She started praising him. Extensively, enthusiastically, with the particular brand of complete honesty that had always been one of the things he found most genuine about her. His strength. How cool he’d been in the battle. How extraordinary it had all been to watch.
And then, with the sa complete honesty and no particular awareness of the specific timing, she ntioned her father and Archon Vyra.
"Even Aunt Vyra," she said cheerfully, her face still buried in his chest, "her strength is nothing compared to even your clone. And Father—"
She giggled.
"Father is not even a tenth of what your clone was."
Leon’s spatial awareness, which had been passively tracking the general landscape around them, caught a very specific piece of information.
Ira’s father had been making his way toward them for so ti. The man had survived since before the realm’s isolation—one of the very few Pyrans who had lived long enough to have genuine knowledge of the outside world, which made him one of the more formidable presences in the race regardless of whether his raw strength currently matched that knowledge.
He had been worried about his daughter. That read clearly in the way he’d been moving—searching, covering ground systematically, the pattern of soone who had been carrying concern and hadn’t yet confird it was unnecessary.
He’d found her approximately fifteen seconds ago.
He had stopped when he found her.
What he was looking at was his daughter—his Ira—wrapped around Leon with the complete comfort and absence of self-consciousness that only existed between people who had moved well past the early stages of whatever this was. Her arms were around his neck. Her face on his chest. The intimacy of it didn’t require any specific action to communicate exactly what it was.
The man was old enough to know. He didn’t need a narration.
Leon had felt the initial presence stop moving and understood it imdiately. He’d kept his face neutral and his attention on Ira, which was genuine—but the corner of his mind tracking the father’s position was registering everything.
He was going to co forward, Leon noted internally until she started talking.
The mont Ira’s voice reached him clearly—that cheerful, completely unguarded giggle, followed by the words about her father not being a tenth of the clone—Leon felt the man go very still in a way that was different from his earlier stillness.
The spatial awareness painted a picture: a man standing at distance, having arrived with the intention of interrupting or at minimum making his presence known, who had just heard his daughter laugh about his inadequacy to her lover within thirty seconds of Leon’s arrival.
The stillness lasted for a long mont.
Then, with controlled breathing that Leon’s awareness could detect as deliberate—the specific rhythm of soone choosing not to react to sothing they very much wanted to react to—the man turned around and walked back in the direction he’d co from.
Blade straight through the heart, Leon thought.
He was laughing in his mind. Completely and thoroughly, the internal version of it that didn’t touch his face at all.
His grip on Ira tightened slightly, an affectionate adjustnt that she wouldn’t have read as anything other than what it was. His eyes softened, looking at the top of her head.
She has no idea her father was just standing there.
He did. He’d known precisely when the man arrived, had tracked every second of his presence, had felt the exact mont the words landed and the exact mont the man decided retreat was the only dignified available option.
He also rembered, quite vividly, the first eting. The way Ira’s father had looked at him then—the assessnt that had been barely concealed, the particular combination of skepticism and territorial instinct that Leon had read without difficulty. The way the entire early dynamic had made clear that this man had every intention of remaining an obstacle.
If not for Ira, the shape of that situation would have been considerably less comfortable.
So.
The father-in-law—which was how Leon had quietly categorized him for so ti now, with the forward placent of that term carrying its own mild satisfaction—would be coming with them. Into the World Fragnt. Into an environnt where he would encounter Leon regularly, and where Ira, being entirely herself, would continue to say exactly what she thought about exactly whatever she happened to be thinking about.
Including, apparently, comparative assessnts of combat strength delivered directly into her lover’s chest while her father stands fifteen ters away.
She had no idea. She was utterly guileless about it. That was entirely the point—she wasn’t doing it to wound anyone, she was simply being Ira, which ant the honesty ca out the sa regardless of who was in range to receive it.
Leon found this profoundly entertaining in a way he had absolutely no intention of correcting.
Not even slightly overboard, he thought, his hand still moving slowly on her back. Entirely proportionate. He had his chance to be decent at the start.
It was devious. He was aware of that.
He liked it anyway.
Ira had moved on to sothing else now, still talking, the rambling quality of it exactly what it was—soone letting the tension of the battle drain out through the path of least resistance, which in her case was words and the warmth of his arms.
Leon listened, and held her, and kept the laughter entirely to himself.
Seraphine, standing close by with her own carefully arranged expression, had watched all of this.
She had not missed any of it.
After she’d said everything she wanted to say—the praise, the rambling, the cheerful devastation of her father’s reputation—Ira finally went quiet.
The silence had a different quality from the talking. She stayed where she was, her arms still around his neck, but the motion stopped. The words stopped. She just existed there for a mont, close and still.
Then she looked up at him.
Directly. Her red eyes found his from that distance, which was close enough that looking directly ant sothing different than it did from across a room.
Whatever she found when she looked seed to catch her off guard.
The blush started at her cheeks and moved outward—a warmth spreading across her already red-toned face that deepened it further, the color visible even against her natural complexion. Her expression shifted into sothing that didn’t have the sa ease as her rambling had. Sothing more uncertain. More aware of the specific distance between them and what that distance was and wasn’t.
Her eyes moved—briefly, almost involuntarily—to his lips.
Then back to his eyes.
Then to his lips again, slower this ti, less like an accident.
Her arms, still around his neck, had stopped being casual. The awareness was in every part of how she was holding herself, that specific quality of soone who has suddenly beco conscious of exactly where they are and exactly where soone else is relative to them.
She was moving slightly closer. Incrental. Almost like she wasn’t fully authorizing the movent herself, like her body had decided on a direction and her mind was following rather than leading.
"Leon," she said, her voice coming out softer than her normal register, carrying a ekness that was genuinely rare from her, "can I have—"
AHEM.
The sound ca from the side with the particular weight of sothing that was not a natural throat clearing but a deliberate deploynt of one—a sound that carried an entire sentence’s worth of aning compressed into a single controlled exhalation.
Leon turned his head.
Seraphine stood approximately three ters away.
She was looking at him with an expression that was composed with surgical precision—pleasant on the surface, attentive, completely readable to him and probably only to him as sothing that was not pleasant in the slightest underneath that surface.
The look had the quality of an abyss, making eye contact.
Patient. Quiet. Infinite.
Hello, it said, without saying anything. I am still here. I have always been here. I will continue to be here.
Leon held her gaze for exactly one second.
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