Renner parted her folds and pushed against her opening, filling her still very wet channel. Miren surrendered control to the three, her moans and gasps joining theirs until their cries echoed around the room.
At the last, Renner pounded her while the twins kissed and stroked her hot skin. When she came, they soothed her, whispering promises to love and care for her for as long as they walked this plane.
Lying atop Renner while she recovered, she enjoyed the feeling of being surrounded, flanked on both sides by two handsome demons. Her sisters would be so jealous. Would likely wonder about the possibilities about to open for them when the others learned about their arrangement.
Renner fingered the tips of her breasts. “Would you like to take the boat out tomorrow?”
“Will you all crew for me?”
“Of course.”
“You have your own jobs.”
“Until you’re claimed, our job is you.”
She lifted her head to study his expression. There was no impatience, no judgment. “Then I guess it better be soon or I’ll be out of business.”
His crooked grin coaxed her own to stretch across her face, and she laid her cheek over his heart to listen to the loud thud. “The full moon’s tomorrow night. I don’t want a church wedding. I want to marry like a proper witch.”
A long sigh lowered Renner’s chest, and he kissed her hair. “Tomorrow night then. Sure you want witnesses?”
“I want my sisters with me. I want them to know that anything is possible if they want it badly enough.”
“No more fears about demons stealing power?”
She looked at Elias, whose eyes sparkled in the moonlight. “There are three of you in case one decides to get greedy. I think I’m covered.”
Elias smirked. “You’re in charge. Except when we are here.”
Her smile faded. “Elias, are you and your brother sure you want to join us? Renner will claim me. My child will be his.”
Elias’s smile softened. He tapped her nose. “Miren, darling, you have a very loving heart. Big enough to make room for us. Of that, I have no fear. You watch, we will protect you, pleasure you. Our bond will strengthen. And when your child comes, we will love it as our own.”
Miren swallowed the lump burning the back of her throat. “We’ll need a bigger bed.”
With laughter rising, filling the room, Miren’s mind swirled with all the loving possibilities.
Chapter Six
Renner watched as Miren haggled with the buyer at the docks, enjoying how she negotiated, part Southern honey—exaggerated on her part, since she didn’t have a drop of Southern belle in her blood—and part vinegar. When both were satisfied with the price for the morning’s catch, Miren nodded and reached out her hand to seal the deal with the buyer who seemed young for the job. He was dressed in cutoffs, was bare-chested and he looked mightily disappointed as he eyed Miren’s crew.
Renner guessed the scrawny younger man knew he didn’t stand a snowball’s chance in hell of attracting her attention when he and the two mermen accompanied her.
When she walked back to the boat, he loosened the line and held out his hand to help her step aboard. In minutes, with her guiding the boat through a narrow inlet, they were back in open water. Only they didn’t follow the shoreline.
“Where are we going?” he asked, coming up behind her to wrap his arms around her narrow waist.
She glanced sideways, challenge in her eyes. “Want to wash off the smell of shrimp?”
He smiled, glanced at the clear sky above them and then over at the two mermen, who had been restless all day as she’d methodically dropped nets to drag the ocean bottom for tasty crustaceans. So near the sea, and the mermen hadn’t dipped their tails even once. He guessed they were all ready to play.
“Sounds like fun.” And a nice diversion to get their minds off the coming full moon. Tonight, everything would change.
Once they were far enough out to sea that the risk of another seagoing craft crossing their paths diminished, she shut down the engine, dropped the anchor and began rifling through a chest for snorkels and fins.
“We won’t be needing those,” Mikkel said, already shucking his shorts and tee.
Elias laughed and leapt nude off the side of the boat.