Читать книгу The Reaper's Heart - Michele Hauf - Страница 5
ОглавлениеThe uninvited reaper had quickly fallen asleep, snoring through the night. Good thing, because Ananda had had no intention of cooking a meal for him so late. She had meanwhile slept fitfully. And a sexy dream had woken her this morning, leaving her gasping and clutching at her pillow.
Silly heart. Once she took a heart, she continued to feel residual emotions from its previous owner. The current one always jumped straight to lovesick. So she couldn’t trust her heart. Because it wasn’t real. Nor could she afford to fall victim to romantic pining now.
She knew what the reaper was up to. And Ananda was not about to let him win. Because if he won, he would reap her soul, which he could only do if she was dead. Was he so heartless— She smiled. Well, yes, he would be without a heart soon enough.
If she achieved her goal.
Though he was right; she did need to keep him nearby if she intended to finagle his heart from him, so she had not chased him out. If he thought to use his sexy charm to annoy her, then she could fire her own charm right back at him.
It was either that or invoke a binding spell that would lash him to her bed for the remaining two days and keep him in one place. Which she hadn’t entirely dismissed as a plan. Until she imagined that gorgeous hunk of steely muscle and smirk strapped to her bed.
“I’ll kill him with kindness. Much safer,” she decided.
The reaper had awoken in the chair before the fire, and now watched her move about the kitchen. Normally, mornings found her mixing herbs for spells and later going out for firewood. But all that seemed a bother when compared to the man with the bare chest and smoldering gaze. Less red now, his eyes, which made him less unsettling overall, thank the goddess.
She turned away. “Tell me what a reaper of lost souls does, exactly.” She strolled to the front window, reaching for the dried herbs that hung along a board. Nettle for tea.
“I reap lost souls,” he provided from behind her.
Ananda spun to find him right there. Mercy, he smelled delicious.
Ignore your heart, Ananda, or lose this game!
She pressed her fingers to his chest and directed him to back up. “Too close, reaper.”
“You have some sort of personal boundary I cannot cross?”
“Indeed.” She took a step to the side, unsure she wanted to be even an arm’s distance from him. She could still smell his sweet perfume of fire and snow.
“Why is the soul lost? And why the armor?”
He sighed and leaned against the back of a kitchen chair. “The soul isn’t lost. That’s just what we call the non-human souls that I, and many others, reap.”
“So, vampires?” she guessed.
“And werewolves.”
“Shapeshifters?”
He nodded. “And witches.”
She swallowed a breath. “I see.”
“This armor deflects the stray human souls that try to attach themselves to me. They’re everywhere, lingering, waiting for their own reapers to come collect them. This metal is fashioned from a powerful demonic substance. It burns human souls.” He unbuckled one sleeve of armor and set it on the table. “Don’t need it on right now, though.”
He unbuckled the other arm, exposing solidly forged biceps.
Ananda sucked in a breath to keep from sighing out loud over such terrific muscles. “Wh-where do they go once you reap them?”
“They move through me and are diverted to their destination, Heaven or Hell. I’m sort of a processing center, if you will.”
“Interesting. Yet I can’t imagine that you typically follow living lost souls around until they drop dead. So why have you abandoned your duties to sit waiting for my last breath?”
“Because you are rare.”
“Only two white witches, besides myself, living at this moment,” she agreed.
“I’m not going to pass up this opportunity.”
Smart reaper.
“So, while we’re explaining our jobs,” he said, “why are white witches so rare?”
Ananda shrugged and twisted a curl of hair about her fingertip. “White witches are born without a heart. I never knew my father—or what he was, exactly—but I suspect it’s because of my paternal line that I was born…lacking.”
“I don’t think you’re lacking in any way, Ananda.” The way he said her name on a hushed breath stirred the passion in Ananda’s breast. Oh, to be wrapped in his arms…
She shook away the image. Naughty, pining heart!
“As for magic,” she continued, “we’re like any other witch. I practice earth magic and rely on ley lines to forge my power.”
“I sense ley lines are near.”
“Two cross beneath my house. It is here where I am most powerful. If I must restore my magic or recover from injury, I simply bunker down in my home.”
“Your magic is not so powerful as mine,” he said, and Ananda did not miss the challenge in his voice.
Instead of arguing with him, she summoned a hefty load of energy in her fist and swung around, releasing it toward him. The blast of air magic slammed his shoulders and body against the door, and chuffed out his breath.
* * *
Vashon gathered up a hefty wallop in his hand and swung his arm back to deliver the payload toward the white witch. But before he could follow through and release the zap that would surely blow the witch off her feet, he paused.
Had he noticed before how blue Ananda’s eyes were? And that pretty little dip at the center of her top lip. Too exquisite for a creature such as he to even ponder. And yet, he couldn’t stop wondering if that dip had been placed there by something divine. It was so sensual. He wanted to taste it, and maybe—