Dragon Laird's Witch

Dragon Laird's Witch

Chapters: 15
Updated: 19 Dec 2024
Author: Aurelia Skye
4.7

Synopsis

When witch Brenna escapes the Englishman enslaving her and using her power for his own evil ends, the only place to run is to the dragon-shifters of the Highlands. The Scots are at war for their independence, and as the Bloodiest Eye, the notorious Seer who has caused the death of many, however reluctantly, she knows they’ll kill her if they believe she’s a threat. One shared glance with Cameron Balfour has her imagining a future entwined with his. She lets the laird believe the lie that taking her virtue will drain her powers, but as their one night becomes more, she knows she’s going to have to admit her deception. With Sir Walstone still searching for her, eager to have her gift of Sight under his control again, she might not survive long enough to tell him the truth or accept his mating mark.

Paranormal Romance Enemies To Lovers BxG Meant To Be Kidnapping

Dragon Laird's Witch Free Chapters

Chapter One | Dragon Laird's Witch

Brenna did her best to keep running, trying to ignore the stitch in her side. It had been with her for at least several miles, and she was aware of her pace slowing, so she focused for a moment and tried to infuse some of her magic into stamina. It didn’t seem to work, and she wasn’t really surprised. She had one main gift, and that was the gift of Sight. Some witches had a multitude of talents, but many were like her, with just one area of expertise.

How she had cursed her Sight over these many years. It had led to permanent separation from her family when she was just nine years old, after Sir Frederick Walstone had heard rumors of her talents. He’d taken her from her family, and he’d held her captive eleven years now.

At first, he hadn’t trusted her at all, and she’d made several escape attempts. Only as the years passed, and she learned to temper her impulse to flee, had he started to take fewer precautions. By this point, he believed her to be a well-heeled pet.

She grinned in savage satisfaction that she had proven him wrong, though the feeling of victory was short-lived. She had fled from the English encampment near the border of the main conflict, and by now, she must be in the Highlands. While she considered Walstone her greatest enemy, the Highlanders would have no use for her either if they caught her. She’d escaped one fire just to enter another inferno, but she was still more afraid of returning to Walstone’s camp than she was of risking the possibility of running into dragon-shifting Highlanders.

She ran as far as she could for another half-hour, until the stitch in her side overwhelmed her. Breathing heavily, Brenna leaned against a gnarled old tree, looking around the darkness as she fought fear and confusion. The moon was barely visible this evening, and though the stars shone brightly at this elevation in the Highlands, they weren’t sufficient to provide true illumination for navigation.

The smart thing to do would be to stop for the night, but where? If she kept running blindly, she had no idea where she would end up, but if she stopped and tried to resume in the morning, she was far more likely to run into a Highlander during the daylight hours. The best she could hope for would be a kindly farmer’s wife who might understand her plight to some extent and not turn her over to the nearest laird—and she had no idea who that might be.

She’d seen the map of the Highlands that rested on Frederick’s table in his tent, and she could picture it in her mind, but that didn’t lead to her knowing where she was exactly. It was perhaps one advantage to her that most of the Highlanders were involved in personal conflicts between clans in addition to waging war against the English, so perhaps they wouldn’t all unite against her.

Maybe she could make it to a disinterested clan. She closed her eyes, struggling to recall the map in its entirety. There were two areas that were tinted yellow on the aging paper to indicate they were no threat to the English, either by treaty or by remaining neutral to the entire fight.

Try as she might, she couldn’t recall the names of them though, and she remembered with a sinking feeling in her chest that they were quite far up on the map. She’d come many miles since her escape, but she was nowhere close to either one of those clans, and there was no guarantee either would accept her or offer her sanctuary from Walstone or the Highlanders who would like to kill her.

That was a grim reality. As soon as they realized she was Sir Frederick Walstone’s infamous Seer, any Highlander with an ounce of common sense would immediately kill her. It wouldn’t matter to him that she been held captive and forced to provide the visions she’d given over the years, for she was a risk to his people. She understood that, but it didn’t have her eager to line up to meet the broadside of an angry Highlander’s sword.

The darkness seemed to be growing, and it had a malevolent tinge to it. She shivered as she wondered if it were her imagination, or if there was witchcraft involved in the darkening fog. She wasn’t the only witch Walstone kept as a prisoner, but she didn’t think they had caught up with her yet.

With luck, they wouldn’t discover her escape until morning. When she had knocked out the guard who was only paying her cursory attention, she had used some of her limited power to ensure he would remain sleeping for at least a full day. Then she had dragged him over to her sleeping pallet and covered him with the blanket to make it seem like her form. If anyone glanced in, she hoped it would be enough to fool them until morning, when everyone rose.

She wondered if there was a witch among the Highlanders, one who was protecting her territory. Brenna shuddered at the idea of ending up in conflict with another witch, especially since she had no personal stake in fighting the Scottish. She thought they were entitled to their freedom, just as she was, but she wasn’t certain any of them would listen to her long enough to allow her to share that opinion.

When she felt like she could breathe again, Brenna made the reluctant decision to press on despite the darkness and the malevolent cloying of the fog surrounding her. If she were in the midst of a spell, she wouldn’t be doing herself any favors by remaining in it. The right spell could sap all her powers before she realized what was happening, and she couldn’t afford to be completely defenseless.

Her side still ached, so it limited her to a fast walk more than a run, but she pressed on for at least another hour, finding the darkness thickening the farther she went. It had to be a spell of some sort, and she finally tapped into her own powers again to provide a little illumination. She had barely produced a flare of light in her palm when she heard shouting in the distance. “This way.”

She immediately realized her mistake. The flare of light had betrayed her presence. Likely, whomever hunted her had already known she was there anyway, but now she had made it easy for them. Brenna focused on extinguishing the light and started running, though she had no idea where she was fleeing to. She had only the goal of escaping the voices that were moving toward her, coordinating together via shouts.

Though running away from them seemed like a smart solution, Brenna froze abruptly, no longer able to move as tendrils of the dark fog wrapped around her, and she shuddered at the feel of magic binding her. Somehow, she managed to tear herself loose, but she only made a few more feet of progress before several large warriors wearing belted red and gold plaids stepped out the darkness to surround her. Light glowed from their torches.

As soon as they approached, the darkness that had been creeping over her receded, and she realized the power must come from one of the warriors. Her gaze moved to the one in the middle, whose bright green eyes seemed to glow with malice, and she realized it was him. She shuddered at the angry look he sent her way, and she wanted to collapse to the ground, though she thought that was more from fear than magic.

“What are you doing here, Maclaren lass?” asked the one on his left. He was a slightly older man with a scarred visage and long brown hair. He didn’t seem particularly concerned on her behalf, but at least he wasn’t reacting with rage or fear.

She looked down, recalling her impulsive gesture of stealing what she’d thought was a blanket from a laundry line earlier in the evening when she had first reached what she was certain was Scottish-held territory. Eyeing it now in contrast to how they wore their plaids, she realized tucked around herself wasn’t quite the proper way, but it was giving her camouflage and hiding her English dress.

“Well, lass, what is a Maclaren doing on Balfour land? Do you not know of the feud between us?”

She looked down, not saying anything. He spoke in thick Gaelic, or perhaps even Dragonish. She couldn’t be certain, but her power allowed her to understand what he was saying even if she didn’t know what language he spoke. It was one of the few benefits of being a witch that was innate in nearly every magical being she had ever met. They knew how to speak languages they had never heard, likely able to read the intent behind the communication more than the words themselves.

“Perhaps she is daft,” said the warrior standing on the right side of the one with the bright green eyes.

“Mayhap she is mute?” said another warrior as he stepped forward. He had long black hair, thick eyebrows, and a rough countenance that spoke to years of battle and deprivation. He could’ve been the age of the other men, or he could’ve been the father of the men standing nearby, or at least the right age group. He had a little hint of concern in his gaze when he looked at her.

She forced herself to look up and nod at him, afraid to reveal her accent when she spoke. She could understand them, but there was no guarantee they would understand her. Unless they had the same innate talent, it would sound like she was speaking a foreign language to them if they didn’t speak English. If they did, they would recognize it as the language of the enemy, and that would probably be the end of her anyway.

“I am certain Cameron will want to talk to her. Perhaps she brings news about the Maclarens. They might be enemies, but they’re also enemies of the English, and if they require assistance, we shall provide it,” said the one with the glowing green eyes.

“Aye, Ian, that we shall,” said the warrior on his left.

“Come along, lass,” said the one on the right, who had posited she was daft.

With no other alternative, not certain how to extract herself from the situation, Brenna made no effort to fight their efforts to get her to walk along with them. She quivered as she was soon surrounded by at least twenty warriors, all of similar size.

They were muscled and massive, and it didn’t seem so outlandish to imagine any of them shifting into a dragon at any moment. She knew that was their talent, and she had heard Walstone curse it a number of times in the past, but she’d never seen a dragon-shifter before, and it still seemed like a remote possibility.

Even now, magical as she was herself, she had a difficult time envisioning a man with the power to do so—but not these men, oddly enough. If ever there were men who were perfect specimens for dragon-shifting, she had no doubt it was the twenty or so surrounding her.

They led her up a steep hill, and she was certain they provided some accommodation for her gradual gait, for she doubted any of the warriors normally walked so slowly with their long legs and determined strides. Part of her slowness was continued exhaustion and pain in her side from her bout of running, but part of it was also pure reluctance. Once she was inside the Scottish keep she could see perched on the hilltop, there would be no escape.

Not that she should fool herself into believing there was an escape now. Surrounded by twenty dragon-shifters, and with her main power being Sight, she wasn’t going to be able to escape from them.

Yet she dreaded reaching the castle even more, and not strictly because it was an ugly monstrosity that showed years of construction in a variety of styles. All of it was solid, and she was certain it was reliable in a siege. It would be highly effective at keeping her in just as well as keeping out an enemy.

“We’re here, Maclaren lass,” said the one who believed her to be mute. She looked up at him and nodded briefly before looking down again. Her fingers clenched tighter on the plaid she wore wrapped around like a blanket, hoping it adequately hid her English clothing.

There was no point resisting, so she walked up the long set of stairs when someone prodded her gently in the lower back. She was still surrounded by all the warriors, but as they climbed to the top of the keep, and the massive doors to the Great Hall opened, revealing a man standing there waiting, it was as though the twenty warriors surrounding her no longer existed.

Instead, all she saw was the man before her, with his flowing auburn hair, green eyes, and strong face, matched by an equally strong body. A wave of fear crashed over her, combined strangely enough with a surge of desire that she had never experienced before. She let out a gasp, which caught the attention of the sharp-eyed warrior beside her, who had posited she was mute.

He nudged her forward, reminding her she wasn’t alone with just the man at the top of the keep. Though she knew the twenty warriors who’d escorted her to the keep weren’t her allies, she wanted to beg them not to present her to the man waiting at the top of the stairs. He seemed to dominate all the space, and she had no trouble at all believing he could instantly transform into a dragon.

Judging from his eye color and the faint dusting of scales across his arms, revealed by the belted plaid that he wore, along with a pair of leather boots and nothing else, she imagined he became a vibrant emerald green. She could picture it in her mind, and even she wasn’t sure if she was having a true vision or just relying on her imagination.

She gulped as she finally reached the top of the stone steps, standing before him. She looked down, certain she couldn’t bear to meet his gaze.

“What is this?” he asked in a gruff tone to someone over her shoulder.

“We found the Maclaren girl. She’s the one who tripped Dolag’s alarms,” said the gruff older man beside her.

“Maclaren?” The man frowned. “I see that, Valen.” The laird—for who else could he be—turned his full attention on her. Brenna could feel it even though she didn’t have the nerve to look up and meet his gaze. “Why are you here, lass? Is your clan in trouble?”

“I do not believe she speaks,” said the one now identified as Valen. He sounded less certain of that than he had earlier, likely because of her gasp. “Or perhaps she chooses not to speak,” he said ominously.

She slanted a glance at him, strangely moved to ask for his forgiveness for the deception. She sensed having this man on her side would be a big help, but she wasn’t optimistic enough to expect that to actually happen.

“Look at me, lass,” said the laird forcefully.

“You had best listen to Cameron,” said the one who’d surrounded her with the malevolent fog. She realized he had the same eyes as the laird, though she hadn’t looked deeply into the eyes of the clan leader.

She couldn’t yet summon the nerve to do so. She was certain as soon as she did, it would strip bare all her pretenses, and he would know immediately who and what she was. She wasn’t certain if it was her power telling her that, or just self-preserving instinct.

“Lass,” he said again, more harshly this time. “Look at me and tell me what you know, or I shall be forced to throw you into a cell. For all intents and purposes, the Maclarens are at odds with the Balfours, but the enemy of my enemy is my friend. If you need something, spit it out.”

Brenna took a deep breath, squared her shoulders, and tried to summon every ounce of bravery she had as she looked up to meet the penetrating green eyes of the laird of the Balfour dragons. The moment their gazes locked, colors danced behind her eyes, and a whirlwind of sensation she’d never experienced before swept over her. Her head spun, and she let out a small cry as she stumbled back. There were too many warriors to allow her to escape, and she stumbled into one of them, though she was barely aware of it.

Instead, she could only look at the eyes of the laird, and he seemed equally mesmerized by her. There was a magnetic pull between them, and she was desperate to break it. She tried to blink her eyes, but instead, with a small cry of surrender, she allowed consciousness to flee from her body as she collapsed to the ground.

Chapter Two | Dragon Laird's Witch

Cameron wasn’t even aware of moving. One moment, he was standing at the top of the steps staring down at the Maclaren lass, and the next, he was surging forward to catch her before she could fall. He didn’t reach her in time, but he quickly scooped her into his arms. “Send for Agnes.”

“Right away,” said his brother. Ian directed the comment to Ross and Stewart, and though they were councilmembers, neither hesitated to obey.

He paid little mind to them as he rushed the Maclaren girl into the keep, through the Great Hall, and up several flights of stairs. He wasn’t even aware of really doing so until he put her on the bed and realized he’d brought her to the lady’s chamber, which hadn’t been occupied since his mother’s death years before. Despite that, the bedding smelled fresh, and there were new reeds on the floor.

As he laid her down and stepped back, a gasp escaped him. The plaid she had worn wrapped around her more like a blanket than an arasaid fell open, revealing an English dress beneath it. It was clear the girl wasn’t a Maclaren, and he had brought an Englishwoman into his keep, and into his mother’s room. A surge of rage filled him, and he shouted as his dragon roared to the surface, wanting to rend the Englishwoman on the bed even as another part of him wanted to keep her from harm.

At his roar of anger, her eyes snapped open, and she started to tremble. “Please do not kill me,” she said, proving she was certainly not mute.

As part of studying his enemy, Cameron had learned the English tongue many years ago, and he recognized it with no difficulty now, particularly the accent. She spoke like someone who had peasant roots but had received education as well. She was a dichotomy and a puzzle he had to solve quickly for the safety of his people. “Who are you, and why are you here?”

She was still trembling as she scooted up the bed, sitting instead of lying down. She was clearly pressing as far away from him as she could get, as though she expected to feel the fiery lick of his dragonfire on her skin at any moment. “Do not kill me.”

“Who are you?” he asked again, making no attempt to hide his anger and irritation. “You will answer,” he said with impatience.

“I have escaped Sir Frederick Walstone. Please, I beg you for sanctuary from him.”

Cameron frowned at the sound of his nemesis’s name on her lips. He had no love for any of the English, and he would happily watch all their soldiers burn, but he had a particular loathing for Walstone, who’d cost him a number of friends and family over the years during the conflict. The man was heading up the Scottish invasion, and he was a true enemy to every Scotsman, regardless of clan or shifter ability.

Before he could stop the impulse, his hand wrapped around her throat, holding her still and keeping her from pulling away from him. “Who are you?”

“My name is Brenna,” she said in a trembling tone. “Brenna Taggart.”

He scowled. “I care not for your name, lass. Who are you to Walstone?”

She closed her eyes, and she seemed to surrender for a moment. He half expected her to pass out again, but her eyes opened, the startling blue catching his attention once more. He nearly lost himself in the depths, and he might’ve done so if her words hadn’t snapped him back to awareness.

“I am a Seer, and the blood of your people is on my hands.”

His eyes crossed for a moment in his anger, and he turned his head as a surge of dragonfire shot from his mouth. It was an uncontrollable impulse due to his rage but quickly burned out before it could touch any of the fabric on the bed and start an inferno. He was aware of the importance of maintaining control, and he rarely lost it these days as an adult dragon, but rage had been a curse that had plagued him since he was a dragonling. “I should kill you at this moment.”

“Yes,” she said in a trembling voice, her throat still wrapped in his hand, though he wasn’t squeezing. “I know you should, but I ask you not to. I have been held prisoner by the man for eleven years, taken from my family, who are dead now, save for my sister. I do not give him the visions because I choose to, sir. He gives me powerful magic that forces them forth. I am a victim as much as you are.”

Still scowling, he turned to glare at her again. “I am no victim, lass.”

Her eyes widened, and she was still trembling, but she nodded as much as his hand around her throat would allow. “Of course, you aren’t, but I am. I am pleading for your help, sir. Please, Laird Balfour.”

“You are a risk I cannae take, lass. If he gets you again, you will be used against us as a weapon.”

“Only if I still retain my virtue,” she said in a rush.

He frowned. “I… What?”

The young woman licked her lips, and he was powerless not to notice how plump and savory they appeared. He wondered how she would taste, and his mouth watered at the idea of finding out for himself. Slowly, he released his hold on her throat and instead grasped the braid confining her black hair. “Explain what you mean, lass.”

“Witches like me only retain our power as long as we have our virtue. If a man steals it, we lose whatever gifts we have. If you were to deflower me, sir, I would no longer have the gift of Sight.” She licked her lips and looked down as her cheeks flushed. It was clear the topic embarrassed the poor girl.

He frowned. “Must it be me specifically?” He wasn’t certain why he asked the question, for the idea of allowing any of his warriors to be the one to take her virginity immediately caused a surge of anger he had to back down and breathe through.

She looked reluctant as she shook her head. “I… I guess not. I suppose it could be any of your men.” She shuddered slightly, clearly horrified at the idea.

It seemed obvious she didn’t mind the thought of him being the one to perform the duty, at least not as much as she dreaded any of his men. He frowned at that tidbit, but he couldn’t convince himself that was the right course of action. He needed to think on it, and Agnes’s arrival allowed him to do just that.

He stood up, reluctantly releasing his hold on the girl’s braid as he faced the apothecary. “She is English and a Seer, so be careful and watch yourself.”

“Most witches only have one particularly powerful gift, Laird Balfour,” said the older woman. She didn’t seem fearful. “More importantly, I can read auras, and hers is terrified, not threatening.”

He frowned. “Wounded and panicked animals are often the most dangerous, Agnes. I shall send in a guard while you tend to her.”

“Ye could stay yerself, Laird Balfour,” said Agnes, though she wasn’t paying him much mind as she opened the valise and started removing bottles of herbs and potions.

“Nay. I have far more important duties to which I must attend.” He said that in a scathing way as he shot a glance at Brenna, one he hoped conveyed his dismissal of her.

If only it were so effortless to dismiss the idea of taking her to his bed. As he left the bedchamber, he could easily envision the pleasure of doing so, and he knew it wouldn’t strictly be to strip the English witch of her powers.

It was certain to be pleasurable for both of them, but he was afraid it could develop into more. With the offensive against the English and the constant battles, he had no time for unimportant considerations like romance. He certainly wasn’t ready to take a mate, and if he did, it would never be an English witch who bore the blood of his people on her hands, no matter how reluctantly.