Chapter 2
"Of course we do. Hay is fed to horses. And babes are wee. Newborns. I simply don't understand why you utter them to me."
He grinned.
My heart squeezed, the pain so immense it was a wonder I didn't double over, fall to the floor, dead before I hit.
So handsome. That light in his striking eyes.
My Antoine had been handsome.
But when he'd smiled...
"Not saying 'hay,'" Noctorno told me. "I'm saying 'hey,' with an e. It's how people say h.e.l.lo, greet each other in my world."
I battled the pain, hid the severity of the fight and nodded my head once.
"And 'babe?'" I prompted, though I shouldn't have. Engaging in discourse would not get him to leave.
"It's what guys call chicks in my world."
I drew up a brow.
He watched it go and his striking eyes lit brighter.
"Chicks?" I asked, ignoring the amused light in his eyes.
"Girls. Women."
"Girls and women?" I asked.
"Well, you wouldn't call a girl-girl, like a little kid, a babe or a chick. You'd call women that."
"So it's an endearment," I deduced, thinking that I might, indeed, expend the effort to have a word with one of the women in this world who were of his world to share with him a few important things.
Precisely that he shouldn't be referring to anyone he barely knew, and certainly not his superior, with an endearment.
"That, though chick is more slang," he shared.
"In other words, in your world, you refer to the female gender with words indicating to said female every time you use them that you think they're as vulnerable and weak as a newborn child or the like, but that of a species of fowl."
Without hesitation his mirth surged forth, filling the room, warming it, drawing me out of my mood, away from the events of that day, of the last months, of the loss of the only man I'd ever loved, and silently I watched and listened.
I gave no indication I enjoyed it.
But I enjoyed it.
He controlled his joviality but didn't stop smiling or watching me as he asked, "What do you call dudes here?"
"Dudes?" I responded to his query with a query.
"Men," he explained, still smiling. "Guys."
"We call them men or gentlemen."
"No, I mean endearments or slang."
"I, personally, do not engage in uttering slang."
He studied me like I was a highly entertaining jester who'd come to court before he inquired, "Okay, what do you call a man you're in with?"
"In with?"
"Who means something to you. Your guy. Your man," he stated.
I looked to the fire again, feeling my face freeze.
The instant I did, he bit off, "f.u.c.k." There was a slight pause before, "Babe...Franka, Tor told me about the s.h.i.+t that went down...f.u.c.k." I felt strong fingers curl around my wrist, a wrist I was resting on the arm of the chair, before he finished, "That was stupid. I'm so sorry."
With a delicate twist, I freed myself from his touch, lifted my winegla.s.s to my lips, and before I took a sip I murmured, "It's nothing."
"Bulls.h.i.+t."
This odd word made my gaze move back to him.
"I beg your pardon?" I snapped.
"Bulls.h.i.+t," he repeated.
"I don't understand this word."
Though I had a feeling I did.
There was no smile on his face. No humor in his eyes. He was regarding me closely again, but this time I was prepared and didn't s.h.i.+ft in my seat.
"You're full of it," he explained. "You're not giving me the entire truth. You're saying something to get past something you don't want to be talking about."
"And if I did this, considering what we both know I'm moving us past, it's customary to allow the awkward moment to pa.s.s."
He leaned slightly toward me. "You're in here all alone, drinkin' wine by yourself, lookin' like the world just
Again, on the tip of my tongue, words hovered to share precisely, in a calculated way, how I knew he had celebrated with Circe.
Those words did not drop off my tongue.
They vanished completely as I simply turned my attention back to the fire.
"And that kinda situation does not say wine," he carried on. "It says whiskey, vodka, or better yet, tequila."
I could not argue with that (regardless of the fact I had no idea what tequila was).
"To that, I heartily agree," I declared, deigning again to glance at him and wis.h.i.+ng I hadn't, for his smile had returned, making me further wish I could s.n.a.t.c.h my words back.
"I'll go find something," he announced, putting his hands to the arms of the chair in order to heft his big frame out of it, and I felt my brows draw together as, once he was up, it seemed he was moving toward the door.
"You simply have to pull the cord and demand it of a servant," I explained.
He was now standing, staring down at me, appearing bemused.
By the powers of Adele, if she reigned in his realm, she gave him more than his fair share of everything.
He even looked delectable bemused!
I really had to leave as quickly as I could without giving anything away.
"Uh...what?" he asked.
I gestured indolently with a hand to the cord in the corner of the room. "Pull the cord. A bell sounds..." I didn't have the information of where it sounded as I didn't concern myself with such matters, and continued with, "somewhere. A servant comes. We tell him we want whiskey. He brings it."
His lips quirked.
I drew in an annoyed breath for that was delectable too.
"Right," he muttered and began to stride toward the cord.
I twisted in my chair and called to his back, "When they arrive, share with them more fuel needs to be added to the fire."
He stopped and turned back to me while I was speaking.
When I was done, he looked to the fire and then back to me.
"Babe, there's a pile of logs right there," he stated.
"Indeed, there are," I agreed, though I hadn't concerned myself with that matter either and had no idea if he spoke truth.
"So I can put more fuel on the fire."
By Adele, he again looked amused.
I needed to find a way to exit this situation with all due haste.
"If you wish to dirty your hands..." I left it at that but added a slight shrug.
He shook his head, his mouth again quirking, and he turned back to the cord.
Fine.
He would order whisky.
I would imbibe a bit (or perhaps more than a bit). Then I'd find a way to purloin the extra bottle of wine and the gla.s.s and remove myself to my rooms.
This was my plan.
As Franka Drakkar of the House of Drakkar, I was very good with plans, making them and executing them to their fullest.
However, that night, not for the first time, I would not succeed.
"You jest," I declared.
I was leaning across the arm of my chair (rather inelegantly) toward Noctorno, who was lounged (rather negligently) in his chair, whiskey in hand, dancing, startling light-blue eyes on me.
"Nope," he stated.
"Nope" I had learned through the fullness of our discourse these past hours in his world meant "no."
Incidentally, we'd had a good deal of whiskey.
We'd also finished all the wine.
And I was sure I was likely to lament how deep in my cups I was at that present juncture.
I just didn't have it in me to care.
"You can speak to any being you want in the entirety of your universe, as long as you have this...number you describe? By just entering it into a gadget and putting it to your ear?" I asked.
"Yep," he replied. "And as long as they also have a phone."
"Yep" I'd learned meant "yes."
So did "Yup," but we had that in my world too.
I examined his face.
He looked relaxed and amused.
He did not look as if he was dissembling.
Even so, he had to be dissembling.
Therefore, I moved back an inch on my accusation. "You lie."
He shook his head, leaning forward and reaching behind him, stating, "Nope."
He then pulled out a thin, rectangular piece of what looked like metal and gla.s.s. It had rounded edges. It was simple but somehow exceptionally handsome.
He leaned toward me, holding this thing my way, and as I watched the little window illuminated, showing a variety of tiny pictures on it, all lined up precisely in rows, up and down.
"By the G.o.ds," I whispered, reaching toward it but stopping, struck immobile by the fantastical.