—And imagine how confused she must be. She’s starving, imprisoned, and friendless in a strange new dimension. If you won’t bring her food she can tolerate, I’ll toss some game in there. Maybe keep her company. You could conjure a chess set for us.— Sian scowled. —She is bold, but that doesn’t mean she won’t be afraid at times.— Sian’s mate. Afraid. Damn Uthyr for plucking that instinct string! Over his endless lifetime, Sian had pondered one question more than any other: What if she returns . . . different? Already she seemed to be. —She’s affecting you, demon. Your rages are much less severe.— Mates were thought to center each other, bringing clarity and steadiness. Was she neutralizing his uncontrollable aggression? —You won’t even attempt to seduce her?— Sian shook his head. —Why not?— “Because it will end in failure.” —What would you lose by trying? This strikes me as abysmal, Abyssian.— “Damn it, dragon, I don’t know how. Before my transformation, my seduction arsenal consisted of one tried-and-true move: a crook of my finger. I beckoned, and females fought over me.” Everyone except his mate. “I never needed anything more. Yet you think someone like me could tempt an exquisite fey?” —I will assist your endeavors with seduction. In the form of a man, I was quite good at it.— Was Sian actually about to take advice on this subject from a fucking dragon? Before he could stop himself, he’d grated, “What would be your first move?” —I’ll help you, but only if you swear off the cruelty. I won’t put forth the effort just to have you undermine it.— “Very well. I swear off the cruelty. For now.” Nod. —First, you need to provide her with comforts. If you give her a bed, she will think of you favorably whenever she’s in it. The same with clothes. Then you invite her to dinner. Afterward the two of you could explore the castle, and you’d let her pick out treasures for herself.— Graven was a type of time capsule. The thousand rooms throughout the seven towers were filled with mystical goods—art, jewels, weapons, clothing, and more—preserved since his foresires had first created this castle. As boys, Sian and Goürlav had played among those rooms, calling them the attics of the gods. The two brothers had once been inseparable. After Sian’s return from Sylvan, they’d never been as close. How could they have been? Yet another thing Kari had stolen from him. . . . —You could delight your mate with the marvels here.— Reminded of his rage, Sian snapped, “She deserves no delight.” Uthyr tapped his chin with a long talon, innocently asking, —Didn’t she call your home a “pathetic excuse for a castle”?— The little witch had. She must’ve compared Graven to the stately castle in that Magic Kingdom and found the demons’ seat of power lacking. But so far she’d seen only a derelict tower and a cavern here. He scrubbed his hand over his nape, recalling an exchange between himself and Kari: “Do your kind truly burrow in the ground?” she asked with a shudder. “Some live in the underworld of the Abyss.” As his ancestors had before Graven had been completed. “But we also have temples of solid gold and a grand castle.” “Grand?” She scoffed. “I suspect your definition of the word does not match my own.” Sian stopped pacing. “If you were a talented seducer as a man, that would have been millennia ago. What do you know of modern females?” Uthyr cast him a fang-filled grin. —I watch soaps.—
NINETEEN