But he didn't split it wide. Instead, his fingers trailed across the trunk reverently--as his emotional grid nearly collapsed from the pain he was feeling.
Concerned for his mental health and the suffering he was going through, she raised a hand to stop him. "Wait. Are you sure you want to--"
He cracked the trunk open, pulling the front halves wide--
Acres of red satin . . . acres of deep bloodred satin spilled out of the LV's confines, falling onto the carpet.
It was a proper mating gown. The kind of thing that was passed down from female to female. The sort of dress that took your breath away even if you weren't a girlie-girl.
Xhex's eyes snapped up to the Brother. He wasn't looking at what he'd brought for her. His stare was locked on the wall across the room, his expression one of forbearance as if what he was doing was killing him.
"Why are you bringing me this?" she whispered, recognizing it for what it had to be. She knew little about the Brother, but she was well aware his shellan had been shot by the enemy. And this had to be Wellesandra's mating gown. "It's agony for you."
"Because a female should have a proper dress to walk down . . . the . . ." He had to clear his throat once more. "This dress was last worn by John's sister on her mating day to the king."
Xhex narrowed her eyes. "So this is from John?"
"Yes," he said hoarsely.
"You're lying--I mean no disrespect, but you're not telling me the truth." She glanced down at all that red satin. "It's incredibly beautiful. But I just don't understand why you would show up here now, tonight, and offer to let me wear it--because your emotions are very personal at this moment in time and you can't even look at the thing."
"As I said, my reasons are private. But it would be . . . a well-intended gesture if you would be mated in it."
"Why is this so important to you."
A female voice interrupted them. "Because he was there at the very beginning."
Xhex wheeled around. In the doorway, standing between the jambs, was a black hooded figure and her first thought was that it was the Scribe Virgin . . . except there was no light glowing beneath the robes.
Her second thought was that the grid of this female . . . was a blueprint of Xhex's own.
To the point where it was identical.
The figure limped forward and Xhex found herself stumbling back and tripping on something. As she went down, she tried to catch her balance on the bed and missed, landing on her ass on the floor.
Their grids were absolutely identical, not in terms of emotions, but the construction itself. Identical . . . as a mother's and daughter's would be.
The female brought her hands up to her hood and slowly lifted that which covered her face.
"Jesus . . . Christ."
The exclamation came from Tohrment, and the snap of his voice shifted the female's iron gray eyes to him. She bowed in slow reverence. "Tohrment . . . son of Hharm. One of my saviors."
Xhex was vaguely aware of the Brother bracing himself on the trunk, as if his knees had voted to take a holiday on him. But what she was truly concerned with were the features that had been revealed. They were so like her own, more rounded, true . . . more delicate, yes . . . but the bone structure was the same.
"Mother . . ." Xhex breathed.
As the female's eyes swung back, she did the same search-and-memorize routine on Xhex's face. "Verily . . . you are beautiful."
Xhex touched her own cheek. "How . . ."
Tohrment's voice was full of shock as he demanded, "Yes . . . how?"
The female came forward a little farther with that limp--and Xhex instantly wanted to know who or what had harmed her: Although there was no sense to any of this--she'd been told her true mother had died in childbirth, for godsakes--she wanted no injury to ever befall this sad, lovely creature in the robes.
"The night of your birth, daughter mine, I . . . I did die. But when I sought entry unto the Fade, I was not permitted to pass. The Scribe Virgin, however, in all Her mercies, did allow me sequestering on the Far Side and therein I have e'er stayed, serving the Chosen as penance for my . . . death. I am still in service to a Chosen, and have come here to be on this side to care for her. But . . . in truth, I have arrived unto this plane to finally look upon you in person. I have long watched and prayed for you from the Sanctuary. . . . and now that I see you, I find . . . I am well aware that there is much you would need to consider and have explained and be angered over . . . But if you should be of an open heart to me, I should like to forge . . . an affection. I can understand if it is too little, too late. . . ."
Xhex blinked. As lame as it made her, it was all she could do . . . apart from absorb the female's incredible sorrow.