Authors: Denise Rossetti
Tags: #Fantasy, #General Fiction, #Science Fiction
belongs.”
His skin crawling, Michael stepped forward to support the dead weight until Dax
could maneuver himself out the window and into the air. A couple of businesslike flaps
that blew the hair back off Michael
‟
s forehead, long arms yanking Veryl away, and Dax
was gone without a word.
Shoulder to shoulder, Michael and Lise stood and watched him wing away over the
rooftops, a huge, ominous shadow. He passed before the moon, a raptor
‟
s silhouette, his
prey dangling like some hideous slack-jointed doll, held fast by an iron grip around one
ankle.
Holy Twister. An atavistic shudder ran the length of Michael
‟
s spine. He slid an
arm around Lise
‟
s waist, unconsciously drawing her closer, feeling her warmth.
Alive
.
“Where—?” he asked, though he was pretty sure he knew.
204
“To the Hssrda.” Lise
‟
s tailed twined around his arm from elbow to wrist. “We
‟
d
better go. Tril
‟
s going to be furious.”
Michael frowned. “Why?”
Lise gave a weary chuckle. “We
‟
ll have to get him out of bed for a start, and he
purely hates patchwork.”
If the
hellfire
had ignited, there wouldn
‟
t have been enough of them left to make a
patchwork pincushion. Michael breathed deep, battling with a rebellious stomach. After
a few tense moments, he swallowed hard and went to investigate the small barrel
sitting in a corner. He turned the spigot. As he
‟
d suspected, Thaniel
‟
s water supply.
He felt…winded, as if he
‟
d run full tilt into a wall. Or as if it was his body Dax was
going to drop over the Hssrda camp, opening his fingers to let the thief fall endlessly
through the night air, twisting and flailing until he—
At any rate, he ached all over.
He found a wobbly stool for Lise. “Here, sit.” Then he tossed the dirty water out the
window and filled the bowl with fresh. Pulling up a chair, he sat close, gently guiding
her hand back under the surface. With a sigh, she rested her head against his shoulder.
Dully, he supposed he was suffering from shock. It wasn
‟
t every day a master thief
discovered how catastrophically he
‟
d miscalculated. He
‟
d wanted them both so badly—
exotic, challenging,
different
. Lise and Dax made his blood sing, they provoked his mind
and his body. They
‟
d tested him, forced him to be the best he could be. His lips
tightened, the entire disaster laid out clear before him. Fucking shame his best had near
as dammit killed them both.
Lise burned to the bone, Dax wounded to the soul. Fuck, he should have moved
faster, got to Veryl quicker. But no, he
‟
d stood there with his mouth hanging open
while—
Lise rubbed her cheek against his shirt. “You
‟
re shaking. Are you all right?”
“Sure,” he said. “Let me change the water.”
But she stood. “No, we should start back to the palazzo.”
Abruptly, the room felt stifling, the walls pressing unbearably close. Michael wet
his lips, sweat springing up along his hairline. “You
‟
ll get there quicker if you fly,” he
said, his voice remarkably steady. “I
‟
ll catch up.”
Lise lifted his arm and arranged it over her shoulder, her tail sneaking around his
waist. “Oh no, you don
‟
t,” she said. When she tilted her head back to stare into his eyes,
he wondered for a panicked second if she
‟
d read his mind. “Dax will need you.”
“Me? But—”
“Didn
‟
t you see his face? Both of us, Michael.” She made an impatient gesture,
nudging him toward the stairs. “Come on.”
* * * * *
205
Lise studied Michael as he prowled around her bedchamber, picking things up at
random—a comb, a bottle of featheroil, a notebook—and putting them down again.
Veil-it, the man was beyond restless, he was poised to run. For the first time, she could
see subtle intimations of age in that handsome face, there were creases in the corners of
his eyes, grim lines bracketing his mouth. She wanted to touch him so badly she ached,
but his expression was so forbidding she hesitated and then the moment was lost.
They
‟
d walked in silence through the dark streets, Michael
‟
s arm firmly around her
shoulders, her tail clasping his waist. It was amazing how well they fit together.
Arriving at the quiet palazzo, she
‟
d smuggled him in through the servants
‟
entrance
and up to her room. The hard part had been convincing him to wait while she went to
Tril
‟
s chamber, but she couldn
‟
t leave the burn untreated, they
‟
d both agreed on that. In
the end, she
‟
d resorted to outright manipulation.
“You can
‟
t leave without saying goodbye to Dax,” she
‟
d said, and watched his lips
thin. She looped her tail around his wrist. “Swear you
‟
ll be here for him.”
“All right. Go then.” Gently, he disengaged himself. Then he picked up her ink
brush and just as quickly replaced it on its block. It was only because she watched him
so closely that she detected the infinitesimal tremor in those deft fingers.
So she
‟
d taken her throbbing hand to Tril who, as predicted, was none too pleased
with the hour, Lise or the injury. Grumbling, the healer had climbed out of his bed-nest
and sluiced the burn with something so icy it made her choke and curse. Then he
‟
d
smothered it in a thick, sticky ointment that contained a numbing agent. “You
‟
ll have a
scar,” he said grimly, pressing a glass of water and three extra-strong pellets of
godspeace
into her hand. He stood over her, wings mantled, until she swallowed the lot.
As a consequence, she felt oddly shaky, all the way to the bones, and lightheaded to
boot. In no condition to—
Suddenly, Michael darted to the windows, flung them wide and leaned out. “Well,
don
‟
t hover,” he said. “Come in if you
‟
re coming. I
‟
ve got places I need to be.”
Boots scraped on the small balcony outside. Dax ducked his head to climb in
through the window, wings furled tightly on his back.
Michael stared up into his pale face. “Did you do it?”
“Yes, from six hundred feet up.” Dax touched the other man
‟
s shoulder. “I think the
Hssrda got the message.” A pause and he let his hand drop.
He shifted his gaze to Lise and she drew a sharp breath at the misery in his eyes.
“Chick, you all right?” His voice cracked.
Lise flung her arms around him. “Don
‟
t worry about me,” she said. She cradled his
set jaw in one hand. “You did what you had to do, but it
‟
s over now. We
‟
ve got you.
Both of us.”
She shot a glance at Michael, standing frozen at Dax
‟
s side, his face curiously blank.
“
Haven’t we?
”
206
Michael roused. “You
‟
ll get over it.” Awkwardly, he patted Dax
‟
s shoulder. “I have
to go.”
“Go?” Dax
‟
s brow creased. He wrapped a wing around the Grounded, pulling him
close. “Why?”
“How soon we forget.” Michael
‟
s lip curled. “If Jan finds me here…” Still cloaked in
brilliant bronze, he shrugged.
“After tonight…” Dax sucked in a painful breath. “Surely the Prince—”
Michael slipped out from under the Aetherii
‟
s wing. He glared. “That
‟
s naïve, even
for you, farm boy.”
Dax flinched.
“The Prince doesn
‟
t give a shit for slum brats.”
Lise stepped forward, her hearts banging together with a sudden unwelcome
tension.
We did it
, she reminded herself.
Relax
. “But the Winged Envoy does. If Jan and I
support it, she
‟
ll request a pardon for you.”
Michael stared, the sneer very marked. “And what shall I do while I
‟
m waiting for
this pipe dream?” He waved a hand. “Languish in your bed like a kept boy?”
“You could do worse.” A tired smile tugged one corner of Dax
‟
s mouth. “It
‟
s a big
bed. Roomy.”
Part of Lise wanted to grab the thief and shake some sense into him, but somewhere
else in her weary brain, a little girl was fighting tears. She squeezed her eyes shut,
rallying her forces. Of course she was emotional—she
‟
d nearly been blown to teeny-tiny
pieces, and the men she loved—
Rip the Veil, she was a Second Pinion warrior, she
‟
d indulge herself with a fit of the
vapors later.
Turning to Dax, she said, “No, he
‟
s right.” She reached out to stroke the thief
‟
s
forearm. “Stay
‟
til dawn, Michael. A quick bath, a nap and you
‟
ll feel much better.”
“What am I? Five years old?” The thief stepped back, his face bleak and empty, and
she had a sudden visceral memory of cold steel at her throat, a mocking whisper in her
ear. She shivered.
Dax seized the other man
‟
s hand and tugged him forward. “What
‟
s wrong?”
Michael looked him dead in the eye. “Nothing, birdy. I just can
‟
t afford the time.”
Dax frowned. “But I thought—”
“Then you thought wrong.”
Lise shot him a dark look. “Send a message with one of the kids and we
‟
ll meet
you.”
“Hear that?” Dax wrapped a huge hand around Michael
‟
s jaw, forcing his head up.
“Soon.”
“Sure. Bitsy or Peter.” Michael speared both hands into Dax
‟
s hair and pulled him
down into a vicious kiss, all teeth and tongues and rasping breath.
207
As suddenly as he
‟
d begun, Michael ripped himself away to take Lise
‟
s face in his
hands. “
Lise,
” he said, a wealth of meaning in the word, but she couldn
‟
t interpret the
tone because his mouth descended on hers, tasting of Dax and desperation.
Peripherally, she was aware of Dax
‟
s great arms and wings surrounding them both, of
his murmured endearments as he nuzzled her hair, licked the tip of her ear.
She tried to stop the shaking, but in all honesty, she didn
‟
t think she was the only