"Priscilla, I ask your forgiveness yet again." His voice was very gentle in her ear. "I didn't want to distress you."
She drew a shaky breath and stood away. "I—" Words failed her. Goddess, she thought, twice a fool.
He sighed and guided her to the couch. Sitting beside her, he took her hand. "When I came to get you from the precinct house in Theopholis, Priscilla, you said something." She tensed. What
was
real from all she thought she remembered of that night?
"What you said," he pursued gently, "was, 'Shan, there wasn't enough time to be sure.'"
She relaxed. She did remember that. "True."
"It might still be true, Priscilla. There's no need for haste. And many reasons to be . . . sure."
She struggled with it, trying to balance the Liaden concept of pleasure-love with what she felt in him even now, with what she herself felt. "I asked . . . pleasure. And you want it!"
"Priscilla, my very dear." He raised her hand, lips brushing her palm, cheek stroking her fingertips. "Of course I want it. But not at the expense of your certainty. I'd be a poor friend if I made that trade." He sighed. "And I've already made you angry with me."
"Not angry," she protested, knowing he could read that lack in her. "It's—Shan, it's
wrong
to—to open up so far. To let someone see your—allness."
"Even when that someone is my dear friend? Even when I wish to give the gift?"
She opened her mouth, then closed it. "It is how I was taught," she told him humbly. "I never thought to question it." She had the name of the searingly bright emotion then, and felt tears forming. Too little time, indeed . . . .
He sensed her understanding and nodded. "There are other reasons not to rush, as I said. Consider your new position, for one matter. Will you have people say that you are first mate because you and the captain are lovers?"
Her chin rose. "It's our business, not theirs!"
"Theirs," he corrected. "It's a matter of melant'i, and of ship's administration. The crew must know that the two people who run this ship are honorable, are trustworthy—are
capable.
That proved, you may take any lover—and as many!—as you wish. You do have an extensive amount of training to undergo, you know, before you'll be up to Kayzin's level."
Impossibly, she laughed. "As if I didn't know it!"
He grinned, relieved and admiring. "Will you be staying on Liad, Priscilla?"
She nodded. "I'm guesting with Lina until I find a house of my own."
"Good. Then you'll be able to get a firm grounding during the time we're docked. And the next run is the long one—one full Standard. Enough time, I'd think, for everyone to know what works and what doesn't." He squeezed her fingers. "We might not make a very good team in spite of it all, Priscilla. That happens sometimes."
"We're a good team," she said, startled to hear the Seer's lilt in her voice. "We'll be a better one. The best."
The silver eyes glinted mischief. "You sound sure of yourself, Thodelm. Would you care to place a small wager? Say, a cantra? Issue to be decided at Solcintra docking, next run-end."
"Done." She grinned, surprised at finding herself so easy, and read the same deep serenity in Shan. On some level, then, they understood each other. The pattern of the Goddess's dance would see to the rest. She gripped the big hand tightly, then let it go and stood. "Sleep well, my friend."
"Sleep well, Priscilla."
She moved to the door.
"Priscilla!"
"Yes?"
"May I call on you at Lina's, Priscilla? It might aid certainty."
She smiled, peace filling her utterly. "I'll be all joy to see you."