Page 157 of Burning Blood


Font Size:

I smirked. “You’re welcome.”

She laughed under her breath. “I really don’t think drinking is the answer to our problems, though.”

“Oh, I think it is. Besides.” I shrugged. “I have a shit ton of revenge to reap, and before I do...I need to find a way to control my temper.”

“You mean the temper that tends to incinerate anything within a four-mile radius?”

“That’s the one.” Grabbing her hand, I headed toward the door, dragging her with me. “Let’s see if wine can help.”

Chapter Forty-Eight

I WAS PLEASANTLY...DRUNK.

That hadn’t been the plan when Lucien dragged me onto the huge terrace, overlooking the entire length of the Gaoligong Valley. We didn’t have time to drink. We had important stuff to figure out, but...he’d tempted me with dishes he’d stolen from the kitchen and kept filling my cup with pear, apple, and plum blossom wine. And as the sky slowly lightened and the sun stretched between the jagged peaks of the mountains, I hadn’t felt so relaxed in a very,verylong time.

Perhaps in my entire life.

In a strange unfathomable way, I felt reborn. Like I’d stepped out of some sort of straitjacket and could finally stretch and move in ways I’d never been able to before.

It didn’t matter that Marcus was still out there...plotting to recapture Lucien. Didn’t matter that I still had to call Frank and Dillon and find out if they were keeping secrets from me.

Everything could wait because...he was right.

We should celebrate.

I sighed as I glanced at his wonderful panther who lay sprawled between our deck chairs, snoring away thanks to stuffing his face with half the cow Lucien had promised.

Stretching on my black rattan lounger, I peered sleepily at the stunning view. Mist clung to the lower slopes, drifting like ghosts between the ancient trees we’d killed and reincarnated a few hours ago. Now, they glowed in the sunrise—flocks of birds soaring, waking early to sing in the new day.

“You know...if someone had told me a few months ago that I’d be drinking plum blossom wine, watching a sunrise with a man who sets trees on fire during an orgasm—”

Lucien chuckled under his breath.

“—I would’ve assumed whoever was predicting my future was concussed and talking crazy.”

“Youwereconcussed,” he said quietly, almost as drunk as I was. “Thanks to being stuck on a wash cycle in the Burning Phoenix falls.”

I giggled, loving the slight burn as more liquor went down and happy bubbles danced in my belly. The faintest dusting of snow flickered in the air before melting into nothing.

He watched the flakes dissolve before narrowing his wickedly hot stare on me. “Careful.”

I ducked in dramatic concern, flicking a look around the stunning estate, searching for anyone who might’ve seen. “I’m sorry. I can’t help it. I didn’t mean to—”

“I don’t care about that. It’s just, I can feel that you’re happy and...knowing you’re no longer in pain is making it really,reallyhard to sit here and not touch you.”

I gulped as desire wrapped thick around us.

It was becoming a problem.

I couldn’t stop the draw, the ache, theneedevery time I looked at him.

Tiny fires ignited on the tips of his hair.

Now, who had to be careful?

Balling my hands, I did my best to restrain myself. “You know arson’s illegal, right?”

He smiled as if he knew exactly what I was doing and relaxed against his lounger. “Pretty sure bringing about another ice-age is worse.”