Dragon Actually. G.A. Aiken

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Dragon Actually - G.A. Aiken Dragon Kin

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I happened to walk in at the wrong time.”

      “Or something?”

      Morfyd shrugged as she knelt down to pick up the scattered pieces of fruit. “He could very well be contacting her through her dreams.”

      “I thought you put up protections around the glen?”

      “I did,” she snapped. “That doesn’t mean he hasn’t found a wizard to work around them.”

      Fearghus walked up to his sister. He towered over her in his human form, dressed and ready to start his training with Annwyl. “No one should be able to get past your protections, sister. I don’t care if it’s the queen herself. I want Annwyl safe. Understand?”

      Morfyd’s eyes narrowed as she examined her brother. “Why are you dressed like that?” Her frown deepened. “And for that matter, why are you human?”

      Damn. “I need to go into town.”

      “Town for what?”

      “Supplies. Now get on with the spellcasting. Please.”

      He stormed off before she could ask any more questions that would force him to lie to her more.

      Annwyl was falling. Then she was landing. Her back hitting the hard ground, then her head. She lay there. Unable to move. Suddenly his face loomed over her.

      “Sorry ’bout that.”

      No he wasn’t. He wasn’t sorry about anything. She’d gotten in a couple of really good blows and he retaliated, knocking her right on her backside…hard.

      It took her several moments to get her breath back; by then he reached out to help her stand. She slapped his hands away and dragged herself up so she knelt on the hard ground.

      She glared at him.

      “What’s that look for? It’s not my fault you weren’t fast enough.”

      Annwyl punched him in the face. “Was that fast enough?” she snapped.

      Now he glared as he clutched his slightly wounded nose.

      Annwyl pushed herself to stand up, but the spasm in her neck and shoulder forced her right back down. She moaned in pain and the knight looked at her.

      “What is it?”

      “Nothing.”

      “Liar.” He moved behind her and placed his hands on her shoulders. His touch sent shocks through her body. Annwyl tried to push his hands off, but he ignored her.

      “Stop being difficult.”

      His strong hands glided across her shoulders and quickly found the spot at the base of her neck where her muscles bunched into tight knots. “Gods, girl. There’s a huge knot here.” His thumb pushed into the flesh and Annwyl’s body jerked.

      “Oi! Painful!”

      “Sorry.”

      “No you’re not.” She stood up while trying to pull away, but he pulled her back.

      “Must you be so difficult? If you give me a moment, I can fix this.”

      Annwyl gritted her teeth.

      The knight chuckled, his hands massaging muscles on her shoulder. Annwyl bit her lip and barely stopped herself from moaning. The man had the most unbelievable hands she ever experienced. She closed her eyes and tried to focus on something—anything!—that could distract her from the feeling of him touching her.

      The muscles loosened under his big fingers and she found herself relaxing…grudgingly.

      “You know, you still don’t know my name.”

      “And I still don’t want to know.” When she left the glen with Fearghus she never wanted to see this man again. At least, that’s what she kept telling herself.

      “Such a difficult girl.”

      “I’m hardly a girl.”

      “Oh. Sorry. Do you prefer old maid?”

      Annwyl clenched her fingers into tight fists.

      “There’s that knot again. It just got worse.” What a surprise.

      The knight pulled her arm out, massaging it all the way down. He stopped at her tight fist. “Unclench.”

      She glared at him but didn’t answer. He slapped the back of her hand. “Ow!”

      “I said unclench, woman.”

      She opened her hand and he began to gently massage each finger.

      “You don’t like me, do you?”

      “No. I don’t.”

      “Do you like the dragon?”

      “Of course, I like the dragon.”

      “What do you mean ‘of course’? No one likes dragons.”

      “Then why are you here?” He opened his mouth to answer but abruptly stopped. Annwyl nodded knowingly. “I see.”

      “You see what?”

      “I know what’s going on.”

      “You do?”

      “You don’t fool me.” She pointed at the crest on his surcoat. “That army hasn’t been seen in over twenty years.”

      The knight looked down at his crest as if seeing it for the first time. Annwyl watched as an unruly bit of black hair fell over his eye. She longed to touch that hair. Longed to feel it move across her naked flesh. I am completely out of control!

      “Really?” He sounded so innocent or at least he tried.

      “Yes. Really. Where did you find it anyway? Some castle you robbed? Or the dragon’s den? Knight my ass. You’re a mercenary. A blade for hire. The lowest of the low.”

      The knight let out a deep sigh and looked away from her. Ha! She caught him.

      He loved the humans’ complete inability to see anything even when it stared them right in their faces. He knew what it was, too. Their logic. How could anything the size of a dragon turn into a human? Humans understood nothing of ancient Magick and how powerful it could be.

      For a moment, he really thought that Annwyl figured it out. Still, he remained grateful she hadn’t. He knew he shouldn’t lie to her and, in the beginning, he really hadn’t planned to. He trusted her now more than he trusted anyone, but her reaction to him as a human male completely confounded him.

      She wanted the knight but hated the knight. Cared for the dragon but, not surprisingly, didn’t seem to have any other feelings than general friendliness.

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