Or fury, as was sometimes the case with Sabin.
Sabin. Always her mind returned to him.
Her gaze sought him. He reclined in the lounge across from her, his eyes closed, spiked lashes casting shadowsover the hollows of his sharp cheeks. He wore fatigues, a silver chain necklace and a leather man-bracelet. (She was pretty confident heâd want the âmanâ distinction.) His features were relaxed in slumber. How could someone look at once harsh and boyish?
It was a mystery she wanted to solve. Maybe when she did, sheâd stop seeking him out. Five minutes couldnât pass without her wondering where he was, what he was doing. This morning, heâd been packing his things, preparing for this trip, and sheâd imagined her nails digging into his back, her teeth sinking into his neck. Not to hurt him, but to pleasure her!
Sheâd had a few lovers over the years, but those kinds of thoughts had never plagued her before. She was a gentle creature, damn it, even in bed. It was him, his I-donât-care-about-anything-but-winning-my-war attitude that was causing thisâ¦darkness inside her. Had to be.
She should have been disgusted by what heâd done, slicing the humanâs neck as he had. At the very least, she should have screamed for him to stop, protested, but part of her, that darker side, the monster she couldnât escape, had known what was about to happen and had been glad. Sheâd wanted the human to die. Even now, there was a spark of gratitude inside her chest. For Sabin. For the wonderfully cruel way heâd dispensed justice.
That was the only reason sheâd willingly stepped onto this plane. A plane headed not for Alaska but Budapest. That, and the respectful distance the warriors had maintained from her. Oh, and the Twinkies. Not that she could give in to their sweet temptation again.
Maybe she should, though. Maybe she should strap on her big girl panties and steal one, risking punishment. Her skills were rusty, but now that she was out of the cell, her hunger pangs were strong, her body growingweaker. Too, if the warriors hurt her that would finally spur her into action. Going home.
Sheâd have to decide quickly, though. Pretty soon, she wouldnât have the strength or clarity to appropriate a fallen crumb, much less an entire meal, and she definitely wouldnât have the strength to leave. What made it worse was that she wasnât simply battling hunger, she was also battling lethargy.
She wasnât cursed to stay awake forever or anything like that, but sleeping in front of others was against the Harpiesâ code of conduct. And with good reason! Sleeping left you vulnerable, open to attack. Or, say, abduction. Her sisters didnât live by many rules, but they never deviated from that one. She wouldnât either. Not again. Already sheâd embarrassed them enough.
But without food and without sleep, her health would continue to decline. Soon the Harpy would take over, determined to force her into wellness.
The Harpy . While they were one and the same, she considered them separate entities. The Harpy liked to kill; she didnât. The Harpy preferred the dark; she preferred the light. The Harpy enjoyed chaos; she enjoyed tranquility. Canât let her out .
Gwen gazed around the plane, searching for those Twinkies. Her eyes, however, stopped on Amun. He was the darkest of the warriors, and someone sheâd never heard speak a word. He hunched in the seat farthest from her, his hands over his temples, moaning as though in great pain. Paris, the one with the brown and black hairâthe seductive one, as sheâd come to think of him, with his azure eyes and pale skinâwas beside him, staring pensively out the window.
Across from them was Aeron, the one covered from head to foot in tattoos. He, too, was silent, stoic. Thethree of them could have been spokesmen for misery. And I thought I had it bad . What was wrong with them? she
Spencer's Forbidden Passion
Trent Evans, Natasha Knight