Chapter 6 #2
“Well.” I settled more comfortably against the wall beside him, our shoulders almost touching. “I am extremely qualified to have opinions about craft. I once spent six weeks learning to make candles and they were deeply mediocre. I know excellence when I see it.”
His laugh was low and genuine and warmed the whole room.
We sat like that for a while—the tome, the tokens, the half-finished charm between us, and the morning settling around us like something we'd earned.
He told me of his clan's mountain stronghold, of their history as guardians of ancient knowledge, of traditions that stretched back before humans had built their first cities.
I found myself captivated not just by the content, but by the way he spoke—measured, thoughtful, occasionally wry.
“We should venture out,” he suggested eventually. “You need fresh air. And the bond grows stronger with movement.”
I dressed in the clothes provided by the Sanctuary—practical garments designed for comfort rather than style, though they fit better than expected. Rakthar watched me with those intense eyes but made no move to assist or interfere. Only when I was ready did he stand, offering his massive hand.
“Is that actual magical fact or are you just trying to get me to exercise?” I asked suspiciously. “Because I should warn you, my relationship with physical activity is complicated at best.”
“Actual fact. Though exercise would not harm you.”
“Rude. Accurate, but rude.”
The Sanctuary's common areas were busy with other newly bonded pairs and staff. As we entered the central garden, I became acutely aware of the reactions our presence elicited. Conversations faltered. Eyes darted our way, then quickly averted. A path cleared before us without Rakthar saying a word.
“They fear you,” I murmured, pressing closer to his side.
“They respect power,” he corrected, his hand warm against my lower back. “As they should.”
I should have been embarrassed by the attention. Instead, I found myself standing taller, some unexpected and possibly ill-advised pride blooming in my chest. This formidable creature was mine. Take that, everyone who said the matching program was a death sentence.
A Sanctuary worker approached, clipboard in hand, looking like he'd rather be literally anywhere else. “The mountain male must sign additional—”
“My mate,” Rakthar interrupted, his voice dangerously soft, “has a name. As do I.”
The worker paled visibly. “Apologies. Rakthar of the Mountain Clans and Aliana. There are additional acclimation forms required for your particular bond type.”
I expected Rakthar to growl, perhaps flip a table. Instead, he simply extended his hand for the clipboard, his movements controlled and precise. “We will review them in private.”
The efficiency with which he handled the bureaucracy surprised me. No bluster, no threats—just calm assertion of boundaries.
When we returned to our quarters, forms properly completed and submitted, I found myself studying him with new eyes.
“You're really good at paperwork for someone who lives in a mountain fortress,” I observed.
“One does not survive treaty negotiations with humans without understanding their love of documentation,” he replied, settling back with his book of clan laws.
“That's surprisingly pragmatic.”
“I contain multitudes,” he said, and there was the faintest deliberate quality to it—like he'd used those exact words before and found them useful.
“You've said that to me already,” I told him.
His eyes flicked up from the page. “Has it stopped being true?”
I thought about the clan law tome and the carved tokens and the corruption revelation delivered with the careful steadiness of someone who'd thought about how to say it. “No,” I admitted. “It really hasn't.”
He seemed content to return to his studies after that, and I felt the pleasant restlessness of someone whose body was still humming with new awareness.
This creature who could silence a room with his presence, who read ancient texts and carved delicate charms, who had sat up in the dark keeping a promise I was asleep for—he was becoming more fascinating by the hour.
And more attractive, which seemed physically impossible but was apparently happening anyway.
I approached where he sat, heart pounding in a way that was completely different from this morning's anger and only slightly less unnerving. When he looked up, I didn't hesitate.
I straddled his massive thighs, hands coming to rest on his shoulders, trying to project confidence while internally composing my will.
“You said you would wait for me to ask,” I said, voice steadier than I felt. “I'm asking now.”
His eyes darkened, but he remained still beneath me, every muscle controlled. “Asking what, little mate?”
“Show me more,” I whispered, leaning closer, intoxicated by his scent, his warmth, the controlled power I could feel vibrating beneath his skin. “Not just the claiming. Not just the bond. Show me you.”
His massive hands came to rest on my hips, neither pulling me closer nor pushing me away—the same deliberate restraint as always, the same choice made again. “Are you certain? Once begun, there are depths to my kind's pleasure that may overwhelm you.”
I pressed my forehead to his, an intimacy that was somehow more frightening than our first coupling.
“I'm starting to think there are depths to you that would overwhelm anyone.
But I'm not afraid.” I smiled, surprised by how true it felt.
“Though I reserve the right to tap out if things get too weird. I have boundaries. Vague, poorly defined boundaries, but boundaries nonetheless.”
The sound that vibrated through his chest wasn't quite a growl, wasn't quite a purr, but something primal that made my insides clench with anticipation. “No tapping out,” he murmured against my lips. “But I will catch you if you fall.”
“That's either very romantic or very ominous.”
“Both,” he said, and claimed my mouth with a kiss that made my earlier concerns about boundaries seem adorably naive.
As his hands began to move, as his mouth traced patterns of heat down my throat, I thought—briefly, clearly, before thought became difficult—that I had been angry this morning.
That the anger had been real and right and was not gone.
That the system was broken and the floor had been thinner than I was told and some people within it had looked the other way.
And that somehow, improbably, I had ended up here anyway. In this room. Choosing this.
The thought dissolved as his lips found my collarbone, and I stopped thinking for quite a while.