“Does she really need the sluagh's backing that much, so much that she'd give up my death, give up punishing us for going against her strictest taboo?” I shook my head. “No, Sholto, she can't let this stand. If we find a way around her celibacy taboo, then others will try. It will be like the first crack in a dam. Eventually it breaks.”
“She is losing control, Meredith, losing her hold on the court. These three years have not been good ones for her. The court is splitting under the weight of her erratic behavior, and Prince Cel's growing . . .” He seemed at a loss for words, then finally said, “When he comes into power, Cel is going to make Andais look sane. It will be like Caligula after Tiberius.”
“Are you saying, if we think it's bad now, we ain't seen nothing yet?” I tried to make him smile, and failed.
He turned haunted eyes to me. “The queen cannot afford to lose the support of the sluagh. Trust me on this, Meredith, I have no desire to end up at the queen's mercy, any more than you do.”
“The queen's mercy” had become a saying among us; if you feared something, you said, “I'd rather be at the queen's mercy than do that.” It meant that nothing scared you more.
“What do you want of me, Sholto?”
“I want you,” he said, his gaze very direct.
I had to smile. “You don't want me, you want a sidhe in your bed. Remember that Griffin rejected me because I was not sidhe enough for him.”
“Griffin was a fool.”
I smiled, and it made me think of Uther's words earlier that night, that Roane was a fool. If everyone was a fool for leaving me, why did they keep doing it? I looked at him and tried to be just as direct. “I've never been with a nightflyer.”
“It is considered perverted by those that consider nothing perverse,” Sholto said, and his voice was bitter. “I would not expect you to have experience with us.”
Us. An interesting pronoun. If you asked me what I was, I was sidhe, not human, not brownie. I was sidhe, and if you pushed me, I was Unseelie, for better or worse, even though I could claim the blood of both courts. But I would never have said “us” when speaking of anything but Unseelie sidhe.
“After my aunt, our beloved queen, tried to drown me when I was six, Father made sure I had my own sidhe bodyguards. One of them was a crippled nightflyer, Bhatar.”
Sholto nodded. “He lost a wing in the last real battle we fought on American soil. We can grow back most of our body parts, so it was a grave wound.”
“Bhatar stayed in my room at night. He never left my side when I was a child. Father taught me chess, but Bhatar taught me how to beat Father.” It made me smile.
“He still speaks well of you,” Sholto said.
I started to ask, then shook my head. “No, he would never have suggested that you do this. He would never have risked my safety, or yours. You see, he spoke well of you, too, King Sholto. The best king the sluagh had had in two hundred years, that's what he used to say.”
“I'm flattered.”
“You know what your people think of you.” I tried to read that face. The need was there, but need could mask so many things. “What of the hags, your little harem?”
“What of them?” he asked, but there was a look in his eyes, that gave lie to his casual words.
“They wanted to hurt me to keep me from you. What do you think they'll do if you actually bed me?”
“I am their king. They will do as they are told.”
I laughed then, but it wasn't bitter, just ironic. “You are a king of a fey people, Sholto, they never do quite what you tell them, or quite what you think they will. From sidhe to pixie, they are free things. Take for granted their obedience and you do so at your peril.”
“Like the queen has done for a millennium?” He made it half question, half statement.
I smiled, nodding. “As the king of the Seelie Court has done for even longer.”
“I am a new king compared to them and not quite so arrogant.”
“Then tell me truly what will your hag lovers do if you desert them for me?”
He seemed to think about it for a minute, long and slow, then he looked at me. His face was serious. “I don't know.”
I almost laughed. “You are new at being king. I've never heard one of them admit ignorance before.”
“Not knowing a thing is not ignorance. Feigning knowledge you don't have, can be,” he said.
“Wise, as well as modest; how terribly unique for fey royalty.” I remembered a question I'd wanted to ask. “The Agnes that took you into the woods as a boy, your nanny, is she Black Agnes?”
“Yes,” he said.
I fought not to frown. “Your ex-nanny is now your lover?”
“She has not aged,” he said, “and I am all grown up now.”
“Growing up around immortal beings is confusing, I admit, but there are still fey that helped raise me that I don't think of in that way.”
“As there are among the sluagh for me, but Agnes is not one of them.”
I wanted to ask why, but didn't. First, it was none of my business; second, I might not understand the answer even if he gave it to me. “How do you know the queen intends to execute me for certain?” Back to the important topic.
“Because I was sent to Los Angeles to kill you.” He said it like it meant nothingâno emotion, no regret, just fact.
My heart beat a little faster, my breath catching in my throat. I had to concentrate to ease the air out without making it noticeable. “If I don't agree to sleep with you, then you carry out the sentence?”
“I gave my oath that I meant you no harm. I meant it.”
“You would go against the queen for my sake?”
“The same reasoning that keeps us safe if we bed each other, keeps me safe if I leave you alive. She needs my sluagh more than she needs to be vindictive.”
He seemed so certain of that last part. Certain of what he was certain of, uncertain of everything else; like most of us if we're honest. I looked at that strong face, the jaw a little wide for my taste, the bones of the cheek at little too sculpted. I liked a softer look to my men, but he was undeniably handsome. His hair was a perfect white, thick and straight, held back in a loose ponytail. The hair fell to his knees like one of the older sidhe, even though Sholto was only about two hundred years, give or take. The shoulders were broad, the chest looked good under the white, button-down shirt. The shirt fell absolutely smooth, and I wondered if he were using some sort of glamour to make it so, because I knew that what lay under the shirt was not smooth. “The offer is very unexpected, Sholto. I'd like some time to think about it, if I may?”
“Until tomorrow night,” he said.
I nodded, and stood. He stood as well. I found myself staring at his chest and stomach trying to see that movement I'd noticed on the street. Nothing showed, he was wasting glamour on keeping it hidden. “I don't know if I can do this,” I said.
“What?” he asked.
I motioned at him. “I saw you once without a shirt when I was much younger. The sight . . . stayed with me.”
His face paled, eyes hardening. He was throwing his walls back in place. “I understand. The thought of touching me frightens you. I do understand, Meredith.” He let out a long breath. “It was a pretty thought while it lasted.” He turned away from me, gathering his long coat from the back of the chair where he'd laid it. The heavy tail of hair lay like a white furred stripe down his body.
“Sholto,” I said.
He didn't turn around, just held the length of hair over one shoulder while he put on his coat.
“I didn't say no, Sholto.”
He turned then. His face was still closed, careful, all the emotions I'd worked so hard to find buried again. “Then what are you saying?”
“I'm saying, no sex tonight, but I can't say yes, I'll have sex with you, until I see everything.”
“Everything?” He made it a question again.
“Now who's being coy,” I said.
I watched the idea take shape on his face, in his eyes. A strange little smile played on his lips. “Are you asking to see me naked?”
“Not all of you.” I had to smile at the look on his face. “But down to your thighs, yes, please. I have to see how I truly feel about your . . . extras.”
He smiled and it was warm with an edge of uncertainty. It was his real smile, that edge of charm and fear. “That is the kindest way anyone has ever described them.”
“If I can't be with you in joy and shared pleasure, then your dream of matching your glow with another falls apart. A sidhe does not glow for things that are duty and not pleasure.”
He nodded. “I understand.”
“I hope so, because it's more than seeing you nude. I need to touch and be touched to see if . . .” I spread my hands wide. “If I can do this.”
“But no sex tonight?” His voice was as close to playful as I'd ever heard it.
“You dream of sidhe flesh and have never had it. I have had it, and for three, nearly four years, I've gone without. I miss home, Sholto. Strange and perverse as it is, I miss it. If I agree to this, then I get a sidhe lover and home. Not to mention I'm escaping a death sentence. You are not a fate worse than death, Sholto.”
“Some have thought so over the years.” He tried to make it a joke, but his eyes gave him away.
“That's why I need to see what I'm getting myself into.”
“Do I raise the question of love, or is that too naive for a king and a princess?” he asked.
I smiled, but this time it was sad. “I tried love once; it betrayed me.”
“Griffin is a worthless thing, Meredith, unworthy of such depth of emotion, and certainly incapable of returning it.”
“I found that out, eventually,” I said. “Love is grand while it lasts, Sholto, but it doesn't last.”
We looked at each other. I wondered if my eyes were as tired and full of regret as his.
“Am I supposed to argue with you, and tell you some love does last?” Sholto asked.
“Are you going to?”
He smiled, and shook his head. “No.”
I held my hand out to him. “No lies, Sholto, not even the pretty ones.” His hand was very warm wrapped around mine. “Let me take you to bed, and see what I'm bargaining for.”
He let me lead him toward the bed. “Do I get to see what I'm bargaining for?”
I pulled him backward toward the bed so I could watch his face. “If you like.”
A look passed through his eyes that was neither sidhe, nor human, nor sluagh, but simply male. “I like,” he said.
Chapter 12
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I LET GO OF HIS HAND SO I COULD CRAWL ONTO THE BED, STILL WORKING
backward so I could watch him. I took the gun out of my waistband and slid it under one of the pillows, then lay back in the middle of the bed, propping myself up on my elbows. Sholto stood beside the bed looking at me. He had a strange half-smile on his face. His eyes looked uncertain, not unhappy, just uncertain.
“You look terribly pleased with yourself,” he said.
“It's never a bad thing to see a handsome man naked for the first time.”
His smile vanished. “Handsome? I've never had anyone who knew what lay under the shirt call me that before.”
I let my gaze speak for me. I lingered over his face, the eyes, the strong, nearly perfect nose, the thin wide mouth. The rest of the body looked wonderful, but I knew at least part of what I was looking at was magically enhanced. I just didn't know how much. But I kept my gaze on the parts that I was pretty sure were real, like the slender width of his hips, the strong length of legs. Until I saw him without the pants I wasn't sure what the bulge in the pants was, so I passed that by in mind as well as by eye. The queen was right, it was a shame; he truly was magnificent.
“I've fantasized about a sidhe woman looking at me like that.” He still looked too solemn.
“Like what?” I asked. I made the question low, sexual, teasing.
That made him smile. “Like I'm something to eat.”
I smiled, and made it everything he wanted it to be, everything he needed it to be. “Eat, eh. Lose the coat, and the shirt, and maybe we'll get to that.”
“No sex tonight remember,” he said.
“How about just no orgasm?”
He threw back his head and laughed, a loud, joyous sound. He looked at me with shining eyes, and it wasn't magic that made them glitter, just laughter. He looked younger, more relaxed. I realized that with his white hair and skin, those gold eyes, that he'd be welcomed at the Seelie Court. If he could keep his shirt on they'd never suspect.
The laughter faded round the edges. “Now you look solemn,” he said.
“I was just thinking that you look more Seelie Court than I do.”
He frowned. “You mean the blood auburn hair?”
“And my lack of height, and the breasts are a little too plentiful for sidhe style.”
He grinned then, wide and sudden. “It has to be the women who are complaining about the breasts. No man would dream of it.”
That made me smile. “You're right. My mother, my aunt, my cousins.”
“They're just jealous,” he said.
“Pretty to think so,” I said.
He let the grey overcoat fall to the floor, then undid a button of his cuff. He watched my face while he did it. He undid the other sleeve, and moved to the first shirt button, the second, fanning the cloth to expose a triangle of white, gleaming skin. A third button, and the first swell of chest muscle came into view. His fingers went to the fourth button, but he didn't undo it. “I would ask for a kiss now, before you see.”
I would have asked why, but I thought I knew. He was afraid that once I saw all of him, he wouldn't get his kiss.
I crawled across the bed toward him. Sholto put his hands on the bed and lowered himself to his knees. He moved down until his chin was nearly touching the bed, his hands flat on the bedspread.
I stayed on all fours above him. He gazed up at me, and I lowered my face toward his in a sort of push-up position. I gave him his kiss. A soft brush of lips and Sholto started to pull away. I touched his face gently. “Not yet,” I said.
Sholto was right, once I saw all his “extras” he might not get another kiss. If it was the only touch of sidhe hands that he would ever know, I wanted it to be memorable. A kiss couldn't make up for not having ever felt the touch of sidhe flesh, but it was all I could offer. In his own way he was as alone as Uther.
Sholto laid his chin back on the bed, rolling his eyes up at me. He waited for me patiently, totally passive, waiting for me to do whatever I was going to do. In that instant I had another question answered. If I was going to tie myself to any one person for a lifetime, we'd have to have more in common than just sidhe blood. He'd have to share my love of pain.
I lay flat on the bed so that our faces were even. “Open your mouth, just a little,” I said.
He did it without question. I liked that. I kissed his upper lip, softly, gently. I used my tongue to open his mouth wider, then used lips and tongue to explore his mouth. He was completely passive at first, letting me feed softly at his mouth, then he began to kiss me back. He kissed slowly, almost hesitantly, as if it were his first time, and I knew it wasn't. Then his mouth pressed against mine harder, more demanding.
I bit his lower lip, gently, but firmly. He made a small noise in his throat, and rose to his knees, pulling me with him, hands on my arms. His kiss mashed against my lips. The kiss was hard enough it hurt, and I had to open my mouth wider, letting his lips, his tongue, his mouth inside mine completely, as deeply as he wanted to probe and lick and feed, just to keep from being bruised.
He pushed me back against the bed, and I let him, but I noticed that he kept his body above mine, using his hands to prop himself up so only our mouths touched. I drew back from the kiss enough to look down the line of his body. I could feel his body above mine like a trembling line of energy. It was as if the weight of his body was already pressed against mine, as if I could already feel the heaviness of him against me. His aura, his magic, had substance like a second body pressing outward from him. The press of power trapped my breath in my throat, brought my pulse racing. His magic drew the blood in my body like a magnet draws metal.
Even with Roane covered in Branwyn's Tears it hadn't been like this. It had been wondrous, but it hadn't been this. And this was what I wanted, needed, craved. Sholto stared down at me with a kind of soft wonder on his face. “What is that?”
I realized he could feel my power as I felt his. I could have simply said, “Magic,” but the last time I'd been with another sidhe had been Griffin, and he had explained to me how my power was a lesser glow, a paltry thing. Once I'd believed him; now I didn't. I had to ask, because I might never be with another sidhe. I might never be able to answer the doubts that Griffin had put in my mind. “What does it feel like?” I asked.
“Warm, like heat rising off your body, pressing against my skin.” He balanced on one arm, using his free hand to caress the air between us like he was stroking something that had shape, weight. The feel of him stroking his hand along my aura made me close my eyes, my body writhing under that not-touch.
He pushed his hand through the energy, and even with closed eyes I knew where his hand was. “It clings to my hand like it's a bowl of something that sucks against my skin as I reach into it,” Sholto said, voice breathy, filled with the wonder his face had shown.
I felt his hand thrust through the power, as if my body were underwater and his hand brought cool air with it. His hand didn't just touch my side, it breeched my shields, forced his magic inside me. It brought my eyes wide open, froze my breath in my throat. It forced me to lash out with my own power, to cover it like holding a hand over a wound.
His body jerked at the touch of my magic. He looked at me with half-parted lips, his pulse thudding like a trapped thing against the fragile skin of his throat. “I had no idea what I was missing.”
I nodded, staring up at him, flat on the bed, his hand like a throbbing weight over my ribs. “This is only the beginning,” I said, and my voice had fallen to a hoarse whisper. I wasn't trying to sound sexy, it was all the voice left me with the press of him above me. In that moment I couldn't think of any deformity that would keep me from saying yes.
I reached for his shirt. He moved his hand off of me, so he could support his weight on both hands and I could reach the buttons of his shirt. I undid the next button; nothing popped out. I undid another button. The power wavered like heat rising from pavement. “Let go of the illusion, Sholto, let me see.”
His voice was a whisper. “I'm afraid.”
I stared up at him. “Do you really think I want to lose a chance at this? I want to end this exile, Sholto. I'm tired of pretending, of settling. I want it all back.” I caressed a hand over the front of his throat, and the mix of our power flowed behind my hand like an invisible veil. “Sidhe flesh, pleasure to equal mine, to walk into the hollow hills and be welcome; I want to go home, Sholto. Drop your glamour and let me see what you look like.”
He did what I asked. The tentacles spilled out of the shirt, and analogies like nest of snakes, or the spill of intestines when you open someone's gut, came to mind. I froze, and this time when my breath caught in my throat it wasn't from passion.
Sholto started to back away immediately, standing, turning so I couldn't see. I had to grab his arm to stop him. My reaction had shut down the magic between us, or rather his reaction to my reaction had. His arm was just an arm under my hand, warm and alive, but nothing more.
I gripped his arm tight with both my hands. I tried to turn him back toward me, but he resisted. I rose on my knees, keeping one hand on his arm, but reached across his body to grab the far side of his shirt. Nothing touched me as I reached across his body, and there should have been a lot of things touching me. He'd called the glamour back in place. I wasn't feeling what was really there.
I dragged him back around to face me. The shirt was open to mid-stomach. The chest and stomach were pale, muscular, smooth, perfect. I undid another button and the stomach that showed was cobblestone, like an ad for the after shot in a gym commercial. Sholto let me unbutton the shirt and pull it out enough that he was exposed down to the leather of his belt, but he wouldn't look at me.
“I guess if you're going to hide behind glamour, it might as well be handsome.”
He did look at me then, and he looked angry. “If this was my true appearance you wouldn't turn from me.”
“If this was your real appearance you'd have never become king of the Host.”
Something passed through his eyes, something I couldn't read, but anything was better than the anger tinged with bitterness. “I would have been a noble of the sidhe court,” he said.
“A lord, nothing betterâyour mother's bloodline isn't good enough for a greater title.”
“I am a lord,” he said.
I nodded. “Yes, on your own power, your own merit. The queen could not let such a power walk away from our court without a title.”
He smiled, but it was bitter, and that anger crept back into his eyes. “Are you saying it's better to rule in hell than serve in heaven?”
I shook my head. “Never, but I am saying that you have everything your mother's blood could have given you, and you are a king.”
He stared down at me, his face that arrogant mask again. The one I saw so often at court. “My mother's blood could have given me you.”
“I haven't turned you down,” I said.
“I saw the look on your face, felt the reluctance in your body. You don't have to say it out loud for it to be true.”
I started to pull his shirt out of his pants. He grabbed my hands. “Don't.”
“If you walk away now then it's finished. Drop your illusions, Sholto, let me see.”
“I did that.” He jerked the shirt out of my hands so hard that he almost dragged me off the bed as he moved away.
“It'd be nice if I could have embraced you without flinching. I am sorry that I couldn't, but give a girl a chance. The first look is a little overwhelming.”
He shook his head. “You're right, I am king of the sluagh. I will not be humiliated.”
I sat on the edge of the bed and looked at him. He looked perfect if a little sulky. But it wasn't real, and I'd spent the last few years hiding, pretending. Pretense, no matter how pretty, can grow very old. Though they rejected him, there was no one that epitomized the Unseelie Court better than Sholto did. A combination of unbelievable beauty and horror, not just side by side but entwined. One could not exist without the other. In his way Sholto was the perfect marriage of all the court stood for, and they rejected him because they feared that he was indeed the ultimate Unseelie sidhe. I doubted they thought of it that clearly, not in so many words, but that was what frightened them about Sholtoânot that he was alien, but that he wasn't alien.
“I can't give my word that I won't turn away a second time, but I can give my word that I will try.”
He looked at me, arrogance like a shield in his eyes. “That's not good enough.”
“It's the best I have to offer. Is fear of rejection really worth losing your first touch of sidhe flesh so quickly?”
Doubt flickered in his eyes. “If you can't . . . stomach it,” something about the phrase amused him, but not in a happy way, “then can I call glamour and . . .”