Burz

He had waited until they were beyond Lyti's hearing, doing her a favor for reasons unfathomable. There was definitely a part of him that would have enjoyed calling attention to her lie and humiliating her in front of her stupid friend, but he hadn't done that. In hindsight he regretted his circumspection. She certainly didn't deserve it.
"When did you first find out? Like your friend, I am just dying to know everything." His inflection mimicked that of Naaja and her friends, but his rasping snarl of a voice turned the words sinister.
Naaja

"Stop it," she said without any expectation that her words would have the slightest effect.
"You know perfectly well that I embellished the truth back there, but I'm going to make it right this very minute. By tomorrow morning the engagement will be official." She spoke with more confidence than she felt. Feigned cheerfulness and deliberate ignorance was the best way she had come up with to deal with Burz's venom.
Burz

"I'm certain your father will be delighted to broker an engagement between you and the lion who was nearly Aesir's son-in-law," he told her. "And that outlander blood will surely make him all the more appealing."
In fact, Burz was still undecided when it came to his feelings about Ru and his return. Nothing had really changed except that a thrall or two was made freeborn and the pride had a few new reavers, some of them female. He smirked. He'd forgotten to mention those.
"Oh, and he takes females viking. Your father will love how forward-thinking he is."
Naaja

"Not that it's any of your business, but I'm not going to talk to my father. That wouldn't be at all proper. And you're right, he wouldn't see the benefits to the arrangement at first. I do appreciate all your helpful suggestions though.."
Helpful suggestions. That was how she would think of Burz's predictions. He was helpfully pointing out arguments that she would have to figure out how to counter when she proposed the match to Thorgrim.
Burz

"Ru was in love with Aesir's daughter Kazul. So in love that he undertook an impossible quest to be with her. With her gone, he may someday marry another, maybe even you, but he will always love her first and best, because their love never had a chance to grow sour and boring. You will always be competing with a ghost, and there is not a woman alive who could win that competition."
He couldn't wait to watch her response to that.
Naaja

"How can you be so consistently hateful?" she asked, her facade crumpling when confronted with the scenario Burz presented. It was what he wanted her to do, and so she hated to do it, but he had found a soft spot she was previously unaware of. "My father could have killed you, you know. Exiles aren't of the pride, and when you were caught in the stronghold he could have killed you, but he spared you. You're lucky."
Burz

His pleasure immunized him against her attempt to make him feel...however she wanted him to feel about his life being spared in his youth. Grateful? Guilty? Whatever it was, she had tried that argument on him in the past to little effect. At this point her try only made him laugh. Or maybe he was laughing at her defeated question about why he was so consistently hateful.
"I'm as lucky to be alive as you would be to be betrothed to Ru," he said to her. "Imagine that: a lifetime bound to someone who doesn't love you. Only you'll dream that he'll change his mind or his feelings and somehow come to love you, which is far less likely to come true than my dream."
Naaja

"I think you underestimate how likable everyone else finds me," she said, forcing herself to be cheerful once more. Then she lied. "Besides, I would think you would be happy to see me married off to anyone at all. My father said he would release you of your bond to protect me when I wed, you know. You would just be a regular thrall in the pride, able to foment rebellion as much as you are able."
Burz

"One day I will kill you," he reminded her. "And everyone you love. I will piss in your wounds while you live, and when I finally allow you to die I will defecate on your corpses and leave them to rot like carrion. You will know every kind of pain."
Suddenly he cut himself off, having realized where she was going. Thorgrim. Oh, that was almost clever of her. But he would have bet blood that he'd unsettled her pretty deeply with his last threat, so he merely offered her a grin and said, "Oh, look. We're here. Good luck."
Naaja

"Keep dreaming," she offered in weak rejoinder.
He was already melting into the background, however. Apparently he had determined that she would not need him as a guard while she was with Thorgrim. That was a blessing at least. That, and the fact that he kept his distance while she took a few moments to compose herself and do her best to dismiss the gorge that had risen in her throat. He had done this deliberately, the b*****d. Well, she wouldn't let him ruin her plans.