Hey, everyone. So this is the tone of the entire work. If you're on board with the story, it will take a couple chapters to get to more hanky-panky, to set the scene for proper hanky-panky, as it were, but then things roll along. I am submitting a new chapter the moment the previous one posts. -Harp
Clans of Luteri: Alveria
Chapter Three
Kane woke at dawn, just like he always did. The Corsaire was asleep. He turned his head, studying her. He got out of bed quietly and dressed, using the accommodations. The servants were used to his habits by now, and one appeared in not too much time when he loitered. He asked for two trays of food.
When they arrived, he brought them in, finding the Corsaire awake, watching him.
"Are you hungry?" he said.
She nodded. He set the trays down on the table and walked to the bed, uncovering just her feet and reaching for them, untying them, and then her hands. She rubbed at her wrists, one of them bruised, pulling the coverlet around her, glancing at the food, sitting up. She was gorgeous in the morning, her hair mussed, flushed cheeks and pale shoulders.
He went to a chair at the table, sitting, taking up his tray. He set it on his lap, extending his legs so his feet were resting on the bed and began to eat. She looked at the other tray again. Yes, she was hungry.
"What's your name?" he said casually in Luterian, chewing.
She stared at him. He smirked. Still playing that game.
"What's your name?" he said in Alverian.
"Emma," she answered.
"Try again if you want to eat."
"I don't have another name, Lord."
"Kane."
"I don't have another name, Lord Kane."
He barked a laugh. There was the defiance he had expected. Luterians addressed each other by first name and then clan if necessary. He finished his breakfast and she watched, dismayed, as he took the two trays, one empty, and set them outside the door on the side table put there for that purpose. He went and got one of his shirts, tossing it to her. She put it on quickly, buttoning it, standing to let it fall. It came to her knees.
He got up and took her by the arm, bringing her to the door and out of it, down the hall to the accommodations. He waited until she came out. She had washed her face, the kohl gone. He brought her back into the room, closing the door behind them and locking it. He went to the chair, turning it to face her. He sat. She was standing in front of him.
"Who are your parents?" he said in Alverian.
"I don't know, Lord," she answered.
"How old are you?"
"Nineteen or twenty, Lord Kane."
"Which is it?"
"I don't know."
He gave another short bark of laughter. She was goading him.
"How do you not know that, Corsaire?" he said, playing along.
"I am an orphan, lord," she said, her chin lifting, her eyes flashing for a moment. "I don't know my parents. I was told I came there when I was six, but I don't know my real birthday. I was raised in Bonstram Home for Orphaned Children near Dunston. I don't know you, regardless of whether or not you believe you recognize me in some other way. You can try to 'get it out of me,' as you say, but I still don't have another name to give you."
Kane got to his feet slowly, his eyes narrowing. It wasn't possible. He approached her close, his eyes intent on her face.
"I am Kane of the Tavishi," he said in Luterian.
Nothing. No hate. She didn't react to his clan's name at all, not even recognition.
"I am Kane of the Tavishi," he said in Alverian.
Nothing again. He was frowning now. Looking down at her, his eyes shifted to her mouth. He knew one way to tell for sure if she was lying. Corsaire would kill him if they came to know about it, but he'd risk it. Corsaire could add it to the list of other reasons they wanted to kill him.
In a fast move, he grabbed the Corsaire's hair at the back of her head, extending her neck back, getting close. Her face was tilted up, her lips parted, fast and quick breaths. He bent, slowly bringing his lips to her mouth, kissing her gently, his hand still gripping her hair. Her lips were soft, her taste arousing. Since he had done it he might as well enjoy it, so he angled, deepening it, parting them, feeling a surge of lust. She didn't fight him. He pulled back, looking at her face.
Nothing. Surprise. Confusion, her eyes dilated, looking even more black, Corsaire eyes. But no outrage at being kissed by a Tavishi. It was the deepest insult for him to kiss her, none worse he could offer.
"Are you not Corsaire?" he demanded.
"I don't even know what that is, Lord," she returned, her voice strained.
Kane studied her, his hand still in her hair. Luterians didn't deny their bloodline.
"Corsaire are murdering cowards," he said. "Their warriors bed with sheep and have no honor."
Nothing. No reaction at all.
"What is your earliest memory?" he demanded, tightening his grip when she hesitated.
"A song. A woman singing a song," she answered quickly, wincing, looking away.
"The one you were singing in the meadow when we met?"
Her eyes went to his face.
"Yes."
"It's a Luterian cradle song. How do you know it?"
"I don't remember, Lord. I have always known it."
"What do you know about Luteri?"
"It is a land of barbarians across the seas in the mountains."
"How do you know that?"
"It was in my geography lessons, Lord."
Kane released her. She stepped back, her breathing uneven. He was staring at her. She didn't know who she was, not even what she was. She'd been here in Alveria as a child, in one of the Alverian homes for children with no parents. Because evidently people in Alveria could look at a starving child in the streets and fail to bring it into their home and feed it.
"You are Luterian, like me," he told her, still trying to take it in. "We will be going there in four months."
She looked at him doubtfully and he almost laughed, to be in a position of having to prove to a Corsaire she was Luterian.
"Trust me," he said, his tone mocking. "You are very much Luterian."
He opened his shirt, showing her the mark at the base of his throat. Her hand went to the same mark on hers.
"We call it Shai's Kiss," he said. "All Luterians have this mark in the same place."
She looked down at her own and then looked up.
"I thank you for offering to bring me to Luteri," she said carefully. "But I would rather stay here, Lord."