Wicked Abyss (Immortals After Dark #17) - Kresley Cole Page 0,29
had trouble accepting the totality of their fated connection. Or she’d been spooked by it. But surely she could never doom him to an existence with no female or family.
Then he’d heard the announcement of a surprise wedding between her and the Draiksulian king—set for that very afternoon. Sian had sprinted to the castle to stop her. He couldn’t lose both of his parents and his fated female in the space of a year! He climbed through her window. . . .
Surrounded by her handmaidens, she stood on a dais, dressed in a white gown. Her beauty stole his breath.
“What are you doing in here?” she demanded, giving him a look of distaste. “Get out now.”
He ran his hand over his face, comprehending his own appearance. He hadn’t shaven, and his garments were a mess. “I won’t leave until you talk to me.”
She dismissed her attendants. Something about her was different. She seemed both older and colder.
“What are you doing, Kari? Are you wedding that king to take yourself out of my reach?”
With zero emotion, she said, “I am marrying my fiancé because I want him. I have loved him since I was a little girl.”
Sian’s stomach lurched as if it’d been punched. “Do not do this, Kari. You love me!” Hadn’t she told him as much? The tender regard I feel for you . . .
“I do not—and could never—love an animal with horns.” She returned her attention to her reflection.
He gaped in disbelief. But their kiss . . . the way she’d responded . . . their plans . . .
Adjusting a lock of her shining hair, she asked, “Can I make it any plainer, prince of beasts?”
His actions later that day would shame him for the rest of his unending life. . . .
—Demon?— Uthyr’s gaze narrowed on Sian’s clenched fists.
He’d dug his claws into his palms until they dripped blood.
—At least tell me how Kari died. It must have been before she became fully immortal.—
Sian grated, “She died at twenty-four, giving birth to the child of another male.” He turned his mind from that enraging memory lest he trace to Calliope and do something dire. “Ask me no more about it. Just go, Uthyr. Fly with the other dragons.”
—I’m not a dragon; I’m a dragon shifter. But that juvenile pack is fun to spar with. If you refuse all of my advice, I might as well go.— He paused. —One thing, though . . . —
“What?”
—If history often repeats itself, and she’s on the cusp of immortality . . . could she currently be pregnant?—
To lose her again?
The king of all hells threw back his head and yelled until the whole realm quaked.
FIFTEEN
You can do this! Lila peered down at the bowl of . . . soup. She could swear this one was more animated than the last, but she needed the nourishment.
She’d been imprisoned for six days, had scratched as many slashes into a wall.
Trays of food appeared for each meal, always with demon dishes. The only good thing about her hunger and exhaustion: a subdued sex drive.
After her last encounter with Abyssian, Lila had berated herself for responding to a M?ri?r. For some inexplicable reason, she’d felt . . . chemistry with that crazy demon. Lots of it.
Far more than I felt with Saetth.
Just minutes ago, Abyssian’s roar had echoed over the kingdom again, though this one sounded more enraged than sexual. What had set him off this time? Would he take it out on her?
Anticipation of a blow could sometimes be as bad as the hit. She would know. Nightmares of the archer had plagued her since childhood—but never as badly as they had here.
If she could fall asleep. She often got the sense of being watched, keeping her on edge. Most nights, she huddled for warmth on the stone floor, listening to hell’s soundtrack. While spiders skittered inside the castle walls, dragon calls and the howls of distant hellhounds drifted in from the wilds.
Other times, she’d watched the dramatic storms. Last night, rain had poured while electric-blue lightning forked above the tops of nearby volcanoes. Lava had steamed in the downpour, solidifying into bizarre shapes.
None of the tales she’d read could convey how surreal Pandemonia was. . . .
During the days, Lila had paced along a narrowing trail between fire vines, conceiving and discarding escape plans. Despite all of her reading, she didn’t have enough knowledge about this realm to plot her exit from it. And she needed to build up her