They had won, it seemed, but victory came with it's own brand of uncertainty. The exhilaration and strange pride Nate felt at seeing his woman - and gods, was he already considering her that? - banish her fears with a gleaming blade seemed to vanish when he ran to her and she collapsed into his arms.
Before, when they had embraced and ground against each other in alleys and darkened nooks, there had been nothing but barely-held lust. The desperate need to shed clothes and inhibitions and slake their desires in each other.
But much had changed, of course. The two of them sat on his cot, holding each other up, exhausted and spent. Then she looked at him, and said those words without a shade of bravado. Such a simple little expression: we say it a thousand times a week, but we rarely know what it means.
My thanks to you.
I give something of mine, to you, because you did service by me. Nate's breathing came in shallow draughts, as if he didn't want to break the moment. Here, in this place, he knew how fragile they were. He was dreaming: this wasn't real, and perhaps she...
No. She couldn't be a construct of his mind. But she was so ideal to him, so perfect, even in her handful of weaknesses...
"Tinnok..."
He whispered the word like a prayer, and smiled. In the doing of it the midnight room in the Sunset Quarter seemed to brighten. She could see the house as it was now. The sleeping, furry mountain of Jorka curled up in one corner, tail wagging whenever one of them glanced over. The neatly-stocked kitchen and scrubbed dining room, for as poor as they were, Kay would rather die than present company with dirty dishes.
His fiddle, pased onto him by the one he loved as a mother, a devilish device he had yet to master and still tried to, every night.
"I could never have made that up," he said to her, stroking her smooth cheek, marveling at the faint scales under them instead of being repelled, as she had perhaps feared, "I'm just not that bright."
He kissed her. It was a gentle thing; a pressing of lips to lips that demanded nothing, asked only the chance to taste and be connected to another. His hands stayed for a moment... and then they were sliding over her, disrobing her gently, slow enough that if she wished for him to stop, she could.
The old, brawling, whoring, gutter-fighting part of Nate wanted to see her as spoils of triumph. His reward for services due. But Nathaniel hushed it like a child, and lowered the both of them to the blanket.
They might have only this one night; this one glimpse into the fantastical, where the two of them had wandered and by the grace of Nysel (or just one of his cruel whims) had found each other.
He wanted to make that more than just a fuck.
She was worth more.
Before, when they had embraced and ground against each other in alleys and darkened nooks, there had been nothing but barely-held lust. The desperate need to shed clothes and inhibitions and slake their desires in each other.
But much had changed, of course. The two of them sat on his cot, holding each other up, exhausted and spent. Then she looked at him, and said those words without a shade of bravado. Such a simple little expression: we say it a thousand times a week, but we rarely know what it means.
My thanks to you.
I give something of mine, to you, because you did service by me. Nate's breathing came in shallow draughts, as if he didn't want to break the moment. Here, in this place, he knew how fragile they were. He was dreaming: this wasn't real, and perhaps she...
No. She couldn't be a construct of his mind. But she was so ideal to him, so perfect, even in her handful of weaknesses...
"Tinnok..."
He whispered the word like a prayer, and smiled. In the doing of it the midnight room in the Sunset Quarter seemed to brighten. She could see the house as it was now. The sleeping, furry mountain of Jorka curled up in one corner, tail wagging whenever one of them glanced over. The neatly-stocked kitchen and scrubbed dining room, for as poor as they were, Kay would rather die than present company with dirty dishes.
His fiddle, pased onto him by the one he loved as a mother, a devilish device he had yet to master and still tried to, every night.
"I could never have made that up," he said to her, stroking her smooth cheek, marveling at the faint scales under them instead of being repelled, as she had perhaps feared, "I'm just not that bright."
He kissed her. It was a gentle thing; a pressing of lips to lips that demanded nothing, asked only the chance to taste and be connected to another. His hands stayed for a moment... and then they were sliding over her, disrobing her gently, slow enough that if she wished for him to stop, she could.
The old, brawling, whoring, gutter-fighting part of Nate wanted to see her as spoils of triumph. His reward for services due. But Nathaniel hushed it like a child, and lowered the both of them to the blanket.
They might have only this one night; this one glimpse into the fantastical, where the two of them had wandered and by the grace of Nysel (or just one of his cruel whims) had found each other.
He wanted to make that more than just a fuck.
She was worth more.