Immortals After Dark 07 - Kiss of a Demon King
Something the bad guys use to keep each other honest. I want to do this for you, demon."
He had no idea what she was talking about, but he savored even the idea that she wanted to take a step for him-
"All I need is clay, picture hangers, an oven, and your blood."
"How can I be sure these covenants are going to work?" Rydstrom asked over his shoulder as he nailed three pic-ture hangers to the wall.
"I made extras so we can test them," she said absently, gazing at his uncovered back as she tied twine through the hole of the third covenant.
The muscles, the tattoo, his smooth skin . . . Gods, this male is too fine -
He abruptly turned, catching her ogling him. She shrugged as if she was helpless not to ogle.
Because she was.
"Are you ready with those?" he asked, his voice a touch rough.
"Oh. Yes." She had three covenants baked and ready to be hung. She carefully handed them to him.
He was clearly still dubious about this whole process, but he was going along with it as if hoping it would work.
When they'd returned to the house earlier, he'd trusted her to stay and shower while he located clay somewhere on the grounds. They'd met back in the kitchen, with Sabine dressed in another one of his undershirts. He'd showered downstairs and wore a clean pair of jeans-with no shirt.
His kitchen was ultra-modern, and she didn't exactly know her way around even a medieval one, but she'd managed to find a bowl to mix a small sampling of their blood with the clay.
"Your blood will bind you to the spell," she'd explained as she made a small cut in his arm. "My Sorceri blood acts as the catalyst, the battery that gives this power."
Once she'd rolled the clay out flat in three baking dishes, Sabine had used an ice pick for a stylus. In the first tablet, she'd carefully inscribed, "I will never lust after Rydstrom." In the second, she'd written, "I will never kiss Rydstrom." The third read, "I will never lie to Rydstrom."
As he hung the tablets, she hopped up to sit on the granite counter top. "Covenant time!
Sacred even among the bad guys."
While Sabine had worked, she'd been drinking a nice dessert wine from his collection. He'd been leaning against the counter with his arms crossed over that broad chest of his, watching her every move.
The sexual tension had been palpable.
When they'd had to wait for the tablets to harden, she'd reasonably suggested that they occupy themselves, but he wouldn't, instead keeping this all business, seeming very serious about getting things "sorted out."
Now he approached her spot on the counter. "What do we do?"
"Ready to test? Then, be so kind as to undo your pants and give me a peek."
"Sabine? Very well." He unbuttoned his jeans, pulling the fly open wide.
As soon as she laid her gaze on his shaft, she bit her bottom lip, wanting to touch him there, to run her lips over that flesh-The first tablet shattered into pieces, plunging to the ground.
His eyes widened briefly as he refastened his jeans. "Kiss me," he told her, leaning in closer to her.
She pressed her lips to his firm, delicious ones, and her eyes slid shut. But when the second tablet splintered and dropped, he broke away. "It's bloody working."
"You married a sorceress, demon. I know what I'm about."
He abruptly turned, inspecting the tablets.
"You can ask me anything, and I'll have to answer honestly. But before you get to your questions, I have one for you." He waved her on in that kingly way. "If I had told you I had to get back to Tornin because of a life-or-death situation but I would return to you, would you have let me go there without you?"
"No. We do not separate, Sabine." As if to illustrate this, he returned to the counter, standing before her, wedging his hips between her legs. "I've found you after fifteen hundred years, and I'm not keen to part from you for any reason."
"I see." She hadn't expected him to answer differently, but his vehemence reminded her that she would have to tread carefully with him.
No matter how badly she wanted to trust him completely, she couldn't. Like Lanthe had predicted, the demon wouldn't be apt to let her go poison herself. In six days, she would have to.
"Ask your questions."
"Where were you going tonight? And why did you run from me?"
Tread carefully. "My sister opened a portal to come get me. She and I can speak telepathically when we're close enough to each other, and she woke me up. I explained to her that it didn't feel right not to tell you that I was
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