“My beautiful girl,” he breathed. He surrendered his caution, eager for her supple, feminine body, for her passionate heart. He pressed his lips to hers, and the animal in him awoke and stretched and roared I want, I need until he could hardly hear the words that left his own mouth. “Large baubles and bent knees will only be the beginning. I am going to worship you every day for the rest of our lives.”
And he lowered his lips to hers once more.
Later, much later, after the fire had burned down to embers and ash and a huge, glowing moon had climbed into the sky, Jenna watched Leander sleep.
He slept on his back, one arm around her neck, his face turned to her hair. She lay on her side next to him and trailed her fingers over his muscled chest, over the edges of the white bandage. His skin sent up heat everywhere she touched.
She had that aching feeling again, that feeling she knew was happiness. It seemed not only unfamiliar but terribly fragile—and frightening. She wondered how people managed to live with it. Like a skittish wild animal, it appeared poised to bolt at any moment.
She smiled ruefully. She was beginning to understand wild animals. Very well, in fact. Maybe one day she would fathom this unpredictable beast called happiness too.
“Whatever you’re thinking, keep thinking it,” Leander murmured, opening his eyes to gaze at her with a drowsy smile. He rolled onto his side and turned her to her back with his hand against her hip. She settled against the smooth satin and angled her head to see him better. In the gloom, he was reflection and shadow, hooded green eyes against warm umber skin.
“It wasn’t anything important,” she said, skimming her fingertips over the unyielding muscles in his bicep, his shoulder. “You know, the nature of reality, the meaning of existence. Light stuff.”
He bent his head to nibble at her lips, his hair soft and fragrant against her throat. “That sounds dreadfully boring.” He took her hand and gently pushed it under the sheets, down between his thighs. His erection was already stiff against her hip. “I’m sure we can come up with one or two more exciting topics.”
“Some people would find discussing the meaning of existence very exciting, I’m sure,” she smiled with slow, sensual mischief.
“No one in this room,” he countered, trailing kisses along the crest of her collarbone.
“And what about the future? Maybe we should be discussing that.”
He paused, lifted his head to stare at her with a guarded look. “You’re not going to tell me you’ve changed your mind about us, are you? Did I fall asleep too quickly? Did I say something wrong?” He struggled to sit up. “Do I snore?”
She pushed him back to the pillows, smothering a laugh. “No, you didn’t say anything wrong, and you don’t snore.” She lowered her gaze and fingered the edge of his bandage, letting her hair drape over his face. “Although I must admit, you do fall asleep really fast. Like, in five seconds. You might want to see a doctor about that.”
“It’s not my fault you’re so goddamned beautiful I have to have my way with you,” he said, relaxing again. He lifted his hand and brushed her hair from her face. She nestled in under his arm and he smiled down at her. “Vigorously and repeatedly,” he drawled. “Until I am completely exhausted.”
“Until you pass out,” Jenna corrected, blinking at him from under her lashes.
He lifted his finger to trace over a ragged red seam that marred the flesh of her shoulder, his fingertip following the path of a knife blade. His teasing smile disappeared.
“Tell me I didn’t hurt you,” he murmured, leaning over to press a whisper-light kiss to her shoulder. “Tell me I didn’t lose myself and forget to be gentle.” He lifted his eyes to her face and she saw the self-recrimination there, the pain. “You’re still hurt, still fragile—I should have been more careful, I should have waited—”
“If you had waited, I might have had to throw myself at you, and that would be very unbecoming for a queen.” Jenna raised her hand to trace the planes of his face with her fingertips. “I’m fine, Leander. Just a bit sore.”
“From me or from...”
He left it hanging between them. She thought she’d never seen him look so troubled or so beautiful, his hair capturing the light in midnight colors, onyx and mink and deepest indigo.
“You did not hurt me,” she slowly enunciated, raising both her hands to press against his face. “In case you couldn’t tell the difference, those were moans of pleasure, my love.”
He released a breath through his nose, pressed his eyes closed, and tilted his head down to hers. “Nothing can ever hurt you, not ever again,” he whispered against her ear. “Not me, not those bastards. When I saw you there, chained and pale as death, all that blood...”
He buried his face in her hair and didn’t speak for a long while. She pressed her hand against his chest, feeling his heart thump strong and erratic under her palm.
“I almost lost my mind,” he finally said, tightening his arms around her. “I did lose my mind. And then when you didn’t wake up for so long...”
She lay against him quiet and still, feeling his heat, the strength of his arms cradling her body.
“I will make them pay for what they’ve done,” he whispered fiercely. “They will pay in blood.”
“Yes,” Jenna said softly. She stroked her hands over his back, trailed her fingers down his spine. “I know. And we are going to win this war, or whatever it is, because we’re stronger than they are. Smarter.”
“Better,” he said, rough.
She nodded against his shoulder. “Also better informed.”