of it, but I didn’t know about the other one. I haven’t seen anything, but that doesn’t mean much considering how clogged my head gets from touching people all day. My best advice is to keep him at your house and try not to excite him too much. If he is getting visions, the quiet and relaxation will help,” Scepta suggested.
“What if it’s more than visions? I’ve never seen someone see the
future like that,” Axis said. It had been disconcerting, like Levi was blinking in and out of reality.
“Hmmm, got me. I’ll call you back as soon as I have answers,” Scepta promised. “Tell him not to suppress them though. It’ll back up and build pressure behind the block. That’s probably why he seized.
Tell him to just let it out.” It sounded like he adjusted the phone on his shoulder. “Okay, I’m at my next appointment. I’ll call you guys when I get back to the tower tonight.”
The phone disconnected, leaving the three of them to their contemplations. Axis was pretty sure he was going to have a heart attack before he got their nephilim lovers settled into a semblance of normalcy.
“Levi is going to be all right, isn’t he?” Brax asked, worrying his bottom lip.
Jade answered before Axis could. “Of course he is. We’re going to take care of our little one, our hellcat, and our new Elite. It’s what
we do. If Levi has special sight, it’s a gift, and he will learn to manage
it like the rest of do.”
“Jade’s right. We will help him in any way we can.” Axis would just have to figure out the best way. “Brax, why don’t you ask around on the Net and see if you can find any angels who can help us out on the vision thing. It’s probably something most prevalent in Archangel Gabriel’s or Archangel Uriel’s choirs.”
“I’ve got some friends I can e-mail,” Brax assured. He worked best when he was being useful, and if he could be on the computer to do it, he was all game.
Axis looked up as the study opened to admit a very sleepy-looking Levi with a worried Keer behind him. “What is it, baby? I thought you were asleep.” It hadn’t been long since he’d left them upstairs, an hour at most.
“Coffee,” Levi grumbled. Their little mate was addicted to the stuff, and damn if they didn’t cater to his wants on the subject. Axis figured if the most selfish thing his Levi wanted was to be babied occasionally and be brought coffee, then it was all right. Marius had spoiled both nephilim, but that was okay. Spoiling the ones he loved was just fine. Besides, Levi wasn’t incredibly demanding about it. He was more cute than anything.
“I’ll go,” Keer said, disappearing from the doorway. Keer might’ve been the one who gave Levi his hardest loving, but he was also one of the most attentive. Levi shuffled into the room and took
up the chair that Jade had refused to sit in.
“I’m not normal,” Levi said, leaning his head back against the chair. “I know I’m spoiled and bratty sometimes. I’m sorry. But I can’t just be your spoiled nephilim. I’m weird. I keep seeing things, knowing things.”
It seemed their boy was finally confessing what he’d been hiding from them in the weeks since they’d all joined. He really didn’t need to apologize, though. They enjoyed when he was a little queen and were far from judgmental of his “weirdness.”
Levi sighed and let his eyes close. “I used to think that Marius would only worry if he knew, and then I just wanted something that was all mine, you know?”
Axis nodded.
“Lately, it’s been worse. I’m not just seeing auras and stuff. I can…” He paused, obviously searching for a word. “I can fix stuff. Not heal per se but reach inside it and fix it.”
“We’re having Scepta look into it,” Axis assured, feeling for his smaller mate. He looked so small