Alpha Omega 02 - Hunting Ground
the time sheâd wanted to kill the fae for flirting with Charlesâfor having slept with him.
She wanted to crawl in a dark hole so that she never bothered Brother Wolf with her presence againâwhich she knew was stupid. He hadnât been rejecting her. Not really. But there had been such . . . dismissal in his admonition. His attention had been on Dana.
Dana who was fae, a Gray Lord, confident and powerful. Not a twenty-three-year-old woman with half an education who didnât even know, after three years of being one, a quarter of what she should know about being a werewolf. She was no fit match for Charles.
None of which she could talk to Charles about without sounding like a stupid twitâa complicated, high-maintenance, stupid twit. Fortunately she could answer his question without betraying what really bothered her about visiting the fae.
âIn Chicago, at the Brookfield Zoo, they have a reptile house. I took a school tour of it once, when I was a kid. They have a green mamba. Itâs the most beautiful snake Iâve ever seen; not flashy, just this . . . indescribable shade of greenâand so poisonous that if someone gets bitten by it, thereâs usually no time to administer antivenin.â
âYou think sheâs beautiful?â He considered it. âInteresting looking, I would say, but not beautiful. Few of the fae are beautiful with their glamour on. Beauty doesnât blend in very well. And the fae, like us, spent a long time learning to hide in plain sight.â
Anna stared ahead. âSheâs beautiful. Distinctive. In a room of movie stars, everyone would look at her first.â
He was watching her intently; she could feel it even if her eyes were busy with the traffic.
âThatâs dominance,â he said. âNot beauty.â
âNo?â She passed a couple of boys in a Ferrari, and they took offense, roaring up behind her until they were so close she could tell that one of the pair should have shaved better.
âBeauty isnât always easy,â she said. âTake Paganini for instance.â
âThatâs music.â
âYou know what I mean.â
He didnât fall into easy, agreeable conversation, and she liked the way he considered what sheâd said instead of just letting her run with it.
âIâve seen her without her glamour,â he told her finally. âMaybe it blinded me to more subtle things. When we became lovers, I did it because I found her interesting.â He was watching her reaction.
That morning she would have told him exactly how hearing him describe a former lover made her feel. But since then sheâd had that little glimpse of him, raw and bareâalthough sheâd done her best not to look. No one should stand completely naked before another person. But sheâd noticed something . . . unexpected. She knew who she wasâand she knew who he was. It wasnât that she didnât value herself; she did. But Charles was . . . a force of nature.
And he worried that she might not ever be able to see who he was and love himâbecause he looked in the mirror and saw only the killer. It was the reason he kept the bond between them tightened down. He loved her beyond all reason and didnât expect her to love him back. He was just waiting for her to wise up.
She felt terrifiedâas if she had been given a delicate and valuable glass ornament, and any wrong move would break it. She felt as though it should have been given to stronger, more capable hands so it would not be harmed. Not that she hadnât staked out her claim in front of Dana quickly enough.
When Anna didnât say anything, he continued. âShe took me as her lover because, once she knew her ability to make anyone lust after her didnât work on me, she was curious what sex would be like without bespelling her partner.â
Anna snorted. âIâm sure the packaging didnât bother her much either.â
Charles sighed. âI did this wrong, didnât I? I owe you an apology.â
She glanced at him.
âI didnât mean to bog this down in ancient historyâbut I didnât stop her doing so soon enough either. And then . . . words are not always my best means of communication. Let me make things clear: there was nothing between us except mutual appreciationâand that a century ago or more.â
âItâs all right,â she told him. âI
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