“What the hell were you doing?” Casteel demanded again, giving me a shake. His breathing was harsh, forming quick clouds in the cold. “You could’ve—you would’ve been broken, Poppy. Broken and shattered in a way I would never be able to fix.”
I didn’t understand what he was talking about, but he looked…he looked like I’d never seen him before. Terrified. Eyes wide and luminous, even in the mist, the planes and angles of his face stark.
He clasped my cheeks with his gloved hands. “I told you not to wander off.”
“I…I didn’t,” I told him. “I was sleeping—I was dreaming. I heard…I heard my father calling my name—”
“Fucking mist,” Kieran growled, waving a hand angrily through the thick white.
“No. No. It was a dream, but it was real. I mean, it was pieces of the night the Craven attacked. Someone…someone else was there at the end.” I started to pull away, but Casteel stopped me. “He was dressed, cloaked, and he was there that night.” I twisted in Casteel’s grip. “I was trying to see his face. If I could only see his face, I’d know who he was. I just…”
My lips parted as I stared into nothing. It wasn’t a void simply absent of light. It was an end. A vast nothingness waited beyond the edge of a…cliff.
“Oh my gods,” I whispered, shuddering as I realized how close I’d come to stepping off into…into nothing.
“It was the mist,” Casteel said, his tone too gentle as he guided my stricken gaze back to his.
“She stopped me,” I whispered.
“What?”
“Didn’t you see her? She stopped me. Oh, my gods.”
Casteel smoothed his thumb across my cheek, along the scar there. “No one else was here. It was just you and the mist.”
“No. There was someone else.” I looked over my shoulder, toward the emptiness. “I heard her voice. She kept telling me to stop, and then she appeared in front of me.” I turned back to Casteel. “She was right there. Where there is…there is nothing. She told me to go no farther. That the truth wasn’t here. She told me to go home and to…” I started shivering, and I couldn’t stop. “To take what was mine. And that I would learn the truth.”
“It’s okay,” Casteel assured me, but the look he exchanged with Kieran said the exact opposite. “Let’s head back to camp.”
“You didn’t see her?”
“No, Princess.” He kissed my forehead. “I only saw you about to—” He cut himself off. “It was only you.”
As Casteel helped me stand, I knew the dream had been peeling back the layers of time, revealing pieces long-buried under trauma. And I knew I hadn’t been alone. Someone…or something had stopped me from walking off the side of the mountain.
We started to—
The rumble I heard earlier returned, this time louder. Kieran cursed as Casteel whipped toward me. Before I could say a word, he lifted me in his arms and ran—ran as far as we could make it before he seemed to lose his balance. My heart seized as the mist scattered. Thrown to the side, Casteel’s arm tightened around me as we fell into Kieran. He grabbed me—grabbed us—as we pressed into a tree that vibrated and rattled like a child’s toy. Golden leaves shaken free drifted down to us, down to the earth that shook and groaned.
“What is happening?” I gasped, a hand clutching both Casteel’s and Kieran’s cloaks.
Casteel turned to me, but I couldn’t hear what he was saying over the rumbling. At any moment, it felt like the entire mountain would rip open and swallow us whole. My wide eyes met his as my heart thundered.
And then it stopped.
The leaves stopped falling as the trees calmed, and the ground stilled.
“Is it over?” I whispered after several moments of silence.
“I think so.” Casteel swallowed as his gaze lifted to where Kieran was slowly climbing to his feet behind me. Then his eyes met mine again. “Who did you say you saw? Who stopped you?”
“I don’t know who it was, but it was a woman,” I told him. “Why?”
“Because that was a god,” Kieran said hoarsely. “Returning to their place of rest.”
Within the first hour of our journey out of the Skotos Mountains, the magic of the mist lifted. The trees of Aios formed a glittering, golden ceiling as we descended the mountain, and I was able to remove my gloves. By the second hour, I considered shrugging off my cloak. The steadily rising temperatures should’ve lifted my spirits, but my mind was still on that mist-drenched cliff.