“The snow here tends to be soft,” Raphael said. “That’s why it’s a good place for flight training.”
Her heart skipped a beat. “Now?” She’d thought he planned only to take her flying in his arms.
“Now.”
Excitement a tattoo against her ribs, she stepped to the lip of the plateau, and glanced down.
And down.
Vertigo had never been a problem, but—“It suddenly looks a lot farther away now that I know I’ll be falling toward it.”
“You, afraid?” The touch of his wings against her own, a shimmer of gold that she caught with the corner of her eye.
Her lips twitched. “Are you dusting me, Archangel?”
“Angel dust looks beautiful coming off wings in the dark.” A kiss pressed to her jaw as he shifted to stand behind her, the aphrodisiac dust a taste of unadulterated sex. “As you fly, it’ll sink into your skin, readying your body for me.”
“You’re all talk,” she murmured, feeling him settle his hands firmly about her waist. “So, what do I do now?”
“The only way to learn to fly, is to fly.” He pushed her off the edge of the cliff.
Fear obliterated everything but the need to survive. Her wings spread, catching air, slowing her descent as her muscles screamed at the sudden strain. Raphael’s shirt twisted around her, baring her stomach to the elements. She didn’t care, more concerned about getting her wings to work. But it was too late, the ground rushing up at terminal velocity.
No snow was that soft—she was still going to hit hard enough to splinter bones.
Hands gripping her under her arms, lifting her up with effortless strength. Close your wings.
She obeyed, though the adrenaline pumping through her body made her want to do the exact opposite. The instant her feet touched the ground, she swiveled around to push him in the chest, her palms sizzling at the contact with his bare skin. “That’s your idea of teaching? I could’ve been splattered from here to Manhattan!”
“You were never in any danger.” His eyes gleamed with laughter and that just made her madder. “That’s how young angels learn to fly—they’re pushed out of the aeries before they have a chance to develop a fear of it.”
Her fury came to a screeching halt, though her heart continued to ricochet violently in her chest. “You push babies out into thin air?”
“How do you think birds learn to fly?”
“Huh.” She folded her arms, the shirt clammy against her sweat-soaked skin. “You know, I’m an adult—I already know fear.”
“That’s why I didn’t give you any warning. Instinct did what it was supposed to.”
Wiping her hands across her cheeks in an effort to cool them down, she took a deep breath, tied the tails of the shirt at her side and walked back. “Okay, push me again.”
“You can step off yourself.”
Elena had long ago learned to keep her fears to herself, seeing them only as weaknesses that could be used against her, but this time, there was nothing to do but admit it. “I’m too chickenshit.”
Raphael pressed a kiss to her nape, put his hands on her waist again. “This time, snap your wings out as soon as possible.”
Nodding, she was barely in position when he pushed. It took her at least three seconds to snap out her wings. Too slow. Raphael brought her up again. And again. And again.
“Once more,” she said, her muscles crying with exhaustion. “I need to get it.”
Raphael’s face was all austere lines, but he nodded. “Once more.”
Knowing her body would give out even if her will wouldn’t, Elena took a few steps back from the edge. “It won’t be as bad if I run.”
“Remember, you must unfold your wings the instant you become airborne, or the downward momentum will be too strong to stop.”
She nodded, pushing sweat-soaked strands of hair off her face. Then, filling her mind with the image of her body in flight, she began to race over the plateau. She went airborne seconds later, and it was only when she felt the hard pull of muscle in her shoulders that she realized her wings were out. There was even, for a single moment, a slight upward drive before she began to fall again. Except this time, she felt a sense of control.
Her landing was nowhere even remotely close to Raphael’s grace. She came down bruisingly hard on her knees, her momentum throwing her face forward, but she was grinning when she lifted that face from the powder. “I did it!”
The archangel crouching in front of her had eyes filled with a fierce kind of pride. “I had no doubts you would.” He watched her dust off her face. “You’ll hurt as if you’ve been beaten tomorrow, but you must continue to train.”