magazine, trying to look busy. One of the older males even picked up an entire Caldwell Courier Journal and put it up to his face.
Well, she could play at the pretend-to-be-busy thing, too.
Making all kinds of tapping noises on her keyboard, she tried to camo the full-body fluster she had going on.
She’d never seen him before. Like, ever. So maybe he had just come over from the Old Country—except what were the chances of that? The vast majority of the population had been in and around Caldwell for how long? Plus no accent. So he must be … well, a stranger, obviously. But he had to be a member of the aristocracy if he’d heard about the training program, right?
Glancing over at the archway he’d come through, she found herself wishing he would hand-deliver that application back.
Who was he—
“Paradise?”
She jumped. And focused on her father, who’d come out of nowhere. “Yes?” Realizing her voice sounded too close to normal, and she was supposed to still be angry at him, she cleared her throat. “What may I do for you?”
Like he was simply another person she was taking care of.
“I just wanted to inquire how you were doing?”
His affect was nothing aggressive. Instead, he seemed so worried—damn it. She wanted to keep being angry at him.
She sighed. “I’m fine, Father.”
“You’re doing such a marvelous job. Truly. Everything is running so smoothly. The King is so pleased—I am so proud.”
See, this was just like him. It was impossible to be pissy when you were confronted by this … this earnest, his-version-of-an-apology stuff.
“May I bring you something to eat or drink?”
“You’re not a doggen, Father.”
“Perhaps you need a break?”
“No.” She rolled her eyes. Got to her feet. Walked around to him. “You drive me nuts.”
She gave him a hug because that was what he was looking for. Then she stepped back. “Oster, son of Sanye, is next.”
As she indicated the gentlemale in question, and the civilian got to his feet, her father gave her hand a squeeze and then reassumed his official duties.
Following his example, she sat down again. Looked at the computer in front of her. And still felt caged.
But what was she going to do? Even though he technically couldn’t stop her—she was of age, and there had been no specification on the application that a female had to get a male elder to approve the submission—she nonetheless found herself paralyzed.
It was hard to rebel against your parents when there was only one left.
And he was all you had in this world.
Selena hated pretty much everything about the exam, the blood draw, the X-ray process. And she felt bad about that. It wasn’t that Doc Jane was anything less than perfectly gentle and very kind. But to be in one of those hospital johnnies, getting poked and prodded, twisted and pictured, was like having the countdown to some kind of detonation happen right in front of you.
Plus, she hated the fake-lemon antiseptic they had to use on everything.
And the fact that she was cold even after they put a blanket over her legs.
And then there was that bright light hanging over her head.
Mostly, though, it wasn’t the external environment that was hard to put up with. It was the internal screaming that she found she had to hold in through force of will.
“Okay, I think that’s our last X-ray,” Doc Jane said from over by the desk.
On the computer screen, a ghostly image of Selena’s knee was front and center, but she refused to look at it.
She had to stay lying down until Doc Jane came back over and moved the X-ray arm out of the way. And as she sat up, the doctor took the plate from underneath her leg and put it aside.
“So … what now?” Selena asked.
She was numb. She was cold. She was sweaty.
But mostly she was feeling stiff. And not just in her hands.
“Let me take a good look at the X-rays with Manny. And then we’ll come talk to you.”
Selena shifted her legs off and looked over the lip of the table at her feet. She flexed one and then the other, her brain going into a tailspin of Better? Worse? The same?
“When?” she said roughly.
“Why don’t we meet around dawn? Trez could come down here with you if you like—”
The crash came from outside of the room, and both of them looked to the door across the way. When the sound repeated itself, Doc Jane raced over—and so did Selena.
After all, she wasn’t frozen