Prince of Dragons (16 page)

Read Prince of Dragons Online

Authors: Cathryn Cade

BOOK: Prince of Dragons
12.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Craig motioned Raile to follow the Dragolin. “Some of you get him to the infirmary. He took three strikes from those snakes.”

“All right.” Craig looked around at the rest of the guard, drawing their attention back to him. “I want absolutely no other crew admitted besides guards, is that clear? None of this can go any further than this room.”

The Serpentians all nodded resolutely. “You can rely on us, sir,” said Yvene. “For our ship and our commanders.”

Craig nodded back. “I know I can,” he said with a tired smile. “I know I can.”

Chapter Twenty-five

When the ballroom had been restored to its usual splendor, Izard and Yvene looked around one last time before they opened the doors to step out.

There, they stopped short. A group of passengers had gathered in the lobby and were talking nervously among themselves. When they saw the two guards, they fell silent. Then a short, plump man stepped forward, possibly pushed by the woman at his side.

“You there, guards,” he said. “What in the galaxy is going on in there? We’ve heard all kinds of loud noises—like a fight of some kind. And my wife distinctly smelled smoke. If there is trouble on this ship, I demand to know. Seems to me this cruise line would be watching its Ps & Qs after the excitement on the first two voyages.”

Izard’s expressive brows shot up. He exchanged a look with Yvene, who widened her eyes at him and shrugged unhelpfully. Izard bent closer to the tourist.

“Well, sir. It’s that Aquarian prince. Another of his little…entertainments.”

The tourist gasped and Izard nodded wisely. “A magician from Teradathia.”

The tourists let out their breath on a collective sigh. Yvene bit her lip.

“But what was he doing?” one dared to ask. “It—it sounded like a wild beast roaring. And—and the smoke?”

“Well, I’m really not allowed to say, sir, but just between us, it involved a large smoke-wolf and several dancing girls.”

“Oh, my stars,” breathed the man. “You don’t say.”

“Disgusting,” said Yvene virtuously.

“Oooh, yes,” agreed the tourist’s wife, who had sidled close enough to hear. She scurried away.

“Don’t breathe a word about this, will you?” said Izard, looking concerned.

“Oh, no, of course not,” said the man. “Wouldn’t dream of it. Er, the smoke-wolf isn’t on the loose, is it?”

“Oh, no, sir. Back into its cage and probably on the magician’s shuttle by now. I believe he mentioned another engagement on Carillon this evening.”

“Oh.” The tourist’s face fell.

Izard and Yvene sauntered away.

“A smoke-wolf?” she murmured. “That was a masterful touch, my love.”

He allowed himself a small smile. “Yes. How long before the story is all over the ship, d’you think?”

She shrugged. “Oh, an hour, give or take. It’s a big ship.”

They reached his quarters, and he ushered her inside. They both sank onto the divan, breathing identical deep sighs of weariness.

“Did you suspect?” she asked without opening her eyes, “that Commander Stone was Dragolin?”

“No more than you did,” he said ruefully. “I merely wondered whether he and Sirena would cause the
Orion
to burst into flames with the force of their passion.”

“Very poetic,” she approved, amusement clear in her voice. “When we’ve had a rest, perhaps we can cause a small conflagration ourselves.”

He pulled her into the curve of his lean body and rested his cheek on her hair.

“I’m certain of it,” he mumbled. “Just give me time to rest first. It’s been seven hells of a day.”

Craig, Navos and Halix stood in the command deck, looking at the device that lay in pieces on a lab tray.

“Just as you suspected, Captain, this is a controller,” Halix said, his round lavender face for once grave. “The lab techs have found that it correlates with the devices found implanted in the wraith serpents’ cerebellums. We also found another piece—a tracking device planted on the prince.”

“There is a diabolical mind behind this scheme,” Navos said. “The intention seems to have been to kill the prince publicly, along with any others they could manage and thus completely discredit the
Orion
and LodeStar Corporation.”

“And the boy and the cadet were simply experiments,” Craig said disgustedly. “To see if the device would work.”

“It was more than that in the end,” Navos said. “The handler discovered that he quite enjoyed the hunt and the kill.”

“Well, we’ll see how the little slime ball enjoys his trial and a life sentence on the prison planet, Deep Six.”

“So even though they came out of eggs, those were not newly hatched wraiths, but full grown adults?” Halix asked.

“Yes, the serpents were sedated and placed inside false kronos eggs, made with some iridium alloy, which is very difficult to penetrate with a micro-scanner, by the way—we will want to study that, Mr. Halix. The false eggs were then placed with her real ones, which were about to hatch. When we were out in space, the handler activated the controller and woke the serpents up. They ‘hatched’, devoured the kronos young and a few other small pets, and were set loose to begin their hunt.”

Craig turned away from the device, striding over to look at space flung out before them. Aquarius was in view, growing larger as they neared it, a hazy blue ball.

“Meanwhile, the prince and his party are nearly safely home. Now that you’ve examined the perpetrator, are we any closer to knowing who is behind this, Daron?”

Navos joined him, shaking his head. “I am afraid not. The handler knows only his part in the scheme. His uncle, who supplied the snakes, has fled. The InterGalactic Space Forces will find him, of course, but it may take some time.”

“Access his credit history,” Halix suggested. “He will have been paid.”

“A large infusion of credit was recently deposited to his account,” Navos agreed. “But it was generic—untraceable.”

“What about sat-com surveillance?” Halix asked. “Pangaea has a most comprehensive system in place. All visitors to the serpentorium should be recorded.”

“Mr. Halix, I am grateful you turned your talents toward LodeStar and the
Orion
,” said Craig wryly. “You’d have made an excellent addition to the space forces. Why don’t you access the sat-com system and let us know what you find? I imagine the space forces investigator, Lt. Qwerx, will welcome your input.”

Halix bowed, beaming. “Thank you, Captain. I will contact him at once.”

“Yes,” said Navos. “I believe he is a compatriot of yours.”

“Ah.” Looking intrigued, Halix hurried away.

Craig sank into a chair and rubbed his hand over his face. Then he looked up, a smile lighting his tired face as Tessa walked into the room. She carried a tray with three steaming mugs on it.

“I brought you a hot drink,” she said.

“And the sun,” her husband murmured as she leaned over to hand him his mug.

She smiled at him and he grabbed his mug hastily as it tipped dangerously over his lap.

“Oh, sorry,” she winced.

“Didn’t spill a drop.” He grinned. “Here, sit down with me.”

“I will, as soon as Commander Navos has his drink.”

Navos joined them, and the two men drank deeply.

“How is Sirena?” Craig asked.

“She will recover,” Tessa said. “But Dr. Tentaclar says that if Commander Stone had not sucked out some of the poison and cauterized the wound, she might well be dead.”

“I doubt she would have survived at all, were she not Serpentian,” Navos said.

Tessa nodded. “Yes, we have some immunity to venom. Still, wraiths can be deadly even to us.”

“Commander Stone was bitten several times, yet he has suffered no ill effects,” Navos mused. “His Dragolin side appears to be completely immune.”

“Not entirely,” Tessa said with a shudder. “I saw the bite marks on his arms. He will have painful bruises for some time.”

She shook her head wonderingly. “I can’t believe he’s a Dragolin. I mean, it’s as if Prince Azuran had disguised himself and decided to work on the
Orion
.”

Her eyes met her husband’s, and they shared a look of amusement. The Aquarian prince, with his lordly manner, clad in a ship’s uniform and serving the passengers? Impossible to imagine.

“The serpent’s bites would have killed Prince Azuran, that’s for damn sure,” Craig said. He drained his mug and set it down with a sigh. Then he laughed without humor. “Well, we’ve averted disaster once again, and all thanks to a shape-shifting guard commander I didn’t know we had onboard. I honestly can’t think of one more damn thing these saboteurs could try to take us down. And if they do, who knows? Perhaps we’ll turn out to have a wizard or faery in our ranks.”

“That would be most useful,” his wife agreed dryly. “But surely you’re right, and there is nothing left to attempt that will get past our defenses.”

“The most potent weapon is that which does not know it is a weapon,” Navos murmured.

Craig and Tessa looked at him, and he shrugged. “Merely a quote from my studies at the Indigon university. I don’t know what made me think of it at this time.”

He rose. “Thank you for the drink, Mrs. Craig. Captain, I’ll be in my quarters if you need me.”

Craig nodded. As the hatch slid shut, he turned to his bride.

She was looking after Navos, a slight frown on her lovely face. “He’s very cryptic at times.”

Her husband grunted, his face weary and drawn.

“Enough of Commander Navos, Mrs. Craig,” he said. “Why don’t you come over here so I can thank you properly for that drink?”

She slipped onto his lap, her arms curving about his neck as his arms settled around her.

“Yes, Captain.”

He pressed his lips to the tender curve of her throat above her uniform. “I’ll never get tired of hearing you say that.”

She leaned her cheek against his hair. “Just keep asking the right questions and you won’t have to.”

“Hmm. I can think of one I’ll ask you later, in our quarters,” he murmured, but his face was still troubled.

She cupped his cheek in her hand. “It will be all right, won’t it, Steven?”

He sighed. “I hope so, love.” He kissed her, and then set her on her feet, rising with her. “Now I’ve got to go and placate a prince.”

She bit back a grin at his wry look.

“I’d rather face a phalanx of Ogre’n,” he said.

“Princes,” she agreed sympathetically. “You can’t just shoot ’em.”

Her husband was laughing as they parted in the passageway.

Chapter Twenty-six

Slyde sat beside Sirena’s bed in the infirmary. He held her hand in his; small, cool and nearly lifeless. So different from when she was awake. She was so fiery, so decisive, that she seemed to take up a larger space. Now she looked slight and feminine lying in the airbed.

“Don’t even think of letting this take you, siren,” he whispered to her. “I can’t go on in a galaxy without you.”

He felt an unfamiliar emotion coursing inside him—fear. Fear that she might yet succumb to the poison working in her system.

“You’re sure you got all the poison?” he asked Tentaclar as the doctor came in once again to check the IV and the cellular monitors. A tech hovered nearby, but Slyde noticed the doctor did not move far away from his patient. That was fine with him.

“I am sure,” the old doctor said, two of his eyes swinging around to focus on Slyde. “Don’t worry, Commander. Your quick reaction saved her. You were able to remove enough of the poison and cauterize the wound so that no infection could take hold. We then flushed her system completely. She just needs rest.”

Slyde sighed deeply. “I don’t doubt you, Doctor,” he said. “I simply will not be able to accept that she is safe until she’s awake and alert.”

“You should rest as well,” Tentaclar said. “Although you’ve an amazing constitution—fascinating how your body was able to repel the wraith venom—your wounds will heal more quickly with sleep. We can bring another airbed in here for you.”

Slyde shook his head. Though his wounds ached and throbbed with cold fire, he knew he wouldn’t be able to rest until she woke.

Because, he acknowledged silently, he feared her waking as well. What would her reaction to him be once she recovered? Would their passion stand the test of time, or would he simply be another sensual interlude for her?

Through the long hours of the night, others came and went. Tentaclar was in and out, as were the medtechs. Craig and Tessa, Navos, Izard and Yvene were allowed in to her bedside. They came quietly, looking down at her as she lay pale and still in the thermal wrappings of the air bed, her flame bright hair the only color. They asked him how she did, if there were any changes.

There were not, until the next morning. He had at last been coaxed away from her side for a meal, a shower-dry and a change of clothing. He walked back into the infirmary to find Tentaclar beaming and the techs hovering with cheerful faces.

“Her vital signs are picking up,” Tentaclar told him. “She will wake soon.”

Slyde sat down with a thump, his legs suddenly weak. Relief fizzed through his veins like champagne. He gazed down at Sirena and saw her lashes flutter. Then her eyes opened and she gazed blankly at the room before her.

“Siren.” His voice sounded as rough as rocks rumbling down the mountainside and he swallowed hard against the tightness in his throat. Leaning over her, he lifted her hand to his face.

Her eyes focused on his. One corner of her mouth quirked.

“This must not be…the heavens,” she mumbled. “If my irritating…co-commander is here.”

He gave a snort of laughter. “No, it’s still the
Orion
. You’re not rid of me that easily, Commander Blaze.”

He turned her hand over and pressed a kiss to her palm. Then he sat back to let Tentaclar move forward.

“It’s about time you decided to wake up, Commander,” chirped the doctor. “I was ready to jump start you with one of my handy little lifesaving devices.”

“A girl can’t even take…a little beauty rest…without you two pestering her,” Sirena retorted, but her voice trailed away and her eyes slipped shut again.

Tentaclar worked over her, fussing with various gauges and tubes on the machines monitoring her.

Other books

Silent Night by Rowena Sudbury
Good Girl (Playroom) by Chilson, Erica
Why We Suck by Denis Leary
Death Run by Jack Higgins