Now, finally, the message had come. The kindred had done all they could. The healing wasn't complete, but the rest would take time, and she should be in a warm human den now.
So he'd been told where to bring the Coach that would take Jaenelle back to the Hall.
He crossed the meadow, stopped a few feet in front of Ladvarian. The Sceltie looked too thin, but there was joy— and wariness—in the brown eyes.
"Ladvarian," Daemon said quietly, respectfully.
*Daemon.* Ladvarian shifted uneasily. *Human males... Some human males pay too much attention to the outside.*
He understood the warning, heard the fear. And now he understood why they hadn't let him come sooner—they'd been afraid he wouldn't be able to stand what he saw. They were still afraid.
"It doesn't matter, Ladvarian," he said gently. "It doesn't matter."
The Sceltie studied him. *She is very fragile.*
"I know." Draca had drummed that into him before she'd let him come.
*She sleeps a lot.*
He smiled dryly. "I've hardly slept at all."
Satisfied, Ladvarian turned. *This way. Be careful. There are many guard webs.*
Looking around, he saw the tangled webs that could ensnare a person's mind and draw him into peculiar dreams— or hideous nightmares.
He walked carefully.
They walked for several minutes before they came to a path that led to a sheltered cove. A large tent was set up well back from the waterline. The colored fabric would keep out most of the sun but seemed loosely woven enough to let in air.
Closer to the water were several poorly made sand casties. Watching Kaelas trying to pack sand with one of those huge paws made him smile.
The front flaps of the tent were pulled back, revealing the woman sleeping inside. She wore a long skirt of swirling colors. The amethyst-colored shirt was unbuttoned and had slid to her sides, displaying her from the waist up.
Daemon took one look at her and bolted away from the tent.
He stopped a few yards away and just tried to draw a normal breath while his stomach twisted wildly.
The kindred had done their very best. They had given months of focused, single-minded devotion to produce this much healing. He never ever wanted to know what she had looked like when they had brought her here.
He felt Ladvarian come up behind him. Since the Sceltie had seen what she had looked like, the dog probably couldn't understand his reaction. "Ladvarian..."
*She rose from the healing webs too soon,* Ladvarian said in a voice that was bitter and accusing. *Because of you.*
Daemon turned slowly, his heart bleeding from the verbal wound.
*We tried to tell her you weren't hurt. We tried to tell her that she had to stay down in the healing webs longer. We tried to tell her that the Stra—that Tersa would tell you that she was coming back, that the High Lord would take care of his pup. But she kept saying that you were hurting and that she had promised. She stayed in the webs long enough for her insides to heal and then she rose. But when she saw...*
Daemon closed his eyes. No. Sweet Darkness, no. She would have been in pain, would have suffered. And she wouldn't have if she'd stayed down in the healing webs.
"Tersa did tell me," he said in a broken voice. "Over and over again. But... all I knew for certain was that Jaenelle had promised to marry me and then had left me, and..." He couldn't go on.
*Maybe we could have told you,* Ladvarian said reluctantly after a long silence. *We didn't think humans would believe that she could heal—at least, wouldn't believe enough. But, maybe, if we had told you about all the webs, you could have believed.*
Not likely. No matter how much he would have wanted to believe, the doubts would have crept in—and might have destroyed everything he wanted to save. "Tersa told me it would be all right. I didn't listen."
More silence. Then, *It is hard to listen when your paw is caught in a trap.*
That understanding, that much forgiveness, hurt. He looked at the Sceltie, needing to see the truth. "Ladvarian... did I cripple her?"
*No,* Ladvarian said gently. *She will heal, Prince. She is healing more and more every day. It will just take longer.*
Daemon walked back to the tent, stepped inside.
This time, he only saw Jaenelle.
*She's all there,* Ladvarian said anxiously.
Nodding, Daemon slipped off his shoes and jacket, then carefully stretched out beside her, propped on one elbow so that he could look at her. He reached out, tentatively brushed his fingers over her short golden hair, almost afraid to touch even that much. She was so fragile. So terribly, terribly fragile. But alive.
*We had to crop her fur.*
Considering the condition she must have been in, it was a practical solution to grooming problems the kindred must have faced.
His fingers brushed over her cheek. Her face, although horribly thin, was the same.
Then he noticed the Jewel resting on her chest. At first, he thought it was a Purple Dusk. Then, in its depths, he saw glints of Rose, Summer-sky, and Opal. Green, Sapphire, and Red. Gray and Ebon-gray. And just a hint of Black.
*It's called Twilight's Dawn,* Ladvarian said. *There's no other Jewel like it.* Then the Sceltie retreated, leaving him alone with her.
He watched her while she slept. Just watched her. After a while, he found the courage to let his fingers explore a little.
Ladvarian was right. She was all there, but she was barely more than a thin sheath of skin over organs and bones.
As one finger delicately traced her nipple, he stopped, thought about the open shirt, then looked at the beach where Ladvarian stood near Kaelas, watching him. *She didn't know I was coming, did she?*
*No,* Ladvarian replied.
He didn't have to ask why. If he hadn't been able to accept what he saw, the kindred would never have told her he had come—and Ladvarian would have taken her somewhere else, to someone else to heal over the winter months.
He knew his answer to that. He loved her, and all he wanted was to be with her. But, despite what Ladvarian had said... because of what Ladvarian had said... he was no longer sure she would want him.
Then she stirred a little, and he knew he wasn't going anywhere unless she sent him away.
Carefully bracing himself so that he wouldn't hurt her, he leaned over and brushed his lips against hers.
He raised his head. Her haunted sapphire eyes stared at him.
"Daemon?" There was so much uncertainty in her voice.
"Hello, sweetheart," he said, his voice husky with the effort not to cry. "I've missed you."
Her hand moved slowly, with effort, until it rested against his face. Her lips curved into a smile. "Daemon."
This time, when she said his name, it sounded like a promise, like a lovely caress.