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Heir to the Shadows





Her eyes narrowed to slits.



"I don't know how things are in Kaeleer, but it used to



be, in Terreille, that a young man could register at a Red Moon house and not only get his 'relief but also learn how to do more than a thirty-second poke and hump."



She made a choking sound that might have been a suppressed laugh.



"And if they can't afford a Red Moon house, they can i> get their own 'relief easily enough."



"How?"



Lucivar suppressed a grin. Sometimes catching her interest was as easy as rolling a ball of yarn in front of a kitten. "I'm not sure an older brother is the right person to explain that," he said primly.



She studied him. "You don't like sex, do you?"



"Not my experience of it, no." He traced her fingers, needing to be honest. "But I've always thought that if I cared about a woman, it would be wonderful to give her that kind of pleasure." He shook himself and set her on her feet. "Enough of this. You need to eat and get your strength back. There's beef soup and a loaf of fresh bread."



Jaenelle paled. "It won't stay down. It never does after . . ."



"Try."



When they sat down to eat, she managed three spoonfuls of soup and one mouthful of bread before she bolted into the bathroom.



His own appetite gone, Lucivar cleared the table. He was pouring the soup back into the pan when Smoke slunk into the kitchen.



"Lucivar?"



Lucivar lifted his bowl of soup. "You want some of this?"



Smoke ignored the offer. "Bad dreams come now. Hurt the Lady. She not talk to us, not see us, not want males near. Not eat, not sleep, walk walk walk, snarl at us. Bad dreams now, Lucivar."



"Do the bad dreams always come after one of these visits?" Lucivar asked, narrowing his thoughts to a spear thread.



Smoke bared his teeth in a silent snarl. " Always."



Lucivar's stomach clenched. So it didn't end once she got



away from Little Terreille. "How long?" The kindred had a fluid sense of time, but Smoke, at least, understood basic divisions of day and night.



Smoke cocked his head. "Night, day, night, day . . . maybe night."



So she'd spend tonight and the next two days trying to outrun the nightmares hovering at the edge of her vision by depleting an already exhausted body that she would mercilessly flog until it collapsed under the strain of no food, no water, no rest. What kind of dreams could drive a young woman to such masochistic cruelty?



He found out that night.



The change in her breathing snapped him out of a light sleep. Propping himself up on one arm, he reached for her shoulder.



"Can't wake when bad dreams come." Standing at the foot of the bed, Smoke's eyes caught the moonlight.



"Why?"



"Not see us. Not know us. All dreams."



Lucivar swore under his breath. If every sound, every touch got sucked into the dreamscape . " .



Jaenelle's body arched like a tightly strung bow.



He studied the clenched, straining muscles and swore again. She'd be hurting sore in the morning.



The tension went out of her body. She collapsed against the mattress, twitching, moaning, sweat-soaked.



He had to wake her up. If it took throwing her into a cold shower or walking her around the meadow for the rest of the night, he was going to wake her up.



He reached out again . . . and she began to talk.



Every word was a physical blow as the memories poured out.



His head bowed, his body flinching, he listened as she talked about and to Marjane, Myrol and Rebecca, Dannie, and, especially, Rose. He listened to the horrors a child had witnessed and endured in a place called Briarwood. He listened to the names of the men who had hurt her, hurt them all. And he suffered with her as she relived the rape that had torn her apart physically and had shattered her



mind, the rape that had made her desperately try to sever the link between body and spirit.



As she plunged once again into an abyss beyond reach, she took a deep, ragged breath, murmured a name, and was still.



He watched her for several minutes until he felt reasonably sure she was just sleeping deeply. Then he went into the bathroom and was quietly, but thoroughly, sick.



He rinsed out his mouth, padded into the kitchen, and poured a generous dose of whiskey. Naked, he stepped onto the porch and let the night air dry the sweat from his skin while he sipped his drink.



Smoke came out of the cabin, standing so close his fur tickled Lucivar's bare leg. The two young wolves remained huddled at the far end of the porch.



"She never remembers, does she?" Lucivar asked Smoke.



"No. The Darkness is kind."



Maybe she just wasn't ready to face those memories. He certainly wasn't going to push her. But he had the uneasy feeling that the day would come when someone or something would force that door open and she would have to face her past. Until then, there were some things he would hold in silence—and he hoped she would forgive him.



He'd heard pain when she'd talked about the men who had hurt her. He'd heard pain when she'd talked about the man who had raped her.



But the only time she'd mentioned Daemon, his name had sounded like a promise, like a caress.



Blinking back tears and leashing his guilt, Lucivar finished the whiskey and turned to go back inside.



2 / Kaeleer



Lucivar settled on the tree stump that marked the usual halfway point for walkies. Summer was over. The healing was complete. Two days ago, he had successfully made the Khaldharon Run. Yesterday, he and Jaenelle had gone to the Fyreborn Islands to play with the small dragons who lived there. He would have happily spent today being lazy,



but something had pushed Jaenelle out of the cabin the moment they'd returned this morning, and the way she shied away from his questions told him it had to do with him.



Well, if you couldn't entice the kitten with a ball of yarn, you certainly could provoke her with a fast dunk in a tub of cold water.



"You could have warned me, Cat."



Jaenelle bristled. "Itold you to watch your angle when you whomped that wave." Her eyes flicked to his right side. She chewed her lower lip. "Lucivar, that bruise looks awfully nasty. Are you sure—"



"I wasn't talking about the wave," Lucivar said through his teeth. "I was talking about the pickle berries."



"Oh." Jaenelle sat down near the tree stump. She gave him a slanty-eyed look. "Well, I did think the name was sufficient warning so that a person wouldn't just sink his teeth into one."



"I was thirsty. You said they were juicy."



"They are," Jaenelle pointed out so reasonably that he wanted to belt her. She wrapped her arms around her knees. "The dragons were extremely impressed by the sounds you made. They wondered if you were demonstrating territorial claims or a mating challenge."



Lucivar shuddered at the memory of biting into that aptly named fruit. Juicy, yes. When he'd bitten into it, the juice had flooded his mouth with golden sweetness for a moment before the tartness made his teeth curl and his throat close. He'd stomped and howled so much he could understand why the dragons thought he'd been showing them examples of Eyrien display. To add to the insult, the dragons had chomped on pickle berries throughout that whole damn performance while Jaenelle had nibbled daintily and watched with wide-eyed apprehension.



The little traitor. She was sitting close enough to reach, the trusting little fool. No weapons. He wanted his bare hands on her. Strangling would be too quick, too permanent. Pulling her across his lap and whacking her ass until his hand got hot . . .



She shifted her hips, putting her just out of reach.



Lucivar bared his teeth in a smile, acknowledging the movement.



Shifting a little farther, she began to pluck grass. "I gave Mrs. Beale a pickle berry once," she said in a small voice.



Lucivar stared at the meadow. Over the past three months, he'd heard plenty of stories about the cook who worked for Jaenelle's family. "Did you tell her what it's called?"



"No." A small, pleased smile curved Jaenelle's lips.



He clenched his teeth. "What happened?"



"Well, Papa asked me if I had any idea why those sounds were coming from the kitchen and I said I did have some idea and he said 'I see,' stuffed me into one of our private Coaches, and told Khary to take me to Morghann's house since Scelt was on the other side of the Realm."



Struggling to keep a straight face, Lucivar clamped his right hand over his left wrist hard enough to hurt. It helped.



"The next morning, Mrs. Beale cornered Papa in his study and told him that I'd given her a sample of a new kind of fruit and, having thought about it, she'd decided that it would enhance the flavor of a number of common dishes and she'd appreciate having some. Then she set a wicker basket on Papa's desk and Papa had to tell her that he didn't know where the fruit came from and Mrs. Beale pointed out that, obviously, I did, and Papa just as politely pointed out that I was not at home at the moment and Mrs. Beale suggested that he and her wicker basket go find me and bring back the desired fruit. So he did and we did and because the Fyreborn Islands are a closed Territory, Mrs. Beale is envied by other cooks for her ability to produce this unique taste in the food she prepares."



Lucivar rubbed his head vigorously, then smoothed back his shoulder-length black hair. "Does Mrs. Beale outrank your father?"



"Not by a long shot," Jaenelle said tartly, and then added plaintively, "It's just that she's rather . . .large."



"I'd like to meet Mrs. Beale. I think I'm in love." He looked at Jaenelle's horrified expression, fell off the stump, and laughed himself silly. He laughed even harder when



she poked him, and said worriedly, "You were joking, weren't you, Lucivar? Lucivar?"



With a whoop, he yanked her down on top of him and wrapped his arms around her tight enough to hold her and loose enough not to panic her. "You should have been Eyrien," he said once his laughter had settled to a quiet simmer. "You've got the brass for it."
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