that
is
A
Short Tale of
a Bargain, a Confession, Three Bloody Battles, Goodbye Kisses, a Warning, New
Gowns, Princes, and Early Midwinter Gifts
.
.
"What
was it you were thinking of this morning, that you would not tell me
about?"
Dylan's
mouth dropped open. The chesspiece she'd been in the process of moving slipped
from her fingers. She met a fathomless gaze of feral gold. After a few
heartbeats of panic, she managed to squeak out, "Oh, crud." She yanked her hands
away from the chessboard and hid them under the table. Pressed them flat to her
thighs when she noticed they were shaking. "Um... I don't... really...
um...."
Nuada
watched her with that empty amber gaze and simply waited. When she didn't speak
again, he raised an eyebrow. "Are you reneging on our bargain, my
lady?"
She
paled. "No." She drew a deep breath, and let it out slowly. "Okay, fine. I had a
nightmare last night."
"So
I gathered."
Dark
brows furrowed. "You're not going to make this easy, are you?"
"You
ask me to trust you with my weakness, my lady, but you will not trust me with
your own. Getting a confession of any sort of weakness from you is like
attempting to teach a rock to sing; successes vary."
Dylan
blinked, bemused. "You've tried to teach a rock to sing and actually managed
it?"
"Do
not try to change the subject." Nuada's lips twitched. His mortal's nerves faded
a little and she smiled. That smile faded when he murmured, "Tell me what it was
you dreamed, Dylan."
"I
can't." A flash of irritation in topaz eyes. She glared. "I mean I honestly
can't - I don't know what I dreamed. I can't remember. I mean, I remember
parts of it, but that's a different nightmare. It was... it was two nightmares
jumbled together. I know that much. And I remember one part of the nightmare,
but not the other."
"Tell
me what you remember."
"No."
She didn't flinch when he frowned at her. "I can't. This... it will hurt you. I
can't."
"Tell
me, as you swore you would." The human jumped to her feet and paced the length
of the small nook-room. She folded her arms beneath her breasts. Shook her head.
"You owe me the answer to a question, no matter what the question may
be."
Dylan
gritted from between clenched teeth, "Ask me something else."
"I
am asking you this."
Dread
and something icy slid down her spine. She shook her head again. "I'm asking you
to choose a different question."
He
wasn't sure what made him push her - instinct, maybe. Whatever it was, it told
him that this needed to be addressed, and addressed now. Not just her reluctance
to trust him with this, but the nightmare itself, both parts. He needed to know
whatever it was she could tell him about the part she couldn't remember; it was
of vital importance, though he couldn't have said why. And he needed to know
what she could remember, because she didn't want to tell him. What could be so
bad that she didn't want to tell him?
"I
want the answer to this question, and I want it now." Nuada saw her waver. Saw
the hesitation in her eyes, the uncertainty. That she wasn't certain of him
pricked his temper like an iron needle. "Do not be a coward, Dylan. Just tell
me."
Her
head snapped up and she stared at him for a long moment. There was nothing she
could glean from his empty eyes and emotionless face. Finally, she muttered,
"Fine. Fine. You want the truth, fine. I had two nightmares, all jumbled
together, bits and pieces flashing around in my head and scaring the living
daylights out of me. I don't remember half of it, except for a few things.
Silver in the dark, and laughter, and someone holding me down. Pain. Not being
able to breathe, not being able to scream. That's all I remember about that. And
I woke up scared to death and feeling like I was going to be sick, my skin
crawling, but at the same time...." Dylan pressed a hand to her mouth. Leaned
back against the bookcase. "At the same time you were right there and I
wanted..."
Nuada
slowly got to his feet and came towards her. "You wanted me to hold you. To
comfort you." He stopped barely a foot away. She could feel the warmth coming
off his body, because she was suddenly freezing cold. Could see his boots even
though she had her head bowed. "Why did you not ask? I would have held
you."
Dylan
shook her head. "That wasn't what I wanted. I wanted... I wanted you to touch
me. To just... just forget my rules and... and let you... I woke up sick to my
stomach, trying not to scream, everything too hot and too close and I couldn't
breathe, and I was so scared and I didn't know why. I only knew I wanted you.
Knew that if you touched me too much I'd give in and that giving in would be a
mistake. That there was something wrong."
"Because
how could you ever want me?"
Her
eyes flashed. "Seriously? That is what you're getting from this? No.
That's not it. Jeez. It felt wrong. Not the fact that I wanted you, but
how I wanted you. It wasn't like normal. Sometimes - often, actually -
you meet my eyes or you take my hand, and suddenly I can't remember how to
breathe and my heart feels like it's pounding in my throat, and I never want you
to look away or let me go. I've never felt like that with anyone but that's
not what I was feeling this morning.
"And
I've never felt scared because I was attracted to you. I've never felt sick or
scared like that. It was like... I wasn't scared or sick because of lust. It was
on top of the lust. Or maybe the lust was on top of that. I don't know. It
was... it was the same revulsion as after my attack in the subway. I felt... I
don't know why, but separate from how I was feeling about you, I felt...
violated. Degraded. Like someone had done something awful to me, and I couldn't
remember who or what, but I knew it had happened."
Dylan
hugged herself, shivering as if cold. "I keep waking up like that. It's not like
my normal nightmares, although I have them, too. I can handle them. I don't care
about them, not really, not right now. But this... I don't even know what I'm
dreaming. I just keep waking up terrified and sick and every part of my body
burning and it hurts and it's scary and I hate it! And that's all from
the part I don't remember."
It
took a supreme effort, but Nuada kept his hands at his sides. He wanted to take
her in his arms and hold her until the echoes of old fear faded from her voice.
Until she stopped shivering as if she would shake apart. Thank the stars she
wasn't crying; he would not have been able to take it.
"And
the part you do remember? Tell me." The breath hitched in her throat. She shot
him a stricken look. Shook her head. "Dylan-"
"No!"
She clenched her fists. Shoved one hand hard against her mouth. White spots
stood out where her knuckles pressed against her skin. "No. I don't want to.
Please, Nuada, don't ask me."
"I
will not be angry, mo duinne, I promise you." Moving slowly, Nuada took the hand
she had pressed against her lips and drew it down and away, so he could see the
way her mouth trembled. "There is nothing you could tell me about this nightmare
that would anger me." She just shook her head again. "Tell me. It will be all
right, Dylan. Please tell me. Do you not trust me?"
Softly,
she whispered, "Of course I do. More than anyone. I trust you with my
life."
"Do
you trust me with your heart?"
"Yes."
"Then
trust me with this, mo duinne. Tell me," Nuada whispered. She squeezed her eyes
shut. Whispered words that, for a moment, held no meaning to him. "What did you
say?" His voice was hollow.
"You
attacked me. In the nightmare. You... you hurt me."
The
words were like icy stones bruising his tongue when he whispered, "How? How did
I hurt you?"
Dylan
tried to pull back from him. "Nuada-"
"How?"
That single word was a whipcrack demand. She flinched. The Elven warrior set his
hands against the bookcase at Dylan's back, on either side of her head. He
leaned in. Pinned her with a feral gaze. She wasn't afraid of him; would never
be afraid of him. So the closeness of him didn't frighten her at all. But she
was afraid of what would happen if she dared to confess the part of her dream
that she remembered. What would it do to him? Too softly, the warrior said,
"Tell me."
She
swallowed. Closed her eyes. "In my dream," she whispered, then had to clear her
throat when the words barely managed to rasp out of her. "You... Nuada, it was
just a dream. It doesn't matter."
Feral
eyes narrowed. "Do not lie to me, Dylan. Not even to spare me grief or pain. If
it does not matter, why will you not tell me?" His eyes searched her face. Why
would she not tell him? What was so terrible that she would not tell him?
He could think of only one reason. "Tell me."
Topaz
met sapphire. He held her gaze.
"You
raped me," she whispered. He sucked in a sharp breath. That fey gaze demanded
the whole of it. "I... you talked to me. You asked me to let you... and then you
weren't asking anymore. You were demanding and I said no and you grabbed me and
I couldn't... I didn't want to hurt you and I couldn't fight you, you were too
strong, and then... then you..." Nuada jerked away from her. Refused to meet her
eyes. "I didn't want to say anything because I didn't want to upset you. I
didn't want you to think-
"Think
what?" He demanded, voice low and bitter. "Did not wish me to think you feared
me? Did not wish me to think that perhaps, just perhaps, even you could think
the worst of me? To think... to think you could ever believe me
capable-"
"I
don't!" Dylan went to him then. Slid her arms around him and cuddled against his
chest. "I know you would never, ever hurt me. Not ever. I know that. This is why
I didn't want to tell you. It was just a nightmare. It wasn't real. I know that.
I know you. If I thought for a second that you could ever do anything
like that to anyone, especially me, do you think I'd be here with you? I'm not
afraid of you. I trust you."
He
didn't put his arms around her. Didn't dare. His nightmare, the worst of his
darkest dreams, reflected in Dylan's own. What did that mean? How many times had
he succumbed to exhausted slumber in the hopes of outrunning those nightmares,
only to find himself with her? Only to feel her hot salted blood on his hands,
on his skin? Taste the raw copper of it on his tongue as he broke her to pieces
beneath him? He'd never told her. Was certain she hadn't known about any save
that dream where'd he woken in a black, nearly insane rage with his hand on his
knife and his knife at her throat. She hadn't known, and yet now she dreamed of
the same thing.
Nuada
thought of Eamonn, of his curse. That curse should have only taken effect upon
the Zwezdan Elf's death. Should have been thwarted by the royal magic coursing
through the Elf prince's veins. If Dylan was right, then Eamonn was alive. Yet
this nightmare of hers, coupled with his own dark dreams, had an undertaste of
premonition.
Slender
fingers twisted in the back of his shirt. "Nuada," Dylan whispered. "Please.
This is why I didn't want to tell you. Talk to me. Please?"
"I
would never harm you, Dylan," he murmured. His arms came up and enfolded her
against him. He felt the tension drain out of her body. "You must know that. You
must know I would never force you to-"
"I
know," she said. "I know. That's why the dream upsets me so much. It
makes me sick and it scares me when it's happening, but when I wake up I feel so
guilty because I know you would never do that to anyone. You would never hurt
me. Not ever. I know that. You don't have to keep telling me. I know it's true.
I'm not like everyone else - I'm not going to suddenly turn on you, Nuada. You
don't have to keep reassuring me. I know you wouldn't hurt me. I'm sorry; maybe
I should've told you before. There's... there's a lot I haven't talked to you
about. I didn't want to worry you. Or hurt you." Dylan's sigh was warm against
Nuada's throat. "I'm so used to relying on myself. I feel... I feel stupid when
I need your help to deal with things that aren't as important as what you have
to deal with. I mean, one woman's nightmares pale in comparison to the fate of a
struggling fae village, wouldn't you say?"
A
callused hand gently cupped her cheek. "You do not wish to be a
burden."
"I
nearly got you killed once."
"And
you have saved my life at least a dozen times over," Nuada replied.
"Your
dad hates me."
"No,
he does not. He merely finds you annoying at times." His mouth curved slightly
when she huffed a laugh. "When you are sweet and charming, he finds you quite
likeable. He is not a fool, mo duinne."
"The
court thinks you're out of your mind for falling for me."
"They
do not see your charms. It is no fault of mine that they are
blind."
"You
think I'm annoying."
Now
Nuada let the half-smile spread across his face, though his eyes were shadowed.
"Only sometimes." His thumb caressed the fragile edge of her cheekbone. She
turned her face into his palm and sighed.
"But
you think I'm frustrating."
He
began to lead her back to her chair at the chess table. "If I answer that
honestly, will you attempt to kick me?"
Her
smile eased some of the choking emotion tightening his chest. "I make no
promises one way or the other," she said in a sweet voice.
The
prince held out the chair for her so she could sit. Once seated, he scooted her
chair in and took his own seat across from her. "Well, it is lucky that I do not
owe you an answer to a question, then, is it not?" He settled back into his
chair. "I will make you a promise, if you make me one in turn."
"I
tell you everything when you ask if you tell me everything when I
ask?"
Nuada's
brow arched. "In simple terms, yes. Do we have a bargain?"
"Deal."
The
Elven warrior moved his aurulent knight. "How long have you been having this
dream?"
Dylan
moved her own knight. Her hands still shook a little. "I feel like this is
taking unfair advantage of our new deal, since the original stakes of the game
were that for every piece lost, the loser would answer a question for the
winner. However," she added when the prince raised his brows, "I will answer
you. I've been having this nightmare, mingled with my normal ones and the stupid
one I can't remember, every night since the night I slept in your
room."
Pale
fingers hesitated over a spearman. "Since Samhain?"
"What?
No. I... I slept in your room while... while you were unconscious after the duel
with Zhenjin. I couldn't fall asleep because I was worried about you, so I went
and ended up sleeping in your room. On your bed. 'Cause it smelled like you."
She paused. Frowned. "Put that way, it sounds a bit creepy,
actually."
"No,"
he murmured, keeping his eyes on the board. "No, it does not. I... sometimes, I
find myself longing for your cottage purely because I miss the scent of you on
the air." Sun-kissed ivory eyes flicked to her, then away again. "The night we
slept beside each other, your scent and the warmth of you soothed away my dark
dreams. I do not find it strange at all that you ventured to my bed because you
could not sleep."
"Oh."
She made her move, and promptly lost a piece. "Dang it. So not
fair."
"I
did not cheat."
"Your
natural Elven superiority is cheating," she grumbled. Nuada smiled. "May I ask
you a question, now?"
"That
would break the bonds of our first bargain."
"So
does our new one. Your point?" When the prince inclined his head, she asked,
"Why don't you and your dad get along? Why does he think so poorly of
you?"
For
a long time there was silence. Pawns and bishops, knights and castles did battle
and lost - or won, in Nuada's case. Dylan merely waited for him to speak. He'd
promised that if she answered his questions, he would answer hers. So he would.
Even if it was hard on him.
In
the end, his answer sent fury racing like hot poison through her body. For just
a moment, she actually hated King Balor.
"He
blames me for my mother's death. Among other things."
"So,
it's because...." Remembering what Nuada had said about speaking ill of the king
in front of other people, she leaned forward and dropped her voice to a mere
whisper. "Because he's an idiot. Got it."
To
his surprise, Nuada huffed a laugh. It held an edge of bitterness. "How do you
know I was not responsible?"
"How
old were you?"
He
looked up at the sudden change in her voice. Gone was the mortal woman who loved
him without reserve. In her place was the woman Nuada imagined Dylan became when
she was in her role as a healer of heart and mind. Her face was open and without
any expression, yet a gentle warmth was there, a warmth that Nuada had never
seen on the empty court faces of the Bethmooran nobles. Without taking her eyes
off him, she moved a white diamond castle and actually took one of his
spearmen.
"I
was in my ninth century," he replied. Moved his heirophant.
"Where
were her guards?"
"They
were with us."
Her
castle captured another pawn. "How many?"
Nuada
forced himself to focus on the game and not on her questions. "Two. My mother's
habit when spending private time with my sister and I." He captured her last
knight. "I was taking her to see something."
"Why?"
A glittering tower of white diamond slid across the board. "What did you want
her to see?"
"A
Fomorian asphodel. My mother's favorite flower, second only to roses. I found it
just at the edges of the woods around Renvyle, where we lived at the time. I
wanted to show it to her. I thought... I thought it would make her happy."
Nuada's hand rested on the yellow diamond queen, but he didn't move it. "I'd
been there before. Humans saw me. They were waiting for us. For my mother and my
sister."
"And
you knew this how?"
He
blinked at her. "I did not know."
"So
like I said - the reason you and your dad don't get along is because he's an
idiot." And like a switch had been thrown, gone was the mind-healer. Back was
the woman who would brave anything to defend him, to stand by him. Her eyes were
steady on his when she added, "You were a child. You were trying to do something
good for your mother. Blaming you would be like blaming A'du'la'di for what
happened on Sunday. I know you don't blame him. Your father shouldn't blame you.
You definitely shouldn't blame yourself."
Nuada
said, "I do not blame myself. I blame the humans who murdered her. Which is why
I am very glad that they are thoroughly dead." He slid his queen into place.
"Checkmate, mo duinne."
Dylan
sputtered. "What? But... but... oh, come on! Seriously? I suck at this
game."
"You
merely need practice. Another game, then. Unless you are afraid to lose?" His
brow quirked in challenge.
The
mortal met his gaze and did not flinch. "Bring it, Elf boy."
.
Dylan
went to bed after the third game (she lost all three rounds, of course, but it
took longer for Nuada to massacre her chess army each time). She woke from the
same collage of nightmares that had plagued her for the last several days and
readied for work. The gold ring on her finger brought her to the
sanctuary.
Just
as she was reaching for the portal that would open to the rest of the subway,
Nuada's voice stopped her. "You left without saying goodbye."
She
turned. "I'm sorry. I thought you were asleep. I left a note."
"I
saw that." He stood with arms folded across his bare chest, watching her with
golden eyes. He was sleep-rumpled, she realized, a state she almost never saw
him in. Sleeping trews wrinkled. Feet bare on the cold stone of the sanctuary
floor. Hair slightly mussed. He had been asleep. Had her departure woken
him somehow? "But I would prefer a more personal goodbye."
A
smile tugged at her mouth as she realized, "You didn't come here to lecture me.
You came to kiss me goodbye."
He
shrugged. "Can you blame me?"
She
went to him and slid her arms around his neck. "Uh-uh. I can't." Popping up on
tiptoe, she brushed her mouth against his. Felt his hot sigh against her lips.
"I'll be back later. Probably around noon, unless there's an emergency or
something. Then we'll go to the palace tailors or wherever you got that dress
and then we'll do banquet stuff and it'll be fun. Maybe."
As
the human started to turn away, Nuada wrapped one arm around her waist and
caught her chin between his thumb and forefinger. Dylan laid her hands on his
chest and upper arm. Felt the hard strength of muscle toned by centuries of
battle. His skin was warm under her hands. She could feel his heartbeat beneath
her palm.
"You
call that a goodbye kiss?"
"Well,
I did learn how to kiss from you, Your Highness."
Releasing
her chin, Nuada allowed his hand to slide around to her shoulder before
smoothing down her back to the waistband of her jeans. He hooked his fingers in
the belt loops and pulled her close. "Well, mo duinne, it seems I have been
remiss in my duty to you. I will have to teach you better."
The
warmth of his breath against her mouth had her eyes drifting closed. There was a
brush of lips. A feather-soft caress. Golden heat spilled down her spine and
spread through her body as his hands settled at her hips. Until Nuada, she'd
never thought about how it would feel to be cradled by all of the strength of a
warrior. His hands were gentle. Always gentle. But she could feel the strength
of him in the hard muscle of his biceps under her fingers, in his hands holding
her to him.
With
studious concentration Nuada slid his lips over the silk of hers. It was a slow
exploration of her mouth, an exploration that merely touched the surface of what
he would find if he allowed himself to deepen the kiss. He adored her mouth. The
shape of it, the feel of it beneath his own. And he adored kissing her - the way
her eyelashes fluttered as he nipped her bottom lip; how she sighed and pressed
close to him; the way her fingers pressed against his arms when a low sound,
almost a growl, escaped his control.
He
broke the kiss when the need threatened to overtake him. A single, closed-mouth
kiss from her could break his control if he wasn't careful. Instead of focusing
on that, on the way she was looking at him, he touched his forehead to hers and
murmured, "I love kissing you."
"No
arguments here," she whispered. "You're kinda good at this."
Nuada
raised his eyebrows. "Kind of?"
She
smiled. Mischief sparkled in her fey-like blue eyes. "In case you missed the
hint, that was a challenge, Your Highness. Or are you choosing to back down from
the aforesaid challenge?"
The
Elven warrior tangled his fingers in the cascade of dark curls tumbling down her
back. "I never back down from a challenge. Though isn't your brother waiting for
you in the tunnels?"
"John
can wait a few minutes," she said, and kissed him again.
.
It
took more than a few minutes, much to Dylan's chagrin. The kissing itself hadn't
taken that long, though. No, it was Nuada's fault. Nuada being cute. Dylan
dumped all of the blame for her tardiness squarely in the prince's lap. If he
hadn't been so cute, and been saying such charming and romantic (if sometimes
cheesy) stuff in tenderly spoken Gaelic, she'd have left at the end of five
minutes, instead of at the end of fifteen.
John
didn't seem to mind, though. In fact, he'd been chatting up a girl with long
black hair wearing a small silver gear around her neck on a silver chain. Her
jade green eyes fixed on Dylan. The mortal inclined her head to the half-faerie.
From the gear around her neck, she was probably a Gate Minder from the Faerie
kingdom of Thorn. From the green eyes, Dylan knew she was probably the only
female Gate Minder of a dual bloodline in all of the land of Thorn - Aoife
Grayson. The only non-full-blooded faerie Dylan knew of, besides the half-human
mechanic Dean Nails down at the Rustworks, who'd fought a shoggoth off and
lived. They hadn't killed the thing, but they'd escaped it. Dylan had heard the
story from Ravus, who was friends - of a sort - with Dean.
Poor
John,
Dylan thought as she approached and the half-faerie girl made her excuses and
disappeared into the tunnels. He doesn't know she's taken. Oh, well. There's
like, zero chance he'll see her again anytime soon, so no worries. It was
common knowledge along the Faerie grapevine that Dean Nails, half-human bastard
son of the second queen of the kingdom of Windhaven, was in love with Aoife
Grayson, the half-human bastard daughter of the mad Princess Nerissa of Thorn.
Since neither the two queens of Thorn nor the king of Windhaven had done
anything to either of them as far as Dylan knew, she figured they were allowed
to be together.
Dylan
didn't know Aoife at all, and had met Dean only twice while down at the
Rustworks; she'd asked him for directions to get to the home of a pregnant
nain rouge whose husband had sent for the mortal healer when his wife had
gone into early labor. While Dean's mother was a queen, he wasn't a prince. His
mother, Shard, was only queen because she'd married the Erlking of
Windhaven.
Dylan
was glad that neither the queens of Thorn nor the Erlking were sending envoys to
Bethmoora. The Erlking, for the most part, hated every other type of fae other
than Erlkin. Octavia and Sinead, the twin queens of Thorn, were busy with
something else, though rumors hadn't said what. Dylan didn't care. She'd never
met either of the three rulers, only heard stories, and what she'd heard gave
her the chills.
John
teased her a little as they walked to the actual subway station, because her
hair was messed up and he was fairly certain she'd been kissing somebody. Dylan
didn't chide him for teasing her. The fact that he was teasing her,
instead of getting angry that she'd kissed Nuada, was a good enough reason to
put up with his jokes. She didn't bother him about Aoife. John was charming, and
a flirt. Sort of a much milder, less oversexed version of Francesca. Dylan
didn't begrudge him.
Work
was quick. She talked to one of her long-time patiences, a seventeen-year-old
named Gus. Gus had the Sight by virtue of having once been turned (albeit
briefly) into a stone-troll as a little boy. His younger sister, Rosie, had
possessed the Sight as a toddler - most toddlers did, before the Sight faded
away during early childhood - and then been kissed by, as far as Dylan knew, the
world's only flower troll. But the Sight wasn't why Gus had come to her
four years ago, when he was about thirteen. It was because he'd ticked off a
judge of juvenile court so badly that it was either mandatory therapy, or being
carted off to a detention center.
Dylan
had done his initial evaluation. She'd taken one look at the sullen teenager,
seen the odd grayish-purple bruise-like discoloration on his thumb, and blurted
without thinking, "You have troll blood." Gus had given her a single look of
absolute incredulity before grinning.
"You
can see this?" He'd flicked his thumb. A spark of violet power had sizzled along
his skin before disippating. "Wicked. Are you a witch or
something?"
"Or
something," she'd said. And that was all it had taken for him to open
up.
After
she saw Gus and Rosie, she dealt with Varen again, at his father's insistence.
He might have been in college, but his father paid full tuition, so Varen did
what his father wanted - usually. Exceptions were dealing with Faerie and
attending his cheerleading girlfriend Isobel's football games at NYU. After
everything the cheerleader and "the king of all Goths," as Dylan's secretary
called him, had been through, she didn't blame him. Her last session was more of
a check-up with Mickey, who gave her a note on his way out.
The
note was from his older brother Ceśar, leader of the Lobos, and it was simple
and to the point. Things are going to be bad for a couple months. The Park
isn't safe. Watch your back. Right. Message received. She'd be careful.
Especially if Ceśar thought she needed to be warned. So she would watch her
back.
.
Back
in Findias, she found herself in her bedroom. She checked her phone. Right on
time. She slipped out of her room, collecting her guards on the way to the
prince's study. Nuada glanced up from the papers on his desk when Dylan poked
her head in to smile at him. Dark lips curved at the corners.
"Hi,"
she murmured. "So... palace tailors? New dress?"
Nuada's
smile widened. "New dresses."
Dylan
blinked. "New... dresses? Plural? You bought me more than one?"
The
prince slid the papers he'd been perusing back into his desk drawer and got to
his feet. After slipping his spear into the sheath at his back and buckling on
his sword, he met her at the door. "There will be little enough time over the
coming days to see the tailors, and I doubt you'll want to wear the same gown
every night. I wanted to get a headstart. If you do not like them, we can have
new ones made. But give me a chance - I know how to dress a woman."
"Really?"
She arched an eyebrow. "I'm sensing some sort of innuendo hiding in there, but I
don't know what it is." He chuckled. She poked him in the chest. "No laughing. I
know what I'm talking about. You're thinking something wicked."
"Darling,"
he murmured, brushing his lips against her temple. "When I think about you and
clothes, nearly all my thoughts are wicked."
She
blew out a long, slow breath. His mouth against her skin was very warm. "Okay.
Um... okay."
"You
do wonders for my ego."
Dylan
wiggled out of his arms and tried to cool the blush flaming her cheeks. "Like
your ego needs any help from me. New clothes. Shopping. Sort of. Let's
go."
The
palace tailors lived close to the servants' quarters, on the floor just beneath
the second-story guard barracks. Nuada led Dylan into the room on his arm in a
formal escort's stance. He allowed a small smile to play about his lips while
Dylan stared around them in wonder at the massive main room the tailors and
seamstresses used to store fabrics, half-finished projects, and other such
things.
He
paid strict attention to the materials Dylan goggled over - rich sapphire
brocade embroidered with gold; artfully dyed green and amber silks; moonbeam
velvet with the sheen of an ivory freshwater pearl. She actually stopped in
front of a Gevaudan-style gown on a dress-form in pale gold crushed velvet, and
deep forest green and silver-embroidered white silk. Reached out, fingers
trembling, but pulled them back before she actually touched the soft material.
"Oh, that's beautiful. Who's it for?"
"You
think it beautiful?" Nuada asked softly. She nodded, staring up at the gown with
wide eyes and parted lips. "That is well, then, as it is yours."
She
whirled on him. "Mine?" He nodded. Her eyes went wide. "Mine? It's really mine?
You bought that for me?"
A
brush of fingers at her cheek sent warmth curling around her heart. "I did," he
murmured in her ear. "I saw the material and it reminded me of our time in the
royal forest. The sunlight on the water and through the oak leaves, the way it
lit up your eyes when you smiled. You like it?"
"I
love it." She hugged him. "I love it. It's gorgeous. Can I... can I try
it on?"
"Absolutely,
my lady," a soft voice said from behind them.
Dylan
turned to see an Elven man with skin so dark that the sunlight through the
windows brought out purple highlights. His hair hung in a thousand braids to his
waist. Each braid was tipped with copper beads that clicked when the Elf moved
his head. Around his right wrist was a thin hemp rope that dangled with more
copper beads and tiny, black teeth. The pale gold of his tunic and trews
emphasized the midnight pallor of his skin. He bowed to the prince and his
lady.
"I
am Themba, my lady, if it pleases you." His accent reminded Dylan of Aso the
Weaver from the Troll Market. This, then, was another Child of the Spider,
another Elf of Nyame. "I am chief of the palace tailors. Would you like to try
on the gown?"
She
smiled. "Yes, please."
"Come
along, then, and we shall see if I was correct in your
measurements."
"How
did you measure me?" Dylan asked as she and the prince followed the dark-skinned
Elf. Another Elf, this one with uptilted eyes the color of dark garnets and a
streak of blond through the midnight darkness of her short-chopped hair,
carefully removed the dress from the dress-form and followed after the
trio.
Themba
laughed. It was a rich, deep, rolling laugh that reminded Dylan of a lion
purring. "I saw you at the prince's banquet, my lady, when Prince Zhenjin
challenged him for the honor of the little dragon princess."
"Oh."
Then what he was saying truly registered. "Wait, so all you had to do was look
at me once?"
He
nodded. "I am very, very good at my work, my lady. It is why I am chief
of this little part of Findias. Now, if you will but step into this dressing
room, and my young journeymaid, Hiyori, will help you." The little Asian-looking
Elf girl ducked her head in respect.
The
dressing room was rather spacious - more spacious than it had looked from the
outside. She and Hiyori fit easily. At the Onibi Elf's insistence - it turned
out the Elves of Onibi, the Children of the Phoenix, had dark red eyes that were
nearly black and at least a bit of blond in their hair, giving credence to their
legends that stated they were literal descendents of firebirds - Dylan stripped
down to just her underthings and Hiyori helped slide the gown over the mortal's
head.
The
velvet should have made the gown heavy, but it didn't. In fact, it felt lighter
than a cloud of silk. The material was cool and soft against Dylan's skin.
Hiyori cinched up the short bodice laces at front and the long ones back. The
entwined antique gold and hunter green of the laces stood out well against the
white silk of the bodice and the pale gold of the rest of the gown. Hiyori also
helped the mortal with the green silk sleeves so that the laces at the shoulders
sat just right. Dylan only protested when Hiyori tugged the scrunchie out of her
hair. "But-"
"It
will look better this way, my lady," the journeymaid seamstress murmured. Her
accent, strangely, was pure Irish. It held none of the sharp consonants of a
Japanese accent, and she had no issue pronouncing the letter "L," which did not
exist in Japanese. Had she been raised in Bethmoora? "Trust me, my lady. You
will see when the prince looks at you. Now come - let us show Master Themba and
His Highness how beautiful you are."
She
saw it the moment she stepped out of the dressing room and into the light.
Themba laughed and clapped his hands, delighted. "I told you it would fit, my
lady. I am very good at my work. Wonderful." Dylan heard him, but her entire
attention was focused on Nuada.
Nuada
had been in the middle of saying something to Zhenjin, who had appeared
seemingly out of nowhere while Dylan was in the dressing room. With Zhenjin and
Nuada were three other men. Two, the mortal recognized as Goazu and Hou Junji,
the Dilong crown prince's younger brothers.
The
other was a tall, lean man with short, off-white hair so thick it almost looked
like fur. His skin was black as a panther's, and unlike Themba's, seemed to
absorb the sunlight rather than reflecting it. Unlike the Dilong and Bethmooran
Elves, his ears were as rounded as a human's. Undyed leather breaches trimmed in
fur the same color as his hair flowed down long legs into black boots. A white
silk shirt beneath an undyed leather vest, also trimmed in that same ivory fur,
stood out stark against his pitch-black skin. When he turned his head just a
little to say something to Zhenjin, Dylan saw his features looked
Inuit.
Whatever
Zhenjin had been about to say dwindled away when Nuada stopped mid-sentence and
stared at her. Heat flooded Dylan's face. She dropped her gaze to the ground.
The toes of her buff-colored leather boots peeked out from beneath the velvet
skirt of her gown. She stared at those and waited.
The
conversation between the four fae men died away as Nuada stepped forward. When
he stopped a scant few inches in front of her, she glanced up and met a gaze
flickering between warm honeyed amber and gold-kissed ivory.
"Well?"
She said. Her voice was barely a whisper. "What do you think?"
He
opened his mouth. Closed it again. What did he think? He thought he might
have been mad to commission this dress from Themba. Mad, not to realize it would
be absolute torture to see her looking so... so... "You are absolutely stunning,
beloved."
Her
eyes widened. Her cheeks grew hot. "Thank you."
"The
color suits you very well," he murmured. Wry chuckles from behind the Elf prince
made him scowl. Nuada cleared his throat. Turning to the chief of the palace
tailors, he added, "Does it not suit her, Themba?"
The
Nyame Elf took pity on the prince and nodded. "That it does, Your Highness, as
you said it would. Your Ladyship looks well in golds and greens, I think. They
suit you well. Blues, too, methinks. We will see when you come back for more
clothes. You do mean to return to me for my services, do you not, milady?" The
tailor asked when Dylan shot Nuada a startled glance. "You'll need more than a
few gowns for the Midwinter festivities the king plans to host. And then there
are those events that will take place after Midwinter, up until the Frost Moon,
hosted by the nobles of the court. You will no doubt be invited, my
lady."
"Oh.
I... hadn't thought that far ahead," Dylan confessed. From the corner of her
eye, she saw Nuada give her a gentle look that conveyed everything she needed to
know. "But I probably will. Especially if they're all as amazing as this
one."
"It
is the woman who makes the gown, my lady, not the gown that makes the woman,"
Themba rumbled in his deep voice. He smiled at the shy pleasure on the human's
face. "Do you not agree, Your Highness?"
"I
agree," Nuada said softly, taking Dylan's hand. He brushed a gentle kiss across
the healing scrapes on her knuckles. "You always look beautiful, mo mhuire. And
you look positively resplendant in this gown. I will be the envy of the entire
court."
"You're
not too bad looking yourself, Your Highness," Dylan replied, and slid her arms
around his waist to hug him. "I love this dress," she added. "It's so gorgeous.
It really ought to be uncomfortable, but it's so totally not. And it's gorgeous.
I love it. Now, um... who's that?"
"Ah,
yes. Allow me to make the introductions. My fairest lady, Dylan of Central Park,
allow me to introduce the Munaqsri of the White Bears of the North, the Great
Nanook, Lord Mashkaupeu of Saami. His wife is Lady Cassandra; I spoke of her to
you last night."
Dylan
nodded. "I remember. A pleasure to meet you, Great Nanook." She sank into a
curtsy.
"In
private, my lady, I insist my friends call me simply Lord Bear. Great Nanook
sounds so... stuffy. And as you are Nuada's lady and he my friend, I hope to
consider you a friend as well." He held out his hand. "My wife, Cassandra, says
that modern humans prefer to shake hands when they meet someone."
The
human grinned and took the proferred hand. "True. Curtsying all the time takes
some getting used to. And if I'm to call you Lord Bear, then you can call me
Lady Dylan if you like. Or just Dylan."
"Lady
Dylan, then." The munaqsri king smiled. His teeth were startlingly white against
his black skin. "I have the feeling you and my daughter Abigail will get along.
She's not fond of being called 'Lady' or 'Princess' much, herself. And I've
heard from Nuada that you're fond of children."
Blue
eyes lit up. "I am, indeed. How old is your daughter?"
"Six
years old, come the Summer Solstice. She-"
"Daddy!"
Mashkaupeu's
sloe-black eyes lit up as he turned to see a little girl with flame-red hair and
the brightest green eyes Dylan had ever seen dart into the room, followed by two
massive ice trolls. The little girl raced up to the munaqsri king, who hoisted
her into his arms. The trolls followed a few paces back. From the armor of
ensorcelled black ice and the swords of glittering, seafoam-green ice at their
sides, Dylan figured they were the little girl's bodyguards. "Well, so you found
me, eh? I thought you were napping with your mother."
Abigail
shook her head so her ponytail bounced. "Nuh-uh. I tried to sleep, but I was too
excited about the party. So I came to find you, instead. Ijirqang and Keelut
said they would help me. And we found you! What are you doing?"
"Meeting
Prince Nuada's lady. And you should meet the prince yourself. Down you get."
Mashkaupeu set his daughter on the ground and turned her in Nuada's direction.
"Your Royal Highness, allow me to present my daughter, Princess Abigail of
Saami. Abigail, this is Crown Prince Nuada Silverlance of Bethmoora and,"
turning his daughter a little to see Dylan, "Lady Dylan of Central
Park."
Abigail
bobbed a curtsy. "It's nice to meet you. Are you a human?"
Dylan
smiled. "Yes, I am."
"My
mommy's a human, but I'm not. I'm a munaqsri like my daddy. That means I can
carry lifespark. Oh. Your hand is hurt." She pointed at the scrapes on Dylan's
knuckles and the fading bruises on her fingers. "I can fix it. Can I fix
it?"
Dylan
flicked a glance from the child to her father. The munaqsri king shrugged and
gave a go-ahead gesture. Dylan held out her hand. Abigail took it gently
in hers and peered down at it. The tip of her tongue poked between her pursed
lips as she blew a soft breath on the scrapes. As Dylan watched, they faded away
completely. The bruises lightened from grayish-blue to a blue so soft it was
almost non-existent, then faded as well.
"Gotcha.
See? My daddy taught me how to do that. Are you gonna be at the party tonight?"
Abigail asked, changing tack so rapidly that Nuada, Zhenjin, Gaozu, and Hou
Junji were surprised Dylan could keep up. "I don't get to go because it's too
late at night and I have a bedtime. I don't think princesses should have a
bedtime, do you? I mean, we're princesses. So... yeah, no bedtimes. That's what
I think."
"Yes,
I will be at the banquet tonight. I'm sorry you can't go, but everybody needs a
bedtime. Even princes and princesses. When you're young, your body needs more
sleep so it has enough energy to help you grow. You don't want to be little
forever, do you?"
Abigail's
eyes grew round. "No way! If I'm stuck being little, I won't be able to be a
munaqsri anymore!"
"So
bedtime's kind of important, then, huh?"
A
heavy sigh of disappointment. "I guess. You're really smart. Are you a
scientist? My mommy used to be a scientist before she married my daddy. She
knows all about polar bears. That's how they met; she thought he was a polar
bear. Are you a scientist?"
"I'm
a doctor, actually."
"Wow.
So you can heal people and stuff?"
Drawing
back a ways from the mortal and the little girl, the four Elven princes and the
munaqsri king were talking.
"How
can she keep up with everything that child is saying?" Goazu wondered. "She's
just like you, Zhen, with Ming. I've never been able to keep up with Ming's
chatter very long. How is Lady Dylan doing it?"
Nuada
smiled. "She has a way with children. She likes them."
Mashkaupeu
watched his daughter reach out and stroke the plush, gold velvet of the mortal's
gown with a careful hand under Themba's watchful eye. "Abigail certainly likes
her. That's good. Cassie and I were worried because whenever Abigail settled
down for a minute from being excited about this trip, she would get sad and
little scared, I think, about not knowing anyone and not having any friends
here. Many of the nobles in Bethmoora dislike humans, and Cassie was worried
they wouldn't allow their children to play with our daughter."
The
prince of Bethmoora flicked his eyes to Mashkaupeu before settling his gaze on
Dylan once more. "My lady has a handmaiden, physically the same age as your
daughter. U'de'ho'sa'ti, a cougar-shifter from Elphame. And I know King Roiben
Darktithe has brought his consort Lady Kaye's foster-sister, Lady Kate, here. I
see no reason why the three girls cannot be playmates while they are in
Bethmoora."
Sloe-black
eyes shifted to meet eyes of Bethmooran gold. "Thank you, Prince Nuada. I know
that for the longest time, you did not approve of my choice of consort. Yet you
extend this offer to me now. I appreciate it."
Nuada
inclined his head. "I do this just as much for 'Sa'ti as I do it for Princess
Abigail." Now the prince smiled. "Although I think perhaps we should separate my
lady from the princess before they start forming plans that will bring down the
castle."
"I
heard that," Dylan called without looking away from Abigail, who was busy
explaining how the munaqsri of the boreal aspens in Canada was, according to
Lady Cassandra, "out of her ever-loving mind." When Mashkaupeu came up, Abigail
broke off midword and threw her arms around her father. The white-haired king
hoisted her up again.
"Have
you been telling tales, little cub?" The faerie known as the Polar Bear King
asked, poking his daughter lightly in the stomach. Abigail giggled.
"Yep!"
"Well,
it is time to say goodbye now. His Highness and Lady Dylan are more than likely
quite busy preparing for tonight. And while you are not attending the banquet,
you are being presented to the Bethmooran royal family tonight before the
banquet begins, and we must get you ready, as well."
Abigail
blew out a breath. "Okay. Bye, Dylan. Bye, Your Highness."
"Bye-bye,
Abigail," Dylan said, amusement in her voice. Nuada merely inclined his
head.
Mashkaupeu
sent his daughter off with her two ice troll bodyguards. Then he
added, "My
lady, it truly was a pleasure. I had heard things, and... well, some of them
were true, some not. I am glad to see it is true that you have made the prince a
happy man. I shall see you tonight, I hope, Silverlance."
Nuada
canted his head. Opened his mouth to speak, but was interrupted by
Zhenjin.
"Well,
Lady Dylan, now that I can get a word in edgewise, I must say that Silverlance
was absolutely right; that gown suits you very well." The Dilong prince held out
his hand for hers, and kissed the back of it. "I agree with Nuada and
Lord
Bear - you look lovely. As lovely as you are compassionate."
Jade
reptilian eyes locked with eyes of silver-washed blue. Dylan smiled. "Thank you,
Prince Zhenjin."
Gaozu
poked his brother in the ribs. "She belongs to Nuada, Brother," the second
Dilong prince interjected in a stage-whisper. The munaqsri king snorted. Hou
Junji rolled his eyes. "Stop mooning over her. Get your own human."
Zhenjin
shot Goazu a sharp look. "Brother-"
"My
sister's on the lookout for a boyfriend," Dylan said. Nuada made a noise like
A'du'la'di about to cough up a furball. Mashkaupeu, Hou Junji, Gaozu, and
Zhenjin gave him a curious look. Nuada merely stared at his lady in something
akin to horror. "Oh, don't look like that. She's not so bad once you get to know
her."
"You
are jesting, surely."
She
laughed. "You know, my sister still wants a picture of you without a shirt. If I
can get a charm for my phone that allows the camera to pick up your glamor,
would you let me take a picture-"
"No."
"But-"
Without
batting an eyelash, he said, "No."
"You
are a meanie."
"Those
lovely eyes of yours can tear up all you like, you can bat your lashes all you
wish, and you can pout at me if you are willing to sink that low." Dylan huffed
a laugh, and Nuada smiled. "The answer, mo duinne, is still no. I will not be
swayed. Your sister is a lust-minded harpy. I cannot believe you would sic her
on me that way."
Dylan
grinned. "Don't worry, Your Highness, I'll protect you."
Goazu
turned his laugh into a cough. Zhenjin just snorted. Mashkaupeu cleared his
throat several times until he stopped straining not to laugh. Hou Junji found
the ceiling suddenly very interesting. Nuada merely raised his eyebrows
at her. She laughed.
Zhenjin,
Gaozu, Hou Junji, and Mashkaupeu
made
their farewells, and the three princes and the munaqsri king went on their way.
The Bethmooran prince turned to his lady. "Well, you've met the Polar Bear King
and his daughter. What did you think of them?"
She
smiled. "You know," she said in a soft voice, so that only he could hear her. "I
like him. He seems really nice. And Abigail's adorable. Are all your other
friends like that?"
"Mashkaupeu
and I are not true friends. We are not enemies, and he has always respected me,
but we have never been close. His sympathy for humans kept us distant from each
other when we might have grown close. Now, though... I can see how he fell." He
lightly touched Dylan's cheek. She smiled. "Dastan is charming; he has to be.
His twin sister, Dinarzadi, used to hit him if he said something she didn't
like. Kagiso and Günther
will
likely compliment you, but Kagiso is more restrained than Günther.
Males are the subservient gender in Nyame. I know you will like them, though. At
any rate, there are four other gowns I would have you try."
Her
eyes goggled. "You bought me five dresses?" She cocked her head. "You
like buying me stuff. Why?"
Those
amber eyes were serious when he murmured, "There is much I wish to give you that
I cannot, so I give you what I can. Does it bother you?"
"No,"
she said softly. "Whatever makes you happy."
.
In
the end, she was pretty happy, too. All the gowns had fit. Themba really
was good at his job. There was the gold, green, and white gown Nuada had
intended for the final banquet of the Midwinter festivities, as well as four
others: a beautiful gown of gold, silver, and a million shades of rich blue,
similar to one Nuala owned but much darker, to complement Dylan's hair and her
cream-pale skin; a gown of rich crimson and champagne gold, the colors of
Bethmoora, for the banquet that very night; one in royal blue sprinkled with
tiny white jewels like stars across the deepening twilight of the night sky,
meant for a masquerade the king was planning at some point during Midwinter; and
a silk gown of icy blue, ivory, and cream in a style originating in the
French-Faerie kingdom of Gevaudan, meant for the Midwinter Ball. Dylan loved
all of them, but her favorites were the green and gold, and the gown
meant for the Ball itself. Her third favorite was the one meant for the
masquerade, though she didn't have a mask. Someone, Themba informed her, was
taking care of that.
By
the time she and Nuada had gotten back to their suites and eaten a light and
rather late lunch, it was time for them to get ready for the banquet. They
parted company after the Elf prince pressed a soft kiss against her mouth. Then
Dylan raced into the bathroom, calling for Eimh and 'Sa'ti.
Eimh
insisted on a bubblebath to relax her person because the hound claimed she could
smell Dylan's anxiety all the way from the bathroom door. At Dylan's direction,
'Sa'ti laid out her mistress's makeup on the long marble counter. Then Dylan
took as long as she dared to scrub, rinse, luxuriate in the scent of her
favorite soap - summer roses and spring lilies - and then wash and condition her
hair. Even as she was getting out of the bathtub and drying off with a thick
towel 'Sa'ti handed her, the mortal's heart was pounding hard against her
ribs.
*Do
not be nervous,* Eimh said, wagging her tail. *You will have fun. There will be
food. And interesting people. Master will be there to protect you and make sure
no males try to be your mate. And there will be lots of food.* The dog gave a
little bounce. *You bring food back for us?*
"Can't,"
Dylan replied, wrapping herself in the towel and sitting at the vanity. She
called up Youtube on her phone and went looking for the perfect Michelle Phan
tutorial. Was it sad that this adorable girl on the internet was better at
putting on makeup than she was? Probably, but for this, Dylan wanted to look her
absolute best. "I don't think that's allowed."
"I
wish we could go," 'Sa'ti lamented, and sighed. Out of Dylan's five "young"
servants, only Tsu's'di and Sétanta would be accompanying her to the banquet.
Suddenly, though, 'Sa'ti perked up. "But I get to see you in your
dress!"
"If
Themba's assistants get it here," Dylan mumbled. The tailor had said he didn't
want to risk the gown getting ruined by being handled by careless guards or,
horror of horrors, the prince himself. Nuada had merely made a sound somewhere
between a duck quacking and a cat yowling while having a bath, and hadn't
argued.
Halfway
through putting on her makeup, while 'Sa'ti watched with wide, fascinated eyes,
Fionnlagh knocked on the bathroom door and poked her head inside.
"Some
servants from the palace tailors have brought your gown, milady," the guard
said. "And your shoes."
Shoes?
She hadn't tried on any shoes. Dylan started to bite her lip, then remembered
the elegant sheen of gold gloss on her lips and restrained herself. What were
shoes when compared to the banquet itself? She'd be fine. Everything would be
fine. The shoes would be fine. It would all be fine.
Somehow,
despite the fact that her hands were shaking, she managed to finish her makeup.
Slipping on the dress was made easy by the fact that Themba had been kind enough
to send Hiyori to help Dylan once again. This gown was easier; it didn't have as
many parts to lace up. Still, Dylan wasn't sure how she'd have managed without
the Onibi Elf to help her. Hiyori even helped Dylan do her hair, tying it back
in a loose and yet incredibly complex braid while crowning her head with two
other, thinner braids that joined up with the thicker braid behind Dylan's head
to flow down her back.
The
shoes weren't shoes, thank goodness. They were boots of exquisitely soft doeskin
the color of russet winter apples. It matched the dark red of the body of her
gown. Her bootlaces were a deep, antique gold, just a touch darker than her
sleeves and the laces of her bodice. She slipped them on over the black,
gold-sheened socks Nuada had bought her as an apology - it seemed like ages
ago.
Finally
she was ready. Dylan thanked Hiyori, 'Sa'ti, and Eimh. The little ewah girl
gazed up at her and whispered, "Oh, A'ge'lv. You look so pretty." Eimh
whuffed in agreement. Hiyori inclined her head. Dylan had learned during the
clothing try-outs that Onibi Elves rarely smiled, but you could tell when they
were pleased because their eyes did a sort of happy crinkling at the corners.
Hiyori's eyes did that now.
Dylan
stepped out of her room to find Nuada waiting for her. His deep scarlet shirt
and champagne gold tunic and trews made him look strikingly handsome. He had a
different sheath for his sword, as well, and new boots. Or at least, Dylan had
never seen them. When he saw her, he smiled.
"Come
here," he said, and held out his hand to her. "I want to show you something
before we go."
"Okay,"
she murmured. "Sure."
He
led her into his room, which - unlike hers - had a full-length mirror in one
corner. She'd noticed it when he'd changed for his audience with the king two
days before. He positioned her in front of it with gentle hands. "You look
beautiful," he murmured. His arms slid around her from behind, and he held her
against him. "A true lady of Bethmoora." He ducked his head so that his face was
just touching the place where her neck met her shoulder. "And I love your
perfume. It makes my head spin."
"Th-thank
you," she whispered. His breath was warm on her skin. His lips weren't touching
her neck, but she could feel them just a touch too close for her peace of mind.
He was so warm and solid, and the way he held her close to him... she suddenly
couldn't quite catch her breath. "Um... you're making me fluttery."
Nuada
pulled back a little. He'd allowed himself to forget, for just a moment, that
the woman in his arms was not his wife. "Forgive me. I did not mean to make you
uncomfortable. This is why I brought you in here." He let her go to pick
up a burgundy velvet box from the low table beside his bed. "I have something
for you. For tonight. Consider it... an early Midwinter gift. Close your
eyes."
Fighting
back a smile - and losing - Dylan complied. Something cool and metallic touched
the skin above her collarbones. Nuada's fingertips brushed against her throat
and the sides of her neck. She shivered. Then the prince murmured, "Open your
eyes."
It
was a delicate web of rubies and gold, intricately crafted into a teardrop
glittering at her throat. The slender chain was cool against her neck. The
weight of the metal was light on her skin. It was one of the most beautiful
pieces of jewelry she'd ever seen. Simple, yet elegant.
"Wow."
"Do
you like it?" He asked softly. She touched it with hesitant fingers. Nodded. "It
looks lovely on you." He caressed her cheek. "It truly does. And you look
lovely, as well, Dylan. Truly. All the nobles of court will envy
me."
Dylan
smiled. "Thank you. It's beautiful. It... it's beautiful."
"I
have one other thing for you," the prince said softly. "I want to make certain
the royals and other nobles realize that while we are not betrothed, you are
under my protection, you are my lady, and you are the woman I would marry... if
I could." He picked up a second box, a bit larger than the first, and drew the
top off.
Her
eyes widened and she stared at the gleaming contents of the box. "I can't wear
that."
"Why
not?"
"It's
a crown. I can't wear a crown. I'm not royal."
"It
is not a crown, mo duinne. It is a simple headpiece, nothing more." He took out
the golden chain with the gleaming jewel like a drop of mortal blood. "It means
only that you are a noble."
"But
I'm not a noble."
He
chuckled. "Dylan, you are the fourth most powerful person in Bethmoora. You may
not be of noble blood, but I call you 'lady' for a reason." Locking eyes with
her, Prince Nuada murmured, "Please accept it, mo mhuire." At her reluctant nod,
he carefully wove the golden chain through the twin braids crowning her head, so
that the ruby hung at her brow.
She'd
seen stuff like this in movies, but she'd never worn something so... crown-like.
It sent flutters through her stomach. At the same time, it made her feel...
different. Less like the human girl who loved the prince and more like the woman
the prince loved in return. She smiled at him. "How did you know how to put that
on?"
Nuada
was quiet for a moment. Then he murmured, "When I was young, just before a
banquet or other royal preceedings, sometimes my sister's hair pieces would come
loose. Her maids would throw fits if she had to go to them and have it reset, so
she would come to me. I learned very early on how to fix it." He stepped back
from her and let his eyes rove over her face. "You look like a
princess."
"You
know something? I feel like one," she whispered. "I really do. So... you
ready?"
"I
am. Are you?"
She
took his arm when he offered it. "Totally. Let's do this."
"Getting a confession of any sort of weakness from you is like attempting to teach a rock to sing; successes vary."
ReplyDeletelol! :)
hilarious
"You've tried to teach a rock to sing and actually managed it?"
"Do not try to change the subject."
LOL! ^^
"I make no promises one way or the other."
add in that she says sweetly, you don't say how she says that
"Bring it, Elf boy."
LOL! =D
New... dresses? Plural? You bought me more than one?"
:)
TAKE OUT THOR!!
Yay! You fixed it! ^^
ReplyDelete"It really ought to be uncomfortable, but it's so totally not."
Should, not ought. Reads funny
"Although I think perhaps we should separate my lady from the princess before they start forming plans that will bring down the castle."
"I heard that"
lol! ^^
=D
"Stop mooning over her. Get your own human."
LOL!!! ^^
"It's a crown. I can't wear a crown. I'm not royal."
Headpieces look like necklaces at first, not crowns. I saw some today, and they seriously look like necklaces.
Oh wow, I'm done! Then again, I didn't read all of it. I skipped the beginning cuz I've read it already.
Loved the change, babe! The king of the bears, I was wondering when you'd bring him in. And Abigail was AWESOME! ^^
<3