Broken Dove (Fantasyland #4)(64)



“Yes,” he confirmed.

Holy cow!

“Are we engaged?” I asked.

“Yes,” he answered immediately and decisively.

I sucked in a sharp breath and on the exhale, noted, “I think this is pretty much the definition of moving too fast, Apollo.”

Apollo said nothing.

“Did I miss your proposal?” I queried.

“The words weren’t uttered,” he replied. “But I think your answer was ‘please.’”

I blinked and asked, “What?”

He suddenly leaned forward, his hand shooting out and clasping mine.

This was not an affectionate gesture.

It was a claiming one.

And his eyes were burning into mine.

Oh shit.

“When I covered you last night, before I took you, you said ‘please.’”

I remembered that. Hell, I’d never forget it.

But seriously?

I felt my eyes get big. “That’s a marriage proposal?”

“It’ll do for us.”

Oh my God!

Maybe he didn’t keep getting better.

I leaned in too, and hissed, “Apollo, that’s insane.”

“I was unsheathed.”

Crap!

“And you took me repeatedly,” he went on.

Crap!

I knew what he was saying. He was saying unprotected sex often equals pregnancy. And pregnancy also often equals marriage. Obviously even in this world.

I didn’t need to deal with that right then. That was too big for me to deal with. And I decided in that moment I couldn’t worry about something when I didn’t know if there was anything to worry about. Instead I would deal with it only when I knew that there was something to deal with.

Now, I needed to deal with the matter at hand.

“Apollo—”

“And I’m having you again tonight.”

Here we go. Back to arrogant Apollo.

“Repeatedly,” he went on.

I felt my heart thump just as my cl*t pulsed and I tried to pull my hand from his but his tightened on mine and I failed.

“And the next night and the next. I think you understand me,” he stated.

I glared at him.

“And we’re traveling together and sleeping in the same room.”

“For protection,” I snapped.

“Until last night, yes.”

“And yesterday, you called me Lady Ulfr to the staff at the inn and that was before what happened last night.”

“Indeed, as my intention was to take you to wife then too.”

Oh my God!

Was this happening?

“This is crazy,” I declared.

“No, it isn’t,” he disagreed.

I leaned deeper and bit out, “It so totally is.”

“And you’d be contented with allowing me to bring you to this world, bring you from yours where you lived in fear and on the run, and let you carry forth working as a barmaid?” he asked curtly. “Subsisting from coin to coin. Forcing down food much worse than our sandwiches today because you could afford no better. A woman who understands and appreciates the finest champagne, reduced to that and me forcing it on you?”

“It isn’t about champagne,” I snapped, his comment hitting way too close to the bone. “And it wouldn’t be you forcing it on me. It would be my choice.”

“It would be me forcing it on you, Maddie. Taking you from the other world, that was not your choice. That was mine. You have grand ideas of how you would exist on this world, but you have no idea how those who work in inns or pubs or elsewhere survive. I’m sure there is contentment and even happiness. But you’re not simply a woman who appreciates the finest champagne. You’re a woman who deserves it.”

At that unexpected and unbelievably nice compliment, I clamped my mouth shut as I felt my heart seize.

“And my first wife was a physician. She had her life, I had mine and we successfully managed to have both of those together. Do you not think it’s a better idea to be fed, comfortable and safe while you decide how you’d like to spend your time in your new world? And then be the same while you go about doing it?”

My heart burst into action and was beating so fast, it scared the hell out of me so I focused on that and on his words and didn’t answer.

He didn’t seem to mind and kept talking.

“You may wish to go from gale to gale, ball to ball, hunt to hunt and wear fine clothes and jewels, and I would not care, glad simply to have you on my arm. Or you may wish to study a profession and then put it to practice, and I would not care, but only if you share your days with me when they are at an end. You may instead wish to bake the best cakes in all of Lunwyn, and I wouldn’t care, for I’d get to eat them. Hell, you could desire to learn something of my financial interests and become involved, and I would welcome it.”

Totally.

Seriously.

Completely.

Was this guy for real?

His hand tightened in mine. “In other words, I don’t care what you do. The only thing I care about is that you’re safe and happy while doing it. You’ve not shared with me but you know that I know that you’ve had a life where you were not either. Not in the slightest. I didn’t bring you here to give you the same ugliness but in a different way, slaving in a pub to feed yourself. I brought you here to give you”—his hand jerked mine—“better.”

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