Darkness Comes (31 page)

Read Darkness Comes Online

Authors: A.C. Warneke

Her heart flipped over in her chest at the strength of his conviction and she lowered her lashes, keeping her eyes trained on the perfect curve his sensuous lower lip. “I would have remembered you even if you hadn’t changed my memories.”

“I just wanted you to be happy,” he whispered, swallowing thickly, resting his forehead against hers, pain filling his gaze.

“You know nothing about my life,” she said, her voice as quiet and reflective as his. “How could you have even known that my life was less than what it appeared the day you found me at the mall?”

“I shared your memories, on the cliff overlooking the ocean and before….” Moistening his lips with the tip of his tongue, his gaze dipped down to her midsection before hastily returning. Tenderly, he added, “And I saw the scars, Malorie.”

“What scars….” She froze, remembering. Her eyes widened in her head as she struggled to free herself from his grasp. He let her go easily and she pulled the hem of her shirt up to expose the smooth, unscarred planes of her belly. Her eyes went to him, accusation and anger burning bright, “How could you take away my scars? Why would you do that?”

“I wanted to take away your pain,” he confessed, his hands dropping to his sides as he simply stared at her, looking hopeless and bleak.

“They weren’t yours to take away!” she pressed her hand against the non-existent scars, forgetting for the moment that she had hated those scars and had wished them gone a thousand times. Irrationally, she demanded, “Put them back!”

“I cannot,” he shook his head, taking a step towards her. At her glare, he halted even as he tracked her every movement with his eyes. “I only wanted you to be happy.”

She couldn’t even look at him, loving him and despising him in fairly equal measure. The worst part was knowing that she was even angrier with herself than she was with him. He had tried to make her happy, even if he had gone about it in a fucked up way, but the memories she had missed the most were the memories she had of him. As angry and hurt as she was, she still hungered for his touch, his embrace; she wasn’t complete without him and yet she didn’t trust him. And her head was pounding and she was going to crash.

“Malorie.” His voice whispering her name was a dagger to her chest.

“I’m so tired,” she murmured, rubbing her temples. The lateness of the hour, the nights of barely sleeping, the unexpected pregnancy, were catching up to her. She had taken just about all she could take and her brain was shutting down; she was shutting down. Crumbling into the chair, she slowly shook her head, “I’m just so tired.”

“Get some sleep,” he murmured, always giving orders. Silently, he had moved across the room and was kneeling in front of her; soul-deep love and regret burned in his eyes as he looked up into her face. His broad hands came down on her knees and he gently massaged the tense muscles of her legs. Leaning forward, his breath moving across the delicate shell of her ear, he whispered, “I’ll be here in the morning.”

“Feryn….” He gathered her up into his arms, cradling her against his chest. It was the most natural act to wrap her arms around his neck and bury her nose against his throat and drink deeply of his familiar, masculine scent. The memories quieted as he held her, giving her a moment of peace as the world shattered around her.

“We’ll talk in the morning,” his chest rumbled as he spoke and she could hear the torment in his voice. “I’m not going anywhere.”

Suddenly, it didn’t matter that she was hurt and confused; she didn’t want him to leave; she couldn’t lose him again when he had consumed her thoughts when he hadn’t been real. Swallowing her pride, at least for the night, she tilted her head back and whispered, “Stay.”

He closed his eyes and a radiant expression softened the harsh planes of his face before he smiled and looked at her. Standing up with her still in his arms, he carried her over to the bed, kicking off his shoes before gently laying her down and carefully lying down next to her. Pulling the blankets over their clothed forms, he held his arm out and she pressed her body against his, the terrifying sense of rightness taking her breath away.

As he wrapped his arms around her, she felt the strain of the last few weeks simply melt away and she let her eyes close. His strong and steady heart beat was a balm to her wounded soul and she was safe.

She was home.

 

****

 

As the sun was rising over the horizon, she opened her eyes and saw Feryn watching her with inscrutable green eyes and she wasn’t sure he slept at all. She had almost expected to wake up in the morning and have Feryn be a dream and the joy she felt upon seeing him in her bed both thrilled her and terrified her. But he was looking at her as if he were a stranger…. Bewilderment turned the corners of her mouth down as she murmured, “You’re still here.”

“Of course I am,” he said. The passion that had burned in his eyes during the middle of the night had been banked and she felt a chill wrap itself around her. His voice was dispassionate as he said, “We have much to discuss.”

She desperately needed to get away from him and the hurt that his change of attitude was having on her. Last night he had given her hope that they might have a future together; this morning, he was once again the remote, arrogant Aradian, so far above her as to be ridiculous. Clamoring out bed, she walked towards the bathroom to escape him and the feelings he evoked without even trying. Barely looking at him, she grumbled, “Give me ten minutes to take a shower and clear the sleep from my brain; I need to clear my head before I can even look at you.”

She practically spat the last word and he grimaced at the anger lacing her voice. But his voice was cool as he told her, “I’m going to make arrangements for Toby.”

She froze, spinning around so fast she almost lost her balance and tipped over. Her hand shot out to brace herself against the wall and in a low, fierce growl, she went into protective mama-mode, “You are not taking my son from me.”

Bewilderment contorted his features for a moment before he shook his head, “Of course not; I was going to have Jiro take him for an extended fishing trip so you and I could talk without interruptions.” He held up his hands in surrender, “I promise, he will be not be taken from you; Jiro will simply keep him for a few days.”

When she continued to watch him with all of the wariness of a cornered wildcat, he lowered his voice, “Don’t you think it would be better if Toby weren’t around to overhear what will probably be said? There will probably be yelling and… strong language.”

She nodded slowly and the wariness eased a bit though she remained watchful. “Fine; you’re right. It’s probably best if Toby is not here when we… talk.”

Without bothering to wait for a reply, Malorie went into the bathroom and locked the door behind her. What had happened to the man who had appeared last night, ready to fight dragons to be with her? Leaning her head against the cool door, she let the tears fall freely, unable to live with the cold, hard man out there, unable to be without the warm, loving man she knew he was.

Less than an hour later, Malorie was hugging Toby, who was far more excited for the fishing trip than she was. He was also far more eager to get going than Malorie was to see him go. She looked up at Jiro as he stood in the doorway, the diamonds and bleached hair still absent. It was strangely disconcerting to have her two worlds come together: her reality and the illusion Feryn had created for her.

“How did he convince you to change your appearance and waste your time watching over us?” she asked, gesturing with her hand towards the tailored brown hair and lack of diamonds. “I mean, I’m sure you had better things to do.”

“My brother asked and I obliged,” he bowed his head in a manner so similar to Feryn’s.

“You couldn’t stand being around me,” she reminded him. “I remember how you acted, the words you said. In fact, I’m pretty sure you hated me.”

“Of course I hated you,” he answered simply. At her gasp of outrage, his eyes sparkled as he took her chin in his hand. “If a Breeder can make an Aradian fall in love, what else is she capable of?”

“How absurd,” she said, jerking her chin out of Jiro’s grasp, unable to bear his pity. Busying her hands with straightening Toby’s jacket, she grumbled, “He’s a powerful Aradian; I’m merely… me.”

“Don’t underestimate your attraction,” Jiro murmured. She looked up and met his eyes, nearly forgetting how to breathe at the turbulence gleaming in the silver-green depths. “Just don’t… don’t break his heart.”

“What an extraordinarily human thing to say,” she said with a trace of wonder.

“The desire to love and be loved is not a strictly human endeavor, love,” With a mocking smile on his lips, he drew his finger along her cheek and added, “It is just something with which we Aradians have little experience; go easy on him.”

Her lips curled up in a wry smile; who was going to go easy on her? Unable to speak, she bent down and wrapped her arms around Toby one more time, “Be safe?”

“Always,” Toby smiled, kissing her cheek, eager to leave and spread his wing a bit.

Looking up at Jiro, her voice was rough, thick, and her eyes welled with tears she swore she wasn’t going to shed. “Swear to me that you will keep him safe,”

“Of course I will,” he vowed without a hint of irony. “Swear to me that you’ll give Feryn a chance?”

She shook her head and reluctantly smiled, “If he’s willing to take it.”

As soon as her son left with Jiro, she wandered out to the living room where Feryn was waiting for her. She sat down on the chair across from him, the caution not leaving her face as she boldly met his gaze. Her hair was pulled back in a low ponytail and her face was scrubbed clean; she felt impossibly young and unsophisticated next to Feryn in his expensive Italian suit, his black hair falling to his sculpted shoulders. He sat there as cool and self-contained as she was frazzled and nervous.

It didn’t help that her stomach was rebelling and she was barely able to keep anything down that morning. It was manageable when she had to worry about keeping up appearances in front of Toby but now that her son was gone, she was going to throw up. Her eyes flittered to Feryn but he was just watching her with that dispassionate gaze of his and she had no idea what he was thinking, what he was plotting.

Jiro said to give him a chance; how was she to do that when he sat there looking as uninterested in her as he would be an insect? At the thoughts of insects, her stomach finally revolted and she had to cover her mouth with her hand. “Excuse me.”

She bolted for the bathroom, barely making it in time. Kneeling on the floor, her hair plastered to her sweat-dampened face, she laughed at herself. Of course Feryn was back; he wanted a child. It wasn’t about her at all, it was about the baby; his baby. Sitting on her butt, she leaned the back of her head against the cool wall, needing to take a moment to find the strength that had gotten her through her childhood, the wars. The loss of Jack.

She’d survive Feryn.

“Are you pregnant?” he asked. She opened her eyes and tilted her head to the side to see him standing in the doorway, his expression… anxious. When she didn’t answer, he said, “Are you?”

She nodded once, disheartened and exhausted.

His jaw tightened and he did that expansion thing, sucking the air out of the enclosed space and taking up all of the oxygen. “Is it mine?”

She laughed a little insanely, “Go to Hell.”

He came in and filled a glass of water before sitting on the floor next to her. Holding the cup to her lips, he had her drink the water to rinse her mouth. His voice was low, solemn, as he murmured, “I don’t know how any of this is happening, Malorie; it doesn’t make any sense.”

“We had unprotected sex; it’s the same way I got pregnant with Toby.” She huffed out a breath, “You would think I would have learned by now.”

“There is no way you should have gotten pregnant,” he explained after a few minutes of contemplation, even more perplexed than she was. She would have thought he understood the basic principles of creating babies…. “I removed my mark and I didn’t ejaculate inside of you.”

“I remember,” she stared at the toilet instead of looking at him and remembering and wanting and…. “But pulling out is not an effective….”

“It is for Aradians,” he contradicted before she had a chance to finish her sentence. “I did not will viable sperm so my orgasm was sterile and, more importantly, you are unmarked. None of this makes sense.”

Licking her lips, her eyes over filling with tears, she whispered, “Do you love me?”

He looked at her, simply looked at her and she could feel her heart cracking in her chest. Jiro obviously didn’t know what he was talking about and why was she even blubbering over any of this? She knew what he was, knew how he viewed anyone not an Aradian; hell, he didn’t even know the name of his son’s mother.

Wiping her eyes, she laughed as she pushed herself to her feet; stupid hormones, making her a weeping basket case. This wasn’t who she was; she didn’t get emotional, she soldiered on. “Never mind that I asked; I should have known better….”

He was standing in front of her, cupping her face in his hands, “I love you but I am not comfortable with it; it overwhelms me.”

“Because I am a mere human,” she sneered, rolling her eyes. “A Breeder.”

“Because it is not something an Aradian has ever experienced,” he said instead. “You can’t understand because you have only lived for twenty-five years; you have known love in your brief life; I am new to all of this.”

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