“Why do you keep . . . trying things with me?” Her cheeks reddened. Could she be a virgin? Then her fiancé was an idiot. “Don’t you have a really old female in your life, one even a relic like you can be with?”
Another jab about age? He’d never thought that might be a detractor. Immortals grew stronger with longevity. But they could also grow mentally unstable. “I have twelve females. My harem of concubines keeps me very satisfied,” he lied—not about the number, but about the satisfaction.
Had Sian ever been even remotely satisfied since she’d ruined him with that one perfect kiss?
In any case, he’d never been with any of those concubines, had inherited them along with the crown.
Calliope bit out, “Then go dally with your harem.”
“I like variety. And a challenge.”
“You think I’d ever sleep with you? Now you’re just being ridiculous. The only place I’d ever sleep with you is in your dreams.” She shook her head, and her silken hair danced over her shoulders.
Her scent muddled his thoughts. He inhaled it like a drowning man’s next taste of air. Not helping my erection.
Damn it, he’d done what’d he come to do; he should leave now. Yet his feet felt rooted to the spot. He wished he had other pressing kingdom concerns to distract him.
Absolute power didn’t corrupt absolutely; it bored absolutely.
Seducing her would keep me occupied. He stifled the idea. She was right: he was just being ridiculous.
She said, “If you’d told me the ring was for healing, I probably wouldn’t have resisted you.”
“Perhaps in your realm, a king explains his wishes to lowly prisoners; not in this one.”
She cast him a measured glance, as if trying to predict what he’d do next.
Good luck. He didn’t even know. He felt the need to be around others, yet Uthyr had taken his advice and flown off. The rest of Sian’s family—the M?ri?r—weren’t available.
For now, Orion the Undoing, leader of their alliance, slept in a godlike hibernation, building strength for the Accession. Rune honey-mooned with Josephine. Blace, the oldest vampire, investigated Josephine’s mysterious vampire father.
Darach Lyka and their alliance’s witch, Allixta, remained in Tenebrous, the M?ri?r’s moving realm, but Sian wouldn’t return there yet. Minutes in Tenebrous could equal hours or even days elsewhere, and he didn’t want to let Calliope out of his sight for that long.
She crossed her arms over her chest. “Even lowly prisoners usually know why they’re being punished. So what will it be tonight?” she demanded, eyes flashing. “Maybe you’d like to chase me around and lick my torso some more?”
Admittedly, not his finest moment—but he couldn’t seem to think anymore! “Take care, little firebrand; the next part of you I lick will not be your torso.”
She gasped, her ears flattening.
Sian’s gaze clocked the movement. Rune hated the fey so much that he despised pointed ears, even his own. He’d avoided bedding any females with that feature. So had Sian—but now he was right back to being fascinated by his mate’s delicate ears. He wanted to discover how sensitive they were.
Hadn’t she trembled when he’d exhaled against one tip? Could she be seduced? For whatever reason, she had responded to him.
If Uthyr had nearly tupped a ghouless in his transition, Calliope might turn to Sian.
Get this idea out of your head, demon. Even if seduction were a sound idea—which it wasn’t, at all—a demon with his strength couldn’t take a fragile female like her until she’d turned immortal. “When do the women in your line reach immortality?”
“I’m way overdue. If this ring makes me heal, how will I know if I’ve turned?”
“Every month I will remove it and test you,” he said.
Her lips thinned. “Every month.”
Was the duration of her imprisonment just sinking in? “Why didn’t you confess your age and weakness in the beginning, then beg for mercy from your tasks?” Even with her two lives added together, she was only in her forties. “I might have been moved to grant it.”
“Beg for mercy?!” She charged forward, breasts bouncing—again, not helping his erection—to stand in front of him. “I would rather bite out my tongue and bleed to death than beg.”
Her talk of dying checked his arousal. “You’re quick to choose death.”
“You’re quick to threaten me! And since you won’t tell me what my ‘crime’ was, why shouldn’t I believe you’ve set me up? Maybe you get off torturing young females so much that your deluded brain makes up excuses to justify your twisted needs!”
She continued to make him into the villain. Yes, she was young, but he had been as well, a mere sixteen years old. Yes, he’d been harsh with her, but no permanent harm had been done—unlike his own mutilation. “You are either very stupid or crazed to continue challenging one like me.” Evidence mounted that she was simply maddened.
And that she was no spy.
Between Sian and Calliope, only one of them was considering seduction.
If he could somehow get her in bed with him, he’d rut her till he’d slaked his need, then discard her, cutting her from his life completely. He’d leave her to rot in this tower.
The only drawback to his plan? He didn’t know how to seduce. For most of Sian’s life, his only difficulty with finding a partner had been getting rid of her amorous friends, since he never slept with more than one at a time.
Hands balled into fists, she said, “All I keep hearing about is my supposed former life, when I supposedly wronged you. You’re a demon who lives in hell and a M?ri?r on top of that; something tells me you’re not the most trustworthy male!”
“Since when have the M?ri?r been known as untrustworthy?”
“Since they decided to invade our universe and conquer everyone in Gaia.”
“Someone needs to rule you because you are all doing a bloody bad job of ruling yourselves.” Especially under N?x’s guidance. Why didn’t they realize she was leading them to an apocalypse?
“I’ve hated and feared all of the M?ri?r since I was a girl. Now that I’ve met you, I see I was right to.”