On the Prowl
the color of a glacier’s heart—a pure, crystalline blue.
Oh, crap.
He stood at the bottom of the stairs, but I still had to look up to meet those eyes. That wouldn’t have been true for many men—I’m almost six feet tall—and the step I was balancing on added another few inches. But then, he wasn’t a man.
The Fey looked me over as he set me back on my feet. Despite my best efforts, his nearness made me shiver and a broader smile broke over his face. I adjusted a strap on my dress and tried not to let my panic show. Gerald & Company requires formal dress for important sales as a way of letting potential buyers know in advance not to expect any bargains, and I’d thought I looked pretty good. My usually frizzy red mane had been tamed by almost an hour with a curling iron and my moss green gown, while not exactly couture, had once been expensive. Now I was wishing I’d blackened my front teeth or, better yet, called in sick.
“Do you know,” he told me, a thread of delight running through his voice, “I’m beginning to think this evening might not be as dull as I’d imagined.”
I told myself to pull back, to get some maneuvering room, but my body wasn’t listening. There was no slowly building passion, no steadily mounting desire as might have been true with a handsome man. Instead, the attraction was instantaneous and so overwhelming that it left me light-headed. I simply wanted him, so much that I had to fight not to throw myself back into his arms.
Of all the things I hate about the Fey, number one is the way they make my body react. I first encountered them when I was sixteen. Father had invited a delegation to visit the family estate, and I was expected to help entertain. Instead, I dropped things all through dinner, unable to keep my mind on what I was doing with my body suddenly going haywire. Their leader had been especially unnerving, with ancient silver eyes and hair as bright as water in sunlight. I’d been fascinated by the way it cascaded over his shoulders, a platinum waterfall that carved tiny prisms from the light whenever he moved. But my admiration had faded fast when he turned to Father and, without altering the polite, bland expression he’d worn all evening, asked if perhaps I was ill, to be so clumsy. Father had laughed off the insult, but I’d been mortified.
Of course, if I’d known why they were there, I’d have shown up for dinner cross-eyed and twitching.
The Fey slid one hand around my waist, drawing me against a body that felt like sun-warmed steel. He used his free hand to produce the evening’s catalogue from under the cloak and flipped it open. He perused a page, then looked down at me again. “You aren’t listed.”
“What?”
“It’s not surprising, considering the treaty,” he continued. “When are we to have the pleasure of bidding on you?”
I could feel my cheeks flush, something that, with my complexion, was probably all too obvious. I closed my eyes and with a sudden movement, wrenched away. I smoothed my rumpled gown with slightly shaking hands and glared at him. “Bite me.”
I caught a gleam in those odd eyes. “Right here?”
Of all the things I hate about the Fey, number two would definitely be their sense of humor.
Suddenly, anger started to override fear. I wasn’t sixteen anymore, and Gerald & Company employed plenty of guards. Not that they’d bothered to furnish me with one—ordinarily, no magical creature wanted to get close enough to give me trouble—but there were more than enough posted around the room to deal with even a Fey. And considering how well the Dark and Light Fey got along, I thought the trolls might even thank me for the excuse.
I looked around for security, but they’d been distracted by the trouble Matt was having. I hadn’t seen what started it, but one of the Weres had attacked the leader of the security team and seemed to be trying to gnaw through its knobby forearm. The troll looked at him in understandable bemusement—their skin is approximately the thickness of rawhide—then snapped his arm, throwing the Were across the room. He hit the far wall with an audible thump before slowly sliding to the floor, leaving a big red mark on the gold-embossed wallpaper.
One of the trolls who usually flanked the stage had moved to assist with the fight, and the other was too preoccupied to notice me. I dodged behind the old couple he was watching through narrow, beady eyes. They’d braved my presence to
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