Read His Highness the Duke Online
Authors: Michelle M. Pillow
Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal, #Supernatural, #Shapeshifter, #Arranged Marriage, #space ship, #Dragon Lords 5, #dragon shifter
empty space now. Even the meteors have floated away.‖
―This isn‘t about our childhood home. This is about a planet that needs saving. If
the Tyoe succeed in their plans, they will kill everyone over mining rights. I can‘t let the
Qurilixian people become exterminated when I can try to stop it.‖
―Send them a communication,‖ Riona muttered.
―I couldn‘t. You know very well that in my position the Federation monitors all
of my communications and, regardless, the Draig are not part of the Federation alliance.
It‘s not like I can get the local nobility to take my transmission. As much as I‘d like to be
able to just type them a letter telling them to be careful, that wasn‘t an option.‖ Aeron
frowned. ―Sorry you were so inconvenienced.‖
―Oh, that sounded sincere.‖ Sarcasm dripped from Riona‘s tone.
Aeron didn‘t answer.
―You act like I‘m heartless. I‘m here, aren‘t I? You wanted my help and I helped
you. You wanted a ride and I found you a ride. It‘s not like trips to the outer Y quadrant
are around every corner, let alone trips to an isolated planet. A planet, by the way, that
houses two warring classes of people, which necessitate landing on the right side of the
planet. That‘s a pretty tall order, sis. Would you rather I hijacked a ship? Broke a few
more laws you‘re so keen on observing?‖
Aeron opened her mouth, but didn‘t get a chance to answer.
―Listen, we go, we smile, we pretend to consider our options, we drink, we
dance or whatever it is these Draigs do for fun, and then you do what you have to and
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we leave.‖ Riona began walking aggressively toward her as she continued, ―Now, we
have a long flight so I suggest you take advantage of all the services. Go upload
mundane planetary and Qurilixen species facts into that brain of yours. Or better yet,
relax
, if you even know what that is. Have permanent polish applied to your nails. Get
your breasts enhanced and enlarged so the other militants will have a reason to
promote you to head analyst. Get that boulder removed from your tight ass. I don‘t care
what it is…‖ She ran her hand over a wall sensor. The door to the hallway slid open.
―So long as it‘s not in here. Have a good flight, sis, see you when we land.‖
Riona gave her a light push, forcing Aeron into the hall before shutting the door
in her face. Shaking with the kind of rage only her sister could produce, Aeron marched
down the metal corridor to her assigned room. Under her breath, she muttered, ―I hope
one of the barbarians takes you home with him as a wife, and I hope they are the
foulest, ugliest creatures to have ever lived!‖
* * * * *
Breeding Festival Grounds, Outside the Draig Palace, Planet of Qurilixen
Lord Bronislaw, High Duke of Draig, eyed the festival grounds before him.
Servants busily worked to make sure everything was in order before the shipment of
Galaxy Brides arrived. Bron wasn‘t necessarily looking forward to the event, being as it
was his seventh year in a row, but he was duty bound to attend—especially this year, as
it was the first year his four royal cousins, the Princes of Draig, would be searching for
their wives. For that he was grateful. The royal family was the only family on the planet
who outranked his, and the people‘s attention had predictably shifted from his marital
pursuits to the princes‘. In fact, it was almost as if the people had forgotten he was
attending. As an honorable nobleman, his repeated failures were not a kind reminder to
others hoping to find a bride someday.
Bron wished he could forget he was attending. This night weighed heavily on the
back of his mind all year round. Would this be the year the gods blessed him? Or would
this be another failed attempt? Would he go home empty-handed to the disappointed
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stares and mutterings of his subjects? Looking up at the green-tinted sky, he could
already see the telltale darkening of the normally light heavens. Night only came to the
planet of Qurilixen once a year. It is part of what made the Breeding Festival so sacred
to his people. It was the only time couples could marry.
Normally, a soft green haze of light plagued the planet‘s sunny surface.
Qurilixen had three suns—two yellow and one blue—and one moon, which made for a
particularly bright planet. To the left of the valley a colossal forest stretched into the
distance. The green leaves of the foliage were overlarge due to the excessive heat and
moisture they received. The trees towered high above the planet‘s surface, thicker than
some of the smaller homes in the nearby village.
―Here we go again,‖ his brother, Alek, said as he reined his ceffyl beside Bron‘s.
He automatically gripped the center horn of the beast to keep his balance on the wide
back as it shifted. The animal had a fanged mouth that opened with a hiss of its long
tongue. It had the eyes of a reptile, the face and hooves of a beast of burden, and the
body of a small elephant. Like all ceffyls in their stable, it was a fine steed.
This was to be Alek‘s fifth attempt and he looked forward to it with all the
excitement exhibited by Bron. The second youngest, Mirek, faced his fourth festival.
The youngest of them, Vladan, came for his first. Bron pitied Vladan for the
disappointment the night would bring. He could remember his own first ceremony as if
it had been the night before. He had stood with the bachelors and waited, his heart full
of hope and his stomach in his throat as he searched the faces of the eligible women for
the one that would be his. Only, the sacred crystal about his neck never glowed to
signify he had found his true mate, his wife. He had tried to warn his youngest brother
against such hope, as did the others. Vladan still carried that spark in his eyes as he
looked down at the valley of pyramid-shaped tents decorated by waving banners.
As Mirek and Vladan reined their mounts next to them on the hill overlooking
the festival grounds, Vladan said, ―Does it always look like this?‖
Bron frowned. Vladan had not heeded their example. Though he tried to hide his
emotions, the youngest brother still believed this night might prove lucky.
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―Yes,‖ Alek said. ―Though they still must set up a banquet tent for potential
brides and fire pits around the campsite. From this position it will look as if the entire
valley is on fire.‖ At Vladan‘s questioning look, he added, ―We camp here after the
festivities. If you do not find a bride, you do not go to the tents. Whichever tents are
empty are taken down early in the morning by servants. No one wants to see a
reminder of the failed attempts.‖
―So we will gather here tonight after the ceremony,‖ Bron stated. He really didn‘t
expect to take home a bride, and if they camped on the cliff they could make a faster
departure in the morning. He had matters to attend to at his castle home.
―Sounds good. I have mares that are about to drop,‖ Alek answered. As Top
Breeder on the planet, it was Alek‘s duty to see to the ceffyl stock. They had a gestation
period of three years but only made it to term about half the time. Overseeing the
birthing process was very important.
―We should greet our cousins and tell the king we have arrived,‖ Mirek said. He
was the first to move.
―Yes, let‘s get our little brother fitted for his loincloth,‖ Alek teased. ―We
wouldn‘t want it falling off during the festivities.‖
―You‘re right,‖ Vladan boasted, puffing out his chest. ―It wouldn‘t do for all the
women to want me after such a display of prowess. I am only allowed one wife.‖
Bron gave a light brotherly snort of disbelief as he urged his mount down the
hillside. ―Come. Let us report to our uncle. He will want a royal accounting before all is
lost to drinking and dancing.‖
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Chapter Two
Dusk claimed the small planet of Qurilixen, turning the reddish-brown earth into
a dark and brilliant red. The oversized leaves drooped on their branches, as if sleeping
off the long year. They emitted a subtle smell unique to the night hours. Bron‘s nose
caught the scent easily behind the smoke of bonfires. He loved that smell.
The grooms stood in two lines, forming two walls of flesh the procession of
brides would walk through to find their matches. Behind them the married men sat in
throne-like chairs with their wives firmly upon their laps. Music and laughter
resounded over the grounds. Bonfires cast the attendants in stark relief. Torches lit dim
earthen pathways leading through the large pyramid tents beyond the main clearing.
Ribbons and banners floated on the breeze in many brilliant colors. Bron knew where
his tent would be waiting for him, though he had never been inside it.
Darkness always brought with it a mystical feeling. It was a time when the
dragon inside them lifted its head and urged the human part to play. Later, as those
lucky enough to find a wife disappeared into tents, the population would spread out
over the valley to engage in various pleasures.
Bron shifted his hips. As was tradition he wore a loincloth, a gold band around
his bicep, a black leather mask to hide his face from forehead to upper lip, and the
sacred crystal around his neck. Though they teased each other about it, his people were
hardly ashamed of the naked form.
Bron had sworn to himself that he would merely go through the motions. He
would not get excited, would not get his hopes up. Then the door to the Galaxy Brides‘
ship opened over the docking plank, and he couldn‘t stop his heart from quickening or
his lungs from filling with air to hold a deep breath. For a long moment, silence
pervaded inside of him. The world stilled.
Then chaos.
The married women burst into laughter. From his place in line, Bron saw several
of the younger men shouting and posing for the prospective brides. They were too
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young to participate in the ceremonies, but that didn‘t stop them from secretly hoping
one of the brides would see them and choose. It happened, rarely, but it did. Unlike the
grooms, the onlookers wore the traditional tunic-style clothing of his people.
The brides waited at the mouth of the ship, appearing in a single file line that
disappeared into the depths of the metal corridor. He narrowed his eyes, letting his
vision shift with gold as he tried to see more details. The women were covered in the
fine gauze and silk of the traditional Qurilixian gowns. The slinky material stirred
against the skin when they moved, hugging tight over the hips and flaring out around
the legs in thin strips. Soft silk shoes encased their feet. The gowns fell low over the
breasts to reveal a generous amount of cleavage. A belt of sorts went across their backs.
But, instead of looping in the front, they continued to the sides, holding the wrists low
like silken chains, and winding halfway up the arm to lock over the elbows. The women
couldn‘t lift their arms over their heads.
His blood felt as if it boiled in his veins. The women looked so soft and feminine.
He ached to touch one. Closing his eyes, he tried to beg the gods for their blessing, but
the words never formed. Instead, he asked them with his feelings, the yearning inside
his chest that didn‘t need words. Let this be the year. He‘d made his offering. He lived a
good life.
―I would rather face battle,‖ Mirek whispered next to him. ―This anticipation is
torture.‖
―I cannot believe our little brother does not have to stand in even one of these
greeting lines. It is almost laughable that Vladan found his wife before his first
ceremony started and here we are, again.‖ Bron was happy for his little brother, though
he would be a fool to deny he was jealous—even as he was a little concerned by the
match. Before the ceremony, the king had ordered they be presented to a marriageable
daughter of a friend of one of the mining dignitaries. Apparently Lady Clara of the
Redding was above attending their ―primitive‖ festival and refused to marry beneath
her station. She barely even acknowledged them as she coldly looked over the highest
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ranking nobles the Draig had to offer. In fact, when Vladan‘s crystal began to glow, she
merely nodded, turned her back on them and left for her private dressing chamber.
―Aye,‖ Mirek answered, chuckling. ―I do not envy him that bride. I only hope
that was paint on her body and not her true flesh. She will scare the children and
deliver them into nightmares.‖
―I did not see the paint. I was too busy staring at her head. Do you think that
tower of hair hides a skull beneath it?‖ Bron wasn‘t sure which was worse—no bride, or
one whose humanoid heritage was questionable.
―Our nephews will be born with skulls the shape of pyramids.‖ Mirek laughed.
Bron knew Mirek was joking and would not be concerned by the woman‘s appearance.
As the Mining Ambassador, he spent the most time off planet amongst alien species.
―The gods would not be so cruel,‖ Bron answered. Even as he said it, he turned
his attention to where his brother Alek waited. Alek‘s hand was clenched over his chest,