Page 31 of A Cursed Hunt


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His body rocked against hers, his length hitting that desperate, wanting part of her. She tilted her head back, felt her hair catch on the bark of the tree and Remis’ mouth dipped to take the peak of her breast in his mouth. Even through the fabric, Meira felt the swirl of his tongue as he sucked her further into his mouth. Dampness spread through the material of what was left of her thin top. It chilled as the wind cut through the forest, only making her nipples harder.

The clothing was too much. She didn’t want these pants on any longer, the tight fit of her flight leathers was suffocating in his presence. And she certainly didn’t want his clothes on him either. All the bare skin of his upper body was exposed under the moonlight now. Her fingers explored every dip and curve of his muscles and then the small patch of hair that ran across his chest.

She writhed against his body, letting herself grind against him. He groaned as the friction between them grew hot. Pleasure built with their languid movements. Every nip of his teeth, the lingering brush of his lips, and swirl of his tongue only brought her closer to the edge.

Why hadn’t she let herself do this sooner? With their bodies intertwined, she could find no reason worth denying herself whatever was between them. Because this raging thing between them was undeniably inevitable.

“Meira,” he whispered her name with the lilt of an accent as he kissed the space just below her ear. “Come for me. Please.” The last word was said on a ragged begging breath. He needed this as much as she needed it.

The last of the walls that remained between her and her self-control had officially crumbled. At his words, they were nothing but dust and rubble. Ecstasy kicked through them, rising upward from her core, building like a ravenous wave. He wrapped his arms tighter around her and let her ride out that warm wonderful feeling against him, while the rest of her body finally relaxed. She moaned, unable to keep herself quiet any longer. His name fell from her tongue as she cried out, “Remis!”

An eruption of butterflies in her stomach forced her eyes open. Meira blinked up at the canopy of trees and the light that filtered through them. The bark of the tree was no longer rough against her skin and everywhere Remis had touched was cold, now damp with dew.

A dream. It had all been a dream.

Meira sat up and surveyed the group of people around her. The riders were all grounded, except for whoever flew overhead as guard. They lay in familiar bundles of cloaks and bedrolls between the trees just to the side of the dirt road they’d been following.

She’d purposefully distanced herself from the others when dawn had come and they’d all lain down to rest. Now, her cheeks hot with embarrassment, she was thankful as both reality and her dream became clearer. The moan she’d made in her dream felt raw in her throat and she almost buried her face back under her cloak at the thought that she’d made that noise out loud. But all the still forms around her were sleeping, their chests rising and falling evenly. A few snores drifted through the quiet morning air.

Judging by the position of the sun she’d only slept a few hours. Yet she’d never felt more awake. Her skin was still warm from the man’s touch in her dream. Her stranger. The man she was hunting.

Remis.

The name was fitting. It held the same stubborn charm and arrogance that wafted from him in every vision.

Another small bit of her memories from another timeline was finally catching up to her body. She wished they’d come faster, that she’d have answers, and a clear understanding as to why she needed to find this man and kill him.

Twice now she’d gotten a glimpse of what it might be like to be with him, to be lovers. Something must have gone terribly wrong. Betrayal, maybe? She doubted an average broken heart would be enough for her to use her magic when she’d been safe all these years with the scale riders. There were few things in her life that she valued enough to risk the security she’d found there.

Again her mind drifted to Mrithun. Should Mrithun be killed and their sacred bond broken…Meira would tear apart worlds. Remis was beautiful in every memory she had of him and her body responded in kind to him, but he’d done something to ruin her, something worth all of this and the target she’d placed on his back. Her mind raced trying to come up with a story that could appease her. Nothing felt right. And nothing made any damn sense.

She rubbed her eyes with the back of her hands, trying to forget the sensation of his hands on her body. Nausea roiled up inside of her. He’d touched her with those hands. If this was a fraction of what she felt before she’d chosen to dive into the depths of her power and force herself through the timeline then she could understand a little bit of the decision.

Bones cracked along her spine as she stretched and stood. She made quick work of rolling up her sleeping mat and compacting it back into her pack. From her spot between two tall leafless trees, she could see where Bram slept with his arms and legs stretched outside of his cloak. He’d always been terrible to sleep next to the few times she’d stayed overnight. He tossed and turned throwing his limbs about and had one time nearly given her a black eye with a swinging elbow. Next to him, Valen looked like a saint. The sun shone off his neat blond hair, giving his relaxed features a childlike grace. His sleeping mat was double as thick as the riders’, so it almost appeared as if he was levitating off the ground. Unlike Bram, his arms and legs were relatively straight, tucked in neatly against his body. Even in sleep, it appeared as if he cared about how he looked. Meira frowned at his perfection and forced herself to look away.

Instead, she lifted her chin to the sky, trying to spot which rider and dragon were currently scouting. Dragons didn’t require as much sleep as humans did and she wondered where Mrithun was. Most were likely out hunting or merely resting themselves. A dark streak of color cut across the clear blue sky. Meira followed it and the jade-green shimmer of its scales. Quincy and her dragon Marticello then.

She was far too awake to even consider going back to sleep; the least she could do was relieve Quincy and let her get extra rest. Breathing in the musky scent of the woods, she felt for that bond that stretched between her and her Bold Wing. She called to the dragon, lifting her face to the sky. Wherever Mrithun was, Meira felt the moment she began in her direction. She smiled when the dark underbelly of her dragon became clearer.

Branches were already scattered and broken from when they’d landed at dawn so it was easy for Mrithun to slip through without waking the rest of the riders. Meira stroked a hand over her silken scales before launching herself into the harness. She leaned forward into Mrithun’s upward trajectory and held tight as they burst upward into the sky. Wind whipped at her hair but the air wasn’t nearly as cold as it had been last night.

They leveled in the sky and Mrithun’s wings spread wide as they glided along the wind. It took no longer than a single minute before Quincy and Marticello were by her side. The woman’s dark brows were raised in questions, her gold eyes bright, and those long braids flowing behind her.

“News?” Quincy asked.

One corner of Meira’s lips lifted, and she shook her head. “Just needed air.”

“Ah, bad dreams,” Quincy said, bobbing her head as if she understood.

Blood rushed to Meira’s cheeks again with that wicked heat. It hadn’t been a nightmare. In fact, she was quite ashamed to even admit to herself that she enjoyed the dream and the touch of her stranger. Not so much a stranger now that she had a name. Remis.

“Something like that.”

They flew in comfortable silence for several long minutes before Quincy spoke again. “There’s nothing for miles except the woods and over to our east the river. No sign of other travelers or dragonis.”

Meira didn’t expect to find either while on their journey. Really, how many people might be idiotic enough to cut through the woods during this terrible season? There were two scale rider groups escorting rich heirs to Croughton; eventually they might run into one another. The two groups weren’t threats to each other. As for the dragonis, they’d only seen the one at a distance and she was fairly certain if it came down to it, she could make it out of a confrontation alive, but that didn’t make the beasts less dangerous.

“This mission is possibly too easy,” Meira said with a shrug. “Nothing like nannying a rich man’s brat.”

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