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A River of Golden Bones (The Golden Court, #1)(70)

Author:A.K. Mulford

“I wish you believed it,” Grae murmured, cocking his head at me. “You can’t help but pull me in, though I know how hard you try not to.”

Reality caught up to me then. Not even my Wolf could outrun it. My sister was cursed, and a kingdom riddled with Rooks stood between us and her salvation. I was fated to the son of a greedy king and expected to take my sleeping twin’s place on her throne.

“I’m just trying to survive,” I whispered into his mind. “That’s all I can do.”

Grae hung his head. “Let’s go for a swim,” he said. “Maybe there’s a few more miracles in these waters.”

I huffed, grateful he hadn’t pushed me any further. My paws were growing cold. Even my Wolf form couldn’t comfort me forever. I trotted after him down toward the lake. Grae’s front paws entered the water. He got as far as his chest before shifting back into his human form.

My heart lurched as I gaped at his muscled back, the water lapping low around his hips. He was a perfectly sculpted warrior, better than any painting or statue. I studied the three long scars trailing down his back. They must have been brutal to not have been healed by shifting.

He waded in deeper, up to his chest, and dipped his head back, slicking the hair off his face. He glanced over his shoulder at me and I snapped shut my gaping maw. My gaze dropped to the swirling turquoise water and I took another step, wondering if any magic was left below its surface. I looked back at Grae’s muscled physique and gulped. I needed whatever magic I could get.

Twenty-Two

The water was the warmest bath that never grew cold. I swirled my arms around, mindlessly drifting around the lake with my eyes shut. The water was so buoyant, I barely needed to paddle to stay afloat.

“Your wounds look much better.” Grae’s voice made me open my eyes.

I ran my fingers along my chin, feeling for the gash, but it was smooth. It was still tender, but vastly improved. My back and chest didn’t ache from the kicks anymore. I felt lighter than I had in days. The ringing in my left ear finally gone.

I met Grae’s hooded eyes. “Thank you for bringing me here.”

“I promised you I would.”

Plumes of steam whorled between us like little clouds. I wiggled my toes into the silty bottom of the hot pools, wondering if the story about the lake’s creation was true. Faery magic was a powerful thing. Vellia hadn’t torn down a mountain, but she’d raised us for twenty years. Food, clothing, shelter—it probably took even more magic over that long span of time. It didn’t look as epic as a massive crater in a mountain, but she had given us both a life, all because my mother wished it so.

Not everyone got to make a last wish. The Goddess came too swiftly for most, reclaiming them to the earth, but for those lucky souls who lingered with one foot in the afterlife, sometimes a faery would appear and grant one final wish. I wondered what my father would’ve wished for if he’d had the chance.

“Have you ever thought about what wish you’d make?” I peered from the dunes of snow back at him. “Your last wish?”

Grae’s brow furrowed. “Sometimes a person’s only wish is for it to end.”

I blinked at him, rolling his words around in my mind. It was clear he was speaking of someone, though I didn’t know who. There was a sorrow in his words that surprised me. I wanted to ask more, but he carried on.

“I suppose I’d wish for you.” His words were so low I strained to hear them. Those umber eyes drifted down my face to my lips. “I’d wish to break the mating bond and let you survive without me.”

Pain stabbed through my chest. My body responded as if our bond was being threatened, even by that confession. It felt so unsettling, so wrong. I didn’t know what it was I wanted from Grae, but I knew for certain it wasn’t that.

I could barely get the words out. “I pray you never have to make that wish.”

His hands swirled idly by his sides. “Me too.”

I stepped closer, dipping lower, even though I knew he couldn’t see my breasts beneath the cloudy water. “Do you ever wish we could go back in time? To when we were just Calla and Grae?”

“We are still just Calla and Grae.”

“No. We’re not.” My voice thickened. “Not like then.”

I squinted as the thick clouds parted, sunlight brightening the snow until it was nearly blinding.

Grae slicked a wet hand over his hair. “Who we are to each other is infinite. Our bond will only ever grow and strengthen. It will always be you and me. Always.”

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