Posting this a bit early - a big, fat teaser for #TeaserTuesday - since I've got a busy day ahead tomorrow.
We're more than halfway through November, which means we've just got about a month until Golden Eagle drops! How many times can I say I'm excited? Many more, it turns out, because I am! I've loved working on each book in this series; these characters are my darling monsters and I love having the chance to share their stories. But, as proud as I am of Dragon Slayer, I think Golden Eagle is something special. If you've enjoyed the series so far, I think you're really going to love book four.
One of the things I enjoy most about this series is the way we get to explore every aspect of family: through romance, through found family, through parent-child relationships...and through sibling relationships. Val and Vlad's bond is unbreakable - but it's fraught with trauma, misunderstandings, and, at times, something like hatred.
Though the brothers don't occupy the same physical space in this book, they do get several moments together to work on understanding one another a little better.
From:
Golden Eagle
Copyright © 2019 by Lauren Gilley
Expected December 2019
** Warning for totally raw, unedited text; beware of typos
Ramirez blew out a breath and bent to pick up her
knife, wiping a sweat-glazed forehead with the back of a hand as she stood.
“Pretty bold showing up here again,” she said to Val.
He felt his fangs elongate as he shifted his
smile toward her. “Says the woman who wanted to practice hand-to-hand with my
brother.”
She looked like she wanted to retort – and like
it was a retort she’d toned down from the kneejerk reaction that sent a spike
of anger across her face – but Vlad said, “Leave us.” She and Treadwell left
without any grumbling; without even a questioning glance.
“They’re afraid of you,” Val said. He didn’t try
to sound delighted, but it happened anyway.
Vlad nodded and shrugged, moving toward the
table. His hands were wrapped – a nod to sparring propriety, but not a
necessity – and he picked the bandages loose as he walked, unwinding them. “Their
efforts are genuine but they’re a poor army.” He set one bandage down and
loosened the other, cutting a glance up at Val through his lashes. “Your
friends–”
“Are not looking to be recruited,” Val said,
loftily, though he felt a squirming of uncertainty in his belly.
“Fine.” Vlad reached for a water bottle and
didn’t press the issue. “You’re still well?”
“Wonderfully so. Mia sends her regards.” He
leaned forward, voice lowering conspiratorially. “She thinks you’re noble, by
the way.”
Vlad’s brows lifted momentarily in surprise,
which smoothed his forehead, and softened the lines around his mouth. He looked
handsome like that, Val didn’t tell him, like even if he wasn’t happy, he at
least wasn’t on the cusp of impaling someone.
He couldn’t repress a smile, though.
Vlad’s brows went back down. “She’s surprisingly
sensible, your mate.”
“I’m glad you think so,” Val said, and meant it.
Vlad snorted and moved down the table, gaze
tracking over the astounding array of knives laid out, gleaming under the
lights. He selected one, tested the edge on his thumb, then sealed the cut it
left with a flick of his tongue. “Are you sleeping, now?”
“No. This is a purposeful visit this time.”
Vlad set the knife down, and reached for another
to repeat the exercise. Val half-wondered if it was some exercise in sharpening
oneself through pain, or some such rot. “Because I’m such good company?” The
edge of bitterness in his voice, like all of Vlad’s more tender emotions, would
have been near impossible for a stranger to detect, but to Val it glittered as
sharp as the knife in Vlad’s hand.
“I think you’re excellent company,” Val said.
Vlad stilled, and his gaze snapped over, dark and
pointed. “Don’t lie to me.”
Val gazed back, and felt the nakedness of his own
expression. “I’m not. We agreed, didn’t we? No more secrets. No more facades. I
think you’re excellent company,” he repeated.
Vlad’s brow smoothed again, surprised again,
handsome again.
He looks like Father, Val thought, struck
suddenly by the idea.
Vlad said, “Why would you possibly think that?”
Voice faint, almost – almost frightened.
Vlad Tepes, fighter of sultans, impaler of
enemies, shaken by genuine fraternal affection. It would have been adorable if
it wasn’t so sad.
“Vlad,” Val said, “you might not be the most –
vigorous of conversationalists. Not exactly the optimistic sort – though I will
tell you that you should smile more, brother, because it does wonders for your
face.”
The brows went down again.
“But you’re also intelligent, learned, and
stubbornly honest. I’ve always enjoyed your company.”
“Always,” Vlad said flatly, and Val remembered a
moonlit bedroom slatted with the shadows of the silver bars on the window, and
the stubborn set of Vlad’s small shoulders, and a gulf beginning to form
between them. He remembered whore; the rejection and contempt. Remembered
a room in a tower, and Vlad saying he would never trust him.
“When–” His voice cracked. “When we were boys,
you were the one I wanted to spend all my time with.”
Vlad stared at him.
And Val remembered sturdy arms around him,
helping him steady and aim his bow. Remembered a hand clasping his, and the
smell of street vendors, and the oohs and ahhs of the crowd as acrobats defied
gravity. Remembered the warmth of the bed they’d shared when they were so
small, soft furs tickling their chins, and the scent of Vlad on the pillows,
familiar and comforting.
“You were a good big brother. And I think you
were always trying to be, even when things were awful. And I think you’re being
one again, now.”
Vlad kept staring. Val wasn’t sure he was even
breathing.
“You’ve scared most people.” Val offered a smile.
“But you don’t scare me.”
A beat passed. Then Vlad nodded, curtly, and went
back to inspecting his knives. “That’s. Well.”
When it became apparent he wouldn’t continue, Val
changed the subject. “How goes the war effort, brother? Or should I say Imperator?”
He chuckled over the title.
Vlad – as expected – didn’t join in his
amusement. “We don’t have to speak of that. You–”
“Vlad.” When his brother glanced over, he said,
“I’m worried for you.”
Vlad frowned. “Worried for me?”
“Gods, we don’t have to go through the whole ‘I
care about you’ song and dance again, do we? Yes, I’m worried. You vowed to
kill him or die trying. And I can’t stop thinking about that.”
“Val, this is what I was bred for. I’m a second
son. I’m the one always meant to dedicate his life to battle – to defending my
family, even if I’m defending it from other parts of our family. You don’t need
to worry. I will gladly–”
“Lay down your life, yes, I’m painfully aware.
And that terrifies me.”
Vlad shifted so he faced him, one hand braced on
the edge of the table. “Is that why you did it?”
“Did what?” But his pulse skipped, because he
knew.
“Why you crippled me and dragged me out of the
that tower. Why you put me to sleep.” He didn’t snarl, but his lips curled
enough to show the glint of one sharp fang.
Val swallowed. “You know it is. They would have
killed you.”
“Then so be it. I was prepared to die. Better at
the hands of Matthias Corvinus than Mehmet.”
“I wasn’t going to let that happen.”
“It’s not for you to protect me–”
“You’re my brother!” When Vlad fell silent, teeth
clicking together as his jaw shut, Val realized he’d shouted. And then he kept
shouting. “I don’t care if you’re older! I don’t care if you’re the fiercest
warrior who ever lived! You’re my brother, and if I can protect you, I will. I
don’t want you dead, Vlad. Putting you to sleep that night was the worst thing
I’ve ever done, but I could live with it because I knew it meant I’d saved your
life.
“You – you took on an entire mansion by yourself
to set me free. To protect me, because we’re brothers. Don’t tell me you’re off
to die and expect me not to worry. Don’t tell me it’s none of my concern what
you’re planning. I just – I just got you back. Finally got you back. And now
you’re…” His chest was too tight; he couldn’t breathe. “Why is it alright for
me to live it up in New York while you go off to war, and don’t you dare
give me that older brother shit again!”
He was panting. Felt sweat sliding down the back
of his neck, under his hair. Was probably shaking in Mia’s arms, a trembling
wreck on a Central Park bench.
Vlad said, “Are you finished?”
He huffed.
“I’ll give you an honest answer, but you won’t
like it.”
“Try me.”
“Do you remember what you told me when we fought
here?”
Val’s arms weak, shaking as he tried to meet the
strike of Vlad’s sword with his own; the glint in Vlad’s eyes – not of hatred,
he now knew, but determination.
“You said,” Vlad continued, “that you wanted a
chance to live. To be free and not bother anyone. And now you have a mate, and
you have friends, and you’re exploring the new world for the first time in
nearly six centuries. You have reasons to live.” He met his stare with a
steady, relentless one of his own. Not with sadness, or nor even resignation,
but with an assuredness that sent a chill skittering down Val’s back. “And I
don’t.”
Val’s breath caught. “No. You – you do. Vlad, you
do.”
But Vlad tucked his chin, expression grave, even
pitying. “You’ve always been the one with a head for dreams. Mircea, too. But
not me.”
“Vlad–”
“If you’ll admit it to yourself, you’ll know
there’s always been a lack in me. I don’t feel the ways that others do. Nothing
calls me to the soft pleasures of life. I know what I am – what I’m capable of
– and it would be wrong of me to withhold my talents where they’re needed
most.”
“Vlad.”
“I have no mate. No friends. There is nothing to
keep me from this.”
“You could have a mate. You could make friends.”
“But I don’t care about those things.”
Inevitable, sympathetic. Poor Val for caring.
Something tickled Val’s face, and he realized it
was a tear sliding down his cheek. Another, another…His eyes burned, and his
throat ached. “You think I’m weak for wanting those things.”
“No, brother. I think you have a heart – but I
never have.”
Oh, it hurt. It hurt terribly. And it
shouldn’t have mattered, because he had his Mia, and his wolves, and he had
Sasha, and Nikita, and their pack, and he had a whole queue of movies to watch
on Anna’s laptop; cities to visit, and food to taste, and natural wonders to
behold.
But before any of that, he’d had his hateful, uncompromising
brother, and that would always be the oldest, deepest, most painful love.
“Then you don’t care about me,” he said, voice
tear-choked and pathetic.
“Valerian.” Vlad stepped in close, and Val had to
tip his head back, tears dripping off his chin and jaw, running hot down his
throat. “Even heartless things can love. Uncle loves power. Mehmet loved power.
And I love you.”
Val closed his eyes and barely managed to choke
back a sob.
“Don’t ever doubt that, dear brother. Never doubt
that I want you healthy, and whole, and as far away from this fight as
possible.”
You fool, Val thought. You absolute idiot. He
sucked in a breath, and opened his eyes, and blinked them clear. Vlad was
looking down at him with his own muted brand of tenderness.
“Your mage says you need me,” he said. “That it
will take three emperors. That–”
“A theory, at best. And not one that I believe.
There’s no precedent for any of the nonsense he spews.”
“But what if he’s right? What if it takes all
three Romes? What if – what if you need me, and I’m out – out sightseeing?”
“I’ll manage.”
“After you’ve told me a dozen times you’re ready
to die? I should be with you. He’s my uncle, too. We should…what?”
Vlad was smiling. “You remind me of Mother right
now.”
“Crying?” he asked with a sneer.
“Ferocious. She would be proud.”
The last time Val had seen her had been in the
wild, dancing firelight of Mehmet’s invaded camp, sword in her hand, hair
braided, face painted with blue streaks.
“Gods, Mama…” He was exhausted, suddenly. “I
never even looked for her. I was too afraid I wouldn’t find her.”
“You should search for her now.” Vlad was still
smiling, his expression oddly soft and fond. “Introduce her to Mia. Mother will
like her.”
“Just like you?”
Vlad nodded.
Val sucked in a few deep breaths, and blinked
away the last of his tears. “I’m being quite serious.” His voice went prim and
tight, like it always did when he was ruthlessly checking his emotions. “If you
need my help, I want to be there. You’re all I’ve got left of our family. And
I–” He bit his lip to keep from crying again, so hard he tasted blood.
“I’m serious as well. I want you safe. I can
handle Uncle.”
“With your hapless army of two?”
“They’re improving.” He made a face. “Somewhat.
And I have the Necromancer, don’t forget.”
“Because he’s so willingly helpful.”
“He’s scared,” Vlad countered, growing serious
again. “He’ll help.”
“Gods. See–”
“No. No more of that. I’m tired of talking of
war.” He folded his arms. “You said this was a personal visit.”
You look so personable, Val thought, and
snorted. “I suppose I did, didn’t I?”
Vlad lifted a hand and made a go on
gesture. Tell me something personal.
Val sighed. He felt lighter and heavier at the
same time. Better for letting the tears out, for hearing that Vlad loved him –
though that proved he was not in fact without a heart. But he hated that he’d
heard how little Vlad valued himself. How ready he was to throw his immortal
body and soul into another war, without reservation, because he felt there was
no reason to keep living.
He sighed again. “Well.” He forced a cheerful
note into his voice. “I’m afraid my inexperience with a Familiar of my own is
showing. I can’t get Fulk to stop mothering me.”
Vlad snorted, one corner of his mouth twitching
up. “I don’t know any better than you. You should have seen Cicero.”
Cicero.
The name alone was enough to send cold chills
down the back of Val’s neck; it conjured all the old pain and fear, the phantom
taste of bile-laced blood in his mouth.
He prayed Vlad never learned the truth of that
betrayal. Desperately smoothed his face to keep his reaction hidden.
Not fast enough.
“What?” Vlad asked.
“Oh, nothing, nothing.” Val gave an airy wave,
and grinned. “Only tired. These wild New York nights are positively draining.”
Vlad clucked his tongue, but another smile toyed
with his mouth.
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