and I believe that they can. Then I get out of the way and let them do it, in their own way, at their own pace.'
There was no graceful way to reply to that, and she just sat down on a stone ledge, feeling totally inadequate and utterly deflated. 'I never wanted to be a leader,' she said, forlornly. 'If anybody had asked me, I could have had the chance to say no.'
'I know.' He sat down beside her. 'I'd rather you were free to do what you're good at; planning, thinking, coming up with solutions. You're all bogged down with trying to get people to see that your solutions are sensible —or to come up with better ones. You spend half your time trying to convince people, and the other half trying to herd them into working on the solution rather than sitting around and arguing about it. I'd rather you -didn't have to worry about all that.'
'So would I.' Suddenly she felt like weeping, and swallowed the lump in her throat, blinking rapidly. 'But —'
He interrupted her. 'Would you trust me to take what you aren't good at off your plate?' he asked, looking earnestly into her eyes. 'I'm beginning to think that I am a leader, that it's in my nature—people listen to me, and I'm good at getting them to cooperate. But would you trust me to do what I'm good at so that you can do what
It took her a moment to work out what he was getting at, and he probably wasn't entirely certain of it himself.
But neither Denelor nor Parth Agon—who
Parth, she suddenly realized, was
ation well in hand, he'd started taking a back seat, letting
Maybe that was the case with Denelor, too.
But could she hand over that much authority to Lorryn? It would make her terribly vulnerable.
She flushed as that thought came, unbidden, and she must have forgotten to shield it, for suddenly he flushed, too. 'I can't help what other people think,' he said, defensively. 'I can't help it that we—that I—'
She flushed again, fumbled for words, and couldn't find any.
'This isn't a very nice position for you,' he said at last. 'Even my own sister thinks we're—you know. No matter what we do, people are going to make up their own minds about your personal life and there's nothing you can say or do that will change what they think. But that doesn't make things easy for you, when there's nothing going on between us.'
'Nor for you,' she managed. 'I mean, here I've been dumping all these things on you, and people are making all these assumptions, and you aren't even getting—' Now her face reddened so it felt as if she were inches from a fire.
'Assumptions! I don't mind, but I'm not in the same position that you are. It's got to be intolerable for you!' he exclaimed. 'I—Shana—I wish—'
Suddenly, everything fell beautifully into place, as if the broken shards of a vase flew back together again before her eyes. She
he had been afraid that if he tried to push himself onto her, she would react by sending him away. He—he loved her. He really did! And—
Lorryn wasn't just a supportive and clever friend anymore. It wasn't
'I didn't—I
'Oh, hush,' she said, suddenly full of a half-mad joy, and kissed him, putting everything
And then, for some timeless time, there was no room in either of their minds for words at all. Finally, for that one moment, no matter what would come after, everything was perfectly, completely,
'This isn't exactly the choicest spot—' he said, finally, into her hair. 'We're rather out in public, not to mention our audience.'
'I suppose they could wake up.' Shana sighed and reluctantly broke the embrace.
She smoothed down her hair, self-consciously. He brushed a strand or two out of her eyes and tucked it behind her ear for her. 'Have you any time to spare?' he asked wistfully.
'I'll make some,' she replied.
The irony of the situation was that the only people affected by this sea-change in their relationship were Lorryn and Shana themselves. But oh, the difference for them!
No one seemed to have noticed that Lorryn's quarters had been stripped and converted into a storage area. Spiteful comments from Caellach Gwain as reported by Shana's sharp-eared observers among the children were in no wise changed. And yet—the difference to her!
But the world outside their chamber was not going to go away.
A plan—a large and complicated plan to safeguard the Citadel forever—was beginning to take shape between the two of them. When news came from Keman that Lord Kyrtian had either given or been ordered to give the command of the army to someone else while the Council debated its future, the need for that plan took on a new sense of urgency.
The old Citadel had defenses that this one didn't; it was time to put them in place. Alara and Kalamadea