'All this was a sham!'
He gave a humorless laugh. 'Of course it was! I'm well aware that you were playing me-'
'No, a sham on
'Give
When he lifted her from the water, cradling her to his chest, she kicked at him, squirming, but his hold was like a steel cage.
'Demon, don't. No more of this
He ignored her, ferrying her to shore, then started the ascent to their camp-heading to that pallet, where he would do
Once they reached it, he let her slide down his naked body. He grasped her upper arms, keeping her in place as he kissed her neck.
She just prevented her head from falling back. 'Demon ... don't make me weak ...'
'You make
'Not bad enough to break your word.'
'One day, you'll be glad you have a man who keeps his word. You gave me unbearable nights. You'll get them as well. I vowed-'
'Save the explanation-you
'I've explained that I can't risk losing you.'
'You're taking fifteen centuries of denial out on me!'
'Maybe what you're saying is true in part. I do like having you at my mercy. I crave driving you mad, as you were last night. Do you know what that does to me to see your eyes go blue with lust-for me? To see fires burning all around us?'
He nibbed his face against hers, inhaling her scent. 'I've never felt things like this, and I want
'Release me!'
Between gritted teeth, she said, 'If you don't let me go, I'll hate you. I vow I'll kill you!'
He dragged her down to the pallet. 'Ah, but my beautiful captive doesn't keep her vows.'
29
Would you care for any child of ours?' he asked her when he had her clasped in his arms, ready for sleep in the chill night. His hand slipped under the tunic and inside her skirt to rest on her flat belly. 'Demon or no?'
She drowsily murmured, 'Unless he was a miserable tool like you.' Then she drifted off.
Over the long hours that he'd teased her, keeping her on the brink of release, she'd never surrendered to him.
She'd been out of her head, her body writhing in a frenzy. She'd rolled her hips, enticing him to break his vow. When he'd beheld her beautiful sex, glistening to be filled ... nothing had ever excited him more.
But now the two nights were done. Tomorrow, he'd get her to surrender completely, and he'd take her once more. Then he would get control of himself. He had to.
Troubled and plagued with uncertainties, he finally fell asleep.
Toward dawn, Rydstrom blinked open his eyes and found himself deep within an illusion. Sabine was casting chimeras in her sleep. Were these her
She wore a silk mask around harried blue eyes. Her headdress stretched out behind her head a foot on each side, the extensions like wings, each crammed with sapphires. Her jet-black hair was tangled beneath it.
When she turned to the mirror, Rydstrom could see two girls in the reflection, one with red hair, and one with black. They were Sabine and Melanthe, both so young, watching her in wide-eyed fascination. This woman was their mother. And she was clearly mad. . . .
'Band it in armor over thy heart, and never will thy life's blood part. Gild your hair and face and skin, and no man breathes that you can't win. Never too much can a sorceress steal, those who defend'-her face went cold-'she duly kills.'
thrown her headdress into the water, he ran a hand over
his mouth.
I
When Sabine's eyes darted behind her lids, and she made faint cries, Rydstrom reached for her shoulder to wake her, but drew back his hand as a new scene appeared.
A nightmare. Literally.
On a blustery night, Sabine was standing at the edge of a pit, with women lined up on each side of her. She looked to be merely fourteen or fifteen.
A male in black robes stood before her, flanked by followers with pitchforks. He asked her in Latin to recant her evil ways.
Donning the smirk Rydstrom knew so well, she spit in his face. The man backhanded her, hurtling her into the pit-no, a grave.
My
An eternity seemed to pass before a dim voice called from the surface. Her sister. 'Rise up, Abie! Climb and
heal!'
Bile rose in Rydstrom's throat as Sabine mindlessly dug past the bodies, blindly climbing for that voice until her sister could pull her free of the grave.
No wonder Sabine was so hard. He'd only thought about her treacheries, never comprehending that she'd been dealt with in kind.
If she hadn't been hard, she would be . . . dead. And
then he wouldn't have her with him now. Would he curse the very traits that had kept her alive to be with him?
In the illusion, the rain poured as she fell to her knees, vomiting earth. Lanthe knelt beside her, rubbing her back. When the rain washed away the filth from Sabine's hair, Lanthe picked up the new white lock and wept....
His fists clenched as a seething fury rose in him. He needed to fight for Sabine, to defend the girl who would