by Meg Xuemei X
“If I refuse?” I cocked my head to the side, my eyes cold.
“Then we’ll kill your pack and drag you in chains behind us,” he said, steel in his voice. The former lightness and amusement had deserted him completely. This one wasn’t used to anyone disobeying him. His amber eyes turned to ice, as if he wasn’t already intimidating enough. “There’s an easy way, and there’s a hard way. You choose.”
Another round of fighting would end us. I hadn’t expected to live long ever since I was a child, but I would do anything to preserve my pack.
“You saw the odds,” the leader continued, softening his tone. “Make the right choice, wolf girl. I can see that you’re a practical one.”
My eyes narrowed; my mind wheeled. Were they the Angel hunters’ pawns? They couldn’t be. The Dragonians hated Angels even more than Fey. The war of Earth against the Heavens decades ago was the reluctant alliance of the Mysthian Fey and the Dragonians battling King Agro and his Reaper army, with the assistance of the Angel High Prince’s Fallen Angels.
That period of history was epic, bloody, and complicated.
“Who sent you?” I demanded.
“Who could send me?” the leader asked with pure arrogance.
Only a Dragonian warlord would use this tone and sound so offended at my implication that someone else was above him.
“The Fey. The Angels.” I tested him. “They’re mightier than your kind, and you’re only half Dragonian.”
“If she knows whom she’s insulted—” a Dragonian murmured but stopped abruptly at his leader’s stern look. I could tell these three hornless Dragonians apart now. This one had a bluer skin than the other two.
The shifter smiled. “Unlike others, the lovely wolf girl isn’t afraid of you, Ares.”
Afraid of him? The ringleader might think he was death, but he had no idea what I was.
I feared not death but something worse—something the Angel hunters had planned for me.
“Wild and untamed, but she’ll learn manners and discipline,” the leader said confidently, the heat in his fiery amber eyes was blatant.
Many men looked at me with desire when I removed my cloak and exposed my face. Those who had tried to force themselves on me had brought a dark end to themselves without me having to raise a finger against them.
I was untouchable. I couldn’t wait for the day to see the agonized look on the half-blood Dragonian’s handsome face when he dared to lay his hand on my bare skin.
The image of his large, rough hand running over my body caused me to shiver.
“You’ll learn yours sooner than I,” I said. I spoke the truth. Only he didn’t know the truth, which would be too costly for him to learn.
I gave his hot body another quick scan. What a shame.
“We’ll see,” the leaders said. “Go pack if you have anything to pack. We’re leaving.”
“Are you sure she’s the one we’ve been looking for?” asked the horned Dragonian.
“Positive,” the leader said. The hard look had departed his eyes, which now sparked with delight, as if he believed he’d found a treasure. “The Oracle said we must find the wolf girl first, and this—” he jerked his chin in my direction, “—is our wolf girl.”
Shit! It was never good when an Oracle was involved.
“What makes you think I am the wolf girl you want?” I said. “There’re dozens of wolf girls out there. You’re wasting your time taking the wrong girl.”
“Dozens?” the ringleader snorted and his men snickered.
My wolves gnarled.
“We’ve been hunting you for nearly four months,” the leader said. “We’ve swept over every forest, and you’re the only girl leading a pack of wolves. Wolves don’t obey a human or a half-human. They regard humans as a delicacy.”
My wolves thought him a delicacy.
The ringleader arched an eyebrow. “How did you get mixed up with the beasts?”
“Beasts?” I said. “They’re better than any of you, and you aren’t worthy to lick the dirt under their paws.”
His men exploded into laughter. Their leader didn’t share their belly laughs, but a bright smile wheeled in his eyes.
My pack and I weren’t amused. They growled.
While my face burned in rage, my heart sank into ice.
Now not just King Agro’s surviving sentinels knew about my existence, but the Oracle as well, and the Oracle had betrayed me to these brutes. Had the Oracle led the Angels to me in the first place? Had the Oracle told this man more about me other than me being the wolf girl?
“What Oracle?” I demanded.
“That’s not your concern,” the leader said. “All you need to do is lead us to the First Witch.”
My hands grew cold, and I willed my heartbeat to resume its normal tempo. They would suspect I was more than I appeared if they detected the turmoil inside me.
“Then you’re out of luck,” I said blankly. “I don’t know anything about any witch or where she is. As you can see, I live in the forest and have no connections to the outside world. You’re wasting your, and my, time.”
“The Oracle said you’d take us to the First Witch,” the leader said. “She’s never been wrong. So you’ll do just that.”
So, the Oracle was female. When I had a chance to hunt her down, I would shut her up once and for all, so no more hunters would come my way.
“Let’s go,” the ringleader said. “No more stalling. We’ve wasted enough time just to find you.”
He gave a piercing whistle.
Vast wings appeared above the forest, casting dense shadows. I looked up and drew a sharp breath as they shot toward the edge of the forest.
My wolves howled in hostility.
I hadn’t been mistaken when I thought I’d glimpsed wings soaring overhead. Except they didn’t belong to Angels but some sort of creatures.’ And the Dragonians rode them.
I dashed toward my daggers on the forest floor, but the Dragonians were faster.
“We’ll keep them for you for now,” the leader said.
I snarled at him, and my pack barked furiously.
The leader turned, not bothered that I could send my wolves to go for his throat, and he expected me to follow.
My nostrils flared at his sheer arrogance.
When he didn’t see me tag along after several yards, he glanced at me over his shoulder and frowned. “What now?”
“After you help us find the First Witch,” said the shifter, “you can return to your wolves and you’ll be bountifully rewarded.”
I didn’t trust anyone’s promise.
“Yes,” the ringleader said impatiently, “you’ll be rewarded riches beyond your wildest dreams.”
What could gold do for my wolves and me? All I wanted was my pack’s safety and me to be left alone. Once again, I had to fight for my freedom. My only choice was to lead the barbarians far away. When the opportunity came, I would finish the lot one by one in their sleep.
“We’d love to have you among us,” the shifter continued to smooth over things. “What’s your name, wolf girl?”
I ignored him.
“Now can we go?” the Dragonian leader asked. “Or must I carry you like a bag of potatoes?”
I trailed after the jerk as I silently and sternly commanded my pack not to follow me.
Let him think he caught me. If he knew whom he’d really abducted, he would have run from me as fast as he could, screaming all the way.
I stared at his backside with a wolfish smirk.
CHAPTER 3
Wind Guardian
My amused smile froze as soon as I saw what landed in the clearing.
Four vast alligator-like creatures folded their enormous wings of talons and swept their tails that could impale a man with one strike. Each creature had seats strapped on their scaled backs.
They bared their fangs—serrated and longer than my forearm—and stared at me with interest. They liked seeing me scared. I lifted my chin and glared at t
hem with disdain in turn.
If I got on those fearsome creatures, they would take me far away, and then it would be more risky for me to journey home since I would have to worry about the Angel hunters. I’d never dared to venture too far from my forest after I’d escaped them years ago.
The savage leader strode toward the alligator that had the largest, most overdeveloped wings. He patted his ride with affection and beckoned at me to approach it. Both beast and man looked formidable and magnificent. Now that the Dragonian leader was relaxed and affectionate, his sex appeal rolled off him like waves.
His sculpted armor fitted him perfectly and highlighted his broad chest. Hard muscles flexed on his arms. My gaze dipped to his long, firm legs before I tore it back to his face.
He had a strong, square jaw, a straight nose that one only saw on the faces of nobility, and long, dark eyebrows. His sensual lips could lead to wild, immodest imaginations. This half-blood had the most symmetric features I’d ever seen, and none of them hid his brutal strength.
For the first time since our encounter, he wasn’t watching me. He wrapped an arm around the beast’s thick, scaled neck in a hug, and the beast purred. It purred!
“I’m not getting on that thing,” I said.
Last time I had been taken to the sky, the Angel had spun me in the air, released me, and only caught me before I hit the ground. Before he had hijacked me, his companions had dropped an Aryanian, a mortal subspecies who had a short lifespan, from the air. Her skull had exploded less than two feet beside me like a cracked egg, her blood and brains splattering all over me.
The sadistic demonstration had been for punishing me for fighting them off.
And then the Angel had soared into the sky with me, ready to show me the extreme sports, despite that my clothes were matted with the girl’s blood and brain. When I had spotted the lake beneath, I’d managed to touch one of his beating wings when they’d come down toward me. His screams of agony had been like music to my ears. His corpse had fallen into the lake after me.
When his companions had reached us, I had been lurking in the depths of the lake. The sky creatures weren’t so powerful in the water. With a touch, I had sent another Angel to Hell, and had buried an angelic blade into the eye of the last Angel.
I’d killed them all.
I was twelve then.
When my pack had found me and dragged me back to the woods, I had had two broken ribs.
“The hell you won’t,” the half-blood leader snapped his head toward me, his amber eyes emitting dark fire. He seemed to have run out of patience with me. This tyrant just couldn’t handle anyone disobeying him.
But he was the one who had invaded my forest and tried to take me away from my home.
This ended now. At this moment, my pack was retreating toward the far north region. They would be safe.
“I won’t fly on that creature,” I repeated. “In fact, I won’t fly at all.”
“You’re my prisoner now, wolf girl,” the Dragonian leader said. “So get used to doing whatever I ask you to.”
“Make me,” I said.
“If that’s what you want,” he said.
I inhaled the earthy fragrance of the forest. This could be my last breath, but I would bring him down with me. His scream of agony would be a melody.
His men would never find the First Witch, even if they turned every stone on Earth.
I sauntered toward him to meet him halfway, planning to use the beast as a shield after I was done with the ringleader.
The alligator leapt and swept his rider behind him with his mighty wings. The beast faced me, his big ice-blue eyes meeting my dark ones.
Hello, Witchling, the alligator said.
What? I stumbled back. What the hell?
I didn’t expect you to be the nervous type, the alligator said and let out a chuckle like a half-thunder.
Did you—did you talk to me? I asked.
Who else can I talk to other than the only witch who can communicate with my kind? He sighed. He actually sighed as if he thought I was dumb.
How do you know who I am? I demanded, my mind’s voice hard and cold as panic shot through me. You must have taken me for someone else!
I won’t tell your secrets, Witchling, the alligator said lazily, if that’s what you’re worried about.
My taut shoulder muscles didn’t relax at his easy promise.
C’mon, get on my back, he said. I won’t bite and I won’t drop you. Never drop you.
Are you the Oracle? Even as I said that, I knew it couldn’t be. The Dragonian leader had said the Oracle was female. He now darted his piercing gaze between his alligator and me, his face unreadable.
No, no, no. The alligator shook his huge head as if I kept him amused. I’m Ventus, Guardian of Wind. I won’t harm you, Freyja.
I narrowed my eyes. How did you know my name?
You talked to your wolves, and I overheard, he said. Now get onto the seat before everyone gets suspicious.
Fine, I could use him if he turned out to be an ally.
“I’ll ride him alone,” I told the Dragonian leader as I put my gloves on, “if you want me to go with you.”
“He’s my rightful ride, so you’ll ride with me,” the ringleader said. “Each guardian will only take two passengers.”
I looked around. His men had mounted the alligators, two men on each beast.
Then I would ride on another alligator. I didn’t want to saddle with this nasty half-breed. If I could mental talk to this alligator, I could communicate with the rest. I would persuade them to rebel against their former riders and follow me to freedom.
“I’ll ride with Lucas,” I said, turning my head to the shifter.
Lucas grinned from ear to ear. “Anytime, wolf girl,” he said, turning to gesture to his partner—the advanced human—to empty the seat.
“Back off, Lucas,” the ringleader said.
Large hands seized my narrow waist while I considered the shape shifter. I snapped my head, and the ringleader lifted me in the air. This close, I could smell his powerful male scent mixed with wood and leather. Suddenly I was lost, and then I was on the front seat strapped on Ventus’ back. With a swift move, the ringleader settled behind me, his hard chest pressing against my back and his inner thighs crowding mine.
“Wait!” I called.
“We’ve waited long enough,” said the Dragonian leader. “No more causing trouble.”
Earth! He kidnapped me, and he thought I was the troublemaker just because I protested?
The ringleader whistled noisily, and Ventus surged into the sky. Bone-chilling wind slammed into my cheeks and whooshed by my ears.
With a yelp, I tugged my hood tightly around my face.
The Dragonian behind me didn’t seem to mind the strong current. He must have thicker skin. I lowered my head, not wanting to shield the rigid airstream for him.
His hand gripped the handle embedded between Ventus’ scales; his free arm wrapped around my waist and pulled me against him. I was tempted to slam my elbow into his abdomen, but his embrace was surprisingly pleasant. It was solid and warm.
“You’ve never flown before, right?” he asked.
You have no idea, I thought.
“After you get used to it,” he said, “you’ll like the thrill of flying. Roaming in the sky is the best experience. It’s freedom. It’s—”
I turned my face halfway so he could hear me as I shouted at him, “Thank you for telling me how I should feel, but I’d appreciate it more if you stop talking.”
That shut him up.
Ventus roared with laughter.
This will be a very interesting journey, he said in my head.
I snorted in answer.
The Guardian of Wind climbed into the high clouds and sent me straight into the freezing air.
Get THE DRAGONIAN’S WITCH on Amazon
More Books by Meg Xuemei X
In the universe of The Wickedest Witch
THE SHIFT
ERS’ TRUE MATES
Claim the Wolf King
Claim the Leopard Princess
Coming on Oct 28, 2017
Complete THE FIRST WITCH duet with an HEA Ending
The Dragonian's Witch: Book 1
The Witch's Consort: Book 2
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH SERIAL (COMPLETE)
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 1: ANGEL'S LUST
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 2: ANGEL'S OBSESSION
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 3: ANGEL'S INDECENT PROPOSAL
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 4: ANGEL'S GLORY
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 5: ANGEL'S FURY
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 6: ANGEL'S MATE
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 7: ANGEL'S WAR
THE EMPRESS OF MYSTH 8: ANGEL'S HOME
The Girl Next Door: A Small Town Romance
“I would recommend Girl Next Door to readers who enjoy stories of first love, romance in general, YA fiction, and romance set in other cultures.”
DARK CHEMISTRY SERIES
THE SIREN (DARK CHEMISTRY, #1)
"A flawless blend of sci-fi, YA fantasy, supernatural events, romance, adventure, action, suspense and intrigue ... The Siren is a one of a kind young adult story and the start of a truly captivating series. I cannot wait to read book 2 and see where this awesome adventure takes us."
(Exclusive in Fire and Fantasy: A Limited Edition Collection of Urban and Epic Fantasy)
THE PRINCE (DARK CHEMISTRY, # 2)
"If you are looking for a sci-fi adventure with cutting edge battles, sophisticated heroes and villains, lost ancient powers, and an impossible love interest that can only end in disaster, look no further."
THE RED QUEEN (DARK CHEMISTRY, #3)
“A powerful plot full of dire circumstances, intrigue, romance, mystery, and action, fans will certainly be captivated and engrossed.”
About the Author
Meg Xuemei X is a USA Today bestselling author. She writes steamy paranormal and sci-fi romance. She finds it dreamingly delightful to be around drop-dead gorgeous alpha males who are forever tormented by her feisty heroines, formidable alien angels, wild shifters, haughty fey, dark vampires, and cunning witches.