“Not at all.”
“Hmmm.”
He still hesitated, toying with the edge of my panties.
“Well…?” I said.
“I’m trying to decide…”
“I say yes.”
He laughed. “I doubt it, and I doubt we’re thinking of the same question.”
“Which is…?”
“Control. As in, can I help you without helping myself to you.”
I stood, turned around and repositioning myself on his lap, facing him, squarely straddling him, hands around his neck. “What if I’m offering?”
He growled deep in his throat and reached for me, pulling me against him, hands tugging up my skirt as I unbuttoned his pants—
An alarm rang, so fast and sudden I almost toppled backward off him.
I looked around. Smoke wafted from the hall. I pictured the fire demon again, reaching for the vase of scrolls, sparks raining from his fingertips. A few must have fallen into the vase, smoldered there and caught fire.
From the other room came the shrieks of people hearing alarms, smelling smoke, and reacting as if the building had transformed into the Towering Inferno. I caught the first lick of chaos and shivered, then shut it off.
Marsten’s arms went around me, pulling me back against him with a hard thrust and a soft growl. I rotated to face him, my hands going around his neck, mouth finding his, drinking in the chaos arising around us. Burning building? Who cared? I had a more urgent fire to put out.
Marsten growled again, this one harsher as he pulled his lips from mine.
“I hate to be the one to bring this up, but…”
“The building’s on fire?”
“Unfortunately.”
I slipped my hands under his shirt. “How fast can it burn?”
A low growling chuckle as he pressed against me. “You have no idea how badly I’m tempted to test that. But I have to remind myself that you’re acting under the influence of something.”
“Something other than you, you mean.”
“There’s that, too.”
“Vain,” I said, poking him in the chest.
He caught me up in a hard, deep, tongue-diving, groin-grinding kiss, then put me back on my feet.
“Time to go,” he said, and started across the room.
“Tease.”
He tossed a smile over his shoulder. “Just giving you something to remember, once all this interference is out of the way.”
We reached the main hall to find it log-jammed with people. Marsten hesitated, then took my arm and led me straight into the heart of the mob. The crowd buoyed us along, and before I knew it, the cool night breeze was rippling through my hair. I looked up, and only then, seeing the stars winking against the city’s glow, could I truly believe it.
We were out. Free.
If Tristan and his guards were here, they’d be watching with dismay as the museum expelled a steady river of white shirts and black jackets and nary a yellow dress to be found. The crowd was so thick that even if I hadn’t covered my dress, they’d probably never have picked me out.
As fire engines and taxis competed for curb space, sirens and blaring horns rose above the din of partygoers yelling for their lost spouses and friends. A few taxis managed a passenger snatch-and-grab before the police cordoned off the area.
We let the crowd carry us across the road, where the taxis were regrouping. Marsten’s grip suddenly tightened, and he ducked sideways, nearly plowing me into a white-haired woman with a walker. As I glared at him, a voice cut through the din.
“Hope? Hope!”
“Don’t look,” Marsten muttered by my ear as he steered us into another pocket of people. “Just pretend you don’t—”
“Hope?”
Douglas cut between a couple. He smiled at me. There I was, bedraggled and dirty, hair flying everywhere, wearing a tux jacket, running from a burning building, and he only smiled, as if I’d just popped back from the buffet line.
“The Bairds have invited us for drinks,” he said.
I stared, the words not penetrating, certain I was mishearing and somehow the din around us had turned “Oh my God, are you okay?” into an invitation for post-inferno cocktails.
“I—I have to go,” I said finally. “The—the paper. The fire. I need to—”
“Oh, you’ll need to write it up, won’t you?” He smiled and winked. “For a cause, I’d go with spontaneous human combustion.”
“I was thinking more of fire demons,” I muttered.
“Sure. That’s different. I’ll let you go, then. Have fun, and don’t work too hard.”
Marsten yanked me backward again, as Douglas slipped off through the crowd. When we reached the sidewalk, Marsten body-checked a young man and shoved me through an open cab door, then crawled in after me and slammed it.