The unit captain from Pia’s guards came out to meet them. Eva, that was her name. Dragos had met with her personally before Pia’s trip. Just as her unit mate had done, she nodded to him but spoke to Pia. “Whole place is a mess, inside and out. Our rooms smell like smoke, but then everything does right now. Other than the smell, the apartment is fine if you need it.”
Pia said, “Get the others, and have something to eat and rest while you can. We’ve allied with Calondir. Troops will be here in less than two hours, and then we’re crossing with the Elves to go after those who were taken.”
The captain’s face sharpened. “You got it.”
The captain jogged away to round up her unit. Dragos asked Pia, “Where are those rooms?”
She looked up at him thoughtfully. “Not far.”
He frowned. Her earlier fierce outburst of joy had become tempered with other things, and he could no longer tell what she was thinking. He told her, “I want to go there.”
Pia hesitated as her gaze traveled to two Elves who half carried an injured third person into the building. For a moment he thought she would insist on helping them, but instead she said, “All right.”
She led him through the building to the apartment. Other than a dim red flicker of coals that were still glowing in the fireplace, the rooms were almost totally in shadow.
The other Wyr would be arriving soon. Dragos asked, “Which room is yours?”
“This one.” Now she kept her gaze averted as she took him to the bedroom, and his mouth settled into a grim line. As they stepped inside, she pulled away and went to look out the window where torch lights from the working Elves dotted the shoreline and were reflected on the black surface of the river.
He shut the door. This room also had a fireplace. Wood for a fire had been laid but it had not been lit. With a flick of his fingers, he set it alight.
He said, “Look at me.”
She did, sidelong, as he walked over her. He took hold of her shoulders and turned her fully around. “No, really look at me.”
His tone must have conveyed the seriousness of his intent, because she complied, gazing up at him with wide, dark violet eyes. He cupped her face, stroking his thumbs along the rose petal softness of her skin and slipped quietly into her mind.
Last May he had removed an intricate citadel of spells that Pia’s mother had woven around her mind. Her mother had intended to protect her, but ultimately the spells had prevented her from fully accessing her Wyr form once she had matured into adulthood. Now her mental strength was wholly her own—and she was strong, with a slender, wholly feminine thread of steel that ran right through her core.
Obsessively, carefully, he examined every part of her, and she allowed it, resting her hands on his wrists, open and trusting to his mental touch. Finally he pulled back and released a deep breath. “You are clear. There isn’t any lingering influence.”
Relief lightened her lovely features. “Oh, thank God. I was really shaken when I realized how much he had messed with my thinking.”
“What did you dream about?” he demanded. “What did he do to you?”
“Nothing,” she said. Then her eyes widened as she caught the full implications behind his fury. “There weren’t many more details other than what I already told you. He kept trying to put a hand on me, but it wasn’t sexual. I think he was trying to control me, and he was probably trying to control the others as well. They had all fallen asleep, including the two that were on watch. Not even the smoke or the sounds of fighting woke them.” She frowned. “But I also dreamed about the baby, who was lying on me and growling. He bit me, which woke me up and then I woke the others.”
“The baby bit you?” Dragos laid a hand on her abdomen, where his son’s strong, bright spark nestled.
Her expression turned wry. “Yeah, that was my reaction. I really believe he wasn’t trying to hurt me, just startle me. It worked.”
“Way to go, little man,” Dragos told the spark.
He knew that Pia thought the baby believed his name was Peanut. Dragos thought it was more likely that the baby responded to the love he felt when his mother talked about him, and in reality he comprehended little more than love and danger. Still, he had acted twice now to save his mother.
A fierce wave of emotion caught Dragos off guard. He clenched his jaw, blinking.
He had a son. The concept was still new and shocking after several months. He had a son, a delicate and small very Powerful creature, and already he was so proud of him.
“All right,” he said, his voice deeper and rougher than usual. “You’re safe. The baby’s safe. Next item of business.”
Pia raised her eyebrows, her expression turning cautious. “We have items of business?”
“Yes,” he said. “I’m sorry.”
She sighed. “Dragos, we have enough to think about. We don’t have to talk about that right now.”