eyes.
“Da,” she said, serious, cocking her head to one side. “I’ve decided. I’m old enough now for a little brother.”
Gaelan looked over at Seraene. She was beaming. She put her hand on her belly.
“This? This is how you tell me?!” he demanded.
She laughed.
By all the gods that were and all the gods that had never been, how he missed Seraene’s laugh.
* * *
The pleasures rolled over Gaelan – and passed, leaving him cold. Gwinvere was astride him, clad only in those delicate golden chains. She stopped once he finished, not having climaxed herself. This was business for her, after all, not pleasure. But she didn’t get off him.
She stared at him, her hair tussled, figure magnificent, letting him bask in her radiance, letting him store up the image of a woman of her supernal beauty, making love with him. She leaned over him, and something like pity flashed through her eyes.
“You are a god clad in flesh, Gaelan Starfire, and you’re more fragile than you know.
Be ware.”
She lay on his chest and tucked her head into his shoulder, but just for a moment. The room was cool, and he was warm; maybe she was just appreciating that physical warmth and nothing more. She got up almost immediately. She began dressing, and he knew with a cynical twinge that she must have practiced dressing like this in a looking glass, because every move was graceful. She wasn’t just a whore; she was an artist, and this last impression he would carry of her was as important to her as the first.
“I want to fuck again,” he said. “Now.” This time he wouldn’t think of Seraene.
Gwinvere was a wonder. He should appreciate her. He should please her.
“So do I, but I’ve three other men to bed before dawn, a fourth if he’s kind.”
“Was I your first – ” He cut off. Ridiculous question. He couldn’t believe he’d asked it. He didn’t know where it had come from.
“Yes, Gaelan, I was a virgin until just now,” she said flatly.
“I meant of the night,” he said in a rush, flustered. “Never you mind. Stupid question.”
She looked at him, hesitated. “You’re magnificent. Distracted, but magnificent. Let’s fuck tomorrow, after I finish dinner with the ambassador. Then you can tell me if you accept my business proposal.”
Proposal? She hadn’t even asked for anything yet.
* * *
A few minutes later, Gaelan pushed through a fog of riotweed, through which he saw the vague outlines of the debauched. Silent servants, costumed uniformly as black horses with blinkered eyes, tended to those who’d overindulged, carrying off those who were ill, tucking pillows under the heads of the unconscious, and covering nude bodies with blankets. The earl’s wife, now wearing nothing but her swan mask and one silk stocking, ran toward Gaelan squealing, pursued by two lascivious lords whose masks had fallen off.
Before she could run into him, or look to him for protection that she really didn’t want, Gaelan ducked into a noisy side room. Musicians were sitting behind an opaque curtain, muscling out a bastardized version of Haranese tribal beat. Two older lords smoking ornate bowls of riotweed were watching a third lord as he danced with a woman. Gwinvere.
The big ape had his fist wrapped around Gwinvere’s slender neck. She ground into him sinuously, her back to him, running her hands down his hips.
She saw Gaelan, missed one beat, and then continued dancing. As she took fistfuls of the young lord’s trousers and pulled him tight against her ass, she didn’t look away.
Gaelan did. He ducked out into the party, and then out into the night.
He was followed.
* * *
Whoever was following Gaelan, he was good. Very good. But Gaelan had options.
The hunted always has options, and Gaelan’s futures spun out as simply as the different men he’d been over the last 680 years. Different men, different choices, different futures, splitting:
As a young man, the man he’d been born, as Prince Acaelus Thorne,