Authors: Heather Killough-Walden
breeze that only blew in the places you dreamed.
“Raven, please. Open your eyes!”
But it was fading.
Raven, I’m begging you. Wake up! Drink. Let me make you strong.
Please
…
Now his voice was much closer, louder, right beside her.
In her head.
She felt his warmth all around her, in such contrast to her chilled body. It nearly
burned. He reminded her of a talking, breathing fire. A fire that was holding her in its
arms, clutching her tightly to its chest.
Something warm and sweet trickled over her lip and ran over her tongue.
She swallowed automatically.
And the world exploded around her. She bucked as a cacophony of color erupted
behind her eyes and the warm, sweet perfection of his blood on her tongue shot down her
throat, through her body and into her limbs. Her hands came around his arm, holding his
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wrist to her lips. Her tongue unwittingly traced the gash he’d made there, and she felt him shiver against her. With each long draw of his blood, the powerful liquid raced through
her like wildfire, ruthlessly igniting her senses and awakening them to a kind of pleasure
she’d never before known.
Mine…
She heard his thought slip past the boundaries of her mind. She felt herself drowning
in his influence, wondered if she should pull away, all the while knowing it didn’t matter.
She couldn’t have pulled away if she’d wanted to, and she knew instinctively that he
would not have let her.
The inherent, ancient power in his veins forced itself into her, infusing her body with
forbidden magic, with strength, and with terrible passion. Her back arched as heat and
moisture pooled between her legs and she moaned low in her throat. She felt his arms like
bands of steel around her body, heard his returning growl of desire as he fed her and she
drank and the rest of the world melted around them, became obsolete, disappeared.
Compared to this, Adonides’s blood had been as water was to wine. Drake’s life
force was infused with something so archaic, so intrinsically potent, it bordered on…
divine
.
She opened her eyes and gazed up at him.
His molten mercury gaze held hers, penetrated her core, seared her soul.
What are you?
There was no answer forthcoming. But the heat, the power, in that gaze told her
everything she needed to know. His indomitable blood racing through her veins answered
her question for her.
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And she knew. She knew who he was. And, hence, who his father was.
Drake stared down at the woman in his arms. His blood stained her perfect lips red
and flushed her cheeks pink. Her eyes sparkled beneath the moonlight. She gazed up at
him in awe, in understanding. And he realized that she knew.
No one had ever taken his blood before. He had never shared it. But when he’d seen
her in Cruor’s grasp, her strength gone, her body and spirit weak, he’d known he would
do it, without a second thought. He would always care for her, give her what she needed.
Always.
It was inevitable that she would come to realize who – and what – he was. How
could she not? The blood that ran through his veins was older than time itself. It held
power immeasurable.
He’d shared it with her, knowing she would stare up at him as she did now.
In shock, in amazement… in
fear
.
He cursed the fate that had brought them together in this manner. If only there were
time to explain. If only they were alone, no elven princes with swords, no Death Mages
with apocalyptic designs. If only the cards had decided, just once, to fall in his favor.
Give her the dagger, Tanith.
Drake jerked in surprise at the sudden strong invasion. A voice was in his head. Loud
and commanding. The time that had slowed down around he and Raven once again
moved at normal speed. He tore his gaze from hers and she let go of his arm. He glanced
behind them. Astriel and Cruor were several yards away.
Give her the dagger. Only the Chosen Soul can truly kill Cruor.
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Tanith shook his head, more than a little bothered by the booming voice inside his
mind. He moved his gaze away from Astriel and Cruor and settled it upon Raven’s
brother. The priest was staring at him with eyes that glowed as brightly as the sun. His
body gave off a brilliant radiance, his red hair moved with a warm wind and appeared as
if it was on fire.
Haledon
, Drake thought,
the Sun God’s avatar. Born again.
Drake stared at the avatar, suddenly torn with indecision. Haledon would know who
he was. What he was. He would surely just as soon see Drake dead as do anything to help
him.
I care not who you are, Tanith. The world needs Raven now. She is the Chosen
Soul. She must do what she was Chosen to do. Give her the Corrigan Dagger!
“Give me the dagger, Drake.”
Drake spun around and gazed down at Raven. She was smiling at him. Her eyes had
gone solid black, from corner to corner. He stared at her. She rose from the ground in one
graceful movement, and he struggled to rise with her. Once they both stood, she
continued to smile up at him, her expression at once calm and utterly eerie.
“
Trust me”.
Drake did not hesitate this time. He held it out to her, hilt first. She slowly took it,
her fingers grazing the skin of his hand, never breaking eye contact with him.
On the other side of the clearing, Astriel lunged at Cruor. The Death Mage was
expecting the attack, and he ducked to the right, bringing his left hand up in a block that struck the Prince’s blade with an uncanny ring of metal against metal. In the next instant,
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he reached his other hand toward Astriel’s chest, palm facing outward, and hastily spoke
the words of a terrible enchantment.
Astriel gritted his teeth and brought all of his power to the fore, creating an
immediate and strong barrier between his soul and the man who sought to steal it.
“You’ll have to do better than that.” He took a step forward, preparing to once again
attack the Death Mage in the manner for which Astriel was best qualified. Respectively,
Cruor took a step back, his expression now wary and a touch uncertain.
Astriel continued, his voice daunting yet calm. “I am not one of your weakling
students. I am the son of Oberon. Have you forgotten?”
Cruor smiled ingratiatingly. “Not at all, my prince. The royal bearing of your soul
will make it all the more delicious when it surrenders to me.”
Astriel answering smile was a bitter mirror to his opponent’s as the Prince swung his
sword in a circle, bringing it with blurring speed toward the other elf.
Cruor bellowed another arcane word, and a sword of the same make as Astriel’s
appeared in his gloved hand, already poised to block the Prince’s attack. But, as if Astriel had known he would take such an action, the Prince’s sword suddenly changed direction,
moving so fast it was nearly untraceable, and, instead of coming down in the arc that
Cruor had expected, it shot beneath the Death Mage’s constructed defense and stabbed
directly toward his midsection.
Cruor could not react in time to deflect such a blow. He merely had enough time to
glance downward and watch as Astriel’s shining blade penetrated the magical barrier
around him and shot on through to pierce his flesh, puncturing deep, sliding in until the
tip of the long sword exited the other side.
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Astriel shoved it deep, and then, as he brought his body flush with Cruor, he looked
the Death Mage in the eyes and gave the blade an evil twist.
Pain of immense design registered in the mage’s eyes.
“That is for touching her,” Astriel whispered, his words dripping with menace. He
twisted the blade the other way and Cruor gasped at the new agony, sweat erupting on his
brow. “And that is for hurting her.”
They remained frozen there for the space of an endless moment. And then Astriel
ruthlessly wrenched the blade free and took a step back.
Cruor stumbled backward, his body impacting with the trunk of a large tree, his
hands coming out to steady himself. He stopped and then clutched at his stomach, his
gaze locked on Astriel’s as one would watch a dangerous animal.
“You can run me through a thousand times, Prince, and it will not kill me,” he gritted
out between clenched teeth.
“I know. I never meant to kill you, Cruor. I only wanted to hurt you. And that, I have
done. It’s Raven that will kill you.”
At that, Astriel slowly turned, his gaze sliding from Cruor to the black-haired woman
who stood facing the Death Mage, several yards away. Cruor followed his gaze and
leveled it on Raven’s now erect and obviously much more powerful, physically stronger
form.
He gazed at her steadily, several emotions chasing each other across his handsome
face. She watched him in silence, her expression unreadable, as he straightened, lifting
off of the tree, his wound healing rapidly before her eyes.
She took a step toward him, and he toward her.
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And then they each raised their left hands in a slow, graceful, synchronous
movement, and the clearing faded into white, vanishing into bright nothingness within
seconds, leaving only Raven and the Death Mage, face to face, alone on a plane of flat,
frozen emptiness. Snow and ice stretched into the horizon as far as the eye could see.
Nothing moved to mar the perfection of the wintry world. Only a hollow wind blew
across the vast expanse.
This was the end, and they had chosen their battle ground.
He approached her slowly, his hands at his sides, his expression subtly sad, his deep
blue eyes devoid of the wicked spark they’d held as he’d touched her only a few minutes
before.
She came toward him in the same manner, her steps deliberate and calm, until at last,
they stood together, a mere foot apart, a study in spatial conservation in this endless plane of frost.
“I promised you that which no one else, not even Haledon, can guarantee. Why
would you so carelessly toss aside your brother’s sworn good fortune?” Cruor asked
quietly, his expression genuinely curious and a touch bemused.
Raven smiled gently. “You and I are not the granters of destiny, Cruor. As an empty
body and a tired soul, we make poor substitutes for human choice and freedom of will.
We are the
vessels
of fate, nothing more.”
He furrowed his brow and shook his head slowly. “Is this truly what you want? A
continuance of war and violence and a ‘freedom of will’ that sees innocents to their
graves?”
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Raven laughed softly. It sounded like a wind chime of ice crystals, blown by the
breeze of their private realm. “If I give you this soul, Cruor, you will lay
all
innocents to sleep in beds of death.” She cocked her head to one side and stared deeply into his eyes.
Her expression became one of puzzled curiosity. “Why do you continue to dispute a
cause that you know I can never join?”
Cruor lowered his head slightly, his gaze intensifying. His jaw set and the cold air
around them began to charge. “Because, Raven, I know you. I know you as no other ever
could. I remember you as you
were
,” he reached down to gently grasp her right hand, and, unafraid, she did not pull away, “the
first
time your soul took form.” With that, he placed her hand against his chest and closed his eyes.
She closed hers.
And then opened them to find herself standing alone in the center of a wide open
field. It was night and Kriver’s two moons shone full up above. White wildflowers
swayed in a gentle breeze. She could smell smoke from a cooking fire and she turned
slowly in place to see a small cabin at the base of a mountain in the distance.
She took a step toward it and was suddenly there, standing in the doorway of the log
house. The door unlatched and swung slowly inward. Firelight and warmth greeted her
and she stepped inside.
The man sitting at the table glanced up and smiled warmly. He was so handsome.
She knew him well.
He rose from the bench on the opposite side and quickly came around to greet her.
He stood tall before her and reached down to gently take her hands in his. He was warm
to the touch. She felt safe in their home.
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“How do you fare?” he asked softly.
“Well,” she answered quietly. She was tired, but peaceful. “The babe has been
dancing all day, I fear. A boy, I would wager, as he has your energy, not mine.”
The man laughed, his long black hair shimmering in the firelight from the hearth as
he shook his head admonishingly. “You’re the one who kicks, wife,” he said through a
chuckle. “I’ve the bruises on my shins to prove it. The night you sleep without giving me
your heel is the night I erect a statue in Haledon’s name.”
She laughed and then gasped as the babe kicked once again. She placed her hand to
her swollen stomach and the babe stilled. Then she took her husband’s hand and placed