Dean woke to heat, weight, and the distinct sense that he was being watched by a creature with far too much fur and entirely too much confidence.
He opened one eye.
Boreas was on the bed.
Not at the foot of it in so respectful, well-trained, aristocratic-dog situation. On it. A vast wall of malamute and imperial shalessness sprawled across the lower half of the mattress as if the suite, the furniture, and likely half the palace had been constructed for his comfort specifically.
Dean stared at him for a second.
Boreas stared back.
The dog’s brown eyes were calm, unbothered, and carrying exactly the sa energy Arion sotis brought to diplomatic etings: yes, I’m here, yes, I belong here, and no, you do not outrank enough to complain.
Dean let his head sink deeper into the pillow and looked toward the other side of the bed.
Empty.
The sheets still held heat. Arion had not been gone long.
It explained the scent in the room, which was still heavy with Arion in a way that made Dean acutely aware that the absence was recent rather than aningful. Vetiver, scorched earth, and the quiet weight of dominant pheromones are woven into the suite so thoroughly that even the cooled sumr air couldn’t quite thin it out. Boreas slled of it too, not just because he was Arion’s dog, but because apparently the universe had decided that what Dean truly needed in his life was a giant wolf-shaped creature marinated in crown prince energy.
Boreas thumped his tail once against the mattress.
Dean narrowed his eyes. "You look smug."
The dog yawned.
Dean pushed himself up onto one elbow and imdiately beca aware of several things at once: the fact that he had slept very well, the fact that his body still rembered exactly why, and the fact that the bed looked as though it had survived an argunt between weather systems rather than two n with poor boundaries and excellent motivation.
That felt, if not respectable, at least morally correct.
Boreas lifted his head and shifted closer by approximately half a mountain.
Dean looked down at the new arrangent. "I see. You’re not here as company. You’re here as surveillance."
Boreas, insultingly, looked very much like a dog who understood the accusation and had elected not to deny it.
Dean let out a breath through his nose and sat up fully, one hand dragging through his hair. The room beyond the bed was bright already, sumr light pouring through the tall windows and laying warm rectangles across the carpet and chairs and the low table near the hearth. Soone - Arion, almost certainly - had opened the inner curtains fully before leaving, which ant the suite had the indecently civilized appearance of a place where no one had ever made catastrophic decisions.
Dean looked at Boreas again.
The dog’s head had co to rest on Dean’s thigh now, with all the subtlety of a siege engine.
The fur was thick and cool near the surface, warr beneath, and the weight of that massive head against him felt less like affection and more like his leg going numb in less than five minutes.
Dean stared at the windows for a mont and knew, with the particular clarity reserved for deeply annoying truths, that Arion had done this on purpose.
Not the dog, necessarily.
Boreas likely required no one’s permission to occupy strategic furniture. But the arrangent. The timing. The absence made it less empty by weight and scent and watchfulness. Arion left Dean asleep but not entirely alone. Arion built, once again, a structure around him before Dean could decide whether he wanted one.
Dean was very aware of it.
Very aware that Arion was trying to shield him.
From the eting, the implications and the danger had clicked into place over the last few days and refused now to unmake themselves.
Dean hated all of that.
He hated more that for the mont, tired and warm and sore in a way he absolutely intended never to discuss with Seven, he was letting Arion do it.
For now.
Only for now.
Because the truth was ugly and not especially flattering: after a week of recovery, family disappointnt, political containnt, and the deeply offensive realization that his second ability had moved from private irregularity to regional concern, the shield did not feel like an insult.
It felt like rest.
Dean let his hand drop to Boreas’s neck and scratched through the dense fur there. The dog leaned harder into it with the dignified greed of an animal who had never once in his life questioned whether he was wanted.
Lucky bastard.
"You know," Dean told him, "I’m going to object to this eventually."
Boreas’s ear twitched.
Dean looked down at him. "Not to you. You’re mostly decorative intimidation with opinions."
The tail thumped again.
"Arion," Dean clarified. "The shielding. The hovering in more strategic formats. The whole ’I built a wall around you while you were sleeping’ thing. That’s not sustainable."
Boreas blinked.
Which was fair.
The dog had not asked for state-level emotional nuance before breakfast.
Dean rubbed once at his face with his free hand and stared toward the closed inner door that led into the dressing room and bath. No sound from there. Arion had left fully. Not for long, probably. Arion was many things, but voluntarily distant after the last several nights was unlikely to beco one of them.
Dean leaned back against the headboard and let the quiet settle around him.
The bond humd low under everything else, less urgent now than in the hospital, less raw than in the days after the ring, but no less there. He was getting used to that too, which should probably have worried him more than it did. The line of awareness that told him Arion was elsewhere in the suite wing, alive, moving, occupied, and still sohow pointed toward him even through walls and polished floors and imperial routine.
He looked down at Boreas again. "Did he leave you here because he thinks I’ll bolt?"
Boreas closed his eyes.
Dean frowned. "That’s not reassuring."
The dog opened one eye just enough to communicate that reassurance had not been the assignnt.
Dean snorted softly despite himself.
There was movent outside the main suite door a minute later, staff noise that registered more as organized atmosphere than interruption. Boreas’s head lifted at once. So did Dean’s.
The dog did not growl.
Which ant it was soone familiar and, most importantly tolerated by the giant brute.
A knock ca a second later.
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