Nathaniel stumbled against Desmond who grabbed him before he fell. This was a dead giveaway that his relationship with the queen was more than just friendly, but neither of them cared. Nathaniel righted himself quickly, but his eyes were frantic.
“Eliza was telling me something right before the attack. She thought that her cousin, Ladd, the one who kidnapped her, was back from the dead. I thought she was crazy, but when Dorian returned, I see that it's now possible. We have to get to the bottom of this. We have to–”
“Nathaniel, we are peacekeepers,” Thomas said. “We are protectors. But more importantly, we do not go where we are not wanted. Unless someone on Jeffro invites us, we cannot simply turn up.”
“We are search and rescue!” Nathaniel protested. “We protect those who cannot protect themselves. This is an attack on–”
“The Jurors will not send a team to Jeffro until we know more,” Thomas said firmly. “And that will be the end of it. If you wish to be on that mission, we can consider your request. But right now, we wait for news. If the planet is not stable, we cannot risk your life.”
“I don't care about my life,” Nathaniel said quickly. Desmond grabbed him before it was too late, throwing a hand over his mouth.
“Come, Tiro,” he said firmly. “We are dismissed.”
It took everything he had to drag Nathaniel out of the room. Frankly, given his former Tiro's energy and mouth, he was surprised this was the first time he ever had to do it. Nathaniel was shaking, somewhere between rage and shock.
“We have to go.”
“There is nothing we can do but wait and see,” Desmond said.
“Sienna,” Nathaniel suddenly said. “Sienna could reach out to ping Eliza, even this far away. She has a connection with her ever since she brought her back.”
“And every time she uses that kind of magic her stomach contents end up on the floor,” Desmond reminded Nathaniel. “Listen to me. No, stop talking and listen. Are you listening?”
Nathaniel nodded, although it was with great difficulty.
“As with every other great disaster this galaxy has been through, we will wait here at the Academy until we are told where we can best be used. It could be a few minutes; it could be a few hours. Eliza is smarter than everyone is giving her credit for. If there was an attack on the palace, she and her team would have gotten out. I have no doubt about it.”
“But…” Nathaniel started.
“It's a twelve-hour trip to Jeffro. What if you are halfway there and find that you've wasted time because they've evacuated elsewhere? What if the next attack is here? What if Sienna needs you?”
These words seemed to bring some sense into Nathaniel who took a deep breath. He wasn't calm – his hands still shaking – but he did loosen his shoulders a bit. Desmond awkwardly patted his arm.
“Come on. I promised Dorian that you would meet him. I've arranged breakfast for all of us.”
“All of us?” Nathaniel answered, confused.
“Christa is here as well,” he said. “I can present my whole timeline to my former Maestro and wait for his judgment.”
Normally, a joke like that would get a smile out of Nathaniel. Today, it got nothing. He glanced at his watch, sighing. “I'll shower and I'll meet you in your rooms? I don't think I could stand being in the cafeteria right now.”
“It's a sound plan,” Desmond replied. “You call me if you need anything.”
“It is just past six o'clock,” Nathaniel pointed out. “So, you call me if you need anything.”
“Right.” Desmond paused and pinged Sienna, who was predictably still asleep. “I'll get her then.”
“Thank you,” Nathaniel replied, turning on his heel. His mind was so distracted that he almost ran straight into a post. Luckily, his magic alerted him before his brain did, and he turned at the last second.
That move, however, nearly made him run into Laura.
“Whoa,” she said, grabbing him. “What's on fire?”
“So much,” he answered. “We're on emergency call. The Jeffroian palace...is gone.”
Laura gasped, putting her hand to her mouth. “Nathaniel, I'm so sorry,” she said.
He gritted his teeth. “The Jurors say that there are no survivors,” he managed. “But I have hope. I'm just going to shower. I want to be ready to go just in case.”
“Of course,” she said, and he realized how early it was.
“Why are you awake?”
“Haven't slept yet,” she admitted. “I didn't want to leave Devon.”
“Of course,” Nathaniel said. “Is he all right?”
“He's fine,” Laura replied. “But he's so rarely in pain that I don't like to leave him when he is.”
“I understand,” Nathaniel answered. “He gave Sienna quite the scare. She was worried.”
“She need not be,” Laura replied. “He has years, at least.”
“Oh,” Nathaniel paused. “You have certainty? Or hope?”
“Certainty, if statistics are any measure,” Laura shrugged, and then realized what she was saying. “I'm sorry. You have no certainty.”
Nathaniel paused. “We keep hope. As I must do now.”
She shook her head. “Of course. I'm sorry. I'm going to get some sleep. But if you need anything…”
She met his eyes, and he was reminded of the passion that he shared with her the night before. It was so easy with her; there was no need for complicated conversation. They seemed to be mirror images of each other, knowing what the other was going through before words were even spoken.
For one brief moment, he had a flash of what his potential future could be like. His life could be like this: effortless in matters of the heart, no distance, no confusion, and no explanations.
He had always envied what Desmond and Mariah had and how they operated. There was a home to come to – not two distinct planets to visit. There was a shared language and shared knowledge; not panic every time they saw each other. They had time off together to do as they pleased, and no one wondered when they spent hours talking.
He had been staring in her eyes for a few seconds before he realized that. He pulled back, shaking himself. “Sorry. I will,” he promised her, putting a hand on her shoulder. “Thank you.”
“Of course,” she shrugged. “That's what friends are for.”
“Right. Friends,” he said as she headed off. Was that was happening?
He headed into his room with a daze, showering so quickly he wasn't even sure he remembered it. He was simply going through the motions, his ears perked for the sound of a video call. He was hoping against hope that Eliza would just call and tell him it was all a bad dream.
But the call didn't come.
He somehow made it to Desmond's chambers early. Only Christa sat there, clearly fresh off a mission. She smiled as Nathaniel came in. She was like a big sister to him, always one step ahead, always ready to share stories of Desmond's looks of terror.
“How are you?” she said. “I heard.”
He sighed. “I’m barely holding it together.”
“Everything will be fine,” she assured him. “I can feel it.”
“Thank you,” he replied, although he knew it was a lie.
The door opened, and Sienna entered. Nathaniel, out of habit, pinged her vitals. She turned her head toward him, her eyes wide as she got a quick flash of his memory of the morning’s events.
“I will check,” she said at once.
“No!” He squeezed her hands as she came to him. “You'll make yourself sick, little one.”
“But I can–”
The door opened again, distracting both of them. Standing beside Desmond, tall and as alive as the day he left, Dorian looked upon the Tiros with a smile.
“Well,” he said with the body language of an overjoyed grandfather, “I am so happy to meet all of you. Desmond has told me about you all.”
“It's a unique opportunity.” Christa got up, her hand out to greet her Maestro's Maestro. “We
may have crossed paths once or twice, but never like this. Welcome back from the other side.”
“If that's what they are calling it now,” Dorian responded. “It frankly seems as if I never left. Except for the fact that everyone seems older. And you must be Nathaniel, the legendary warrior.”
“I am Nathaniel,” the younger Maestro said. “I don't know about legendary, though.”
“Yes,” Sienna shot out. “In my textbook, all the time.”
“This is Sienna.” Desmond gave her a smile as Dorian turned to her. “My current Tiro.”
“Hello,” Dorian said. He was impressed by her strength; he could already feel it before they touched. But he could also feel the fault in her stars, the acridid genes raging. “I hear you are going to be the one to save us all.”
Sienna blushed, shaking her head. “No,” she answered. “I think not.”
“We'll see about that,” Dorian answered. “But for now, shall we eat?”
“That is Nathaniel's favorite activity,” Desmond answered, trying to distract Nathaniel from the horrors of the morning.
But despite the reunion, Nathaniel did not feel like he was distracted. He was vaguely listening to them catch up, to the stories of their past, and to the laughter. But none of it calmed his heart. He checked his com-link every few minutes; he tried to hold his own ground in terms of the conversation. It was clear he was distracted, though, and Dorian soon brought it up.
“I was once in a similar situation,” he said to Nathaniel, who jumped.
“I'm sorry?” Nathaniel asked.
“As you are in now. It wasn't with a foreign queen,” Dorian took a deep breath, “but it was one I cared deeply about: my brother.”
“Your brother?” Nathaniel said in shock. “Was he also a witch?”
“He was trained early on,” Dorian said. “But this life was not for him. He left the Academy at eighteen with another witch. It wasn't a dishonorable discharge, for you know that choosing to leave if one's heart isn't in it is acceptable. The space station he was on was attacked by rebel pilots.”
“I never knew that,” Desmond said, watching his former Maestro. “Was he all right?”
“He was,” Dorian answered, giving Nathaniel hope. “He returned a month later, having had to hitchhike his way across the galaxy. That month was the hardest month I had ever lived, but I had hope. Hope for the future, and it was what got me through.”
“He left with another witch?” Sienna perked up beside Nathaniel. “He was in love?”
“He was,” Dorian said. “Last I heard, he had three children and was very happy. It's hard to imagine another life outside the Academy, but I'm glad that he had one at all.”
“I didn't know it was an…outlook?” Sienna's language failed her, but both her Maestros understood that she meant possibility.
“It's not,” they both replied, and Sienna jumped at their unison.
“I wasn't thinking of it,” she said, looking down at her plate. She knew that she shouldn't even speak of such things. But given their examples, it was hard not to at least dream. The memory of Devon's kiss was all too real for her.
Chapter 12
“How are you enjoying school?”
Sienna looked up in joy as they finished the meal. Although Dorian's voice was strongly accented, it appeared he had some grip on the Jeffroian language.
“Challenging,” she answered. “But I enjoy it.”
“Sienna,” Desmond said, as he took the dishes to the sink. “You can answer in Basic, please.” He turned to Dorian. “My apologies, Maestro. It's a struggle already.”
“Of course,” Dorian replied, the smile of an indulgent grandparent recognizing the rules that his adult children set out for their own protégés. “Your Basic is quite good, though I heard you didn't speak it at all when you came.”
“I learned.” Sienna traced the pattern on the table cloth. “But I still prefer…otherwise.”
“Do you know I didn't speak any Basic when I came here?” Christa gave her a smile. “My Maestro raised me multilingual, so it took me a lot longer to have a solid grip on anything. As a pilot, it's worked out well, for I never seem to be in the same language belt twice.”
“Your Maestro…” Sienna's eyes darted to Desmond, and then she remembered. She reached out to Christa – who was surprised by her force – in order to see her former Maestro.
She saw a smiling woman who was middle aged, with long, brown hair and a kind smile. Graceful and tall, the woman looked over her shoulder, as if seeing something pleasant.
“That's Diana,” Christa said softly as she felt Sienna's mind touch her.
“Sienna, that's not nice,” Nathaniel gave her a little smack on the arm. “You ask before you invade people's thoughts.”
“It's okay,” Christa replied. “We're all connected.”
“How?” Sienna asked, unable to imagine the sadness of losing a Maestro. She purposely blocked Christa's emotions from reaching her, not wanting to feel such a thing.
“They were on a quest,” Desmond spoke quietly, and Sienna turned toward him. “It should have been Christa who died. She was the one in the path of the spear. But Diana chose to move forward instead.”
Sienna squeaked, the sadness of it overtaking her. She lay her head on Nathaniel's shoulder, who put a distracted arm around her.
“It's okay,” Christa tried to reassure her. “Really. I am living in the way that she wanted, and she would have been happy to know that Desmond helped me accomplish that.”
“Well,” Desmond made a face, “not happy exactly. Diana and I never saw eye to eye.”
“Which is why she may have been all the prouder that I actually made it to the tests at all,” Christa teased him, and Desmond laughed.
“That may be true,” he said.
Sienna's head suddenly came up, her magic dancing on her fingers. Nathaniel reacted immediately, concerned that she was reacting to something. But the faraway look in her eyes told him she was sensing that something was happening as she listened far beyond their room.
“Eliza,” she said suddenly.
“What?”
“Eliza is here,” she said, and he slid his chair back, bolting to his feet.
“Where? How?”
“I…” She was using magic that she shouldn't be, pushing further than she normally did. Desmond tensed, watching them both. From the look on their faces, he wasn't sure which one would fall. “Hangar.”
Nathaniel said nothing. Everyone standing around the room knew what was happening with Eliza. The fact that Sienna could sense it from that far away was astonishing to everyone but her Maestros. They knew her power was unprecedented, and they also knew when she was using power that she shouldn't be.
“Go,” Desmond said as they all stood up. Nathaniel bolted, and Desmond turned to her.
“Is she alive?” Desmond asked her.
Sienna nodded in surprise. “Of course,” she said. “Is it possible to feel a dead being?”
“For most it is not, little one. For you, though, who knows?”
“I want…” Sienna stood up. “I want to go with him. I want to know.”
Desmond paused for a moment, but then decided there was no harm. The others in tow, they headed down to the hangar, not knowing what to expect. Desmond half wondered whether they would find a Jeffroian ship full of corpses. He had seen the details of the explosion, and he had seen the aftermath of such attacks. Even if someone did manage to get out, it wouldn't be pretty.
To his surprise, the ship that was in the hangar was in perfect condition. He recognized it as the royal transport ship which was kept running at all times in order to evacuate the queen if there was ever a threat. After hundreds of years of implementing this policy, it appeared that it was finally in use.
The doors were closed as Nathaniel skidded into the hangar. His heart was thudding in his chest as he moved forward, sending out a ping.
Sure enough, Eliza's life force beat from inside. Bu
t the doors remained closed and sealed, and he feared something was very wrong.
“Desmond,” Nathaniel reverted to his teenage years, fearful and unsure as Desmond came up behind him, “be prepared. “
“You think there's a threat inside?” Desmond summoned his magic. The others around them did the same, ready to attack anything that came out of the doors. It was a strange sense of Deja vu, for they had just done it with Dorian's ship.
“I don't know,” Nathaniel admitted. “I don't know. I just want–”
Suddenly, the doors began to open. They creaked, and Nathaniel sensed that the ship had been damaged. He noticed a dent on one side and that one of the tires was blown. It must have been a rough landing, which wouldn't be uncommon if they had just escaped a threat.
He held his breath, praying to the Creator. Please, he begged to a god he didn't usually believe in. Please, let her be all right.
His prayer was timed with the first of the Jeffroian guards coming down the platform. Because this was a royal ship, the witches bowed to their knees. Nathaniel's eyes remained fixed on the platform, praying.
And there, in all her majestic glory, was Eliza. She was dressed as if she was greeting the people, with jewels and a crown on her head. She stood, her outfit of pure white blowing slightly in the breeze from the open door.
Nathaniel let out such a breath of relief that he almost fell to the ground. She looked around, and he could see she was trying to stay calm.
He rose, trying not to rush into her arms and sweep her up, as much as he wanted to. “Your highness,” he called out. Her eyes locked onto his, and she felt a strong sense of relief. “We thought you were dead.”
“We very nearly were,” she answered, regal as ever. “But it appears we escaped just in time. We seek sanctuary.”
“Of course,” Nathaniel said, approaching. His hands were trembling, and he fought to keep his face neutral. As soon as he was close to her, he lowered his voice. “Are you all right?”
“Yes,” Eliza answered. “But many of my people are dead. Nathaniel…”
A Wolf's Mate (Wolf Mountain Peak Book 6) Page 32