“I just—” St. Sebastian started, but Auden shook his head, a single quick jerk.
“Hold completely still,” Auden ordered. “Don’t move until I say.”
Unsure where this was going, St. Sebastian gave a slow, nervous nod.
Auden bent down until his mouth hovered just over St. Sebastian’s, and St. Sebastian wanted to buck and whine with how close they were, how fucking close they were and why wouldn’t Auden just kiss him? Why had he denied St. Sebastian the right to surge up and steal the kiss he needed to keep living?
But St. Sebastian held still. And held his tongue—literally and figuratively.
“I wanted to wait,” Auden breathed over St. Sebastian’s mouth, “until I wouldn’t scare you.”
“Scare me with what?”
“With how much I want to do this.”
And then Auden didn’t kiss St. Sebastian—he bit him. He took that bottom lip he loved to sketch and to touch so much, and he bit it. Right in the middle. Hard enough to leave marks, and hard enough that St. Sebastian grunted against his bite. Hard enough that when he pulled back and blinked down at St. Sebastian, St. Sebastian could feel the hot, shocking roll of blood—just a single, small drop—welling from the very center of his lip and tracing down to the corner of his mouth.
Auden’s eyes darkened as he watched, and then he dipped his head and slowly . . . carefully . . . licked the blood away while St. Sebastian trembled underneath him.
“Did I scare you?” Auden asked, now trailing his kisses everywhere, all over St. Sebastian’s jaw and neck and cheeks and eyelids. He finally brushed his lips against St. Sebastian’s mouth; they were warm and firm and damp with wine and blood. “Did I scare you away?”
Scare? It was like St. Sebastian was learning safety for the very first time. His mother and her family kept him safe in so many separate ways, but this—this—this was his spirit finding its home, this was being seen in his wholeness, in his complicated, contradictory entirety and being worshipped for it.
If there was fear, it was necessary; if there was pain, it was savored. He could no more be scared away from this sketching, drawling, entitled prince than he could change the stars in the sky.
“Never,” St. Sebastian breathed. “You’ll never scare me.”
“I wouldn’t be so sure,” Auden said.
He took St. Sebastian’s wrists in his hand and pinned them above his head, and his hips pinned St. Sebastian’s to the ground, rolling hard, hard enough that St. Sebastian knew he was going to come soon and he didn’t even care. He would have died if Auden stopped, he would have died right there in the lavender.
“Kiss me again,” St. Sebastian pleaded. He searched Auden’s face—flushed, half-lidded—he felt Auden’s thick erection grinding against his own, the seams and zippers and buttons of their pants sending near-heavenly frissons of pain to dance through St. Sebastian’s nerve endings along with the pleasure. “Kiss me again and never stop.”
“God, how many times have I wanted to hear you say just that?” Auden murmured, lowering his mouth again. This kiss came with more—with depth and tongue and stark, cruel possession. Auden would let nothing stop him from searching every part of St. Sebastian’s mouth—he used his free hand to press a thumb against St. Sebastian’s throbbing, bleeding lip and he pulled the lip down and opened St. Sebastian to him even more. And with all of Auden’s weight on him—chests pressed together, and stomachs and cocks—and with lavender in the air and the fountain trilling in the background, St. Sebastian thought maybe it would be good if he died after all, because surely life never got any better than this. Surely this was heaven and anything other than being kissed into the fucking ground by Auden Guest would be hell.
“Promise me,” Auden said raggedly as they parted in a wet, breathless gasp. “Promise me you’ll say when I scare you; promise me that you won’t run away. I couldn’t bear it if you ever ran away from me.”
“I promise,” St. Sebastian said, feeling his chest crushing in with something heavier and better than the weight of Auden’s body. It was the weight of what Auden might feel for him, and fuck if it didn’t fire St. Sebastian’s blood hotter than any liquor, drug, or thrill he’d ever tried. “I promise I won’t run away.”
Auden’s forehead dropped to his and his hips stilled, even though St. Sebastian could feel the incontrovertible proof that Auden hadn’t come yet. Even though St. Sebastian was only two or three more thrusts away from coming himself.
“Auden?” he whispered, hoping he hadn’t done something wrong.
Somehow, Auden seemed to know his fear, in that way that Auden seemed to know things he had no right to know. “Shh,” he hushed St. Sebastian, tucking St. Sebastian to his chest as he rolled off to the side. “You haven’t done anything wrong. You’re perfect. You’re perfect.”
Together they laid in the crushed flower bed, Auden’s arms tight around him, and his face nestled into his strong, warm chest. Auden’s heartbeat filled one ear, the splashing of the fountain filled the other.
If magic was real, like it was in the books St. Sebastian loved so much, then this was it. This was the very thread and pulse of magic, this moment here in the shimmering, sweet-herbed garden of Thornchapel, burrowed in the arms of its master.
“I have to have this,” Auden said, almost apologetically. “I’ve wanted this for so long . . . I can’t rush through it.”
“Kissing me?”
“No,” Auden said.
“Then what?”
“Holding you,” Auden said simply, and for a very long time, neither of them said anything else at all.