Dark Enchantment (10 page)

Read Dark Enchantment Online

Authors: Janine Ashbless

BOOK: Dark Enchantment
3.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘That’s a good girl.’

He’s already out, imperiously erect, and the sight nearly stops my heart. The distant lamps lend his length a pale sheen. The smell of leather rides his body heat. Then he guides me to him and there’s no preamble, just the charged solidity and the bulk moving over my tongue, stretching my mouth, colliding with the soft back of my throat, and the groan of his pleasure. For a moment I think he’s going to use my mouth as a cunt and just fuck me, but after that first impetuous thrust he relaxes, his hands slackening on my head. I can feel his thighs quivering. I draw back, taking breath, drowning in the leather-and-sweat masculine smell of him and the sharp salty taste as my tongue is given room to move over his thickness. His scrotum is clenched high, almost spherical under my fingers.

The pomegranate, round and pallid and packed solid with seed, breaks under his strong hands. Juice as dark as wine runs out over my belly as he plucks the ruddy jewels from their nest, filling my navel, trickling over my skin and running round my waist to drip on the sheets. It will stain me. He tries to clean it up, licking the spills from my flesh, lapping the pool that has formed in my navel, kissing up the seeds that have fallen, but it’s impossibly messy. One cannot eat a pomegranate with decorum. I am juiced and sticky, my belly heaving with suppressed tremors. He laughs and licks me deliberately to make me squirm, knowing me ticklish
.

I suck him eagerly, hoping that once satisfied, even for a moment, he will be gentler. ‘Oh, that’s right,’ he murmurs, looking down on me, pulling back my hair so his view is unimpeded. ‘Your mouth makes such a fine cunt, hon. Perfect for my big hard cock.’

He’s wearing a ring just behind the head of his dick. No, not a ring, a little bronze snake, coiled snugly about his girth, its flattened head capping the eye of his glans. I let my tongue play with both serpents, wondering how the ornamental one stays on when he is flaccid. Maybe he never is. Maybe he’s been hard since he set out tonight, on the hunt. Then I work out that the snake pierces his flesh and I shudder with fear and a strange, sick excitement. I take him to the back of my throat and moan, longing for the tidal rush.

He feels my eagerness and tilts my head so he can look at me. I can make out nothing beyond the shine on those glasses. ‘Good,’ he whispers. ‘Very very good.’ Then he plucks my lips from his swollen glans. ‘It’s not going to save you though.’

Pulling me to me feet, he scoops me up bodily without ceremony or any obvious effort and dumps my arse on the sloping plastic lid of one of the garbage skips, making an almighty clang. My bare skin would recoil from the grubby stickiness but I’ve no leisure to worry about such things, as he rips off my panties – literally rips them, snapping the elastic. The skip holds me at the right height for penetration and, forcing me back on my elbows and splaying my knees, that’s exactly what he intends to do.

‘Now,’ he says simply, his face over mine as he guides his big cock with its bronze ornamentation to my pussy.

Gripping my hips he pulls me down sharply onto him, piercing me to the core. I feel the metal spiral as it slips in. I feel him spread my sex with his thickness, and it’s so unfair that I’m not ready for this, that I’m not used to it any more. I
try
not to squeal but it tears from me. He’s sweating, he’s shaking – he wants this so much. My arse skids around on the plastic bin lid and he has to hold me in place as he thrusts. It all makes a noise, the lid and my heels banging on the skip, my gasps and his groans. Lights come on, scattered across the black brick faces. A window opens noisily overhead.

No one calls out. The watchers do it in silence.

All my resistance has deserted me and I fall back upon the plastic incline. My exposed breasts are banging wildly up and down as he thrusts into me and I can hardly draw breath; there is no part of my body that he doesn’t seem to have invaded. He reaches forward one hand with hardly a hitch in his rhythm and shoves his calloused fingers into my mouth. I can taste my sex on him. There’s a ring on his third finger and it bites into my lip.

He rolls a single ruby aril out of the sticky crowd, using only a fingertip: up the length of my torso, over my ribs, between my breasts to my collarbone and my throat. There is such longing in his expression, such absorption; my supine and passive body is everything to him. As he tips the fleshy seed over the angle of my jaw he lifts his eyes to mine, pleadingly. He has never given up, though I’ve offered him no hope. He rolls it around my lips and then tenderly slips it between them. For a moment we both hold our breath. Then I let the tip of my tongue protrude, the pip balanced upon it. For a heartbeat we are motionless. Then I close my lips, and bite down upon the seed. It is sour and sweet at the same time, as fragrant as perfume, and tears swim in my eyes as I swallow. It’s the first food I’ve eaten since he brought me here
.

In his midnight eyes light blossoms. Very gently he plucks another pomegranate seed from the platter of my belly and feeds it to me. Then he places the third between his own lips and leans over me. His mouth brushes against mine. I take the
pip
from him, and as its juice wets my lips he kisses me. He tastes of wild sour fruit and ruby-red desire. I twine my fingers in his dark hair as I open to him, to his mouth and his passion
.

And in the back alley of a midnight city the man in black leathers brings both of us full circle and almost collapses over me, his shudders bone deep as he comes and comes. He goes down on his elbows and his long hair brushes my bare skin. I lie quiescent but for my panting as I recover from the pounding he’s given me, and my sex feels awash with him. He pushes himself up onto splayed arms to stare at me with blank plastic eyes. His lips curve. With an unsteady hand I remove his shades so that I can see his eyes at last, and all at once I can read his expression: the satisfaction, the relief, the rueful acknowledgement of what I do to him. Sweat speckles his brow and upper lip.

‘I’m sorry, Seffany,’ he says in that husky voice that sends shivers down my spine, ‘I couldn’t wait.’

He always was too impatient, I tell myself. If he’d been just that bit more restrained when it came to the pomegranate seeds he could have had me for four months, or six, or all year round, but three seeds had been all he’d been able to hold himself back for. I laugh as I cup his face, feeling the dark stubble harsh on my hand. How can you blame someone who wants you
that much
?

‘The snake was … a nice touch,’ I giggle.

‘Ah.’ He runs his tongue over his upper lip. ‘For you. I hoped …’

‘I like it.’

A great deal more gently than he’s been so far, he scoops me up into a sitting position and I twine my arms about my husband’s neck and we kiss, and laugh between kisses because it feels so good. He kisses like a parched man drinking great draughts of water, holding me tight against him. When he’s
temporarily
slaked he nuzzles my throat and ear and hair and whispers, ‘Are you all right?’

I wrap my hands in his long coarse hair. ‘I went half-mad missing you.’

He nods, understanding. ‘Time to go home.’ Slipping his cock from me and readjusting his clothes, he picks me up and I wrap my legs about his waist. He holds me as lightly as if I were a child and carries me carefully back down the alley. I have eyes only for him: for that dark stern face and those broad shoulders, for that hard mouth that can be so exquisitely tender. I’m perversely scared he’ll lose me before he gets me safely back.

‘A good year for you, Seffany?’

‘I live for the winter. You know that.’

‘How’s the family?’

‘Same as ever.’

‘How’s your mother?’

‘Still hates you.’ Freed from my enthralment to her and from the black swamp of emotions that it entails, I can sympathise with Demi; she has good reason to resent what the family has done to her over the years. When she finds out that I’m missing she will be angry enough to tear the leaves off the trees, and she will rage and weep and withdraw from the world, but there’ll be nothing she can do about it for now. Me and my husband have all of three months together, guaranteed, before she pulls legal strings and forces us apart once more.

Hades shakes his head, smiling that at-least-I-try smile. Then we reach the bike and he sets me on my feet.

‘Nice bike.’

‘Thought you’d like it.’ He swings astride it and indicates the seat behind him. It’s a bloody big machine; my legs don’t come near to touching the ground. The saddle is soft though, and
comfortable
against my pantyless flesh. I can feel our combined wetness oozing from me to grease the leather.

‘Nice,’ I repeat, holding the bar behind me. My skirt has ridden right up my thighs. He slides a hand up my leg, tucking the limb close against his, all but baring me.

‘Let’s see how far we get before I have to fuck you again.’ He pulls me tight up against him, wedging himself into the angle of my thighs so that I can feel his solidity through the leathers, stirring my bruised flesh and awakening my appetite anew. I wriggle against him, reaching round to squeeze the bulge of his crotch. My need pleases him and I hear the intake of breath between his teeth. He kicks the engine into life and I feel the throb of the engine through my spine. ‘I wouldn’t want you to go cold on me,’ he says.

There’s no chance of me going cold, I think as he pushes the bike forwards off its stand. Though the world freeze over, I’ll never lose this heat. The bike growls like a lion as we ride. As the street lamps flash past overhead and the kerbstones peel back and the road drops away beneath our wheels, I look briefly up, catching a last glimpse of the city skyline as we plunge steeply down the road to the Underworld, and he takes me home.

Cold Hands: Warm Heart

‘SO, WHAT ARE
we doing here?’ I asked when we’d finished dining on the cold mutton and potted meats from the hamper, washed our distinctly bachelor repast down with a passable Chablis and finally settled back with brandy – from crystal glasses, carefully packed – and cigars that were produced from a humidor which looked both oriental and antique: Morgan might have no talent for picnic dinners but he could be relied upon to provide excellent smokes. I glanced around at the shrouded furniture that cluttered the parlour where we were sitting. ‘If we’re going to be doing any shooting, wouldn’t it have been better to invite a few more people?’

And bring some servants, I might have added. We’d had to lay our own fire, and a sorry job we’d made of it. The October chill had soaked into the bones of this house and though our blaze had finally caught, it was not yet doing much to warm a room that hadn’t been inhabited for some weeks at least, by the looks of things. I didn’t want to think about the state of the bedlinen upstairs; we were, I suspected, in for a clammy night.

‘We’re not here for the shooting,’ Morgan said, taking out his cigar and examining it for flaws, ‘though it is said to be excellent here. And there are trout in the river. Perhaps next time, Thorpe.’

‘Then what are we here for?’

He’d told me next to nothing so far. We’d left London under
a
pall of secrecy, without notifying anyone or leaving any clue as to where we’d gone. We’d driven to the Welsh Borders and arrived under cover of darkness, without pausing at the village inn for the recuperative tipple or the blazing fire that I was rather in need of after such a long and chilly drive. All I knew was that our location was Morgan’s own country residence; he’d made me read him directions from the hand-made map. The house was called Levingshall and was ensconced in a bend of the River Lugg – or possibly one of its tributaries – and though there’d been neither tenant nor servant to greet us, Morgan had the front door key in his possession.

‘We’re here because I’m thinking of living here after I get married.’

I nodded, not much the wiser. ‘You think Cicely will like it? I suppose it’s good for gardening. Very … damp.’ My recollection of the grounds was that they were substantial but overgrown. We’d crossed a stone bridge to get here and the river ran round three sides of the garden. If the shutters had been open I didn’t doubt we’d be able to hear it. ‘Good for her Japanese azaleas or whatever it is she’s keen on at the moment.’

‘It’s an excellent house. And there are good neighbours: the Torrington-Henrys over Ludlow way; and the Milburns have a place further up the valley. Cicely won’t be bored.’

Cicely, in my opinion, would find it terribly remote. But one doesn’t criticise a friend’s marriage plans. Besides, I was interested in the dark inward look on Morgan’s face; in what he so obviously hadn’t said yet. ‘But there’s something wrong?’ I hazarded.

He raised one eyebrow. ‘There’s a ghost.’

‘A ghost.’ I blinked, and without thinking looked around us as if one of the palely sheeted lumps of furniture were likely
to
raise shrouded arms and moan eerily. ‘Is that why there’s no one here?’ Why the place was shuttered fast? Why there were no staff? Why Morgan had never lived here nor even, so far as I could tell, visited the place?

‘Not at all. The tenants never had any complaints. Their lease ran out, that’s all, and given the timing of the wedding I thought it convenient.’

‘It’s a quiet ghost then?’

‘Nobody has seen hide nor hair of it in three hundred years, Thorpe.’

I was slightly disappointed. ‘Not much chance of us spotting it then, is there?’

‘Ah.’ Morgan looked smug. ‘It’s a very particular ghost, they say. It only … manifests … when the owner of the house spends the night here, which is why we haven’t ever lived in the place. My father regarded the whole thing as a joke, to be perfectly honest, but it’s a family tradition: the taboo of the Morgans.’ His eyes glinted.

‘And what does it look like?’

‘It’s a woman, apparently.’

I tilted my brandy glass towards him. ‘And?’

‘And the story is that if the master of the house stays here overnight, she turns up and … he dies.’

I flicked ash off my cigar into the hearth and remarked, ‘Not terribly friendly then.’

Other books

SHADOWLOVE--STALKERS by Conn, Claudy
Cold Days by Jim Butcher
Once Upon a Revolution by Thanassis Cambanis
Warrior in the Shadows by Marcus Wynne
Burial Rites by Hannah Kent
What the Cat Saw by Carolyn Hart