Home > Cursed Mate (Shadow Guild The Rebel #5)(36)

Cursed Mate (Shadow Guild The Rebel #5)(36)
Author: Linsey Hall

The curse had its hooks fully into me.

It had been trying to drag me away from this world for so long, growing stronger every time I was injured. This would be the last straw. I could feel the ether tugging on me even now, the curse determined to pull me away from Carrow and the life that I had almost had.

A life of light and love.

“Are you all right?” she demanded, her voice wavering. “Is the potion working?”

“I’m fine.” I had minutes left, maybe. We needed to get out of here. If I didn't survive, I couldn’t leave Carrow here with my body. Would my body stay behind when I left?

I had no idea. Couldn’t risk it. Too much to ask of her.

“Help me up, if you can.” The words tasted sour as they left my lips.

Tears rolled down her face as she pulled me to my feet. Every part of me felt broken, shattered beyond repair. The sorcerer’s magic had rent me inside, the blast doing irreparable damage.

Once, I might have survived it. Now, not a chance.

Carrow tucked herself under my arm to help support me, and I leaned on her, hating it. She shouldn’t have to do this. Shouldn’t have to be here for this.

I could only imagine what I would be feeling if I thought she were about to die. Utter devastation. The idea that she might hold that depth of feeling for me seemed almost laughable. But from the tears that streamed down her face, it also seemed almost possible.

My heart thundered.

Her scent wrapped around me as we walked, rousing the beast inside me. It wanted her blood, wanted me to drink to save us both.

This was my last chance. If I took her blood now, I would survive this. She would not, but her blood would not only break the curse, it would undo the damage of the sorcerer’s magic. It would make me whole again.

I forced the beast back, unwilling to even consider it.

“We’re almost there,” she said. “The library is right up here, and we’ll be home in no time. We’ll fix you right up with more healing potions.”

The sea could be made of healing potions, and it wouldn’t be enough. I said nothing.

We staggered toward the library, finding it locked at this late hour. Carrow leaned back and kicked open the door, hitting it so hard that the wood around the lock splintered and it swung open.

“I guess fear gives extra strength,” she said as she helped pull me inside.

The cavernous library was dark save for a few fairy lights floating near the ceiling. Our footsteps echoed as we staggered toward the back of the library. My strength was waning, and I could feel myself putting more weight on Carrow.

She plowed onward, dragging me behind her.

“We’ve got this,” she said, her voice trembling. “You’re going to be okay.”

“Of course.” The words almost took the last of my breath.

Finally, we reached the very back of the library. The empty aisle called to me, the glowing light a beacon of hope. Not that I’d survive this, but that we’d at least make it back to our time for Carrow.

She pulled the small book out of her pocket, and we entered the aisle. The magic pulsed around us, bright and warm. My heartbeat began to slow as we entered deeper into the aisle, my vision starting to go dark at the edges.

Not yet.

I wanted one last look at her face.

I fought the pull of the afterlife, grateful when I felt the ether tugging on me. It caught us both and spun us through time. I gripped Carrow hard, determined not to lose her here.

A moment later, solid ground appeared beneath my feet. I staggered, the ground calling to me. Carrow tried to keep me up, her grip strong. We managed to get out of the stacks and into the cavernous space of the main library, but I was too heavy. I staggered to my knees, going down hard.

“Grey!” She followed me down, trying to slow my fall.

I hit the floor anyway, the tile cold beneath my feverish skin.

“Grey, you must drink from me.” Her voice broke as she held her wrist to my mouth. “You need strength. The blow was too much.”

I turned my mouth away, nearly insensible as the afterworld called to me. The beast within me roared, trying to force me to follow her commands. There was still time. Time to save us both. The beast and me.

Not Carrow.

I would never.

I looked up at her, wanting her face to be the last thing I saw. My voice rasped as I said, “I love you.”

Why hadn’t I said the words before? Why hadn’t I shown her more?

What wasted time.

“Please, Grey. Don’t go.” Tears sounded in her voice. Rolled down her face. “I love you. I love you.”

The words cloaked me in warmth as the darkness crept in. Nearly blind, I stole one last look at her. She was the sun, glowing golden above me, a promise of all that could have been and all that I didn’t deserve.

We’d almost done it.

Almost.

 

 

Carrow

 

Grey went limp on the floor. His energy disappeared from the air, and I was alone.

Alone.

Something inside me broke, shattering into a thousand pieces. My scream echoed in the cavernous space. Frantically, I pulled at his shoulders, trying to drag him back. To make him stand, healthy and whole. “I love you. I love you.”

I couldn’t stop repeating the words, couldn’t get ahold of myself. Everything was frantic inside me, everything terrible. I was pure energy, pure emotion.

On the ground, his body began to disappear.

I clutched at him, trying to keep him with me. Was this normal? Why was this happening? His form faded even more, becoming nearly transparent.

“Grey, don’t go. Grey!”

Seconds later, he was entirely gone. I sat alone in the dark library, the air so still that it almost suffocated me. My mind went blank with pain and loss.

“Carrow!” Seraphia’s voice sounded from the other side of the library, concern in her tone. She hurried toward me and fell to her knees at my side. “Carrow? Where’s Grey? What’s happened?”

I looked up at her, vision blurry with tears. “Gone. Gone.”

“Where?”

“The curse took him. We were too late.” I pressed a hand to the cold stone tile beneath me. “He was right here.”

Seraphia looked down, as if she might see him. “It just happened?”

I sucked in a ragged breath, my throat so tight I almost couldn’t manage to get the air in. “He was hit by a sorcerer’s magic. It was too much. The damage was too much. He’s been weakening, the afterworld pulling harder. And it was just too much.”

I wanted to scream again, but Seraphia gripped my shoulders, shaking me hard as she commanded, “Breathe. In and out.”

I did as she ordered, my shaking beginning to subside.

“Keep going,” she said. “Get some oxygen into your brain so you can think.”

I nodded blindly, scrubbing away my tears as I sucked air into my lungs. As she’d promised, my mind began to clear. Thoughts returned in a more rational way, driving out the desperate fear and loss.

This wasn’t over.

I wouldn’t let it be over.

I’d brought back Beatrix. I would bring him back as well.

This was what fate had been maneuvering for all along. It was clear now.

I surged to my feet. “Where’s Eve?”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)