The Blessed Curse (The Elder Blood Chronicles Book 4)(87)
“Because I want something from them, so I’m charming. That should reassure you, Yasny. It means I’m not trying to use you,” Seth muttered as he moved past her in the hall and started down the stairs.
“It would be nice once in a while, Seth,” Yasny snapped from behind him. “Can’t you be charming without wanting something from someone?” she added in a louder voice as he crossed the landing toward the slender window.
Seth paused and looked back up at her with a smile on his face. It was the smile he had always reserved for women when he wanted something. The smile that seemed to make their thoughts slow and their knees weaken. Yasny had been about to speak, but the words died in her throat the moment he looked up at her. She stared at him with a shocked expression on her face clearly at a loss for words. Nice to know it works on dragons too, he mused.
“Yasny, I have never tried to use my charm on you simply because I believed you were too intelligent for that approach. I didn’t want to insult you with the same droll behavior I use on the lesser women. You are my equal, not a pawn to be played. If I treat you poorly, I apologize. I simply need someone that understands, to vent to.” Seth’s voice had dropped to the low tones. It was a habit that came with the special smile. Women always responded well to the calm quiet voice. Even the Undrae seemed to be affected by it.
Yasny frowned and blinked then smiled faintly before rubbing her face. Shaking her head quickly she smiled once more in a more genuine expression. “Do what you have to do, Seth. I will be around when you get back and I will make sure Fiona doesn’t come into the tower. The Undrae will remain undisturbed until you return,” Yasny promised, and let out a quick sigh. “If only you would have explained it sooner, Seth. I wouldn’t have been nearly so grumpy with you over the years,” she added as she waved a hand at him to go.
It was difficult not to laugh at her reaction, but Seth fought back even the faintest hint of amusement. He had thought she was resisting his magic when she had frowned, but it had clearly worked on her. He had developed a knack for detecting lies and Yasny was not lying. She was truly going to play guard dog for him until he returned. It was almost too much for him. Part of him had actually believed she was superior to the rest, but she had just proven that she was just another stupid bitch. Nodding his head gratefully, Seth gave her another special smile before shifting to his crow form. Bloody hell, he hadn’t expected her to actually believe the words he had spewed, but then she had been the one that asked for charm.
Typically, the souls of the Darklands lost the magic they had held in life. Seth, however, had not. Death had allowed him to keep his talents for one simple reason. It was another form of torment to remind him what he was. In life, he had never known who his father was. He had been slave-born in Avanti and that was all he had ever known. In death he learned the truth of it all, and the Divine had delighted in reminding him of it at every turn, even if it meant allowing him more power. Donrey Avanti had been charming when he tried to be. He had been an amateur compared to his son, though. Seth knew how to charm people better than anyone else. He could earn trust, love, or favors with nothing more than a smile and a hint of magic, and it had never been difficult. It was simply easier to kill them than to waste time with words most of the time. There were those that were too useful to kill, however, and those were the ones he reserved his smiles for.
*
There was nothing quite like spring in Firym. The lush jungles seemed to explode with life at this time of year and the fragrance of the flowers was intoxicating. The humidity and heat were enough to suffocate you as well, Seth decided, as he settled into the upper branches of a tree near the outskirts of the busy city. His eyes scanned the crowds, finally settling on a well-dressed young man making his way through the market with an expression of determination on his face. He carried several bundles tucked under one arm and to the casual observer he looked to be running important errands for his house, or perhaps he was a master tradesman. He was dressed well enough to be important, but the fact that he was managing his own shopping meant he was not important enough to be well known. It was a good disguise and a clever one. The average hunter would have been fooled by it. Seth wasn’t, and neither was the old man that was slowly making his way through the crowd browsing at various stands while still managing to keep the boy in sight.
Had he been in his human form, Seth would have smiled. He kept his eye on the pair of them moving from tree to tree as he silently followed them across the city. The boy seemed nervous and checked behind him several times as he turned corners or crossed busy streets. His shadow, however, was well trained and despite the boy’s obvious paranoia, he remained oblivious to both of his stalkers.
Melissa Myers's Books
- Archenemies (Renegades #2)
- A Ladder to the Sky
- Girls of Paper and Fire (Girls of Paper and Fire #1)
- Daughters of the Lake
- Hiddensee: A Tale of the Once and Future Nutcracker
- House of Darken (Secret Keepers #1)
- Our Kind of Cruelty
- Princess: A Private Novel
- Shattered Mirror (Eve Duncan #23)
- The Hellfire Club