’t as good as she thought it was.

  Daisy patted the wolf’s neck. “You shouldn’t be here. He’ll tell the rangers.” Heat still wafted off the wound, but now it came from her healing, and not an infection. “You need to go home, okay? Back north to Canada. Go find a nice lady wolf and start a pack of smart pups, huh?”

  The wolf twisted his head one way, then another, as if he understood.

  “Go,” she said, and followed with a calling scent brew she hoped would send him on his way to safer grounds.

  He shook like a wet dog. The brambles released, as did a fair number of the thistles attached to his fur. He pawed the ground once, then ran north, toward the river and what she hoped would be a long life.

  Daisy peered down the ridge, and inhaled deeply. Brad’s scent lingered but he was already a good hundred yards up the trail.

  Douchebag, she thought. He wasn’t the first. She really did have a problem with her taste in men.

  Daisy zipped up her red hoodie. Time to return to the lodge, to civilization, and to sorting her man-mess once and for all.

  Chapter Two

  The porch wrapping the Rocky Arbor Park Lodge circled from the rear guest door, around the main door, to the second side entrance next to the ice machine and the building’s soda and candy vending machines. Rocking chairs, small tables, and a bench or two lined the west side while the south opened up into the reception desk and gift shop. The entire building was a lovely, low-slung log cabin. The rooms were small but tidy, and smelled surprisingly fresh. No bleach. No acrid chemical nastiness. Just lemons and vinegar.

  It was a nice place, even if Daisy had wanted to go to the Boundary Waters. Brad had rolled his eyes and made some whiny comment about his family’s vay-cays up North and how he wanted
to go somewhere new. So to The Dells they went. Camping first, then a stop at the kitschy fun of the water parks and attractions.

  Daisy leaned against one of the porch’s log posts. The rose- and rust-colored sunset set the hills glowing, but it turned the vibrant green of the trees into a sad, semi-rotten shade of mud brown, much like how Brad had cast his lovely glow on her life and left a film of ugly.

  She had her bachelor’s degree. She would be starting her veterinarian training in a few weeks. She had a handle on her Shifter gifts. Yet here she was all by herself at the lodge because she had shitty taste in men.

  There’d been a fight. Brad had yelled. The staff had been concerned. Then Brad took the car and left her alone in a lodge inside the Rocky Arbor State Park. Alone, with no vehicle, four hours from her home off the St. Paul campus of the University of Minnesota.

  Douchebag, she thought yet again.

  Daisy pulled out her phone and dialed. “Hey, Dad,” she said. “Brad stranded me in Wisconsin.” He hadn’t paid his part of the bill, either.

  The ambient noise of the bar at The Land of Milk and Honey flowed through the receiver. They must have a band playing tonight. Most nights her father’s massive entertainment complex outside Branson, Missouri, had some type of loud, crowd-pleasing adventure going on. The Land wasn’t all that different from the attractions around Wisconsin Dells.

  “Do you wish me to have him killed?” Dmitri Pavlovich asked in his deadpan, aristocratic Russian accent.

  Her father was a man who enjoyed using stereotypes and clichés against his opponents. He understood all the generalized flavors of Russian-ness and was more than capable of using each and every one of them to his advantage.

  With her, though, he was himself. Mostly. Unless he was sitting in the bar.

  Daisy chuckled. Life’s tough when your father’s a “Russian gangster.”

  “No, Dad,” she answered. Bradley Mitchell Richardson was not worth the effort of killing, maiming, poking, making cry, or even the mildest of a normal’s revenges, much less those of any of the many high-powered Shifters in her father’s employ.

  Shifters who had a wide range of frightening talents that could be used to kill, maim, terrorize, or otherwise cast a Russian fairytale-worthy vengeance upon any unworthy man-child.

  Ice clinked against the crystal tumbler her father must have been holding in his other hand. He always had a crystal tumbler of something or other. It helped with his “image.” His own Shifter healing ability took care of any effects of the alcohol, and normals found the hard liquor both disarming and stereotypical, which often gave her father the upper hand.

  One should never underestimate the great and terrible Dmitri Pavlovich Romanov.

  “It is not a problem, daughter.” He clinked his glass again. “I will send Ben.”

  Daisy sighed even though she knew damned well that sighing around her father—even over a phone call—was never a good idea. But she’d had enough male posturing to last her a long immortal’s lifetime. “Do not send Ben, Dad!”

  Jacob, the sweet but bored older gentleman who ran the reception desk, stepped around the corner just as she raised her voice with her father. A wave of sour-citrus-like annoyance rolled off him, then a burst of pheromone-clearing shock after he realized she was one of the guests who’d been yelling earlier.

  But then he smiled and began tidying the tables and rocking chairs.

  “Perhaps not killed, then,” her father said. “Ben will make this Bradley never think of you again.”

  Literally. Ben was a powerful and skilled Shifter enthraller, and could force an unsuspecting normal like her now very-ex-boyfriend to forget precisely what Ben wanted him to forget.

  “Dad, no.” Daisy pinched the bridge of her nose. He might not be serious. Maybe. “Please. It’s okay. Brad left.” She looked out at the sunset. “There’s a car rental place in town. I’ll get a ride there and drive myself home.”

  She glanced at Jacob. The staff would know what to do to get her a car in the morning. “I just wanted you to know why I’m charging a car to my Land credit card.”

  She carried a Land of Milk and Honey company card even though she hadn’t worked at her father’s bar since high school. He insisted. For emergencies.

  Which this was. No denying that. But not one she couldn’t handle.

  No clinking ice, though the background buzz of his bar drifted over the line. “There is no need.”

  He was going to send someone to pick her up. “Dad, don’t send the plane, okay?” Not that she wouldn’t appreciate the gesture, just that it seemed extreme. And as much of a douchebag move as Brad’s abandonment in the first place. It screamed self-centered self-absorption with an extra-unhealthy dose of self-deception.

  Her father laughed. “I will make a call.”

  “Dad. Really. Don’t. I’m fine.” I’m not, she thought.

  Daisy closed her eyes. Why would she think such a thing? Yes, Brad had left her in Wisconsin without a ride, but he was gone, and the anger and relief seemed to be balancing each other. And she’d gotten to help a wolf. A real wolf.

  A wolf was infinitely better than Brad, any day.

  So maybe she wasn’t fine, but she sure as hell wasn’t going to lose her composure. She’d been in much worse situations. Brad leaving her was a cakewalk.

  Plus, she’d gotten to touch and heal a wolf.

  Still, damned good thing she hadn’t said “I’m not” out loud for her father to hear.

  His glass clinked again. “It is okay to ask for security,” he said as if she had said her thought out loud.

  She would have hugged him, if they had been in the same room. He might be a bit of a hardass, but he would drop everything and drive from Branson to Wisconsin Dells himself if he thought Bradley would cause her one more tear.

  “I need to get back to campus,” she said, to change the subject. “I have to pick up my graduate student ID.” Four more years, and she’d have a Ph.D. and vet licenses in both Minnesota and Missouri.

  Her father sniffed. “You will become an extraordinary veterinarian, daughter. My horses will have the best.”

  Daisy shook her head. Her father spoke as if he voiced not his expectations, but an inevitable future. “You sound like a Fate, Dad.”

  He sniffed again. “One does not need to see the future to understand the truth of the world.”

  No, but sometimes it helped. “Don’t worry about me. I’m fine,” she said.

  The ice clinked yet again. “I know.” He sipped. “Care for the animals.”

  Daisy Reynolds Pavlovich, the woman who saved wolves and who also happened to be the daughter of a Russian gangster, smiled for the first time since her now very-ex decided to abandon her in the tourist mecca known to the world as The Dells.

  “I will, Dad. I will.” Daisy disconnected the call and stuffed her phone into her pocket.

  Jacob from the front desk looked up from his task and smiled. “I’ll comp your room tonight,” he said. “And we’ll find you a ride in the morning.” He patted her arm and leaned close as if sharing a secret. “You’re way too good for that jerk who ran off.”

  Yes, it was a fine day, even if she had been abandoned.

  Daisy inhaled deeply. She straightened her t-shirt, and hugged Jacob. “Thank you,” she said, and walked into the lodge to sleep off her bad-yet-good day.

  Chapter Three

  Morning blazed through the curtains of Daisy’s sweet and clean, if small, room. She’d slept surprisingly well by herself. No weird dreams about walking naked in public, or not finishing tasks, or finding herself in the final of a chemistry course she’d forgotten to attend.

  No dreams of her very-ex, either, or the wolf for that matter. At least not that she remembered.

  She sat up and rubbed her cheek and ear. Her head hurt, though.

  Her mind may not have clenched over Brad abandoning her, but her jaw had.

  Douche—, she started to think, then stopped herself. No use in
getting into a spiraling internal monologue about her now very-ex. Time to focus on finding transportation, and perhaps spending a day at one of the rides. She was at The Dells. It would be a shame to go home without a t-shirt.

  The reception area, like the rest of the lodge, was surprisingly bright considering the amount of dark wood on the walls and used in the furniture. Someone had flung open the windows, and a humid, warm breeze moved from the front, toward the desk, and down the hallway.

  Car exhaust mixed with traces of three or four people who hadn’t been in the building last night, as well as another person whose scent reminded her of Jacob, except this new person smelled young and feminine.

  The young woman looked up when Daisy walked into the reception area and quickly wiped her hands on her lodge polo shirt as if she’d been handling dirt instead of playing solitaire.

  She looked just as Daisy expected her to. A smaller, female, young version of Jacob stood behind the desk, right down to the same cowlick at her right temple, except that the young woman—Marci, her tag said—sported a bright pink streak instead of Jacob’s salt and pepper.

  Marci smiled. “Are you Ms. Pavlovich?” She glanced down at her desk as if she’d been storing an important package she just had to give to Daisy.

  “Yes,” Daisy said.

  Marci nodded. “Grandpa said you’d need a ride today.” She tapped her keyboard and pulled up a screen, but leaned over the counter. “He said the guy you came with up and left like a dumbass.”

  Marci stiffened and her scent shifted toward embarrassed. “Sorry. I’m not supposed to say stuff like that to guests.”

  No, she probably wasn’t. “It’s fine,” Daisy said. “It’s an apt description.”

  Marci grinned and tapped the counter. “Grandpa says you need to get to The Twin Cities.” She pulled a map of Wisconsin Dells and the surrounding area out of a folder and set it on the counter for Daisy to see.

  Marci tapped a building on the edge of town. “The car rental place is here, next to the train station.” Then she tapped on one of the large hotels next to the water park. “They have a satellite pick-up station here.”

 

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