Read Serpent's Kiss: A Dragonfire Novel Online
Authors: Deborah Cooke
Astrid
.
“Who’s Astrid?” Rox murmured into his ear.
“I don’t know,” Niall admitted, even as the shards of the dream faded from his mind. The pain of betrayal lingered though, like a bitter taste on his tongue. “I don’t remember.”
“Whose dream was it?”
“I don’t know.” Niall shook his head. “I couldn’t see. I could only feel.” He shuddered again and tried to think. “No one has ever talked about an Astrid.” He frowned, fighting to recall details, even as Rox reached for the notepad she kept by the bed for exactly this purpose. “
‘All I did was love you.’
That’s what she said before she died. He was furious at what she’d endured.”
“Because he hadn’t defended her?”
Niall shook his head. “Because he believed the
Pyr
were responsible for her death. That they were teaching him a lesson.”
Rox made a note then shook her head. “That doesn’t sound very much like the
Pyr
defending humans as one of the treasures of the earth.”
“No,” Niall admitted with frustration. “It doesn’t. But it’s gone already. I can’t remember more.”
“Maybe he wasn’t
Pyr
,” Rox suggested, nestling beside him again.
“If he was
Slayer
, he wouldn’t have loved anyone other than himself,” Niall murmured. “And even if he was
Slayer
, the
Pyr
wouldn’t have murdered a woman because of him.”
“Other
Slayers
then?” Rox suggested.
“I don’t think that’s what he meant.” Niall shook his head. “Even if it happened before we used the term
Slayer
, we still would have been aware of wickedness in our own kind. He thought it was the good
Pyr
. I felt his conviction!” He shoved his hand through his hair. “It doesn’t make sense.”
“Maybe more of it will come to you later.”
Niall didn’t sleep, though. He knew in his heart that it had been the dream of a
Pyr
and that the experience had influenced his fellow dragon shifter for good. He also knew that he had to be experiencing the dream for a reason.
Astrid
. Niall breathed her name and saw her in his mind’s eye for the barest moment. She was fair with blue eyes, tall and slender. Those trees and mountains could have been Scandinavia. Maybe it was one of Erik’s relations. He’d come from that part of the world. Niall would ask the leader of the
Pyr
about it the next day.
He wished he could remember more detail, but he had to make do with what the dream brought to him. He rolled over and caught Rox close, breathing deeply of her scent and fiercely glad that she was safe beside him. The dream made him feel vulnerable and made him fear for those he loved.
What would he do, if he found Rox in such a state and believed his fellows were responsible? Niall didn’t even want to think about that. It wouldn’t be a friendly discussion, that was for sure. He slowed his breathing and exhaled a steady stream of dragonsmoke, strengthening the protective barrier that already encircled his lair and the precious treasures that were his partner and sons.
On this night, he couldn’t have too many defenses.
Niall didn’t realize then that Rox would fill a notebook with his recurring dreams of the other
Pyr
’s last moments with Astrid. He would have that same nightmare every single night for the next twenty-two months, except that it became more violent and the
Pyr
’s reaction more vehement each and every time. It was as if the
Pyr
’s fury was being steadily fed to become greater and more consuming.
And yet, over those same months, he didn’t manage to find a single
Pyr
who had been loved by an Astrid.
Much less understand why the dream was so persistent.
Chapter One
Bangkok—April 15, 2014
It wasn’t right.
The city Thorolf knew as home didn’t look right. It made no sense that it had changed so much in just one night. The evening before he’d drunk some vile concoction, nearly killing himself on a dare from Viv, and by morning, the world had changed drastically. He couldn’t understand it.
He was also feeling jumpy. Maybe it was the hangover, but he’d never had one like this. A single phrase repeated itself incessantly in his thoughts:
it could happen again
. It terrified him, even though he refused to explore his memory of whatever had happened. The past was over and done. He’d made his choices.
No matter how many times he told himself as much, his conviction continued to grow. Thorolf couldn’t let the same thing happen again. He felt a strange need to find Viv so he could defend her. He should never have left her, even though he didn’t remember doing so. She wasn’t his destined mate, but she was his lover and companion. He’d never been anxious when they were apart—Viv was good at taking care of herself—but that had suddenly changed.
Maybe it was the pain. He ached all over, his skin burning from head to toe. The torment grew with every step he took and he was sure his skin was inflamed. It was as if he’d gotten a new tattoo while he was drunk—which wasn’t out of the question—but this one burned as a new tattoo never should. Had he gone to some hole where they didn’t change the needles? Did he have an infection?
How could
all
of his skin be affected?
Thorolf didn’t know, but the pain was driving him crazy. He checked out his forearms as he walked and didn’t like the look of the spirals that were traced all over them. The moron had even tattooed over top of the blue dragon tattoo that Rox had put on the back of his left hand. What kind of loser would obliterate a masterpiece like that dragon, obscuring it with this kind of meaningless scribble? The spirals were all over his arms and hands, and from the burning sensation of his skin, all over the rest of his body, too.
Just how drunk had he been for some jerk to take advantage of him this much?
Thorolf felt a new anger against losers who called themselves tattoo artists but were incompetent idiots, a rage that surprised him with its intensity. All the same, he couldn’t deny its persuasive power. The pain and anger melted with the fury, as well as that fear that something bad could happen again. He blamed his fellow
Pyr
.
The
Pyr
had cheated him.
The
Pyr
had stolen from him.
He couldn’t work it through, but he had to find Viv.
Thorolf walked a street that should have been familiar, unable to account for how much had suddenly changed. The signs were different. The businesses were different. The bikes darting through the foot traffic were louder and faster. More people had cellphones than he remembered, as if some technological genie had showered the city with expensive new devices. The phones were bigger, too, with more elaborate displays. Maybe it was a market test. He was starving, but his favorite chicken place was closed and boarded up, an injustice that unsettled him even more.
Maybe he wasn’t in Bangkok, after all.
The sky was dark and becoming darker, even though it was mid-afternoon. Thorolf crossed an alley, which gave him a sudden view of the sky, and he saw that the sun was being obscured. An eclipse! Thorolf didn’t remember that there was going to be one: in fact, he’d been sure that the next total eclipse was years away. He stopped to stare for a long moment, breaking every sensible rule by looking straight at the sun, but there was no mistaking the eclipse for what it was. That shadow crept steadily across the sun, blocking it and turning the light to a strange orange color.
A total eclipse, and he hadn’t known it was coming.
Yet he was
Pyr
, and a total eclipse often sparked a firestorm. Eclipses were important to dragon shape shifters, and he wasn’t that lax about his responsibility to his fellows. Firestorms could require the help of all the
Pyr
, to ensure that the dragon shifter in question successfully defended and courted his destined mate.
Thorolf always knew when there was going to be an eclipse, but not this one. He had a very bad feeling about that. He strode quickly toward the apartment he shared with Viv.
As the sun was plunged into darkness, he felt the spark of the firestorm ignite somewhere in the world. He closed his eyes as its heat sent a welcome surge through his body, driving a chill from his bones. It even eased the pain of that stupid new tattoo, and soothed his concern about evil repeating itself. He breathed deeply of it, wishing it could be his own.
The firestorm was close. Could it be Sloane’s? Was the Apothecary in Bangkok? What other
Pyr
were in Bangkok?
The heat of firestorm grew with every step he took. The firestorm was really close, a tangible golden heat in his vicinity. The fact that there was a firestorm, though, meant that
Pyr
and
Slayers
would gather.
And Viv could pay the price.
It could happen again.
Thorolf remembered the smell of Astrid’s burned flesh all too clearly and the sight of her body damaged beyond healing. He saw the betrayal and disappointment in her eyes once more and heard her whispered last words. The worst part was that his fellow
Pyr
had been responsible.
It could only happen again over his dead body.
Thorolf broke into a run. He had to find Viv!
Smart people took one look at him and scurried out of his path, casting fearful glances backward. He was comparatively tall in this city, and his fair hair made him stand out. Thorolf felt his body hovering on the cusp of change and wondered if his eyes had shifted to dragon eyes as yet. There probably was a glow of pale blue around his body, a mark of his intent to shift. He forcibly calmed himself, pushing back the insistent urge to change shape, trying to corral his growing fear.
It only pissed Erik off when Thorolf changed to dragon form in public. He could do with not pissing off the leader of the
Pyr
any more than he already had.
Thorolf arrived in the street where the apartment was located and narrowed his eyes against the changes he noticed there. Did it matter if the used bookstore had become an internet cafe? Did it matter if the old noodle shop was gone, or that the beggar who was always on the corner had disappeared? No! The only thing that mattered was Viv. He inhaled deeply, but even his keen
Pyr
senses couldn’t discern Viv’s presence.
Had they taken her away?
Was he too late?
Fear had him taking the stairs three at a time. Thorolf kicked in the door and shouted for Viv, hearing his own fear. The door swung back hard enough to slam into the wall behind and the wooden frame shattered. He frowned as he surveyed the apartment.
It looked so different that he checked the number on the door.
This was the apartment but where was Viv?
Had he failed his lover?
Again?
A nude man who emerged from the bathroom, brushing his teeth, his expression astonished.
“Where’s Viv?” Thorolf demanded.
“Who?”
This human had to know where she was. She’d lived in this very apartment with Thorolf until the day before. That this man should lie only meant he was one of those wicked humans, like the one who had cursed him with this tattoo. He must be in league with the
Pyr
.
Just like the humans who had tied Astrid down and stoned her.
Anger flooded through Thorolf. Viv couldn’t die because of his failure. He took one step and seized the man by the throat. He lifted him off the floor and slammed the man back into the wall. The toothbrush fell to the floor as the man’s eyes widened in terror and his legs flailed as he gasped for air.
Thorolf pressed his thumbs against the man’s windpipe, watching as his victim began to choke. His skin hummed with the steady pain of that new tattoo, filling him with a need to do violence. He felt a chilly determination to see justice done.
No matter what the price.
“Where is she?” he demanded.
The man kicked and struggled as he tried to escape, his fingers grasping at Thorolf’s hands. “I don’t know who you’re talking about!”
“Don’t lie!” he snarled. “I’m talking about Viv Jason. She lives here.”
“No. No!
I
live here. I’ve lived here for almost two years…”
“Liar!” Thorolf lifted the man closer, then summoned the change to his dragon form, ensuring that his eyes changed first. He controlled the change, mindful of Erik’s injunctions against revealing his powers to humans, but desperately wanting to terrify this guy. Thorolf knew when his eyes changed to dragon eyes with vertical slits for pupils, because the man freaked out. Did he think Thorolf was stupid? Did this moron think he could just lie about something so obvious and Thorolf would believe him?
“Tell me where she is,” Thorolf repeated. He wished he was good at beguiling, so he could convince this guy to spill the truth.
He’d have to make do with brute force, as usual.
The halo of blue light that surrounded Thorolf’s body before he shifted shape was already glowing, the change sliding through Thorolf’s body. He wouldn’t be able to stop it in a second, but his rage was overcoming his desire to hover on the cusp of change.