“Ah! Drops are going up my skirt!”
“Lucky drops.” Had he said that aloud?
Yes, because she faced him with an inquisitive look, as if she were taking his measure. Or making a decision.
Go to her, kiss her.
Yet when he heard bugle calls in the distance, he was reminded of all the perils of this realm. This strange glade might be the only source of water around, which made it a target.
Thronos leapt to a moonraker tree to keep watch.
Cold water seeped along Lanthe’s back, wetting her hair and cooling her heated skin.
She’d never seen a place like this glade and was determined to relish it—even if Thronos had deserted her.
After drinking her fill, she sat on the silver grass, removing her boots. “Just because you don’t have a skirt doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy this.”
He crouched on a limb, scanning the woods, looking both sexy—and demonic.
She didn’t know how he could continue to deny his demon blood when evidence kept mounting. Aside from his similarities to those dragons and his seamless adaptation to this place, he could read the demonic writing!
Maybe that was due to a genetic memory, passed down through the blood—a memory formed here.
By his ancestors.
Now that Thronos had returned to his “realm of origin,” his very behavior was changing. There’d been an overall mellowing of rage, and he’d actually cracked jokes. In the last twenty-four hours, he’d probably committed more offendments than in his entire lifetime. She could take some of the blame for those, but not for other changes.
His voice, already a baritone rumble, had grown even deeper, raspier. And his language was deteriorating rapidly. Over the day, he’d begun carrying his seven-foot-tall frame differently, with not quite so much tension in his shoulders, not so much stiffness in the spine. Even his horns seemed prouder somehow.
He not only sounded like a demon, he looked like one. Which she was discovering she might have a weakness for.
Sabine adored having a demon lover. Would Lanthe?
Maybe the realm of Feveris was precisely where she and Thronos needed to go. In the Land of Lusts, she’d feel no guilt for bedding an enemy Vrekener. No fear of the future.
Wait. What was she thinking? She was a daughter of the Sorceri, a born hedonist. She’d take pleasure where she found it, and laugh in the face of guilt.
Well, as long as she didn’t get knocked up.
Thronos could be an endless source of pleasure. She’d enjoyed teasing him earlier, wanted to some more. “Come back down here”—she crooked her finger at him—“with all the other offendmenters.”
Though he looked like he wanted nothing more than to join her, he remained where he was. “I’ll keep watch. It’s my job to protect you.”
Because his instinct told him so. She sighed. She appreciated the protection, but she wished he was doing it because he wanted to, not because he was compelled to.
For once, she’d love to hear a male say, “I’m going to do you a solid—not because of what you can do for me in return or what you can give me—but simply because I like you.”
Was Thronos so different from Felix? Thronos wanted offspring. Felix had hungered for power.
Both of them sought something from her; yet neither truly cared about her. They only saw what she could give them, how they could use her.
Which she didn’t care about, because she had a plan to get her back to Rothkalina: beguile Vrekener. Afterward, she’d never have to see Thronos again. “Come on, don’t be a killjoy. You’ll scent anything that comes near.” When he made no move, she said, “I think you don’t know how to have fun.”
“Why would I be versed in something I haven’t experienced since our last day together?”
She frowned at that. How . . . sad.
But she wouldn’t dwell on it when fun was here to be had now. “Thronos, we might not make it out of Pandemonia alive. We should have died multiple times over the last few days. These things remind me . . .”