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Jaded
Destinies
Mae Powers
Dragon's
Wish
Can a tormented dragon shifter and a battered princess’
growing passions withstand a tyrant and a curse that
could kill or free them both?
Ox-Heart
Lavera Tallys wants Zareth Okshart, but he’s
part of a spoilt alien princess’ endowment. Now
if only she can barter for his heart and body.
Erotica, Paranormal, Fantasy, Romance, Mature Content
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Dragon's Wish
by
Mae Powers
Chapter One
Laora dreamed of a large man, other than her husband. She also dreamt of
dragons.
One, in particular, shifted from man-beast to full glorious dragon. Oddly
enough, the dragon reminded her of the precious statue her husband, Kragus, had
given to her on the day they became engaged to be married. In her dreams, she
watched him change from a small statuette to a man-dragon and then into a huge
dragon beast.
The
dreams hadn’t started right away. Occasionally, the thoughts entered her mind,
but those first ones were foggy. Then she’d seen a face. Handsome with hard jaw
lines and slightly weathered by wind and time, she’d assumed. As the dreams got
more vivid, a man, slightly taller and bigger than her husband, appeared in her
nightly imaginations. Where her warrior husband stood dark and tall, the
dragon-man had glorious golden hair, spreading thick and long around his broad
shoulders, giving him a wickedly enchanting appearance that appealed to her
feminine senses.
Her
senses overloaded during her visions. His teal-colored eyes seemed to vibrate
with knowledge, and she wanted to melt into their mysterious depths—eyes that
promised her freedom, salvation and oh so much more. Just as his body offered a
salvation of freedom to her distraught emotional and physical senses.
Her
last dream of him, a few days ago, filtered through her mind. In it, he’d
promised to cherish her, to give her all the passion she’d always longed for, in
any way she wanted. His man body was hulking, towering over her average height,
yet part of her was not afraid of him.
However, her shaky loyalty to her husband, Kragus, made her afraid of where her
mind wanted to escape to—into the arms of her dreamy man-beast. In the
beginning, before the dragon lord invaded her dreams, she’d been happy with
Kragus. At least, she thought she had.
Barely a month after they wed, his attitude toward her changed drastically. He
took her more roughly in their bed, no longer caring if her own desires were
fulfilled. He left the castle more often. And, each time he thrust into her
without care, she’d felt a little more drained. That had been nearly a year ago.
She did not know how much more she could endure.
She’d been a priestess of the Sherenzade religion, but a princess to this very
kingdom as well. Her father sent her to be raised at the monastery when her
mother died during Laora’s eleventh year. Then she’d learned that, upon his
deathbed, her inconsiderate father had given her hand in marriage to his
favorite warlord, Kragus.
Still, in the beginning, he’d wooed her gently. He’d even been considerate and
loving as he taught her earthly delights. Then the changes started. Kragus told
her it was her fault. When she dared to back-talk him, he’d slapped her. Laora
no longer had anyone to turn to. Kragus seeped insidiously into her people’s
hearts, making them think he could do no wrong. What was she then, but a
figurehead he married for the power she brought him?
There was much she still didn’t understand about Kragus, or herself, for that
matter. Her mother had been a sorceress princess for Sherenzade, too, but
retained powers on the day her father married her. Laora’s mother told her the
powers did not come to their line always, and that, sometimes, it skipped a
generation. Some females of their birth-heritage had only small amounts of
magic. Mostly they did not come into them until they mated, which was another
reason she’d married Kragus, if she was truthful.
The
other reasons being duty and the law said she must marry.
Kragus frightened her at first, but she had found him handsome and, when he went
out of his way to woo her, she thought herself in love with him. Now she was
uncertain where her loyalties, or her heart, lay anymore. Perhaps her naivety
did her in. She was at a loss as to what to do now. She wanted to stand up to
Kragus, to tell him he could not rule her
kingdom or her body and mind like he had of late.
What was a princess to do when no one would listen?
Ox-Heart
By
Mae Powers
When
Zareth saw the astonishing woman enter the large, crowded room, his heart
accelerated to an almost impossible rate. His eyes widened, his breathing
halted, and his groins ached heatedly. Then his big hands shook nervously,
tingling with alarm that soon spread throughout his body.
His
sixth senses told him to beware. Then an elated awareness, both mentally and
physically, shot through his entire system, telling him that this woman would
influence his life in many ways.
He
put a hand to his chest, feeling a sudden warmth in the middle of it. Beneath
his tunic he felt the warming of the Okshart, his family’s symbol medallion
passed down to each son of the king, its center imprinted with the great Okshen
Beast, the icon of royalty on his home-world. He kept it hidden as was necessary
amongst strangers, but still it heightened his extra senses, making him know
that it too agreed with his previous thoughts – that the uniquely beautiful
alien woman would indeed play havoc with his destiny.
He
had to be careful. No matter that no other but he could understand or use the
guidance of his own Okshart medallion, its rare metal properties would be worth
a small fortune on the dark-market, or worse, Princess Orla would covet the
ornate necklace. He couldn't have his intended, Princess Orla, find out he had
it in his possession. Nor that he wanted some woman other than her. The princess
was a selfish bitch who wielded some power that could crush his life and his
world.
Still, the strange woman's sensual magnetism, drew him to find out what he could
about her. With almost no caution, his eyes never left the alien beauty’s form
as she intermingled with the crowds of people amassed into the small reception
room.
He
kept properly one-step behind his future bride-mistress, Princess Orla, hoping
she had not seen his reaction to the unusual woman across the room, who
presently intermingled with other world dignitaries. He took a quick glance at
the dainty, golden haired royal princess, noting she was doing her usual norm of
letting other men and women ogle and compliment her. Thankfully, she looked too
engrossed in her own whims to pay much attention to him. He hoped she kept up
her daily fixation of needing attention.
He
snuck another look at the woman, who’d nearly taken his breath away; and shot
his libido aching to release long suppressed desires. From his stance, he could
tell she stood tall, perhaps coming to his eyebrows if they were in close
proximity. He couldn’t help wishing that she stood naked next to him.
She
wore a tight evening gown of sapphire, which sparkled whenever she moved those
lusciously rounded hips and long legs. It split up the left side, showing her
dark, lovely limbs when she moved. Her auburn hair looked lovely piled up in
wavy circlets on top of her head, complimenting the toasty brown coloring of her
skin. She was exotic to look at, with her powerful charisma and full-figured
curves. Looking at her strong and oval face, he could make out her softly
contoured nose, and a determined chin.
She
bore an aura of confidence that emanated to him from amongst those surrounding
her. When she tilted her head up and glanced, what seemed to be in his
direction, he quickly stifled an automatically induced, sharp intake of air.
By the stars, he thought of her as the most gorgeous woman he ever beheld,
and definitely, the sexiest he ever came across. She filled out that
one-strapped gown as if she were melted into the outfit. Her eyes remained
mesmerizing, like a grayish mist upon the purple seas of his homeworld.
Then
the princess moved. He did his expected duty and turned as Orla did, still
keeping the proper step behind and beside her. Orla laughed at some anecdote
someone in her throng of admirers said, and Zareth did all he could not to look
back at the woman he admired. If Orla knew, she would be highly piqued.
No,
she would be furiously ticked. She did not like any of her chosen intendeds to
admire other women or men. He hoped when the time came, she would not make him
one of her final choices of being one of her two husbands.
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