“What the fuck? What is happening to her?” Rhys’ tone filled with panic.
Talia made a strangled noise, as if Rhys was choking the life out of her. “Recall your magic and unhand me, Van Helsing! I am here beneath a vow of protection!”
Wrapping my arms around my middle, I whimpered as my vision doubled before failing me. Darkness swallowed it entirely as my stomach roiled then forced bile up through my throat as my head slammed against the floor, removing all coherent thought.
Chapter Thirty-Three
Acontinualwhooshingnoisebrought my consciousness to awareness. My fingers slowly traced an infinity symbol over my lower abdomen. Lifting my hand, my eyelids pried apart, gazing into azure depths that promised violence. Warmth shot through me, issuing a delicious shiver through my entire frame.
Rhys’ hair was disheveled. His suit jacket was hung over the back of the chair he occupied. He’d rolled up his sleeves and unbuttoned several of the buttons on his shirt. The skin beneath his eyes was dark, as if he’d not slept enough.
“Nyota?” I whispered through the dryness of my mouth.
He studied my face before slowly shaking his head. Turning away from me, he reached for something out of sight. When he turned toward me, he held a glass filled with water in his hand. Slipping the other behind my back, he assisted me as he brought the glass up to my lips.
“Never again, Love. Do you fucking understand? Her life isn’t worth the price you’d have paid if Talia hadn’t been here. Youcould’ve died.” The fear exposed in his voice had my eyebrows pushing up on my forehead.
“I didn’t intend to die,” I admitted and saw the flash of anger in his gaze as it lit. “I didn’t kill the healer, either. I swear it to you, Van Helsing.”
“You’re fucking me. I think you and I are past using last names at this stage of our relationship.” Leaning forward, Rhys’ lips brushed against my forehead.
Fear trickled down my spine as the question posed on my tongue. “Bullet?”
“Our child’s a fighter, just like his mother,” he murmured.
My heart fluttered as relief washed through me. “His mother?”
Rhys’ mouth curved into a smirk. “Or her mother. I refused the healer’s offer to know what you carried. That’s something we should learn together, Love.” Using his fingers, he tucked an unruly curl behind my ear.
“Rhys,” I whispered thickly, knowing he wasn’t telling me everything.
Sitting back in his chair, he steepled his fingers in front of his face. “Nyota’s condition isn’t clear. She’s no longer in crippling pain, but she hasn’t regained consciousness yet, either.”
The corners of my lips slanted down into a frown. “I didn’t save her.”
“What you did was reckless and selfish, Remi. You could’ve died. You could’ve lost our child. Why would you be so damn foolish to even attempt such a thing in a weakened state?” His voice shook as he scolded me.
Swallowing past the narrowing in my throat, I shook my head. “Nyota’s my friend. My silver—” I paused, gulping past the lump forming. “—It’s not an easy death, Rhys. She didn’t deserve to die for protecting me or our child. She saved us and in doing so she was suffering undreamed of agony.” Tears pricked my eyesas he snorted, then pushed his long, slender fingers through his tousled, dark silken strands.
“It was idiotic,” he chided, as if he thought I wasn’t processing what he said.
Snorting, I shook my head from side to side, closing my eyes against the way he stared at me. “I couldn’t do that to our child.” Swallowing past the guilt, I struggled against tears.
“Do what, Love?”
The area behind my nose burned as tears rolled free of the delicate hold that I held them back with. “You’d have looked at our babe and only seen Nyota’s agonizing death. You and our child deserve a bond that isn’t tainted with the history of our bloodlines or the death of your baby sister.” A sob bubbled from my throat as I turned away, lying on my side.
A bevy of healers rushed through the door as the chaotic whooshing noises stalled. Hands pushed me back flat onto the bed. Another pair of hands adjusted the instrument attached to my belly, causing the butterflies in my abdomen to take flight once more.
“You need to remain on your back, ma’am. Until we’re done monitoring the lord’s heir, it’s required you remain so,” the oldest of the healers scolded, her tone beaming with disapproval. “If you can’t, I’ll restrain you to the bed myself, happily. If you want the truth, the likes of you shouldn’t be housing the heir. You don’t deserve to breathe the same air as the Van Helsing.” Lifting her chin, I forcibly bit my tongue to not issue slurs or insults back at her.
Rhys bolted from his chair, gripping the healer by the collar of her green gown. Twisting it in his fist, he lifted her from the floor. “Hold your sharp tongue, healer. You’ll speak to her with the respect she’s both earned and deserves. Remington is my mate and the mother of my child. Illeron murdered the girl. I watched the footage myself. Twice. He ran from my challenge,but when or if he returns, I’ll personally ensure he suffers for what he did to her. She’s under the same vow of protection I gave you. She’s the Lady of House Van Helsing. Nod if you understand me,” Rhys demanded coldly. The healer’s head bobbed slowly as her mouth mimicked a fish-out-of-water.
“I understand, Van Helsing! My mistake!” She howled.
Rhys released her, then took a step back before curling his fingers into his palms, forming angry fists at his sides. His shoulders rose and fell with angry breaths, and his terrifying glare burned into the woman he directed his simmering rage at.
“See that you tread carefully where she’s concerned. I hear anything about you harassing or treating her like anything other than a queen, you’ll be packing and leaving this household so quickly your head will fucking spin. Nod if you understand,” he demanded, until her head continually bounced up and down like a bobblehead. Rhys shoved her away from him, as if he didn’t trust himself.