War (The Four Horsemen #2) - Laura Thalassa Page 0,29
killed, he doesn’t need food or water, and he doesn’t shit or piss like the rest of us.
I repeat: the horseman doesn’t shit or piss.
I’m telling you, he makes no sense.
War’s voice cuts through the night air. “While I slept, I dreamed. I could hear so many voices. So many things,” he murmurs.
I study his profile. So far, War has been haughty, possessive, silver-tongued, and terrifying. But this is the first time I’ve seen him like this. Full of his otherness. An eerie feeling creeps over me, like he might’ve just been about to spill the secrets of the universe.
He seems to shake himself. “But that is no matter.”
I stare at him for a little longer.
“Tomorrow my army will arrive here.”
“And things will go back to the way they were,” I say.
I imagine my tiny tent. I should feel relief that I’ll be able to put distance between us once more. Instead my stomach twists. I hadn’t realized how lonely I’ve been. You don’t really focus on things like loneliness when you’re just trying to survive each day like I’d been in Jerusalem. But I had felt lonely. I’d felt it every night I fell asleep without my family and woke to silence.
And then War swept into my town and I stopped trying to survive. I opened my arms to death, and it was the horseman who kept me from that fate.
“Things don’t have to go back to the way they were, wife.”
Wife.
The horseman knows exactly how to bait me. I don’t want to be with him, but now I’ve remembered just what it’s like to be with someone. To have open, unvarnished conversations.
My throat works. “They must.”
Chapter 10
I wake in War’s arms.
I know it before I open my eyes—even before I fully shake off sleep. I’m far too warm, and I can feel his heavy limbs draped all over me as I lay on my side. Still, when I blink my eyes open, I’m not prepared for the reality of it.
My face is all but buried against his naked chest. I pull my head away a little. This close to him, all I can see is the crimson glow of his markings and endless olive skin.
How did this happen?
I glance down between us and—damnit, we’re on his pallet, not mine, which means I scooched over to him at some point in the night, sacrificing my blankets for his thin mat and thick muscles.
My eyes travel up, past the column of his throat, to what I can see of his face.
In sleep, War looks angelic—or, more appropriate, angelically demonic. All his sharp features have been blunted just a bit. He almost looks … at peace. His jaw isn’t so firm, his lips seem a touch more inviting, and now that I can’t see his dagger-like eyes, he’s not nearly so intimidating.
I stare at him for a long time before I remember myself.
Stop ogling a horseman of the apocalypse, Miriam.
I also need to get out from under him, stat. The last thing I want is for him to wake up to this, too.
War’s leg is thrown over mine, and his arm is draped over my side, hugging me to him. With a little effort, I manage to slip one leg, then the other, out from under his own. When I get to his arm, I try to push it off of me—try being the operative word.
My God, his arm weighs five billion kilos, and it is not giving up its hold on me.
I twist a little with the effort. This ogre.
“Wife.”
I take a steadying breath, staring at his chest. This is really what I didn’t want.
Slowly, my eyes move up to War’s. He’s so close I can see those flecks of gold in them. There’s a hint of a smile on his lips and a deep look of satisfaction.
“This is your fault,” I say.
He raises his eyebrows. “Is it?”
The horseman doesn’t bother pointing out that we’re on his flimsy excuse of a bed. He also doesn’t bother removing his arm from where it’s draped over me. Instead, his hand slides from my back to my ribcage, settling into the dip of my waist. I can tell he’s mapping out the contours of my body. He must like what he’s discovering because he looks annoyingly pleased.
His eyes are like honey when he says, “Stay with me, Miriam.” His hand flexes against my side. “Sleep in my tent. Make your weapons. Argue with me.”