een must have gotten the hint about Reeseâs clothes being too long, because soon after he left for guard duty, or whatever he did around this place, a team of seamstresses flooded her room. The women poked and measured, showing her dozens of fabric swatches. Reese prayed it was for something practical like jeans and a comfortable shirt, but the fabrics they presented didnât look cozy, or even stretchy. They looked shimmery and elegant. Which would have been fun back home, but not here amid the Fae and their dungeons.
What was with dressing her up like a Victorian doll? It was one thing for her to wear the dresses her mom bought for her back home. They were on the sexy side, but they were fun, and Reese loved her mom. The Fae taste in womenâs clothing sucked.
Reese stood still while the women did their thing. She was in nothing but a flowing white undergarment that was thin but covered her from collarbone to knee. So basically, she was clothed beneath the clothing sheâd eventually wear. Sheâd hate to see what they wore for bathing suits.
A light rap sounded, and the large wooden door to her room opened.
Ulric entered, his eyes darting away at the sight of her. âYou are well?â He stared at the wall, seemingly embarrassed.
Reese shook her head. She wasnât fully dressed, but she was wearing her potato sack underwear. Ulric hadnât had a problem with her tight, short dress when sheâd been in the dungeon, yet now he blushed?
âAre you talking about after you starved and nearly froze me to death?â she asked.
He turned to her and his handsome mouth pulled back in discomfort. âI did not know you were soâ¦fragile. Please forgive me.â
So far, Marlon and Portia, and even Keen, at times, acted as if she were inferior. Why would Ulric care how heâd treated her? âAre you trying to gain information by being nice to me? Because Iâll tell you right now, I know nothing.â
His eyebrows drew together, and suddenly Reese experienced something that made her think she hadnât fully recovered from her dungeon stay.
She couldnât tell by his expressionâyet somehow she sensed sincere guilt for the way heâd treated her in the cell.
âI will leave you to yourââ He waved his hand vaguely at the fabrics. âI merely wished to apologize for how I enacted my orders. I should have confirmed yourâuhâneeds.â
âHold on. Before you go, let me ask you something. You treated me like a piece of meat when they dumped me in that cell. Is this change of heart all because you feel bad?â
He shifted his feet. âI thought you were a human when you first arrived.â
âSo?â
âIt would have made youâ¦less.â
âLess, as in no biggie if youâd used my body for your pleasure?â
He winced lightlyâonly it was . Heâd made no physical movement.
She was losing it. Discovering Fae existedâthat she was a part of itâher mind was beginning to snap.
âI would have never touched you, or anyone, without approval,â he said. âBut Iâve heard humans areâ¦easy.â He lifted one shoulder. âI was curious.â
She sighed. There might even be some truth to that. Fae were beautiful; they probably never got turned down. âYou realize there wouldnât be Halven if you guys werenât so eager to sleep with the riffraff?â
Ulric exuded light remorse. Again, not from something he did; sheâd it. âHalven are considered a distasteful side effect. No offense, miss. The Halven Elena saved our people. Some are worthy.â
âAll Halven and humans have value.â
âAs you say.â
Reese took a deep breath. Ulric was trying, even if he was extremely misled. Fae had been raised with these beliefs for who knew how long? That theyâd changed their thinking at all was probably miraculous.
âBefore you go, can you talk these ladies into making me something comfortable to wear? Pants and a top? Something I can move in.â
He nodded and approached the head seamstress. She wore a matronly high-necked gown with her measuring tape tied like a belt around her waist. Reese wasnât optimistic, but she was desperate for something other than Victorian dresses, and Ulric seemed in a charitable mood.
He spoke in a low tone to the woman. The womanâs mouth pinched, but she gave him a curt nod.
Ulric dipped his head toward Reese, then headed for the door, exiting the room. It was a simple gesture, that head dip, but Reese picked up on so much more.
Emotions he hadnât shown or in any way expressed.
Ulric still felt shame, but he was cheerier than when heâd enteredâ¦and Reese knew this because she could tell his emotions like her own. The same way she knew the head seamstress was irritated, and that the younger one was excited.
The excitement from the younger seamstress she might have read from physical cues, because the girl was bubbly, but detecting the other Faeâs emotions? No way.
This couldnât be the powers Keen had talked about. It wasnât the ability to create fire or move objects. This was justâ¦weird.
She was hungry, that was all. Sheâd not eaten nearly enough.
Reese reached for a sandwich from the food tray. It contained some mysterious meat substance she tried not to think about while she ate.
And if she could tell her seamstressesâ emotions as they flittered around the room, she kept it to herselfâ¦until two days later.
âWhere are we going?â Reese nearly jogged to keep up with Keenâs long stride, all the while taking in her surroundings.
The New Kingdom palace was bigger than sheâd imaginedâlong corridors with beautiful light stone flooring and intricate wainscoting along the walls and niches. The niches and built-in shelving were filled with statues of warriors and angels. Paintings on the walls looked like masterpieces, only no masterpieces sheâd ever seen in the museums sheâd visited with her wealthy parents.
âYou said you wanted exercise,â Keen replied without slowing his pace. âWe will train.â
Reese peered in an open doorway they passed. It led to the biggest room sheâd ever seen, and that was saying a lot, considering the ballrooms and homes sheâd been in, growing up in Hollywood. The stunning passageway where they walked looked miniscule compared to the room, which seemed to extend the length of a city block.
And then Reeseâs brain caught up to Keenâs words. âTrain? For what?â
His jaw firmed. âYou need fighting skills. The longer they contain you, the more concerned I grow about their intentions.â
Reese swiveled her head distractedly at the statue of what looked to be a woman making love to a tall, muscular man with wings.
She shook her head and raced to keep up. âRight, well, you said they wanted to use me. We just donât know how.â
Keen stopped suddenly and Reese almost ran into him. âWhat do they expect to gain from you? And what do they hope to gain from your father?â he asked rhetorically and with a great deal of agitation.
âFather? You mean that guy my mother had the affair with? Who cares? It was a one-night stand. I doubt he cares Iâm alive.â
Keen sighed harshly. âYour kind might be blasé about couplingââ
âWhoa, ? You mean sex. Are Fae really that uptight that you canât say the word?â
He stepped forward, but Reese held her ground. He might be big and striking, but she was no pushover. âCoupling is not considered an act one does for the simple pleasure of it.â
Reese snorted. âI highly doubt that. Ulricâ¦â The look Keen leveled at her made her pause before continuing that train of thought. Keen could be a scary-ass warrior when he wanted to be, and the look he was giving her right now said he was on the brink of rage.
He quirked an eyebrow, but the tension in his jaw didnât subside. âYou were saying? Ulric what? He told me he did not touch you.â
âHe didnât, but he made it clear heâd be happy to warm me up.â She grinned, enjoying the figurative steam coming out of Keenâs ears. âIn other words, he flirted with me when he thought I was nothing but a lowly human only good forâ¦
. You do know what flirting is, donât you?â
He let out a long, slow breath. Was he even listening? âI will make sure he pays for his words.â
Okay, that wasnât the reaction sheâd wanted. Well, maybe a little, but not that extreme. âIt was nothing. The point is, I highly doubt Fae donât find pleasure in the act.â
âI never said that.â Something flickered in Keenâs eyes.
Oh God, he needed to stop looking at her that way. Every once in a while, heâd shoot her a heated gaze, like the one he was giving her now, and it messed with her head. When he crowded her with all of that arrogant warrior rolling off him, his words giving a different message than his bodyâit was confusing as hell.
Keen glanced to the side. âIt takes most Fae centuries to sire a full-Fae child, and some never do. There are social rules to ensure paternity. If a man chooses a woman, she must be faithful to him. They may part after a time and partner with another.â
She raised her finger. âHold up. Do you mean the woman has to be faithfulâ¦but not the guy?â
âIt is our way. The man must know he is the father.â
âKind of a double standard, donât you think?â
âIt is the only way to ensure the child belongs to her mate.â
you could see a doctor and ask him or her to run a paternity test.â
âWeâve never needed doctors; there are no such tests in Tirnan. Running a human test, with the physiological differences between our two species, would be impossible. A human doctor would have to make allowances in Fae and human genetics, and our existence has remained a secret from humans for millennia. It must continue to remain so. Our forefathers insisted on it.â
âYour what? You mean the angels?â
âHumans have varying beliefs about religion. Different gods and deitiesâeach religion claiming to own us. Knowledge of our kind would be controversial at the very least, and would cause war in the extreme.â
Reese didnât know how many wars had been fought over differences in religious beliefs.
âFine, human doctors are out, but you could still use human science in Tirnan to determine the father of a child. Not like you guys arenât already utilizing other modern conveniences. Orânow hereâs an ideaâFae could use birth control and then you wouldnât have to worry about who the father was. You could be intimate for pleasure.â She made sure to give him a sultry smile on that last word.
Keen scowled. âBirth control? Our greatest wealth is furthering our race, particularly the noble lines closest to the angels. We do not prevent conception.â
âOkaaay.â She held up her hands. âI get it. Itâs a touchy subject. We were talking about my biological father, anyway, and I still donât see why he would care about me. My being a mere Halven and all. He returned to Tirnan to be with his daughter. No one around here cares about the half-bloods.â
âYou are correct. We detest Fae-diluted offspring. Theyâre a nuisance and defy everything we hold dear, weakening our abilities.â
She clutched her chest in mock pain. âThat hurts, Keen. But if itâs trueâ¦â She paused for dramatic emphasis. âWhy did they ask Elena for help? And why are they holding me here?â
He looked away. âHalven of nobility areââ
âAwesome-sauce. Kickass. Gorgeous specimens of perfectââ
âUnusual,â he said.
Reese glanced at the ceiling and shrugged. âIâll take it. In other words, Iâm I still donât see how that makes a difference. My father is a Fae with noble blood. They think Iâll have powersâ¦â Reeseâs voice drifted off. The emotions sheâd picked up from her seamstresses and Ulric came back to her. Emotions sheâd read without physical cues. She didnât want to believe that could be her power, because it seemed weird, and to tell the truth, kind of weak. But what if it was?
âWhatâs wrong?â Keen asked.
She shook her head. âNothing.â Reese never read Keenâs emotions, and she didnât think the abilities Halven possessed were choosy that way. What sheâd experienced couldnât be her power. âIf Halven are so universally detested, why would my father want anything to do with me, powers or not?â
Keen stepped back and opened a door across the hall. âElena saved our people. It left a lasting impression. They may want to keep you in Tirnan for your abilities, something we prize. A few believe Halven of noble blood could be of useânever for procreation, but for other purposes.â
Reese rolled her eyes. âRightânever for . Except, thatâs how we got here,â she said, circling back to the argument she most enjoyed.
Keen frowned. âEnough.â He waved her inside a room that looked different from the others sheâd seen thus far. This one wasâinsignificant. Kind of plain. With gym equipment. âThe queen and I have come to an agreement, and Iâve been given access to the training rooms. We will train, and attempt to prepare as best we can for what lies ahead.â
Sure, because didnât sound ominous.