House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City)

House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City) by Sarah J. Maas Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City) by Sarah J. Maas Read Free Book Online
Authors: Sarah J. Maas
off early?”
    She balanced on her toes as she put the gin back in the upper cupboard, the hem of her dress rising precariously high. Connor studied the ceiling as if it were immensely interesting, his gaze only snapping to hers as she settled on her feet again. In the other room, someone turned the volume on the television up to an apartment-rattling level.
    Thank you, Danika.
    Even wolf hearing couldn’t sort through that cacophony to eavesdrop.
    Connor’s sensuous mouth twitched upward, but he remained in the doorway.
    Bryce swallowed, wondering how gross it would be to chase away the burn of the gin with the beer she’d left warming on the counter.
    Connor said, “Look. We’ve known each other a while …”
    “Is this a rehearsed speech?”
    He straightened, color staining his cheeks. The Second in the Pack of Devils, the most feared and lethal of all the Auxiliary units, was blushing . “No.”
    “That sounded like a rehearsed introduction to me.”
    “Can you let me ask you out, or do I need to get into a fight with you about my phrasing first?”
    She snorted, but her guts twisted. “I don’t date wolves.”
    Connor threw her a cocky grin. “Make an exception.”
    “No.” But she smiled slightly.
    Connor merely said with the unwavering arrogance that only an immortal predator could achieve, “You want me. I want you. It’s been that way for a while, and playing with these human males hasn’t done a damn thing to make you forget that, has it?”
    No, it hadn’t. But she said, her voice mercifully calm despite her thundering heart, “Connor, I’m not going out with you. Danika is bossy enough. I don’t need another wolf, especially a male wolf, trying to run my life. I don’t need any more Vanir shoving into my business.”
    His golden eyes dimmed. “I’m not your father.”
    He didn’t mean Randall.
    She shoved off the counter, marching toward him. And the apartment door beyond. She was going to be late. “That has nothing to do with this—with you. My answer is no.”
    Connor didn’t move, and she halted mere inches away. Even in heels, even though she fell on the taller side of average height, he towered over her. Dominated the entire space just by breathing.
    Like any alphahole would. Like what her Fae father had done to nineteen-year-old Ember Quinlan, when he’d pursued her, seduced her, tried to keep her, and gone so far into possessive territory that the moment Ember had realized she was carrying his child—carrying Bryce —she ran before he could scent it and lock her up in his villa in FiRo until she grew too old to interest him.
    Which was something Bryce didn’t let herself consider. Not after the blood tests had been done and she’d walked out of the medwitch’s office knowing that she’d taken after her Fae father in more ways than the red hair and pointed ears.
    She would have to bury her mother one day, bury Randall, too. Which was utterly expected, if you were a human. But the fact that she’d go on living for a few more centuries, with only photos andvideos to remind her of their voices and faces, made her stomach twist.
    She should have had a third shot of gin.
    Connor remained unmoving in the doorway. “One date won’t send me into a territorial hissy fit. It doesn’t even have to be a date. Just … pizza,” he finished, glancing at the stacked boxes.
    “You and I go out plenty.” They did—on nights when Danika was called in to meet with Sabine or the other Aux commanders, he often brought over food, or he met up with her at one of the many restaurants lining the apartment’s lively block. “If it’s not a date, then how is it different?”
    “It’d be a trial run. For a date,” Connor said through his teeth.
    She lifted a brow. “A date to decide if I want to date you?”
    “You’re impossible.” He pushed off the doorjamb. “See you later.”
    Smiling to herself, she trailed him out of the kitchen, cringing at the monstrously loud television

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