Part 22 (1/2)

Ignoring him, Gavarian rose and stepped back so that Fain could take over. He reviewed the data on the tablet and checked the diagnostics. Then he double-checked the couplings and swabbed them out with disinfectant before he added more gel to the connectors. The trick was to slide it in smooth and quick before either he or Talyn moved even a millimeter. Something he and his brothers had learned to do fast since their father was p.r.o.ne to knock the s.h.i.+t out of them if they hurt him in the process of reattaching his limbs.

Bracing the cyber foot against his own thigh, Fain gripped Talyn's real knee and the prosthetic calf muscle. ”Ready?”

Talyn inclined his head to him and held on to the chair's arms.

Fain slid the leg into place.

For a full minute, Talyn didn't move or breathe as he no doubt waited for pain to kick in. ”Is that it?”

”Should be. Can you move anything?”

Talyn wiggled his toes and finally let out a relieved breath as he slumped back in the chair. ”Thank the G.o.ds,” he said with a happy note underlying his raspy tone. He slowly moved his leg back and forth to make sure it wasn't malfunctioning.

Fain had to give the surgeons credit. When attached, it looked completely natural. Unless you were right up on it, there was no way to detect the faint line that marked where Talyn's natural leg stopped and the cybernetic replacement began. It even felt real to the touch.

”What happened to cause that?”

His features sullen, Gavarian picked up the pad and link. ”You should know, Hauk. You were there.”

”Vari,” Talyn chided, ”don't.”

But it was too late. Over and over, Fain replayed that firefight against Viper and Reaper in his mind. It'd been a brutal fight. No wonder Galene had fallen apart at the prospect of putting Talyn back into a c.o.c.kpit. Pain struck him hard in the pit of his stomach at what he'd unknowingly cost his son.

And Galene.

”I'm so sorry, Talyn. I would never have hurt you had I known.”

Talyn shrugged with a nonchalance Fain would never fathom. ”It's okay. Really.” He glanced over to Gavarian. ”My leg for Vari's life was a fair trade as far as I'm concerned. And it could have been worse. Could have been my head I lost, or something else not so easily reattached.”

Gavarian snorted. ”You weren't saying that ten minutes ago when you were threatening to kill me.” He took the pad and cord out into the living area.

As Fain started away, Talyn stood and caught his arm. ”Seriously, Hauk. Let it go.”

”How can you stand to look at me?”

Talyn answered in an honest tone. ”I fought in the Ring for over a decade. Open and Vested. With Warswords and without. Honestly? I never thought I'd live to this age. Every time I entered a match or flew down a launch tube for battle, I fully expected to lose my life or a limb in the fight. I made peace with both possibilities a long time ago. We're warriors and we're Andarions. It's what we do.”

Still, Fain couldn't imagine how his son could stand to be in a room with him and not kill him for what he'd taken from him. It made no sense. ”You have every right to hate me.”

”I do hate you, old man. But not for this. We all make mistakes. The G.o.ds know, I'm not perfect. So I'm not going to hold what happened in battle against you when you had no idea who you were facing off against. We do what we have to, to survive war. And I don't fight for myself. I never have. I fight for what I love.”

”Your mother.”

Talyn nodded. ”For your sake and hers, don't ever let her know you had anything to do with me losing my leg. Don't even let her know you were there that day. She won't forgive you.”

”I still don't understand how you can. And if you don't hate me for the leg, what the h.e.l.l else could you possibly hate me for?”

Talyn pulled out his link and turned it on. He showed Fain the lock screen photo of him with his arms around Felicia. They appeared to be on a camping trip and inside a bright yellow tent. When Talyn unlocked it, Felicia turned and said in the sweetest contralto, ”Love my s.e.xy baby!” Then she gave him a loud, audible kiss.

Swallowing hard, Talyn turned the screen dark and slid the link back into his pocket. ”Every day I wake up and have her in my life, I have no real problems with anything or anyone. I'm just glad to be here. I don't know why my mother loves you like that, but she does. Whenever you come around, that sadness inside her vanishes and she lights up in a way she never has before. While I might not get it, I won't stand between you. So long as you treat her like she deserves, I'll do anything I can to help you. My personal feelings be d.a.m.ned.”

In that moment, Fain felt even more like s.h.i.+t that he hadn't told Talyn Felicia was on her way here. He should. But he wanted to see Talyn's face when his son saw her unexpectedly.

”What I hold against you, Hauk, are all the years I watched my mother suffer because you weren't there for her. I hate you for every lonely tear she's ever shed in your name.”

The front door opened. ”Talyn?”

”In here, Mum.”

The sound of her voice filled Fain with both panic and joy. d.a.m.n, that female had way too much power over him. It made a mockery of Ven's kill switch in his brain.

He followed Talyn out of the room to find Galene with Morra and Qory. They were each carrying two large covered trays of food. And Vega and War came in the rear of the group with small bags of chips in their hands.

After kissing Talyn on the cheek, Galene flashed a dazzling smile at Fain.

Suddenly, he felt out of place. ”Did I misunderstand our plans?”

Galene laughed. ”Not at all. You're a little early. But it's fight night and we always have dinner together while we watch.”

Baffled, Fain looked from Talyn to Gavarian to Qory and Morra and back to Galene. ”I thought you hated fighting.”

She arched her brow. ”I'm Andarion. I love the Ring. Not when my son or pledged are the ones bleeding in it, but for the rest...”

”She loves it.” Talyn pulled back a lid and snuck a crunchy bit from one of the platters. ”More than even I do.” He snuck another piece and handed it off to War, who grinned before he ate it.

Morra sidled up to him. ”Don't look so disappointed, Fain. This is a family tradition she's invited you to.”

He locked gazes with Galene. ”Really?”

Galene nodded. ”Only Felicia's missing from it. Talyn and I have been doing this since he was in nappies. Even when I couldn't be with him, we'd watch together via links whenever we could.”

And it was something she'd started doing with Fain and his brothers and father and uncles when they were kids. As physicians, her family had never cared much for the sport. But every weekend, his had come together for the big fight. His mother and aunts would prepare food and everyone would crash wherever they could find s.p.a.ce at his paternal grandparents' ma.s.sive house. Since the event was vastly chaperoned, Galene's father would drop her off for it, and they'd sit on the floor in front of the screen next to Dancer and their cousin Dimie.

How weird that Galene would carry on a Hauk family tradition without him when he'd basically abandoned it after his mother had disowned him.

Galene handed plates of food to the kids and helped them sit in front of the screen before she returned to make a plate for herself.

Morra pa.s.sed an ale off to Qory and waters to Talyn and Gavarian. Since they were Andarion military, they weren't allowed to imbibe. She arched a brow at Fain. ”Hearty or boring?”

”The good stuff with bite in it.”

She popped the cap and handed him the bottle. Galene gave him a plate before she grabbed a water for herself and headed toward the living room with the others.

”Who's fighting?” Fain started to sit next to Qory, but Galene grabbed his belt and pulled him down beside her.

Too stunned to argue, he balanced his plate on his legs and set his drink on the table next to the couch.

Talyn licked the sauce from his fingers. ”Torrid and Gallows.”

”Who you banking on?”