Part 32 (1/2)

He caught her, picked her up, hugged her so hard her bones cracked. ”Mama.” His voice broke. ”Mama.”

”My beautiful boy.” Overcome with joy, she hugged his neck. Hugged and hugged, as if she could never let him go. This was the baby she had carried in her womb, the boy whose knees she had bandaged, the young man who had grown tall on her cooking, who had hugged her before his first date and told her he would always love her best. . . .

Abruptly enraged, she leaned back, took his shoulders in her hands, and shook him as hard as she could. ”Where have you been, you stupid . . . I have worried and cried. Where have you been? Why didnat you call? Or write?”

”You didnat want to hear from me.” He wore guilt on his face, and hard-won wisdom, and such sadness.

”Of course I wanted to hear from you, you big, stupid . . .” She hugged him again. ”Men are so stupid. You are so stupid. Like your brothers. And your father. Did you have to be such a man?”

He kissed her and set her down. ”I guess.”

She turned and faced the porch. Her other boys stood with Karen and Jackson, watching and grinning. Tasya and Ann stood by the windows, looking out and crying.

The boys started to applaud and hoot, and Zorana hushed them. ”Your fatheras sleeping in the living room. If he looks out . . .” Remembering her shriek, she said, ”In fact . . .” and started for the house.

Too late.

The door slammed open.

Konstantine Wilder stepped out on the porch.

The stent was still in his arm, thank heavens, but head stripped the tubes away. For the first time in over a month he was on his feet, thin, worn with pain, his face ablaze with some emotion she didnat dare guess.

Jasha and Rurik rushed to his side, took his arms.

He gestured them to help him down the stairs.

They didnat argue. No one argued with Konstantine when he looked like that, like the lead wolf in a fury.

They helped him down the stairs, step after painful step.

He shook them off. He fixed his gaze on Adrik, pale and immobile, waiting for his fatheras verdict.

Zorana didnat dare move, didnat dare speak.

The whole world waited in a hush to see what Konstantine would do.

He walked to Adrik. He stood and looked at him, looked at him for many long seconds, his eyes overly bright. Then he opened his arms. ”My son. Adrik. My son.”

Adrik walked into Konstantineas all-enveloping hug. ”Papa, forgive me. Forgive me.”

”Youare alive. You are home.” Tears ran down Konstantineas face. ”I have forgotten everything except how much I have longed to hear your voice and see your face.” Throwing his arm around Adrikas shoulders, he said, ”Now come in. Come in. Tonight we celebrate. Tonight we will have a feast!”

Chapter Thirty-five.

Karen lay on the couch in the Wildersa crowded living room, her head in Adrikas lap, while he poked his motheras pickled beets into her mouth. ”They will make new blood,” he said.

It amused her that when he was around his family, his voice took on a decidedly Russian intonation. ”I feel fine.”

”He is his motheras son, so it is easier not to argue.” Konstantine sat in his recliner, his swollen legs elevated. ”If you eat your beets, they let you drink your vodka.” He saluted her with his gla.s.s full of clear, straight liquor.

She smiled back.

His illness had worn the old tyrant down physically, but he had lost none of his power. He noted everything, heard everything, and his family deferred to him as if he were a kinga” or rather, the lead wolf in the pack.

Jasha and Ann sat on the floor arguing as they built something with blocksa”they called it the new home of Wilder Winesa”while Aleksandr frowned mightily and built his own structure.

Rurik and Tasya were in the kitchen, supposedly preparing another plate of appetizers. But theyad been gone so long Karen suspected they were in a corner kissing.

This family was big on kissing. And hugging. Karen grinned as she watched Jackson, sitting beside Konstantine on a straight-backed chair, filling him in on the details of the battle on the cliff. Every time Zorana got close to Jackson, he jumped back to avoid another affectionate a.s.sault.

Karen paid no attention to the low-voiced conversation until she heard Jackson say, ”When I realized that limp little p.r.i.c.k Phil Chronies had sold my daughteras location to those Varinski b.a.s.t.a.r.ds, I broke his one arm.”

”Good man,” Konstantine said.

Yeah, Karen thought.

”First he says heas going to sue me; then I give him to understand he has a lot of bones in his body and Iam a mean old man, so instead he may take the retirement package I offered.” Jackson grinned with all his teeth. ”So I call Karen in Sedona, but some poor womanas been murdered at the spa, Karenas on a Cessna flying to California, and the next thing I hear is that the plane crashed in the Sierras. If anyone could survive, it would be my Karen, but with those Varinskis tracking her, I knew shead be heading for a defensible position, so I studied the terrain, then got into the backcountry and tried to intercept her. I missed, but, by G.o.d, I made it in time for the fight.”

”Iam glad you made it, Dad,” Karen called. ”You saved my life.”

Jackson looked startled, then horrified and embarra.s.sed. ”Well, I . . . You are . . . Um, your mother made me . . .” He glanced around at the interested Wilder family, and his voice got lower. ”And I didnat do what I . . . It was the least I could do since . . .”

She rescued him. ”I know, Dad. Thank you.”

”Yes.” Adrik stroked her forehead. ”Thank you, Jackson.”

”Welcome,” Jackson muttered.

”I wish Iad been there for the fight.” The wistfulness in Konstantineas voice almost broke Karenas heart.

”Where is Firebird?” Adrik asked, to distract his father. ”I had hoped shead be here by now.”

”You know what itas like down at the hospital, ” Zorana said soothingly. ”Theyare always running late.”

Konstantine crossed his arms over his chest. ”Oh. I do know. Always slow. But I canat wait another minute to see this third icon, to join it with the others. Please, my daughters. Will you show them to me?”

”Of course, Papa,” Ann said. ”You may see my icon.”

”And I will show you my icon,” Tasya said.

The two women both agreed to present the icons they had found, yet at the same time they laid claim to thema”and no one in this powerful family disputed their right to possess their Madonnas.

That gave Karen the courage to say, ”If Adrik will bring me my bag, Iall find my icon for you.”

The men in the room sighed in relief.