Immortals After Dark 04 - Wicked Deeds on a Winters Night
zipper. When he began pulling it down, the sound was surprisingly loud in the cave. He drew it open slowly as if he didn’t want to spook her from what they were about to do. Her breaths came quick once he grasped himself in his jeans.
Yet movement out of the corner of her eye drew her attention away. A sizable cave spider crawled along his leg, but MacRieve was so absorbed in looking at her that he didn’t even notice.
Rising to her knees, she reached for it. He must have thought she was aiming for his groin because he hissed an oath, and his hands seized her waist. After letting the spider take hold of three of her fingers, she brought it forward, displaying it to him. MacRieve abruptly released her.
When she returned from relocating it outside and lay back down, his eyes were narrowed. “You were terrified of that scorpion in the tomb, but no’ of a spider the same size?”
“I’m not afraid of things like that anymore, not after I had insects crawling all over me... ” In the dark, for weeks.
Her lips parted. What a timely reminder.
A bucket of cold water poured over her head couldn’t have awakened her more sharply from this sensual stupor. Making her tone biting, she said, “And actually, I think the incubi varied my steady diet of blood with some, so I’m accustomed. As a witch I’m supposed to have a connection with all low creatures like that anyway.”
His face fell.
“You almost made me forget what you’re really like, Bowen the Bitter .” She turned to her side, away from him. “But I’ll be on my guard now.”
24
M ari woke the next morning as surly as a bear roused in winter. She felt uncomfortable in her own skin, exhausted from the surprising demands that thwarted desire placed on her body.
Blearily rubbing her eyes, she scanned the cave but didn’t see MacRieve. He’d gone, leaving behind fruit for her, which she regarded with a glare. Fruit was not her breakfast mainstay. She wasn’t a coffee drinker, but she was an Eggo eater, and she hadn’t had a single waffle in weeks.
He’d also left a change of clothes for her and had already packed up everything but her hiking gear and her toiletries. Did he think to dress her now?
One thing that was missing from the ensemble: a cloak. For the first time in years, Mari would get ready for the day without a cloak or glamour.
Was she worried about the prediction? Not really. She suspected she could handle the “immortal warrior.” Her strategy? Throwing him.
In fact, she couldn’t believe she’d dreaded this so much and for so long, and scowled to think of all the days at the beach she’d missed and the dates she’d failed to secure because males thought she was a hideous little troll covered in yards of scarlet cloth.
She could have resumed her glamour last night, but what was the point? The horse was already out of the barn in that matter. Besides, she hadn’t realized how cumbersome and draining the glamour had been until she’d been freed of it—she felt like she’d shed a ten-pound parasite.
Once she rose and began motivating, she braided her hair into two plaits to cover her ears, as she hadn’t had to do in years. Then she pulled her mirrored compact from her toiletry case—but not to check her hair or to make sure that her eyes weren’t puffy from crying last night. No, she wanted to further investigate her new discovery.
Gazing into the mirror, she swallowed, then whispered, “My mother says I must not pass... ” When she’d finished the rhyme, her own reflection was replaced by the visage with shining eyes and swirling hair. Mari was actually conjuring, using the power of yet another caste. Because... she was a freaking captromancer!
She decided to ask the mirror something she had always wanted to know. “What does the mark on my back mean?”
“ In a dead language, it says, the Queen of Reflections .”
“A queen?” A witch was considered a queen of an element when she was more powerful with it than any other witch. Mari had never met one before.
“What’s the warning in the rhyme? What can’t I know?”
“ I’ll show you .” The hand broke the surface of the mirror, the glass becoming pliable to allow it—and the apple she presented—to fit through.
Mari stared at the shining apple, her mouth unexpectedly watering for it as though it were a waffle. She shook her head hard. “No, why don’t you just tell me?”
“ All your questions can be answered if you come with me.
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