His dark eyes took in my scrunchy face, his lips gave me a smile and his arms gave me a squeeze.
Again, whatever.
I focused on the task at hand. Then he focused on his task.
Needless to say, this added nuance to bath time with Lahn made it even more fun.
Yep, I was definitely screwed.
* * * * *
“Oh Circe, my lovely, I’m so sorry. Golly, I can’t imagine my Feetak ever taking a hand to me,” Narinda breathed.
Her Feetak.
Yep, ole Feetak was in there and I meant that in more ways than one.
That didn’t take long.
“I’m okay,” I promised her, reached out, squeezed her hand; she gave me her small, weird smile and squeezed mine back.
Then I looked out into the Daxshee.
Narinda and I were lounging on hides and cushions outside Lahn and my cham while I kept my eye on Ghost, who was wandering around, being cute, attacking things and generally annoying passersby to which I’d call out, “Kay tingay,” which meant “I’m sorry,” and I’d get smiles as they moved away.
Our cham had been set up a bit away from the others, close to the creek on a slight rise, so we could see most of the Daxshee spread out below (this gave evidence that The Eunuch did not set up the Daxshee the same every time).
It was late afternoon, Narinda had come around earlier, we had had lunch and now we were sipping fruit juice, chatting and watching the activity of the Daxshee. There was a long, wide gauze fall set up which provided shade that we could laze under. This was welcome but unnecessary. Nearly my whole body was a golden honey color from riding for days in the sun. But it was nice to have a break from it.
I’d just told Narinda the story of the bruise that she informed me looked a lot better.
But it wasn’t gone.
And I couldn’t allow myself to forget it, no matter how sweet and sexy my husband was being.
He might be the tiger and a warrior who thrived on challenge but I was a tigress raised by the kind, loving king of a small, loving kingdom and I knew what I deserved and it was not what Lahn handed me a week ago. So he had a fight on his hands, one I was determined to win.
“Oh look! There’s Diandra! Poyah, Diandra!” Narinda exclaimed, waving frantically and I followed her gaze.
Then mine narrowed.
Diandra grinned shamelessly at my narrow-eyed look, came right up and gave Narinda a “poyah” as she dropped into a lounge on the hides, grabbed a big cushion and shoved it under her side and then helped herself to fruit juice.
Then her dancing eyes came to me. “How are you, my queen?”
Now she was just trying to be irritating, calling me her queen.
“I’m not talking to you,” I informed her and she burst out laughing.
“What’s this?” Narinda asked.
“Oh, nothing,” Diandra answered as I glared at her, “unless you’re talking about our Dax’s groan of gratification that half the Daxshee heard ringing from his cham last night. Seerim and I aren’t that close but it still woke us both up.”
Narinda’s wide eyes flew to me and a wobbly smile hit her lips.
I kept up the glare but ratcheted it up as high as I could take it.
Diandra ignored me and just like Diandra, kept right on yapping.