CHAPTER 10
New Orleans.” He would not lie to her. A
wrinkling of her brow. “I see.”
“Do you want the details?”
“No, not tonight.” Her gaze lingered on the damp
lines of his body before she rose from the bed, her wings sweeping
across the sheets. “Bonne nuit.”
He hadn’t touched her intimately since the night
he’d fed from her, so hot and sweet, but now he crossed the room to
stop her with his hands on the silken heat of her upper arms, his
chest pressed to her back . . . to her wings. “Nimra.” When she
stilled, he swept aside the curling ebony of her hair to press his
lips to her pulse.
Reaching back, she touched her fingers to his face.
“Do you hunger?”
A simple question that staggered him with its
generosity, but no longer surprised. Not now that he understood the
truth of the woman in his arms. “Stay.” Kiss after kiss along the
slender line of her neck, a delicate pleasure that made his skin go
tight, his own pulse accelerate. “Let me hold you tonight.”
A moment’s pause and he knew she was weighing up
whether or not to trust him with the depth of her vulnerability.
When she shifted to face him, when she allowed him to take her into
his arms, to take her to his bed, it turned a key in a dark, hidden
corner of his soul, a part that had not seen the light of day since
the events that had almost broken him. But they hadn’t. And now, he
was awake.
Nimra’s need for Noel was a deep,
unrelenting ache, but she fought the urge to take, to demand from
this captivating male with wounds that would take a long time to
truly heal. Then his eyes met her own as he braced himself above
her, his fingers stroking the sensitive arch of her wing, and there
was an intensity to them she’d never before seen. “Put your hands
on me, Nimra.” A command.
One she was happy to accept. Running her foot over
the back of his calf, her gown sliding down her leg, she began to
explore the ridges and valleys of his body, so hard, so very
masculine. He shuddered under her touch, his breath hot against her
jaw as he grazed her with his teeth, his cock pressing in blatant
demand against her abdomen.
No civilized lover this.
“You are a beautiful man,” she whispered as she
closed her fingers over the rigid evidence of his need.
Color darkened his cheekbones. “Uh, whatever you
say.”
“Such compliance, Noel?” She squeezed him,
luxuriating in the velvet-soft skin covering such powerful steel.
“I am not sure I believe you.”
A groan. “You have your hand on my cock. If you
called me an ugly git, I’d agree with you. Just. Don’t.
Stop.”
His unashamed pleasure made her entire body melt.
Not only did she continue in her intimate caresses, she began to
suck and kiss at his neck until he slammed his mouth down on her
own, tender control transforming into untamed sexuality. Demanding
and aggressive, he thrust his cock into her grip in time with the
thrust of his tongue into her mouth.
His hand fisted in her gown at the same instant,
pulling up the material until it bunched at her waist. His fingers
were underneath the lace that protected her an instant later,
making her arch, cry out into his kiss. Taking that cry as his due,
he tore away the lace to stroke her to quivering readiness even as
he pulled her hand off him. “Enough.” A ragged word against her
lips, heavy hair-roughened thighs nudging her own apart.
She wrapped her legs around his hips as he flexed
forward and claimed her with a single primal move. Spine bowing,
she clung to him, her nails digging into the sweat-slick muscle of
his back. When she felt his mouth settle on the pulse in her neck,
it made a tremor shake her frame, the spot unbearably sensitive.
Yes. She fisted one hand in his hair, held him to her. “Now,
Noel.”
His lips curved against her skin. “Yes, my lady
Nimra.”
A piercing pleasure radiated out from the point
where he drank from her, while his body, his hands, shoved her ever
closer to the precipice. Then the two streams of pleasure collided
and Nimra flew apart . . . to come to in the arms of a man who
looked at her with a furious tenderness that threatened to make her
believe in an eternity that did not have to be drenched in
loneliness.
Three days later, she found herself
frowning at Asirani. “And there have been no other problems?” While
she could believe her fellow angels wouldn’t have paid heed to the
passing of a mortal, the vampires in the region had long dealt with
Fen, understood the role he’d played. It defied belief that they
hadn’t attempted anything while she’d been wracked by grief.
Asirani avoided her eyes. “You couldn’t quite say
that.”
Nimra waited.
And waited.
“Asirani.”
A put-upon sigh. “You’re talking to the wrong
vampire.”
Rather than chasing down the right one, Nimra
decided to do her own probing. What she discovered was that
“someone” had negotiated Fen’s passing with such skill that any
ripples had been few and handled in a matter of hours. As far as
the outside world was concerned, Fen’s decades of service had been
forgotten as soon as he was gone, his death a mere inconvenience
rather than a splintering pain that had ripped apart her chest,
filled her eyes.
Later that day, she discovered that her reputation
as an angel not to be crossed had in fact grown in the time
she’d spent mourning her friend. “Why do I have a letter of apology
from the leader of the vampires in New Orleans?” she asked
Christian. “He seems to believe I’m an inch away from executing his
entire kiss in a very nasty way.”
“His vampires misbehaved,” was the response. “It
was taken care of.” His face, acetic and closed, told her that was
all she’d get.
Intrigued at both the defiance and the realization
that Noel and Christian appeared to have reached some kind of an
understanding, she finally cornered the man responsible for a
political game that had, from all indications, been played with
none of Fen’s subtlety—and yet garnered excellent results. “How,”
she said to Noel when she discovered him in the wild southern
gardens, “did you acquire the title of my enforcer?”
He jumped up from his kneeling position with a
distinctly guilty—and young—look on his face. “It sounded
good.”
When she tried to look around him, and to whatever
it was that he was hiding under the shade of a bush laden with tiny
blossoms of pink and white, he shifted to block her view. Scowling,
she tapped the letter of apology against her legs. “What did you do
in New Orleans?”
“The vampires didn’t learn their lesson the first
time.” Cool eyes. “I had to get creative.”
“Explain.”
“Heard of the word ‘delegation’?” An unflinching
stare.
Her lips curved, the ruler in her recognizing
strength of a kind that was rare . . . and that any woman would
want by her side. “How are my stocks doing?”
“Ask Christian. He has a computer for a brain—and I
had to give him something to do.”
Unexpected, that he’d shared power after taking it
with such speed and without bloodshed. “Is there anything I need to
know?”
“Nazarach’s hounds were nosing around about a week
ago, but seems like they had to return home.” A shrug as if he’d
had nothing to do with it.
“I see.” And what she saw was a wonder. This strong
male, who was very much a leader, had put himself in her service.
Unlike Fen, Noel had intimate access to her, and yet even when
she’d been at her most vulnerable, there had been no sly whispers
in the sinuous dark, only a luxuriant pleasure that muted the
jagged edge of loss.
Before she could form words from the fierce cascade
of emotion in her heart, she heard a distinct and inquisitive
“meow.” Heart tumbling, she tried to see around those big shoulders
once more, but he turned to block her view as he crouched down.
“You were supposed to stay quiet,” he murmured as he rose back up
and turned to face her.
The two tiny balls of fur in his arms—comically
colored in a patchwork of black and white—butted their heads
against his chest, obviously aware this wolf was all bark when it
came to the innocent.
“Oh!” She reached out to scratch one tiny head and
found the kittens being poured into her arms. Squirming and
twisting, they made themselves comfortable against her. “Noel,
they’re gorgeous.”
He snorted. “They’re mutts from the local shelter.”
But his voice held tender amusement. “I figured you wouldn’t mind
two more strays.”
She rubbed her cheek against one kitten, laughed at
the jealous grizzling of the second. Such tiny, fragile lives that
could give so much joy. “Are they mine?”
“Do I look like a cat man?” Pure masculine affront,
arms folded across his chest. “I’m getting a dog—a really big dog.
With sharp teeth.”
Laughing, she blew him a kiss, feeling younger than
she had in centuries. “Thank you.”
His scowl faded. “Even Mr. Popinjay cracked a grin
when one of them tried to claw off his shoe.”
“Oh, they didn’t.” Christian was so vain about
those gleaming boots. “Terrible creatures.” They butted up against
her chin, wanting to play. “It’ll be good to have pets around
again,” she said, thinking of Mimosa when she’d been young, of
Queen. The memories were bittersweet, but they were precious.
Noel walked closer, reaching out to rub the back of
the kitten with one black ear and one white. The other, she saw,
had two white ones tipped with black. “I’m afraid there’s a
condition attached to this gift.”
Hearing the somber note in his voice, she put the
kittens on the ground, knowing they wouldn’t wander too far from
the cardboard box where they’d evidently been napping. “Tell me,”
she whispered, looking into that harsh masculine face.
“I’m afraid,” he said, opening his fist to reveal a
sun-gold ring with a heart of amber, “the archaic human part of me
requires this one bond after all.”
Amber was often worn by those mortals and vampires
who were entangled in a relationship. Nimra had never worn amber
for any man. But now, she raised her hand, let him slide the ring
onto her finger. It was a slight weight, and it was everything. “I
do hope you bought a matching set,” she murmured, for it seemed
she, too, was not quite civilized enough to require no bonds at
all.
Not when it came to Noel.
His smile was a little crooked as he reached into
his pocket to pull out a thicker, more masculine ring set with a
rough chunk of amber where hers was a delicate filigree with a
polished stone. “Perfect.”
“We won’t be able to have children.” He spoke the
solemn words as she slid the ring onto his finger with a happiness
that went soul deep. “I’m sorry.”
A poignant emotion touched her senses, but there
was no sorrow. Not with an eternity colored by wild translucent
blue. “There will always be those like Violet who need a home,” she
said, rubbing her thumb over his ring. “Blood of my blood they
might not be, but heart of my heart they will be.”
Eliminating the small distance between their
bodies, Noel stroked his fingers down her left wing, a slow glide
that whispered of possession. As did the arms she slid up his chest
to curve over his shoulders. There were no words, but none were
needed, the metal of his ring warm against her cheek when he cupped
her face.
Her wolf. Her Noel.