her on the shoulder, because he didn’t want to offend her by grabbing at her.
“John, just let me go—”
He stepped in front of her and lost his breath. Her eyes were glowing with unshed red tears.
She blinked fast, refusing to let anything fall to her cheeks. “You think I’m going to be jumping for joy because you aren’t bonded to me anymore?”
He recoiled so badly, he nearly fell over.
“I didn’t know it could end, but in your case, clearly it has—”
She seemed momentarily stunned, nothing but those quick lids of hers moving. Then she crossed her arms over her chest and stared up at him. “Are you serious?”
She glanced away. Looked back. After a moment, she said roughly, “I have… hated not being with you.”
As her lids dropped a little, he had the sense that she was scanning him in the ways of her other side, and he squared his shoulders under the scrutiny: He knew what was in his mind, his heart, and his soul.
He had nothing but love for her.
He wanted her back.
He had nothing to hide.
And those terms he’d just spilled out were ones that not only he had thought long and hard about, but knew he could live with. This was not the off-the-cuff of a newly mated guy thinking life was going to be a breeze just because he had the girl of his dreams in his arms and a future so bright he had to wear shades.
Now, as he spoke, it was as a male who had lived for months without his mate; who had suffered through the strange death valley that came with knowing the one you loved was on the planet but not in your life; who had emerged out the other side of hell with a new understanding of himself… and her.
He was ready to meet real life head-to-head… and compromise.
He just prayed he wasn’t the only one.
As Xhex stared up at John, she found herself blinking like an idiot. Shit on a shingle, she hadn’t expected any of this: the personal call from Wrath, the opportunity presented to her… and definitely not what John was saying to her now.
He was utterly sincere, though. This was not a calculated ploy to get her back into his life—although she knew that without reading his grid. Not his way.
He meant every word.
And he was still bonded to her, thank God.
The problem was… she had been to this corner with him before. She had been ready for a good stretch of happy normal. Instead? The most important relationship she had had crashed and burned.
“You sure you’re going to be okay with me heading into wherever they live and maybe fighting directly with them. Without backup.”
“You were pretty adamant that where Tohr is is not a place where you want to be.”
He shrugged.
Xhex narrowed her eyes. She could read his grid, but not every part of his brain, and before she opened up to him again and got her hopes up, it was critical to know that he’d thought this shit through. “What about afterward? Say I get the rifle and bring it back here and it turns out to be the weapon that was used—what if I want to go after them. Wrath is not my king, but I like the guy, and the idea that someone tried to snuff him makes me cranky.”
John’s stare didn’t waver, leading her to believe he had in fact considered that outcome.
“What if I want to keep my job with Trez? Permanently.”
“What if I wanted to keep staying at my cabin.”
It was, of course, everything that she had wanted to hear: no limits on her, free to choose, free to be equal.
And, God, she wanted to fall into it all. Being apart from him had been the shittiest stretch of darkness she’d ever been through. But the thing was, she was used to the chronic suffering. The only thing worse than it would be having to acclimate to this kind of hell all over again. She didn’t think she could go through that—
“You realize that I can’t go through another freak-out from you. I can’t—it’s too hard.”
She thought back a million years ago to Lash and that alley—when John had given her her revenge, had allowed her to be the one to kill her own personal enemy. And that had been in spite of the bonded-male thing that had no doubt made him want to rip that evil fucker apart.
He was right, she thought. Good intentions didn’t always work out, but he could prove how things were going to be over time.
“Okay,” she said hoarsely. “Let’s give it a go. Come with me to Wrath’s?”
When John nodded once, she stepped in beside him.
Together they walked down to the king’s study.
Each step they took seemed wobbly, even though the mansion was solid as a rock. Then again, she felt as though the earthquake that had been tossing her life around in a blender had suddenly stopped, and she didn’t trust her balance or the steadiness of what was below her feet.
Before they knocked on the closed doors, she turned toward the male who had had her name carved in his back. The assignment she was about to accept was a dangerous one, something vital to Wrath and the Brotherhood. But its implications to her own life, and John’s, seemed even more significant.
Stepping into him, she put her arms around his body and held on. As he returned the embrace, they fit just