I raced to catch her before she passed out and fell flat on her face. “Zel, no!”
Holding my son in one arm, I pushed the woman I was going to marry back into bed and brought the sheet up over her shuddering body. Her face was ashen, waxy with stress.
My heart hadn’t known such love. I’d never believed I could feel so f**king happy.
I stood numbly, drinking in how much I loved her. How much she’d given me.
She snatched Vasily from my arms, hugging him close. Tears glassed her eyes.
“Goddammit, Roan. You almost gave me a f**king heart attack.” She curved her body around Vasily. He began to cry under her fierce embrace.
His wails were music to my ears because there was nothing else. No orders. No rush of conditioning.
All there was were the harsh shrieks of my son and the ragged pants of the woman I adored.
I felt like f**king laughing.
Livid tears spilled down her cheeks. “What the hell were you doing? My God. Can I never trust you? Will you never be free?” Her body shook as shock took over. “How can we raise them together if you can’t ever be around them? What hope is there? What—”
It wasn’t fair that she was so distraught and I was walking on air.
Grabbing her chin, I jerked her mouth up and kissed her. I kissed her like I’d always wanted to. With my entire soul.
I didn’t have to fight anything. I didn’t have to watch my thoughts or guard myself against her touch.
It was f**king heaven.
Twenty-eight years and I’d finally found what I’d always wanted.
Happiness.
Her lips froze beneath mine. I tasted salt from her tears and sorrow from her tongue. Pulling away, I murmured, “Don’t cry.”
Her eyes widened as she rocked a screaming Vasily. “Don’t cry? If I can’t cry over the fact I love a man who can’t be around his children what can I cry about? It’s hopeless. Everything—it’s over.”
My stomach twisted at the desolation in her voice.
“I can’t do this anymore. I can’t live in fear that I’ll find you’ve ransacked the nursery or stolen our children’s lives. I want you gone—”
The dagger went straight through my heart. There was no conditioning to wade through or fog of anger. Everything affected me a hundred times stronger. A thousand times deeper.
It was like exposing myself to a whole new existence where the sun burned my skin, tears dissolved my will, and Zel’s sadness ripped out my heart with claws.
“Don’t. It’s over, dobycha. It’s over.”
She sniffed, dropping her eyes. “I know it’s over. It has to be.” A sob escaped her lips.
Something monumental had happened. Something I never dreamed was possible. And instead of celebrating she was trying to cut me out of her life.
I’m not letting you go. Ever.
Prying one of her arms from around Vasily's shoulders, I tugged her hand toward me.
Her lips popped open. She fought me. “Let me go. Stop it.” Her eyes narrowed. “Take your hands off me, Operative Fox.”
I paused, tensing for a wave of conditioning, so used to obeying all my life.
Nothing.
Heavenly nothing.
Blessed f**king nothing.
No rush of orders.
No crush of commands.
No debilitating need to kill.
I smiled and unwound her tight fingers. “You said you trusted me. Trust me one last time.” My voice even sounded different. Less gruff. Less bound to a past I’d always run from.
Zel froze, then let her hand go slack. She never took her eyes off me as I very carefully laid her hand on my forearm.
I looked up, drowning in her emerald gaze. “What do you see?”
She shook her head. “I don’t understand. What are you trying to do?”
I removed her hand and put it against my chest, directly over my heart. Her body tensed, feeling the racing beat beneath her fingertips. Her fear surrounded me but slowly a trace of hope filled her eyes.
“What do you feel?” I murmured.
She gasped, twitching her fingers against my chest. Her touch sent boomerangs of aliveness and heat through me. Branding me. Making me hers. Always hers.
“You’re different.” Cocking her head, she narrowed her eyes. “What happened? What’s changed? I don’t understand.”
I laughed, feeling weightless.
Guiding her hand up my chest, I shivered as her gentle touch came up my throat and tangled with Clara’s silver star around my neck. Her face spasmed with grief before I brought her fingers up and up, until her entire palm cupped my scarred cheek.
I never let her touch my scar.
I hated it.
It was hotwired to my conditioning.
It ruled my life for so long.
Dropping my fingers from hers, I whispered, “What do you sense?”
The hope she’d nursed exploded into her entire body. Vasily stopped crying and a brilliant smile lit her tear-streaked face. “It’s gone?”
My heart expanded until I couldn’t breathe. My legs wobbled in sheer gratefulness.
“Oh, my God. Roan… it’s true?”
Shivers captured my skin sending goosebumps and every emotion that had been muted all my life over my skin. Love exploded my heart. I nodded. “It’s gone. All of it. Every last bit.”
Her hand clutched my cheek harder, dropped to cup my chin. “Are you sure?” Her eyes danced with hope and hesitation.
I wanted to scream. I wanted to dance. I couldn’t stand still with the joy frothing in my stomach. “Positive. Every bad thing inside. Every f**ked-up need to obey. Every mind-twisting command is gone. It’s disappeared.”
She went from ashen to f**king glowing. Fresh tears filled her eyes, but this time they beamed with happiness. “You’re free?”
I laughed, stepping backward.
Every movement was lighter.
My vision brighter.
“I’m free.”
“I’m normal.”
I’m a father.
My eyes wrenched wide and I spun around. I was a father and I was free. I’d never thought I could have so much.
Striding to the cot, I scooped up Vera in her pretty pink cap. Her round eyes opened, locking onto mine.
Blue to white. I fell madly in love.
My heart expanded to include a little girl I’d lost. A little girl I’d gained. And a son and woman I belonged to.
“Hello, Vera,” I whispered.
The little girl yawned, her tiny lips stretching wide. She squirmed in her blankets. I knew right then and there things would be okay.
I brought her to my lips and pressed a kiss on her forehead.