I matched his smile. “May I join you?”
He sat up straighter and closed his book. “Of course.”
I sat beside him on the cushioned bench.
“What brings you out of your bed at this hour?” he asked.
“I needed a break from Adrian,” I said, rolling my eyes.
Sorin chuckled, eyes glittering. “Exhausting, is he?”
“If you are referring to the words coming out of his mouth, then yes,” I said.
Sorin laughed louder.
“And you? Why are you out here?”
“Ah, well,” he said, smile fading, the cover of his book suddenly seeming far more interesting. “I am giving Daroc a break.”
“I have a feeling it isn’t his words you are tired of,” I said.
Sorin shook his head. “The only time he speaks is when I’ve done something he doesn’t approve of.”
“I’m sorry,” I said.
“I suppose you should be. It was your husband who put him in such a poor mood,” he teased. Then he paused for a long moment, adding, “Sometimes…”
He trailed off and I waited but he did not finish his sentence.
“Sometimes, what?”
“I do not know if I should say,” he said and met my gaze.
“If it is how you feel, it is valid,” I said.
It took him a moment, but finally he spoke. “Sometimes I wonder if he is in love with Adrian.”
I did not know what to say, and it took me a moment to find words. “Is it love or is it loyalty?”
He looked almost as though he were trying to make himself smaller as he sat forward, running a hand over his short, coarse hair.
“Maybe,” he said and paused. “Perhaps I am only jealous.”
I tilted my head to the side, studying him. “Or maybe you know a truth Daroc refuses to acknowledge because he also loves you.”
Sorin covered his mouth and offered a single, disbelieving laugh and dropped his arms, letting his elbows rest on his knees.
“Enough about me,” he said. “Adrian tells me you’ve turned into a beast.” Sorin grinned, his dark eyes alight with amusement.
I glared. “Careful or I’ll claw that pretty face of yours.”
“You’d have to catch me first,” he said. “And last I checked, aufhockers cannot fly.”
I sighed. “I think I’d have preferred flying.”
“There are few abilities greater than one another,” he said. “It is all in how you choose to use them.”
I met his gaze. “And you are the one to teach me?”