He moved then, a mere casual ripple of muscles, but he was standing without any effort, Jaxon in his arms. “You must eat, little one. You are wasting away right in front of me.”
“You pick me up so much, I thought you’d appreciate the fact that I’m not carrying extra pounds.”
Lucian plopped her down on the counter. “You are not going to try to tell me you do not eat because you worry I will not be able to pick you up.”
She crossed her legs and arched one eyebrow. “I was more worried you’d strain your back.” She tried not to watch the way the muscles rippled suggestively beneath the thin white silk of his shirt.
He laughed softly at her outrageous suggestion as he began to put together a base for a soup. “You will not disobey me again, Jaxon, not when it comes to matters of safety.”
“‘Disobey’? Interesting word. I don’t think I really fully understand the meaning of the word, being a grown woman and all.”
“Grown woman. Is that what you call it? You think you are as grown as you are going to get? A frightening thought.”
“I hope you don’t really think I’m going to obey you,” Jaxon said softly, meaning it. She leaned over to get his attention. “You don’t, do you?”
He shrugged with that casual grace, the movement that always took her breath away. “I have never had to ask more than once.”
She sat back with a quick frown. “What does that mean? You wouldn’t dare to use that threatening voice of yours on me.”
He looked up from his task, his black gaze holding hers. “You would never know if I were, would you?” His voice was very, very soft.
Jaxon jumped to the floor, barely restraining herself from kicking him in the shins. “I’ve had enough of this. You know, it isn’t as if you’re asking me to accept some weird aunt in your family or something. You’re not exactly the everyday, average fiancй. I’m not changing who I am for you. I worked my way up in the department because I’m good at what I do. I’m very good. Have a little respect.”
He stirred the soup without changing expression. “You think I have no respect for you and the things you have had to cope with in your life? You cannot possibly think that. You are angry for no reason, Jaxon. I cannot change who I am either. It is my sworn duty to care for you. It was imprinted on me before my birth. Do you think that changes because you are mortal?”
“Oh, God, the mortal thing again. At least someone actually gave birth to you. That’s a relief.” She pushed a hand through her hair. “Look at me, Lucian.”
At her command, he turned obediently. She examined his face intently, a slow sweep of his sensual features before her gaze rested thoughtfully on his black eyes. “I would know. You would never even attempt to hide such a thing from me. You’d feel guilty.”
“I would never feel guilty for forcing you to care for your health, angel. Do not make the mistake of giving me too much credit. I would feel guilty for concealing things from you, true. It is not right between lifemates. In any case, you have only to examine my mind.”
Jaxon found herself laughing at the thought. “I can barely comprehend the things you tell me. I’m certainly not going to go trotting around in a brain that’s several centuries old. That’s just asking for trouble. How is it you can sound modern—sort of—if you’re really so darned ancient?”
Lucian turned back to his soup. “It is not hard. I study and adapt quickly to new environments. It is necessary when one wishes to fit in. Sit at the table.”
She tapped her foot. “The smell is not making me sick. That’s you, isn’t it? You’re doing something so I can smell food without feeling sick.”
“Yes.” He saw no reason to deny it. “It is necessary that you eat. I do not want to make the decision to bring you over because you are unable to take sustenance. That would not be right.”
Bring you over.
Jaxon found a chair and sat down in it rather abruptly. Why did that sound like something straight out of a vampire novel? She waved a hand dismayingly in the air at him. “No more of that. Don’t think it, and don’t ever say it again. I’m getting used to the ‘centuries’ thing, but the ‘bring you over’ thing is too much.”
Lucian placed a bowl of soup in front of her. His mind, connected as it was with hers, assumed the lead. He built the feeling of hunger in her. The idea that the broth smelled delicious and she wanted to eat it. He commanded her body not to reject it and reinforced the order with a “push” so there would be no mistakes. Very gently he rested a hand on her shoulder, needing the physical contact with her.
Never once had he allowed himself to express what he had felt when he realized she was leaving the house. He examined it now, there in the kitchen, turning the unfamiliar emotion over and over in his mind.
Fear
. He had been afraid for her. Not that Drake would find her, but of having to use her to destroy Drake. He would not want her to have to face such a thing.
Fear
. Fear that a vampire would discover her away from the protection he had woven for her within the grounds and the house.
Fear
. He had never experienced such an emotion. It had been gut-wrenching.
Lucian tangled his fingers in the wealth of her blond hair. She tipped her head back to look up at him, surprised by the way his fist was clenched in her hair. “What is it? What are you thinking about?” There was no expression on his face, nothing in his eyes to give him away, but Jaxon was beginning to know him. That small telltale sign of tension revealed that his thoughts had not been pleasant. “Tell me.”
“I feared for you. Earlier, when you were away from the safety of the house.” Lucian did not think to avoid the truth.
Jaxon responded immediately, wrapping her fingers around the thickness of his wrist. “You said yourself that I was perfectly safe.”
“From Drake, you were safe,” he admitted, staring down at her hand in wonder. Her fingers didn’t even curl halfway around his wrist, yet she wielded so much power over him. “Drake cannot harm you.”
“He has power, Lucian. He could get to Barry. I know you think you’re invincible, but a sniper’s bullet can kill from a great distance, and Drake is an excellent marksman. He doesn’t have to face you.” She ducked her head. “That’s how Drake can harm me. That’s how he’s always done it—through someone else, someone who matters to me. That’s why I don’t want to be with you.”
Above her head he found himself smiling. “You are beginning to have feelings for me.”
“Keep telling yourself that,” she told him. “This soup is good. I’m surprised you know how to cook.” She didn’t want to examine too closely or allude in any real way to what he did or didn’t eat. Now wasn’t the time to scare herself to death. She stood up carefully, moving away from him in a feminine little retreat he found secretly amusing.
Everything she did was like that. It lit him up inside. Filled him with warmth. Made him want to smile. More than that, he
had
to smile. He watched as she very carefully, very domestically, washed out the bowl and spoon.
Jaxon caught him watching her. “What?” She sounded defensive.
“I like watching you,” he admitted easily. “I like having you in my house.”
She tried not to let him see how much his words pleased her. Maybe she was just lonely. Maybe she was entirely too susceptible to his beautiful eyes. His voice. Or maybe his mouth. Or maybe it was because he was drop-dead gorgeous. She sighed aloud. “I’m going upstairs to rest for a while. Life with you is way too much excitement for me.”