Torture
The Twin Dragons Series: Requiem City
Days later and I was still on my best behavior. At Xanderâs insistence, I started classes, joining my friends in learning all about the evil ways of dragons.
The classes were a joke. History of Dragons was, at best, a propaganda-filled seminar of all the ways dragons had wronged humans throughout history.
I struggled not to laugh at the ridiculous, convoluted ways the lecturer rewrote the narrative so dragons were monstrous, blood-driven beasts hell-bent on eradicating the human race. But when looked at from a slightly different angle, the dragons were protecting their race from the humans who slaughtered young dragons in their sleep.
But I kept up the charade, attending lectures and partaking in dragon-defense classes. Though, honestly, if a dragon wanted you dead, nothing taught in that class would save you.
I was sitting on a beanbag chair in the luxurious dorm room I shared with Zayda and Thea. I took a sip of coffee and spun the mint bracelet on my wrist, my mind on my mates, just like it always was whenever I had a minute of downtime.
âYouâre not thinking about them, are you?â Zayda said. I looked up. She was watching me from a window between the stacks of textbooks piled on her desk.
âNo,â I said shortly, knowing I needed her to believe me. I couldnât let word get back to Xander that I was thinking about Loch and Hael. Heâd never forgive it, and I feared what he would do to my friends if he found out.
I pretended to look out the window, watching faraway birds soar through the cloudless sky. I wondered if one might be a dragonâ¦
âMadeline,â Zayda said, reading my silence. âDonât lie to me. Youâve been acting strange since you got here.â She plopped down in a beanbag next to mine.
âItâs the bracelet, isnât it? That thingâs likeâ¦I donât knowâ¦making you too chill. Youâre usually so fiery and angry and passionate. You seem so much quieter. Itâs weird. I know that the bracelet is for your own protection, but still. Itâs okay to think about them a littleââ
âI hate them,â I said, cutting her off. But the words came out hollow, and my chest ached as Iâd said it.
I didnât hate Loch and Hael at all. Why else would I have felt like this even with the stupid bracelet on?
âThe truth, Maddie. Spill.â Zayda had a determined look on her face.
I hadnât told anyone the truth. Iâd just barely admitted the truth to myself. Would it really hurt to tell her?
I gripped her wrist tight, forcing her to look me in the eye. âYou have to promise not to say a word. If any of this gets back to Xander, your life could be at risk.â
Her eyes went wide, almost like a bugâs. âI promise.â
âI donât hate them,â I admitted. âThey have their own, somewhat twisted sense of ownership and pain and pleasure, but I donât hate them. I couldnât. Theyâre my mates.â
I scratched underneath the bracelet.
âI think you should take it off,â Zayda said.
âNo. I canât,â I refused in a weak voice.
âDo it,â she said, her eyes lasering on the bracelet. âItâs full of bad energy. I can tell.â
âHow?â I asked. âWait⦠What are you doing?â
Zayda grabbed my wrist and concentrated on the bracelet. Her eyes glazed over, trance-like. Her curly brown hair blew around her head, though, oddly, I couldnât feel a breeze.
âZaydaââ
The bracelet suddenly snapped. Green liquid oozed down my arm. Zayda gasped, covering her mouth with her hand.
âOh my gosh! Iâm so sorry. I donât know what came over me.â
I stared at the broken bracelet, speechless. What the fuck was that?
âOne of my professors thinks Iâm some sort of mage,â Zayda mumbled, sensing my thoughts. âI canât control my powers yet⦠But Iâve never done anything like this before.â
Her phone buzzed loudly, and she hurried back to her desk. As I stared in wonder at the trailing liquid, I heard her shriek with delight.
âXythorâs at the gate! Gotta go!â
She took a quick look in the mirror, adjusting her now messy hair.
âXythor? Whoâs that?â I asked.
âI met him last night. Thea and I went into Requiem City after you went to sleep. We have a date,â Zayda said, grabbing her purse. âDonât wait up, okay?â
She slammed the door behind her, leaving me alone with the broken bracelet.
I went to the bathroom and washed the mint liquid off my skin. It felt like removing shackles. I was whole again.
My brand throbbed gently on my back as I reached out to Loch and Hael in my mind. I had to know if they were okay.
â~Hello?~â I asked, the voice in my mind trying to pinpoint them like radar. I definitely sensed that my mates were alive. And nearby. But they didnât answer.
Instead, my feet turned on their own and headed for the door. It was like I was possessed. I didnât try to stop. I knew they were taking me to Loch and Hael.
Free of the mint bracelet, I felt reckless. I didnât care if Xander saw me or not. I needed to know my mates were okay. I missed them. A lot.
I walked down one hall, then another. Down a set of stairs to another hallway.
Eventually, my feet led me across the courtyard to an old stone building Iâd never seen before. Inside, I descended several dark and musty stairwells to a basement level deep beneath the campus. I opened a heavy door to find myself in a sort of medieval dungeon.
I shivered in the cold, subterranean air, listening to the slow drip of water. I heard slow, ragged breathing. My feet led me slowly forward, the throb of my brand growing stronger with each step.
I looked through barred cell doors, but the rooms behind them were empty. I winced with a sudden pain. My brand was burning. I felt it pulling me toward an oversize door at the end of the hallway. I had to stand on tiptoes to look through the tiny window.
I gasped at what I saw.
Loch and Hael were sprawled naked on the wet stone floor. They looked weaker than detoxing drug addicts, their skin nearly translucent in its whiteness. They were both hooked up to IVs infusing their blood with some sort of bright red liquid.
Loch squinted through the window, recognizing my face. Too depleted to muster his usual sneer, he called my name in the withered voice of a dying manâ¦
âM-M-Madelineâ¦â
At one time, I might have taken some joy in seeing them so near death.
But I felt gutted knowing that I was the cause of their pain. If Iâd trusted our mating, I wouldnât have put them to sleep that night.
And now they were splayed on the cell floor, limp and pale like a pair of diseased bodies.
Iâd experienced the depth of their powers and understood how truly helpless theyâd become.
I squished my face to the bars, tears blurring my vision.
âWhat did Xander do to you?â I asked in a trembling voice. For a second, I thought the Dobrzyckas were too feeble to answer. Then I heard Haelâs raking whisperâ¦
âItâs Dragonâs Bane,â he gasped, laboriously nodding to the IV in his arm. âYou have to save us, Maddie⦠Or weâre going to dieâ¦â
âPlease, Maddieâ¦â Loch whimpered.
I was stunned. Their menace was completely erased. My mates were mere husks of their former selves. Shriveled, desperate, and dying.
âYouâre trying to trick me,â I said, testing them. I didnât want to be their fool again.
âNow is not the timeâ¦to be a stupid ratâ¦â Loch chuckled, breaking into a coughing fit.
âWeâre dyingâ¦,â Hael said. âAnd once weâre deadâ¦you will be too. N-no oneâ¦survivesâ¦their mateâ¦dyingâ¦â
I watched as the light disappeared from their eyes, now faded to the color of dead grass rather than their brilliant emerald. Lochâs head sank closer to the floor as he lost the strength to face me. A cockroach skittered past him. His breaths slowed to a near stop.
My heart almost ripped out of my chest. My brand throbbed, but this time it wasnât painful. Instead, pure adrenaline pumped through my veins. I grabbed the bars.
âLoch!â I shouted. He didnât move. I pulled hard on the bars. Nothing happened. I pulled harder, giving it all my strength. To my surprise, the hinges gave with a piercing whine, and I snapped the heavy door from its frame.
I rushed to Lochâs side, freeing his arm from the drip. I shook him hard.
âLoch, wake up⦠Wake up!â I saw the light flicker back into his eyes as he looked up at me. For the first time ever, they expressed his reliefâ¦his thanksâ¦
I turned to Hael, gasping and wheezing across the room. I stood to free himâ¦
When I heard running footsteps behind us.
âApprehend her!â I heard Xander yell. I turned around to see Nautica running toward me, blocking the empty doorframe. Xander appeared behind him, his face twisted with rage.
âWait!â I argued as the dragon slayers moved closer. âLoch was dying⦠You said you wouldnât kill themâ¦â
I felt a sharp pain as Xanderâs hand flew across my face.
âYou foolish girl,â he said, seething. âNautica, take her away while I take care of the Twin Leading Breeds.â He knelt to the floor, picking up Lochâs dripping IV.
âWeâll speak about this soon, Madeline,â he growled. âIâm extremely disappointed.â
Nautica roughly grabbed me, pushing me out the door. I fought him, trying to steal a last look at my mates, but he wrenched my arms in his grasp and marched me down the cell block toward the stairs leading up.
I struggled against his hold on me, shouting curses at both him and Xander. How dare they treat my mates like that. Loch and Hael were beautiful creatures deserving of respect, not the monsters this school thought they were.
I cursed myself for being such a naive fool, for thinking Xander would spare my matesâ lives if I followed his orders.
If Xander killed Loch and Hael, he would be toast. I didnât care that he was my father. I didnât care if I had to do it with my last breath. Iâd kill him. That was a motherfucking promise.