Ulrik ground his teeth together. Muriel’s hand tightened on his arm. He glanced down at her to find her red eyes on him.
Was that concern he saw there? The Dark Fae should know not to waste such emotions on him. He knew how to take care of himself.
“Let’s sit,” Mikkel said and pulled Sinny to her feet before walking her to a table already set for dinner, complete with lit candles.
Ulrik helped Muriel into her chair at the round table. He placed her across from her sister so Ulrik could keep an eye on his uncle.
“It’s about time Ulrik found a companion,” Mikkel said, his sly smile directed at Ulrik.
“I’m the lucky one,” Muriel said.
Mikkel’s gold eyes slid to her. “I expected you to keep him occupied for one night, but it seems you’re good enough in bed to hook him.”
“Mikkel,” Ulrik warned.
Muriel placed a hand on Ulrik’s knee under the table. “I am very good at what I do,” she told Mikkel.
“So it would seem.” Mikkel held her gaze for long moments. “Ulrik has never minded sharing.”
It was obvious that his uncle was trying to bait him, but Ulrik had thousands of years of practice. It was going to take more than a reminder that one of his assets had been working for Mikkel. Losing Abby had been a blow, but it was the last time his uncle would put one over on him.
Muriel smiled pleasantly at Mikkel. “I share no one’s bed but Ulrik’s for as long as he wants me.”
“Or as long as Taraeth allows it,” Mikkel said and motioned to a servant to pour the wine.
Ulrik swirled the red liquid in his glass before he took a drink. “It was your idea to send Muriel to me, Mikkel. I suppose it was to make sure I didna find your people rummaging through my store.”
Mikkel laughed out loud. “I was beginning to think you hadn’t known.”
“Twice now you’ve been there. Did you find what you were looking for?”
Mikkel set down his stemless wineglass and eyed Ulrik. “I wanted to make sure you weren’t hiding anything from me.”
Ulrik was hiding quite a lot, but Mikkel would never find it. “We made a deal.”
“So we did.”
The seconds of silence stretched as they stared at each other. Ulrik could kill Mikkel right there. There were two reasons he let his uncle continue breathing. One, because eventually Con would learn about Mikkel, and it would keep him guessing as to who was attacking, him or Mikkel.
Two, he was going to crush Mikkel and slowly take away everything he craved—his money, his power, and his connections. It had already begun, though Mikkel didn’t know it yet.
Nor would he until the very end.
“Shall we eat?” Sinny asked as she leaned up and touched Mikkel’s arm.
His attention swiveled to the Dark using glamour. “Of course.”
Ulrik had found another weakness of Mikkel’s—Sinny. Not only did he not know he was being spied upon by one of Taraeth’s assets, but he was well and truly smitten.
CHAPTER
TWENTY-TWO
The alarm on Lexi’s phone woke her. She reached over and turned it off before she let out a sigh and flopped back on the bed.
She was leaving Scotland. Her last few hours would be all she had left of such a terrifying time. But not all of it had been terrible. There was Thorn.
And his kiss that set her soul ablaze.
That kiss was burned into her memory. It was a kiss she’d thought only existed in fantasies. The kind of kiss that changed her entire world and made her crave him as if he were the only thing that could keep her alive.
All night she had lain in bed hoping Thorn would return to the flat. The more time that passed and he didn’t, the more the ache in her chest grew.
It was ridiculous, right? She’d just met Thorn. She knew next to nothing about him.
That part wasn’t entirely true. She’d learned a great deal from Darius, but some of it she knew by Thorn’s actions alone.
Christina used to say that everyone had someone out there for them, and if Lexi wasn’t careful, she wouldn’t be paying attention well enough to see him.
“Well, I saw him, Christina,” she whispered.
Lexi threw off the covers and rose. She spotted Darius standing by the windows overlooking the front of the building as he had done all night.
“Morning,” she said.
He raised a hand, but didn’t utter a sound. Lexi shook her head and went to take a shower. It didn’t take her long to get ready and make sure all of her things were packed.
She zipped her suitcase and stood. Darius was watching her with a peculiar expression on his face when she exited the bathroom. “What?” she asked.
“I expected you to put up a fight about leaving.”
Lexi grabbed the handle of her suitcase and rolled it behind her to the door. “I thought about it, but the truth is, I don’t have the money to stay. I feel okay about leaving because Thorn gave me his word he would kill the Dark. I left the sketch I drew on the nightstand.”
“You accept his word so easily?”
“I do. Why does that surprise you?”
Darius blew out a breath. “You surprise me, Lexi Crawford. That doesna happen often.”
He took her suitcase and carried it down the stairs and set it on the sidewalk. Then he waved over a taxi. While Darius put the suitcase in the trunk, Lexi looked around for Thorn.
“To the airport, please,” she told the driver after she got in the car.
Lexi was reaching over to close the door when Darius grabbed it. She had no choice but to move over when he climbed in beside her.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
Darius held out her purse. “You almost forgot this.”
She had put it in her luggage, completely forgetting she was going to need her passport as well as her money. Her mind was so focused on Thorn that she was surprised she managed to get her jeans on the right way.
“Thanks,” she said and took it. “But you still haven’t told me what you’re doing here.”
“What does it look like?” he asked as he gazed out the window.
Lexi rolled her eyes. “Are you afraid I won’t get on the plane?”
“I promised I would see you safely to the airport. That’s what I’m doing.”
Thorn. Thorn had made Darius promise to accompany her. Even when he wasn’t with her, he was looking out for her. No one had done that except for her father and her mother—when she wasn’t drunk.
They rode in silence to the airport. Every mile away from the city center meant she was farther and farther from Thorn.
By the time the cab stopped at the airport, it was all Lexi could do to keep a smile in place. Darius was a gentleman and got her luggage.
She tried to take it from him, but he gave her a look and paid for the taxi. There was a mixture of shock and surprise as she watched the cab drive off.
Lexi had to run to catch up with Darius when he walked off. “You didn’t have to do any of this,” she told him.
“We keep our promises.”
We meaning the Dragon Kings. If she ever had any doubt, she didn’t now. “Thank you.”
He stood beside her in line as she got her boarding pass and checked her luggage. They walked slowly to the security line where she knew he couldn’t go.
“It was nice meeting you, Darius.”
He smiled as he put his hand on her back and ushered her to the left where there was a small niche with chairs. There, a man with long honey brown hair and pale brown eyes stood.
“Guy,” Darius said.
“Darius,” he answered in return. Then Guy’s gaze moved to her. “So this is Lexi. Nice to meet you.”
It didn’t take a brainiac to realize Guy was another Dragon King. That’s not what concerned her. It was his presence.
“I’d like to say the same if I knew why you were here,” she replied.
Guy’s smile widened. “I came to meet you, of course.”
“Because I’m the idiot who led the Dark right to Thorn and Darius?”
Guy’s eyes narrowed a fraction as he sent a quick glance to Darius. “Is that right?”
“Look, you don’t have to worry,” she said to them. “I’m not going to tell anyone the things I’ve seen. The Dark are blatantly roaming the streets and the police thought I was nuts. Can you image what would happen if I mentioned dragons? I prefer to remain out of mental institutions, thank you very much.”