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Milner shook his bony head. “We must report her existence to the Bane’s Council.”

Dage bit back a sharp retort. “All due respect, Prophet, but you are a spiritual leader of the vampire race only. I lead the Realm.”

Guiles set his drink down. “We’re all members of the Realm and are subject to the same laws, Kayrs.”

“True. But as King of the Realm as well as the vampire people, I decided it is unnecessary to contact the council at this point.” Damn but he hated to pull rank. He needed the meeting to go smoothly.

Lily gave a delicate cough. “Well then. I guess that’s settled.” She fluffed her pale yellow skirt around her legs. “So, what’s next on the agenda?”

Dage wondered once again what the fates were thinking to make this fragile woman a prophet on the day her mate died. Her mate, Miles Sotheby, had been a prophet and a good one. Sympathy for the woman charged through him.

“Dage?” Lily raised an eyebrow.

Milner leaned forward. “Now we talk about humans being given access to our DNA.” His beady eyes narrowed.

“Meaning?” Dage kept his voice low and controlled.

“Meaning it has come to our attention that you’ve allowed humans to be a part of the research team investigating the virus. Do you have any idea how many laws this breaks?” Milner swept his hands out, his jaw clenching.

Dage didn’t twitch a muscle. Apparently he had a leak. “I’ve broken no law, prophet. The human scientists believe they’re studying cancer treatments for humans. They have no access to any data regarding Realm species.”

“You can’t guarantee that,” Guiles said, shaking his head. “This could put your kingship in jeopardy. Don’t you know that?”

The temptation to step away from the kingship nearly overwhelmed him. “My family has led the Realm for centuries.” They’d protected the Realm for centuries.

“True.” Milner sat back in his chair. “But only because there’s been no reason to remove you as the ruling family.”

Dage narrowed his gaze and lowered his voice. “You threatening me, Prophet?”

Milner shrugged. “The council has a duty to make sure the ruling family is doing its job. If it isn’t, the council must take steps to replace the current monarchy.”

Steps that would entail Dage’s head being removed from his body.

Lily slapped her hands together. “Enough of this nonsense. Dage is a fine king and the Kayrs family is doing an excellent job.” She glared at Milner. “We’re at war and the last thing we need is an internal battle. One I don’t think you would win.”

If Dage had had any question as to where Lily’s loyalty lay, he now had the answer. He gave her a short nod. “I appreciate the support, Prophet. And I assure you, the humans are not aware of our existence—nor will they be.”

“Good.” She took a sip of tea, carefully setting the cup back down. “So, what’s next on the agenda?”

He might as well hit them with all of it. “Ah. Well, it’s time to bring Caleb Donovan back into the fold.”

Lily gasped, Milner paled and clutched his chest, while Guiles jumped to his feet. “You must be jesting.”

“Nope.” In Dage’s peripheral vision he could see Jase settle into a readied stance with his knees bent and his concentration focused on the door.

Milner swept a brown speckled hand toward Lily. “Caleb killed the prophet. Her husband. How can you think—”

“No he didn’t.” Dage stood as well. “The Kurjans killed Sotheby. You know that.”

An ugly red crept up Milner’s withered face to make his eyes bug out. “You truly are trying to end the Kayrs monarchy. Caleb was responsible. The Kurjans said they’d let Sotheby go if Caleb stopped his search. He didn’t.”

Lily put a shaking hand to her head. “He was avenging his sister’s death. You can’t begrudge him that.” She chewed on her lip for a moment. “The Kurjans would never have released Miles. We all know it.”

“You disloyal witch.” A dark vein popped out of Guiles’s neck.

Dage pinned him to the wall in a heartbeat, forearm against the bastard’s neck. “I strongly suggest you apologize, Prophet.”

A soft hand on his arm kept Dage from pressing any harder. “Dage. Let him go. I’m not a witch, darn it.” Lily cleared her throat. “If I were, he’d be croaking as a toad right now.”

Dage started in surprise at the humor but kept his gaze on Guiles’s blue eyes. “I’m waiting.”

The door banged open and the two prophecy guards dodged inside, guns at ready. Dage pivoted toward the entry as Jase took one guard down to the floor and the cocking of a gun stopped the other. Caleb flashed a grin, his weapon pressed into the second guard’s neck. “Well now. I can see not much has changed with the Realm.” His booming voice echoed around the room.

Dage tightened his hold against the prophet’s jugular. Shit. He couldn’t exactly kill a prophet today. “Now.”

Guiles cleared his throat. “I apologize.”

Lily nodded, dropping into her chair.

Dage threw Guiles back into his seat and gestured for the guards to leave. Jase tossed one out on his ass while the other backed away.

“Caleb. Thanks for coming.” Dage extended a hand.

Caleb shook it, his multi-colored gaze encompassing the entire room. “So. Invited to speak with the Realm after a century and a half of being exiled. Hell has frozen over, huh?” He sprawled into a chair next to Lily, turning toward her. “Before we start, I’d like to say how sorry I am the Kurjans killed your mate. I’d have prevented his death if possible.”

She nodded, her hand going to her throat. Dage frowned. She appeared paler than before. Maybe this was a bad idea.

The red in Milner’s face flushed darker until his skin matched his waistcoat, though he held his tongue.

Conn entered the room and stood at the other side of the door from Jase. Dage gave him a short nod of acknowledgment. “We’re at war. The Kurjans have allies and are prepared, scientifically as well as strategically. The smart move is to reunite our allies.”

“Allies?” Guiles sat forward, biting out the words. “Are you kidding me? Caleb and his crew turned their backs on us years ago.”

“You exiled me, boyoh.” Caleb leaned back, the chair protesting under his weight. He was as tall as Dage, and thick across the chest. A dark eyebrow rose. “In addition, you underestimated the number of my followers. Lost a bit of the Realm, did you?”

“You gave us no choice but to exile you,” Milner hissed. “First you refused to stop your crusade, then you protected your brother.”

“My brother didn’t do anything wrong.” Caleb relaxed back in his chair. He’d probably tied his blond hair back not in an attempt at fashion but as a prelude to a fight. Dage had done the same thing.

“Nothing wrong?” Guiles jumped to his feet again. “He mated with a wolf shifter who’d been betrothed.”

Dage cleared his throat. “First, there’s no law against vampires and shifters mating.” The union was rare, but not unheard of. “Second, the woman chose him. The prophets do not need to get involved with such matters.”

“She was betrothed to a ruling demon,” Guiles spat. “We needed the demon nation as an ally.”

Dage cleared his throat. “What’s done is done. Now we need to consolidate for this war. Without question.” He turned toward Caleb. “The prophets will confirm you are no longer exiled”—he put a deadly threat into his gaze as he eyed each member in turn before focusing back on Caleb—“or the royal family will denounce them.” He hoped nobody would call his bluff. He couldn’t go to war and denounce the prophets in the same fucking month.