Tag: A thousand years of Hope

  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 16-2

    Tani cursed under his breath as he walked away from Dante, his heart speeding in his chest. Just now, when Dante cut the dead branch off the tree, he thought they were going to kiss. It hurt him when Dante turned away without giving in to the urge.

    It was always so difficult at the start of their relationship. This pull between them was too hard to manage. If Tani were asked, they would have spent most of their time here in bed, but…

    He could not be greedy. He needed to remember to take his time. Remember their connection was new for Dante. Their love was fresh…again.

    Tani closed his eyes in frustration and rubbed his forehead with his right hand. He would have let out a soft sigh, but then a strong hand gripped his left wrist, pulling him to a stop.

    Tani gasped when Dante dragged him into his arms and kissed him hard. A deep hungry, demanding kiss that had Tani closing his eyes and his free hand gripping Dante’s left arm to keep steady.

    Dante let go of his wrist. He cupped Tani’s face and kissed him again, like a man starved, finally giving Tani the passionate kiss he had been craving.

    Tani let out a soft moan, wrapping his arms around Dante’s waist, his fingers bunching Dante’s white linen shirt. Feeling the heat coming off Dante’s body. Tani closed his eyes, losing himself in their hungry kiss. He felt too hot, insanely needy, his skin turning sensitive, needing to feel Dante’s hands on him.

    Dante broke their kiss a moment and Tani opened his eyes to find Dante studying him. Dante caressed Tani’s bottom lip with his thumb.

    Dante’s gaze was sharp and filled with heat. His lips slightly parted, his breathing coming a little too fast, as he slid an arm around Tani’s waist and pulled him closer. Closer still until their chests touched. Tani’s breath came in shaky breaths as he brought his arms around Dante’s shoulders. Dante held him tighter, turning to pin Tani against the trunk of the closest apple tree. His big body pressed against Tani in full possessive ownership.

    Tani’s breath snagged as his cock filled with need, arousal engulfing him in a hot cloud. Dante took advantage of his parted lips and set his mouth to his again. His kiss was ravaging. Tani’s blood surged in response, his body molding to Dante. He tightened his arms around Dante, savoring his taste, hot, wild, and utterly uncivilized. Their shared heat was so familiar it brought the sting of tears to Tani’s eyes.

    Dante pressed him harder against the apple tree, his hands moving over Tani’s body, stroking down Tani’s back, cupping his bottom, and grinding his swollen cock against him. Long fingers slipped between them, feeling Tani’s hard length through his trousers. Tani let out an aroused moan, his fingers digging into Dante’s hair in response. He undid the rubber band Dante used to hold his hair and sunk his fingers into the soft tresses, holding on, making Dante moan.

    Dante pressed his palm on Tani’s hard length, his touch bold, sensual. Tani had seconds of warning; his hard cock pulsed so hard, he feared he might disgrace himself from the sensation. Then Dante stroked his palm over him and Tani forgot modesty. An intense orgasm built up inside him and fractured into a million pieces leaving him shaking. Tani let out a hoarse moan, arching into Dante’s caress at a loss.

    Dante took in his moans with a sweet kiss, and a soft sob escaped when Dante wrapped a secure arm around him to keep him steady. Holding him tight through his weakening ecstasy. Their kiss broke and Tani buried his face into Dante’s shoulder, closing his eyes as his breath came too fast trying to find his balance again. He clung to Dante’s shoulders afraid he was going to melt to the ground.

    Dante buried his nose into Tani’s right shoulder and breathed him in. He pressed his lips on the soft curve of Tani’s shoulder, sucking on sensitive skin, and then licked at the spot with hot intimacy.

    Tani trembled.

    “This is my answer,” Dante murmured into his ear after a while. His hot breath sent maddening electric tingles racing down Tani’s spine. “I want you. All of you. Every part of you. I don’t want to wait. Let’s make love, Tani.”

    Tani held on to Dante, elated. He opened his eyes and stared at the rows of apple trees closest to them. They were filled with blooming white flowers, even the ones that had none before were now heavy with them. He grinned and decided to hide this strange happenstance of his ecstasy from Dante, for the moment anyway.

    “Let’s go inside,” Tani murmured.

    “Mm,” Dante agreed.

    Tani held onto Dante and teleported them straight to the bathroom. His cheeks flushed with color when Dante cupped his face and tilted his head up.

    “You’re gorgeous,” Dante murmured, studying Tani’s face. His thumb stroked Tani’s right cheek, the pad of his thumb shifting to trace over Tani’s bottom lip.

    “I’ve wanted to see you this way for a while,” Dante said.

    “Messy because you drove me to the brink with a simple touch?” Tani asked, his cheeks flaming, somewhat mortified by his swift orgasm in the orchard. He had thought he had more control. Turns out Dante could drive him to the edge with a simple kiss.

    “Wanting me,” Dante corrected, taking Tani’s lips in a soft kiss. Then he murmured against Tani’s lips, “as much as I want you. There’s nothing messy about our passion. It’s how it should be.”

    Dante kissed him again and then helped Tani out of his clothes. His hands were gentle as he helped Tani pull off his t-shirt. Dante dropped it to the floor with a small smile. His gaze was appreciative as he took in Tani’s figure. His fingers were sure when they reached for Tani’s trousers. He unbuttoned them with a single flick of his fingers. Tani held Dante’s gaze as Dante pulled down the zipper and Tani’s trousers dropped to the floor. Tani stepped out of them and closed his eyes when Dante reached for his dark underwear. His fingers warm against Tani’s skin.

    Dante took Tani’s lips in a short sweet kiss, as he pushed his messy boxer briefs down.

    Then, Tani stood naked before Dante.

    Dante looked at him, his gaze heated as it traveled down from his shoulders, down his chest, to his stomach then to his aching cock. Tani fought the urge to step back as he faced his beloved for the first time in decades. With no clothes to shield him, and no lies between them, Tani decided to take off the glamour that hid his origins. His eyes took on the distinctive fox clan slits. Kinon’s cuffs on his wrists restored to their true form, heavy and punishing on his wrists.

    Tani met Dante’s gaze.

    “This is my true self,” Tani murmured, his voice shaking, vulnerable.

    Dante took a step closer. He placed his hands on Tani’s bare shoulders. His fingers started a slow gentle caress down Tani’s arms. He held Tani’s gaze as his fingers wrapped around Tani’s wrists, holding the gold cuffs that marked him a deviant. He lifted Tani’s right hand to his lips and pressed his lips to the cool gold metal.

    Dante then brought Tani’s hand to his left cheek and Tani straightened his fingers to cup Dante’s cheek.

    “What?” Tani asked.

    “I think you’re expecting that I’ll turn away from you. You show me your cuffs, your eyes, wanting me to cringe and run,” Dante said, shaking his head. He took Tani’s hands and brought them to his chest and the buttons of his white linen shirt. “I won’t, Tani. You’re stuck with me now, no matter what we face in the future.”

    Tani sucked in air at the mention of the future. He thought about Cale’s warning. The idea that someone took Dante’s life when they parted filled his head. Panic had him dropping his gaze to the buttons on Dante’s shirt. The longer he spent with Dante, the more he wished Cale were wrong. The more he wanted to know what a future with Dante looked like. The future he never once experienced in Dante’s company, he wanted to know it.

    Tani undid the first button of Dante’s shirt and looked up to find Dante studying him.

    Their future seemed far away and unsolvable, but the now was here. Tani decided he would lose himself in their shared bliss.

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 16-1

    Dante loved everything about the farmhouse in the middle of an apple orchard.

    From the kitchen filled with herbs growing in little pots on the window seal, the antique cooking range and the oven spelled into baking potatoes in the afternoon like clockwork.

    “What happens if I put in something else to bake?” Dante asked the first day when Tani pulled out a tray of four large baked potatoes. “Will it let me?”

    “It will,” Tani said. “This is Cale’s sense of humor. He thinks I will soon have potatoes growing in my stomach. I figure I have loved eating them so long, it is unlikely his thoughts will come to be.”

    “You and Cale sound close,” Dante said, as he sat at the kitchen table. He watched Tani pull out sour cream from the fridge.

    Tani found a bunch of chives from a vegetable holder on the counter and washed them. He chopped them on a board, then opened the sour cream container and got to work cutting open the baked potatoes. He took his time responding to Dante’s comment. Dante waited with patience.

    “Cale is family,” Tani said, as he found a tablespoon. He scooped sour cream and placed it on the top of the baked potato. Two scoops for each potato, then he sprinkled chopped chives on he sour cream.

    “He was assigned to watch over me when I was sentenced to stay in the mortal realm,” Tani said. “Through the centuries, we have come to understand each other better. Cale’s the master of calamities and he has ended up being the one to understand mine best. He helped me through the worst of it.”

    Dante absorbed Tani’s answer with a nod. His heart heavy at the thought of the pain Tani must have lived through to find comfort in the god of calamities.

    “Don’t think about it,” Tani said, bringing a plate with two baked potatoes and placing it on the table before him. “Cale is a friend. Don’t over think it.”

    Dante nodded, and accepted the spoon Tani handed him. He used the spoon to mix the sour cream and the chives with the soft insides of the potato. He took a bite of the result and smiled at Tani.

    “It’s delicious.”

    Tani smiled, sliding soft fingers over Dante’s cheek. He went to the counter and returned with two glasses of orange juice, and his own plate. He pushed the salt and black pepper shakers closer to Dante.

    “What would you like to bake in the magic oven?” Tani asked, with a wink.

    “Chicken,” Dante said.

    “Mm,” Tani nodded taking a bite of his own baked potato. He let out a soft moan of appreciation at the taste and Dante placed his spoon down to stare.

    The joy on Tani’s face at the taste of baked potatoes was hard to ignore. He filed the look away and reminded himself to discover new baked potato recipes for Tani to try.

    “We’ll have to visit my nosy neighbor for chickens,” Tani said. “This farmhouse has none. It would be cruel to let life grow here without a tender

    “Okay,” Dante said, picking up his spoon. “So, does this count as our second date?”

    Tani glanced at him then and chuckled.

    “When was the first?” Tani asked.

    “This morning when you met my parents,” Dante said, making Tani laugh. The sound filling Dante up with joy. “We can say the elephants in the forest in the middle of a jungle were the highlight of that date. This must be the second one.”

    “You’re impossible,” Tani said, continuing his meal.

    After lunch, Tani took him on a walk around the vast farm, to see the apple trees. They were blooming, ready to fruit soon.

    “Why apples?” Dante asked, when the sun started sliding down in the horizon. They walked back to the farmhouse at a slow pace. They held hands, and Dante felt like he was living a teenage dream he had forgotten. It felt exhilarating.

    “Will you laugh at me if I tell you why?” Tani asked, stealing a glance at him.

    “No,” Dante said with a small smile, as they walked along the grassy path between rows of apple trees.

    Tani nodded.

    “The first gift I ever received from a mortal was a bunch of apples in a bag,” Tani said. “They were delicious, and I became partial to the taste.”

    Dante’s eyes widened, remembering the bag of apples the original Durante brought to a wild forest for Tani. The start of a fate that tied them together for a lifetime.

    Dante tightened his hold on Tani’s hand and stopped, making Tani turn to look at him.

    “Is that why you’ve grown an orchard full?” Dante asked.

    “Perhaps,” Tani said, with a shrug. “It started out that way. I transplanted the original apple tree from Durante’s old farm. Then, in time, I grew more, collected others. Now…”

    Tani looked at the rows of apple trees around them.

    “Maybe I always liked apples. In any case, they have become my sanctuary,” Tani said, then resumed their walk back to the farmhouse. “It’s been too long. It’s hard to pull it apart to figure out the reason.”

    Dante held his comment on the matter. His anger at Durante growing again. Tani’s devotion was so clearly painted in the apple orchard. How did that fool miss it? Or had Durante simply chosen to ignore it?

    Breathing out the weight of their past, he followed Tani to the farmhouse in silence. Listening to Tani talk about their nosy neighbor who might visit them if she noticed smoke coming from the fireplace the next day.

    Falling into a domestic routine with Tani felt amazing. They took turns showering in the well-stocked bathroom tucked in the corridor. Tani summoned Dante’s clothing from Artri House. They both dressed down in sweats and t-shirts.

    Later, they ate sandwiches for dinner.

    Tani was careful to keep their conversation away from their heavy past. Pulling Dante into discussions about the archeological digs he had participated in around Europe. They ended up in the living room designed for comfort after a hard day’s work. Tani lay on the comfortable couch with his head resting on Dante’s lap as they talked. They watched the fire crackle away in the fireplace in the corner.

    “Do you miss spending time with April and Zach?” Tani asked at some point, late in the night.

    Dante combed his fingers through Tani’s hair. His fingers occasionally playing with the gold leafs on Tani’s right ear.

    “I do but my presence in their lives will never be prominent,” Dante said with a soft sigh. “There was a time Viola would get very angry when I told her that. She thought I had no love for our children, for her.”

    “And?” Tani asked, shifting on Dante’s lap so that he could look at him.

    “I do love my children,” Dante said, holding Tani’s gaze. “Because I do, I feel the best place for them to be is with Viola. My fire magic, my family legacy is too heavy for them to carry. It would only place them in harms way if they stayed with me.”

    “What if they had the legacy in their blood?” Tani asked.

    “Then I would bring them to Artri House without hesitation and teach them everything I know,” Dante said. “As my mother taught me. As Grandmaster Landi taught me.”

    Tani studied him for a moment.

    “None of them have the legacy though. They might never understand why you left them. Will you be sad if they never understand your way of thinking?” Tani asked.

    “Perhaps,” Dante said, his gaze shifting to the bright fireplace. “It is the price I have to pay as a warlock father to two pure mortals. I do hope, when they are older, we can meet and talk. I do want to see them achieve their dreams. I’ll always support them, if they let me.”

    “You’re a good man, Dante,” Tani murmured.

    “You’d be the first partner I’ve ever had to say so,” Dante said, thinking of Viola and the way she got angry with him.

    “I will remind you often,” Tani said, then got up and held out his hand to Dante. “We should sleep. I think we should prune the apple trees while we’re here. Make sure my nosy neighbor gets a good harvest.”

    Dante took Tani’s hand, and stood up.

    “Turn off the fire,” Tani murmured.

    Dante waved his hand at the fireplace, using his magic to snuff out the flames until the embers cooled. Then Tani led the way to the master bedroom with its large bed made of oak. They slid onto the comfortable mattress. The white sheets felt so soft Dante wished he could feel them on his skin.

    He imagined making love to Tani on the comfortable bed, even anticipated it. Then, once they were in bed, Tani gave him a chaste kiss, turned of the lights and promptly fell asleep.

    And so, a seven-day stay at the farmhouse started.

    Each day was filled with a lesson on patience and restraint. Dante was sure Tani was testing him. They spent their days in the orchard, pruning apple trees.

    Mornings at breakfast were light, their fridge refilled by the clever magic created by the god of calamity. Dante listened to endless praises for Cale from Tani. After breakfast, they started work. He loved watching Tani walk the grand apple orchard with a set of shears pruning apple trees. There was a love for the work in every action Tani did.

    In between the work, there were fond kisses and affectionate hugs, but their nights were filled with Tani going to sleep the moment they slid between the comfortable sheets. It was as though he had forgotten their promise to make love on their third date. Dante started a very regular sighing routine.

    Two days into their stay, Dante finally met the nosy neighbor.

    She was a Greek woman in her late twenties. She wore her blonde hair long, was dressed in a white cotton skirt and a blue blouse, her feet in flat sandals. The Greek woman brought two chickens for their pantry and a basket filled with an assortment of vegetables from her garden. She arrived right as they returned to the house for lunch.

    “Fox Lord, you should call to let your neighbor know you’ve returned to the farmhouse,” she complained the moment she saw Tani. “How long has it been since you dared to let your shadow darken our region?”

    “I don’t remember,” Tani said, opening the front door.

    Dante took the basket of vegetables from the woman and smiled in greeting as he hugged the basket.

    “I’m Selene,” she said in greeting. “Can’t wait for him to introduce you to me. He thinks I’m a nuisance. I’m glad he is staying with someone this time. I worry he might starve to death if he stays here alone.”

    “I’m Dante.”

    “I know,” Selene said with a small smile. “The last one of you.”

    “You know?” Dante asked, surprised as he looked at Tani.

    “Hard not to when Cale is his warden,” Selene said. “I thought the little lordling had jumped into the dark side the first time I saw the god of calamities aura in our region. I came to banish them both, only to discover Ekho royalty had come to search for solace in our quiet isle.”

    “You talk too much,” Tani said.

    “You barely talk, Fox Lord,” Selene said leading the way into the farmhouse. She headed straight to the kitchen. “Come on Dante, I bet you want to eat more than baked potatoes. I’ll teach you a special trick about the magical oven in the kitchen. Cale has a strange sense of humor. If you put vegetables into the oven, they cook in record time. One day I tried chicken and I swear to the fates that it makes the most delicious grilled chicken in the world. Otherwise, baked potatoes remain a boring staple.”

    “I like your neighbor, Tani,” Dante said, placing the basket of vegetables he held on the kitchen table.

    “Fox Lord thinks I’m nosy,” Selene said, as she pulled out a flat baking pan from a cupboard and took it to the sink. “Let’s make chicken, with grilled cauliflower and some wild rice. Dante, the rice bin in the pantry is refilled by Cale’s magic.”

    “Hm,” Dante winked at Tani who had sat down at the kitchen table with his arms folded against his chest. “I should explore this kitchen more.”

    “It will surprise you,” Selene said, coming to open her basket to find two heads of cauliflower. “In any case, I’m glad to see you here, Fox Lord. I worried that this would be the last—”

    “I’m already here,” Tani cut off Selene. “Stop talking so much. Why don’t you focus on making the chicken?”

    Tani stood up and took the cauliflower heads from her.

    “I’ll wash these for you,” Tani said.

    Dante frowned at how fast Tani interrupted Selene but did not pause to think deeper about the reason. He went to the pantry and found the rice bin filled with wild rice. Taking the scoop inside the bin, he measured a cup and returned to the kitchen to find Tani glaring at Selene.

    Tani sighed when he saw Dante and turned on the tap at the sink.

    “What now?” Dante asked, moving to join Tani at the sink so that they could wash the cauliflower and the rice. “Why does Selene annoy you so much?”

    “He can’t stand my sunny face,” Selene said, as she found a pan for the chicken.

    “You’re too nosy for your own good,” Tani grumbled.

    Dante kissed Tani’s right cheek, amused by Tani’s attitude toward Selene.

    “I like your annoyed face,” Dante said when Tani glanced at him.

    “I’m not annoyed.”

    “Yes, you are,” Dante said, leaning on the counter so that he could study Tani’s expressions.

    Dante stole a glance at Selene who was busy arranging the chicken pieces she brought on the baking pan. She salted and seasoned them with the attention of a seasoned cook. So, Dante leaned in and whispered into Tani’s ear.

    “She seems worried about you, you know,” Dante said. “I think she’s no different from Cale who spelled the house.”

    “Mm,” Tani said, biting his bottom lip as he washed the cauliflower and broke it into pieces.

    Dante placed a colander in the sink for the cauliflower pieces.

    “She’s the reason you want to prune the apple trees, right?” Dante asked, studying Tani’s face.

    Tani met his inquiring gaze and nodded.

    “She’s another Hera,” Dante said with a quick grin.

    “Not at all,” Tani said, shaking his head. He glanced at Selene and then scowled at the cauliflower. “Hera is a child I’ve raised. That one is Ekho.”

    “What?” Dante glanced at Selene to find her watching them.

    Selene grinned wide.

    “You heard everything I just said,” Dante said, knowing their hearing was sensitive.

    “Yes, handsome Dante. Have I told you that I think you’re the best version? I especially appreciate the fire brewing inside you for the Fox Lord. It’s spectacular to watch,” Selene said.

    Dante bit back a grin when Tani’s scowl deepened at Selene’s comment.

    “What kind of Ekho are you?” Dante asked, leaning on the counter, his arms crossed as he studied Selene.

    Strange, but had Tani not said it, he would never have known Selene was an Ekho. She did not look like one. Dante frowned thinking about the Ekhos he had met in the past few days.

    Tani’s uncle, Amu, and the earth goddess, Eren, had also looked quite plain. Why was it different when he looked at Tani? Was it because Tani’s eyes were amber?

    “I’m a half-breed,” Selene said, smiling at Dante. “Half-fox and half-dragon. My parents brought me to the mortal world to escape harsh criticism from the more cynical members of our clans. Don’t look so surprised. Prejudice grows in every society in some form.”

    “Why do you call Tani royalty?” Dante asked.

    “He’s the son of the Fox Goddess Anit and…,” Selene looked at Tani. Dante wondered if she was waiting for Tani to protest, but when he did not, she grinned and continued. “The Immortal Lord Sunu.”

    “Immortal Lord,” Dante said, his gaze returning to Tani. “As in the head of the Immortal Clan?”

    “Yes. Lord Sunu is the master of the Citadel and the emperor of our Ekho clan. He rules the Septum,” Selene said. “You’re well informed for a mortal.”

    “I’m a bloodborne warlock,” Dante said. “Ekho-blessed with fire magic.”

    “Oh,” Selene’s eyes widened with drama. “That explains the fire I see in your veins. You’re a mortal hybrid. Your kind is rare. Your mother must have come from a powerful warlock line.”

    “Yes. Her powers added to my father’s and made me. Why are your eyes different from Tani’s?” Dante asked, curious about Selene’s blue eyes.

    “My father is a dragon,” Selene said. “I get my eyes and blonde hair from him. Even my powers and love for beautiful things come from him. In our line, the more powerful parent leaves a mark on his or her children.”

    “So, Tani’s power and eyes,” Dante said, his sentence trailing off as he met Tani’s amber gaze.

    “My father’s mark on me,” Tani confirmed. “My hair is red from my mother’s side.”

    “Fox Lord’s parents are at the god level,” Selene said, her voice heavy with reverence. “It’s natural to have a mark from each one.”

    “Why do you call him Fox Lord?” Dante asked.

    “It is the easiest title,” Selene said. “I’m not shameless enough to go around calling out the name of the Immortal Lord’s son. I’m afraid he will come to find me.”

    Tani scoffed at Selene’s comment, his shoulders tense at the mention of his father.

    Dante noted the tension growing in Tani at the mention of his roots. He brushed his lips on Tani’s forehead and decided to change the topic. He asked Selene about her farm and what she was growing.

    Selene was fun to have around, once they got over her need to poke at Tani’s mood. She was lively and enjoyed sharing recipes. She shared the same aversion to Cale that Dante had for the god of calamities.

    “Don’t fight him if he shows up,” Selene said to Dante when she got up to leave after lunch. “He protects Fox Lord like a guard dog. It’s hard not to respect him for his dedication.”

    “Have I said you talk too much today?” Tani asked as he watched Selene leave the kitchen with a wave.

    “More times than I care to count,” Selene said. “I’ll bring you more veggies the day after tomorrow.”

    “I didn’t ask,” Tani said.

    “I’m telling Dante,” Selene said, blowing a kiss at Dante. “I’ll see you later, handsome Dante. I hope you smooth his edges by the time I get back.”

    Dante chuckled as a strong wind pushed Selene out of the house and slammed the door closed.

    “Your magic works well when you’re annoyed,” Dante said. “Selene is not so bad.”

    “She is an acquired taste,” Tani said, shaking his head.

    “I think you worry about her, but you don’t want to make it obvious. Why?”

    “I don’t,” Tani said, standing up. He took their used plates to the sink.

    “Tani.”

    “We should finish the row we started this morning,” Tani said starting the water to wash their plates.

    Dante bit his bottom lip to stop himself from pushing. It was interesting to discover that this house probably held the secrets of Tani’s core. Like the truth of Cale protecting Tani, and pushing him to live when he didn’t want to.

    This place was where Tani allowed himself to feel vulnerable. It held the truth of Tani’s true feelings.

    Later in the afternoon, Dante stood next to Tani looking at the dead branch Tani was pointing out.

    Dante held a hand pruner, poised to make a cut as soon as Tani showed him where.

    “We have to get rid of these dead branches,” Tani said, showing him the spot to cut. “I try to make sure there is enough light coming through. Don’t hesitate when you cut. We don’t want the branch to gain an unnecessary bruise.”

    Dante made the cut, holding the dead branch so that it would not fall on Tani’s head.

    Tani turned to him with a pleased smile, and Dante froze in place, his heartbeat speeding. Sunrays sifted through the leaves of the apple tree they were pruning, falling over Tani’s red-brown hair, turning it into a rich vibrant color. Tani’s amber eyes shone in the light making Dante’s heart squeeze tight.

    So beautiful, Dante was sure he would never tire of looking at Tani.

    Yes, these past two days had turned into an exercise in restraint.

    Dante waited every day for Tani to reach for him. To ask him for more than the kisses they shared, for more than holding hands as they sat watching the sunset. He wished and hoped for their kisses to turn into lovemaking, but Tani seemed content with the little they were doing.

    It was hell sleeping next to Tani and feeling so unsure—

    Of course, the sun would decide to push his limits. Painting this perfect creature with light, making him look so utterly stunning, it was hard not to want to kiss him until they were both naked on the grass under the apple trees.

    Damn. Did the sun forget he was a simple poor mortal soul?

    Dante dropped the branch he held in the wheelbarrow from the shed already half-filled with dead branches. He stole another glance at Tani and caught him frozen in place.

    “What are you thinking about?” Dante asked, closing the pruners he held.

    “I should ask you that question,” Tani said, turning away. He sauntered to the next apple tree.

    Dante watched Tani study the branches. Dropping the pruners into the discarded branches in the wheelbarrow, Dante followed Tani.

    “Your lips are pursed so tight, I want to kiss them into compliance. What are you holding yourself back from saying?”

    “I’m not holding back,” Tani said, touching a small bud on the tree. The white apple flower grew into a fuller bud before Tani let go of it and walked to the next tree.

    Tani’s magic seemed to work better in this place, Dante noted.

    “Yes, you are. Tani, you promised not to keep me at arms’ length,” Dante accused, following Tani. “I can barely restrain myself from pulling you down on the grass and making love to you. Yet, when I look at you, I think you don’t feel the same way.”

    “Who says I don’t? We’ve slept in the same bed for two nights. I must hold no appeal to you, as you have not attempted to reach for me at all. Dante Arturo, if you want me, you must tell me. How will I know if you don’t say it?” Tani asked.

    Tani abandoned his study of the apple trees and headed to the farmhouse.

    Dante gaped and then chuckled at Tani’s last question.

    “Then, I’ll just show you how much more I want with you,” he murmured and ran after Tani.

    ****

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 15

    Dante checked the approval forms he held again, smiling at the sight of his faculty dean’s signature and the stamp of approval. He was very grateful his boss liked him. There was also Thomas to thank for his firm support. Otherwise, it would have taken weeks to get his sabbatical approved.

    “Thank you for your support,” Dante said, folding the forms neatly as they walked. “I didn’t think Dean Travis would agree so easily.”

     “Dean Travis values your contribution to our research branch,” Thomas said. They were walking along the corridor leading to Dante’s office. Thomas glanced at Dante. “You’re the most dedicated professor he has. Your willingness to dedicate tireless hours to the various excavations has left you working nonstop. Not to mention your willingness to work with other professors on tailoring lectures around topics of interest. I don’t remember you taking time off. Unless it was taking a few days to visit with your family at the Aretias Island. You are overdue for time away from this place.”

     “I’m looking forward to it,” Dante said, thinking of Tani who was waiting for him in his office. They had teleported to Dante’s apartment, and then Tani had insisted on walking with him into the university. Dante had loved strolling along the many paths and walkways at the university with Tani at his side. It had turned his usual route to his office into a pleasant adventure.

    “What will you do first?” Thomas asked.

    “Don’t know yet,” Dante said, with another smile. “I’ll go with the flow.”

    “Hm,” Thomas said, studying Dante for a moment, and then grinned. “You have spent most of your life lost in this place. We all worried your parents will never see you in a relationship. Are you happy together?”

    “Who says I have to be in a relationship to take time off?” Dante asked, with a soft scowl for Thomas.

    “Just a guess,” Thomas said with a short shrug. They reached a junction. One path heading to Dante’s office, the other to the History Faculty building. Thomas stopped. “For the first time since I’ve known you, you brought someone to your office. I’m surprised it is the extraordinary gentleman who gave us a tour of his hidden fortress. I imagine you’re the only reason we got the opportunity. He must like you a lot.”

    Dante could not help smiling at the mention of Tani.

    “You like him too,” Thomas said, tilting his head to the side as he studied him.

    “I do,” Dante said.

    “Good for you,” Thomas said with an approving nod. “It’s good to have more than work in life. I hope your sabbatical is full of enlightening adventures. You deserve it, Dante.”

    “Thank you, Thomas,” Dante said, taking Thomas right hand when he held it out.

    “I have notes to look over before my next class,” Thomas said, shaking Dante’s hand, then letting go. “I hope you discover another fortress and share it with us.”

    Dante laughed.

    “I always do,” Dante said, as he let go of Thomas’s hand and watched the older man walk away.

    Dante headed to his office with an excited sigh. He opened the door and stopped. His gaze riveted on Tani who stood by the picture board Justina liked to pin up.

    For a moment, all he could remember were the dreams about Tani that filled his nights. Tani’s face remained the same, but his red brown hair came in various lengths through each period. Sometimes it was long down his back, others short around his shoulders, braided, and flowing, each style changing Tani’s look, but his face remained the same.

    Dante felt like he dreamed up a new video of Tani each time he slept.

    The past aside, his most favorite remained the Tani he met during his waking hours.

    While Dante had gone to talk to the Dean, Tani was left here in his office. It was nice to return and find Tani exploring his workspace, reading papers on his desk, and now grinning at pictures taken at digs. Dante entered the office and closed the door, drawing Tani’s gaze.

    “I like this one,” Tani said, holding up a picture of Dante wearing a dusty hat, as he helped excavate ships in a metropolitan dig that started a few years ago. Dante was grinning wide, holding out his hands at the frame of a ship found in the ground.

    “You look happy.”

    “I was,” Dante said, crossing the room to where Tani stood leaning on his desk. He stole a kiss and sighed when Tani returned it with a small smile.

    “Can I keep the picture?” Tani asked, touching Dante’s smile in the picture.

    “If you want,” Dante said, wrapping his right arm around Tani’s shoulders. He pulled him closer and whispered in his ear. “You can also keep me and you won’t have to look at the picture.”

    Tani chuckled, but he put away the picture in his pocket.

    “Did you finish with your sabbatical application?” Tani asked.

    “It’s approved. I’m all yours for a year, and more, if you want.”

    Tani glanced at him then, and the strange shadow that filled Tani’s eyes at the mention of time lingered.

    “What is it? Why this look?” Dante asked, hoping Tani would tell him what made him look so wary.

    Tani’s gaze slid away from him and he shrugged Dante’s arm away from his shoulders.

    “I’m still getting used to it,” Tani said, his voice soft. “This, you with me, so willing and…hopeful.”

    Dante let the sad words sink into him.

    “I’m here,” Dante said after a moment. “I’m here, Tani.”

    “Mm,” Tani nodded and pushed off the desk. “Your office is as I imagined. Full of adventure and stories of the past. Your students are lucky to have you as their professor.”

    “Not for a while from today,” Dante said, straightening up. He picked up the book bag he used to carry his books and papers. “Let’s leave before Thomas discovers something he would like help with and I’ll end up doing research for him instead of having fun with you.”

    Tani grinned and took Dante’s hand.

    They left Dante’s office and returned to Dante’s apartment.

    “Your spoiling me,” Dante said, when Tani let go of him and they were standing in his living room. He placed the book bag he held on the coffee table. “I’ll forget how to drive around after this.”

    “I like spoiling you,” Tani said, starting a slow exploration of his living room. “If you finish what you’re doing here, I’ll spoil you with lunch in an exotic beautiful place.”

    “Sounds intriguing. Let me check the fridge and then I’m all yours,” Dante said.

    “Okay,” Tani said.

    Dante grabbed a crate from one of the cupboards and filled it with two packs of milk, a pack of eggs, an assortment of cheeses and meat. Thankfully, he had not bought vegetables, too busy with Artri House. He would take the crate to his next-door neighbor. She was a cheerful mother of two and always gave him delicious homemade portions of Greek baklava. He was sure she would use the crate of groceries.

    Grabbing a bottle of water from the fridge, he closed the fridge satisfied nothing would go bad, and took a healthy sip of water. Dante moved a few steps so that he could see into the living room through the kitchen door. He paused when he saw Tani standing by a small desk in the corner. The desk had pictures of April and Zachary, and two framed drawings the kids sent him.

    Tani picked up the pictures and studied them.

    Dante finished his water and placed the bottle into the recycling bin. Picking up the crate of groceries, he left the kitchen and entered the living room.

    “I’ll hand this over to my neighbor, and then my time is all yours,” Dante said, when Tani glanced at him.

    “Do they visit you here?” Tani asked, returning the picture frames to the table.

    “No,” Dante said. “I’ve been the one to visit the children for a while. We thought it was best for them to have a steady home life. I’m hoping they will agree to visit when they turn eighteen. They can visit Artri House and play in the vineyard.”

    Tani studied him for a moment, and then nodded.

    “I’m sure they will love it,” Tani said, moving to sit on the couch. “Go, give away the crate. I’ll be here.”

    Dante grinned and hurried out to the corridor.

    Zoe’s door was the only door on his floor. She lived opposite him and her door was always slightly open. Her children were always in a constant in and out. He knocked and a moment of excitement rose when Zoe saw him at her door. Dante handed her the crate, and had to talk fast to escape her serious offer for tea.

    “I have someone waiting for me,” Dante said, when Zoe held on to his right wrist. “I promise to stop by when I’m home next. We can have tea and you can tell me about the kids.”

    “I will hold you to it,” Zoe said. “By the way, a few days ago, someone knocked on your door looking for you. He asked me if we had seen you and I told him you must be away because of work. He hurried away before I could ask his name. Could he be from your workplace?”

    Dante frowned. Anyone looking for him for work would go through his office. Anyone with his work address would have his number. How strange that he had not received any calls.

    “I’m sure,” Dante said to Zoe.

    It was better if she was not troubled by news of a stranger lurking in their shared corridor. Her children lived here.

    “Don’t worry. I’m sure I’ll meet him through my office. If he shows up again, call me. I will talk to him.”

    “Okay,” Zoe smiled, and patted the crate. “Thank you for the groceries. Be sure to come for tea. I’ll feed you a good hearty meal.”

    “I look forward to it,” Dante said and waved goodbye.

    Dante hurried back to his apartment. A moment of panic struck him when he did not see Tani on the couch where he left him. He closed the door fast and hurried into the living room. He stopped when he saw Tani sitting on the floor by his books and his stash of vinyl records.

    Tani held up a universal standard encyclopedia printed in the nineteen thirties.

    “This is really old,” Tani said. “Why do you have it?”

    Dante chuckled and moved to sit next on the floor next to Tani. He took the book from Tani, and opened it.

    “They are a series of encyclopedias. This one starts with an explanation of the word Idaho and ends with the word jewel. The first page has three-page description of Idaho. The last page has a description of the Jewel Cave Monument. Between these two words, are insane word definitions, as if someone was trying to compile all the knowledge one could have between the words Idaho and Jewel. I wonder how they decided what to choose.”

    Tani studied him as he flipped through the book.

    “Look at this, an entire five pages explaining Indonesia,” Dante said, pointing it out for Tani to see. “They must have gotten someone who had just visited Indonesia to write an entire essay.”

    “They must have,” Tani said, leaning in to kiss Dante’s right cheek. “I think they did well, so that I can sit here watching you be amazed about their lengthy essays in the encyclopedia.”

    “We don’t make such books anymore,” Dante said, closing the book. “At least, the effort is not as Herculean as it was those days.”

    “True,” Tani said with a nod.

    “Not for you though,” Dante said, placing the encyclopedia on the bookshelf. He shifted closer to Tani. “Moving from one place to anther with a thought. Tell me, what is the most exciting place you have seen?”

    “Places are not as memorable as experiences,” Tani said.

    “Well said,” Dante said, agreeing with a nod. “So, I should ask which experiences are most memorable to you. Can you remember them all?”

    “I do,” Tani said, his voice wistful. “Sometimes, I wish I could recreate them, but it’s impossible to get it right twice.”

    “What kind of experiences do you want to recreate?” Dante asked, wanting to know, studying Tani’s thoughtful expression.

    Tani bit his bottom lip, and then shrugged.

    “Are you done with your neighbor?” Tani asked.

    “Mm,” Dante nodded.

    “Then,” Tani said, getting up. He held out his right hand to Dante with a small smile. His amber eyes filled with a mix of challenge and excitement. He was incredible to look at.

    “Why don’t I show you these places?” Tani asked.

    Dante scrambled to his feet sure he would follow Tani even if they were just going to walk through a supermarket. He took Tani’s hand and stepped closer, only to shiver when Tani transported them out of his apartment.

    Dante blinked when he was standing at their destination.

    Tani wrapped an arm around him, to keep him steady on a rough path surrounded by tall trees. They stood in the middle of a rain forest. It had recently rained, and Dante’s shoes were not fit for the muddy path.

    “Oh no, it’s muddy,” Tani said holding to Dante as though to lift him up from the mess.

    “I don’t mind. I live on a vineyard, remember?” Dante wrapped his arm around Tani’s waist as he looked around. “Where are we?”

    “A hidden sanctuary,” Tani said, bringing his right hand to cover Dante’s mouth as he looked around, his gaze searching. “Shh…”

    Dante smiled at the gentle hand over his lips, unsure why he needed to hush. He looked into Tani’s eyes when those amber eyes finally looked at him. Tani grinned, and Dante wanted to lean in to kiss him. Before he could, Tani shifted, moving his hand away from Dante’s lips to point into the trees.

    Dante’s gaze followed his finger, looking between two trees to a lush green walkway carved between the tall trees. Dante stilled when a moment later a herd of elephants came into the scene. They were huge, majestic, and wild. Crossing the forest in a large herd, a mix of sizes, mothers and babies, huge ones with enormous tusks and medium-sized ones, leaving their mark on the grounds they passed.

    They were beautiful.

    Dane glanced at Tani and blushed when he found Tani watching him. He leaned in closer so that could ask.

    “Will they mind us here?”

    “No,” Tani shook his head, returning his gaze to the wild elephants. “They don’t care about us, if we don’t mind them either. This is their home, heir territory. This huge forest is their freedom. No interaction with humans.”

    “They are beautiful,” Dante said, watching a little elephant doing its best to keep up with its mom. Quite a few of the elephants had young ones. The herd was thriving. Dante wished he could get closer to touch one.

    “Why don’t you interact with them?” Dante asked, whispering into Tani’s ear.

    Tani shifted so that he was leaning on Dante’s front. Dante wrapped an arm around Tani’s waist.

    “We are standing in the deepest part of the Sumatra jungle. These herd has survived here for centuries,” Tani said. “Wild elephants can take care of themselves just fine as long as they have resources. As long as their habitat stays intact, they don’t need to meet humans. Once elephants are domesticated, they rely on humans, and can no longer return to wild. We’ve tried to keep their home safe.”

    Dante rested his chin on Tani’s shoulder and whispered into his right ear. “Tani is passionate about wildlife.”

    “It’s no different from people fighting for their rights to live as they wish,” Tani said.

    “Well said,” Dante said, kissing Tani’s temple, holding him tight. “Thank you for this spectacular view.”

    Tani chuckled and shook his head, his hair tickling Dante’s cheek.

    “I’m glad you love it,” Tani said.

    Dante watched the last of the elephant herd cross the path beyond the two trees where they stood.

    “What else lives here?” Dante asked, looking up at the tall trees around them. The forest floor was thick with wild bushes, the tree branches heavy with vines. A branch moved, shaking the leaves wildly and a stroke of anxiety swept down his spine. They were in a wild jungle. A wild jungle with elephants and…slithering animals.

    “Orangutans,” Tani answered his question. “Want to see them?”

    “Can I think about it?” Dante asked, nervous at the thought of snakes slithering along the heavy tree branches and the thick bushes around them.

    “Worried about snakes?” Tani asked, shifting in Dante’s arms so that he could look at Dante’s face.

    “How did you know?” Dante asked, meeting Tani’s amused gaze.

    “There are many snakes in this jungle,” Tani said, his gaze solemn as he held Dante’s gaze.

    “Hm,” Dante said at the confirmation of his hidden fears.

    Damn it. This was supposed to be their first date. There was no way he was going to show his fear of snakes when Tani looked so happy in this wild place. Not when he was hoping to look strong enough to manage a clearly extraordinary date in a jungle.

    Dante took in a deep breath, tightening his hold on Tani as he looked around. Hoping to all the powers that be that none of the snakes would venture close. The thought of one falling on them had him extremely nervous.

    “Baby, thank you for showing me elephants. It was extremely awesome. Can we go back home or somewhere less wild?” Dante asked.

    Tani chuckled and Dante met his gaze, suspicious of Tani’s amused gaze.

    “What?”

    “It’s fascinating,” Tani said. “How consistent your fear of snakes remains.”

    “Tani.”

    Tani brushed his lips on Dante’s left cheek.

    “Okay, I’ll stop teasing you.”

    Dante’s stomach growled.

    “Hungry?”

    “Mm,” Dante said, stealing a glance at his watch. “You’ve kept us moving around all morning. It’s almost one o’clock.”

    “Then I’ll get you fed,” Tani said, wrapping his arms around Dante’s shoulders, moving even closer so there was no space between them.

    Dante’s heart skidded in his chest. Tani’s face was so close he could feel Tani’s breath on his skin. Dante ran his hands over Tani’s back and closed his eyes, letting out a shaky sigh.

    “Why are you so nervous?” Tani asked.

    “I’m half-afraid you’ll disappear if I don’t keep holding you,” Dante said.

    He opened his eyes and stared into amused amber eyes.

    “Actually, I’m worried I dreamed you up.”

    “We’re standing in a jungle with snakes moving on the branches above us,” Tani said, making Dante gasp and look up sure he was about to see a python dangling above them. His heartbeat was so fast and loud that Tani could hear it.

    “Do you still think you’re dreaming?” Tani asked.

    Dante stepped closer to Tani, clutching Tani’s arms, his gaze returning to Tani’s, and he groaned.

    “You scared me on purpose,” Dante said, his tone accusing.

    Tani grinned and leaned in, covering Dante’s lips with his in a sweet, demanding kiss.

    Dante forgot his growling stomach, the jungle and its frightening occupants. All he could focus on was Tani’s lips on his; their kiss was delicious and full of promise.

    ****

    “We’re here,” Tani said a moment later, ending their kiss.

    He could spend hours sipping on Dante’s lips. Their kisses were intoxicating. He breathed in Dante’s scent and rested his forehead on Dante’s shoulder. His heart trembled with the joy of slipping straight into the rhythm of want. Every time he got the chance to hold Dante, he forgot how to be careful. How to not ask for everything, and only settle for the moments they would share. It was difficult. So difficult, that he had gone ahead and brought Dante to a place he kept to himself.

    “Where is here?” Dante asked, looking around their destination. “There are so many apple trees. What is this place?”

    “An orchard,” Tani said, moving out of Dante’s arms, taking in the strangest of his obsessions, and he had many.

    This four-acre orchard was flat and shadowed by a large hill in the north. It was on a Greek Island. One of the pieces of land Tani found when he was finding his footing in the mortal realm. He had built the farmhouse in the middle of the orchard with his own hands, hoping to occupy his thoughts.

    The farmhouse was not as sophisticated as the Elderwood property. No, this place was rural, and rough. It was comfortable. The rooms included a master bedroom, a kitchen that flowed into the living room, and one bathroom tucked in the corridor leading to the master bedroom. The store on the side housed farming tools and crates used for harvesting apples. A borehole in at the back of the house supplied water for the orchard and the house. Electricity lines were the only sign of a connection with the outside world.

    Tani’s gaze shifted to the gates in the distance. His amber eyes glowing gold for a moment. He was relieved to see his invisible shield still covered the property. It was hard to discover it unless one was ekho-blessed, or an ekho. Otherwise, mortals saw a field of green

    “This place is beautiful,” Dante said. “Reminds me of the farmhouses I see when I visit the kids in Kirtland. Are we visiting someone here?”

    “No.” Tani cleared his throat and started walking to the house behind them.

    “Tani? Where are we?” Dante asked following him.

    “An apple orchard in Greece,” Tani said. “I used to plant trees here and tend the place myself, but I do get help from a nosy neighbor when I’m not around.”

    “Interesting to know,” Dante said, as Tani walked up to the front door.

    Tani placed his hand on the doorknob and the lock clicked open without a key.

    The picture window in the living area opened. The kitchen window too. A kettle filled with water started whistling on the stove. The scent of fresh laundered sheets filled the house, soon accompanied by the scent of baking potatoes.

    “And who lives here?” Dante asked once they were inside.

    “No one,” Tani said, removing his jacket. He dumped it on an armchair and looked at Dante. “The house has a domestic spell to manage necessities. Cale helped me cast it when he thought I was going to go crazy and not take care of myself.”

    “Why did he think that?” Dante asked, a frown creasing his forehead as he stared at Tani.

    Tani looked around the comfortable living room. The comfortable couches around the living room, the fireplace in the corner, the shelves filled with books on the opposite end. He had once spent a whole month chopping wood for the fireplace like a mad man. Shaking his head, he returned to his gaze and opted for truth. He had nothing more to lose anyway.

    “I built this house when you left me in this world and went to a place I could not reach you,” Tani said. “I have loved you too long, too hard and at times, it has come close to breaking me. When I reach that point, I find peace in this place. The peace finding is not always a healthy process. Cale is my warden. He has done his best to protect me when…”

    “Finish it, Tani,” Dante said, taking a step closer. His gaze intent as he studied Tani. “I want to hear it. When what?”

    Tani started to turn away afraid of voicing his obsessive tendencies. Through the living room picture window, he caught a glimpse of the apple trees growing there and frowned.

    Dante closed the distance between them and turned him around so that he could look into Tani’s eyes.

    “When what, Tani?” Dante asked, cajoling.

    Tani held Dante’s gaze and answered the truth.

    “Cale fought me back to reason when I felt that I should follow you to the world beyond.”

    Dante took in a harsh breath, and closed his eyes, his hands gripping Tani’s upper arms tight. He pulled Tani closer and pressed a kiss on Tani’s forehead. He breathed in and let out a soft sigh.

    “Tani,” Dante said. “I wish I could take in the hurt lingering inside you. I want to drag it out and fill you with happy memories of us, and I wish there was a way to do that.”

    Tani smiled and buried his face into Dante’s left shoulder.

    “There is no way to take away the memories,” Tani murmured, and bit his bottom lip when Dante wrapped tight arms around him. “I don’t mind the weight of our past. It makes these moments I’m in your arms priceless. I would go through it again for this moment.”

    Dante held him tighter, then he pulled back, bending his head, and Tani gasped when Dante brushed his lips with a soft kiss. Dante brought his hands to frame Tani’s face, and their kiss then turned heated, urgent. Tani slid his hands around Dante’s waist, sliding them up his back until he was holding on as he lost himself in their blissful kiss. Tilting his head back, eyes closing in the joy of the moment, he let Dante lead their hungry kiss until they were both breathless.

    Dante broke their connection and Tani opened his eyes breathing in deep, every nerve in his body primed with passion and need. He wanted more, wanted to feel Dante’s hands on his skin.

    Donmuş kalbimi ateşle dolduruyorsun,” Dante murmured as though reciting a spell. (You fill my frozen heart with fire)

    “Perhaps I’ve always known I’m yours. And, my heart has remained locked away waiting for you. Now, it opens wide for you. I want to give you all that I am, Tani. Will you accept me even though I’ve come this late?”

    Yes. Always, yes. Tani thought, fighting the sting of tears. Even when you leave me alone, I wait and love only you. Even when you choose another, I wait for you.

    Tani did not voice these words. Wanting to keep their moment pure and free of their bitter past. Tani bit his bottom lip afraid his words of accusation would burst out.

    “Tani.” Dante murmured, leaning in again to brush his lips on Tani’s, the soft touch turning into a blaze of electric energy that ran through every nerve in Tani’s body.

    Tani bunched Dante’s shirt, as he bit back a soft moan, his cock throbbing in response. Then Dante kissed him again and rewarded him with a second sliver of his fire soul. Its white-hot aura burning bright as it forged a path through their kiss to the depths of the empty pool that had waited hundreds of years. It sunk into Tani’s heart, joining the first, filling him with warmth and the tears he had been fighting slid down his cheeks.

    Dante used his thumb to wipe the tears away when he noticed them. Breaking their kiss to brush his lips along the tear tracks, pressing a soft kiss on Tani’s closed eyes, one by one.

    “I’ll wait. You don’t have to answer me now,” Dante murmured, placing Tani’s head on his shoulder, and wrapping his arms around Tani tight. “I’ll wait for you this time, Tani. I’ll wait for you to accept me.”

    Tani closed his eyes and they held each other in the middle of a living room he had built to remember his beloved six centuries ago.

    ****

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 14

    Christophe and Landi stood. Their gazes wide for different reasons as they took in Tani.

    “It is you,” Landi said in greeting, moving away from the island table, coming to face Tani. “You are Ryuzo?”

    Tani smiled.

    “Yes. It has been a long time, young Landi,” Tani said. “How have you been?”

    Landi took a few steps forward and took Tani’s right hand, holding it with both his hands as he studied Tani.

    “Extraordinary thanks to your help. You haven’t aged one bit,” Landi said.

    “What are we missing?” Nora asked, looking to her husband. “Christophe? Why are you standing there like a statue?”

    “Excuse me, it’s not everyday one gets to meet an Ekho in ones home,” Christophe said.

    Tani chuckled, glancing at Dante, who winked at him.

    “When did you meet Landi?” Nora asked.

    “He was a very young man when we met,” Tani said, not making an effort to remove his right hand from Landi’s hold.

    The grandmaster watched him with wonder. His eyes bright with recognition.

    Tani sifted through his vast memories, until his stint with Landi in Andalusia in the late eighteen hundreds returned to him.

    “We met when I was fourteen,” Landi said.

    Dante let out a short impressed whistle and walked around them to sit at the island table.

    “Grandmaster, were you ever that young?” Dante asked.

    “Even younger,” Tani said, smiling at Landi when the older man grinned back at him. “As reckless as you, Dante. He almost burned down an inn over brutal treatment by a gang leader at the docks where he lived at the time.”

    Landi chuckled and let go of Tani’s hand.

    Christophe pulled out a chair next to Dante at the island table.

    Nora then guided Tani to the island table and he sat next to Dante. She hurried to the cooking range to get him a glass of tea.

    Landi sat across Dante and Tani with Christophe joining him.

    “Why did you almost burn down a building, Grandpa?” Christophe asked, taking the glass of tea Dante pushed toward him.

    “Our family was going through a hard time,” Landi said. “My father passed away and we had creditors who wanted our very life. I had to protect mom, so I tried my best to make money and sometimes it wasn’t enough so I broke the law. Until I met Mr. Ryuzo. He changed my life.”

    “Please, Mr. Ryuzo sounds so formal,” Tani said, getting comfortable in his seat. “Call me Tani.”

    “I think we need to know more about this encounter. Don’t you think so, Dad?” Dante asked, accepting a glass of tea from Nora. He passed it to Tani and waited for the second one.

    “I have read the stories in your grandmaster’s journals,” Christophe said, sipping his tea. “Still, reading is not the same. He tells the story better.”

    Landi let out a soft sigh and looked at Tani.

    “There is not much to tell. I was born in a shabby house in the Seville docks in Andalusia. My dad worked in cargo ships, and often took voyages so we lived where he could find work. He had moved our family from Ottoman territory, hoping to escape the life of a farmer and make a fortune in a different region. The only work he could get easily was working on ships. He made good money, but he was not very smart with our family’s finances,” Landi said, shaking his head.

    “When he was not on long voyages, he ran destructive vices: drinking, gambling, and women…,” Landi sighed. “There was no way to cure him. Mom tried and failed too many times. She did her best to keep my younger sister and me safe. Mom worked in the laundry of a successful inn. She kept money aside to sustain our lives and pay rent. We tried to hide what she saved, but it didn’t always work out.”

    “Your father found it,” Dante said, tensing in his chair.

    “Most times,” Landi said, shadows in his eyes as he remembered his distant past.

    “Was he violent?” Dante asked, his tense tone drawing Tani’s gaze.

    “When he was drunk,” Landi said with a shrug, looking at Dante. “It’s in the past.”

    “Either way, I’m sorry you had to live through that kind of situation,” Dante said, sitting back in his chair.

    Tani placed a hand on his right knee and warmth flooded him when Dante reached down to cover his hand with his right one.

    Landi studied Dante for a moment, and then his lips curved in a smile at the clear sympathy in Dante’s gaze.

    “Don’t dwell on it,” Landi said. “I don’t. In any case, Dad died after fighting with a man he owed money in a pub. His creditors soon came knocking at our door after his funeral. I had to start working to make money to help mom. The best place to do that as fourteen-year-old kid was doing odd jobs at the docks.”

    “We lived along a stretch dominated by a powerful gang that had its hands on liquor imports and all the pubs along the docks,” Landi said, staring into his tea. “As I said earlier, I was very angry at fourteen. Easy to trigger, and full of fire. A fire my mother called the devil’s gift because she had no idea why I had it in me. She tried her best to love me despite my strange gift. Still her discomfort with it made me angrier.”

    “We had to live. I had no scruples in making sure we had money for food. I overstepped and crossed multiple members of the gang, and even stole money from their leader if an opportunity presented itself. One bad night, the gang boss caught me thieving from one of his clients, and he made mom pay for the interest with money she had saved for our rent. Mom was at her wits end with me. She cried for a night and a day. So…I left the house the next evening determined to make the gang boss pay for making her cry.”

    “Not stealing would have made her cry less,” Nora pointed out, placing a platter filled with cured meats, tomatoes and lettuce, white cheese cubes, eggs, and more on the table. She handed Dante a glass of tea, and patted his shoulder.

    Tani studied the platter of food excited by the spread. He smiled at Nora in thanks when she handed him a plate and cutlery.

    “Stealing was the easiest way to keep our family living day-to-day, or so I believed,” Landi said, continuing his story. “In any case, I set about getting that gang boss back for making mom cry. I decided the best way was to burn down his most popular pub, which was where he had his office. I waited until it was late in the night. You see, I was skinny enough to slip through the alleys without people noticing me. I found the right spot to start the fire on the bar and lit up a beam with my magic, and…”

    Landi made a wave with his hands, soft harmless sparks falling from the tips of his fingers.

    “My fire died in a vacuum,” Landi said, shaking his head. “It shocked me because I had never experienced something like that. The fire always came when I wanted it. I looked up and Mr. Ryu—I mean, Tani was leaning on the wall opposite watching me. I thought he was one of the gang boss’s men. Though with his clean cut style of dress, he couldn’t have been.”

    “You tried to put me on fire,” Tani said with a short grin, as he took a slice of homemade bread, and covered it with a thin layer of cottage cheese. He took a bite, his gaze on an embarrassed Landi.

    “There was no chance I would manage it,” Landi said with a soft voice. “You turned my fire attempts into grape vines. Told me I should rethink my choices. That I should work to get my family to move back to our true home and start a new.”

    “I just wanted to give you a new school of thought,” Tani said, swallowing the delicious bread. He sipped his tea. “Had you continued as I found you, I fear this present existence would not have come to be.”

    Landi studied him, and then agreed with a single nod.

    “Yes. You are quite right,” Landi said. “The vines you made from my fire started this vineyard. I have always wanted to thank you for helping my family back then. Your support saved us, helped us return here to Artri.”

    “It was my duty,” Tani said, placing his slice of bread on the plate and sat back, his gaze on Landi.

    “Is it because of the promise you made to the original Durante?” Christophe asked, watching Tani openly.

    “No.” Tani shook his head, the importance of his meeting with Landi suddenly filling him.

    “No, that is not why I came for you, Landi. I was working under the Elderwood Conservancy. We were hidden in those ages, still are in a way. We are known now among modern scholars because we try to help heal the environment and protect wildlife. However, the core reason why Elderwood exists is to watch over the Ekho-blessed children in the mortal realm. Creating sanctuaries for the children powerful heretics insisted had the devil’s gifts, as you say,” Tani said. A deep frown creasing his forehead. “I was sent to check your case because of a rumor that there was a child who started fires when he was angry. I had no clear information on you until you wanted to burn down the bar.”

    “Oh,” Landi frowned. “So, it is not because of my connection to Durante? I heard you are sworn to protect his generations.”

    “I am sworn to this promise, but no, that is not why I came to you. Durante’s line had no power when you were young, Landi. His bloodline was pure mortal. You changed it though when you met your wife. She belonged to Durante’s bloodline.”

    “Wow,” Christophe said, his gaze shifting to Landi. “Here you thought it was because of our Artri bloodline.”

    “It seemed like it should be,” Landi said, shaking his head as he studied Tani. “Then…is it true our patriarch is a powerful ekho, a god of fire in the Ekho Realm?”

    “It is true. Kinon is his name,” Tani said, holding out his wrists. “Forger of these cuffs that ground me to the mortal realm.”

    “Is he a good soul?” Nora asked, her gaze on the cuffs on Tani’s wrists. “This Kinon who has blessed our Artri House with his power. Is he a good ekho?”

    Tani let out a soft sigh, and dropped his hands to his lap, a heaviness filling his chest. Dante responded to the sigh by taking his left hand and tangling their fingers. The warmth of his touch soothed the sting in his chest and he took in a lighter breath.

    “Your definition of good is different from mine, ours as Ekho,” Tani said. “In real truth, I am not old enough to pass judgment on Kinon, the Ekho god of fire. By all the rules governing my existence in the Ekho Realm, I am a deviant Ekho. One who has broken, defied, the accepted rules of our Ekho realm. So, I cannot answer your question, Nora Arturo.”

    The room went silent, and then Dante cleared his throat.

    “So, just how old are you, Grandmaster?” Dante asked. “Should I be calling the Guinness World Record? I’m very sure we are bound to win. What year were you born?”

    “You will do no such thing,” Christophe said, pointing a finger at Dante in clear admonishment. “This son of mine might actually attempt to do it.”

    Tani chuckled and glanced at Landi.

    “I should be a hundred and forty-seven or so,” Landi said. “The fire inside me keeps me young. It should be the same for those in our bloodline. We age slowly.”

    “How many are there like you?” Tani asked.

    “Our family is very old. Our bloodline dates back to the eleventh century. We here in this room are the last standing with power,” Landi said, his gaze lost in memory. “The first of our line was named Christophe Artri, he had a daughter named Nora Artri, and it continues. Those before me had passed on by the time we were able to return to Aretias Island.”

    “When my family returned from Andalusia, we only found my grandmother. Thank the fates for her. She helped me understand who I was, what I was. From her, I learned how to control my fire. She kept records of our family. It felt good to discover that a long line of Artri men and women had gifts like mine. I didn’t feel so alone, even though my power was decidedly stronger than all the others in our line were. I have helped document our line since then.”

    “How did you know your power was stronger than others?” Tani asked.

    “There were spells grandmother could not do and she was with power. I was stronger than she was, though that changed when Dante was born. He is stronger than Christophe and me. When my wife gave birth to our children,” Landi said. “I got one son and three daughters. My son had no magik in his blood because his mother was not ekho-blessed. The magik skipped the girls too, but that is common. However, it found my grandson because we made an effort to make sure his mother was ekho-blessed, Christophe, and his son, Dante. These two should have the same outcome with age as me.”

    “They should,” Tani said, with a thoughtful nod.

    Kinon had truly put a lot of thought into his interference. The question remained why.

    Had this been his intention to begin with?

    Tani studied Landi.

    Kinon had blessed the Artri nurturing a long line of warlocks. Then Landi’s father decides to break out of farming, ending up in Andalusia. He takes long voyages in search of a fortune, and Landi is born with the strongest power in the line. His bloodline then contributes to Dante’s current bloodborne warlock magik. It felt like a renewal of Ekho magik. Renewing the Artri line to keep it relevant.

    Tani bit back a scoff at the thought.

    For Landi to grow his power this much, then it should have been that his mother had an affair with Kinon. Landi’s mother would have no real knowledge of what Kinon was.

    Tani thought about the request to the conservancy to find Landi. It was also suspect.

    Could Kinon have pretended to be the owner of the inn…?

    Tani reached for his phone.

    “What is it?” Dante asked.

    “Now that I hear Landi’s story and remember his case, I have questions as to how Elderwood knew to find you in Andalusia,” Tani said.

    “Is it very unusual?” Dante asked.

    Tani wrote a message to Hera.

    ‘Visit the conservancy archives for me. Find case files for the Andalusia region, late eighteen hundreds. I need to know who sent the case to the conservancy. Also the lineage book with Artri House.’

    “Mm,” Tani said. “Not quite, we did get requests for odd occurrences around the world, but…Landi’s case was specific.”

    Tani’s phone pinged and opened the voice message from Hera.

    Sawa, Babu. By the way, the ghost of the fortress left a gift in the living room you should see. Tom and I have decided you should bring your new boyfriend to meet us. I’ll make him samosas with pepper.

    Tani grinned and glanced at Dante.

    “What are samosas?”

    “Triangle pastries filled with beefy yummyness,” Tani said. “Hera is a master with them. You’ll love them.”

    “Can’t wait to try them then,” Dante said.

    “Just so you know, she’s going to ask many questions,” Tani said, putting away his phone.

    “Does she know about our past?” Dante asked.

    “No,” Tani shook his head. “And, I would like to keep it that way. There are parts of my life that are difficult to share with Tom and Hera. Our long connection is part of that.”

    “I understand,” Dante said tangling his fingers with Tani’s left hand again.

    “Just how long has the Elderwood Conservancy existed?” Landi asked, sipping his tea.

    “Elderwood has been around in various forms since the thirteenth century. My uncle named it.”

    “Uncle?” Dante asked.

    “Mm,” Tani said turning to Dante. “He would have given you the tour when you came, but he had a pressing engagement. He’s my…guardian.”

    “Will I meet him too?” Dante asked. “Will he approve of me?”

    Tani chuckled.

    “I doubt he has a choice at this point. We’ve been—,”

    Tani broke off, biting his bottom lip his gaze on Dante.

    “He’s been part of us for a long time. He knows everything about you.”

    “Oh,” Dante said.

    “What kind of work does the conservancy do?” Christophe asked. “In this age.”

    “It has always protected your kind,” Tani said. “You’re not the only recipient of our care. Though, I wasn’t sure of your bloodline at the time. There are many like you who need our care, even now.”

    “Like my father?” Landi asked.

    “Your father was a mortal,” Tani cut in, studying Landi, wondering how to convey his suspicions without seeming callous. “If the power was in him, it remained dormant. Instead, he was a damaging force. I doubt anyone could have saved him from himself. Once his quest for fortune failed, it was not in him to return to his true family here, so he kept you and your mother in pain and poverty. In a way, he forged you.”

    Landi sighed and nodded in agreement.

    “I’ve always wondered if he had the gift.”

    “He did not,” Tani shook his head. His phone buzzed again and he reached for it to find a picture from Hera. It was the file he asked for and the book with Atri House’s lineage. They were on the desk in his private library.

    “Thank you. Will plan for you to meet Dante. Don’t give him a hard time. He’s my heart.”

    Tani messaged back to Hera and summoned the file and book to him. He moved his plate and teacup to the side so that the book and the thick folder could fall on the table. No one at the table flinched in surprise. They had clearly seen more elaborate designs of magik.

    “This book records your house and claims the current head of the house is Christophe Arturo.” Tani opened it to the fire element pages and held out the book to Landi. “I think it was recorded using hearsay. If you would help correct the record for future generations working in our Elderwood Conservancy.”

    “We will,” Christophe said, taking the book from Landi. He started reading the contents and paused. “This is fascinating. Are you saying Artri is the only lineage with fire?”

    “Yes,” Tani said. “There has not been any other. Any discovered anyway.”

    “Oh,” Landi said. “We’re so rare.”

    “I think your patriarch is very strict with himself. Your house should be the only one he created,” Tani said, opening the old file from the Andalusia period.

    He searched and found the name of the inn keeper who submitted a request to find Landi.

    It read, ‘Onnik Kinno.’

    Tani grinned at the god of fire’s clear originality.

    Onnik Kinno. First and Last name, each one an anagram of Kinon.

    Must you reveal Master’s clear lack of originality?” Artri whispered in Tani’s head.

    Not my fault he could not think up a good name for his mortal lover,” Tani replied. ‘Onnik Kinno.’

    Artri huffed and Tani bit back his amused laugh.

    Landi’s true father was Kinon, the god of fire himself. Tani sighed. Kinon must have been very invested in making Dante’s line strong to have renewed the bloodline.

    This…he would have to discuss with Dante later.

    He returned the file to his library and sat back in his chair to drink his tea. His gaze on Christophe and Landi who were busy counting down the number of generations they needed to add in the book.

    Dante used tongs to fill Tani’s plate with cheese cubes, grapes, toasted fresh bread and a mix of cold meats.

    “I have a question,” Nora said. She had settled in a chair at the head of the table on Tani’s side. “What is your Ekho clan, Tani?”

    “I am a hybrid,” Tani said. “Also, I’m a deviant Ekho sent to the mortal world to serve a sentence. My affiliations with any clan have ended at this point.”

    “Because of your beloved?” Dante asked, studying his plate of food with grat interest.

    “Partly,” Tani said. “I was still in the mortal realm even before my punishment. There are reasons for that too.”

    “Oh,” Nora said, nodding. “So, would you be willing to give us more information about the Ekho Realm?”

    “Yes,” Christophe said, looking up from the lineage book. “I mean, our institute is in dire need of information about your kind. What we know is like folklore. We teach it but it’s not the same as the offering truth. Is that something you would be willing to share?”

    “It would depend,” Tani said, accepting the fork Dante handed hi. “I might be a deviant but I am still sworn to the laws of our kind. They include not giving mortals too much information about our kind.”

    “It’s hardly fair,” Landi said. “Your kind has all the power. You come here and create the ekho-blessed. We now have to content with deadly parasites like Kara ot. Don’t you think it’s unfair to keep us in the dark about your kind?”

    Tani chuckled and sat back in his seat.

    “I suppose you are right,” Tani said. “Those in the Elderwood Conservancy have spent time with me and my uncle. What they know has been largely from dealing with us, and situations that crop through time. We handle the worst brought by the Ekho Realm. We don’t share the information with outsiders because it can also prove dangerous. I suppose it is because of Uncle Amu—”

    “Can we join the conservancy?” Landi asked. “Including us into Elderwood will mean you violate no agreements with your people.”

    “Who are us?” Tani asked, popping a grape into his mouth. “Artri House or the school you both run. The one that made Dante?”

    “Both,” Nora said, drawing Tani’s gaze.

    “Mom,” Dante started.

    “Artri House includes me,” Nora said, sipping her tea. “The institute does not. Tani, I saw how you were with Hera and Tom. Who is Hera to you?”

    “She is my ward,” Tani said. “Why?”

    “You respect her opinions,” Nora said. “I feel Elderwood does that for the women of our kind. I want to be part of it.”

    “Nora,” Christophe said, staring at his wife in shock. “You run Artri House, unfettered. Why would you say you are not included?”

    What did you do when I told you that Landi had placed a silencing spell on me?” Nora asked.

    Christophe stopped, his gaze shifting to Dante.

    Tani watched Dante sip his tea without pause. He decided to relax and enjoy breakfast too.

    “You did nothing,” Nora answered for Christophe. “Our son confronted Landi the moment he discovered the truth. So, I am no longer spelled thanks to Dante. This is why I am able to tell Tani that the Ekho I trade with is called Aero. He is from the Dragon Clan.”

    Tani placed his fork down and frowned.

    “Aero. I’ve know of him. He runs auctions across the world. Elderwood has watched him for some time now. The results of his auctions have been mostly harmless. But now with the wicked black weed…”

    Tani’s frown deepened in thought.

    The dragon clan was in peace with most clans in the Ekho Realm, but they were a cunning race. They were noble and ferocious. Dragon clan people loved wealth and precious jewels. They did not discriminate on the people they traded with especially if it meant attaining a coveted item. Which could mean Aero might have brought Kara ot for the right price.

    “Tani?” Dante touched his elbow.

    Tani met worried brown eyes.

    “Perhaps your grandmaster is right,” Tani said with a small sigh. “Our traits make us. In saying that, Aero’s dragon traits are important. He might have brought the black weed. I need to call in someone Dante. Do not lock them out.”

    “I don’t—”

    “It is your will that runs Artri House,” Tani murmured. “I won’t go with them, but we need to work very fast. Aero is dangerous. Trust me.”

    “I do,” Dante said. “Do what you need to do.”

    Tani smiled and turned to Nora.

    “Thank you for sharing the name with me,” Tani said. “I’ll bring someone who will help resolve this mystery. He can also accept Artri House and your school’s application to join Elderwood. I can only help you up to here. The rest is up to you.”

    Nora nodded her consent and Tani closed his eyes and reached out to Amu.

    ‘Uncle.’

    ‘Tani, where are you?’ Amu responded.

    ‘Please visit Artri House. Use me as an anchor to find it,” Tani said.

    Tani hesitated then clenched his hands into tight firsts as he added.

    You may bring the Ekho goddess of earth with you.”

    We’ll be there,” Amu answered.

    Tani ended the connection and swallowed down his annoyance with having to include Eren. The thought of helping the Septum left him angry but he could not leave the members of this house vulnerable.

    Dante’s warm hand covered his left fist. He looked up to find Dante studying him.

    “You okay?” Dante asked.

    “I’m fine,” Tani said, his heart skipping at the warmth in Dante’s eyes. He wished they were alone. He consoled himself with the fact that they would be sooner or later. Reaching for the tea glass before im, he took a sip. “Nora, the breakfast spread looks delicious. Atri House sure does have the best meals. Dante cooked last night and it was amazing.”

    “Meals are the soul of a house,” Nora answered. “It is good to have everyone in the house meet at the table to touch base.”

    “Meals are how you discover who has spelled who in the family,” Dante said, making Nora chuckle and Christophe and Landi scowled at him.

    “Then you serve tea after serious threats,” Nora added. “Grandmaster would know very much about such an incident.”

    “Really?” Tani turned his inquiring gaze at Landi.

    “Yes, Dante threatened to rip me to pieces with liquid silver on Wednesday. He wanted me to remove the spell on Nora. I did it and then Nora served us breakfast right here.”

    Tani chuckled at his beloved’s petty nature.

    “You have a mean streak, Dante,” Tani said, glancing at Dante.

    “I was protecting mom,” Dante said, holding out a piece of white cheese to Tani. “Try this, it’s delicious.”

    Tani took a bite and nodded in agreement, as he ate. He was sipping his tea when Amu and Eren shimmered in to the kitchen.

    The wave of white light that filled the kitchen surprised Nora. She dropped the butter knife she held to stare at the two Ekhos in her kitchen.

    Tani stood then, and Dante followed his gaze to Amu.

    “Uncle,” Tani said in greeting.

    “Tani,” Amu said, with a small nod in greeting. “So this is Artri House.”

    “Yes,” Tani held out his hand to a stunned Landi. “He is the eldest of the Artri line, followed by Christophe and his wife, Nora. They are Dante’s parents.”

    “Children of Kinon,” Eren said, her gaze fixated on Dante. “You…you’re the culmination of his power. How extraordinary.”

    Tani ignored Eren’s observations and faced Dante’s family.

    “May I introduce Amu Izuna, born of the Fox Lord Nua Izuna. He is brother to the fox goddess. He takes the last name Ryuzo in the mortal realm to honor my roots. She is Eren, the Ekho goddess of the earth. She is from the Immortal Clan and one of the Septum.”

    Landi, Christophe, and Nora stood to give their greetings.

    Dante’s came up much slower, his gaze on Eren.

    “She contributed to the cuffs on your wrist,” Dante said, still holding Tani’s left hand. “Why is she here?”

    Tani smirked, meeting Eren’s gaze.

    “It is unavoidable,” Tani said, moving closer to Dante. He squeezed Dante’s fingers. “We need her authority to control Aero.”

    “How should we address you?” Landi asked.

    “Amu and Eren,” Amu said, looking at the laden table. “Sorry for intruding during your breakfast.”

    “Not at all,” Nora said. “You are welcome to join us. Have a seat. I’ll brew some more tea.”

    “Thank you for the offer but not this time,” Amu said, shaking his head. “We have an appointment we must keep elsewhere. Cale waits for us.”

    “The god of calamity?” Dante asked with a frown. “Why would you associate with him?”

    “I would ask why we are associating with mortals.” Eren countered.

    Dante gaped at her.

    “These mortals are Ekho-blessed, guarded by Kinon,” Tani said, frowning at Eren. “I called you here because Nora Arturo has provided us with the name of the Ekho who visits this manor. He is Aero from the dragon clan.”

    “Aero, the owner of the Kur Auction,” Amu said, his right brow rising in mild surprise. “Why would he visit here?”

    Tani glanced at Nora and smiled when he saw her shiver with anxiety.

    “Uncle, you know Aero needs to source items for auction,” Tani said. “Artri House is filled with great magik. They will cross paths. It is not taboo.”

    “Of course,” Amu said, shifting his gaze to Nora, Christophe, and Landi. “Now that we know the possible source of the black weed, we can trace back his steps. We shall need help from the person Aero meets.”

    “That is me,” Nora said.

    Eren held out her hand.

    Nora walked around Dante and Tani to reach her. They shimmered out of Artri House the moment Nora touched Eren’s hand.

    “Don’t worry,” Amu said when Dante took a startled step forward. “They will be back shortly.”

    “Uncle,” Tani said, squeezing Dante’s hand. “Artri House would love to join the Elderwood network. Landi and Christophe also run a school they want to include. I told them you would hear them out.”

    “Artri House is included in our network without question,” Amu said, his gaze on Dante. “As it always is with one in his bloodline. His children and theirs after remain under our care.”

    Dante held out his hand to Amu.

    Amu took his hand in a firm handshake.

    “Thank you,” Dante said.

    “Don’t thank me,” Amu said, letting go of Dante’s hand after a moment. “I take care of what is important to Tani.”

    “I am grateful for your care,” Dante said.

    “Uncle,” Tani started.

    “The culprit responsible for the black weed is almost caught. We know where to start looking in order to resolve this incident. Leave the search to Cale, Eren, and me,” Amu said his gaze gentle when he looked at Tani. “The sand in the hourglass lessens. You should get on with it.”

    Amu was giving him time with Dante. Releasing him from the search for Aero so that the trial might end with no interference.

    “This is the last chance,” Amu continued. “Give it your all and make sure there are no regrets.”

    Tani smiled and stepped forward. He took Amu’s right hand, and pressed the back of it to his forehead. A show of respect for the man he considered his father in all the ways that mattered. He was keenly aware that his life would be miserable without Amu’s full support.

    Amu placed his palm on top of Tani’s head in gentle blessing.

    “Be careful out there,” Amu said. “I will let you know if any changes arise.”

    Tani stepped away from Amu, just as Nora and Eren returned to the kitchen. Nora sat in the closest chair when Eren let go of her hand and let out a relieved breath. Her eyes shining with excitement.

    “Mom, are you alright?” Dante asked, moving to Nora’s side.

    “I’m very fine,” Nora said with a happy grin. “The teleporting was exciting. Lady Eren is very powerful. She traced Aero’s comings and goings at the beach. We discovered he uses a ship that docks not too far from our beach and comes in. They’ll find out more.”

    “Mm,” Eren said, nodding as she turned to Amu. “I have marked his footsteps on the ground. I’ll be able to find him in this realm.”

    “You’re indeed of the earth,” Amu said. “Before we leave, there is the topic of Elderwood and this house. Mrs. Arturo, why don’t we get started on an agreement. Tani, don’t let us keep you here.”

    Tani looked to Dante with a small smile, relieved his uncle would take on the case with Aero.

    “You wanted to stop by your office,” Tani said, remembering Dante’s wish for time alone. “Do you still want to take the sabbatical?”

    Dante squeezed his mother’s right shoulder and moved away from the table to stand next to Tani.

    “Yes,” Dante said, taking Tani’s left hand. “I’d love it very much.”

    “Then,” Tani said, tightening his hold on Dante’s hand. “Let’s go.”

    Dante glanced at his family, gave them a short wave, before Tani enveloped both of them in bright gold light. Tani teleported them out of Artri House, heading to Dante’s apartment in Istanbul.

    ***

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 13-2

    Dante woke to sunshine flooding his bedroom, and the feel of Tani Ryuzo’s warmth in his arms. He lay still, taking in the scent of his own shampoo, mixed in with Tani’s clean scent. It filled his nostrils, permeated his cells, and his lungs, and filled his heart with joy. He could not remember feeling so content in his life.

    Tani shifted, snuggling deeper into his chest, and Dante smiled at the trust Tani was giving him.

    He rarely held his partners in his arms, not even Viola with whom he had children.

    Dante brushed his fingers through Tani’s red-brown hair and enjoyed the moment. They were on his bed, the covers wrapped around them after a night of hard sleeping. Tani breathed in gentle motion, deep asleep.

    Dante took the chance to sink his fingers into soft red-brown hair, allowing his fingers to memorize the texture of it between his fingers. He stroked Tani’s hair in absent movement and managed to uncover Tani’s right earlobe.

    The gold leafs lining Tani’s right earlobe drew his interest, and he shifted his fingers to the earrings. It took him only a second to discover the leaves were not earrings. They were part of Tani and could not be removed. They looked sealed into Tani’s skin. Five Elderwood leaves, their artisanship hard to copy, they looked real.

    Dante rubbed his thumb on the surface of each leaf, fascinated by their presence on Tani’s ear. Why five golden leaves on his ear? Did they represent something? Did he feel it when Dante touched them?

    Dante pressed a kiss on the top of Tani’s earlobe and leaned back to find Tani watching him. His breath caught when he looked into clear amber eyes. His cock filled in full appreciation when Tani pressed into him with a small smile.

    “Morning,” Tani murmured, burying his face into Dante’s chest.

    “Morning,” Dante said with a pleased grin, then whispered into Tani’s right ear. “I think I should let you know that I’m in trouble.”

    Tani leaned back, eyes wide with worry.

    “What kind of trouble?”

    “It’s very serious trouble,” Dante said, his tone grim.

    Tani frowned, and Dante grinned.

    “Now that we’ve spent this night together, I really cannot give us up. I slept so well, and then I woke up with you in my arms. It’s a gift. I have to keep you. Can I?” Dante asked. “You’re addictive.”

    Tani shook his head at Dante’s declaration and studied him for a moment.

    “I didn’t think you were so mushy,” Tani said, resting his head on Dante’s chest.

    “I can’t help it,” Dante said, running the palm of his hand over Tani’s back. Up and down, until Tani leaned back to look at him.

    “You’re not the only one addicted,” Tani said. “I love yo—this, I love this, too.”

    Dante smiled and leaned in to kiss Tani. Taking his lips in a sweet kiss that quickly turned possessive. The moment his lips touched Tani’s, he wanted more, wanted to feel Tani’s skin, explore, caress, and touch every inch of him. Discover what made Tani moan in pleasure and come apart in ecstasy. Tani returned his kisses with equal hunger. Dante wished they could stay in his bed making out the whole day.

    His phone buzzed on the bedside table and burst the bubble. He ignored it, kissing Tani, wrapping his arms around him, and rolling so he was on his back with Tani lying over him. Their kiss continued until they were both breathing hard. His phone started ringing again, this time in earnest and Tani broke their kiss to stare at the gadget on the bedside table.

    “Nora is calling,” Tani said, looking at Dante. “She seems determined.”

    Tani rested his head on Dante’s chest and let out a soft contented sigh. Dante sunk his fingers into his hair as he reached for his phone with his left hand. He answered the phone.

    “Morning, Mom.”

    “My son is finally awake,” Nora said. “I wanted to catch you before you decide to leave this morning. Your father is home. It will be nice to have breakfast together. I also have news from Aero. Will you come down?”

    “Yes, Mom. I am also bringing someone to breakfast.”

    “That sounds heavy,” Nora said. “I can’t wait to meet him.”

    Dante smiled as he hung up and looked down to find Tani watching him.

    “My family is downstairs,” Dante said, placing his phone on the bed so that he could wrap both his arms around Tani. “They want to have a meal together.”

    Tani nodded and held his gaze.

    “You want me to meet your family?”

    “Why not?” Dante asked, kissing the top of Tani’s head. “I want to introduce you to my family as my boyfriend. This way, they will not be confused. They’ll know what you mean to me.”

    Tani gave him a slow grin, his amber eyes shimmering for a moment with a beautiful ring of gold. His eyes were so beautiful; Dante took in a breath as his heart leaped in his chest. Tani lowered his gaze and shifted his head on Dante’s chest. Dante’s gaze caught on Tani’s right earlobe and he reached for the gold leaves.

    ***

    Tani closed his eyes and listened to Dante’s heartbeat. Tani’s heartbeat matched the rhythm. It was steady, assuring.

    “Your right earlobe is fascinating,” Dante said, his thumb stroking Tani’s right earlobe. “Why do you have five gold Elderwood leaves on your ear?”

    “They show my standing in my father’s family. To show that I’m his son,” Tani said, not liking the melancholy filling him when he thought about his father.

    “Your Dad?”

    “Mm,” Tani said, looking up to meet Dante’s gaze again. “Let’s not think about him. I don’t want to spoil this beautiful day.”

    Dante studied him for a moment then smiled.

    “Okay. It is a beautiful Thursday morning,” Dante said with a nod. “The best I’ve ever had. I lay here earlier, watching you sleep, and contemplated taking a sabbatical.”

    “Are you running away from work?”

    “It won’t be running away,” Dante said with a chuckle. “Just taking time off and spending a year with you. I don’t want to miss a moment with you, Tani. It occurred to me that I’m almost thirty-six years old. You are the first person in my life I want to give all my time. Maybe Viola was right and I am a cold bastard.”

    Tani’s heart skipped a beat and warmth filled his chest at Dante’s words. He had already given Dante all his time, his life. It felt good to have Dante want to give him back a little of the same. It was the first time his beloved had voiced even an intention of more than a dalliance.

    “I will cherish your time, Dante,” Tani said. “And you’re not cold, you’re filled with fire. She just didn’t know how to see it.”

    “Do you see my fire?” Dante asked, his brow rising in question.

    Tani sat up, his left hand resting on Dante’s chest. The warm fragment of Dante’s soul residing in his empty heart sent a pulse of heat through him. The gold mist swirling around Dante wrapped around his palm, responding to the obvious affection in Dante’s heart.

    Their connection was so very fragile, but promising. He wished there was more, but this felt enough for now. He had no words to describe the gift of having spent a night in Dante’s arms after decades of being without him. There were never sufficient words to describe this moment.

    He looked into Dante’s curious gaze and smiled.

    “You forget,” Tani said. “You singed me at our first meeting, Dante Arturo. I was so stunned that I ended up ankle-deep in marshland when I returned to Elderwood. You ruined a good pair of my favorite shoes.”

    Dante grinned, his lips curving in a handsome smile. Tani immediately wanted to kiss him again.

    “I promise to get you a pair to replace them,” Dante said, his grin turning into a short chuckle.

    Left with no defense, Tani kissed his beloved just to feel Dante’s smile on his lips and then scrambled out of the comfortable bed. Afraid they might linger and not leave at all.

    “I’ll wash up first. I can’t believe you have me meeting your parents when we haven’t been on our first date.”

    “It is part of my secret plan,” Dante said, making Tani pause at the bedroom door to look at him.

    “What secret plan?’

    “The plan to seduce you and keep you at Artri,” Dante said. “Before you showed up, I had planned on kidnapping you.”

    Tani laughed.

    “Does my staying here make me a willing kidnapee?” Tani asked as he opened the door.

    “Yes. Elderwood will have to be calling you to hear your voice,” Dante said. “I’m a very invested kidnapper and will entertain you until you forget you have them waiting.”

    Tani chuckled and shook his head.

    “Entitled warlock,” Tani said as he headed to the bathroom.

    “Dazzling Ekho,” Dante called back. “Come back to bed and make out with me all day.”

    “Your parents are waiting downstairs,” Tani replied and heard Dante let out a soft sigh.

    “They are clearly ruining perfect plans,” Dante complained.

    Tani smiled in amusement and closed the bathroom door.

    ****

    Thirty minutes later, they were both showered and dressed for the day. Tani had made friends with Atri, so he was able to teleport to his house for a moment for a change of clothes. He returned just as Dante was emerging from the bedroom.

    Dante stopped Tani by the door on their way out. He pressed him against the wall and kissed him making Tani chuckle, and wrap his arms around Dante’s shoulders.

    “We should stay in here,” Tani said, raining kisses on Dante’s face. “I love it in your suite of rooms.”

    Dante smiled and wrapped his arms around Tani, holding him close. He buried his face into Tani’s shoulder.

    “I agree.” Dante squeezed Tani tight, loving the fact that Tani was an Ekho and he seemed to love tight hugs, with no flinch at Dante’s strength. “But we should finish with my parents downstairs. My father must know all about the black weed in the olive grove by now. Mom wants to tell us about the Ekho she meets there.”

    Tani rubbed his hands over Dante’s back.

    “Dante. Let’s live your day today,” Tani said. “Tomorrow, we can live mine. I have lawyers to meet. Then we can deal with the rest after.”

    “Okay,” Dante agreed, pressing a kiss on Tani’s shoulder not making a move to open the door.

    Tani rested his chin on Dante’s strong shoulder. He rubbed his hand over Dante’s back, smoothing the pale blue shirt he wore. He liked the color on Dante. It brought out his eyes. Dante’s stomach growled and Tani chuckled.

    “Dante.”

    “Mm?”

    “You’re my beloved and I worry about you very much. We should leave your room so that you can have your morning meal,” Tani whispered into Dante’s ear.

    “I’m in love with the way you talk to me,” Dante said.

    Tani grinned when Dante let him go and took his right hand.

    “Let’s go eat breakfast,” Dante said. “The faster we get through it, the faster we can have time to ourselves.”

    Dante opened the door and led Tani out. They went down the stairs and Dante could not help looking back every few steps just to see Tani following him.

    “I won’t disappear,” Tani said when they got downstairs and Dante squeezed his hand, making sure to walk right beside him. “I’ve already thrown my lot in with you.”

    Dante stopped, bringing Tani’s right hand up to press a kiss on his inner wrist.

    “I just…I feel like I need a minute or two hours to process,” Dante said and then squeezed Tani’s hand, a kiss on his inner wrist. “Maybe twenty-four hours, or a few days…”

    “Months?” Tani asked, teasing.

    “Definitely months,” Dante said. “Years even.”

    Tani’s amber eyes gained a gloomy cloud that quickly disappeared. The shadow hidden behind the strange wall Tani was keeping up between them.

    Dante could not wait to break it down and discover what brought the shadows into Tani’s eyes. He wanted to obliterate it, replace the shadows with joy.

    “Your family fills the kitchen,” Tani said when they continued their walk along the hallway to the kitchen. “Your father doesn’t know I’m here, but your mother and the grandmaster might.”

    “Are you nervous?” Dante asked, surprised by the naked note of anxiety in Tani’s voice.

    “They are your family. Your closest ones. Of course, I’m nervous. What if they don’t like me for you?” Tani asked, anxious energy filling him as they approached the kitchen.

    Dante stopped their progress, brought their clasped hands to his lips, and pressed a kiss on Tani’s knuckles.

    “They should worry if you like them,” Dante said and kissed Tani’s right cheek. He clasped Tani’s hand tighter and did not give Tani a chance to think as he opened the kitchen door.

    Nora gasped when Dante and Tani walked into the warm kitchen. She sat drinking tea at the island table next to Christophe. Grandmaster Landi sat across them, arranging a salad plate.

    They all looked at Dante and Tani when Nora gasped.

    Tani tensed as Nora pushed her chair back and got up. Dante squeezed Tani’s hand as she crossed the room to meet them.

    “Dante,” Nora said, coming to kiss both his cheeks. “You look very happy this morning. Well rested. So very handsome.”

    “Are you saying I wasn’t handsome before?” Dante asked, giving her a scowl, as she let go of him.

    “You’re always handsome to me. I am only saying you look even more handsome this morning,” Nora said, turning to Tani. “Do I have you to thank for this change?”

    “I can’t take any credit. He got it all from you,” Tani said.

    “Aw, I like you very much,” Nora said, leaning in to kiss Tani’s cheek. “What is this?”

    She rubbed her thumb over a red spot on Tani’s neck.

    “I like kissing Tani,” Dante said, wrapping his arm around Tani’s shoulder, pulling him closer, making his cheeks fill with color.

    “Oh, that is the mushiest thing you have ever said near me,” Nora said and held out her hand to Tani. “You’re a miracle to have him announcing he likes you in our kitchen. Come, I’ll introduce you to Dante’s Papa.”

    Tani pulled his hand out of Dante’s and took Nora’s in a gentle handshake. She led him to the island table where two men stood looking at him, caught between shock and…surprise?

    Tani could not tell.

    “Christophe,” Nora said, leading Tani to the younger of the two older men. “This is Tani Ryuzo. He healed the soil in our olive grove. Dante is sweet on him.”

    ****

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 12-2

    At Elderwood, Anit stood in the middle of Tani’s bedroom, taking in his personal space. The large bed in the middle of the room was neat. The closet was open, so she moved closer to find the room filled with tall racks. Tani’s clothes hanging on the racks, and a collection of the same type of shoes in different colors. Anit touched a black pair of Vans and smiled at her son’s little quirks.

    “Your presence here kicks him out of his home,” Cale, the god of calamities, said behind her.

    She pulled away her hand from Tani’s shoe with a sigh.

    “Which puts you in a bad mood,” Anit stated. “You enjoy filling yourself up with his sadness, don’t you?”

    “If that’s how you want to judge it, then I gain more with your presence here. Your pain is far more infinite than his,” Cale said, giving a satisfied sigh. “I don’t agree with you punishing Tani this way. You’re his sore spot. Stop giving him unnecessary pain.”

    “Cale, I don’t want to hear a lecture on how to treat my son from you,” Anit said, stepping away from her son’s peculiar shoe collection. “When is his calamity ending?”

    “The mortal is almost thirty-six years old,” Cale said, shaking his head. “Tani stayed away too long this time.”

    “A broken heart will do that to you,” Anit said. “It would be insane to expect him to carry the same feelings after so much pain. Whatever the outcome, you pull Tani out of the mortal realm before the Septum gets to him. I will lock him away in our lands. The next Fox Lord will not be a pawn for the Immortal Clan anymore.”

    Cale sighed.

    “What?”

    “Sunu has asked Tani be returned to the Immortal Clan.”

    Anit scoffed.

    “My son will take on his rightful title. He is the Fox Lord, the only one in millenniums past. I will not hand him over to the Immortal Clan.”

    “He is also the son of the Immortal Lord,” Cale said.

    “Your people forgot that part when they chained him to the mortal realm for a thousand years,” Anit said, her green eyes filled with anger. “You tell Sunu I don’t care what he wants. He watched me leave the Citadel when Tani was five hundred and did nothing to stop us. He shall endure his choices for as long as I draw breath.”

    Cale studied her for a moment, and then scoffed.

    “Meanwhile, Tani suffers between you and Sunu,” Cale said. “You think Tani is enduring his sentence for love because of a human in the mortal realm. You’re wrong. It is because of the lack of love forced on him by you, and Sunu. Don’t ever forget that truth. You should have afforded him more care. Amu and Eren are ready downstairs.”

    Cale left the room and Anit fought the urge to fling Tani’s shoes after him.

    What did the god of calamities know? Sunu betrayed her first. He abandoned her and Tani first.

    Closing her eyes, she took in a deep breath and let it out slow. Sunu would not get Tani to enter the Citadel.

    Tani belonged to the Fox Clan.

    Anit did not bother to go down the stairs. She shimmered out of Tani’s room and appeared in the living room where she had met Tani face to face for the first time in two and a half millenniums. She knew there were mistakes made, but Cale did not have to rub it in.

    Still, she would never forget how beautiful Tani’s amber eyes looked.

    Anit glared at Eren in the living room, and then sank into an armchair nearest the fireplace. She arranged her frock and rested her hands on the armrests.

    “What does the Septum want with my Fox Clan?” Anit asked of Eren.

    “Goddess Anit, Eren greats you. I heal the soils of our Immortal Clan lands. I would ask the Fox Goddess a question on the amount of Kara ot in your lands.”

    “The black weed is forbidden in my court,” Anit said. “I obliterate it as fast as it is detected. The weed is dangerous for the fox children born between mortals and those of our clan. Black weed infects them, bringing them unimaginable pain as it works to rob them of their abilities. We do not tolerate its presence in our lands.”

    “Are you saying you have allowed hybrid children to live in the fox clan lands? How is that possible?” Eren asked her eyes wide with shock.

    “We are not purists. It is not impossible in our lands to find children from the mortal realm,” Anit said. “Our fox clan does not punish our people for loving mortals when they visit the mortal realm. Our traits are strong. Children are natural consequences of a mating. When one of ours sires a child with traits leaning to our clan, we bring them back to our lands. It is acceptable to pull them out of the mortal realm in order to protect our Ekho Realm secrets. My council and I have worked hard to create guidelines on the matter. The Palladium Gatekeeper has the guidelines on our rules. She allows passage as needed.”

    “So, the foxes are visiting the Mortal Realm often,” Eren said, with a knowing nod.

    “You suspect one of our people of bringing the black weed to the mortal realm?” Amu asked, his gaze wide at Eren’s comment.

    “We can’t rule them out,” Eren said.

    “How bold of you,” Anit said, her voice heavy with annoyance at the audacity in the Immortal Clan. “My people are very careful. I just laid out to you how deadly the weed is to our children. Which of us would then dare to carry it around? How dare you look down on my people?”

    “Fox Goddess, I do not mean to disrespect you or your people. I am only pointing out that there is a break in the chain. This problem needs both our clans to find a resolution. The Immortal Clan is willing to help—”

    “Eren of the Earth. Our Fox Clan manages to solve problems without your help,” Anit said, slapping her right palm on her arm of her chair. “I have personally cleansed Kara ot from vast swaths of land not only in our Fox Clan but even in the Dragon Clan’s lands and the lesser clans’ provinces. How dare you imply we do less than your Immortal Clan?”

     Eren sighed and sat back in her chair. She had no words to use with this Fox Goddess. The woman somehow twisted her words no matter what she said. They seemed to have used up all their good fortune with her.

    “Eren,” Amu said. “What do you need from us?”

    “Access to the Inter Clan Court. Being one in the Septum, I do not know the members. I only know that the Fox Goddess has a large influence with the court,” Eren said.

    “I refuse to carry on the Immortal Clan’s chores,” Anit said, getting up. “Amu, don’t bring me out to handle such a small problem. I’ll go back to my planting now.”

    “Can’t you think of your son?” Eren asked.

    The Fox Goddess did not like her or the Immortal Clan so she was going to walk away without giving Eren a chance. Eren gave up on diplomacy and decided to sting the woman with words.

    “Every time there is an outbreak of Kara ot in the Mortal Realm Lord Tani is the first to know. He is the one to cleanse it, as his power demands it, unlike that of Cale. To cleanse black weed, the cuffs on his wrists have to come off. Surely, no one would wish such pain on their child.”

    Anit stopped her departure and her gaze fixed on Eren.

    Cale got up fast and stood in front of Eren.

    Eren frowned at his clear worry, and then felt the air pressure rise in the room and understood his concern. Cale started to shield Eren, but Anit waved her hand and pushed him away as though he were nothing, sending him to the living room entrance.

    At the same time, vines as thick as a hand pierced through the wood floors and wrapped around Eren in tight bands, giving her no chance to escape. Bright green leaves with sharp and deadly edges cut Eren’s skin on her arms and up to her neck.

    Anit used the vines to drag Eren closer so that she could look into her eyes.

    “You would dare poke at my weak point to get your way,” Anit said, her green eyes as turbulent as a storm in the deepest ocean. “Eren of the Earth, have you forgotten who placed those cuffs on my son’s wrists? Who voted to keep him here for loving a mortal? For daring to follow his Fox Lord heart, all because, he has Immortal Clan blood. You punished him for sharing his soul with a mortal and did not even care to ask me about it!”

    “Fox Goddess,” Eren started to say, and the vines around her tightened to the point of drawing a whimper of pain from her.

    “I loved your Immortal Lord with all my heart,” Anit said, the sneer on her beautiful face seemed to add to her power. She scoffed. “Your Septum conspired to pull us apart, saying a fox and the Immortal Lord cannot live in the Citadel. It will somehow make our clans imbalanced. Your Septum made it that I could not fight back. So, I left the Immortal Lord and took our son. The loss was difficult, and I dared to blink in order to mourn my sorrows, only to discover that you lot put my young son in a bind. Now, you, Eren of the Earth, dare poke at my inability to protect him after the criminal decisions you’ve placed on our shoulders. Do you not like living?”

    “You can’t kill me,” Eren said, straining against the vines wrapped tight around her.

    Anit laughed long and hard.

    “Oh, I know I can’t, but you are in the Mortal Realm. I can make you bleed so much that you will only be able to crawl to the Palladium Gates in order to heal. Don’t test me,” Anit said. “You’re the one who came to me to ask for help. I refused to help. You dared bring up my child. I retaliated. Don’t get the story wrong when you meet the Septum. I do hold deep grudges.”

    The vines disappeared as fast as they wrapped around Eren.

    The wood floors restored, Anit made sure to add her stamp in Tani’s living room.

    Anit then met Amu’s gaze for a full minute before she shimmered out of Tani’s sanctuary, her heart breaking at the thought of her son having to endure pain again.

    She left an Inter Clan Court badge on the coffee table next to Amu.

    Eren sank down into her chair and let out a long sigh after Anit’s departure. She reached up to touch the stinging cut on her neck and grimaced when her fingers came back with red blood.

    “She must be in a good mood today,” Cale said, coming back into the room. He sat in the armchair Anit had used. “Uncle Amu, should we thank you that she did not give Eren a thousand cuts?”

    “Eren, why did you mention Tani?” Amu asked, picking up the fox clan badge allowing entrance into the Inter Clan Court. “You should have given her a moment. We could have talked it out and gotten her to see your side. Anit does not take kindly to one who mocks her failures.”

    “Do you really think she was going to give us that badge out of kindness?” Eren asked, sitting back, her heart still beating too fast. “She hates the Immortal Clan. I should have realized it was incurable. When does one find Anit, and her son, Tani, in a good mood?”

    “It depends on who you are,” Cale said on a chuckle.

    “Cale.” Amu chastised.

    “Okay, I won’t tease Eren anymore. We should make use of the badge quickly and go to the Clan Court.”

    “Is this what you’ve been waiting for?” Amu asked.

    Cale nodded, getting up.

    “I have business in that court and we can only enter with her permission. Amu, sometimes you forget I’m also from the Immortal Clan.”

    “I truly do,” Amu said, narrowing his gaze at Cale. “What are you looking for in the Inter Clan Court?”

    “The same culprit you’re looking for,” Cale said. “We should go now.”

    Amu sighed and looked at Eren.

    “Cale is right. We should leave, otherwise Tani will never return home if you stay longer,” Amu said.

    Eren stood slowly, touching the cut on her neck once again with a hiss.

    “Why won’t it stop bleeding?” Eren asked.

    “Anit’s special power is nullifying our Ekho gifts in the mortal realm,” Cale said. “You won’t be able to heal that cut until you enter the Palladium Gates again. So, we should go.”

    “She’s so unreasonable,” Eren hissed, as they all left Elderwood and appeared in front of the Palladium Gates.

    ****

    At Artri House, Tani shifted on the large comfortable couch with the huge pillows facing the beautiful windows. He and Dante were watching the sun fade in the horizon. The sunset was especially beautiful this evening. He sipped his wine and returned his attention to Dante who sat next to him.

    Dante had changed out of his day clothes, and released his hair from the tight ponytail. He was now in a black t-shirt and matching sweatpants. His feet stretched out before him. He was the picture of relaxation.

    “Why did you study World History?” Tani asked, loving that Dante answered his many questions without hesitation.

    “I like learning about the past,” Dante said. “As you know our Artri House takes the education of its Ekho-blessed children seriously. Grandmaster Landi runs a successful institute in New York that trains those like us. Which also means he expects too much of the children coming from his house. The only outlet I had from the pressure was learning history. I liked discovering the rhythms of growing nations, people, cultures and languages.”

    “So what do you do all day when you’re not at Artri House entertaining a deviant Ekho?” Tani asked.

    “Hmm, not so deviant if you ask me. I was teaching the students you met today until two weeks ago,” Dante said. “My sessions with them are over. So, I’ve returned to my research work. We’re documenting an underground city discovered in Asikli. The dig is dated back to the Neolithic age. It’s an ongoing dig site. So far, we’ve uncovered painted churches and houses rebuild over time. It is slow tedious work, but I enjoy it.”

    Tani smiled at Dante’s clear infatuation with his day job. He could watch him talk about excavating dead cities forever. Sitting on a couch as the sun set and they shared a bottle of wine. This small pleasure was all he lived for when he could have Dante in his life.

    Why couldn’t life be this simple all the time?

    His heart squeezed tight and the familiar sting of tears at the back of his eyes had him blinking.

    “Tani?”

    Tani found Dante watching him.

    “You okay?”

    “Mm,” Tani nodded, bringing his glass to his lips taking a sip, he turned to look at the fading sunset in the distance. “These floor length windows are such a genius idea. You get a great view any time you take a look.”

    Dante placed his glass on the stool in front of them with their half-full bottle of wine. Dante closed the little distance they had maintained between them. He took Tani’s glass and set it on the stool too.

    “Look at me,” Dante said taking Tani’s left hand. “You were lost in thought a minute ago. I’ve talked myself thirsty this evening. You’ve just asked questions. Now, I have one for you.”

    Tani met Dante’s gaze then.

    “Ask,” Tani said.

    Dante cupped Tani’s right cheek and looked into Tani’s eyes for a moment.

    Tani’s heart thundered in his chest, wishing and hoping Dante would not ask him about his past. This was a beautiful evening and he did not want to think of their tragic past. It would ruin this…and he so wanted to hold on to this memory. Simply sitting here with Dante having a conversation.

    “Can I kiss you?”

    Tani bit his bottom lip and smiled in relief.

    “Dante, I have wished I could kiss you since the moment we met in the olive grove. I…”

    Dante leaned in and took his lips in a sweet short kiss that tasted of sweet rosé. He ended the kiss as fast as he started, but he did not move away.

    Tani kept his eyes open meeting serious brown eyes already wanting another kiss. Their breaths mingled and Dante’s gaze shifted to Tani’s lips. Tani took in a short breath, his heart racing again.

    “You are a dream to me,” Dante said, closing his eyes. “I’m half afraid I’ll wake up tomorrow and discover I’ve made up this encounter with you. Will you stay with me tonight? Let me hold you?”

    Tani breathed him in and leaned in to brush his lips on Dante’s cheek, smiling at the tickle of Dante’s beard on his own cheeks.

    “I’m already here with you there is no need to imagine it,” Tani said, closing his eyes when Dante brushed back his hair, sinking his fingers into his red hair and pushing it away from Tani’s face.

    “I’ve never been anyone’s dream. What do you picture about us?” Tani asked. “Will you tell me?”

    “I never thought anyone else a dream before you. When I saw you I wanted to experience everything with you,” Dante said with a small chuckle, shifting even closer so that he could wrap an arm around Tani’s waist.

    Dante maneuvered them until they were lying on the long couch, the pillows pushed and arranged for their comfort. Tani rested his head on Dante’s right shoulder, burying his face into the curve of Dante’s neck when strong arms rubbed down his back. Their feet tangled and Tani hummed at the warmth between them.

    “I never felt much before,” Dante said, his hand moving up and down Tani’s back. “But since I met you, I’ve felt helpless, jealous, angry, infatuated, almost all at the same time. It’s overwhelming.”

    “What kind of experiences do you want, Dante?”

    “Will you give them to me?”

    “Yes.”

    “All of them?”

    Tani grinned and leaned back to look into Dante’s eyes.

    Dante kissed him again on the lips. A lingering kiss, teasing, it warmed him up straight to his heart. He wanted more, because he did, he worried about how much time they had together.

    Tani ended their kiss and answered Dante’s question.

    “I will give you all of them,” Tani promised.

    Dante smiled.

    “Then, I’ll give you what you want too,” Dante said. “I have talked away the whole evening. I never gave you a chance to say what you think about us.”

    “You haven’t asked,” Tani said.

    Dante held his questions.

    “Are you scared to ask?” Tani asked when Dante kept quiet.

    “Yes.”

    “Why?”

    “Your memory is too long,” Dante said. “I’m afraid it is full of sad moments about us. I want to change those memories and fill them with good ones. So, I’ll wait a bit before I ask you what you want.”

    Tani bit his lip hard because Dante’s thoughtfulness threatened to undo the protective walls built around his heart. He swallowed the lump of emotion that rose up in his throat and let out a soft breath.

    “Then, you tell me a few things,” Tani managed to say. “We can do them while I think about what I will ask of you.”

    “Okay. I’ve already said the first one. I want to wake up next to you everyday,” Dante said.

    “I’m already here with you at Artri House for tonight, and tomorrow. I’ll try to make your wish come true, but it might not be daily. There is still Elderwood.”

    “Fair enough,” Dante said with a small nod. “If I’m welcome, I’ll sleep over at Elderwood with you then we can balance it.”

    Tani grinned and nodded in agreement.

    “What else do you want us to do?”

    “I want to make love with you,” Dante said, leaning in to breath Tani’s scent in. “Not yet though. When we get to know each other better. I don’t want our first time to feel impersonal.”

    Tani hid a smile. He did not remember their sex life being fast and impersonal. Their lovemaking was consuming in the best of ways. He missed being close to Dante. Loved their intimacy, it was the one thing they never got wrong.

    “Let’s not wait too long,” Tani murmured.

    “Then after our third real date.”

    “Is this our first?”

    “No,” Dante shook his head. “You came to me when you were upset. This, here, is me comforting you. Our first date should be fantastic and memorable. We can go on it tomorrow.”

    Tani grinned at Dante’s enthusiasm.

    “I can work with that,” he said.

    “With what?”

    “Fantastic and memorable,” Tani said, thinking Dante’s wishes were very easy to fulfill.

    “About earlier,” Tani continued, pressing his face into the curve of Dante’s neck, he closed his eyes, as the sting of his mother’s slap finally faded. “Thank you for making me stay here with you. I had an unpleasant encounter. I cannot explain it yet, but you’ve healed the sting that I thought would stay with me.”

    “I’m a great listener too,” Dante said. “Whenever you’re ready to talk about it, I’m here for you.”

    “I know,” Tani said, grateful that Dante had not pressed him on the details of his encounter with his mother.

    “Should we travel?” Dante asked. “Let’s see the world together…”

    Tani and Dante talked into the night, they mapped dreams of traveling together, places they could visit, Dante’s interests mostly. They fell asleep on the comfortable couch, holding each other in a tight embrace as though an inch between them would be too much to suffer.

    ****

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 12-1

    Tani frowned and Dante smiled, brushing a second kiss on Tani’s right cheek. Tani was cute when he was upset and unsure of himself. Dante decided to take advantage of the indecision. He led Tani to the front door of Artri House, and gave an approving nod when the house opened the door without his prompting.

    The manor felt empty.

    His grandmaster was out, and his mom was somewhere in the vineyard handling daily chores with the vineyard manager. His father had yet to arrive it seemed.

    The old grandfather clock in the main hall said it was fifteen minutes after four. Holding Tani’s hand tight, Dante led him up the staircase heading to the third floor where his suite of rooms was located. Dante opened the door to his rooms and turned to meet Tani’s gaze, knowing they were crossing an invisible line, one he wanted gone but needed Tani’s consent.

    Tani hesitated for a short moment, then he gave the subtlest of nods and Dante led him into his room. He closed the door, and they both stood at the entrance for a moment, Dante still holding Tani’s right hand. He used his left hand to sink his fingers into Tani’s wet hair.

    “You need a hot shower,” Dante said, then turned to lead the way into the bathroom on his right.

    Dante opened the sizeable shower stall and turned on the water, using his own temperature preferences. He stepped back out and turned to Tani who stood behind him seErming in deep thought.

    “Wanna talk about it?” Dante asked, letting go of Tani’s right hand. He stepped in closer and rubbed his hands up and down Tani’s arms, drawing his attention. He frowned when he noted the red mark on Tani’s right cheek. “You were smiling when I left you. Who ruined your mood?”

    “I don’t want to talk about it,” Tani said, shaking his head, and then looked at his wet shirt, and started unbuttoning it.

    “Okay, don’t talk about it,” Dante said. “I’ll make dinner for us, and we can spend the evening together. We can get to know more about each other.”

    Tani pulled off his wet shirt without unbuttoning it all the way and dropped it on the sink counter.

    “Sounds delicious,” Tani said with a small nod. He reached for the button on his trousers, and paused when Dante held his hands in place.

    “Thank you for coming,” Dante said, and smiled when Tani looked at him, amber eyes filled with surprise. “I’m really happy you came when I called, Tani.”

    Tani made a face at him, and Dante bit back a chuckle.

    “Take a shower,” Dante said, taking in Tani’s body naked as he removed his pants. “Have I told you how exciting it is to have you stripping in my bathroom? I don’t think I’ll forget this one for years. It is fantastic sexy.”

    Tani chuckled and picked up his trousers and boxer briefs. He shook them out and placed them on the sink counter. He blew a kiss at Dante before he entered the shower stall and closed the opaque glass door.

    Dante sighed wishing they were at a stage where he could follow Tani into the shower. It was a tragedy not being able to yet. He took Tani’s wet clothes and dropped them into the hamper. This was the second set of clothes he was going to have in his closet for Tani. The first set was from the day Tani healed their soil. Dante let out a happy hum and hurried to his closet. He found a t-shirt and comfortable grey slacks.

    Dante spelled them to fit Tani’s size and placed them on the sink counter. He found a towel and a new toothbrush. When he was sure Tani had everything he needed, he listened to Tani shower for a few minutes, then called out.

    “I’m going downstairs to the kitchen. Find me when you’re done.”

    “Okay.”

    Dante grinned and left his suite, heading downstairs. In the kitchen, he washed his hands and headed to the fridge. He took stock of the ingredients in the fridge and was happy to see his mother had the makings of chicken rice pilaf and a veggie salad.

    Dante pulled out shredded chicken in a sealed bowl, and another bowl with chicken broth. He carried them to the kitchen range counter and went in search of long-grain rice and orzo in the pantry. He measured enough of both to include his parents and the grand-master.

    Although, he and Tani would have a private dinner. No one was taking his time with Tani tonight.

    Besides, Tani did not look in the mood to socialize. His parents would have to wait until tomorrow for Tani.

    Dante wore an apron, washing his hands again, and got to work.

    Tani came downstairs when Dante was busy adding the required chicken broth to the sautéed rice and orzo. He looked calmer, and laid back in the borrowed t-shirt and sweatpants. His hair was dry and messy, as though he had finger combed it. A lock of it fell over his right eye, and all Dante wanted to do was reach out and pushed it back so he could see Tani’s eyes.

    Scents of cinnamon and all spice filled the kitchen.

    “It’s smells so good in here,” Tani said, walking on bare feet. He pulled out a chair at the island table, sat and watched Dante add a teaspoon of salt and then reach for the black pepper crusher. “You look at home in the kitchen.”

    “Mom made sure I knew how to cook,” Dante said, finishing with the black pepper. “She did not want to have a son who cannot take care of himself.”

    “Nora is admirable,” Tani said, with a small sigh. He rested his elbows on the kitchen table and watched Dante cover the pot, and lower the heat. “Do you have cousins?”

    “I do,” Dante nodded. “My mother has siblings. Two sisters who have made their lives in Istanbul. Between the two aunts, I have five cousins who now have made families and are living in Greece, and Spain.”

    “Do you visit them?” Tani asked.

    “Yes, when they have occasions they call us. Mom makes it mandatory to attend so I cannot ignore them. They all come here for family celebrations too. Artri House comes alive those times. Those days we have almost a hundred people in these halls. My mom loves it.”

    “Do you love it?” Tani asked.

    “Sometimes,” Dante said, with a shrug.

    Dante got a baking pan from a shelf under the kitchen range counter. He greased the pan with olive oil and spread out the pieces of shredded chicken on the pan. He turned on the oven and got to work sprinkling the shredded chicken with chopped cilantro, salt and garlic.

    “What do you mean sometimes?” Tani asked.

    Dante met his gaze and braced his hands on the counter.

    “I do try to avoid spending too much time in the festivities. It gets noisy and I find the level of affection I have for everyone is not at par with theirs,” Dante said, and then stared at the shredded chicken on the baking sheet. “Viola called me cold. She believes my emotions are locked away behind a cold wall. I agree with her. I was locked away.”

    “Was?” Tani asked.

    Dante glanced at Tani.

    Tani’s gaze set his heart dancing in a wild rhythm inside his chest. He had never felt this surge of excitement over a person before. Not even with Viola. He was happy just having Tani sit across him at the island kitchen table.

    “Dante?” Tani’s amber gaze filled with concern.

    Dante smiled and picked up the baking sheet. He opened the oven and slid the baking sheet in to warm up the shredded chicken for ten minutes. He set the timer and closed the door. Wiping his hands on the hand towel in his apron pocket, Dante returned to the stove to check on the rice.

    “Are you saying you’re free now?” Tani asked, not letting the topic fade away.

    “Perhaps,” Dante said, getting a clean spoon. He used it to scoop out a bit of rice to check doneness. “I might be thawing out because of you. I feel too much when I’m around you, Tani.”

    Dante walked around the island table to where Tani sat and held out the spoon of cooling rice.

    “Taste,” he said, and Tani studied him for a moment before he took in the spoon into his mouth, and ate the rice. “Is it good?”

    “Mm,” Tani nodded when he swallowed.

    Dante leaned on the chair next to Tani, holding the empty spoon.

    “You should have been a chef.”

    “No,” Dante shook his head. “I’d be a terrible task master. I would chase away all the staff with a bad temper.”

    Tani grinned and rested his chin on his right hand.

    “What were you like as a boy?”

    “Full of myself and out of control,” Dante said. “I had to learn how to control the fire inside me. There were very many near misses. Mom had her hands full. One summer, I burned the grapevines closest to the manor when I tried to roast potatoes in the firewood pit in the back garden. Nora gained a few gray hairs that day.”

    “Were the vines saved?”

    “No,” Dante shook his head. “We only managed to stop the fire from spreading to the rest of the vineyard. We had to uproot the damaged vines, restore the soil, and plant a new batch. Mom and Dad punished me to work with the crew for a month. I helped with the digging, no spells allowed to make it easier.”

    “It must have been an adventure.” Tani chuckled

    “I did not think so at the time,” Dante said, shaking his head. “It was the first time I understood how tiring tilling the land can be.”

    He moved away from Tani and returned to remove the rice from the stove.

    “What can I help with?” Tani asked, as Dante picked up the pot and placed it on a wooden board on the island table.

    “I just need to put the chicken rice pilaf together. Then we can toss a veggie salad together. Give me a minute, I’ll bring the salad ingredients to you,” Dante said, checking the oven timer. He had five minutes on the chicken.

    Dante hurried to the sink. He had rinsed the iceberg lettuce and cut the leaves into bite-sized pieces. He added in a mix of herbs he had chopped into fine pieces: sorrel, parsley, dill, and fresh mint, and mixed them in with the lettuce.

    Dante took the colander to where Tani sat, together with a clean glass salad dish.

    Dante then went to the fridge and brought out lemon juice squeezed by his mother into a small jug and a slice of white cheese. Closing the fridge, he got the salt container and the olive oil. He carried everything to Tani.

    “What’s missing?” Dante asked, leaning on the table smiling at Tani.

    “Something to mix everything,” Tani said.

    “Okay, coming right up.”

    Dante found a tablespoon, and the wooden spoon they used to mix salads. He brought them back to Tani and stole a kiss on Tani’s cheek. Tani smiled, and it felt like a little win.

    Tani took a small clean bowl from a pile on the island table and got to work. He poured about three tablespoons of olive oil into the bowl, adding a pinch of salt and half the juice in the jug. He used the tablespoon to mix the liquids together.

    Dante returned to the other side of the table.

    “Did you get to eat your roasted potatoes?” Tani asked, as he put the lettuce mix into the glass dish.

    “I did,” Dante said. “I had gotten them from the vineyard manager’s patch. They were very big, and looked delicious. So, I ate them in the evening when my mother thought I was repenting my sins in my room.”

    “You didn’t even share with her after burning the vines. Sneaky child,” Tani said.

    “I was determined to keep my roasted potatoes to myself,” Dante said. “If I offered them, then I would have to explain how I got them in the first place. I didn’t want my potato supply cut off.”

    Tani laughed then, and Dante paused in the act of chopping up parsley and dill to stare at him.

    “What now?” Tani asked, when he noticed Dante staring.

    He was pouring the mix of olive oil into the lettuce in the dish. He used the wooden spoon to toss the salad and make sure every bit of the lettuce was covered with olive oil.

    “I should find more funny stories to tell you,” Dante said. “I love your laugh.”

    Tani took a piece of lettuce and popped it into his mouth. He nodded in satisfaction and reached for the slice of white cheese.

    “Your childhood sounds so interesting,” Tani said. “I wish I could have seen it.”

    Dante started to ask if Tani had tried to see him when he was younger, then stopped himself. He did not want to see Tani sad tonight. Their past was already so difficult to deal with, better to keep things light, cheerful.

    “Did you have a girl or boy you liked during your teenage years?” Tani asked, as though reading his thoughts.

    “There was one,” Dante said, finishing with the parsley and dill. He got four stalks of scallions and chopped up the green parts only. He left them all on the chopping board and went to check on the warming shredded chicken. Opening the oven, he pulled out the baking sheet without an oven mitt, relying on his fire magik to shield his fingers. In any case, heat had never burned him.

    Placing the baking sheet on the cooker, he turned off the oven and the timer.

    “Who was he?” Tani asked.

    Dante stole a glance at him and found Tani concentrating on breaking pieces of white cheese and tossing them into the salad bowl. He bit back a smile, remembering his torrid infatuation with Ermin, a boy whose family lived by the docks. Ermin’s family ran a tourism business, taking tourists on boats to see the surrounding islands. Ermin was handsome, and loved the waters too much.

    Dante always found him on a boat dressed in swimming shorts and nothing else. He could not be blamed for wanting to find out what a kiss between them tasted like, or all the exploration they did with each other on the beach of a small tiny deserted island where Ermin liked to fish.

    Dante grinned at the memory of Ermin now.

    “He must have been something if he still has you smiling,” Tani said, pushing the salad bowl to the middle of the table.

    “He was,” Dante said. “Ermin was a summer fling I thought I would never get over. We were experimental with each other. He taught me how to kiss, and how to make my partner feel good. We had a lot of oral sex. I was young, excited to be getting off whenever I felt like it. Ermin denied me nothing. We celebrated each other until my mother caught us in the fertilizer storage room.”

    “What did Nora do?”

    “Of course she was shocked,” Dante said, opening the pan with the rice.

    Dante added the shredded chicken on top, and placed the chopped herbs on top of the chicken. He took the chopping board to the sink, thinking about his mother’s wide gaze when she opened the store and saw him coming as he clung to a shelf as Ermin sucked him off. He could not have stopped himself if he wanted.

    She truly chose the wrong moment to check on their fertilizer stock.

    “Were you scared?” Tani asked, studying him now.

    “No,” Dante said, placing the chopping board on the drainage rack. “I didn’t really care about it, but Ermin did. He was mortified. I guess I was scared of losing access to him. Nora left us alone and we cleaned up in the shower behind the store. We found her waiting for us at the back of the manor. She gave us both a glass of lemon tea and made us sit with her. She asked Ermin if he was serious about me, and he got scared and ran off.”

    Dante wiped his hands on his cloth and leaned on the sink counter. He met Tani’s gaze and shrugged.

    “Mom did not mind that I liked having sex with boys,” Dante said. “She just cared that the boy I was with was serious about me. He wasn’t. Ermin was terrified Nora would tell others about us. When the summer season ended, he moved to Istanbul.”

    “His loss,” Tani said.

    “Nora’s exact words to the whole incident,” Dante said with a small smile. “After that, Nora made my Dad have the sex talk with me.”

    Tani grinned.

    “Did he? What was it like?”

    “Christophe is not like my mother, or like the Grandmaster with many words,” Dante said. “He’s laid back with me. He took me out to the beach beyond the olive grove. He brought a pack of beer and a cooler filled with fish. We camped out, roasting fish, and he gave me my first beer. I told him I liked both boys and girls. I thought he would lecture me, but he gave me two rules. One, to learn how to commit when a relationship is serious, and two, to learn how to take responsibility if my partner gets kids.”

    Dante thought about his stint with Viola and his father’s eternal disappointment that his grandchildren were not Ekho-blessed.

    “I failed with the first rule, but I have learned how to take responsibility of the consequences to the best of my ability,” Dante said.

    “You’re a lucky man, Dante. Your parents are present for you, each in their own way. You should be proud of it.”

    Dante nodded, and wondered why he read a wistful note in Tani’s voice.

    “I am,” Dante said, pushing off the counter. He went to get two plates from the cupboard and two wine glasses. “Come serve food, Tani. We’ll leave the rest warming for Mom, and Grandmaster Landi. Dad might also be around, but I want to be selfish tonight and hide away with you.”

    Tani got up, bringing the salad bowl with him. They spent the next few minutes serving up plates. Dante cleaned up the remaining dishes and left the pot of chicken rice pilaf on the cooker. They sealed the salad bowl with cling film and left it in the fridge.

    Dante got a new bottle of a medium-bodied rosé from the wine cellar next to the pantry. He handed it to Tani, along with the pair of glasses.

    “I’ll carry the food,” Dante said, taking their plates and spoons now on a tray.

    “Where to?” Tani asked.

    “My rooms, no one will disturb us,” Dante said, leading the way out of the kitchen.

    Tani followed without question.

    “Artri House watches the happenings within its walls,” Tani said, as they went up the stairs. “Does it bother you?”

    “No,” Dante said. “I wouldn’t call it watching because that sounds creepy. I think of it as logging, like remembrance. The manor will let us know when something is amiss, or someone is in danger, or when an intruder comes in.”

    “That’s useful,” Tani said, as Dante’s door opened when he got close. “Very useful when you’re carrying stuff.”

    “Yes,” Dante said, taking their plates to a low table in the middle of the living area in his suite.

    His suite was his sanctuary. It was built with three major rooms. Two rooms on each side of the living area. Floor to ceiling windows filled the living area with natural light and a great view of the vineyard. Dante had decorated the space with an eclectic antique style. He collected pieces during his travels and brought them back to add to the comfort. His most exciting piece of furniture was the comfortable couch with large deep burgundy cushions facing the windows. It was the perfect spot to watch the vineyard, the olive grove beyond, and the seas in the horizon

    Dante could already imagine an evening spent sitting with Tani on the comfortable cushions watching the sunset.

    “My bedroom is to the right,” Dante said, pointing to the open door into his sleeping space. “The closed door on the left is a library/office/study/research room. I clutter it with a lot of paperwork on good days.”

    “What happens on bad days?” Tani asked, taking in the living area with an air of curiosity.

    “I fill this place with chests packed with artifacts and old papers. They spill over into this room, and my bedroom,” Dante said. “Mom calls them my obsession moments.”

    Tani placed the bottle of wine on the low table, and the wine glasses next to it. He reached for a cushion from one of the regular couches by the wall and dropped it on the floor near the table. He sat down and smiled up at Dante.

    “I can’t wait to discover those days for myself,” Tani said. “Let’s eat, Dante. I’m suddenly starving.”

    ***

    <<Previous | Table of Contents | Next >>

  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 11-1

    Tani’s gaze shifted to the round room. It was a museum of sorts. One he started at a low moment in the years between cycles when he missed Dante the most. When Dante hurt him, he sometimes suffered constant episodes of wanting to bring it down, burn the contents, and restructure it. Yet, each time his beloved left him, he returned here, like a forlorn fool. Lost in memories and a love he could not forget, glancing at the elder leaf bracelets disguising his cuffs, nor a love he could discard.

    He never thought to share this tower with the others, but this Dante felt infinitely different, with his determined gaze, and his raging firepower.

    Sharing this tower felt like the best way to convince him they were doomed.

    “Tani,” Dante said, his voice cajoling, his eyes pleading with Tani.

    Tani was amazed by the fact that their doomed love story was having the opposite effect on Dante Arturo.

    He met Dante’s gaze.

    “I’ll give the time,” Tani said, after a moment, not missing Dante’s relieved sigh. “I always did, Dante.”

    Dante held out his hand to Tani.

    “Start by giving me your phone,” Dante said, when Tani frowned at him.

    Tani reached into his pocket and got the black phone Tom gave him.

    “Why do you need my phone?” Tani asked.

    “So I can reach you when we’re apart,” Dante said. “In this century, a phone is just like having a personal messenger. I need to be able to reach you, Tani. You can’t imagine how frustrated I was with Tom when you left my house. He would not give me your phone number. I thought I was going to burn down the manor with frustration.”

    “Sorry, I misplaced my other phone,” Tani said. “I think it was when I was in the vineyard.”

    Dante took Tani’s phone and turned it on. Swiping the unlock button he grinned.

    “Tani, you don’t even lock your phone.”

    “I just got it,” Tani said, frowning.

    Dante keyed in his number, then dialed. His phone buzzed in his pocket, and he reached for it to save Tani’s number. He held out Tani’s phone back to him, and Tani stared at him, amused.

    “Do you think I’ll remember to bring it along everywhere?” Tani asked, biting back a grin when panic filled Dante’s eyes.

    “Should I help you remember?” Dante asked, his gaze shifting to the black smart phone on his palm. “I can spell it so that it finds you when you get a call.”

    “Is that something you would do?” Tani asked, taking the phone from Dante before he actually spelled his phone. What a frustration that would be, hauling the gadget everywhere. He only carried it when he knew Hera or Tom would need to call him.

    “Tani,” Dante stepped forward, looking into his eyes. “Don’t you want to reach me when you need to talk to me?”

    Tani slipped his phone into his pocket and shrugged.

    “I can always find you, Dante,” Tani said. “Have you forgotten? I followed you to your Viola’s house in the Americas.”

    Dante smiled. It was a startling curve of his lips that had Tani staring. Dante’s smile was genuine, his eyes shined, his face lighting up, softening his face. Tani started to bring his hand up to touch the curve of Dante’s bottom lip. He stopped halfway when he looked up and found Dante watching him too.

    “What did I say that made you smile?” Tani asked.

    “You called the U.S. the Americas. Why are you calling it my Viola’s house?” Dante asked, his voice low, husky, teasing.

    “I—,” Tani frowned. “She is though.”

    “No, she is definitely not,” Dante said, taking a step closer, he gripped Tani’s right elbow. “She would snap at you for a full minute if she heard you call her mine. She’s the mother of my children. That’s it. She has a lover. Someone who makes her happy. Her loyalties are with him. I’m very sure she’ll be having a wedding soon.”

    Tani’s heart skipped hard, violently squeezing in his chest, filling with more hope than he knew how to contain.

    “I do want to be yours,” Dante said, his gaze so serious, Tani dropped his gaze to the collar of Dante’s white shirt.

    “It will take me more than the minutes we have been standing here to digest your words,” Tani said, confessing his heart.

    “I know,” Dante said, with an understanding nod. “How did you know to find me the first time?”

    Tani grinned, and started to pull away from Dante, but he would not let go of his right arm.

    “Tom has a great team of investigators. They gave found your address,” Tani said.

    “Tani.” Dante narrowed his gaze at him.

    “I’m a deviant Ekho,” Tani said with a sigh. “My powers are limited.”

    Dante’s hand slid from his right elbow to his right wrist. His fingers circling Tani’s wrist. His thumb rubbing over the Elderwood leaf bracelet. Tani watched it with a sense of apprehension.

    “I want to burn these off,” Dante said, his words sounding like they came from between gritted teeth. “It’s unfortunate they are placed here by someone more powerful than me. They make me ambitious.”

    “Ambitious for what?” Tani asked.

    “I want to be powerful enough to take these off you,” Dante said.

    Tani chuckled.

    “How often does your temper get you in trouble?” Tani asked.

    “Often,” Dante said, and then winked. “But it’s always the best kind of trouble.”

    Tani scoffed and was grateful when Dante’s phone started buzzing. He thought Dante would let go of his wrist, but he was only disappointed. Dante slipped his hand into his, tangling their fingers. He answered his phone after looking at the caller ID.

    “Yes, Justina,” Dante said, looking at Tani.

    “Where are you? You disappeared on us.” Tani heard Justina say on the other end of the call. “The food is ready. Hera and Tom are wondering—”

    “I’ll be right there,” Dante said.

    “Um, have you seen Mr. Ryuzo?” Justina asked. “Thomas has a few questions for him…”

    “I’ll see if I can find him,” Dante said, smiling at Tani.

    “Okay, hurry,” Justina said, then ended the call.

    “She has a little crush on you,” Dante said. “Should I tell her I have dibs on you?”

    “Do you?”

    “I do, Tani,” Dante said, putting away his phone. “So, if you don’t always have your phone, tell me how else I can reach you.”

    “Say my name,” Tani said.

    “What? How?”

    “Just say my name,” Tani said, holding out his hand to Dante. “Let’s go back before your students send out an SOS and start looking for you all over our fortress.”

    Dante grinned and took Tani’s hand stepping in too close. So close, he filled the space between them with the scent of Jasmine.

    Tani closed his eyes and started to step back, but Dante held his hand tighter, stopping his little escape.

    Tani teleported out of the fourth tower and into the drawing room turned into a library. It was empty. He started to let go of Dante’s hand, but Dante still held on.

    “Stop trying to escape me. I’m afraid if I let you go, I won’t get to see you again,” Dante said, his scowl deep.

    “Where am I going? I’m right here,” Tani said, firmly letting go of Dante’s hand. He turned and headed to the door. “Come on, Fire Lord. For the record your temper needs help.”

    Dante caught up with him just as Tani stepped out of the drawing room into the wide hallway.

    Tani smiled when Dante kept pace with him, walking side by side. He opened the glass doors opposite the drawing room, and they entered the large courtyard. The Elderwood bushes were blooming. Tani cursed under his breath because Eren had clearly messed with his work. She was unable to curb her power. It was spilling all over.

    “The Elderwood flowers are beautiful,” Dante said beside him, taking in the rectangular courtyard. “This would have been the center of life in the old days.”

    “Yes,” Tani smiled, pointing to the square patch of grass on his right. “The weavers worked here on warm days. An all weather loom was mounted out here. Life was harsher then, but it was also simpler. The gardens at the back of this fortress were for crops. It was easier to grow our own food then.”

    “I think it was a spectacular choice to protect the women here,” Dante said. “I would have loved to be part of it, Tani.”

    “You were—”

    Tani started to say Dante was part of it, but paused. They had just agreed to think of Dante as being different from the rest. Tani stopped on the path, in the middle of the courtyard and glanced at Dante. Making a conscious decision to make a fresh start. He smiled and reached up to press his left palm on Dante’s right cheek.

    “I think you would have loved it,” Tani said, his smile widening when Dante stood very still staring at him. He dropped his hand away from Dante’s cheek. “I have an Ekho visitor who is making my Elderwood bushes bloom at will. She’s a bit of a headache.”

    “Another Ekho?” Dante asked.

    “Yes,” Tani said. “I seem surrounded by them of late.”

    Tani continued on the path to the cafeteria doors. The construction crew was hard at work on the archway to Tani’s right. The doors leading into the front hall were accessible from the courtyard, just not now. Tani shared these little tidbits with Dante without prompt. He opened the glass doors and led the way into the warm cafeteria already packed with staff and the tour students. Hera met them, smiling at Dante as she led the way back to the table where Thomas and Justina sat.

    ***

    Amu found his oldest sister working in her garden, her hands deep in the healthy soil. She was tending apple saplings. She was obsessed with growing them. Amu thought it an obsession because the only person he knew who loved apples was Tani. Anit knew Tani loved them, and in a strange twist, she poured her guilt and love into growing a massive number of apple trees. His gaze moved over the large spread of apple saplings filling the one-acre garden behind their family home and he bit back a smile.

    “Anit, our fox clan log house is soon going to change its name to the Apple House,” Amu teased, leaning on the worktable where she kept her supplies. He folded his arms against his chest and smiled when Anit turned her gaze on him.

    “What problem brings you here?”

    “I also visit you when I don’t have problems to solve,” Amu said, with a slight frown.

    “You came to see me days ago,” Anit said. “I gave you apple trees for my Tani’s born day. Did you give them to him?”

    “I tried,” Amu said. “They are in our garden still in their growing bags. Tani is thinking on whether to plant them or leave them to me to plant.”

    Anit let out a heavy sigh, and pulled out her hands from the fertile soil. Her abilities similar to Tani’s, she could nurture soil, turn it healthy. She sat back on her haunches where she knelt, and rested her hands on her bright green frock.

    Anit gave all her attention to Amu.

    Amu took her in. His sister had given Tani the shape of her face, though hers was infinitely feminine and delicate. She had also given Tani his red hair. Where Tani’s hair boasted shades of brown in the red, Anit’s was pure red, like ripe pomegranate seeds. Her eyes the color of the leaves of an apple tree. She was short, only four feet nine, but the power within her could destroy a planet. She was as old as Sunu, the Immortal Lord. Her most destructive trait to date was her ability to carry a grudge. Her biggest gift was the ability to give life, as Tani was her greatest creation.

    “I need your help,” Amu said now, knowing her grudge against the Immortal Clan would make their conversation difficult. He held her green gaze. “Eren wants a meeting with you. She has a task that can only be completed with your approval.”

    Anit let out a soft chuckle.

    “It takes a special kind of man to walk into my domain and try to convince me to help the people who have imprisoned my son,” Anit said, barely taking a breath between her words. She closed her eyes and shook her head. “Don’t say more if you hope to see me in the next decade.”

    “Anit, our fox clan depends on you. You’ve made a vow to protect the mortal realm with our maker. You can’t shirk that duty just because you’ve closed the boundaries of our lands to the Immortal Clan,” Amu said. “I would not be here if it wasn’t important.”

    “What so important you would ask me to help the Immortal Clan?”

    Amu decided to use the one thing that always made Anit give in.

    “Tani cleansed a massive invasion of Kara ot in the mortal realm. The cuffs on his wrist had to come off for him to do it,” Amu said.

    Anit got up fast, scrambling to her feet; she wiped her hands on her skirts and crossed the distance to stand before Amu.

    “How is he? Is he lucid? Should I help?”

    Amu hid a smile at the pure concern in her eyes.

    “He’s fine,” Amu said. “His beloved helped him endure the pain. Dante is a bloodborn warlock this cycle.”

    ‘Don’t talk to me about the mortal,” Anit said, her voice half a growl. “Where is Tani?”

    “I left him at Elderwood. He looked in high spirits now that his beloved is close. He is still taking care of Deniz, Hera, and Tom.”

    “The mortal children he’s adopted while he endures loneliness because of a human soul,” Anit closed her eyes. “I don’t understand my own son. What does Eren want with our fox clan?”

    “The size of the Kara ot in the mortal realm is questionable,” Amu said. “She suspects someone carried it through the gates.”

    “So, she’s not interested in the fox clan but the Inter Clan Court,” Anit said, with a deep frown.

    “She wants to ask about the amount of kara ot in our lands,” Amu said.

    “Those stuck up idiots in the Septum don’t believe anyone outside the immortal clan can cleanse black weed.”

    Anit seethed for a moment, and then reached for a towel on the worktable. She wiped her hands and took in a deep breath.

    “I’ll change into appropriate clothes. We’ll go to Elderwood. I need to have a good look at Tani before I listen to Eren’s immortal clan nonsense.”

    “Tani might not want to see you,” Amu reminded her.

    “I’m his mother. He can’t change that fact no matter how many mortals he loves. He has endured pain, which usually has him passed out for years. I will see his face.”

    Anit shimmered away and Amu let out a sigh. He hoped Tani would be in a good mood after spending a day showing his beloved around the fortress. Otherwise, mother and son would only end up hurting each other again, and their last hurt had now lasted thousands of years.

    ****

    “Thank you for the tour, it was fascinating and we learned so much,” Justina said, smiling at Tani. “Is it possible to visit the fortress again?”

    “Perhaps, though the fortress is not open to visitors often. We made an exception for Mr. Arturo because he helped us with a dilemma,” Hera said. “We’ll have to keep in touch to see how tours would work out in the future.”

    “I hope you consider it,” Justina said, seconded by Thomas.

    The students each thanked Tani, Hera and Tom, and then they boarded the Arturo Vineyards staff bus.

    “So,” Dante said, turning to Tani. “When do I see you again?”

    Tani smiled, clasping his hands behind his back. “When do you want to see me?”

    “This evening until I close my eyes,” Dante said with a slow smile. “Tomorrow morning when I open my eyes, all day…”

    Tani chuckled.

    “I don’t remember you being so clingy.”

    Dante shrugged, reaching for Tani’s right hand. His fingers wrapping around Tani’s wrists, circling around the elder leaf bracelet.

    Tani bit his bottom lip. He had both hoped for and dreaded this moment for days. The moment he chose to throw in his lot with Dante Arturo, regardless of their assured destruction. His heart squeezed tight as he met Dante’s gaze.

    “Get your guests to the ferry,” Tani said, his voice soft, low, for Dante’s ears only. “See them off.”

    Dante took in a sharp breath and he seemed to hold it in as he waited.

    “Call me when you’re back at the vineyard,” Tani said, his tone full of promise. “I’ll come.”

    Dante smiled wide, his eyes lighting up so beautifully, Tani pulled his hand out of Dante’s hold fast afraid he might kiss the man in front of all his students. Just because he was always in love with Dante’s soul, didn’t mean Dante loved him too. It would be too soon. Gods, he had no sense of self-preservation.

    “I’ll hurry,” Dante said, not saying more. He waved goodbye to Tom and Hera, and then boarded the staff bus as fast as he could.

    Tani bit back a chuckle as the driver started the bus and pulled out of his parking space.

    “What was that?” Hera asked, coming to stand next to Tani.

    “What?”

    “That,” Hera nodded to the retreating bus. “You and Dante, making eyes at each other? Has the warlock enchanted you, given you some strong juju?”

    Tani chuckled and shrugged. He smiled at the retreating bus and started to walk away from the fortress.

    Babu?” Hera called after him.

    “I’ll be unavailable for a while,” Tani said.

    “Where will you be?” Hera asked.

    “Occupied by the strong juju,” Tani said, turning to wink at Hera. “Finish reading The Lightning Thief to Deniz for me.”

    Hera let out a soft sigh and Tani was aware of Tom pulling her into a short hug before they headed back to the fortress.

    Tani walked with brisk steps, taking the less traveled path back to his house behind the fortress. Once he was in a safe spot, he teleported into the living room, and immediately started to leave when he felt the strong energy in the room.

    A powerful wall of energy wrapped around him and stopped his escape. Tani solidified in the middle of the room, his gaze on his mother who stood by the long comfortable couch Deniz and Hera loved to lounge on.

    Anit looked every bit the fox goddess that she was, powerful, beautiful, and elegant. Her long hair looked like fire, and she had robbed the blue skies of color as her dress seemed alive with it. She started to cross the room to his side, and he gritted his teeth to greet her, hoping to stop her approach.

    “Mother.”

    Anit stopped a few inches away from him, her green eyes taking him in, there was a frown on her smooth forehead, and he scowled at the sight of it. She had no smiles for him, ever.

    “Tani,” she said, her voice coming out in a soft breath, as she reached up to touch his left cheek.

    He slapped her hand away and stepped back.

    “What are you doing here?” Tani asked, hating how defensive he sounded.

    “Amu came for me, something about Eren,” Anit said, with a negligent shrug. “I heard Cale took off the cuffs on your wrists. The last time it happened, you needed some help from me. You don’t like to hear it, but you did. Your mortal brings you so much misfortune…I-I worried.”

    Tani closed his eyes, a soft chuckle coming out of him before he could stop it.

    “What?” Anit asked a note of hurt in her voice. “Can’t I worry about my son?”

    “Which son do you worry about?” Tani asked, opening his eyes to look at Anit. “The last time we stood face to face, you screamed me out of your study at the Fox Clan’s log house. You could not stand to look at me because my eyes remind you of my father. Amu, the only one who has ever wanted me in our family, brought me to this mortal realm to live with him. He is my parent. I ask again, which son do you worry about?”

    Tani’s eyes burned with the faint power in his veins. Gold and amber shimmered in his eyes, and sure enough, Anit winced and stepped away from him, as though burned.

    “See, you still can’t look at me,” Tani chuckled, hating the bitterness coloring his forced laugh.

    “Is that why you have decided to torture yourself in the mortal realm? Why you live with the shadow of the power your parents gave you? It’s a disgrace to see the next Fox Lord live like this.”

    “Then forget you had me,” Tani said. “Continue living as though I don’t exist.”

    Anit slapped him, the force of her slap making him turn his head, his cheek exploded with pain but it could not compare to the pain in his heart.

    Tani bit his lip to keep from crying out and turned away from his mother. He paused when he saw Amu standing at the entrance into the living room.

    “You should not have brought her into our home without telling me first,” Tani said to Amu.

    “You returned earlier than I thought,” Amu said. “Cale is on his way with Eren. They were busy in the conservancy as per your request.”

    “Thank them for me. You know my mother and I can’t be in the same room,” Tani said. “I’ll stay at Artri House with Dante until you solve Eren’s issues. Find me when Elderwood is free of Eren, and The Fox Goddess.”

    “Tani—” Anit started behind him.

    Tani left his house not ready to hear her say his name again. It hurt too much when she never had good words for him to hear.

    Thankfully, she let him leave. He teleported to the olive grove at the Arturo Vineyard and stood among the old olive trees taking in deep breaths. His chest ached…not with anger, but with longing. He brought his right hand to his cheek, still remembering the feel of his mother’s hand on his skin even as it was painful. It was the first touch in years. He could not remember what it felt like when she hugged him, or held him. That he wished for the memory pained him more.

    Tears filled his eyes and he stared up at the sky wishing for rain to wash them away.

    ****

    Dante was filled with impatience during the ride back to the vineyard. He wished he could get the driver to speed, but it was four o’clock. Even though the island was no city, there was mild traffic caused by people returning home from a full day of work in their small city. He was glad when they finally left the city center and took the open road to the vineyard.

    Thunder rumbled in the sky, and Dante frowned when he felt power call to his. Heavy rain fell just as they entered the vineyard’s gates. Dante opened the window and held out his hand to the falling rain, and felt Tani’s power touch his.

    He bit his lip, waiting to call Tani’s name. The bus driver brought them to a stop at the front of Artri House. Dante thanked the bus driver for spending the day with him. He then sent him off to park the bus and clock out.

    Alone in the front yard, Dante spoke the words he had been holding in.

    “Tani, I’m home.”

    He stood in the front yard at Artri House, next to his mother’s favorite planting urns and waited in the rain. Hoping with all his heart that Tani had told him the truth, half-afraid Tani would ignore his call. His past lives made him feel insecure with Tani. Made him afraid Tani might not bother to give him a chance…he closed his eyes, when several minutes past.

    “Tani,” Dante said, pleading. “You promised. Please.”

    Dante felt a shift in the air, and then Tani stood before him shivering with cold: his clothes wet, his hair wet and sticking to his head, and his eyelashes clamped with water droplets.

    Dante stepped forward and gripped Tani’s arms. He looked into closed off amber eyes, and for a moment, thought he saw tears mixed in with the raindrops. Tears or no, Tani was unhappy.

    “What’s upset you?” Dante asked.

    Tani gave the slightest smile, and shook his head.

    “I wanted to spend time in your Artri House,” Tani said. “Now, I’m not sure it is appropriate.”

    “Why wouldn’t it be?”

    “I’m in a terrible mood. I’ll make for terrible company,” Tani said, looking up at the sky and the dark clouds above.

    Dante noted that Tani was still in the white shirt and pants he had worn earlier for their tour. He had not changed, which meant, something had happened during their short separation.

    “Keep your terrible mood,” Dante said, leaning in to press a kiss on Tani’s forehead. He reached for Tani’s right hand and tangled their fingers. “I’ll keep you.”

    ****

    <<Previous | Table of Contents | Next >>

  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 10-2

    “Dante, this place is epic,” Thomas said, folding his hands against his chest. “I can’t believe it is not on a roster at our department for visits.”

    “They’re low key about visits,” Dante said, fighting the urge to pace with impatience.

    They were in a waiting room. The eight students who had come along sat in the leather chairs around the room murmuring amongst themselves. They were all waiting for their guide.

    “How did you find them again?” Justina asked.

    “Professor Roberto from biology,” Dante said. “He said they have a lab that tests soils. Though he has not visited the conservancy, one of their researchers worked with Professor Roberto.”

    “No wonder,” Thomas said. “If Roberto discovered this place, we would not have heard the end of it.”

    Justina chuckled, and started to comment only to stop when the door opened.

    Tom walked in first. Looking formal in his business suit. Hera followed, looking beautiful this morning in a navy blue dress. She smiled at Dante when their gazes met, giving him a short nod of recognition.

    Then…Tani walked in.

    Dante forgot all the reasons why he was here. His gaze riveted on Tani, taking him in from his red brown hair, to his amber eyes hidden behind reading glasses. He looked handsome in a white shirt and tailored dark trousers. He wore white slip-on Vans this time. Dante smiled as he realized Tani seemed to have a serious fixation with the brand.

    Tani stood behind Hera and Tom, hands in his pockets. His gaze moving around the room.

    Dante took in a breath, waiting…he breathed out when Tani finally looked at him and their gazes held. Time stopped, for a solid minute, and all he could do was look at Tani.

    Then, Tom started talking and Tani broke their gaze. Dante sucked in air, feeling the loss of Tani’s gaze on him deep in his soul.

    “I want to welcome you to The Elderwood Conservancy,” Tom was saying. “We have not had guests in a while, so we’re all excited to show off a bit of our fortress.”

    “We hope you enjoy the tour and the stories you’ll learn about this fortress from one of our patrons,” Tom said. “Next to me, is Miss Hera. She helps manage our conservancy. If you need anything, don’t hesitate to approach her. Professor Arturo, you mentioned in your message that you want to look at the architecture of the building, and learn about the fortress’s history. Is that right?”

    “Yes,” Dante said, nodding. “We’re learning how architecture from the different eras in history still influences modern architecture. Also, if we can get an explanation as to why the horrendous addition of modern walls at the front.”

    The students laughed, and Tani shook his head at Dante for the mischief. Dante found he liked Tani’s censuring look.

    “I’m sure you’ll discover the answer soon,” Tom said with a quick smile. “Allow me to introduce our patron, Mr. Tani Ryuzo. His family has supported and lived in this fortress since its commission in the fifteenth century.”

    Tom clapped his hands, prompting the students to do the same.

    Tani grinned at Tom’s short introduction, and took a step forward.

    “Call me, Ryuzo,” Tani said, and then turned to Dante, Justina and Thomas. “And, I will take responsibility for the addition of modern walls at the front.”

    Dante grinned, and Tani nodded, turning his attention to the students.

    “Everyone keeps inviting you to The Elderwood Conservancy, so I’ll explain who we are,” Tani said. “We are an organization dedicated to creating a safe space for endangered wild animals and plants. We also run an environment research center where we work to discover new ways to protect and conserve our environment.”

    “Are you saying the forests around the fortress belong to the conservancy?” One of the students asked.

    “Yes, they are protected forests,” Tani said. “If you do go deeper, you’re likely to run into wild animals and discover rare plants which cannot be harvested.”

    “Do the wild animals reach the fortress?”

    “They can but they don’t,” Tani said. “But, we have mounted a perimeter fence about two hundred meters around the fortress to protect the mortals living here.”

    Tom coughed, and Tani glanced at Dante who was hiding a grin at his use of the word mortals.

    “I meant to say, we don’t want the wild animals finding our staff in their offices,” Tani said, gaining chuckles from the students. “We do get an occasional monkey stealing bananas from an unsuspecting staff member in the flower gardens, but the fortress grounds are secure.”

     “How do I work here?” A dark haired young man sitting at the front asked, looking quite serious and eager.

    “Does it look like a fun place to work?” Tani asked.

    “Yes, I love conservation science,” he said.

    Tani grinned.

    “Then, we would have to ask Tom and Hera,” Tani said. “They are the true heroes of our organization. They work at the helm of the conservancy, coordinating the massive effort it takes to navigate various government laws, keep researchers working, and keep our conservancy safe and secure. Talk to them on how to join,” Tani said. “Now, about the fortress….and the addition of modern walls…”

    “You’re not going to let that go, are you?” Dante asked.

    “No,” Tani said, making the students laugh again. “The building is steeped in ottoman architecture. The smaller tower at the entrance was used to control who entered the fortress. The rest of the building is what makes it a fortress with its four towers. It is square with three flours on each wing and a courtyard in the middle. Let’s not sit in here. If you’ll come with me, we’ll start with the front tower of the fortress and work our way in.”

    Dante smiled as Tani led the way out of the waiting room.

    Hera’s phone buzzed and she moved to the side to answer the call.

    Thomas and Justina approached Tom, so it fell to Dante to herd their students after Tani. They left the waiting room and turned left.

    Tani led them into a hidden stairwell right after the waiting room that led up to the smaller round front tower.

    “As mentioned earlier, the fortress was commissioned in the Fifteenth Century. At the time, Ottoman Empire was enduring a great expansion, which meant war. A great shift of power began, and as is expected of war, the need for sanctuary grew. The fortress was commissioned for this purpose,” Tani said, as they climbed the stairs. “The wall on your right is part of the original build, constructed with natural stone and mortar. It was the busiest part of the fortress because it was the first point of contact. Suppliers left their wares here, messengers spoke to the fortress soldiers, and anyone who wanted sanctuary made their request in this tower.”

    Dante ran his hands over the cold stone, and slowed down when for a full minute, he thought he saw the stairs turn to wood instead of the marble they were now. The walls covered with intricate wood beams, and an elegant balustrade running along on the side with glass. He stopped and blinked.

    He looked up in time to see his students following Tani up the tower. His gaze lingered on the glass walls showing off the front of the building. He hurried up the steps, past his lingering students until he was behind Tani.

    “Why was the tower rebuilt?” Dante asked, needing to know.

    “In the seventeenth century, a great fire broke out in this tower,” Tani said. “The occupants of the fortress had a disagreement with a neighboring Sultan. The tower was built using wood between floors, on the stairs and the roofing. The fire left it severely damaged, the structure almost collapsed. We’re lucky the fire did not spread to the rest of the fortress.”

    The stairs brought them to an open landing on the third floor. The glass wall built on their left showed off a stunning view of the fountain and the front of the fortress.

    “When did the tower gain the glass view?” Justina asked, having reached them.

    Tani’s attention was on a glass door at an open space to their right. He smiled when the door opened, and a tall man wearing a security uniform waved at him.

    “This front tower stayed damaged for a time. We—it was rebuilt in the early nineteenth century as a reception area for visitors. As architecture modernized, and the fortress’s work changed, we redesigned this part of the tower to serve the needs of the conservancy. The fortress has always served as a sanctuary,” Tani said, leading them to the open glass doors and Dante was surprised to discover a very modern security room.

    The room was packed with security officers monitoring screens filled with forests, and swamps.

    “Wow,” Thomas said, as eager to discover as his students. “What is this?”

    “As I said before, we’re responsible for the forests around us. These last few decades, it has become important to monitor the conservancy’s lands for poachers and raiders in the forests looking for precious trees and herbs. The men and women you see at work watch out for unusual movements like human encroachment into forests, poachers hunting our herd of precious Asian elephants,” Tani said. “If you want to work here, expect action-filled days when we chase poachers off the conservancy.”

    “Do you ever allow public tours in the forests?” one of the students asked.

    “No,” Tani said. “We only allow need-based tours for research scientists. The team of wildlife veterinarians we have on staff run the tours. They take care of any animals that absolutely need support. They also help us learn how to monitor, maintain and increase the numbers of the endangered animals.”

    “How do you get a job here again?” Justina asked.

    “Ask Hera or Tom,” the students told her in answer.

    “Fred is going to show you a little movie the security staff prepared to show you the amazing creatures we have on our conservancy,” Tani said, nodding to the tall man who wore the security uniform.

    Fred urged the students to follow him to a small sitting area with a screen mounted on the wall. Tani stayed back to allow the students to move closer. Some sat on the four chairs before the screen, the remaining stood behind their friends, with Thomas and Justina joining them.

    Dante took the chance to finally stand next to Tani.

    The moment he leaned on the wall next to Tani, Dante cursed under his breath at the mad urge to lean in closer to Tani and take in a deep breath. Tani smelled so good: apple and citrus teased his senses. He started to cave in to the urge, but he didn’t get a chance. Instead, he found himself staring into Tani’s amber eyes, still distracting even hidden behind reading glasses.

    Tani watched him for a moment, and then smiled.

    “What?”

    “Why did this tower really burn down?” Dante asked, as Fred dimmed the lights near the screen and started his video.

    Tani folded his arms against his chest and shifted on the wall to face Dante.

    “Why do you want to know?” Tani asked in a low whisper, his amber eyes visible even in the dim light.

    “I had a moment when we were coming up,” Dante said, matching Tani’s low whisper. “It felt like I was once here in this tower. The stairs were made of wood, so was the roof…”

    Dante remembered the stories from his grandmother’s journal.

    “I think the fortress was used to protect women who did not want to live as slaves at the time. They made dyes and wove carpets here in exchange for a place to live. I…”

    “You were Dane. You helped bring those women here,” Tani said, his voice filled with nostalgia.

    “Hm,” Dante nodded, and then added. “Dane is not me though, he just looked like me.”

    Tani chuckled and nodded.

    “I know. Dane was different. He was a soldier born of a Christian woman and stolen from her at birth. He grew up into a masked janissary under a powerful sultan. We met while I was saving women lost in the forest. He helped me fight off deadly mercenaries, and we fell in love,” Tani said. “He later fell in love with a woman in the castle where he worked. She discovered his visits to our fortress. She sent a troop to burn the place, and stop Dane from helping the women. This tower suffered the worst of the fire they set. We sent everyone away to our other sanctuaries and emptied the fortress for a period.”

    “He should have chosen to stay and help you,” Dante said, angry at Dane’s love for a vengeful woman.

    “You’re angry,” Tani said, studying him. “Don’t be. Dane helped the women because we were together, not because he thought I was doing the right thing. When the woman in the castle found out about the fortress, he ended our relationship in the only way he could. He returned to who he was and delayed the troops so that the women were able to escape. I—”

    “Your heart was broken,” Dante cut in, his anger rising at Dane’s betrayal of Tani. “He broke it when he married the woman who burned down this tower. You watched the wedding in the square, and then left after bidding him goodbye.”

    Tani exhaled and shrugged.

    “It wasn’t the first time,” Tani said, his gaze shifting to the video on the large screen on the wall. “I wasn’t helpless as you know. The fortress endured. It was a cycle I had to get through.”

    “Tani,” Dante started oddly upset about the last part of Tani’s comment. As though he was resigned to all of Dante’s predecessors hurting him now.

    “Stop thinking about sad things. Watch the video,” Tani said. “I’m really quite proud of Hera and Tom’s work with the Asian elephants. They’ve managed to increase their numbers. I’m going to need to expand their territory somehow, maybe you can help.”

    Dante studied Tani’s face in the dim light and wondered where Tani hid his hurt. Where he took the pain of centuries of betrayal. He wished—

    “Don’t look at me like that,” Tani said.

    “Like what?” Dante asked.

    “Like you owe me,” Tani hissed at him. “It is the last thing I want from you, Dante Arturo.”

    “Then what do you want?” Dante asked.

    Tani shrugged and moved away from him.

    Dante breathed out and returned his attention to the video his students were watching. The screen was filled with a Bengal tiger climbing a large tree. The tiger was magnificent, but all Dante could think of was the scent of apples and citrus filling his nose, and the picture of Tani watching Dane get married as written in the journal.

    When the video ended, the students clapped, and asked Fred a few questions before they had to move on to the next part of the tour.

    Tani was cordial with the students. He answered questions with patience as he took them to the fourth floor of the tower where they discovered the reason why all the glass. A glass dome covered the top, creating an observatory complete with a very professional telescope.

    They each got a turn at the telescope, and then had to move on to the next part of the tour.

    Tani walked them through magnificent hallways with high arches built with brick, and exotic wood, the walls adorned with colored stone and tiles. They all marveled at a drawing room turned library, whose walls were decorated with gold calligraphy.

    Dante watched Tani through the tour, barely asking his questions, his thoughts preoccupied with the past and the present. He wondered what Dane had seen walking these halls with Tani. He wondered what that idiot had thought giving up on Tani so easily for a woman who would dare burn this place down. Thinking about it made Dante angry.

    “You must be hungry,” Tani said, pausing at a wide grand staircase that would lead them back to the ground floor. “We have gone through three wings of the fortress. Due to privacy reasons, we cannot enter the fourth wing. It is a residential area, and is where our staff lives. We are left with the courtyard…”

    Tani frowned, looking over Dante’s students to the back.

    “Alas, we cannot enter the courtyard for legal reasons,” Tani said, pointing to Hera and Tom who were holding their hands up and shaking their heads. “Or so I’m told. There is a renovation crew working on the archway leading to the front hall. Our tour will now head to the cafeteria. Hera and Tom will guide the way and you can get a warm meal.”

    “Aren’t you coming along?” One of the girls asked. “You’re not leaving us, are you?”

    Tani met Dante’s gaze and then grinned at the girl.

    “I’m not leaving yet. I’ll join you in the cafeteria in a few minutes,” Tani said.

    Hera and Tom took over, guiding the students away.

    Tani frowned when Dante remained standing at the landing just watching him.

    “Why are you still looking so sad?” Tani asked, his hands at his sides. “Is it because of what I said about Dane earlier?”

    “I can’t shake it off,” Dante said. “Any of it. I thought I could, but hearing you talk about it…I think this burden is too heavy. What do you do with the pain? None of them could burn it away. They were human, pure.”

    Tani held out his right hand to Dante. He sighed when Dante did not make a move to take his hand. So, he closed the distance between them. Tani removed the reading glasses he wore, so that Dante could see his amber eyes.

    “How much do you know of our past?” Tani asked.

    “We’ve loved each other seven times that I know of, and two that are not quite clear to me,” Dante said, remembering the stories in the diary written by his grandmother, plus the dreams he had experienced. “Each time, I have disappointed you and you’ve walked away with a broken heart. How can you look at me as you are right now?”

    “How do I look at you?”

    “With interest,” Dante said, frowning.

    “You are interesting, Dante,” Tani said. “How did you come to know of our past?”

    “A journal written by my grandmother,” Dante said. “She worried I would disappoint you too. My mother gave it to me when you left the vineyard. I read it and wanted to see you. I wanted to…”

    “To what?” Tani asked, cocking his head to the side.

    “I don’t know,” Dante said, shaking his head. “Now that you’re standing in front of me, I don’t know what I should do.”

    Tani studied him for a moment, and then held out his right hand again.

    “Are you going to take my hand, or aren’t you?”

    Dante’s gaze shifted to Tani’s right palm. His gaze fixating on the thin bracelets shaped like Elderwood leaves. The leaves a mirage, hiding the true shape of the gold cuffs Tani wore because of him.

    “Tani,” Dante said, his voice a whisper, as he looked into amber eyes. “I’m afraid that if I hold your hand, I won’t want to let go. Do you think you can accept me? I—I want to try being with you. I’m not like the past me.”

    Tani chuckled and shook his head.

    “You were always different, never the same. Also, I’m the one offering my hand, Dante. Will you take it or not?” Tani asked.

    Dante placed his left hand over Tani’s palm, and gasped when Tani clasped his fingers tight.

    “Close your eyes,” Tani said.

    It was the only warning he got, then they were in a burst of gold light. The landing faded away and then they were standing in a large round room. The domed ceiling filled with paintings of a floating citadel surrounded by waterfalls. The floating citadel was so exotic, Dante thought it a fantasy, including the man painted in a corner sitting on tall throne like chair. He looked like Tani, but wasn’t, the hair was wrong, it was dark and long.

    “This is the fourth tower in the fortress. This room takes up the third and fourth floor. It is not accessible by anyone,” Tani said, looking at Dante. “You have to be Ekho to enter here. Not even Hera and Tom know about it because there is no door.”

    Dante nodded in understanding, looking around the room. The windows were high and tall. They allowed more than enough light into the perfect round room. The light showed off painted portraits mounted in intervals on the natural stonewalls. The furniture looked antique, the shelves filled with books, and leather bound journals. There was a desk with two chairs set next to each other. A long comfortable couch arranged by what he assumed used to be a fireplace.

    “There used to be a bed in the middle,” Tani said. “I got rid of it in a fit of anger after a bad night.”

    “You have a temper,” Dante said.

    “You do too,” Tani said, with a shrug. “This is—was my room until the last century. I—I—, um, since you know what we have been to each other, I want to share my memories of you, not what others have told you.”

    Dante nodded in agreement.

    Tani rewarded him with a small smile then clasped his hand tight and led him to a painting to their right. Dante sucked in air when he took a close look at the hanging portrait.

    It was Durante. The first one of him. He was dressed in the white robes he wore the day he married, and broke Tani’s heart. The one who started Tani’s hell.

    “I still remember the day I met you clear as day,” Tani said, his voice low. “Your scent drew me to you. The pack of wolves chased you, you didn’t shout because you were afraid your family would hear and come after you. So, you ran…and stumbled through the barriers I made right into my protected forest. I had no choice but to save you.”

    “Barriers?”

    “Yes,” Tani said, reaching out to run his palm over the frame of the portrait. The dust on the frame disappeared, and Tani dropped his hand away. “You ran right through, I suppose you were meant to.”

    Dante studied the portrait. A fine gold mist surrounded Durante in the portrait. He had thought it dust at first, but now that Tani had cleared it away, the gold mist remained.

    “What is this?” Dante asked, touching the gold mist aura, tightly wrapped around Durante.

    “It is how I see you even now,” Tani said. “I took after my mother’s people more than my father imagined. Ekho’s believe in having one true beloved. When we meet them, we share part of ourselves with our beloved. A sacred bond that cannot be severed. When I first met you, I knew, you’re my beloved. I tried to ignore it for a time after you left the forest. You were human and I am Ekho. We were from different worlds, it was better to wait for another time, another meeting. It is what our people do. But then, you returned holding food and concern for me. I—”

    “You tried to scare him,” Dante said, remembering Tani letting go of his glamour for Durante in his dream. “You showed him your eyes, and your claws thinking it would make him run.”

    “He called me a fox,” Tani grinned. “I let him think so, because it was easiest. I didn’t know how to explain my kind. My heart would not let him be alone, so I loved him as the fox he thought I was.”

    “He ended up breaking your heart,” Dante said, shaking his head, remembering the night Durante wedded and Tani wore his gold cuffs.

    “He needed immortality,” Tani said, with a small shrug. “A mortal’s life is short; a blink of an eye and it’s over. So, mortals form bonds through family. Their children meant to succeed where their ancestors did not, meant to push the family to the next era, the next century. His decisions were rooted to the ways of a mortal. Without him, you would not exist. He made the right decision. Because I love him, I understood him.”

    “I don’t,” Dante said, shaking his head. “If he loved you too, he should have been loyal to you.”

    “Don’t judge him so harshly,” Tani said, turning to meet Dante’s gaze. “Durante’s bloodline has lived one thousand years, moving from century to century. It is the best magic he could have forged.”

    “Still—”

    “You have two children,” Tani said, his words coming out sharp. “Your bloodline will see the next generation, and the generation after and so on. Who are you to judge him?”

    “I did not marry Viola,” Dante said, needing Tani to understand his failure with Viola. “She is not my beloved, Tani. I—”

    “You what?”

    “I was careless when I was younger. I stayed with Viola and let her believe in a future together when I felt nothing for her. We made Zach and April, but I could never offer her more than financial support. We separated, for her sake and the children. I am not tied to Viola and I regret the pain our relationship brought to her.”

    “Don’t regret the children,” Tani said, shaking his head. “Don’t do that when they both love you so much.”

    “I don’t regret Zach and April,” Dante said. “I am however, a bad parent to them.”

    Tani stared at him for a moment, and then turned to the portraits on the walls. He moved to the second one and shrugged.

    “I’ve come to realize that parents are also people who make mistakes. Their children must learn how to live with the mistakes they make,” Tani said, smiling at the second man he loved. “He was Dante like you. Simple man who only wanted a simple life. He didn’t know what I was, nor think me a fox. We were happy for a time.”

    “Until his wife chased you out of the settlement,” Dante said.

    “Violet has remained a steady force in your life with an astounding variation of her name,” Tani said letting out a soft chuckle. “I hated her for a while, in time my hate turned to tolerance. I suppose without her, you would not be here.”

    “Tani.”

    Tani moved to the next painting, placing his palm over the frame, his power wiping away the dust.

    “This was Duante,” Tani said, studying the painting of a man dressed in white robes. “He was a scribe. Quite dedicated to his work at a magistrate’s office. We were together for a very short time before he married and promptly chased me away. He made me so angry, I left his town and traveled the world, determined to forget him.”

    Dante held his tongue as Tani went down the line of four more versions of him, until he stopped at the portrait of a masked janissary, a red strip over his mask. Tani lingered on this one, his gaze complicated.

    “We have the same portrait at Artri House,” Dante said. “He is holding the mask and his eyes are full of sorrow. Why is he different for you?”

    “His Violet burned my tower,” Tani mused. “He loved me enough to hide the existence of this fortress from his Sultan. I just didn’t understand his ties to his family were tighter than the ones before. He almost made me believe he would stay with me, until Violet burned the fortress. It is lucky he cared enough for my causes to help the women who found sanctuary here. After him, I almost gave up.”

    “One of Dane’s daughters found my great-grandfather,” Dante said.

    “Yes,” Tani said. “Someone pushed her to find him for his bloodline. I knew nothing of it. The family was consistent with the name Durante for two more generations, which is probably why they named you Dante.”

    “My grandmother knew the original story,” Dante said. “The patriarch of the family told her.”

    “I figured as much,” Tani said, stopping at the last portrait.

    In it, Durante was dressed in a dated suit, probably nineteen twenty. He stood tall and held a cane.

    “I ran away to East Africa after surviving him,” Tani confessed. “Even though he married Violet early, he kept us longest. I was a secret he enjoyed having. We stayed together until he turned thirty. Then Violet wanted to move to the Americas, so they left. I would have followed, but he insisted on having a clean slate when they landed in New York. A branch of his family stayed here, and the other moved to New York.”

    Tani sighed, and let go of Dante’s hand.

    “So,” Tani said, indicating the nine portraits on the wall. “This is the size of the baggage I carry. I have tried my best to let it go, but…there are moments when it leaves me feeling broken. The cuffs on my wrist probably have a lot to do with that.”

    Dante stood in the round room, his gaze moving from portrait to portrait. The faces on each one similar to his, but not quite. Their priorities certainly differed from his.

    “Tani,” Dante said, facing the extraordinary man who had loved his soul for centuries. “Let’s agree on three facts.

    “Okay,” Tani said. “What facts are these?”

    “First, I am not them,” Dante said, pointing to the portraits. “Agreed?”

    Tani folded his arms against his chest, and studied him for a moment.

    “Agreed,” Tani said after a while. “You were never the same, ever.”

    “Okay, this is good,” Dante said, taking a step toward Tani. “Two, I am truly interested in you. And when I say interested, I want to kiss you and make love with you. What about you?”

    Tani smiled wide, studying him for another minute before he dropped his hands to his sides and nodded.

    “I’ve always wanted you, Dante,” Tani said. “Our physical attraction has never been the problem.”

    “That’s good to know,” Dante said, relieved, he took a step toward Tani.

    “I’ve heard about us from my grandmother’s journal, then a warning from a grimoire in our home. All of them ask me not to disappoint you. As a result, I ran here to find you,” Dante said.

    “I thought you wanted a tour for your students?” Tani asked.

    “No, I was hoping to find you because I don’t have your phone number or know where you live. I have to tell you, it breaks my heart when I listen to you talk about us. It sounds like you’ve given up on me,” Dante said, taking another step forward, stopping only because Tani raised his right hand as though to stop him.

    “You’ve judged my decision on all the others,” Dante said. “I’m not them.”

    “No, you’re not,” Tani agreed. “Your warlock education has given you more information than the rest. I’m grateful that I don’t have to explain what an Ekho is to you.”

    “My Grandmaster is a solid jerk who pushed me too hard and turned me into an overachiever. I even know there is a Septum in the Ekho Realm, and what it has done to you with those cuffs.”

    “Sounds like a man who understands how to groom a fire warlock,” Tani said. “You have one thing right too. I have given up on proving my choice. I was not going to meet you this lifetime. , This time, I was going to ignore you existed and return to the Ekho Realm forever.”

    Dante nodded, taking in the sting of Tani’s words. He stepped back.

    “Why did you approach me?” Dante asked. “If you gave up on me, you should have let the kara ot ravage our vineyard.”

    “I should have,” Tani said, his answer stinging more than it should. “But I can’t. It’s an Ekho’s job to make sure that blight does not spread in the mortal realm.”

    “So, you came out of obligation?” Dante asked, oddly hurt by the thought.

    “Yes,” Tani said. “No matter what’s happened between us, I can’t see you in danger.”

    Dante took comfort in that statement and took a step forward.

    “Then, Tani, are you willing to give me a chance?” Dante asked. “My number three is: How do I show you that I choose you this time?”

    “You—”

    Dante waved to the portraits around him.

    “I understand from your perspective that the evidence is clearly not on my side,” Dante said, scowling at the men on the wall with his face. “I’ve never felt so attacked just as I’m thinking of hitting on a guy I like for a date. This is a lot of pressure. So, give me a chance, Tani.”

    Tani stared at him for a full minute, and then chuckled.

    “I just laid out our less than stellar past,” Tani said.

    “I still want my chance,” Dante said, pointing to all the portraits. “Each of them got their chance. They fucked up. I want mine.”

    “We might not have enough time,” Tani started, then bit his bottom lip as though to stop himself from talking.

    “I don’t care,” Dante said, taking another step toward Tani. It brought him close enough to take in Tani’s scent again. “I want my chance with you. My time with you, Tani. Can you give me that?”

    Amber eyes met Dante’s determined gaze.

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  • A Thousand Years of Hope Ch 10-1

    A storm ravaged the island late Tuesday night, rain falling into the early hours of Wednesday.

    A whispered ‘help’ woke Tani from a deep sleep. He sat up on his bed and listened to the raging rain. The trees in the forest around them broke most of it…

    The plea for help came again, and he got out of bed.

    Closing his eyes, he listened, and once it came again, he followed it, teleporting to the overflowing river in the middle of the conservancy. The waters had swelled and spilled over to the bank. Not caring that the rain was soaking him; he stood on a flat rock, searching until he saw the little red fox standing on the edge of the flooding river. It was pacing in distress, trying to reach a bobbing boulder caught between two large branches. The river water doing its best to take the boulder downstream.

    Tani froze when he saw a second fox caught under the shifting boulder. The river water was racing down too fast. He didn’t stop to think. He simply teleported to the two large branches, reached down, and caught the drowning fox by its neck just as the boulder got loose of the branches and went racing downstream.

    Cradling the soaking fox, he returned to the flat rock, and the little fox that had called for help ran after him.

    “You poor things, your cave must have flooded,” Tani said, placing the drowned fox he held on the flat rock. The little fox leaned closer, peering at its friend. “Don’t worry. He’s just swallowed a lot of water.”

    Tani pressed two fingers to the still fox’s stomach and pushed. Water came out of its mouth and it coughed. Tani rubbed its back, turning the tired fox to its side as it coughed out more water. When it was breathing easier, Tani smiled and pressed his palms on both sides to warm it up. The rain was still falling, so he looked around the thick forest. They needed shelter.

    Taking the two foxes into his arms, he walked deeper into the forest until he found a hollowed-out tree. He lined the inside of the hollow with leaves and urged the little foxes into the space.

    “You two, don’t wander close to the river until I can get it to calm down,” Tani said when they were settled. The little fox who had desperately called for help licked his hand, and he smiled at the affection. “Stay here until the rain stops.”

    He spent a few minutes making sure the hollowed-out tree was safe and dry. When he was done, he returned to the burgeoning river.

    Tani checked to see if there were any other animals caught in the fast sweep of water. He tried to calm the waters with his power, but it hurt to use too much. He was still raw from the vineyard so he stopped. Letting out a sigh, he decided he would need to talk to Uncle Amu in the morning. Returning home, Tani found himself standing in the middle of his bedroom, soaked to the bone.

    Staring at his muddy feet, all he could think about was what Dante was doing at the same exact moment.

    At six in the morning, Tani sat at the kitchen island table, reading a daily report from the conservancy on a tablet they kept in the kitchen.

    There were damaged boundary fences, and broken cameras in the forest and the flooding river was making it difficult for the animals to cross it. It pained him that his power still felt too raw to use. If he were to take on the tending of the conservancy, it would take him all day.

    Eren entered the kitchen and stopped when she saw him. She was in a long simple frock, her hair falling down her back. She was on bare feet, clearly not dressed for the day.

    Eren started to turn away in a clear escape.

    “Eren,” Tani said, remembering that she kept making his Elderwood bushes bloom. He could channel her excess power to the river.

    “Little lordling,” Eren said, turning to face him, and looking around the sunny kitchen. “Lord Amu?”

    “He’s not back yet,” Tani said.

    “Hera and Tom?” Eren asked.

    “They are at the fortress working,” Tani said, placing his tablet down, now studying Eren. She was clearly unwilling to be in the same room with him. Had to be his comment about disowning his father.

    “And Cale?” Eren asked, going down the list of all the people she met last night.

    Tani grinned as he realized Eren was hoping she would not have to deal with him alone.

    “Cale we can find,” Tani said. “All we have to do is call for him.”

    “You mean you call for him,” Erin said, bunching the skirts of her dress. “He won’t respond to me. I’ve tried.”

    Tani blinked. He had always thought Cale responded to every call made to him.

    “Cale?” Tani said and smiled when Cale appeared a few minutes later in a charcoal grey suit. His hair was brushed to perfection, he was busy adjusting his cuffs.

    “You called, Little Lordling,” Cale said.

    “Eren was asking about you,” Tani said, pushing the tablet toward Cale who stood a few feet away. He got up from his chair and went to the coffee maker in the corner. He didn’t feel like tea this morning. It was lucky someone in the house had felt the same at a point. There was coffee already made.

    “Do you think you can help me with a bit of work?” Tani asked. “The river is flooding and it is causing trouble.”

    “I will only make it get worse,” Cale said, picking up the tablet and reading the list made by Tom’s team.

    “I don’t need you to fix it, take Eren,” Tani said, finding a mug, he poured himself a half cup and sipped the bitter liquid. “There were foxes in trouble last night. I tried to soothe the river last night, but I could not.”

    He lifted his right wrist to show his cuffs.

    “I overused at the vineyard,” Tani said, smiling at a panic-stricken Eren. “It happens after a big use. Eren, do you mind?”

    “No,” Eren said, shaking her head. “I mean, yes, I will help.”

    Tani smiled at her.

    “Thank you.”

    “Stop making her feel guilty this early in the morning,” Cale said, placing the tablet on the table. He moved to the coffee maker, checked the state of the coffee, and sighed. “Stop drinking stale coffee.”

    Cale took the mug Tani held and the coffee pot to pour out the coffee and rinse at the sink. He was adding fresh water to the coffee pot when his cell phone buzzed.

    Tani frowned, wondering where he had left his own. He had not seen it since the day he was at the Arturo vineyard.

    “Hi Hera,” Cale said when he answered the call. “He’s right here. I’ll put you on speaker.”

    Cale placed his phone on the island table and returned to making coffee.

    Babu,” Hera said. “Where did you take your phone?”

    Tani chuckled and returned to his chair.

    “I don’t know,” Tani said.

    “Honestly,” Hera said, exasperation clear. “I’m going to find a cord to clip on the phone and have you wear it like a necklace. Uncle Amu won’t make it to the tour. We need you.”

    “No.” Tani started to protest, gaining Cale’s undivided attention.

    “Who is going to do it then?” Hera asked.

    “You or Tom,” Tani said.

    Hera sighed and would have started complaining but Cale stopped her.

    “Just a sec, Hera,” Cale muted the call and turned to Tani.

    “You promised to make an effort on this,” Cale said, glaring at Tani. “Running away is not helping you or him. Time keeps moving along.”

    “Why do you care so much?”

    “I’m not going to answer that,” Cale said, glancing at a fascinated Eren. “All I know is that you should do the tour today. If you don’t, Eren won’t help with the river, right Eren?”

    Eren started to protest inclusion, but Cale glared at her and she sighed.

    “Right?” she said, though it sounded more like a question.

    Tani scoffed, looking at her for a moment, and then he turned to Cale.

    “You’re enjoying this too much,” Tani said and reached for Cale’s phone. He unmuted the call. “Alright, Hera, what time should I be there?”

    “Before ten o’clock, you can use Tom’s office. We’ll be waiting for you,” Hera said.

    “See you,” Tani ended the call and studied Cale who was now making coffee. “You’re very invested in me and Dante.”

    “I’m just tired of watching the colossal disasters that happen between you,” Cale said. “I miss my domain and a peaceful existence.”

    “You can imagine how absurd that sounds from the Ekho god of calamity,” Tani pointed out.

    “You’re full of good fortune, but you never make it work for you,” Cale said, pouring Tani a fresh cup of coffee when it was ready. He brought the mug to Tani, his right brow raised. “Who is more absurd?”

    Tani drank his coffee in silence because he had no answer for Cale. He needed to deal with his indecisiveness. Right before ten o’clock, he teleported into Tom’s office after a hurried shower and a change of clothes.

    Hera was visibly relieved to see him. She hurried to his side to adjust his shirt, while Tom watched them from behind his large desk.

    “I am so glad you agreed to give this tour,” Hera said, arranging the mandarin collar on Tani’s white shirt. “Otherwise, Tom would have to, and he bores everyone to sleep.”

    Tom chuckled and Tani winked at him.

    Tani had left the top two buttons of the shirt open. Hera finished with the collar and brushed off lint from his shoulder. Tani tugged at the long sleeves of his shirt. He had used a bit of magic to turn the gold cuffs on his wrist into thin bracelets carved to look like a chain of Elderwood leaves.

    Tani smoothed his left hand over the short part of his hair on the left side.

    Hera made use of the comb she held to manage the long fringe of hair falling to the right side. She brushed his hair down his right side, straightening out red-brown curls into their cut, making sure his hair hid his right ear lobe. She used a finger to slide a few strands away from his forehead.

    Tani grinned at the intent look on her face as she brushed his hair.

    She was the one who had taken him to the salon. Hera and Deniz chose his hairstyle, turning it into a right undercut with his long hair brushed to one side to hide the gold Elderwood leaves on his right earlobe.

    Hera stepped away from him when she was satisfied with her work. She placed the comb in a small bag on Tom’s desk, and then took him in.

    They were anticipating the arrival of Dante’s students in a few minutes. Tom and Hera were handling the visit arrangements: clearing with the various departments, as well as the cafeteria.

    Tani had been last to arrive at Tom’s office.

    “How do I look?” Tani asked Hera.

    “Like the patron of The Elderwood Conservancy,” Hera said with a satisfied nod. She handed Tani gold-rimmed reading glasses that would mute the otherness of his eyes. Tani wore them without protest. “Am I right, Tom?”

    “Right,” Tom said, getting up from his chair behind the desk. “The alarm at the gate pinged my phone three minutes ago. They are here.”

    Tani breathed in and moved to the windows showing off the front of the building.

    His heart sped up when a few minutes later he saw a white staff bus driving up to the fortress’ front entrance. Despite the many hours Tani spent telling himself he should not get excited over Dante, his heart betrayed him when the man so much as appeared.

    Just knowing Dante was on the bus was enough to get his heart speeding.

    Tani let out a quiet sigh and slid his hands into his tailored black trousers. This was the start. He had no way to stop it, and he was afraid this time he was going to hurt too many people.

    Babu,” Tom said, coming to stand next to him. “Uncle Amu is sure you’ll not be as available after today. Should we be worried?”

    Tani stared at the white bus, which had slowed down, navigating around the fountain at the front and coming to a stop at the front doors.

    “The conservancy will continue,” Tani said. “You’re here. There is Uncle Amu, and Cale is around. Everything should run without a problem, the same way it has when I was away.”

    “Okay,” Tom said with a soft sigh.

    Tani looked behind him and was glad to see Hera on the phone.

    “I will ask you to make an appointment with the conservancy’s law firm,” Tani said, giving Tom a small smile. “I need to clean up a few things.”

    Tom studied him for a moment and then frowned.

    “I hope you know that I’m as attached to you as Hera and Deniz,” Tom said. “I know you disappear on us, but it is okay because we all know you’re around. Easy to meet. Easy to call. I’m asking you now. Can you not go somewhere we can’t reach you?”

    Tani turned to face Tom, unable to give him an answer. The look on Tom’s face reminded him of the first time he ran into Tom in this very fortress. It was a mix of challenge and determination.

    When Tom was twelve, he had been very angry at the world. His family lived on the outskirts of a city on the mainland. They hid their abilities because they could not share them in a rapidly changing modern world. Tom rebelled against his parents’ ideas. He resented having to hide his true self.

    He wanted to show his friends his gift of making the earth shift, making flowers bloom on notice, and whatever else he thought up to amuse himself. When they did not understand him, he ran along the beach on the mainland terrorizing anyone who dared pick on him for being a freak.

    One evening, Amu got a message from one of his contacts to check out a strange boy at the beach. Amu arrived just as Tom was busy throwing balls of sand at three boys. Amu ended up with a solid ball of sand in his mouth and became one of Tom’s victims. Tom was eternally shocked when he too received a mouthful of sand in his face in retaliation. Amu always gave back as good as he got, it was the way of the fox clan.

    Soon after, Amu brought Tom’s whole family to the fortress and gave them the task of taking care of The Elderwood Conservancy. Young Tom could play to his heart’s content in the forests surrounding the fortress. He met more people like him and made great friends who understood him.

    Tani was living at their station in East Africa then, but he would stop by to manage issues that cropped up with the fortress. On one such visit, he ran into twelve-year-old Tom and almost ate dirt from the garden at the front of the fortress, before there was a fountain.

    Tani grinned at the memory.

    Tom followed him for a whole week to discover how Tani had evaded his ball of dirt. He could not remember how Tom got him to teach him how to shift dirt in midair. The kid was a ball of persistence. As time moved on, he became Tom’s teacher, helping him with his abilities.

    Then Tom grew up. Their roles changed. Tani started relying on Tom to take care of the fortress, more and more. In a blink, here they were. Tom was all grown up.

    “Do you remember throwing balls of soil at people when you were twelve?” Tani asked, grinning when Tom scowled at him.

    “Why are you bringing up my dark days?” Tom asked, frowning at him.

    Tani chuckled.

    “You were such an angry kid,” Tani mused. “Looking at you now, who would believe it?”

    “You,” Tom said with a grin. “Uncle Amu ate a lot of sand.”

    “He did,” Tani agreed.

    Tom looked handsome as always. His thick dark hair was in a neat cut and combed back. His brown eyes were kind and his smile was ready. He dressed in proper suits when he was at work. Today he was in a grey suit with a white shirt and a burgundy tie.

    “I might not be able to give you the promise you want,” Tani said, his gaze shifting to Hera.

    Hera was still busy writing down a note, as she listened to the person on the other end of the call. She looked classy today, dressed in a navy blue sheath dress and black heels. Her braids were in a tight ponytail, the length of them falling down her back.

    Tani continued.

    “I will, however, make sure you’re all—”

    “Do not say ‘taken care of’,” Tom said, narrowing his gaze.

    Tani smiled and met Tom’s gaze.

    “It is the only thing I can say to you,” Tani said. “I have unfinished business…”

    “Then finish it, and still return to us,” Tom said, ending the conversation. “I’ll call the lawyers, but only because Uncle Amu would want me to. I expect to see you at my lastborn’s tenth birthday party, Tani Ryuzo. I should warn you, my wife will give me five kids.”

    Tani scoffed.

    “You don’t even have a girlfriend.”

    “Well, look at all that time we have together,” Tom grinned.

    “They are signed in,” Hera said, ending her call. “Rachel has led them to the waiting room. Ready, Babu?

    “Yep,” Tani said, and pulled his hands out of his pockets, fighting off nerves.

    “Here,” Tom said, holding out a black phone. “In case you leave the fortress and we need to call you.”

    “Ok.”

    Tani took the phone and slipped it into his trouser pocket, smiling at the determined look on Tom.

    Tani rubbed his hands together, suddenly looking forward to the tour.

    “We should start with the tower at the entrance,” Tani said. “I think they’ll get a kick out of the observatory, won’t they?”

    “Cale was painting up there a month ago,” Hera said, picking up a folder from Tom’s desk. She led the way out of Tom’s office, with Tom bringing up the rear. “Something about helping the restoration crew.”

    “Cale sure has a lot of time,” Tani said, shaking his head as he followed Hera. “He had better not have installed gargoyles on the roofs.”

    Tom chuckled behind him, as he closed the office door. They headed to the waiting room at the reception together.

    ****

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