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“I hear you have spirit. Did you use it all on Taraeth and his men?” the man asked with a chuckle.

Lexi sat back on the couch. “Will you let me go?”

“Heavens, no,” he said. “Why would I do that?”

“Because I’m no one’s property.”

He leaned forward and smiled like a wolf about to devour a lamb. His gold eyes crinkled in the corners, as if he had been waiting for her to say just those words. “Oh, but you are now. Taraeth took you. The Dark don’t easily hand such a prize over. Especially not with a mate of a Dragon King.”

“As I told Taraeth, I have no idea what you’re talking about. Dragon King.” She snorted and rolled her eyes. “There’s no such thing as dragons. Now, Fae? Obviously that’s a different kettle of fish altogether.”

He cocked his head to the side. “How do you know of the Fae?”

“They killed my friend.” Lexi shrugged. The act had nearly gotten her free the first time and might work now. “I wanted revenge.”

“Revenge, hmm?” He sat back in the chair and regarded her. “We know something about that, don’t we?”

“Aye.”

Lexi’s gaze jerked to a dark place over her host’s left shoulder. Someone was there and she hadn’t even known it. She searched the shadows, but she couldn’t make out anything about the man.

The man before her motioned with his hand with the drink in it. “Please. Go on. I’m dying to hear the rest.”

Lexi pulled her gaze away from the shadow. “I saw two men fighting the Red Eyes. That’s what I called them before I knew. These two men were killing the Dark, so I started following them as well.”

“And they didna know it?” asked the shadow.

Lexi shook her head. “No. I did that for several days before I overheard them talking about the Fae and how this was a second war with them. The men seemed confident of winning.”

“I bet they did,” the man in the chair said with an evil smile.

“After that, I noticed that more and more Dark were popping up all over the place. I missed my flight back to the States, and the roads were clogged with cars. So I ran out of the city. I kept off the roads and stuck to going across country.”

“Where were you headed?” the man asked.

Lexi lifted one shoulder in a half-shrug. “Anywhere that was away from Edinburgh. I thought if I could get somewhere safe I could call the authorities. Then I got caught in the rain.”

“And you just happened to be on Dreagan?” he asked with brows raised, his starkly handsome face half lit by the fire.

It was really sad to see someone so good-looking be wicked. He might not have hurt her, but she could see it in his eyes. The man was malicious. He delighted in crushing the weak, savored in defeating the vulnerable.

“I had no map. I ran as far as I could, then I walked and ran some more.” It was time to sprinkle in some truth, Lexi decided. “I saw firsthand what the Dark could do. I wanted no part in it. As for where I ended up, I was thankful someone found me and gave me a place to get out of the rain.”

She looked down at the blanket around her. “As you can see, I removed my clothes to dry. The man gave me a blanket to warm up with.”

“Oh, that I know to be true.”

Now that confused Lexi. How would he know one thing but not others? Nothing about this entire experience made sense.

“The Dark found me and asked me the same questions you have,” she finished.

The man smiled as he lifted the glass to his wide lips and took a drink. She noticed the hint of gray at his temples. “That is an amazing tale. You’re going to stick with the story that you’re not a mate to a Dragon King, I suppose.”

“Dragons don’t exist.”

The shadow snorted. “And Fae doona either.”

Lexi wasn’t sure what to do or say. She was backed into a corner now, and there was nowhere for her to go.

The man rose from his seat and walked to a desk. He grabbed an open laptop and set it on the large wooden coffee table in front of her. He turned it toward her and motioned with his head. “Watch it.”

Intrigued, Lexi scooted to the edge of the sofa. She poked an arm out of the blanket and hit play on the video that was on the screen.

Shock reverberated through her as she saw dragons flying and shifting into men before shifting back again. Her mouth fell open when she saw the claret dragon.

Thorn.

He shifted and ran into the shop where she had been. Lexi put a hand over her mouth. He had come for her. She hadn’t expected him to, but he had come.

When the video ended, Lexi raised her gaze to the man who stood watching her as she dropped her arm to her lap. It was time for another Oscar performance. “I’m supposed to believe that is real?”

“You should,” he said. “It’s Dreagan. You were taken from that very spot.”

“Whoever did this is very good with computer graphics. It looks almost real.”

The man smiled and glanced at the shadow. “It’s very real.”

Lexi looked down at the screen that showed a picture of Thorn in dragon form. His mouth was open, and she could imagine his deafening roar.

She had seen him before, but now she got an uninterrupted view of his deep wine scales. There were short brow horns and another horn atop his nose. His tail was equipped with a stinger on the end that looked like a scorpion tail.

The sheer size of him was awesome and frightening. She had seen him up close, looked into his teal dragon eyes. Lexi was taken aback. How had she not remembered the color of his eyes in dragon form before?

She tore her gaze away from the screen. “What are you going to do with me?”

“Your Dragon King will be looking for you. He’ll search the world over, but he’ll never find you.” The man chuckled and lifted the glass to his lips again. “I find that infinitely humorous.”

“How many times do I need to tell you? I don’t have a Dragon King. This video proves nothing. Things like this are faked all the time.”

The man took a drink. “To him, you’ll have just disappeared. I think it’ll be fun to make him think you betrayed him.”

Like what happened with Ulrik. Lexi looked at him with new eyes. Was she sitting before the banished Dragon King?

“You’re going to keep me prisoner here?” she asked, appalled.

He nodded and sat down as he set aside his empty glass. “Yes, I am. You’re lucky that I have a lover at the moment. I’m sure there will come a time when I’ll take you. And I’ll warn you, mortal, I like it rough.”

“You have no right to keep me here.”

He stood up in a rush. “I have every right!”

His face was contorted red with rage. He slowly unclenched his hands and adjusted his suit jacket before he buttoned one button.

“You should kill me now,” she said.

He paused as he began to walk off. His gaze was curious as he looked back at her. “Why?”

“Because there will come a time when you have your guard down. That’s when I’ll kill you.”

“Good luck with that.” He walked around the coffee table and leaned down so that his face was inches from hers. “You see, I can’t die. Nothing you can do to me will kill me.”

“Everything can be killed.”

Everything but a Dragon King. Lexi had her confirmation. This had to be Ulrik.

She got to her feet as he straightened and walked away. “I have friends and family who will search for me,” she hollered after him as he walked from the room.

A thick arm came around her, pinning her back against a hard chest. In her anger she had forgotten the man in the shadows.

“There’s no use in yelling,” he said.

Lexi shook her head. “He can’t do this. This can’t be happening.”

“You’re a mate.” His voice was flat, devoid of emotion. “It was a nice try lying, but I saw your face in the video. You recognized one of them. He thought it was shock. But I saw the truth.”

Lexi wanted to cry she was so frustrated. How could everything be going so wrong? Thorn had warned her. He’d told her to get away, but she had fought the memory wipe. And look where she ended up.