Heir of Amber and Fire Rachanee Lumayno (books on motivation txt) đ
- Author: Rachanee Lumayno
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One that Beyan would not leave alive.
Beyan halted our group, motioning us to silence. In the distance, we could see Joichanâs cave, alongside a steadily flowing river in a clearing surrounded by the trees where we were now hiding. Although Beyan had seen no one when he had scouted earlier, this time there was now a man kneeling by the water. He seemed to be checking some traps in the river. Sunlight glinted off his golden hair.
Remembering Beyanâs story about the strange man that his father Kye had encountered at the cave, my breath caught. Knowing that the dragon was a shapeshifter, and seeing this man at Joichanâs cave... could I be looking at my father?
Beyan glared at me, putting a finger to his lips to indicate I needed to be quiet. I nodded, shifting my weight. Dry leaves crunched underfoot as I did so, and the man at the river froze and looked around. Rhyss and Farrah added their glares to Beyanâs. Sheepishly, I shrugged my shoulders at them in silent apology.
As one, we looked back to the riverbank. The man had disappeared.
Beyan pursed his lips in frustration. For a while longer, we stayed there motionless, waiting for the man to come back or the dragon to appear. But nothing happened.
Beyan motioned for us to follow him and moved out of the trees, back toward the direction we had come from originally.
Once we were out of the trees on the other side, I put a hand on Beyanâs arm, stopping him in place. Even though I was sure we were out of earshot of the mysterious man, I kept my voice low. âIâm sorry, Beyan. I didnât mean to give us away.â
âItâs all right,â Beyan said, although we both knew he didnât mean it. âThe dragon wasnât there anyway. Strange, because I had been so sure.â
Hoping Beyan wouldnât come to the eventual correct conclusion about the strange person at the dragonâs cave, I tried to distract him. âWell, youâve done your job. You brought me to where Joichan lives. I guess... you could all go home now?â
Beyan, Farrah, and Rhyss all gave me matching incredulous looks. âAre you crazy?â Beyan said. âWe couldnât just leave you here, by yourself. An unarmed girl? Weâre not heartless mercenaries.â
I bristled. âIâm not an âunarmed girl,â as you well know from our bandit visitors the other night. I can defend myself.â
âEven so,â Beyan argued. âWe wouldnât head back north without you.â
âFine, then. Why donât you go back to Dennanâs inn and wait for me there?â
âNo. The dragon is dangerous. You need us here to help you, just in case.â
âI donât think your intention is to help.â
Beyan, to his credit, didnât argue with that statement. Instead, he said, âWhat are your intentions? You never told me that, not when you first asked for my fatherâs help, and not any time during our travels.â
âI donât think that really matters. Do you ask all of your commissions why theyâre looking for the dragons they hope to find?â
âNo, but since we came all this way without payment, I think weâre owed at least that.â
Our argument was cut short by Farrahâs unsteady voice. âUh... you two...â
A large shadow briefly blocked the sun overhead. The wind picked up, blowing leaves and dust around us. A heavy thud shook the earth as a magnificent gilded dragon landed just behind us.
Massive amber eyes regarded us. The dragonâs mouth opened.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
BEYAN, RHYSS, AND FARRAH instinctively ducked to either side, anticipating an oncoming wave of fire. I remained where I stood, frozen in place.
But instead of incinerating us, the dragon spoke.
âI understand youâre looking for me.â His thundering, deep voice rumbled through my body.
âHow... how did you know that?â Instinctively, I moved closer to the dragon, mesmerized by his liquid eyes.
âAllayne.â Beyanâs warning â and his hand on my arm â stopped me.
âYou have a seeker among you,â Joichan said. âAnd, dragons have excellent hearing.â
I nodded. I seemed to have trouble forming coherent thoughts. No one else spoke for a few moments. We just stood there, humans and dragon, staring at each other.
âWell?â Joichan broke the stalemate. âState your business, or be on your way.â
Without thinking, my hand went to my neck and tugged the necklace out from under my collar. The moonstone gleamed, catching Joichanâs eye. Curiosity aroused, he turned his full attention on me.
And then reared back, screaming in pain.
Beyanâs dagger was lodged in Joichanâs side, sticking out under one of his golden scales. Blood dripped from the creature, pooling on the grass underneath him.
I had been so focused on the dragon that I hadnât noticed Beyan had moved from my side. While I had unwittingly distracted Joichan, Beyan had taken advantage of the moment to strike.
Now Beyan had his sword drawn, ready to finish the job.
âBeyan, no!â I spun, reaching out to grab his sword hilt. Beyan easily avoided my hand, swinging the sword away from me so he wouldnât accidentally cut me.
âAllayne, move away.â
âBeyan, this is insane. You donât want to do this.â I looked to Rhyss and Farrah for help. They didnât draw their weapons, but they didnât try to stop their friend either. I turned back to Beyan, trying to appeal to his sense of logic. âThis will break your mind. Donât go down this path.â
With his free hand, he pointed toward Farrah and Rhyss. âGo join the others.â
âBeyan! Stop and think for a second. Kye needs you.â
Beyan paused. For a moment, he looked uncertain, and I hoped I had gotten through to him. Then his face hardened. âSome things are worth the sacrifice.â
âNo. You donât mean that.â I stayed firmly in place.
Keeping his eyes on the dragon, Beyan called over his shoulder to his team.
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