Sascha’s laugh filled the room, and for the first time, Dev truly understood what she was. A number of empaths had dropped out with the Forgotten, but so many had stayed behind, hoping against hope that their mere presence would help their people. His great-grandmother Maya had been a child when her parents chose to defect, her empathic abilities in the moderate range. Because of her, he’d thought he knew empaths . . . but never had he been in the presence of a cardinal E-Psy.
It was, he realized, quite simply impossible to feel hate or anger toward Sascha if you felt any kind of emotion at all. And that, he suddenly understood, was why E-Psy were systemically suffocated in the Net, their powers bound—they were a real threat to Council power. Should Silence break, it was the empaths who might well take control.
But extraordinary as she was, he felt nothing but admiration toward Sascha. She awakened none of the complex, turbulent feelings brought to life inside him by the woman sitting silently in the room at the back of the house.
It destroyed something in him that he couldn’t set her free.
Sascha met his gaze at that moment, her own holding nothing but warmth. “I think you can trust me with Cruz.” She glanced over her shoulder at Lucas. “Shoo. No one’s going to jump through the window with half the pack on watch outside.”
Lucas straightened from the wall as Dev looked over to see if Cruz was okay with being alone with Sascha. The boy already had a hand wrapped around hers. “You want Tag and Tiara to continue to shield?”
“Yes.” Sascha smiled as Lucas bent down to kiss the back of her neck. “We’re going to start with the basic building blocks today. Though I have a feeling Cruz here will catch on fast.”
Walking out with the DarkRiver alpha, Dev pulled the door shut so Sascha and Cruz could have privacy. “Sascha’s very slender for being pregnant.”
Lucas bristled. “Are you saying I don’t take good care of my mate?”
“Stop antagonizing him, Dev,” Tiara said from her cross-legged position in front of the entertainment screen in the living area. “You know perfectly well how feral predatory changeling men get with their pregnant mates. Tag, go hit one of them.”
Tag sighed and looked up. “Is that really necessary, gentlemen?”
Lucas, his eyes human again, looked from Tag to Tiara and seemed to see something he shouldn’t. But he didn’t say a word. “I’d like to meet Katya.”
Disliking the familiarity with which the changeling male said her name, Dev began to walk down the corridor. “She’s staying with me.”
“Well, now. . .” Lucas shrugged. “Ashaya’s attached to her.”
“No compromise.”
Lucas gave him a shrewd glance. “You talk to her like that, too?”
“None of your damn business.”
“That’s what I thought.” A feline smile. “Here’s a tip—don’t snarl at women. It makes them mad.”
“Go screw yourself,” Dev said without heat.
Lucas laughed. “I don’t have to. I have a gorgeous mate.”
Katya opened the door at that moment. “I thought I heard—” Her eyes locked on Lucas.
The DarkRiver alpha was all green eyes and that warm leopard charm as he smiled. “You must be Katya. I’m Lucas.”
“Hello.” Katya gave a small smile.
Fire rippled up Dev’s spine. “Let’s go outside to talk.” There was no way in hell he wanted the other man in Katya’s room.
“Not so long as Sascha’s in the house,” Lucas said, taking a position against the wall opposite the doorway. “We can talk here.”
“What’s there to talk about?” Katya asked, gripping the doorjamb.
Lucas’s eyes went to her white-knuckled hold. “Ashaya wants you to know you have a way out.”
Dev’s jaw tightened. “Don’t play the alpha here, Luc. I’ve got no loyalty to you.”
“I have to look after my people, Dev, same as you. And Ashaya considers Katya a true friend.”
Dev thought of Katya’s determination to go north, waited to see what she’d do.
“Thank you,” she said, uncurling her fingers only to wrap her arms around herself. His body bucked at the reins, wanting to go to her, crush her close. Then she spoke, and his pride at her turned into a flame inside of him. “I think of her as a friend, too. And because I am her friend, I won’t put her family in jeopardy.”
“There’s your answer,” Dev said, making sure Lucas heard the absolute lack of flexibility in his voice. “Anything else?”
“You change your mind, Katya, all you have to do is say so.” Lucas’s head angled slightly to the right. “I have to go talk to my mate.”
Knowing Tag and Tiara would keep an eye on things, Dev stayed behind as Lucas walked away. “You should’ve taken the chance he gave you.”
Katya’s eyes went wide at his tone.
Something primitive in him pushed at him to finish his, make his claim in the most final way. “I won’t let you leave.”
Katya knew she should’ve been angry, but it wasn’t a threat she saw in Dev’s eyes. No, what burned in those gold-flecked depths was a possessive demand that she knew would end her loneliness forever . . . but only if she accepted his rules. “I may have been broken when I came in,” she said, a deeply feminine part of her sensing that if she gave in now, it would all be over, “but that’s not true any longer. The pieces are starting to come together.”
“Good.” He took her chin in a hold that was blatantly proprietary.
Her stomach filled with butterflies, the steel and heat scent of him in every breath—but she kept her voice. “Even if that means I won’t do what you want?”
He rubbed his thumb over her lower lip, his eyes on her mouth. “I never said I wanted a puppet.”
“In that case,” she said, her lips brushing his thumb, “consider yourself forewarned. Nothing you can do will stop me from doing what
Dev’s expression changed then, filling not with anger but with challenge. “Bring it on.”
The kiss was hard, fast, openly possessive—a warning and a promise in one.
Striding down the corridor to find Sascha leaving Cruz’s room—to go directly into her mate’s arms—Dev nodded at the couple to follow him outside. “Tag,” he said, the taste of Katya a lingering sweetness on his tongue, “one of you two should sit in on this, too.” They could easily transmit what they heard to the other.
Tiara rose in a graceful movement. “I’ll go. Keep your mind open to me, okay, big guy?”
Tag gave a short nod, but Dev saw the flash of hunger in the man’s eyes. It made him wonder what it felt like for the two telepaths to communicate—did Tag feel something different when it was Tiara? Part of him couldn’t help but think what it would be like to have Katya’s mind open to his.
His every male instinct growled in rejection. Such contact would have nothing to do with intimacy—it would be the worst kind of violation, a mockery of what should be.
“Dev, you okay?” It was Tiara, her voice pitched low.
Realizing he’d let his emotions bleed into his face, he nodded. “Sascha,” he said, turning to the empath as she came to stand beside him, Lucas on her other side. “What’s your opinion on Cruz?”
“He’s damaged, but not irrevocably so.” An encouraging smile. “The boy can learn to shield.”
Tiara blew out a breath. “Damn, I’m glad to hear that. But why wasn’t he picking up the things we were trying to show him?”
“His pathways,” Sascha said, “are so compromised I had to devise a completely new form of shielding just for him.”
“You can do that?” Tiara asked. “Tag wants the blueprint.”
“It’s a work in progress at the moment—I’m building it from the inside out. Or rather,” she amended, “Cruz is, according to my instructions. I’ll be happy to give you what I’ve got so far.”
“Luc,” Dev said as the two women stepped away, “I’ve got something else I need to talk to you about.”