[ Most days, she rises with the sun's ascent, an irony that isn't lost on her — the Sun Summoner, beckoned by the first glow of light beyond the window. Other days, she wearily waits for its first appearance to cut through the shroud of darkness in her chambers. It's a habit learned from the road, impossible to shake, as though her body still waits, taut and tense, for the next sign of danger. The next threat on their lives. The next obstacle to overcome.
It would be an easier enemy to face than the difficulties of her own heart. It thumps in her chest as soon as her bare feet sweep across the floor, like a beat that leads her through the palace's twists and turns, and toward the promise she has sworn. If the waking servants and guards worn into exhaustion from their nightly shifts notice her bedraggled appearance or the route she has taken, tray in hand, they say nothing of it — though she has no doubt that whispers will circulate, as they always do.
At least there is a Ravka left for them to gossip about. It's a wry thought that distracts from the anticipation that tightens her throat as she slips into Nikolai's quarters without a knock, the stare of a knight heavy on her back. There are still disheveled wisps of thick hair gathering in her eyes, nightgown rumpled from sleep; they are seeing too much of each other like this lately, she thinks, human and unguarded — but it's too late to think better of it and make her exit when she sets the assortment of toasts and jams and juices at his bedside table.
Or perhaps it isn't. Closely, she watches the rise and fall of his chest, uncertain if he's even awake at all when she mutters, ] Nikolai?
It would be an easier enemy to face than the difficulties of her own heart. It thumps in her chest as soon as her bare feet sweep across the floor, like a beat that leads her through the palace's twists and turns, and toward the promise she has sworn. If the waking servants and guards worn into exhaustion from their nightly shifts notice her bedraggled appearance or the route she has taken, tray in hand, they say nothing of it — though she has no doubt that whispers will circulate, as they always do.
At least there is a Ravka left for them to gossip about. It's a wry thought that distracts from the anticipation that tightens her throat as she slips into Nikolai's quarters without a knock, the stare of a knight heavy on her back. There are still disheveled wisps of thick hair gathering in her eyes, nightgown rumpled from sleep; they are seeing too much of each other like this lately, she thinks, human and unguarded — but it's too late to think better of it and make her exit when she sets the assortment of toasts and jams and juices at his bedside table.
Or perhaps it isn't. Closely, she watches the rise and fall of his chest, uncertain if he's even awake at all when she mutters, ] Nikolai?
[ For all of their talk of guarding hearts behind the cautious armor they wear, the invitation into his bed is a boundary she can't return from crossing. It's too personal, too intimate, for the glimpse it gives her into the future he's offered her on a golden platter. For the taste of what they could be, and what she might lose if she walks away from it.
Still, she hovers, caught between her head and her heart. It's a battle the latter never fails to win, despite her better judgment; his grin is too boyish, the pink-painted sunrise catching in the gilded strands of his hair, the sight of him too rumpled — vulnerable, she thinks. Young. Nothing like a steadfast captain at the helm of a storm, or a dignified king looming confidently on a throne.
In the end, she supposes her caution was never a match for that temptation. Her fingers slide against his sheets — as luxurious as she expected of his status — before she clambers over him and drops beside him, not daring to slip beneath them. That's too great of a temptation, when he's looking at her like that. ]
I made you a deal.
[ And now, she admittedly feels like an idiot for expecting that he had been serious, when he seems so shocked to see her here. With a purse of her lips, she narrows her eyes at him, without any true sullenness, and ignores the sudden flush that's spread to her face. ]
If you're not going to eat it, I'm taking it for myself.
Still, she hovers, caught between her head and her heart. It's a battle the latter never fails to win, despite her better judgment; his grin is too boyish, the pink-painted sunrise catching in the gilded strands of his hair, the sight of him too rumpled — vulnerable, she thinks. Young. Nothing like a steadfast captain at the helm of a storm, or a dignified king looming confidently on a throne.
In the end, she supposes her caution was never a match for that temptation. Her fingers slide against his sheets — as luxurious as she expected of his status — before she clambers over him and drops beside him, not daring to slip beneath them. That's too great of a temptation, when he's looking at her like that. ]
I made you a deal.
[ And now, she admittedly feels like an idiot for expecting that he had been serious, when he seems so shocked to see her here. With a purse of her lips, she narrows her eyes at him, without any true sullenness, and ignores the sudden flush that's spread to her face. ]
If you're not going to eat it, I'm taking it for myself.
[ Out of every mask he has worn — and she has witnessed many, from Sturmhond's smugness to Nikolai's unwavering determination — the devious glint to his eyes feels, by far, the most familiar. More and more often, she catches herself wondering which face is the truest — or if they are all pieces of himself given in piecemeal parts, sections that form a greater portrait of him when locked together.
Whatever the case, she knows that territory comes with trouble. While the brush of his hand smoothing over stray wisps that had fallen into her line of vision has coaxed her (like a spooked horse, she thinks to herself with a muted scoff) into relaxing into his ridiculously fluffy pillows, her eyes still squint with feigned skepticism.
And, beneath that act, a questioning sort of curiosity that flares inside of her. Carefully, she locks her fingers around his wrist, a clasping bracelet that holds his hand steady. It is tempting to tear her gaze from his watching eyes, but she doesn't dare waver as she takes the tip of his finger in her mouth, licking the almost too-sweet taste of golden apple away with a slow swipe of her tongue and a deliberate graze of teeth. As if to prove she can match him in any game he offers.
She releases him with a wet pop, lifting both eyebrows as she drawls, ] If that was your way of testing to see if I've poisoned you, we're both doomed.
Whatever the case, she knows that territory comes with trouble. While the brush of his hand smoothing over stray wisps that had fallen into her line of vision has coaxed her (like a spooked horse, she thinks to herself with a muted scoff) into relaxing into his ridiculously fluffy pillows, her eyes still squint with feigned skepticism.
And, beneath that act, a questioning sort of curiosity that flares inside of her. Carefully, she locks her fingers around his wrist, a clasping bracelet that holds his hand steady. It is tempting to tear her gaze from his watching eyes, but she doesn't dare waver as she takes the tip of his finger in her mouth, licking the almost too-sweet taste of golden apple away with a slow swipe of her tongue and a deliberate graze of teeth. As if to prove she can match him in any game he offers.
She releases him with a wet pop, lifting both eyebrows as she drawls, ] If that was your way of testing to see if I've poisoned you, we're both doomed.
[ It's the far too likable to be poisoned people that get poisoned, part of her wants to say, delivered with a fervent nudge of her foot against his shin. Asking Nikolai not to be so daring, even in playful speech alone, over his life is a little like asking the sun not to shine down on them — an impossible feat that demands he go against his very nature. All the same, the spike of dread in her gut — that she has no reason to feel while sprawled across an overly grand bed in an overly grand palace — strikes like a sudden knife to the stomach, uncomfortable and painful.
Another reminder that they are both too in over their heads to ever part ways cleanly, for this not to matter. Even this moment, quiet and peaceful, stolen away in the early pieces of morning. Or as stolen as it can be, she supposes, when tongues are already wagging. Rumors are poison in their own right, experience tells her, seeping into the blood of anyone who deigns to give them any scrap of their attention. ]
It's not the first time I've had to get used to rumors in this place. I can promise you that those were probably worse.
[ Her mouth twists a little too sharply to be comforting, a little too bitterly to be fond of those memories. Zoya's tear-stricken face flickers to life in her mind, a loyal Grisha dismissed so easily, berated for perpetuating them. No matter how precarious their relationship is now, it's another chilling observation she had missed: how carelessly the Darkling had tossed a prized pupil aside when she outstayed her welcome, outlived her use. ]
Do I want to ask what they've been saying?
[ Perhaps it's the same rumors, dressed up differently, floating through these halls. She frowns, even as she nibbles at the end of her toast, a little self-conscious about getting crumbs in Ravkan royalty's bedsheets. ]
Another reminder that they are both too in over their heads to ever part ways cleanly, for this not to matter. Even this moment, quiet and peaceful, stolen away in the early pieces of morning. Or as stolen as it can be, she supposes, when tongues are already wagging. Rumors are poison in their own right, experience tells her, seeping into the blood of anyone who deigns to give them any scrap of their attention. ]
It's not the first time I've had to get used to rumors in this place. I can promise you that those were probably worse.
[ Her mouth twists a little too sharply to be comforting, a little too bitterly to be fond of those memories. Zoya's tear-stricken face flickers to life in her mind, a loyal Grisha dismissed so easily, berated for perpetuating them. No matter how precarious their relationship is now, it's another chilling observation she had missed: how carelessly the Darkling had tossed a prized pupil aside when she outstayed her welcome, outlived her use. ]
Do I want to ask what they've been saying?
[ Perhaps it's the same rumors, dressed up differently, floating through these halls. She frowns, even as she nibbles at the end of her toast, a little self-conscious about getting crumbs in Ravkan royalty's bedsheets. ]
[ It feels like inviting a ghost to share the bed with them, a haunting presence that can't be banished now that he's summoned it. She is finished — with fleeing from the Darkling, even in death; with granting him any slip of power over them in both their waking and dreaming hours — but the Darkling has never been finished with her. Alina ignores the chill that washes over her and turns her skin to gooseflesh, but that hint that Nikolai has heard any of the stories surrounding her stay with the darkling —
It unsettles her, creeps beneath her skin, as she imagines Aleksander would crave. Would mock her for, if he were still residing within the darker corners of her mind. A human weakness, he might call it, if he didn't first prey on the fear that Nikolai might look upon her differently. When she raises her eyes from the messy slide of jam over her fingers, though, his gaze isn't the least bit condemning. ]
That makes two of us.
[ The snort she gives is entirely humorless, a bitter little thing over being so stupidly gullible in the first place, drawn in by the first pretty face to tell her she was special. ]
No one is going to give us any peace unless we take it for ourselves. I know that.
[ And even then, she wonders if they won't be dooming themselves into becoming birds with clipped wings, given the illusion that they are happy and free when the crown could cage them. But if ignoring rumors brings them even a modicum of peace — well, it's advice worth following, even if she sourly thinks to herself: that's easier said than done.
With put-upon sight, her nose wrinkles as she looks from her crumb-covered hands to his sheets, pulling absently at the covers. ]
You're going to get crumbs in your bed, if I climb in. [ It's clear, though, from the twist of her mouth that she's considering it. It is cold, and if the rumors will begin with or without her part in them, then maybe — She pauses, and then arches an eyebrow at him. ] I'll consider it once you've told me what they've been saying. I would rather be prepared to hear it than entirely unprepared.
[ And subsequently humiliated because of it. ]
It unsettles her, creeps beneath her skin, as she imagines Aleksander would crave. Would mock her for, if he were still residing within the darker corners of her mind. A human weakness, he might call it, if he didn't first prey on the fear that Nikolai might look upon her differently. When she raises her eyes from the messy slide of jam over her fingers, though, his gaze isn't the least bit condemning. ]
That makes two of us.
[ The snort she gives is entirely humorless, a bitter little thing over being so stupidly gullible in the first place, drawn in by the first pretty face to tell her she was special. ]
No one is going to give us any peace unless we take it for ourselves. I know that.
[ And even then, she wonders if they won't be dooming themselves into becoming birds with clipped wings, given the illusion that they are happy and free when the crown could cage them. But if ignoring rumors brings them even a modicum of peace — well, it's advice worth following, even if she sourly thinks to herself: that's easier said than done.
With put-upon sight, her nose wrinkles as she looks from her crumb-covered hands to his sheets, pulling absently at the covers. ]
You're going to get crumbs in your bed, if I climb in. [ It's clear, though, from the twist of her mouth that she's considering it. It is cold, and if the rumors will begin with or without her part in them, then maybe — She pauses, and then arches an eyebrow at him. ] I'll consider it once you've told me what they've been saying. I would rather be prepared to hear it than entirely unprepared.
[ And subsequently humiliated because of it. ]
[ Distantly, it occurs to her that rumors have a farther reach than any weapon she has known. Soon, those whispers won't be contained simply within these walls; soon, they will spread beyond the ears of servants and guards, and eventually — inevitably — tumble into the hands of their friends, their allies, perhaps even their enemies.
She isn't prepared for it — what they might say, what they might do, the looks of curiosity or betrayal or disapproval — but she has learned, quite quickly, that the world hardly cares whether she is ready for what it has in store for her. It remains a nagging thought at the back of her mind, trying to worm its way to the front, even as the wet warmth of Nikolai's mouth startles her into a twitch.
Even as the smile crosses her mouth, pursing and twisting it until she has no choice but to concede to that dimpled turn. ]
If they're trying to imply I'm some sort of seductress, they're giving me more credit than I deserve.
[ But then it's more amusing for them, she supposes, to imagine those insane scenarios. To paint them as people they aren't, than to truly look into them and see them for what they are: human, flawed, just like them. Not the strange, fantastical creatures they have made them out to be. ]
The proper way for me to behave is — [ For a moment, she leaves him in suspense, just long enough to slip beneath the covers and shiver at the sudden burst of warmth it provides. Her fingers free themselves from his mouth, just to roam over his cheekbones, an affectionate touch as much as it's a devious one — spreading the slickness of his saliva over his own skin as she wrinkles her nose at him. ] — however I want. Put that in the manual.
She isn't prepared for it — what they might say, what they might do, the looks of curiosity or betrayal or disapproval — but she has learned, quite quickly, that the world hardly cares whether she is ready for what it has in store for her. It remains a nagging thought at the back of her mind, trying to worm its way to the front, even as the wet warmth of Nikolai's mouth startles her into a twitch.
Even as the smile crosses her mouth, pursing and twisting it until she has no choice but to concede to that dimpled turn. ]
If they're trying to imply I'm some sort of seductress, they're giving me more credit than I deserve.
[ But then it's more amusing for them, she supposes, to imagine those insane scenarios. To paint them as people they aren't, than to truly look into them and see them for what they are: human, flawed, just like them. Not the strange, fantastical creatures they have made them out to be. ]
The proper way for me to behave is — [ For a moment, she leaves him in suspense, just long enough to slip beneath the covers and shiver at the sudden burst of warmth it provides. Her fingers free themselves from his mouth, just to roam over his cheekbones, an affectionate touch as much as it's a devious one — spreading the slickness of his saliva over his own skin as she wrinkles her nose at him. ] — however I want. Put that in the manual.
[ She nearly hesitates, parting her mouth to speak — only to find no words on the tip of her tongue. Nothing she suspects he'll want to hear, nothing that feels attainable to her. At best, these fantasies he invites her to indulge in are an escape from the prison of their reality; at worst, it is merely a reminder of two lives she must decide between.
She mirrors him, tilting on her not only to face him — but to invite the soft drag of his fingers through the messy strands of her hair, fanning out across his pillows. ]
I'd go somewhere far away and find peace for myself.
[ Far from civilization. Far from the light they shine down upon her. Far from the pedestal Ravka has propped her upon. Far from a world that would invite themselves to become an audience to her life, a permanent spectacle for the world to see and worship and criticize. Thus far, this — this moment, encased in glass away from the remainder of the world — is the closest she has come. ]
There's no one to bother us in the sea. No duties or responsibilities or creative rumors. [ Across the space between them, she reaches, fanning her fingers over his cheekbone before it drops to his pillow. ] And it's not really stealing if I give you my permission.
[ It's a nice dream, at any rate — but perhaps that's all it can be: a dream, hazy and slipping through their fingers. ]
What attainable thing would you do? I don't know much about the handbook of future kings, either.
She mirrors him, tilting on her not only to face him — but to invite the soft drag of his fingers through the messy strands of her hair, fanning out across his pillows. ]
I'd go somewhere far away and find peace for myself.
[ Far from civilization. Far from the light they shine down upon her. Far from the pedestal Ravka has propped her upon. Far from a world that would invite themselves to become an audience to her life, a permanent spectacle for the world to see and worship and criticize. Thus far, this — this moment, encased in glass away from the remainder of the world — is the closest she has come. ]
There's no one to bother us in the sea. No duties or responsibilities or creative rumors. [ Across the space between them, she reaches, fanning her fingers over his cheekbone before it drops to his pillow. ] And it's not really stealing if I give you my permission.
[ It's a nice dream, at any rate — but perhaps that's all it can be: a dream, hazy and slipping through their fingers. ]
What attainable thing would you do? I don't know much about the handbook of future kings, either.
Edited 2020-10-30 04:37 (UTC)
[ It's that which sets him apart from the conquerors and warmongers and idle kings that have come before him: a heart as golden as the rest of him, as impenetrable as it is generous. The edges of his grin have dulled, like a flame flickering until it dies and darkens the world, but Alina's dims only to complete its transformation into something softer. Something she, herself, doesn't wholly understand. ]
I know.
[ Perhaps it's that, that unwavering uncertainty that, in this moment, there is no need to doubt his sincerity. Or perhaps it's merely the strange faith he has inspired in her, in them all, that coaxes her into those two words: I know. Simple, but carrying so much meaning, as if to say: I know who you are, no matter how untrue it often feels. I know, and I believe you. I know, and I believe in you.
She shifts forward as though she is expecting him to run, a creature that might startle with quick movements, when he has been anything but. Still, there's that window of opportunity to escape from her, as he has given her, before the light brush of her mouth — soft as a feather, and floating away just as quickly. ]
Do you think I would even be considering this if I thought you would be forcing me into it?
I know.
[ Perhaps it's that, that unwavering uncertainty that, in this moment, there is no need to doubt his sincerity. Or perhaps it's merely the strange faith he has inspired in her, in them all, that coaxes her into those two words: I know. Simple, but carrying so much meaning, as if to say: I know who you are, no matter how untrue it often feels. I know, and I believe you. I know, and I believe in you.
She shifts forward as though she is expecting him to run, a creature that might startle with quick movements, when he has been anything but. Still, there's that window of opportunity to escape from her, as he has given her, before the light brush of her mouth — soft as a feather, and floating away just as quickly. ]
Do you think I would even be considering this if I thought you would be forcing me into it?
[ You always find yourself in great danger, she thinks to herself. It's a trait true of all of them, as expected as the sun rising to shine another day. Peace is a fleeting, fleeing thing — just like the security of surviving to another day, or the foolish hope that they may win this war yet. It only makes her want to seize it, only makes her want to live, free from the regret of walking away from this and leaving herself to wonder what if?
If any of them are going to become martyrs, they may as well throw caution to the wind. Alina's soft eyes spark, shining with an amused tease. ]
Wasn't that the deal we made last night?
[ Though it's a harmless joke, she doesn't want to dwell on bargains and deals, on considerations and proposals. Not now, not enclosed in this private bubble, not yet pierced by politics or war. She tilts her head like an animal leaning into touch, welcoming the graze of his fingers as they tickle across her skin, and letting her eyes flutter closed. Despite the hammering beat of her heart, pounding against her chest like a caged bird, the careful stroke of his hands is a soothing balm against her nerves. ]
You can, if you're feeling brave. [ The corner of her mouth twitches upward. ] Just don't knock me onto the floor at all, or you'll absolutely be in grave danger.
If any of them are going to become martyrs, they may as well throw caution to the wind. Alina's soft eyes spark, shining with an amused tease. ]
Wasn't that the deal we made last night?
[ Though it's a harmless joke, she doesn't want to dwell on bargains and deals, on considerations and proposals. Not now, not enclosed in this private bubble, not yet pierced by politics or war. She tilts her head like an animal leaning into touch, welcoming the graze of his fingers as they tickle across her skin, and letting her eyes flutter closed. Despite the hammering beat of her heart, pounding against her chest like a caged bird, the careful stroke of his hands is a soothing balm against her nerves. ]
You can, if you're feeling brave. [ The corner of her mouth twitches upward. ] Just don't knock me onto the floor at all, or you'll absolutely be in grave danger.
[ Lovely. It sounds like an impossible thing, but no less impossible than the one word that comes to mind when she peers at him above her, framed by the soft spill of the morning light: tired. As if the glow of the sunrise has illuminated the blue blooms of circles beneath his eyes, the weary lines that want to etch themselves into his skin, the unkempt spill of his hair. Everything that is human about Nikolai Lantsov. Everything that doesn't belong in a pretty portrait hanging above a throne.
Maybe that's what he is. A delicate portrait — beautiful from afar, his colors bleeding apart as she comes closer. One wrong brushstroke and the entire piece unravels. Her thumb sweeps beneath his eye, as though it might erase the existence of his exhaustion. Perhaps it's only fair that she should know the shape of it beneath her fingers, the feel of it in her hands, when he holds the secret of her heartbeat beating against his palm — wild and erratic, despite the softness of his sheets at her back.
Her fingers splay over the sharp angle of his cheek before winding into his hair, twisting it around her fingers like shining, golden thread. There is something so vulnerable about him like this that she can't help but to want to hold onto it, torn between mussing him further and welcoming him to find his peace with her, if only for a little while.
(That's all that people like them can have before the world demands more: a little while.) ]
I have many secrets.
[ A joke too close to the truth. Her heartbeat spikes in response, but it can easily be blamed by the fingers tickling down her sides, the soft petaling of his mouth against her chin, her jaw, as she tips her throat with a pleased little hum in response. ]
Trying to interrogate me like this is an abuse of power, Nikolai.
[ It's his only warning before she coils her legs around the bend of his hips and shoves at his shoulders, with every intent to try to reverse their positions. Mostly, she can fnally admit to herself, because she's overcome by the sudden urge to kiss him again, and again, and perhaps again until they have to be forced apart by duties she has, in this very moment, forgotten to care about. ]
Maybe that's what he is. A delicate portrait — beautiful from afar, his colors bleeding apart as she comes closer. One wrong brushstroke and the entire piece unravels. Her thumb sweeps beneath his eye, as though it might erase the existence of his exhaustion. Perhaps it's only fair that she should know the shape of it beneath her fingers, the feel of it in her hands, when he holds the secret of her heartbeat beating against his palm — wild and erratic, despite the softness of his sheets at her back.
Her fingers splay over the sharp angle of his cheek before winding into his hair, twisting it around her fingers like shining, golden thread. There is something so vulnerable about him like this that she can't help but to want to hold onto it, torn between mussing him further and welcoming him to find his peace with her, if only for a little while.
(That's all that people like them can have before the world demands more: a little while.) ]
I have many secrets.
[ A joke too close to the truth. Her heartbeat spikes in response, but it can easily be blamed by the fingers tickling down her sides, the soft petaling of his mouth against her chin, her jaw, as she tips her throat with a pleased little hum in response. ]
Trying to interrogate me like this is an abuse of power, Nikolai.
[ It's his only warning before she coils her legs around the bend of his hips and shoves at his shoulders, with every intent to try to reverse their positions. Mostly, she can fnally admit to herself, because she's overcome by the sudden urge to kiss him again, and again, and perhaps again until they have to be forced apart by duties she has, in this very moment, forgotten to care about. ]
Or have you made so many rules that it's difficult to remember to follow them?
[ An eyebrow raises, challenging. Weakness is a guise. The less you say the more words your weight carries. Meet insults with laughter. All of his spouted wisdom has created a series of complex rules that she has discovered are nearly impossible to navigate, a structure that leaves no room for fumbling without its whole foundation crumbling apart around her. Some time ago, she might have assumed princes — with all of their influence and power and prestige — would have the freedom to establish their own rules, but she hadn't known Nikolai then. Had barely come into her own power, and what the title thrust upon her might mean for the future of Ravka.
He is as trapped as any of them, she thinks. It only happens that his cage is more gilded, its extravagance giving the illusion of freedom. Perhaps that's worse, but she doesn't want to think of the traps they've set for themselves. Even if the lingering hint of alcohol on his breath is a reminder, traces of fine liquor from his attempts to charm nobles into coughing up coin the night prior, offsetting the sharp sweetness of jam. She chases after the taste with a low hum in her throat, swiping over his bottom lip, sweeping her tongue into his mouth with a greed that, in quieter and isolated hours, often frightens her.
A warm flush paints itself across her cheek when she pulls back, lips shining as she presses them to the corner of his own — as if she isn't in need of catching her breath, as if her heart isn't threatening to plunge through her chest, as if each kiss doesn't radiate through her until she is molten, as if she has more restraint than to kiss him until her lungs die out.
She hardly does. It's an overestimation of her self-control, and the unnatural golden glow to her eyes, when she leans back to look at him, proves it. It sparks and fizzles out, much like the dying light of a setting sun, but she is too preoccupied with outlining his mouth with idle strokes of her fingertips to realize any of it. Her lips curve, the only warning of her deliberately annoying cheekiness before it spills out of her. ]
The more you offer it, the more I start to think Nikolai Lantsov has a secret taste for punishment.
[ An eyebrow raises, challenging. Weakness is a guise. The less you say the more words your weight carries. Meet insults with laughter. All of his spouted wisdom has created a series of complex rules that she has discovered are nearly impossible to navigate, a structure that leaves no room for fumbling without its whole foundation crumbling apart around her. Some time ago, she might have assumed princes — with all of their influence and power and prestige — would have the freedom to establish their own rules, but she hadn't known Nikolai then. Had barely come into her own power, and what the title thrust upon her might mean for the future of Ravka.
He is as trapped as any of them, she thinks. It only happens that his cage is more gilded, its extravagance giving the illusion of freedom. Perhaps that's worse, but she doesn't want to think of the traps they've set for themselves. Even if the lingering hint of alcohol on his breath is a reminder, traces of fine liquor from his attempts to charm nobles into coughing up coin the night prior, offsetting the sharp sweetness of jam. She chases after the taste with a low hum in her throat, swiping over his bottom lip, sweeping her tongue into his mouth with a greed that, in quieter and isolated hours, often frightens her.
A warm flush paints itself across her cheek when she pulls back, lips shining as she presses them to the corner of his own — as if she isn't in need of catching her breath, as if her heart isn't threatening to plunge through her chest, as if each kiss doesn't radiate through her until she is molten, as if she has more restraint than to kiss him until her lungs die out.
She hardly does. It's an overestimation of her self-control, and the unnatural golden glow to her eyes, when she leans back to look at him, proves it. It sparks and fizzles out, much like the dying light of a setting sun, but she is too preoccupied with outlining his mouth with idle strokes of her fingertips to realize any of it. Her lips curve, the only warning of her deliberately annoying cheekiness before it spills out of her. ]
The more you offer it, the more I start to think Nikolai Lantsov has a secret taste for punishment.
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