Authors: Denise Rossetti
Tags: #Fantasy, #General Fiction, #Science Fiction
dark, fast and very often furious. Kissing them was a waste of time and resources. The
best way to use a man
‟
s mouth was to fuck it, hard and deep.
Dax growled and vibrations tap danced the length of Michael
‟
s spine. His balls
drew up and his cock bucked in his trews. Reflexively, he pressed closer, challenging
for control. Dax responded by spreading a huge hand across the back of Michael
‟
s skull
to hold him steady. Fuck, against the Aetherii
‟
s strength he was helpless. No hope.
Michael of Sere didn
‟
t do helpless or hopeless, not since Tannio, when he
‟
d been
little more than a boy. He growled back, low and dangerous, gripping double fistfuls of
hair and tugging. The other man
‟
s chest rumble dropped a register until it was
positively subterranean. It hardly seemed possible, but the embrace ignited, became
incendiary.
Michael
‟
s head went light. Fuck, this was the second—no, godsdammit,
third
—time
he
‟
d kissed Dax of his own free will. Somewhere along the line, he
‟
d clearly lost what
little sanity he possessed.
Put an end to it,
yammered something in the back of his mind.
Now, you fool, before—
His heart knocking against his ribs, he kept his mouth moving, gathering his forces,
bearing down hard on the bloody-minded determination that had kept him alive
through a childhood and adolescence in the dog-eat-dog world of the Slopes. Slipping
125
his hands out of the thick wealth of the other man
‟
s hair, he stroked down the back of
his neck. Dax arched and rumbled, a sound like a huge velvet purr. That beautiful
monster of a cock ground into his thigh. Dax gentled the kiss, nibbling on Michael
‟
s
lower lip.
Shaking, Michael pressed his fingers against the place where the Aetherii
‟
s carotid
artery should be. He dug in. Gods, what if he
‟
d miscalculated? Dax had two hearts,
what else might be different?
But no, he
‟
d done it right.
“Hey,” mumbled Dax, his breath warm and sweet against Michael
‟
s jaw. “Hurts.
Stop that.”
Reaching up, he took Michael
‟
s wrist, all gentle inexorable strength, pulled his hand
down and planted a kiss in the center of his palm.
The bottom dropped out of Michael
‟
s stomach. He stared into green-gold eyes,
glittering with fever. The golden skin of Dax
‟
s chest was stained with a deep flush,
extending to his neck and his cheeks. Drops of sweat beaded his hairline.
Dax smiled, wide and white and trusting. “
Mmm.
” He drew Michael closer and his
lashes dropped to half-mast. “More.”
Something very like panic flared behind Michael
‟
s breastbone, but that was
nonsense. Panic was a weakness no thief could afford.
“Fuck no!” He pushed away, punching Dax in the chest, a hard jab.
“Ow.” Dax rubbed the spot, sending him a reproachful look.
Michael stepped back quickly, breathing hard. “What the fuck was that?
‟
Still smiling, Dax considered. “Payback?” he offered at last. “And, gods, it was
good.” He made a grab. “Come back here.”
Michael danced aside. Coolly, he arched a brow, shoved his trembling hands in his
pockets. “You
‟
re going to pass out any second. I
‟
ll leave you for the scavengers, I
swear.” He jerked his chin in the direction of the lights. “Get your fine feathered ass into
the palazzo. This fucking minute.”
Dax squinted down the street. Then he rubbed his brow and sighed. “Huh,” he
said. “All righ
‟
. C
‟
mon.” He shambled away, weaving like a drunk.
Almost dancing with impatience, Michael willed him on. He could feel the
sharpened attention of something—
someone
—focus first on Dax and then on him. Yet he
couldn
‟
t bring himself to leave, not quite yet. “Go on, birdbrain,” he muttered under his
breath. “Get fuckin
‟
on with it.”
But Dax turned so he was walking—stumbling really—backward. “C
‟
mon then.”
He held out a hand.
Automatically, Michael took a step forward then stopped, brought up short by the
edge of the shadow. No more cover. Gods, any minute—
“Lise will want to—” The other man cannoned into a wall. Bouncing off, he grunted
then went on as if nothing had happened.
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Michael winced.
Serves you right
. He glared.
Dax raised his voice slightly. “She
‟
ll want to see you.”
Not bloody likely.
From farther up the street, someone exclaimed, the sound carrying crisply in the
still night air. Dark figures erupted from the palazzo, half running, half flying.
Footsteps beat a rapid tattoo, coming closer.
“My ass is fine, huh?” Dax chuckled then hissed through clenched teeth. “You
‟
re
wrong though, no feathers, not on my ass.”
Grinning, Michael faded back into the lane between the buildings, trailing one hand
along the side of the cart. Fleetingly, he thought of the carter, gazing sightlessly up at
the moon, back near the west gate. He hadn
‟
t taken the man
‟
s belt pouch. Twister, he
was slipping.
“Dax!” said a woman
‟
s voice. “Gods, what happened?”
Lise.
Hopping over a fence, Michael threaded his way through backyards and service
alleys, but it wasn
‟
t long before he gave in to temptation and took to the rooftops.
Curiosity had always been his besetting sin. Soundlessly, he navigated pitched roofs
and gutters until he
‟
d come almost full circle.
Stretched out on his stomach in the shadow of a pair of chimneys, he inched
forward to peer over the edge of a gutter. The palazzo
‟
s grand double doors had been
flung open. Strangely foreshortened, three Aetherii were approaching the front steps—
Dax, Liseriel the Gray and a stocky male with tawny wings, a stranger.
Dax had his good arm wrapped around Lise
‟
s slim waist, but it was obvious he was
trying to spare her his weight. In fact, he was taking the opportunity to nuzzle her hair,
the clever bastard. The other Aetherii hovered, watching anxiously.
“You
what?
” Lise
‟
s exclamation rang out in the quiet street.
Dax came to a halt, staring down into her face. Michael heard the rumble of his
reply, but he couldn
‟
t distinguish more than a few phrases. “Children at Crastin
Market. Veryl… fight them off. Couldn
‟
t…Michael.”
Lise looked utterly appalled. “
Michael?
Veil-it, Dax, you can
‟
t trust him, he
‟
s,
he
‟
s…” She raised a shaking hand to touch his face.
Dax caught her hand and pressed a kiss to the palm. On his roof, Michael rubbed
his own hand furiously against the side of his trews, remembering. Dax lifted his head,
staring toward the cart. “A bad man, I know.”
“He didn
‟
t try to…?”
Even though they
‟
d turned toward the door, Michael could hear the smile in Dax
‟
s
voice, that special smile that was all his own, sweet and steady and calm. “Of course he
did.”
The moonlight made Lise
‟
s upturned face glow with an otherworldly beauty, but it
did nothing to conceal her agitation. She lifted her hands to Dax
‟
s chest, and with a
127
shock, Michael noticed her tail rubbing over Dax
‟
s, again and again, slow and sure.
Twister, would he ever get used to it?
Tails!
“Are you all right?” she said, and Michael knew she wasn
‟
t asking about the
wounds.
“I
‟
m fine, chick. I—” Dax broke off.
The tide of Michael
‟
s blood rushed in his ears. He
‟
d never been so acutely aware of
the pump of his heart, working away in his chest, beat after beat. The tiles beneath him
grated as he strained forward. He froze, knuckles white where he gripped the gutter.
Gods, no farther or he
‟
d be taking a short flight without benefit of wings.
Below, Dax cupped Lise
‟
s cheek in a big hand. “Don
‟
t worry, love,” he said. “I
‟
m
here.” The words came slowly, as if he selected each one with special care. “I
understand better now, but I have a lot of thinking to do.”
They stared at each other, the seconds stretching and growing heavy. Michael
cursed under his breath, rigid with frustration. What he
‟
d give to see their expressions
close-up, to read the emotions in their eyes!
Janarnavriel the Noir appeared in the doorway, black-winged and grimly
handsome. “Go get your bag, Tril. I
‟
ll help here.”
As the other man nodded and disappeared into the building, Jan called after him,
“We
‟
ll be in the front office.” He reached out and drew Dax over the threshold.
Liseriel the Gray stood staring after them, her head tilted to one side. With a shrug,
she mantled her wings, tail lashing. Abruptly, she spun around, scanning the street
with narrowed eyes, hands on hips.
Michael froze. Gooseflesh sprang up the length of his spine, across the small of his
back, even over the inside of his thighs.
Gods, she was fine! Like a tempered blade, all rapier grace and deadly steel. She
knew
. Twister, somehow she knew he was there.
Ah, but he could never resist a challenge. Grinning, Michael came easily to his feet.
Immediately, that raptor
‟
s gaze locked onto him and her glorious wings spread in a
wide, threatening arc. What
was
that? A seven foot span? Eight?
He sketched a courtly bow, touched his fingers to his lips and then to the
featherpearl throbbing over his heart. Laughing, he slipped away across the roofs of
Sere.
* * * * *
Lise strode into the room, rustling with gray-winged outrage. “He was there,” she
said in a voice choked with fury. “Blew me a kiss, the cheeky—”
“He brought me back.” Gratefully, Dax allowed Jan to guide him down to a stool
next to his big desk. He felt shaky and uncertain, all the way to the marrow of his bones.
“Might not have made it without him.”
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His entire left wing was a burning, throbbing hurt, and his shoulder ached in
sympathy. Ow, shit. Rip the Veil and fry the world.