emanate deep from within his chest, his mouth claimed mine, the fire pouring out of him and into me. His lips were hotter than I remembered, hotter than I thought possible, moving over mine in a fashion that left me both satisfied and craving more.
"More," I murmured, my hands in his hair, tugging on the dreadlocks. I was dimly aware that I was behaving in a manner wholly at odds with my normally unemotional self, but there was something about him that seemed to release all the inhibitions I usually held.
That thought scared me to my toenails.
Dragon fire whipped around me, spiraling up from my toes to my waist as Gabriel kissed me with a thoroughness that left no secrets undiscovered. I was shocked at the depths of my desire for him, a man I'd just met. I couldn't hide from the fact that I wanted him, all of him, with a hunger that left me weak with sudden need. I moaned into his mouth as his fingers dug into my hips, pulling me tighter against the hard lines of his body. He tasted like fire, hot and exciting and dangerous, and I wanted more. The fire grew around me, twisting my desire higher, building my need until I thought it was going to burst from me in a primitive cry. The fire roared from me back to him, leaving me a blazing brand that threatened to burst into a million incandescent sparks.
"Sweet May," he groaned into my mouth as he rubbed my hips against his. "Sweet, sweet mate."
The words pierced my being like little bullets of ice, slicing through my almost out-of-control desire and returning me to reality with a shock that left me reeling.
With a cry, I pushed back, pulling my mouth away from his. "Don't call me that," I said, my voice hoarse and shaky.
Confusion filled his eyes.
I shadowed and twisted out of his arms, backing away a few steps. I touched my lips with a trembling hand, feeling empty inside, as if I'd lost something integral to myself.
"May?" he asked, taking a step toward me, evidently seeing me despite the darkness of the evening. "What's wrong?"
"Nothing. I just... I just don't like that word," I answered, clearing my throat and glancing around.
Everyone was standing where they had been before Gabriel sucked all my attention from the room, their faces displaying varying emotions.
Cyrene turned shocked eyes to me, but I sensed an underlying emotion that didn't make any sense to me: pain.
"I'm sorry," I said, feeling the need to apologize. "I didn't mean to turn the evening into a peep show."
"You-" Cyrene started to say, then stopped, biting her lip as she looked away.
"I liked it," Jim said, plopping its big butt down next to a chair. "You don't often get to see a wyvern claiming a mate. It's better than Skinemax. Is there going to be an encore? If there is, can you hold off until I make some popcorn?"
Aisling spoke a few hurried words and, before the demon could do more than open its mouth in protest, banished it to the Akasha. "I'm sorry about Jim. I think a little time-out is in order. I'm afraid, though, that it might be right about one thing."
I slid a glance toward Gabriel. He was watching me with an intensity that both flattered me and made me uncomfortable. "Yes, I'm afraid that it is... It would seem that despite the fact that I'm a doppelganger, I appear to be your mate."
"I don't understand how..." Cyrene 's voice trailed away to nothing as she sank rather less gracefully than normal into a nearby chair.
"The how is not important," Gabriel answered, his dimples slowly emerging. "What matters is that the impossible has happened. I'm delighted that you understand the significance of being able to share my fire, May. I never expected to have a mate, but now that I've found you, I am very pleased."
I wanted to shadow, to go find a quiet spot where I could think over recent events by myself, without any other distractions. I was a thief, dammit, a shadow walker, servant of a demon lord, keeper of Cyrene 's common sense, and responsible only for myself and her well-being. And now I found myself bound to a stranger? I shook my head. I just didn't have experience with men, let alone dragons. The situation seemed untenable at best.
"I don't understand any of this," Cyrene said, giving me a hurt look. "You do like men?"
"I'm sorry,"