keep her loving him. Keep her happy. He wanted to keep her beautifully naked and steeped in pleasures.
More than anything, he wanted to keep her.
The hours were whizzing by so quickly, tumbling into days so that he was losing track of time himself. What did time matter now, to either of them?
He could give her anything she wanted here. Anything and everything. What would she miss of the life she had outside? It was ordinary and tedious. Hadnât she said so herself? He would see that she never missed what had been. Before long she wouldnât even think of it. The life before would be the dream.
Â
He taught her to ride, and she was fearless. When he thought of how sheâd clung to him in terror when heâd pulled her up onto Dilis the first time, he rationalized the change by saying she was simply quick to learn. He hadnât changed her basic nature, or forced her will.
That was beyond his powers and the most essential rule of magic.
When she galloped off into the forest, her laughter streaming behind her, he told himself he let his mind follow her only to keep her from harm.
Yet he knew, deep inside himself, that if she traveled near the edge of his world, he would pull her back.
He had that right, Flynn thought, as his hands fisted at his sides. He had claimed her. What he claimed during his imprisonment was his to keep.
âThat is the law.â He threw his head back, scowling up at the heavens. âIt is your law. She came to me. By rights of magic, by the law of this place, she is mine. No power can take her from me.â
When the sky darkened, when lightning darted at the black edges of clouds, Flynn stood in the whistling wind, feet planted in challenge. His hair blew wild around his face, his eyes went emerald-bright. And the power that was his, that could not be taken from him, shimmered around him like silver.
In his mind he saw Kayleen astride the white horse. She glanced uneasily at the gathering storm, shivered in the fresh chill of the wind. And turned her mount to ride back to him.
She was laughing again as she raced out of the trees. âThat was wonderful!â She threw her arms recklessly in the air so that Flynn gripped the halter to keep Dilis steady. âI want to ride every day. I canât believe the feeling .â
Feeling, he thought with a vicious tug of guilt, was the one thing he wouldnât be able to offer her much longer.
âCome, darling.â He lifted his arms up to her. âWeâll put Dilis down for the night. A stormâs coming.â
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She welcomed it too. The wind, the rain, the thunder. It stirred something in her, some whippy thrill that made her feel reckless and bold. When Flynn set the fire to blaze with a twist of his hand, her eyes danced.
âI donât suppose you could teach me to do that?â
He glanced back at her, the faintest of smiles, the slightest lift of brow. âI canât, no. But youâve your own magic, Kayleen.â
âHave I?â
âIt binds me to you, as Iâve been bound to no other. I will give you a boon. Any that you ask that is in my power to give.â
âAny?â A smile played around her mouth now as she looked up at him from under her lashes. The blatantly flirtatious move came to her much more naturally than sheâd anticipated. âWell, thatâs quite an offer. Iâll have to consider very carefully before making any decision.â
She wandered the room, trailing a fingertip over the back of the sofa, over the polished gleam of a table. âWould that offer include, say, the sun and the moon?â
Look at her, he thought. She grows more beautiful by the hour. âSuch as these?â He held out his hands. From them dripped a string of luminous white pearls with a clasp of diamonds.
She laughed, even as her breath caught. âThose arenât bad, as an example. Theyâre magnificent, Flynn. But I didnât ask for diamonds
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