Vengeful Prince

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Vengeful Prince Page 1

by Mary E. Twomey




  Vengeful Prince

  Book One in the Territorial Mates Series

  Mary E. Twomey

  Contents

  1. Going for a Run

  2. Alexavier’s Next Bad Idea

  3. A Vampire, a Shifter and a Fae Walk into a Bar

  4. Three Princes, One Offer

  5. Convincing Hannah

  6. Fiora’s Approval

  7. Marrying Hannah… or Lilya

  8. Honeysuckle

  9. Sleeping with the Boys

  10. New Girlfriend

  11. A Carriage for Lilya

  12. Arrows and Daggers

  13. Blood on the Rug

  14. Healing Touch

  15. Pleasantly Uncomfortable

  16. Belief in Goodness

  17. Sharing a Bed

  18. Strange Bedfellows

  19. Rude Awakening

  20. Punch and Punish

  21. Scolding King Ronin

  22. Loving Destino

  23. Pens and a Plan

  24. Riding with Ronin

  25. Cave Kisses

  26. Ring of Truth

  27. Sharing My Mattress with Ronin

  28. The Fate we Fear

  29. Red Dress

  30. Vengeful Prince

  Wicked Prince

  1. Blue Eyes, Teddy Bear

  Copyright © 2019 Mary E. Twomey

  Cover Art by Emcat Designs

  All rights reserved.

  First Edition: July 2019

  This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance of characters to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. The author holds exclusive rights to this work. Unauthorized duplication is prohibited.

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each reader. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  For information:

  http://www.maryetwomey.com

  For Ryan Keenan,

  Who has a fantastic imagination,

  and an even grander concept of reality.

  1

  Going for a Run

  Destino

  How a peace walk turned into running for my life, I’ll never understand. This was a bad idea.

  Even though I can see just fine through the night, the rain pelting my face makes the jutting rocks harder to detect. I’ve tripped three times already, and I just know it’ll be an even four if I’m not careful. But there’s not a spare second to invest in caution. The growl and snap of jaws close behind me light up a fear I know I’ll never be able to outrun. I don’t know how Alex talked me into this, but if he ever suggests another hairbrained scheme, I’m saying no. I’m saying no so loudly that he actually hears me this time.

  The smattering of trees thickens as I near the tall border wall. The stone barrier I’m bolting toward in the distance is a clear message to all shifters that they don’t want to travel through these woods. They can’t handle the lawlessness that lurks on the other side—which is exactly why I charge full-force toward it. Neutral Territory is for criminals and the outcasts of society. It’s where shifters and vampires are forced to coexist, which is one of the most brilliant punishments our peoples can dream up.

  The pursuing shifter’s howl to rally his mates resounds through the night, so my legs pump harder as I breach the barrage of trees that usually warn people to stay away. Instead, I welcome them, knowing I’m not safe yet, but I’m on the edge of it. Most shifters won’t do more than sniff near these woods, not even to snatch at a rogue vampire like me who’s daft enough to traipse through enemy territory.

  But I’m not their enemy. That was the whole point of the peace walk. To stroll through shifter territory and let them see we mean no harm. We’re people, not blood-sucking monsters of the night.

  Well, I mean, vampires do drink blood, and yes, we largely do our living during the night, but monsters? That’s a bit of a reach.

  The soft cadence of paws hitting leaves and branches slows but doesn’t stop completely, so I keep my swift pace. For a second, the sound stops, and everything in me brightens at the idea that I might get out of this with only a few bruises and a bloody nose.

  When the canine shifter pummels me from behind, I realize he hadn’t stopped, but jumped at me instead. His fangs sink into my shoulder as my chin hits the forest floor, my arm landing beneath my body with a sickening crunch. I roll onto my back the second he lets go, facing my assailant head-on. My forearm screams in agony, and I know something’s too wrong to shake off.

  Only slivers of moonlight shine through the twined branches overhead, glinting off my attacker’s maw enough to highlight him backing up instead of lunging again. In a blink, he changes into his man form—a dark-haired brute with his hands raised in caution. “You’re Prince Destino Karamathian? Why would ye… We wouldn’t have…”

  I stand, though that small feat takes more effort than I’m prepared for. “You wouldn’t have attacked me if you knew you could be hanged for it? So it’s alright to jump a vampire, so long as it’s not me? Is that the sort of logic I’m hearing from you?”

  He doesn’t respond, which is probably best.

  I wave him off. “Go back to your home and realize that my biggest crime was walking. You bit me for walking. That’s the sort of bloke you are. Be very proud you defended your territory from a pleasant stroll down the street. Brave soul, you are. Would you be able to sleep better at night if I bared my fangs to give you a good scare?”

  “Not your fangs, your majesty!” the shifter pleads.

  Oh, for clouds’ sake. “Are you having a laugh? You bit me!”

  He backs away, turns and bolts out of the forest, leaving me alone in the woods. He’s probably hoping I get too lost in here to find my way to report him. Little does he know I understand these woods better than he does, as well as the land that lies on the other side. I was headed in that direction anyway, so I turn and trudge through what is rapidly becoming a muddy path, traveled usually only by my best friend. Salem’s not going to be happy when he learns one of his own attacked me, but honestly, I’m not sure what Alex and Salem were expecting would happen. I can only hope they aren’t as bad off as my arm feels. Every bloody movement is an echo of pain through my forearm, shooting up my arm and zinging off the bite marks in my shoulder. It’s a solid half a mile through the woods, and I take each step with care.

  When the trees thin out to reveal the towering stone wall that’s meant to keep miscreants out of Jacoba, I shake my head at the flimsy logic of the shifters. “Like a wall could really keep us out if we wanted in,” I say to the night.

  Though, truly, this wall is far easier to scale without what I’m fairly certain is a broken arm. It’s not impossible to climb, but I’m grateful I’m alone, so Salem and Alex don’t see me sweat through the effort of making my way over the ten-foot-high stone barrier.

  I stumble a few steps when my boots hit the earth on the other side, but manage to catch myself before I break any other limbs. The moonlight glints off the sharp, craggy boulders that welcome the unwelcomed to the outskirts of Neutral Territory. I heave a sigh of relief that I’m nearly someplace safe. I could go home to the castle and let the healer give me a look, but then I’d have to report what happened. I don’t want a shifter hanged on a vampire’s order. I want peace.

  Somehow.

  The mountains are all black rock in this part of the land, and probably look formidable to anyone with a shred of sense. But to me, it looks like home, more than my own address. I’ve many fond memories of practicing different styles of weaponry with Salem and Alex, talking politics, and trying to dream up a better future than the one that will be handed down to us. Our parents have mad
e such a mess of things, that these angry-looking ebony rocks have been my safe place more times than I can count. Though I never venture into the heart of Neutral Territory, I often travel on the outskirts and climb up to our cave overlooking the land of cast-outs. I wonder if they’ve lucked out and found the secret to happiness, living without the governing and often corrupt hand of the shifters, the vampires and the fae.

  Though I’m not scheduled to meet here with Salem and Alex for a few hours, this is the place I’m called toward most often. It’s quiet here, and no one lies to me. No one hates me. No one dismisses me as useless because my ideas don’t involve waging war on the shifter or fae territories.

  So I climb. Even though I’m doing it one-handed, I move up the side of the mountain, working my way around the side so I can rest in our secret cave. It’s far enough away from the damage that might always be unfixable.

  This was a bad idea.

  The rocks are bloody slippery from the intermittent rain. It’s not pelting me at the moment, but judging by the clouds hovering over the mountaintop, it won’t be long before I’m making my way up to our cave in the dark, in the rain, with a broken arm.

  My fingers slip, and my heart jumps into my throat in time with my foot scrambling to find its hold. Despite my apparently “monstrous” ability to see in the dark, this mountain is still problematic when you’re scaling it with one usable arm. I’m just grateful my mates aren’t watching me struggle.

  With a surge of desperation to get to level ground before my only functional arm gives out, I hoist myself up again and again, my forearm straining. My teeth grind as I grunt through the last few feet, finally glimpsing the ledge with a cry of relief.

  I’m almost there. I won’t fall. I won’t fall.

  My fingers slip, and a cry belts out from me. The sound scares me more than the few inches I slip before I manage to catch myself.

  “Why, is that the great Prince Destino Karamathian?” Alex’s voice hits my ears from two feet above my head. A lantern’s light flicks on and shines into the night to guide the way more clearly. “It can’t be. Prince Destino doesn’t climb like an elephant and sweat like a bride on her wedding night.” I glance up, and his face pops out from the cave’s mouth. His blond hair falls forward, framing the wry grin that greets me, but then vanishes when he sees my struggle. “Des, what have you gotten yourself into this time?”

  2

  Alexavier’s Next Bad Idea

  Destino

  I guffaw at the notion that my injury is in any way a result of my poor judgment. “Me? This was your idea!”

  Alex sends down a rope, which I wrap around my good arm, using it as leverage to gain a better foothold. It doesn’t take more than a handful of seconds for Alex to pull me up the rest of the way. When he grips my cloak, his fingers dig under my bicep to tug me to safety.

  My breath comes in heavy pants as I collapse near the ledge by his side. Alex pats my bloodied shoulder because he’s a proper arsehole. “Is the mountain getting taller, or are you out of practice? If I didn’t know any better, I’d say you were winded, brother.”

  I roll onto my back, groaning at the pain in my arm and shoulder. I want to shove Alex, but can’t commit to the effort. “You’re a foul git for saying that. I’m fairly certain it’s your plan that got me into this mess.”

  He smooths his hair from his eyeline. “That can’t be. All my plans are amazing. Must be your execution that sent everything sideways.” Alex’s casual cadence always has a smile to it, even when there’s no reason for such cheeriness. “Should I bring up a rocking chair or something next time, grandpa?” Then his joking quiets. “Are you alright?”

  I cringe, my chin lifting to take in the cloaked form of Prince Alexavier. “Just a little winded, is all. Ran from quite the determined shifter to get here.”

  Alex stands and reaches out for my broken arm to hoist me to my feet, but I extend the other instead, hoping he doesn’t notice. Of course, that’s the next thing he comments on. “Do any handstands lately? You don’t exactly look up for the challenge.” The play leaves his blue eyes as I lean against the cave wall opposite him, cradling my arm to my chest.

  “I barely feel it.” I shake my arm as proof, but it aches so badly, I’m certain Alex sees me wince. The cave is lit only by the lantern that hangs on the hook I installed overhead, but I know he’s studying my scrapes as he takes off his cloak. He drapes the black material over my shoulders, and then leans against the far wall. Any light reflects off his skin and makes it look like he’s glowing. But that’s the fae for you.

  He’s slimmer than me and a couple inches taller, and sometimes I envision myself shoving him when he gets that cocky know-it-all look about him when I’m lying, and he spots it. I’ve always been a dreadful liar. Though, as any movement pains my broken arm, I’m guessing body-checking my best mate is out. For now.

  Alex’s tone is scrubbed of all condescension, which I know is quite the effort for him. “It needs to be set, Des. This kind of thing worries me.”

  “You know I can’t go to the palace healer with something like this. The story of how I got it will have to come out, and that would only cause more problems. Harris wants me to stay out of trouble. Thinks stuff like this reflects poorly on his ability to parent me. He’s worried King Ronin will never hand down the crown to him if Harris can’t keep his own son in line.”

  “Well, your dad’s an ass, and your great-grandfather’s not much better.” Alex turns his chin from left to right. “I don’t like this. It matters if you come to us with broken bones.”

  “You’re doing that pesky hovering thing again.” At my blasé attitude, Alexavier tosses a rock my way, and before I can think it through, I lift my hand to catch it. I bite my lip through a howl as the fist-sized stone sends a painful ricochet up my bum arm. “Ah!”

  Alex detaches himself from the wall and closes the gap between us, now that I’ve finally admitted the full scope of my injury. As much as he enjoys needling me, he’s careful with our hug, making sure my arm doesn’t jostle too much. “I missed you, brother,” he says, his eyes closing.

  Understatement. I finally exhale, and it feels like the first breath I’ve taken since the last time we saw each other. “Meeting up once a month isn’t enough. I keep thinking it’ll get easier, but it doesn’t. Things are bad back home.”

  “Bad enough that you come back to me with a broken arm?”

  “Salem’s territory still holds a strict hatred for vampires, in case you were wondering. Bloody shifters.”

  Alex hisses his disapproval. “You’re an idiot.”

  “It was your plan!”

  Alex throws his head back as if I’m a colossal screw-up. “My plan was that you two go together on your peace walks through each other’s territories. Speaking of which…” He taps his ear to let me know he’s picked up whatever grunts the final member of our clandestine group makes as he climbs his way up. You’d think the stars would give us a little help, but it’s cloudy tonight. I’m hoping our climb down isn’t done on rain-soaked rocks. “Salem! Brother, it’s good to see you.”

  Salem shakes his fur when his solid form fills the view. He’s a silhouette framed by the backdrop of tall trees and clouds in the distance. A nod means he missed us, which he gives after he catches his breath. His wolf form is enormous, and far more menacing than Alex or me.

  Alex motions to my arm. “Now, now. Turn into your man form so you can make sure to give old Des here a proper handshake.”

  “Shut it,” I mutter.

  Salem stretches out his front legs until they look like hands. The transformation washes over his body like a breeze that blows his black and gray fur into nothing, leaving the surly mug I’ve grown to count on since we were younger. Well, since I was young. I’m not sure Salem was ever young a day in his life. I’m fairly certain he came out of the womb with a mission and too much on his plate. He glances down at his standard jeans and military green button-up shirt, stomping some of the
rain off his combat boots. He takes in my battered physique with an edge to his jaw. “Your people or mine?”

  Salem wants to know the culprit, which means he cares about me. But I care about him enough not to send him into a fight that’ll defeat all we’ve been working for. “The point of a peace walk is to keep the peace, not to create more violence,” I remind him. “If you settle the score against me by taking down some of your own people, I don’t think that’ll accomplish what we’re trying to do. You’ve already angered my people enough when you tried doing a peace walk in my territory with a handful of your men. Apparently Drexdenberg isn’t any more ready for shifters traipsing through than Jacoba’s willing to allow vampires inside.”

  Salem points at me in accusation. His brogue always ramps up whenever he’s vexed, which is not uncommon. “I’ve got every right defending myself if I get jumped. We were outnumbered seven vamps for every one of my shifters, ye know.”

  Alex sighs heavily, his blond hair almost glowing when the lantern’s light flickers in his direction. “This isn’t working. Our little experiment. Us taking walks in each other’s territories has only resulted in you two getting beaten up on enemy grounds.”

  I hate that Alex is right. I run my hand through my damp hair, frustrated with the same problem we can never manage to solve. “Then we just give up? We let our parents and grandparents ruin the world with their stupid prejudices? We sit back and do nothing, and then when they pass on, you two inherit a mess no one can fix?”

 

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