I like the quiet evenings and mornings we spend together. I would have never assumed Kalos to be an expert cuddler, but he could charge for his services. Not that he would need to. The man is richer than God. To my surprise, most of his wealth comes from legitimate businesses.
Some nights when I don’t feel like sketching or reading, we talk. He tells me about all the different industries he has his claws in, and I ask all the questions about our world that I’ve never been able to get answers to before. Kalos shares information generously.
He tells me about the fae realm’s history of indentured servitude and the danger of the fae gates. That many of the paranormals that exist on our plane today can trace their ancestry back to beings that fled the fae plane, but so much time has passed that Earth is the only home many of them know. Every question I have gets answered until the topic sways to his life, then he becomes tight-lipped.
I’m curious about him, but all the information he freely gives makes up for the disappointment that he is still a mystery.
The time we spend together is nice… but it’s hard to keep from touching him. My senses awaken in response to the warmth of his scales or skin against mine, and I remember the growly way he dominated my body during his heat.
I’m always able to resist, but as the weeks pass, my body’s response to Kalos strengthens rather than dims. It’s inconvenient. It doesn’t help that he knows when I’m wet. His nostrils flare, and my heart skips a beat, wondering if this time he’ll offer to soothe the ache of my body with his.
He never does, and the lust brewing in me threatens to shatter my decision not to get involved. Temptation whispers to accept the pain of an eventual broken heart in exchange for the mind-blowing orgasms I know he’d give me.
The robes don’t help the situation.
I underestimated how much Kalos hated my robe. I didn’t like it either, but it was the only one I had until I’d walked into my closet to find ten colorful silky robes. They’re so beautiful and flow so smoothly over my skin that I couldn’t reject them. I let him spoil me while trying to convince my heart that the gesture doesn’t mean anything.
Kalos just really hated the robe I had.
But… if it was only about replacing the robe, wouldn’t he have just ordered the same as his? And these robes aren’t that. No, these robes are from all different creators with unique designs on each one. The gift feels personal.
My soul knows art when I see it, and Kalos gave it to me.
The robes are thin and heat easily on contact with him, but I love them too much not to wear them. Even if I fall asleep needy every night.
Once he leaves in the morning, I jump in the shower to try to alleviate the ache in my core, but it doesn’t leave me satisfied. My body is hungry and I’m keeping a feast from it.
It feels like it’s only a matter of time before I break.
Just like it’s only a matter of time before Kalos finds out about Griffin.
The fact that Kalos still hasn’t noticed that there’s a cat living in his house is because Griffin must be the most chill cat in the whole world. He doesn’t make a peep when I put him in the bathroom closet in the evenings, he just curls in his favorite spot to sleep.
I let him wander wherever he wants during the day, and somehow my dragon hasn’t noticed his domain has been invaded.
I huff in annoyance. Not my dragon.
A dragon. A dangerous tempting dragon whose presence I’ve grown too used to. I need to prepare myself for a future when these cuddle sessions stop. When I won’t wake every morning in his arms.
Like this morning.
The shock of waking alone doesn’t bode well for after the baby comes. Maybe I’ll be too busy to even remember his existence by then.
There’s a sound, and I pull my paintbrush away from the project I’m hunched over. I’m supposed to do retouching on the easel, but got carried away. Luckily the paint stroke isn’t botched with the interruption. I glare at the doorway before freezing.
He’s here. My stupid body sings.
“Kalos.”
He stands in the doorway, the cut of his expensive suit making my mouth water and heat cascade through me at an embarrassing rate. For all the time we spend together, his presence is still a weight, one that pulls like tugging heartstrings.
His eyes shift over me, as if hungry for the sight of me. Has this been as torturous for him as it has for me?
“Business called me away this morning and I wanted to make sure you felt okay,” he says.
Goose bumps rise on my skin, and he must see them because he strides toward me.
“It’s fine,” I say. “I’m fine.”
He surrounds me and pulls my back against his front. I sigh. The embrace eases my horniness and hectic thoughts. The contact with clothes on is different, but the heat of him is still a comfort.
“Hey stranger,” I say, putting my paintbrush down and removing the gloves on my hands so I can rest them on his arm.
Kalos takes in the room. “You seem well set up here.”
I’m working over a table that I put a protective covering on. I’ve stored most of my items in organizational drawers under the table to keep the bottles of solvent and rolls of cotton wool out of the way. Two easels stand side by side. One empty, while the other is holding an 1800s landscape with a drying layer of varnish that awaits retouching.
He’s never visited me during the day. Whenever we’ve made contact it’s been because I’ll stop by his study to let him know that I’m leaving the house with Ben.
He never asked to be kept up to date with my location, but every time I tell him, there’s relief in his gaze. He considers me his to protect. I can make that job easy for him.
“Yeah, this room is pretty great. All this natural light is gorgeous,” I say.
I sense Kalos look down past my shoulder, and his body stiffens. “That’s an… interesting painting.”
I snort, and my cheeks heat. “It has emotional significance. It’s been in my client’s family for generations, and the aging varnish obscured the portrait.”
“And they wanted the portrait… not obscured?”
I laugh. The portrait is kind of hideous. The artist either wasn’t very skilled, or the original matriarch of the family really did have terrifyingly large, glaring eyes. I wonder if the painting had been done to keep future generations in line with the threatening gaze.
“Are you scared of her?” I ask.
Kalos shudders. “Wouldn’t you be?”
“They’re only trying to preserve their history.”
“Perhaps some history should be left buried,” he mutters, and I grin.
“You’re terrible.”
He gives me a look. “That’s terrible.”
“You’re just lucky that it isn’t actually cursed and only looks that way. Sometimes ancestors leave nasty surprises for their descendants.” Which is partially why I’m glad to leave my origins a mystery. All this contact with old witch families really doesn’t leave anything to be admired. I much prefer the tight-knit life I’m cultivating now.
“It must pay well for you to risk such nightmares,” Kalos teases.
I hum in response but can sense his eyes narrowing.