“I didn’t ask you to look for me.” The words left Kiva before she could stop them.
“What part of this aren’t you understanding?” Caldon growled, his ire rising anew. “We care about you, Kiva. Ignoring that you deliberately kept me from coming with you — which I would have done in a heartbeat, as you damned well know — when you didn’t return, we thought something had happened to you. Do you have any idea how that feels, to know someone you care about is missing, possibly in danger, and you don’t know how to find them?”
The tears welling in Kiva’s eyes weren’t fake this time.
Caldon had lost both his parents after a storm had hit. He’d had no way to find them, or to know if they were still alive.
There were too many parallels with what Kiva had put him through that afternoon, unintentionally making him relive the worst moments of his life.
“I’m sorry,” she whispered again, her voice breaking on the words.
Her emotion didn’t sway Caldon. “Saying sorry doesn’t change what you did. I can’t even stand to look at you right now.” True to his word, he turned his fiery glare to Jaren and demanded, “Come find me later.”
He didn’t wait for his cousin to agree before storming out of the room.
Kiva stared after him, feeling numb.
“He’ll come around. Give him time.”
Turning slowly, Kiva faced Jaren again, the breath leaving her when she found his expression no longer closed, but flooded with everything he’d felt while she’d been gone. Fear, dread, desperation. And relief — so much relief that she was safe.
Her knees wobbled at the knowledge of how much power she held over him.
. . . And at the knowledge of how much, with a single look, he held over her.