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Dragon Soul

Page 80

   


She sighed and gave me a long-suffering look that she had no right to use upon me, not after all I had to put up with. “The First Dragon, of course. I’ve known him for, oh, ever such a long time, and when I told him that I was tired of the mortal world without Bo, he said he would help me since it would aid his descendants as well. So he sent me to Bael’s stronghold to fetch the Ka and the ring, and then he approached you, since he knew I’d need a dragon, and you were just drifting, and the rest you know.”
My jaw sagged a bit. “He approached me? Jian’s cousin! The one whose name I can’t remember! That was the First Dragon?”
“So I gather.” She rose and leaned in to check herself in the mirror.
“I can’t wait to tell Rowan. That and the reason he summoned Constantine to be there at the last challenge were driving us nuts. Until Rowan finally broke down and asked Constantine, but he, being a typical dragon, wouldn’t give us a straight answer.”
“Oh?” Mrs. P frowned. “Why was he there?”
“According to Gary—you know, the head that drives around on the little radio-controlled car—it’s because Constantine needed closure with Bael. Gary said that Bael killed Constantine’s mother, and Constantine had been angsting over it for centuries, and that his psyche was all tormented about it, and so on. Which is totally understandable—I mean, who’d want a demon lord for a parent? I’d much rather be an orphan than have that blighting my life.”
“Your parents were very nice people,” Mrs. P said, taking another petit four. This one she wrapped in a napkin and stuck in her purse. “I met them once, oh, around the turn of the nineteenth century. Your father was very dashing and had a fine eye for a hoochie-coo. Your mother disliked me, I think, but then she was mortal, and she feared I was trying to steal your father away from her.”
I looked suspiciously at the gorgeous woman standing next to me. “And were you?”
“Maybe just a little,” she said with a little smile. “But not seriously, because that’s when I was involved with my president. Oh, dear, does that music mean what I think it means?”
“Five minutes!” The door opened and Gary rolled in, did a turn, and immediately zoomed outward. “This is your five-minute call. You have five minutes.” He stopped at the door and said in a soothing tone, “And I don’t want you worrying about a thing, Sophea. They got the blood out and set Rowan’s hand. He’s been focusing on healing it for the last half hour, so I’m sure it’ll be just fine when it comes time to exchange rings. Gabriel’s head wound closed nicely, and Baltic insists he doesn’t need the crutches at all, so there won’t be any unwelcome thumping when the wyverns escort the grooms in. One of Gabriel’s men, who is also a healer, took care of Drake’s dislocation, so all is well there, although really, you’d think that beings who could heal themselves would do so rather than drinking themselves into insensibility, not to mention the fact that they were engaging in fisticuffs to begin with. But you know how it is with gentlemen and their stag parties. Still, all’s well that doesn’t end in death and dismemberment, and all that, so don’t worry, Sophea, everything is just fi—what? No, you can’t come in! Don’t you know it’s bad luck—”
Gary was unceremoniously pushed aside as Rowan entered the room. He was indeed wearing a tunic, a gorgeous deep red embroidered with golden dragons on the front. It wasn’t at all traditional bridegroom wear, but then, we weren’t very traditional people. To my amusement, he held a hand over his eyes. “I won’t look at you if you don’t want me to, but I wanted to make sure you were all right.”
“You can look,” I said with a little laugh, then choked on it when I saw the two black eyes that darkened his face. “Oh, Rowan!”
“It looks worse than it—hoo.” He lowered his hand and blinked at me, a slow smile curling his delectable lips. “You look gorgeous.”
“Thank you. I’d like to say the same, and I would except for your eyes. What happened?”
He glanced at Mrs. P.
“Am I de trop?” she said brightly, then got to her feet and patted my shoulder, saying, “You see? I told you they wouldn’t need the tux.”
Rowan waited until she left before closing the door and leaning against it. He looked tired, but happy, beat up, but there was heat in his eyes, and a fire simmering inside him that warmed me to my toenails. “The bachelor party got a bit… contentious.”
“So I gather. Too many wyverns in too small a place?”
He made a wry face. “That, and too much alcohol flowing. My eyes are much better than they were when I woke up this morning. Gabriel says they’ll heal if I have some quiet time when I can focus on them.”
“Well, it’ll make the wedding photos something to remember,” I said, wanting to laugh but not wishing to hurt his feelings. “I’m glad you found me, although from the sounds coming through the door, Gary is having a hissy fit about you seeing me early.”
“He can have any sort of fit he wants. I needed to make sure you were okay with this. With me.”
I looked at him in confusion, unsure why he’d suddenly think I’d changed my mind, then realized what he was asking. I got to my feet, pulling him forward a step as I took his hands in mine and kissed the tip of his nose. “You’re not replacing Jian, Rowan. You’re the new wyvern of the red sept, yes, and you’re the love of my life, but you’re not ousting him from my heart. I’ll always love him, just as I’ll always love you. What we have is a new start, both for the red dragons and for us.”
His jaw worked. “I want desperately to kiss you. I want to nibble on your delicious earlobes. I want to suck on that spot on your neck that makes you moan with pleasure. I want to lift up that skirt and bury myself in you. But I suspect Gary would have my balls on a platter if I mussed you up, so I’m just going to tell you that you have my heart. And soul. And every other part of me, from now until the end of our days.”
“If you make me cry and ruin the makeup that Ysolde was so careful to apply,” I murmured, tracing one of the gold embroidered dragons on his chest, “I’m the one who will have your balls. Although not on a platter.”
He fought for a good twenty seconds, then swore. “To hell with Gary—” His lips were hot on mine, but not as hot as the fire that swept through him, and into me, binding us together.