his gaze, desperate to divert him.
“I had an itch and you scratched it.” She shrugged. “What do you want? A trophy?”
She’d intended her cutting words to bring an end to his questions. Didn’t men want their sexual encounters to be a no muss, no fuss deal? She was offering it to him on a platter.
But of course, Ariyal refused to behave as he should.
Aggravating ass.
“I want the truth,” he growled. “Something that seems a foreign concept to you most of the time.”
“I just told you... .”
His hands moved to grasp her face, his expression grim. “Dammit, Jaelyn, enough games.”
The scent of herbs filled the air as his power seared over her skin, but it wasn’t fear that shivered down her spine.
She pressed her hands against his chest. “This isn’t a game.”
“No, it isn’t. So stop jerking me around and give me a straight answer.” He resisted her halfhearted efforts to push him away. “Does it disgust you that I’m an evil Sylvermyst?”
Disgust?
Was the man mental?
She’d just literally begged him to take her on a dusty table in an abandoned farmhouse in the middle of freaking nowhere.
Did that seem like the actions of a woman who was disgusted by him?
She gave a sharp shake of her head, careful to keep her expression guarded.
“You aren’t evil.”
“That wasn’t what you said when I announced my intention to sacrifice the child before it could be used to resurrect the Dark Lord.”
“I have no intention of allowing you to harm the babe, but wanting to protect your people isn’t evil.” She grimaced. “Believe me, I’ve seen the difference.”
He scowled down at her. “Then why did you refuse to share your blood when I needed it?”
Dammit, was he still on that? Why wouldn’t he let it be?
“We have more important things to discuss,” she muttered.
His hands tightened on her face as she tried to glance away.
“No, I’m not going to be distracted,” he warned. “Tell me.”
They glared at one another in silence. Then with gritted teeth Jaelyn at last lifted her hands to grasp his wrists and pulled his hands away from her face.
“I was afraid what might happen,” she snapped, accepting that the stubborn Sylvermyst wouldn’t give up until he’d managed to drag the humiliating truth out of her.
Predictably the annoying man didn’t appear at all pleased with her confession.
“You didn’t trust me,” he said in flat tones.
“I didn’t trust me,” she huffed. “Satisfied?”
“No, I’m damn well not satisfied,” he snapped. “I don’t speak cryptic. What the hell are you talking about?”
She studied the perfectly chiseled lines of his face, her heart squeezing as if it had been put in a vise.
The Addonexus had done everything in their power to destroy her emotions. She was supposed to be a weapon, not a woman.
And she’d assumed they had succeeded.
Until this man.
This beautiful, powerful, truly aggravating man.
She didn’t know how or why, but he’d smashed through her defenses and threatened her in a way she didn’t fully understand but was smart enough to fear.
“I couldn’t take the risk that the blade would bind us together,” she forced herself to admit.
He glanced toward the sword that had been tossed on a wooden stool near the refrigerator.
“The blade merely absorbs your energy, it doesn’t actually steal your soul, regardless of the rumors.”
“Don’t be dense. I mean ...” She battled against a wave of embarrassment. Dammit. He was making her feel like an idiot. “Bind us. Forever.”
“Obviously I am dense. How could a few drops of your blood on my blade bind us together?”
“Because the blade transfers the blood to you.”
“And?”
“And it might very well be the same as if you took it directly from my vein.”
“I’ve never heard that taking the blood of a vampire is binding. Not unless ...” He froze, the bronze eyes narrowing with disbelief. “Not unless they’re mates.”
Ding, ding. Give the fairy a gold star.
A vampire needed blood to survive. And it wasn’t unusual to take the vein of a lover during sex.
But the exchanges were about body functions. Food and pleasure.
Nothing that a wise vampire couldn’t walk away from without a backward glance.
But for the rare few who found their true mate, the exchange of blood would entwine their souls.
They would be irrevocably connected.
Forever and ever and ever ...
Unable to bear his piercing scrutiny, she gave him a sharp shove backward, slipping off the table before he could regain his balance.
“We should be deciding what we intend to do next,” she reminded him in clipped tones, pulling on her clothes and belting her holster