Room 4, Rin's Travel Agency, Macalania
Raine felt far away.
Auron's exhilaration was laced with dread as he cinched his arms a little tighter around Raine, attempting to lure her into the present, but she was blankly preoccupied. An uneasy silence thickened before his organ had completely drained and he tucked it away. Quickly.
Rigidly unraveling from his arms, she buttoned two arbitrary shirt buttons, swiped the garter from the nightstand, and found her pajama bottoms at the end of the bed.
"Where are you going?" Auron asked.
"To clean up."
Auron trained her with a sharp eye as she fished her underwear out of the flannel pant leg, keeping her back to him as she snapped on the bathroom light and closed the door.
Damn.
A Guardian should make a Pilgrimage easier, not complicate it.
Squeezing his lips together, Auron rolled onto his back, raising his head off the bed as he tied the drawstrings on his trousers, then entwined his fingers behind his head as he stared at the ceiling.
Nothing about today had been easy for her. Jet-lagged, hungry, homesick... He couldn't help to think it was a matter of timing. How different would things be if he had just asked her not to marry Jory? Maybe if he had taken her to bed in Zanarkand, when everything was simpler, when the air smelled different and the food had flavor, she might still be in his arm now, pestering him with some form of pillow talk. She would not be locked in the bathroom and he would not be wondering when a man finally was immune to making mistakes.
Mistakes.
Seized with panic, Auron sat up straight. "Raine?" he called, his voice deep, hard.
The seven seconds it took for her to answer felt excruciatingly long. Auron heard nothing but the Pyreflies rustling frantically at the back of his skull, reminding him Raine had ventured out of their comfort zone.
"Yeah?" Her muffled voice echoed from the bathroom acoustics.
Rubbing the back of his neck, Auron exhaled. "Nothing."
Interestingly enough, the Pyreflies were not only quieter when Raine was near, but they were downright mute when he was balls deep in her, and he couldn't help the curl of his lips as he smiled to himself. He had to admit she was a worthy contender, her contribution instinctive and mostly unquestioning, but maybe he'd shown too much of himself, he thought, and his smile faded. With a sinking sensation, Auron had the oddest notion that his skin was see-through and Raine didn't like what she saw.
Unable to shake his disturbing thoughts, he rolled off the bed, approaching the cart by the door. He rattled through the dishes, the uncovered trays. Raine's fork, knife and spoon were under a napkin on her unfinished plate, and he checked the other sets of flatware to make sure they were all complete, namely the knives.
I've made so much progress and you coming back...well, it's liable to set me back.
There had been a reason she had sent him away in Zanarkand. Maybe he should've heeded it.
At the bathroom door, he gripped the door knob and knocked.
What
was
she doing in there?
To his surprise, the door was unlocked, and he swung it open, too fast. He discovered her on the toilet in a curious position, head down, legs apart, looking critically down at her thick blond nest of pubic hair. At his entrance, she straightened, pinned her knees together, her expression frozen with embarrassment.
"What are you doing?" he asked around a bewildered smile.
"
Auron,
" she scolded.
"Privacy
?"
After careful consideration of what he'd walked in on, Auron leisurely faced the door. "I thought it would be locked."
"I'll lock it next time," she muttered. "I didn't realize you had issues with your impulse control."
Auron smirked. If she only knew the impulses he'd resisted over the years.
Leaning a hip on the edge of the sink, he noticed her garter sitting by the basin, but it was her ring that snagged a double look. He looked away from it swiftly; one more thing he wasn't supposed to see, but he couldn't ignore it. "Having regrets?"
Her pause was careful, tentative. "About what?"
Pinching the ring between his index finger and thumb, Auron held it up over his shoulder so she would see it.
"Maybe," she sighed. Auron heard the papery flick of toilet paper and the shuffle of her movements as she finished up. "I don't know. I think I need to see more cards before I answer that."
"Fair enough." Behind him, the toilet flushed. "Which cards would you like to see?"
"It will have to be a personal one, I think," she said, standing next to him, turning on the faucet to wash her hands.
She was wearing just her pajama top and underwear and his eye darted straight to her legs. A swing of desire came readily over him. He wanted her again and the Pyreflies danced at the thought, but now wasn't the time. Considering her temperament, it might never be the time again. "I figured. You're being abnormally unsociable."
Without looking up at him, her forehead crumpled, affecting annoyance. "No I'm not. You did exactly what I asked, thank you."
Auron laughed, hard and gritty, but stopped abruptly when Raine shot him a cursory look. He had suspected it before, but now he wondered seriously if Raine was pursuing momentary diversion, to distract herself from their Pilgrimage. He knew he should feel hurt, used, maybe angry, but he instead felt strangely turned on. This ruthless version of Raine was quite unexpected. "You think I only did that because you wanted me to?"
"Didn't you?"
He conceded with a side nod. "Partly. I hear it's not as fun with only one enthusiastic participant."
She bullishly smothered a grin, tried instead to look defiant. "Is that what you had? Fun?"
He raised one brow. "Wasn't it obvious?"
"It was a little more than just fun, don't you think?"
She was seeking verification of his feelings. They were present and accounted for and his larynx dropped to say it, but his lips stayed sealed. The longer the pause, the more difficult it became.
Flushing, she shook her head to dismiss him from answering and hastily dried her hands on the towel. "Never mind," she said and quickly circled around him to leave the bathroom.
Auron caught her by the elbow and said, a little too bitterly, "Don't forget your ring."
With an irritated sigh, she reached for the ring between his fingers, but Auron didn't let go right away. She tugged and when he still didn't let her have it, she frowned up at him.
He said, "I've always believed actions speak louder than words." Releasing the gold trinket, he hoped she understood his meaning. Lying with her
was
more than fun.
"Is that so?" she asked, clipped.
She held up her left hand for him to see, making a rather ostentatious demonstration as she displayed the ring in her other hand, between her thumb and forefinger. A second later, she deliberately joined the ring to her left ring-finger, sliding it purposefully in place. Her point was not lost on him. Raine intended to stay married and she expected Auron to act accordingly.
Shadowing her out of the bathroom, Auron pressed his shoulder on the mount of the door and folded his arms. Raine straightened the coverlet, crumpled from their previous activity, and slipped underneath, lying on her back. She had picked the left side, where he had tucked her in earlier, and he interpreted the Auron-sized gap on the right as an invitation. Crossing the room, he mirrored her under the blankets, both of them steely, staring at the ceiling. He waited for her card request and wondered why he was always the one with cards to show.
"When is it your turn?" he asked.
"My turn?"
"To discard."
She turned her head so her cheek rested on her pillow. "You want to see one of my cards?"