Lord's Fall
“I can sense him, but I guess he isn’t dreaming?”
    He shook his head and shoved the disappointment away. “No.”
    She rubbed his back. After a moment she asked, “How did . . . everything go today?”
    He answered her real question. “Everybody is fine. All the sentinels and, yes, your friend have won through to the next round.”
    “That’s good.” She searched his gaze. “Right?”
    “Yes.” Suddenly the playful, pretty scene was no match for his darkening mood. Setting his teeth, he let go of her and turned away.
    Silence fell between them. He gazed over the endless-seeming, empty desert with a scowl. When he heard tinkling and a splash, he looked over his shoulder. Pia sat by the edge of the oasis with her feet in the water, harem trousers rolled over her knees. She had taken off the anklets. She straightened one leg and lifted her pretty foot out, looked at it then let it fall with a splash back into the water.
    Somehow she knew when not to push him. Yes, she was wiser sometimes than he would ever be. He walked over to ease down behind her until she sat between his legs, and when he put his arms around her again she leaned back with a sigh. The feel of her body in his arms felt maddeningly familiar and yet somehow incomplete. Damn these dreams, yet he would not go the week without them.
    He said, “I asked Gray to be my First, and he said yes.”
    She turned her head slightly. “That’s great news.”
    He sighed. “We also talked a little about Rune and what happened last summer.”
    She said gently, “That must have felt complicated.”
    “It did.”
    “I’m glad you finally talked to someone about it. Did it help?” She rubbed slender fingers soothingly along his forearms.
    “Yes, actually, it did.” He pressed his mouth to the place where her neck met her shoulder. “How was your day?”
    “Complicated too in its own way.” She reached behind her and cupped the back of his head, stroking his hair in a brief caress. “I like Beluviel, and she told me some things I didn’t know about my mom. That hurt, but it was kind of a good hurt, if that makes any sense. I think we really connected. She told me something interesting that may throw a monkey wrench into my visit. They’ve received word that an emissary from Numenlaur is coming to meet with them.”
    Dragos raised his head. “Did they?”
    She twisted to look over her shoulder, searching his expression. “Calondir has gone into Lirithriel Wood to get ready for their arrival. Have you ever heard of Numenlaurians visiting the U.S. before?”
    “No.” He regarded her thoughtfully. “Are you sure that Beluviel said Calondir went into the Wood? She didn’t say that he crossed over to prepare for the emissary in their Other land?”
    She frowned and scooted around until she could face him fully. “Yes, I’m sure. Why?”
    “Do you remember how I once described Other lands like bodies of water, from small lakes to large oceans, with streams or rivers that sometimes linked them together?” She nodded, and he continued, “I know their Elven Other land is quite large, and I’ve suspected for some time that it has several connections, or crossovers, to Earth and to Other lands. I think they’ve had the ability to travel to and from places in Europe.”
    “What makes you think that?”
    “Stories of arrivals and departures,” he told her. “People disappearing and then reappearing in other places.”
    She cocked her head. “Sometimes sudden appearances and disappearances can be explained when the Djinn are involved.”
    “Yes, they can, but these accounts are different,” he told her. “Beluviel and Calondir were involved in rescuing Jews during World War Two. A few of the survivors described journeys that sounded like they traveled in an Other land until they suddenly arrived in America.”
    Her eyebrows rose. “I’d like to learn more about that sometime, but what is the connection here?”
    “I wonder how the emissary

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