Less than six hours later, the sun rose high enough in the sky to throw its energizing rays through Carley’s bedroom window. She sighed in her sleep and rolled over onto her back, flinging one arm across her face and the other across the bed. She lay there, sleeping, bathed in a pool of sunlight, her body recovering from the overuse of magic the day before.
Reid watched from his perch on the roof of the building next door.
When she rolled over, exposing those luscious, full breasts, that smooth alabaster skin, the gentle curve of her waist before it flared into perfect-for-grabbing hips, his cock went instantly hard, making his position even more uncomfortable than it had been for the past few hours.
He’d dozed, fitfully, as he sat on the roof and watched her sleep, but it was damned cold at night in Chicago, and no matter what animal form he took, he still could not get warm. Just as he finally asked himself what the hell he was doing and what did he mean to gain from this stupid, cold vigil, the sun lifted over the edge of the building, and its rays poured into the open window where the lightbearer lay sleeping in the nude, without even a sheet as a barrier between her body and his hungry gaze.
This is what I was waiting for.
Wide-awake now, he stood and stretched, working cold and kinked muscles even as they protested the movement. And then he continued to watch, although she did nothing at all but sleep.
She is so beautiful in rest. He surprised himself with the thought. He wasn’t normally one to put much thought into something like sleeping. It was necessary, it happened, and then you woke and went on with your life. The idea that this one woman was worth simply watching while she slept was strange, very strange indeed.
As he adjusted his swollen crotch, he knew that watching her was not all he wanted to do. No, he wanted much, much more from the beautiful, magical lightbearer. He recognized the signs of shifter-born obsession, but he didn’t care. Even reminding himself of the scars that were a direct result of dallying with a forbidden woman didn’t help.
He wanted to sleep with the lightbearer. He wanted to lie on that bed with her, between her legs, and connect with her in the most primal way known to living beings.
Well, maybe not quite that primal. He certainly did not want to mate with her. He just wanted to fuck her until both their heads were spinning and they were too damn tired to do it even one more time.
He watched for a while longer, until his stomach rumbled loudly, reminding him that the last time he’d eaten had been the steak Carley had made for him last night—which even cold had been delicious. Not to mention the added benefit of his date having deserted him while he had been in the kitchen, discovering there was a lightbearer in his vicinity.
He reluctantly turned away from the sight of her gloriously naked body, shifted into the form of a bird, and flew away. First, he would find a hearty breakfast. Then he would retire to his own bed for a while, and then he would begin formulating a plan of attack. The lightbearer wouldn’t even know what hit her until he was already buried deep inside. Then, he doubted very much she would care, because he fully intended for her to be just as caught up in the moment as he knew he would to be.
*
“I don’t know what I’m doing.”
His laugh was loud, mocking. He’d presented such a perfect front to her parents, which made the cold, harsh reality that much harder to believe. But she had no choice. She was living that cold, harsh reality now.
“Are you kidding me? You’re still an innocent? I got a hell of a bargain, didn’t I?”
“What do you mean?” she asked. If what he implied was true, his words would cut deeply, all the way to the bone. To her heart.
He snorted and then pulled off his shirt and tossed it to the floor. “Your parents sold you to me, Carley Druthers. They were sick of having you around, but apparently couldn’t find any takers. I wasn’t exactly looking for a mate, but I sure as hell needed my gambling debts paid off. I suppose taking a mate is a fair price to pay. And now that you’re mine, I can do whatever the hell I want with you.”
Carley shrank away from him as he unsnapped his pants and then pushed them down his legs. He wore a pair of briefs underneath, and there was a bulge behind them that made her eyes widen. Her parents had done an amazing job of maintaining her innocence. Too amazing.
“Get undressed,” he commanded in that same harsh voice.
“I-I-I…” She began stuttering as her face flushed and her tongue suddenly stopped functioning.
“I said get undressed.” He reached for her, grabbed the front of her dress, and pulled. The fabric tore away, leaving a gaping hole that showed off the pale pink bra she wore underneath.
“I hate pink,” he snapped, and he cupped her shoulders and roughly turned her around. With a complete lack of decorum, he removed her bra and then twisted her to face him again, and gave her a shove, sending her sprawling on the bed on her back. She scrambled to sit up, but he’d lost all patience by that point.
He lay on top of her, the weight of his body making her feel as if she was suffocating. She gasped for breath and instinctively began wiggling, trying to get out from under him.
“Yeah, keeping doing that,” he said, and then she felt his hand as he gathered her skirt and pushed it out of the way. His hand was on her panties then, and a moment later, they were torn from her body and tossed over his shoulder.
This was what her girlfriends all mooned over every day?
“Miguel, please,” she said as she continued to struggle beneath his weight. He wasn’t even trying to keep from pressing her into the mattress, making it difficult for her to breathe.
“Oh don’t worry, I’m about to give it to you,” he promised, as if she’d asked him for something other than a chance to pull in a decent amount of oxygen. His hand slid between her knees, pushing them apart, and then his body fell between her legs, relieving some of the pressure on her sternum. She gasped as she sucked in air.
“Will it hurt?” she asked tentatively. She didn’t know her new mate. They’d hardly said three sentences to one another prior to the mating ceremony, which had only commenced that afternoon. Now, the sun dipped below the horizon and she was officially mated to another, and she still didn’t know anything about him—or the act of mating.
“It always hurts the first time,” he said as he slithered out of his briefs. “But you’ll get used to it.”
“Get used to it?” she echoed, thinking that wasn’t a very romantic way to describe what she had heard was supposed to be something very special between two mates.
“Oh yeah,” he said, and then he thrust.
* * * *
Carley came awake with a start, one moment thrashing about in her sleep, as if she was reliving the terrible nightmare, and the next, she was wide-awake, propped up on her palms and blinking at the window where the sunlight poured into her bedroom.
She sucked in several deep breaths, as if she truly had been suffocating while she’d been trapped in the nightmare. The fog cleared from her mind, and she reminded herself it was just a dream. It wasn’t real.
At least, not anymore.
She hadn’t had one in a while. When they didn’t happen, she didn’t even think about them, but when they did, they often managed to consume her life for at least a day afterward. She climbed out of bed and wrapped a thick terry cloth robe around her body. As she padded down the hall to the bathroom, she silently cursed that damn shifter for coming into her restaurant last night. No doubt his presence brought about the reminders of her past life, stirring the subconscious memories and causing the nightmare.
She shivered as she cranked the hot water in the bathtub. All the nightmares were bad, but that one, the memory of her first sexual experience, was one of the worst. She climbed into the blistering hot shower and hoped the steamy water would rinse away the remnants of the nightmare. There was no place in her life for those memories.
She was with the humans now, and if she could help it, Miguel would never, ever find her. Ever.
*
“Are you waiting for your dining companion, sir?”
The maître d’s nostrils quivered with recognition when Reid stepped into the restaurant on Saturday evening.
“No,” Reid said shortly, as he continued to gaze impassively at the tall, thin human who was, Reid suspected, normally a bully when it came to people’s desire to eat at his restaurant without a reservation. But Reid could be ten times the bully this man was.
“S-so would you care to dine at the bar?” the maître d’ suggested with a flourish of his hand.
“No.”
It took the man a moment to recover from his abrupt refusal, so Reid decided to make it easy. He was eager to be seated anyway.
“I want a table near the kitchen. As close as possible.”
“N-near the—the kitchen?” the man stuttered, clearly struggling to comprehend Reid’s intentions. Which was fine. He didn’t need the man to comprehend.
“Yes.”
He stared until the man’s entire body shook like a leaf, and then the maître d’ finally turned to the nearby podium and consulted his master floor plan. Finally, he pulled a menu out from behind the podium, cleared his throat several times, and said, “Right this way, please.”
Reid stuffed his hands into the pockets of his pants and followed. He’d dressed tonight in navy wool slacks and a blue V-neck sweater with a white T-shirt underneath. He recognized that he wasn’t quite up to this restaurant’s dress code, but he didn’t care.
He settled into his chair, ordered a bottle of excellent cabernet and a rare steak to go with it. He ignored the salad the server placed in front of him, and then he settled in to wait. He doubted it would take long for the lovely lightbearer to figure out he was in the building.
*
“Ohmigod, he’s back!” Sara, the server who’d waited on Reid the night before, hurried into the kitchen and made the announcement in a high-pitched, excited voice. She fanned herself with her notepad. “And he’s just as freaking hot as he was last night!”
Carley’s hand slipped, as she sliced thick chops from a smoked tenderloin, and she cursed as she nearly sliced off her own finger. She wasn’t a healer, so slicing off a finger would really not be a good thing. She took a deep breath and placed the knife on the wooden cutting board.
“I hardly think someone’s looks would change so drastically over the course of twenty-four hours’ time, Sara,” she chided, even as she thought, He’s here? Ohmigod, he’s here!
Her inner excitement was a fair replication of Sara’s enthusiasm.
“Are you talking about that guy who barged into our kitchen last night?” Vivian asked as she walked around the stainless-steel counter and peeked through one of the round windows carved into the swinging doors. She stepped back into the kitchen and said, “He’s sitting at that table that most people hate to sit at. It’s right outside the door. He can practically hear what we’re saying.”
Not practically. He was a shifter, so he could, without a doubt, hear every single thing they were saying, from that short distance.
“Back to work everyone,” Carley called out as she took a deep breath and resumed slicing the tenderloin.
A short time later, Sara returned. “He ordered a steak. Rare. And key lime pie.” She offered the ticket to Carley.
She waved it away. “Give it to Sean.”
All activity within the kitchen came to a stuttering halt.
“What?” Carley asked innocently.
Vivian spoke on behalf of the entire kitchen. “You make all the steaks, Carley. It’s your thing. And Sean’s brand new. He’s so green behind the ears that he probably doesn’t even know the difference between a butcher block and a butcher knife.”
Sean, the subject of her comment, turned puce in the face and stuttered that he did, indeed, know the difference between those two objects.
“I’ve had Sean’s steaks,” Carley insisted. “And there’s a reason we hired him so fresh from culinary school. It’s because he has talent. Now give him the ticket.”
Sara turned to Vivian for confirmation, and when that woman shrugged her shoulders, she handed the ticket to Sean. He eagerly stepped up to the open flames of the grill, and set to work trying to impress both his coworkers and the customer on the other side of the door.
* * * *
“He sent it back?” Carley asked in disbelief.
Sara nodded. “He said he can tell you didn’t make it, and he refuses to eat anything from this kitchen that does not come specifically from you. He suggested you could come out and talk to him about it.”
Carley shook her head and rolled her eyes. She would just bet he was open to her going out into the dining room to talk to him.
“Tell him I’m not making steaks tonight. Tell him I’m focusing on the vegetarian dishes,” she said suddenly. She grinned when Sara walked away. That ought to teach him.
The waitress returned a moment later. “He wants the vegetarian special,” she said. “And the key lime pie.” She tilted her head and gave Carley a quizzical look. “What’s going on with you and that guy? I thought you said you didn’t know him?”
“I don’t,” Carley insisted. “I know…someone close to him,” she said. She knew Tanner and his mother, Ariana, Finn, and Lisa, the shifters who were currently living in what had once been Carley’s home, the lightbearers’ coterie. Whether this shifter knew them or not, she had no idea. But they were the same species. That meant he was closer to them than any other species, right?
She washed her hands and nudged Eric away from the vegetable station. “He wants our vegetarian special? I’ll make him a vegetarian special,” she announced, and she set to work chopping every damn type of vegetable she could find.
When Sara returned with the empty plate from the shifter’s table, she held it up for Carley’s inspection and said, “He wants to speak to you. He said he’ll summon the manager if you don’t go out there.”
Carley’s heart sank. The manager would undoubtedly force the issue, if it was brought to his attention. He saw no reason why his chef wouldn’t want to go out into the dining room and schmooze customers.
“Fine,” she grumbled as she sliced a wedge from one of the key lime pies she had made earlier in the day. She deliberately dropped it onto its side on the plate and didn’t add garnish before shoving a few strands of hair behind her ear and stomping out of the kitchen.
“Here,” she said as she unceremoniously dropped the plate onto the table.
The shifter gave the sloppy slice of pie a cursory glance before lifting his pale blue eyes and focusing so wholly onto Carley that she was certain he saw absolutely nothing else in the room at the moment. How could someone be that focused? She didn’t think she’d ever had anyone pay her such full attention in her life.
She fidgeted, nervously twisting her hands together before she realized what she was doing and clasped them behind her back. The shifter continued to stare at her.
“You owe me for that one, Carley.”
She visibly jerked at the sound of his voice, low and deep and smooth as whiskey.
“For what?” she asked, wondering how in the world he knew her name and for what she could possibly owe him. As far as she knew, she’d never met the man before yesterday.
“That dinner. As enticing as it was eating something with your magical stamp on it, forcing me to eat vegetables does not put me in a particularly good mood.”
She blinked owlishly. “I didn’t force you to eat vegetables.”
“You refused to make me a steak.”
“Sean’s steaks are practically as good as mine,” she protested.
“‘Practically’ isn’t yours.”
With a great deal of effort, she pulled her gaze away from his and made a swift perusal around the restaurant. All human, and none were paying them any particular attention, other than the ones she knew were listening at the door behind her.
“Do I know you?” she asked.
“Not yet,” he replied.
She frowned. “What is that supposed to mean?”
His voice pitched low. “It means I intend to get to know you, every inch of you, from the inside out. I intend to possess you. I intend to do things—” He reached for her, and she pulled away as if he was about to hit her. He froze, midreach and midsentence. And then he slowly lowered his hand.
“You’ve been abused,” he stated, matter-of-factly.
She shook her head, trying to deny it. Don’t go there. Don’t go there.
“Past lover?”
She shook her head again. How had the conversation turned to this?
“Family member then.”
“No,” she finally managed to get out.
“Who?”
“Stop,” she said as she lifted her hand, palm facing out. “Just stop. This is none of your business. I don’t know you. I don’t even know your name, and I have no idea how you know mine. I—” He cut her off.
“My name is Reid. And one of your employees referred to you by name yesterday, when I went into the kitchen to meet you.”
“Fine. Fine. Reid. Look, Reid, obviously you know what I am, and I know what you are. So can we just be honest with each other? What do you want from me?”
“I was in the middle of telling you when you flinched away as if you expected I would hit you.”
Carley blew out a breath. Damned instincts. But it was hard to change the only way she knew how to interact with men.
“I don’t know how you found me, but—”
“It was purely by accident.”
She drew in a ragged breath. “Fine. By accident. Whatever. Look, I’m trying to establish a nice, normal life here. One that doesn’t involve shifters or lightbearers or anyone else from the magical community for that matter. That means there isn’t any room in that nice, normal life for you. So the best thing for you to do is just finish up that key lime pie and go back to whatever pack you came from, okay?”
“I can’t go back,” he replied. “And it isn’t acceptable that you have no room in your life for me.”
Was he serious? She stared at him. He certainly looked serious. If he was joking, he was doing a damn fine job of acting deadpan. Too fine a job.
“I don’t understand,” she finally said.
“Which part?”
She flapped her hand. “All of it. What do you mean, it isn’t acceptable? Since when do you have any say in my life?”
“Since I entered it and decided I want you.”
She stared again, her jaw falling open. “You want—”
“You.”
“Me?”
“Clearly it isn’t for your quick wit.”
She snapped her mouth shut and stabbed her finger at the restaurant entrance. “Get out of my restaurant. You can’t have me. Get out. Now.” She didn’t wait to see if he complied. She turned and stalked back into the kitchen with her head held stiffly, refusing to turn around and look at him again. She didn’t need to, to know he was watching her. Lights above, she could feel the intensity of his stare without having to look.
Just as soon as the kitchen door swung shut behind her, she leaned against the wall and took great, gasping breaths. Her entire body shook as if she was in shock. Hell, she probably was.
Someone thrust a glass into her hand. The stench of bourbon assaulted her nose.
“Drink,” Vivian commanded. Carley obediently drank and then sputtered and gasped when the amber liquid slid down her throat.
“What did he do to you?” Vivian demanded, clearly having decided she was coherent enough to speak of the incident.
“Nothing,” Carley said.
“Well, what happened, then? You’re shaking like a leaf. Something scared the crap out of you. What was it?”
Carley shook her head, but Vivian was a tenacious human being. Finally, Carley admitted, “I’ve never stood up to a man like that before.”
Vivian looked at her as if she’d just sprouted an alien head. Carley shook her head again.
“My father—he wasn’t exactly the most loving parent. And I ended up in a really bad relationship,” she said, conscious of the fact that she’d never spoken of this to anyone, not since the day she left the coterie, five months ago. “I never had the option to say no.” She smiled, just a little. “It sort of felt good.”
“Hell yeah, it did,” Vivian said fiercely. But then she frowned. “Problem with those types, though, is that they generally see someone like you as a challenge.”
“What does that mean?” Carley asked in alarm.
“It means that I doubt this is the last we’ve seen of Mr. Rare Steak.”
*
At noon the next day, Reid stood on the front porch of the three-story Victorian home Carley shared with half a dozen humans, all of whom worked at the same restaurant. He never knew humans were so pack-like. Working and living with the same people, day in and day out—he couldn’t imagine it, and he was a pack-like creature.
The dishwasher answered the door. Short, stocky guy with brown skin and thick, dark hair. His shrewd brown-eyed gaze swept over Reid’s person.
“Stalking her isn’t going to get her to sleep with you, bro,” he eventually commented, by way of greeting.
Reid lifted his eyebrows and gazed back at the shorter man. “Are you going to give me advice on what will?”
The dishwasher snorted. “Hell no. Even if I did know that answer, I sure as hell wouldn’t share it with you. Stay here. I’ll see if she’s willing to give you some face time.” And then he promptly slammed the door in Reid’s face.
Reid touched the peeling paint on the door. He felt residual magic there, although the wards were fairly old. At least a few weeks, maybe more. At some point, she’d warded the place against detection, and eventually stopped, or at least grew lax. The wards would have to be renewed regularly, as the magic, just like the lightbearer who created it, would weaken with time. He wondered who had frightened her so much that she would actually flinch away when he only meant to touch her gently, encouragingly, as he told her that he wanted to sleep with her.
Not a past lover, she’d said. Family member, he had guessed. She denied it, but then she’d refused to tell him more. But someone had done something to hurt her. The way she’d flinched away from him—that was a learned behavior. He understood learned behaviors, and he knew well how hard it was to break oneself of a habit forced upon you by someone else.
She obviously had an unpleasant past. Or at least something terrible in her past that caused her to react to him the way she had. She clearly wanted nothing to do with him. This would be no easy conquest he could bend to his will for a brief period of time, providing short-term mutual satisfaction, before he went on his way and they never spoke again.
So why was he here? Why was he pursuing her? Why did he feel as though he wanted her even more, despite—or because of—the issues that he really knew nothing about?
Because I can relate, a small voice whispered in his head.
Perhaps, he admitted grudgingly. But that didn’t mean it was a good idea.
The door opened again, revealing a different human, this one a male with ruddy skin and strawberry-blond hair that he kept closely cropped to his head. His eyes were bright blue, and he had a sprinkling of freckles across his nose. He was clearly young, although probably not as young as he looked.
“What’re you doing here?” the boy demanded.
“Waiting to speak to Carley.”
“She’s busy.”
“Doing what?”
“None of your beeswax.”
Charming. “The dishwasher was supposed to tell her I’m here.”
“Roman? He did. And she said to go away.”
The kid was lying. Reid could tell by the way his gaze darted to the side as he said the words. He started to flush, as well.
“I cannot abide liars,” Reid said in his low, dangerous voice. The one that intimidated most humans.
The kid flushed darker and dropped his gaze to stare at the ground. “How come you didn’t like my steak?” he finally blurted.
“You must be Sean.”
“Yeah. What of it?” Sean asked defensively.
“I didn’t eat your steak.”
“Why not?”
“Carley didn’t make it.”
“So? My steaks are good too, you know.”
“They might very well be, but I’m not trying to sleep with you.”
The kid’s face darkened until he was almost purple. Reid wondered if he would have to perform CPR.
“You can’t have her,” Sean finally managed to say on a wheeze.
“Your protective instincts are noble, but I hope you can understand that I really don’t care about your opinion on the matter.”
Sean’s mouth opened and closed several times as he appeared to simultaneously try to breathe and speak, and succeeded at doing neither very well. Someone stepped up behind him, and both men lifted their gazes and looked at Carley hovering in the doorway.
“Sean, come inside,” she ordered, and he gave Reid a nasty glare before following her direction. She held the door partially closed, neither stepping outside nor retreating into the house.
“Why are you here?” she asked warily.
“The same reason I was at the restaurant yesterday. Are you going to invite me inside?”
“No.”
“Then come outside. It’s cold, but the sun is shining, and I know you need to regenerate.”
“I’m fine,” she said stiffly.
“No, you aren’t. You work too hard, and those artificial lights do not regenerate your magic nearly as well as the sun does.”
“Since when are you an expert on lightbearers?” she asked snottily.
“The way you regenerate your magic is common knowledge, Carley. Walk with me. There’s a coffee shop a few blocks away. I haven’t been sleeping well these past two nights, and I could use a cup.”
“I’m not going anywhere alone with you.” The wariness was back in her voice and her stance.
She didn’t trust him. His initial reaction was that he did not want or need it, but he recognized that if he had any remote possibility of taking her to bed, he would have to earn her trust first.
“Fine,” he said as he bit back a sigh. “I’ll come inside with you. Spending time with your human bodyguards ought to convince you that I mean no harm, right?”
Carley’s eyes widened. “They aren’t my bodyguards.”
“Human shields, then. Whatever you want to call them, you keep them close as a means of keeping other magical beings at bay.”
Carley gasped at his suggestion. “They aren’t human shields. They are great people, and I would never intentionally put a single one into danger.”
“Then you certainly expect your enemies to play by the rules, don’t you?”
Just as he expected, she sputtered nonsense about not having enemies, other than himself, of course.
“I’m not your enemy.”
“Yes, you are. Your kind has been our enemy since the dawn of light.”
“That may be so, but I’m pretty certain the war is ending. Last I heard, the heir to the lightbearer throne has mated to a shifter.”
The look on her face told him the rumor he’d heard was true.
“Tanner Lyons has indeed taken the lightbearer heir to mate, then? You do know he is the legitimate heir to his own shifter pack as well, don’t you?”
“He doesn’t want it,” Carley said with a surprisingly fierce pride. As if she personally knew Tanner and his opinions on the matter. Interesting.
“I believe they’ve gathered as much. Those who were not dispersed to other packs are trying to re-form some semblance of a pack as we speak. Unfortunately, the former pack master did not do a good job of training them to be leaders, so the process is not going well.”
“Really?” Carley asked, clearly intrigued despite herself. “The pack master died almost a year ago.”
“Eight months, actually. So what is your connection to the errant pack master’s son?” he asked, hoping to catch her off guard, so that she might actually give him a tidbit of information. Tanner had left the pack almost eleven years previously, but Reid remembered him as nothing at all like his father. He wondered how Tanner was faring, living amongst the lightbearers.
Her chin lifted in defiance, telling him she was no easy mark. “There is no connection,” she said haughtily. He wondered at her tone, but knew better than to ask. Instead, he deliberately took a step forward, closing the space between them. As he anticipated, she instinctively took a step back, leaving plenty enough opening for him to push his way into the house’s foyer.
“Was it a shifter who abused you, Carley?” he asked softly, his gaze intent on her face.
“Get out,” she whispered, her voice almost a hiss, as she glanced around and no doubt counted how many humans were within shouting range. He could tell by their breathing that each and every one was attempting to eavesdrop on their conversation.
“Tell me.”
She ground her teeth, and then finally answered him. “No.” The word was clipped, short, firm. But it was enough.
Reid deliberately raised his voice. “It’s cold outside. I could have sworn you offered me a warm drink, since you refused to go with me to the coffee shop.”
“Just made a fresh pot,” someone shouted from somewhere.
Reid flashed a grin at the frustrated lightbearer. “Excellent,” he said, and he followed his nose in the direction of the kitchen, knowing full well she would follow in his wake.
*
Sean was in the kitchen, making himself a ham and cheese sandwich. He scowled at Reid as he entered the room.
“Get out,” Reid barked, and the younger man scurried away.
“Don’t bully my friends,” Carley snapped. She watched him open and close cabinets until he found the one filled with mismatched glasses and mugs. He pulled out a chipped coffee mug with the words Cooks Do It Better scrawled across the side in blue print. He filled it with dark liquid and then lifted it to his lips while he propped his hip against the counter.
“I wasn’t bullying him. I just wanted a few minutes alone with you.”
“We’re hardly alone here,” she warned him. Don’t try anything magical, buddy. Not unless you want to break magical cardinal rule number one.
He sipped at the hot coffee. “I’m not going to hurt you, Carley.”
“You keep saying that. The thing is, I don’t believe you.”
“What will it take to convince you?”
Her gaze shifted to the side, and she ran her hand through hair that was still damp from a recent shower. “I don’t know. Not be magical, I guess.”
“We both know that isn’t an option. So what else will work?”
“Nothing,” she snapped, as her gaze darted to the nearest door again, checking to ensure no humans were lurking too closely. “You’re a shifter, and I’m a lightbearer. We aren’t meant to be together.”
“I believe we just clarified that a pack master’s son mated with your king’s daughter. Last time I checked, Tanner was a shifter, and I assume your king’s daughter is a lightbearer.”
“They’re an exception to the rule.” As were Cecilia and Finn. She’d also heard rumor that Dane Metaldyne was keeping house with that slightly scary female shifter, Lisa. But that did not mean Carley would ever consider it. She had no intention of considering any sort of liaison with anyone, ever again.
“And I believe we also clarified that whoever hurt you in the past was not a shifter.”
“No, but he was male.” She felt like a cornered animal. She did not like that he was pressuring her. Although she had pushed back once, and there had not been dire consequences.
“Look, Reid, I’m not interested, okay? I don’t know what it will take to convince you, but you aren’t my type.”
“What is your type?”
“I have no idea,” she admitted before she could stop the words.
“I’m not that type.”
“What type?”
“The one who abused you. I don’t abuse women. I’ve always tended more toward worshipping them. I think, if you give it half a chance, you’ll discover that I am, in fact, exactly your type.”
“You’re overbearing.”
“Yes, I am,” he acknowledged with a small nod. He continued to sip coffee, looking as casual as he pleased.
“And obsessive,” she added, thinking that insult would put him off.
“True. A trait inherent to my species, I’m afraid.”
Her mouth dropped open for a moment. She hadn’t expected him to agree with what she meant to be an insult.
“I’m not leaving, Carley,” he murmured, so low she knew no one else could hear, even if they were listening at the door. “You’ve been hurt, and I recognize that means you need time. I can wait. But I won’t leave.”