with so many years ago.
But this was also the man who was an emissary from the European Ministry. The man he hadn’t seen in centuries. He could be different now. This could be an act. A lie.
The sound of Marcus clearing his throat had Aiden’s head snapping up again. God, how long had he been lost in thought? He needed to get his head pulled together. This was nonsense. Whether Ronan was the man he’d known as a human or a vampire aiming to kill him didn’t matter. His first responsibility was to his family, to protecting the vampires within his domain.
His eyes fell on Ronan’s smiling face, and Aiden found himself speechless once again. He was alive. It hadn’t been a dream or a hallucination brought on by stress. Ronan was truly alive and standing in his doorway.
“I can tell by your expression that you didn’t expect to see me again,” Ronan teased.
“I think it’s more that I didn’t trust my memory that I’d truly seen you last night,” Aiden murmured.
Ronan’s smile widened as he stepped farther into the room. Tonight, he was dressed a little more informally. Dark slacks wrapped around narrow hips while his button-down navy shirt with a tonal diamond pattern was open at the throat.
“I had the same thought. It’s why I rushed back over here tonight. To make sure I hadn’t dreamed it all up.”
“Will the rest of the envoy be joining you?” Marcus asked stiffly.
Shaking his head, Ronan’s smile never wavered as he looked over at Marcus. “Nope. They don’t even know I’m here.”
“A social call?” Aiden said.
“Yes, definitely.”
It took some effort for Aiden to pull his eyes from Ronan, but he smiled up at his son. “Thank you, Marcus. You’re free to spend some time with Ethan or check that your brothers are staying out of trouble.”
Marcus growled what sounded like “Highly doubtful” but left Aiden alone with Ronan.
Aiden turned his attention to Ronan, who was smiling softly as he looked over the room Aiden had claimed as his office. When he’d officially moved into Marcus’s home, his son had tried to give him the office he’d set up, but Aiden had refused. He liked that Marcus had an office between the music room with his favorite piano and the office where Ethan completed his college studies and other work. It was their space and kept his son close to his two loves in life—Ethan and music.
The room Aiden had chosen was on the first floor, toward the back of the house, with a wall of windows looking out on the forest at the edge of the property. It wasn’t a particularly large space, but there was an openness to it that Aiden enjoyed. Of course, he didn’t spend much time in here. He was usually in the library with his sons or relaxing in what Ethan had dubbed the “family room” because it was the space with the extremely comfortable furniture and large TV.
“So this is the life I escaped,” Ronan said after a moment. He stood in front of a bookshelf that contained a motley collection of books Aiden had deemed his favorites over the long years. “Endless meetings and dealing with people who want things they can’t have. I can’t say I’m sorry I missed out on it.”
Aiden snorted, relaxing a little in his chair. “You didn’t care for anything that took you out of your saddle or removed a sword from your hand.”
Ronan’s mouth fell open in mock surprise. “I don’t know what you’re talking about. I also appreciated the harvest and all the wenches at the brothels.”
“And they appreciated how liberal you were with your coin.”
Sliding his hands into his pockets, Ronan partially turned toward Aiden, a sad smile on his lips. “Would you believe me if I told you that I thought by drowning myself in women I could forget how much I wanted just one kiss from my best friend?”
Heat burned across Aiden’s cheeks, and he had to lower his gaze as his heart gave a happy little flutter. His throat was dry, and he barely croaked out, “Ronan, I…”
“I would have traded all those women for just one kiss from you and been completely happy for the rest of my human life,” Ronan said in a soft but fierce voice.
“People change,” Aiden whispered. That truth was the only thing keeping him in his chair rather than rushing over to Ronan’s arms. So many years of unknown history separated them. They were different men now.