Wicked Abyss (Immortals After Dark #18)

Well, then.

The low bodice pushed her breasts far above the crisp edge, making them look larger, all but revealing her areolas. The gown tucked in around her waist, flaring at her hips.

She’d never worn such a decadent dress. She looked womanly, felt womanly.

She felt . . . sexual. And she was all too aware of her lack of panties.

Would Abyssian like this dress on her? Not that she would care, since a dozen concubines would probably be joining them.

She tilted her head, attention on her eyes. Did sharp emotions—anger, glee, lust—really turn her irises teal?

As the sun set, she grabbed the drawstring gear bag she’d fashioned from a pillowcase and rug tassels. She reached under her dress to strap it to her thigh. Her skirts concealed it.

At nightfall, she exited her room into the courtyard, expecting Abyssian to materialize soon—instead a patch of the wall in front of her started to shimmer. A door appeared where none had been a moment ago.

She cautiously opened it and crept out to a landing. A winding candlelit stairway awaited her.

Not even a servant or guard to escort her? Would her escape be easier than she’d hoped? She descended, her heels loud on the stone.

Abyssian’s description of this castle had set her imagination aflame. Steeped in magic . . . a mind of its own . . . all but alive.

As she made her way down stair after stair, the magnitude of this labyrinthine palace struck her. The demon hadn’t exaggerated its size.

From the staircase, she stepped into a corridor. A gilded door at the end groaned open. She headed through it into a new hallway, and the door behind her closed.

Ah, so that’s how Abyssian would keep his mouse in the maze: no door would open until the previous one closed, which gave her zero avenues for escape.

That was okay. She’d prepared for a confrontation.

As she traveled deeper into the castle, that feeling of being watched returned. Sensations danced over her skin, and the faintest whispers sounded in her ears. At one point, she could have sworn a breath ghosted across her nape.

The castle did seem alive, simmering with secrets, mysteries—and loneliness.

Because its master was lonely? Why wouldn’t Abyssian be if he’d lost his mate? He clearly still longed for Kari.

For me?

She passed a blue chamber with a large mural of hellhounds and dragons hunting. Her ears twitched, and she glanced over her shoulder at the mural—then shivered. Were the eyes of one of the hellhounds following her?

Shake it off, Lila. Soon she came upon yet another set of steps. She was halfway down them when the entire staircase began to move, sweeping her to another landing. She grabbed the railing, laughing with excitement.

Next she entered a gallery with gargoyle statues and ancient tapestries lining the walls. Trenches of moving lava meandered through the expanse, lighting and heating the area, dispersing the chill of the other corridors.

At the end were two massive doors. They must be fifty feet tall, made of what looked like solid gold. When she stood before them, she craned her head up, feeling small and insignificant.

Etched across the surface were scenes of demonic battles, filled with more hellhounds, dragons, storms of flame, and horned warriors attacking some gigantic reptilian creature.

These scenes evoked hell’s storied past, trials and punishments in an unforgiving and mysterious world.

So what would she face beyond these doors?

When they started to open, she squared her shoulders, knowing one thing for certain: whatever awaited her . . . Lila would adapt.

She stepped into a grand dining room, her heels clicking on the polished marble floors. A fire crackled in a large hearth along one wall. A candlelit chandelier descended from a soaring ceiling.

Abyssian sat at the head of a long table set for two. Only he and she would be dining?

He stood at her arrival, acting the gentleman. She hadn’t expected manners from a brute like him. That wasn’t her only surprise.

The king’s appearance was . . . improved.

His crown was made of fire, its shape wider in the back, then tapering to two sharp ends over his forehead. He wore fine tailored clothes: black leather breeches and a crisp white tunic embroidered with gold symbols that matched his glyphs. A wide, red sash circled his waist. His dark boots shone.

Did he have feet like a man or paws? Hooves? And how did he wear a shirt? The back must be modified for his wings. He’d folded them down until they were barely visible past his broad shoulders.

His long hair was secured in a queue, and his irises looked impossibly green against the darkened skin around his eyes. Yet as his penetrating gaze roamed over her, that green wavered to glowing black.

When a curl escaped her updo and she tucked it behind her ear, his eyes clocked the movement and lingered. Though pointed ears were the most unmistakable trait of the fey, this demon seemed to like hers.

Tracing to the other end of the table, he pulled out a chair for her. Abyssian’s behavior was improved along with his looks? His concessions tonight struck her as respectful. Obviously he was setting her up for some elaborate trick.

Wary, she glided forward.

Had he just inhaled the scent of her hair? In a roughened voice, he said, “Your beauty pleases me, Calliope.”

Her cheeks grew hot. But she was still a princess; if the king put forth the effort to be civil, at least on the surface, she’d reward him with the same. “Thank you, King Abyssian.”

His welcoming and gracious efforts were working. She felt herself relaxing a touch—

“Now, if you will be so kind as to lift your skirts. . . .”





TWENTY-ONE


Calliope narrowed her eyes at him. “What did you say?”

In that dress, she resembled Kari more than ever. Good. Sian needed to be reminded of her treachery.