But even as she had been on the brink of taking the next step in their relationship, she realized she just couldn’t do it. The specter of Eryk Thorn seemed to haunt her, and she acknowledged finally that poor Gerald Malick couldn’t replace the mercenary any more than any of the other young men she’d seen on Nova Angeles. And then he left, still not understanding exactly what had happened. Miala wept for the pain she caused him, but she could no more have made a life with him than she could have given her son to another woman to raise.
And now Eryk Thorn had unexpectedly dropped back into her life. Not in a way she would have wanted—if nothing else, she felt slightly ridiculous for being taken in by Murgan and worried that Thorn thought her still foolish and not entirely grown up. Even though she had spent the last eight years planning what she would say to him if she ever saw him again, still she wanted more time.
But time was not on her side. She slept some, fitfully, but the exhaustion that settled in after she lay herself down on Thorn’s uncomfortable bed soon claimed her. Before she knew it, Miala felt the ship drop out of subspace and knew they had arrived at Nova Angeles.
Like so many others, it was a blue jewel of a planet, overlaid with wisps of pale clouds, its many continents strewn like semiprecious stones against a sapphire sea.
“Where to?” asked Thorn, as he looked up to see her standing in the doorway to the cabin.
“Rilsport. It’s the main city on the continent of North Cape.”
Miala watched as he contacted the spaceport and received permission to land at one of the public platforms. As before when they had gone off-planet, he gave the authorities the false name of Captain Marr, and no doubt the ship’s I.D. he transmitted was just as false. Not that it mattered. Nova Angeles was probably about the last place anyone like Eryk Thorn would usually frequent—certainly no one would be looking for him here.
The landing was smooth, and when they left the ship the familiar breezes of late spring caught at her hair. The air smelled faintly of salt from the nearby harbor.
Without protest Miala let Thorn call them a taxi. She knew there was nothing she could do now to head him off—although she was relieved to find that they had landed at midday. At least Jerem would still be at school. Perhaps she could deal with Thorn before her son even came home. Anything, she thought, to keep him from discovering the truth.
The house looked just as she had left it—not that she had expected anything different. She had two household mechs to keep things tidy, and Jerem knew better than to leave his tablet or his toys lying about. He could have as messy a room as he liked, as long as there was still space to walk on the floor, but the rest of the house was sacrosanct. At least there would be no betraying little-boy clutter for Thorn’s sharp eyes to catch.
“Nice place,” he said at length, after she led him through the foyer and into the ground-floor office she maintained for working at home.
“Well, they say you can’t go wrong with real estate,” Miala replied, tension adding to the brittle sarcasm of her tone.
He looked around at the expensive blond-wood furniture, the exotic plants, the delicate light sculpture that glistened at one corner of her desk. Some time while she slept Thorn had changed out of the conspicuous dark robes and into a plain gray jumpsuit, but he still looked dangerous and out of place in the elegant room. “You’ve done well for yourself,” he said.
Miala could feel herself blush slightly. Was his approval really still that important? “I can access the accounts from here,” she said quickly. “There’s a waiting period, though.”
“No problem.”
Still he continued to glance around the room, and she was grateful she’d just recently taken down the portrait of Jerem that usually sat on her desk. He’d complained that he looked stupid in it, since he’d been missing a tooth at the time, and since the school was about to issue new portraits anyway, Miala hadn’t argued the point.
She’d just booted up her computer and was waiting to establish a connection with the bank on New Chicago when the door to her office flew open and Jerem came bounding in.
“You’re back!” he exclaimed. “I thought you wouldn’t be home until the end of—” And he came to a sudden halt as he stared at Eryk Thorn, who had turned from his study of one of the light sculptures to see who the intruder was.
For the longest moment no one spoke. Miala could feel Thorn’s gaze travel from Jerem to her and back to Jerem, where it lingered.
“I got back early,” she managed at last, willing herself to keep her voice calm. “It didn’t take as long as I had thought on Iradia. Speaking of early, why aren’t you in school?”
“Short day,” Jerem replied promptly. “Teacher training or something.”
How could he not see it? To her the resemblance between father and son was almost overwhelming. But although Jerem looked somewhat puzzled to see a strange man standing in her office, that seemed to be the extent of his confusion.
“Jerem, I have a—a client with me right now,” she went on. “Can you give me a few minutes?”
Her son nodded, looking over at Eryk Thorn with a slight frown. “Um, sure. Can I go over to Mikhal’s?”
Her voice a little strangled, Miala replied, “That sounds like a great idea. I’ll call you when it’s time for dinner.”
“Okay.” Jerem gave a quick glance at Thorn, then said, “Bye, sir.”
Thorn inclined his head slightly, but didn’t reply. Then Jerem ran out, the slap of his rubber-soled boots loud on the tiled hallway.
Silence then, as Thorn gazed out the door through which Jerem had just disappeared. Then he turned slowly and fixed Miala with a hard stare. “Is there,” he asked softly, “anything you want to tell me?”
XVII
Miala’s hands found the back of her office chair. Somehow the feel of the expensive leather under her fingers was oddly reassuring. Or perhaps she felt a little safer because both the chair and the bulk of her desk provided some sort of barrier between her and Eryk Thorn.
He waited, watching her carefully. As always, she could not tell what he might be thinking.
How often had she gone over this scene in her mind? How many times had she tried to decide what would be the best way of telling him about Jerem? She’d always thought she would have more time to prepare, more time to soften the news. There was no way to deny the boy’s parentage—Thorn’s legacy revealed itself in every line and curve of Jerem’s face.
“He’s yours,” she said simply, forcing herself to keep her gaze level and steady, fixed on the mercenary.
The dark eyes seemed to bore back into hers. “Were you ever going to tell me?”
At that remark she gave a small, bitter laugh. “And how was I supposed to do that? You didn’t exactly make yourself available.”
One eyebrow lifted slightly. “I can be found—if you know where to look.”
“Well, you knew exactly where I was, and you never came calling,” Miala snapped. Then she looked down at her hands, white-knuckled as they clenched the soft leather of the seat back. Damn it—she had sworn that she wouldn’t take him to task for his absence. She’d known she had no hold on a man such as Eryk Thorn. Taking a breath, she replied, in as reasonable a tone as she could manage, “I made the decision to have him. So it was my responsibility to raise him.”
Finally Thorn looked away from her and glanced around the room, at every detail, from the softly pulsing light sculpture on her desk to the expensive antique lithographs on the textured walls.
Perhaps he thought she had raised the boy in too soft an environment. Miala had always tried to make sure that Jerem never lacked for anything—not in his home, not in his school—not even in the friends she’d made sure he cultivated. Outsiders they were and always would be, but Miala’s continuing successes and the unremarkable life she and her son led had eventually won over most of their acquaintances in the upscale neighborhood. Not for Jerem a life on the margins, where he never fit in or felt comfortable in his
surroundings. Too often in her own childhood she’d considered herself ignored, superfluous—she was the reason her father got stuck on Iradia in the first place, after all, and between her half off-worlder status and their continuing poverty, Miala had always felt on the outside, even in as marginal a place as Aldis Nova.
But in making sure everything was safe for Jerem, perhaps she had denied his heritage. Maybe the continuing scrapes he got into at school were simply the expression of a restlessness he had inherited from his father. Miala knew nothing about Thorn’s background, except his admission during that one half-drunken dinner they’d shared at Mast’s compound that he’d been born in a brothel, begotten by a man he’d never seen or met. But who that father was, or which world he called home, she had never known.
Thorn spoke then, in that same flat voice which revealed nothing of his true thoughts. “And you never thought it was your responsibility to let me know he existed?”
He had her there, and she knew it. So many times over the years she’d thought of hiring an agent to track down Thorn and inform him that she wanted to meet, but over and over again she’d rejected the idea. Miala could never think of a way to approach Thorn that somehow didn’t seem like the cry of a desperate woman, and so she’d maintained her silence, telling herself that Jerem was doing just fine without a father. The unfairness of it struck her now, as she looked on Eryk Thorn’s hard face. She could see nothing there of the passion they had once shared. He might have been a stranger.
It hurt. Of course she’d known he wouldn’t sweep her into his arms and murmur soft words of forgiveness into her ear, but at the same time she’d hoped that perhaps he would soften once he had seen Jerem, once he realized what a fine son he truly had.
“I wanted to tell you,” Miala said at length, and to her horror her voice sounded thick, choked with tears she only just now realized had sprung to her eyes. Blinking, she tried to force them away. The last thing a man like Thorn wanted to deal with was some weeping female. “I just didn’t know—know how,” she ended and, to her dismay, began to sob. Idiot! she berated herself. He’ll definitely walk out on you now...
To her surprise, he did exactly the opposite. Almost before she realized what was happening, his arms were around her, and she found herself held once more by the only man who had ever felt so strong, so real. All the others over the years had been but ghosts.
Miala leaned her head against his firm chest, felt the wonder of his hand stroking her loosened hair. And what was that? Had his lips just brushed against the top of her head?
Some of his strength seemed to flow from him into her own body, and, almost as immediately as they had begun, the tears dried on her flushed face. It was enough for now just to feel his chest rise and fall against her cheek, to feel the heavy warmth of his hand against her hair.
After what seemed like several eternities, Miala lifted her face to his. “Sorry about that,” she said, and raised a hand to wipe at her eyes. “I always swore I wouldn’t fall apart, but—”
“It doesn’t matter.” He watched her closely, eyes narrowing a bit. “Does he know about me?”
Biting her lip, Miala shook her head. “I couldn’t tell him. Not when I didn’t know if I would ever see you again.” She managed a shaky laugh, then added, “Besides, he’s enough of a handful without trying to be the next Eryk Thorn.”
That remark brought the quirk she remembered to the corner of his mouth. Seeing it, Miala experienced a sudden rush of relief. Perhaps there would be additional recriminations later, but she realized he would not make a scene over this. She’d forgotten that, above all things, Thorn was a realist—and a cold one at that. Accusations and threats would not change the fact that he had a son. Best to deal with the situation calmly and logically.
That’s probably why he held me just now, she thought, with an odd mixture of wryness and sorrow. What’s the fastest way to get a crying woman to shut up, anyway? Take her in your arms and tell her everything is going to be all right.
Of course, Thorn hadn’t really said any such a thing, but his actions had been enough. Just the sensation of his heart beating against hers had calmed her.
Looking up, she caught his gaze and tried to convey some of her regret to him as his eyes locked with hers. “I’m sorry, Thorn,” she said. “I didn’t do it to—to hurt you, or to have something to hold over you later. You have to believe me about that.”
“I believe you,” he replied quietly. “So why? You were going to a new planet, a new life. Why tie yourself down like that?”
Why, indeed. Did she dare explain to him that Jerem was the living expression of the love she had felt for Eryk Thorn, that the mercenary’s child had given her the devotion she could never have expected from his father? But confessing that would reveal how much Miala had loved him—still loved him, she thought suddenly. It didn’t matter that eight years had separated them, that he had never tried to see her during all that lonely time, even that he was probably angrier with her now than he chose to reveal. She had never dared to tell him how much she really cared. Perhaps he knew, perhaps not. Strange that telling Eryk Thorn how she felt suddenly seemed so much more difficult than admitting Jerem was his son.
All sorts of flip answers bubbled their way to her lips, but she knew that uttering any of them would be worse than useless. “He was a part of you I could keep,” Miala said at last.
The silence between them seemed to lengthen painfully as Thorn stared down at her. For the first time she noticed how taut the muscles in his jaw looked and thought of how difficult this must be for him, a man who had spent almost his entire life alone, who had made sure he had no personal entanglements to tie him down.
“This doesn’t have to change anything if you don’t want it to,” she went on, wishing that just this once she could read those impassive dark eyes. “If you decide to go back to your ship and fly out of here, I won’t blame you. And Jerem would never have to know.”
For the first time she saw a brush of anger pass over his features. “What kind of man would I be if I did that?”
“I don’t know,” she admitted. “But I suppose some might say it was the way they’d expect a mercenary such as you to react.”
“All the more reason not to,” he said immediately, and she could finally hear the edge to his voice that indicated a deeply buried rage. “I honor my debts.”
“There’s no debt here,” Miala replied, and she could sense the anger begin to build in her as well, as she recalled all the times over the years when she had despaired of ever seeing Thorn again, all the sleepless nights she had spent worrying over their son and wondering if he were somehow going to turn out irreparably damaged because he had never known his father. “No one knows he’s yours. And I’ve already told you I don’t expect anything from you for him.”
“Who does he think his father is?”
Desperately, she said, “I told him his father died in the siege of Arlinais.”
An eyebrow went up. “A brave Gaian defending his home world’s honor?”
“Well, of course,” she snapped.
“Of course,” Thorn echoed, and again his mouth twitched.
Did he think it was funny? God, if he only knew how long she’d agonized over what story to tell Jerem about his father—this fictional parent had to be dead, so there was no hope of Jerem ever trying to find him, but at the same time she wanted the father Jerem had never known to be someone he at least could be proud of. Time after time she had reproached herself. I am going to burn for the lies I’ve told my son. Desperate and alone, she could think of nothing else to do.
“I had to tell him something,” Miala said at length. “What was I supposed to do?”
Another long pause. Finally Thorn replied, “I don’t know.” To her surprise, he reached out and smoothed the hair away from her brow, then traced his fingers along the curve of her cheek. His gaze was intent, as if he were refamiliarizing himself with the contours of her face.
His touc
h was almost too much for her shaky composure. Miala took a deep breath, then another. What can one more revelation do? she asked herself, then said, “I never meant to fall in love with you.”
“I know,” Thorn replied. He hesitated, a slight frown pulling at the level dark brows. Miala could only guess that he was wrestling with thoughts and feelings he’d never thought he would have to articulate. “That’s why I thought it would be better if I left.”
“Because you didn’t have the same feelings for me,” Miala said flatly. Even though she’d known he might say something like this, still the pain of it seemed to cut through her the way she imagined a pulse rifle wound must feel—intense, white-hot, searing agony.
“No,” he replied, his voice quiet. “Because I did.”
A cautious joy began to spread through her. Had he really just said—
“Connections kill,” Thorn continued. “That’s what I thought. I’d let you get too close. I couldn’t take the risk of caring for someone. You’d be a target.”
“So you let me go off to the university here—”
“—where you’d be safe,” he finished. “And no one the wiser. If I’d known—if you’d said anything—”
“What could I have said?” Miala asked. “I was so sure you were tired of me, that you wanted to see me off so you could get on with your life—”
His response was to bring his mouth down on hers, smothering her useless explanations. For a shocked second Miala remained absolutely still, and then she returned the kiss, her own mouth opening to his, remembering the familiar taste of him as if he had last done this only hours ago instead of years. A rush of desire washed over her, so strong that for a moment it made her dizzy. No wonder everyone else had seemed pallid and insipid compared to him, her lost mercenary. Somehow, insane as it seemed, she had always known he was the only man in the galaxy for her.
Eventually Thorn pulled away from her. His dark eyes had a warmth she remembered from their time together in Mast’s compound. “So who’s going to tell him?” he asked.
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