Reading Online Novel

The King(146)


Shit was not going well.
As Beth heard the double doors of the study shut behind them, she went over to the banked fire and put her palms out to the heat. She was suddenly feeling very cold … especially as Wrath did not go behind the desk and sit down on his father’s throne.
Her hellren settled into one of the two French-blue sofas, and the effeminate little thing let out a very unlady-like protest as his weight landed.
George settled at his master’s feet, the dog staring up as if he, too, were waiting for the other shoe to drop.
Wrath just stared straight ahead even though he couldn’t see a thing, his brow tight behind the bridge of his wraparounds, his aura black as his hair.
Turning, she backed her butt into the heat source and crossed her arms. “You’re scaring me.”
Silence.
“Why aren’t you sitting behind the desk,” she said roughly.
“It’s not mine anymore.”
Beth felt all the blood leave her head. “What are you … I’m sorry, what?”
Wrath took off his sunglasses and braced an elbow on his knee as he rubbed his eyes. “The Council has removed me.”
“What the … fuck. How? What did they do?”
“It doesn’t matter. But they got me.” He laughed in a short burst. “Listen, at least now all that paperwork over there? Not my problem. They can govern themselves—have a ball infighting and arguing about stupid bullshit—”
“What were the grounds?”
“You know what’s really fucked-up? I hated doing the job, and yet now that it’s gone…” He rubbed his face again. “Anyway.”
“I don’t get it. You’re the King by blood and the race is ruled by the monarchy. How did they do this?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
Beth narrowed her stare. “What are you not telling me?”
He burst up and walked around, having memorized the furniture layout long ago. “This’ll give us more time together. Not a bad thing, especially if you’re pregnant. And hell, if you have a young now, part of what I was all up in my head about is a non-issue—”
“I’m going to find out, you realize. If you don’t tell me, I’ll get someone who will.”
Wrath went over to the desk and ran his hands down the carved edges. Then he fingered the top of the throne, caressing the ins and outs of the wood.
“Wrath. Talk. Now.”
Even with her laying it down like that, it was a long while before he spoke. And when he finally did, his reply was nothing she expected … and as devastating as any piece of it all.#p#分页标题#e#
“They based it on … you.”
Okay, time to have a little sit-down.
Going to the same sofa he’d sat in, she all but fell into the soft cushions. “Why? How? What did I do?”
God, the idea that she’d cost him the throne because of something she’d—
“It’s not anything you’ve done. It’s … who you are.”
“That’s ridiculous! They don’t even know me.”
“You’re half-human.”
Well, that shut her up.
Wrath came over and knelt down in front of her. Taking her hands, he held them in his so-much-larger palms. “Listen to me, and you have to be clear on this—I love you, all of you, each and every part of you. You are perfect in every way—”
“Except for the fact that my mother was human.”
“That’s their fucking problem,” he snapped. “I don’t give a fuck about their goddamn prejudice. It doesn’t affect me at all—”
“Noooooot exactly true, is it. Because of me you’re not sitting on that throne anymore, right?”
“You know what? The shit’s not worth it to me. You’re what’s important. You’re what matters. Everything else—everyone else can fuck off.”
She glanced over at the throne. “You mean to tell me you don’t care that your father’s seat is no longer your own?”
“I hated the job.”
“That’s not my point.”
“The past is the past and my parents have been dead for centuries.”
She shook her head. “Does that really matter, though. I know why you stuck with it all—it’s for them. Don’t lie to me—more important, don’t lie to yourself.”
He sat back sharply. “I’m not.”
“Yeah, I think you are. I’ve watched you these past two years. I know what’s motivated you—and it would be a mistake to think all that commitment up and disappears because some third party says you can’t wear the crown anymore.”
“Number one, it’s not ‘some third party.’ It’s the Council. Number two, it’s a fait accompli. What’s done is done.”