Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Pucker Up

    Prev Next


      A loud crash of wood startled

      her. Garren dumped an armload of dry

      branches by the log she sat on. He glared

      at her before turning around and

      marching back into the woods.

      She rolled her eyes. What a

      baby.

      Why did he have to be so

      stubborn? It’s just a little dragon. A

      dragon. A pang of guilt smacked her

      square in her chest. He did save her

      from being torched, twice. Maybe he

      wasn't all bad deep down— deep, deep

      down. She needed to thank him.

      Damn it. Why did she have to be

      the bigger person? Leaving Thane

      working on the fire, she followed Garren

      into the forest. The smell of pine

      triggered a sudden craving for roasted

      marshmallows and ghost stories.

      At first, she didn't see him until a

      grunt in the shadows tipped her off. He

      tore apart a rotten log, piece by piece,

      and threw them in a pile. A large branch

      he tossed nearly hit her foot when she

      stopped by the growing pile of wood.

      He did a double take when he

      saw her standing there. He straightened

      up and wiped the sweat from his brow

      with the back of his hand. His gaze

      washed over her from head to toe and

      back again. “You need something?” He

      sounded as if he was still annoyed with

      her.

      She squirmed at his scrutiny.

      Clearing her throat, she said “Hey, I just

      wanted to... um...” This was more

      difficult than she thought it would be. If

      he wouldn't stare at her like she had two

      heads, she might get through this with a

      little grace. She fiddled with her leather

      bracelet as she gathered the courage to

      continue. “Thanks for helping me up

      there. You know, when the dragon tried

      to roast me.”

      His eyebrows shot up, nearly

      disappearing into his hairline. Then, his

      lips spread into a smirk as he stalked

      towards her. She automatically backed

      up. For every step he advanced, she

      retreated, until rough bark scraped at her

      back. Her heart thudded in her chest as

      he braced his hands against the tree on

      either side of her head, trapping her.

      “So, one might say you're

      indebted to me, like an indentured

      servant.” He took another step closer,

      his eyes never leaving hers.

      His proximity seemed to suck all

      the moisture from the air and she had to

      swallow in order to talk. “I think you’re

      reading too much into a simple ‘thank

      you’.” She held his gaze, wondering

      what he was up to .

      “Well, if being my slave is off

      the table, I have a better idea of how you

      can show me your gratitude.” He leaned

      in closer, so close she could see each

      eyelash framing his crystal blue eyes.

      Those eyes darted down to her mouth

      and lingered.

      Holy crap, he's going to kiss

      me!

      Suddenly, she became very

      aware of exactly how close he was.

      Heat radiated off his body in waves,

      crashing into her. Breathing normally

      became

      impossible

      as

      her

      lungs

      struggled to take in air. Did she want to

      him to kiss her? She wasn't sure. He did

      save her life. Maybe there was a nice

      side to him after all.

      Her gaze dropped to his mouth.

      He really did have nice lips. And with

      all those skanks he dated, he had to be a

      good kisser.

      Leaning in further, he rested his

      elbows on the tree, just above her

      shoulders. His warm, minty breath

      washed over her face, causing both her

      eyelids and belly to flutter.

      This is Garren , the boy who

      gave me purple polka dotted skin that

      lasted for a week. Push. Him. Away.

      Her traitorous arms refused to listen to

      her brain and remained perfectly still at

      her sides. In fact, her whole body was

      paralyzed with… fear, maybe? But not

      attraction. Definitely not attraction.

      Their lips were only centimeters

      apart. Her heart hammered against her

      chest. At that moment, her tough-chick

      persona slid away leaving only girl. She

      wanted this. Without realizing it, her

      eyes slid shut and she waited for him to

      close the distance.

      And waited.

      And waited some more.

      Nothing.

      Nothing but the crunch of leaves

      as he stepped away. Reality slugged her

      in the gut, turning her split-second

      moment of disappointment into utter

      mortification.

      Why?

      Heat crept up her neck as she

      prayed for a hole to open up beneath her

      and swallow her up. When that didn’t

      happen, she threw up a wall around her

      heart and opened her eyes.

      The back of his head greeted her

      as he did an about face and marched

      back toward his woodpile. “You're

      welcome,” he called over his shoulder.

      Fury burned through her as she

      stared at his back, imaging how nicely

      her dagger would look embedded

      between his shoulder blades. After

      envisioning his death in a few more

      brutally painful ways, she turned around

      and stomped out of the woods.

      Pull yourself together, Ivy.

      Garren is not worth a second thought.

      And definitely not worth your kisses. So

      why couldn’t she get the image of his

      lips out of her mind? So much for

      believing there was anything even

      remotely

      decent

      about

      him.

      She

      should've known better than to trust a

      wizard. At least she'd have the upper

      hand when she kissed Prince Sebastian.

      Bile climbed up her throat. He

      couldn't back away from her kiss, being

      a stiff and all.

      He's only sleeping, Ivy. Just

      sleeping. The drawing in Thane’s book

      flashed

      in

      her

      brain—

      Prince

      Sebastian’s black eyes, intense and

      beautiful, peering into her soul. She held

      on to the image and relaxed. Hopefully,

      his eyes wouldn't look at her in mockery,

      like Garren’s did.

      Gathering up the pieces of her

      broken pride, she vowed to never let

      another wizard sneak past her defenses

      again. She stepped out of the trees and

      stopped. Thane was crouched on the

      ground, slowly stalking across the

      beach. In each hand, he held a branch,

      dead leaves still clinging to the twigs.

      She waited to see if he was going to start

      chanting like a voodoo witch doctor.

      “What are you doing?” she

      asked.

    &n
    bsp; He jumped at the sound of her

      voice. “Oh, hey. I’m trying to get fire.

      Rubbing the sticks together wasn’t

      working.”

      What a surprise. “So you’re

      doing a fire dance?”

      He furrowed his brows before

      glancing ahead of him. Using one of the

      branches, he pointed to something on the

      beach. She followed his gaze and saw

      the baby dragon staring at Thane, its tail

      twitching.

      “So you’re using yourself as

      kindling? That sounds reasonable .”

      He’d have better luck with the dance.

      “No. I figure if I agitate it

      enough, it’ll try to scare me off by

      breathing fire. Want to help?”

      Her mouth gaped. “That sounds

      horrible.”

      “You have a better idea?” He

      held out one of the dry sticks. She racked

      her brain for any other solution.

      Reluctantly, she snatched the branch

      from his hand and started shaking it in

      front of her as she crept toward the

      dragon.

      “Here, Sparky,” she called in a

      soft, high voice. “Come light the stick on

      fire. No, wait. Where’re you going?”

      For the next hour, they stalked the baby

      dragon around the beach. A couple times

      they got a spark out of it, but nothing

      ignited.

      The sun hung low, right above

      the horizon. Garren sat next to an

      impressive pile of wood, laughing at the

      other two.

      “Who’s Lucy and who’s Ethel?”

      he shouted out.

      She did her best to ignore him as

      she cornered the little creature against a

      boulder. She shoved her branch in its

      face. It yelped, spitting out a tiny spark.

      The spark landed on a dry leaf and

      smoldered. She backed away from the

      agitated dragon. The ember glowed

      brighter as she gently blew on it. She

      pushed another leaf closer and blew a

      little more. Soon, she had a flame.

      “Thank you, Sparky.” She tore

      her eyes away from the burning leaves to

      find Thane. “I got fire,” she yelled

      louder.

      Thane waved his arms toward

      the waiting fire pit he created earlier.

      “Quick, bring it over here.”

      She walked sideways toward

      Thane, using her body to block the wind

      coming off the water. She stopped a

      couple times when the flames almost

      died.

      “Hurry up,” he yelled.

      “I’m coming,” she muttered. She

      started on her way again when the

      flames suddenly burst, igniting the rest of

      her branch.

      Oh, gawd. At the rate it was

      burning, she might not make it to the fire

      pit. She held the burning stick out like

      the Olympic torch and ran, screaming

      across the beach. Tiny sparks flew past

      her on the wind. The heat burned her

      hand and she dropped it on the pile of

      dry grass and twigs in the center of the

      rock circle.

      Thane

      got

      right

      to

      work,

      pampering the flames and building it to a

      respectable campfire.

      Garren had to intervene at one

      point. “Unless you want to burn the

      forest down, that's big enough.”

      Thane sat on the nearby log and

      beamed at her. The setting sun at his

      back made his dark blonde hair glow.

      She found something familiar in his face,

      something that confirmed to her that they

      were family. They both had the same

      shade of hazel eyes, gold in the center

      and blue at the edges. It was the first

      time she truly believed they were

      connected, the first time she didn't feel

      totally alone in this world since her mom

      died a year ago. A year of running and

      hiding and never letting anybody close.

      Maybe he could look beyond her past

      and really accept her. Her heart ached

      with longing, hoping that her loneliness

      would soon be over.

      She glanced over his shoulder to

      the vast expanse of water. The day’s

      events replayed in her mind. When she

      remembered Captain Burgandy, sadness

      tightened in her chest.

      “Did you know the captain very

      well?” she asked Thane.

      His head snapped up from

      staring in the fire. “Not really. He kept

      to himself most of the time.”

      Awkward silence hung in the air.

      “He seemed nice,” she added,

      not knowing what else to say. He

      deserved a few nice words, no matter

      how crazy he was. “At least he died

      doing what he loved.”

      Garren slowly raised his head,

      that condescending eyebrow raised.

      “What?” she asked. “Do you

      have something you’d like to say about

      the man?”

      His gaze shifted to Thane and a

      smile spread across his face. “From

      what I heard, flying wasn’t his first love.

      At least not with the Daisy Mae that

      crashed in the ocean.”

      Both guys chuckled at what she

      assumed was an inside joke. Either that

      or they had a lot of maturing to do.

      Deciding that the conversation was

      headed in a direction she didn’t want to

      go, she concentrated on digging a hole in

      the ground with the point of a stick.

      The three of them spent what

      seemed like the longest hour in tense

      silence, sitting on a rotten log, Ivy in the

      middle. No one could relax. Every time

      a twig would snap, they’d each jump to

      their feet, ready to fight. It was either the

      dragon sniffing around for food or some

      other forest creature. Could someone die

      of adrenaline overload?

      Garren spent his time shaving a

      spear out of a long stick with his Swiss

      Army knife. He seemed to make a point

      out of deliberately not looking at her, as

      if she was the one who humiliated him

      earlier. After a while, the deliberate

      silence and tension around the campfire

      crawled under her skin. She needed to

      do something before she went crazy.

      I should be nominated for

      sainthood after this. Clearing her throat,

      she broke the ice. “What do you call a

      witch that lives on the beach?”

      Thane looked up, waiting for the

      punch line, while Garren kept staring at

      the blaze as if he didn't hear her, or

      didn't care. She elbowed him in the ribs

      and repeated the joke.

      He threw a glare her way, which

      she returned, and then he gave up.

      “What?”

      “A sand-witch.”

      Thane chuckled, more likely out

      of pity, and smiled. Garren rolled his

      eyes, but the corner of his mouth

      twitched. She was breaking through his

      wall.


      “What is a vampire's favorite

      fruit?” She asked with a little laugh as

      she nudged Garren.

      He allowed himself to smile,

      although small, and played along. “I

      don't know. What is it?”

      “A neck-tarine.”

      “That has to be the stupidest joke

      I've ever heard.” Garren tried to keep a

      straight face but failed miserably.

      Soon, they sat around the

      campfire, telling the worst jokes they

      could think of as stars dotted the night

      sky like glitter spilled over a black

      tabletop. They still jumped at every

      noise, not wanting to be caught off guard,

      but they were having fun. Her sides were

      aching from laughing so hard. After a

      while, a yawn escaped her lips and

      visited the others in turn.

      Thane

      rose,

      retrieved

      his

      backpack, and tossed it on the ground to

      use as a pillow. Garren shifted to do the

      same, but she stopped him with her hand

      on his. He looked down at the contact

      and then met her eyes with a smirk on his

      face. She immediately yanked her hand

      back.

      Not going there again. “You get

      first watch,” she said.

      His brow furrowed as the

      firelight danced across his face. “Why

      me?”

      “Because your hair is darker.”

      She stood up and put her jacket on to

      keep warm through the night.

      “That doesn't make any sense.”

      The weight of his stare bore

      down on her as she lay down on the sand

      next to the fire. “Of course it does. Just

      think about it.” She rolled up one of her

      sweatshirts and tucked it under her head.

      She shifted around, trying in vain to get

      comfortable. The ground was hard and

      small rocks dug into her hip. It was

      going to be a long night.

      “Fine. Get some sleep while you

      can because I'm waking you up next.” He

      got up and grabbed the stick he’d been

      whittling to a sharp point all evening.

      Setting it next to him on the log, he began

      the first shift.

      She made sure her dagger was

      safely tucked away next to her before

      falling asleep.

      *****

      Unfamiliar female voices woke

      her up hours later. She kept her eyes

      closed as she tried to calculate how far

      away they were and what they were

      talking about. They were just far enough

      away that she couldn't make out any

      specific words.

      Where the hell is Garren? The

      low timbre of his laugh coming from the

      same direction as the voices answered

      that question.

      She was about to open her eyes

      and take a look around when footsteps to

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026