That emptiness was filled when I met Kymaris.”
My spoon remains poised over the bowl, but I’m too shocked by this revelation to even think about eating. “But how? How would you have met her?”
Pyke’s gaze moves from me to the staircase that leads up as if he’s pondering whether he should tell me or if he should just leave. Luckily, a Light Fae’s vanity and ego tend to rule the day, and since he—like Kymaris—considers me no threat, I can tell the moment he decides it won’t hurt to tell me.
Leaning forward and placing his arms on the table, he says, “I was out in the Faere countryside hunting one day. I’d stopped by a stream to rest and as I was sitting there, I noticed something shimmering in the air just on the other side of the water. It was like the air itself was rippling. The longer I watched it, the more a female shape began to take form, which made me even more curious. I crossed the creek to look closer and, as I approached the rippling air, I could see more clearly what was on the other side. It was a room done in floor-to-ceiling shiny black tile with a huge blazing fireplace. The orange light cast the figure in better relief, and I got my first look at Kymaris.”
My eyebrows draw in. “She was in the Underworld?”
“She was,” he says with a chuckle. “Apparently, she was poking at the veil into Faere. She had some stone magic within her, but not enough to tear it. It was enough for her to get close and peer in at her sister’s realm, and I was the first Light Fae she’d ever seen.”
“What did you do?” I ask in almost a whisper. My food is long forgotten, so I set the spoon down.
Pyke stares at me, a fond smile playing at his mouth. “I fell in love, of course.”
My surprise is so great that my jaw drops.
Pyke laughs, shaking his head. “I can only imagine how odd that sounds, but it’s true. And when we spoke, it was only minutes into our conversation that I knew it was felt from her, as well.”
“You could speak to each other?” I ask incredulously.
“We could,” he says with a nod. “But the veil held firm. She couldn’t cross into Faere, but it was thin enough that we could converse. We could even press our palms together against it.”
“Unbelievable,” I mutter.
“I thought so, and it was a secret I maintained for decades,” Pyke continues. “We met regularly at the veil between our worlds, and we fell deeper in love.”
“Why didn’t you just open the veil for her? You have the power to do it.”
“Yes, I do,” he agrees with a sly smile. “But Kymaris didn’t want to come to Faere. She didn’t want to risk her sister finding out. But I crossed over to visit her many times, and we became lovers.”
I try not to grimace because not only is the thought of Pyke and Kymaris having sex just gross, I’ve also never liked the term “lovers”. It seems cheesy.
“Kymaris had her sights set on the Earth realm,” I say, wanting him to get moving with the story.
“Yes, she did. It was a grand plan and one I approved of.”
This was a no-brainer. “Let me guess… she was going to take over the Earth realm, and you would rule at her side.”
Leaning forward just a bit more, Pyke gives me a sly smile. “Sure beats being the prince of a kingdom I’ll never rule.”
“So, you want power?” I ask, my tone scathing with distaste.
“Why is that a bad thing?” he asks neutrally. “But more than power, I just wanted to be by Kymaris’ side.”
I shake my head, giving him a dubious look. “So this is really about love?”
“Tell me love isn’t worth the fight, Finley. Tell me you wouldn’t do anything to be with Carrick. In fact, tell me you’ll forsake Carrick’s love for a good reason, and I’ll let you go right now.”
Pyke doesn’t know our background. He doesn’t know we’ve loved each other for centuries. But he does know we have something together, and I absolutely can’t tell him I’d ever forsake that love.
In that respect, I suppose I understand him just a little bit.
“Did you help Kymaris come to the Earth realm?” I ask, making that the most innocuous question I can muster without giving away that I know anything at all.
Luckily, he’s in a chatty mood. “She came