ELIJAH DIDNโT ASK FOR AN EXPLANATION. HE ASKED ONLY TO BE
LEFTย alone with his sleeping daughter, and Signa was more than willing to oblige.
The veil over what sheโd done began to dissipate, clarity
sinking in. Percy would recover, and Blythe would live to see another day. The murderer was found, and all would soon be well again at Thorn Grove. But to make that happen, Signa had condemned another soul to death. Sheโd sacrificed another life in place of Blytheโs.
She chewed her nails to the skin as she paced down the hall, mind reeling. She knew she should care more, she should have regrets. But sheโd make the same choice again and again if she had to.
God, what was she becoming?
When she reached her suite, the chill warned her that Death waited inside. He was pacing the drawing room floor when she opened the door, shadows dragging behind him like a cloak. The moment he caught sight of her, the shadows in the room rushed forward, hovering mere inches from her.
โCome with me.โ It wasnโt a question, yet hesitation laced the command.
โWhere?โ was all she could think to say.
โItโs time for you to see what I do.โ He extended his hand, beckoning. โItโs time for you to see that thereโs more
to death than you believe.โ
The hand he stretched toward her meant so much more than just a hand. She knew that taking it would mean opening herself up to him and his world. It would mean accepting what sheโd done and embracing this side of herself once and for all.
This wasnโt Death the killer who stood before her. This wasnโt the demon sheโd built up in her head, spending too many years hating. This was the man who ferried innocent souls to their afterlife. This was Death, whose powers she shared. Who understood her better than anyone else ever could. She was tired of running from him.
Signa laced their fingers together as she tipped her head back to observe the souls floating around them. The more she watched them, the more she could make out glimpses of faces within. โWhy donโt they look like typical spirits?โ She gripped Death like a vise. He was bending the space around them as they moved, shifting to somewhere new. It felt like slipping through a pond and emerging dry.
โThey would have that form had I reached them sooner,โ he said. โTheyโre eager to pass, and traveling is simpler as a soul. Spirits are weighed down by the emotions and memories they cling to. Spirits linger, souls pass on.โ
โPass on toโฆ here?โ
Wherever they were, it wasnโt Thorn Grove. Theyโd crossed over into a place where time stood still. Signa was glad she no longer had to breathe, for the air here was too thick. It sat upon the base of her throat, making it impossible to swallow. She stumbled over soil as Death pulled her ahead. The farther they pressed forward, the antsier the souls around them became. They no longer hovered so tightly around Death but rushed ahead before inching back, fearful of getting lost in the forming mist.
They came to a magnificent blue-and-white bridge built over an endless lake. Though it was covered by fog, the sheer number of souls that were crossing over shone a hazy
light upon it.
Some floated along in small spheres while others shifted back into their spirit selves, hurrying through the throng toward the call of something wonderful that waited for them on the other side. Something that Signa felt deep in her core, warm and rich and consuming.
She started to follow them, needing to find out what it was, but Death gripped her tightly. โCross that bridge and youโll no longer be of this world,โ he warned her. โItโs not your time.โ
They sat upon the bank of the lake, watching the souls from a distance.
Itโd been ages since sheโd visited a church, and she didnโt remember any lessons about the afterlife. Sheโd always believed it was a dark, lonely place. But whatever resided beyond the bridge didnโt feel like an end-allโit felt like a beginning. Like a journey beckoning to be taken. โWhat happens once you cross?โ
โThere are many possibilities.โ He loosened his grip and leaned back to watch her. Perhaps it was to avoid spooking the spirits, but Death was softer here. โSome souls choose to give up the memories of their life on Earth and to be reborn as someone new. Others keep their memories and remain in the afterlife, awaiting those they left behind.โ
โWhat of those who do not live a just life?โ she asked. โIs there a punishment?โ
Deathโs voice was dark when he spoke next. โThe afterlife is my domain, Little Bird, and I take care of my people. Itโs no easy decision, but I do not welcome those who will taint my home. I claim those souls for myself, and I get rid of them. For them, there will be no afterlife. There will be nothing.โ
It was a cold fate, but Signa already felt a fierce protectiveness of this place, and knew without even seeing it that she, too, would do whatever it took to preserve all that waited across the bridge. โDo you know everyone
there?โ she asked as she watched one of the souls bob across the bridge.
โIโve met all residents of the afterlife.โ There was pride in those words. โThough I admit that some stand out more than others. Your mother is one of the many reasons I donโt care to journey into that place often, you know. All she does is pester me with questions about you.โ
Signa curled her fingers in the grass, a smile warming her lips. โEveryoneโs been making her sound so fierce. I always imagined her a bit like Marjorie, I suppose.โ
โLike a murderer?โ
Signa swatted him on the chest. โOf course not! I meant someone who always seemed very proper.โ
Death nodded, considering. โShe has more manners than you, certainly, but thatโs not saying much.โ This time when Signa went to swat at him, his shadows caught her hand and tossed it back at her with a laugh. โYour father is a kind and tender man, very soft spoken. Rima is more like you, so loud with her opinions and always butting in. She knew her position in society well and abused it for her benefit. With as much money and influence as your family had, no one dared to criticize them, for fear that they might lose the possibility of an investment by the Farrows.โ
Signa leaned against his shadows that stilled for her, soft as she imagined a cloud would be. โYou seem to know a lot about them.โ
โOf course I do,โ he said with such seriousness that Signa stilled. โTheyโre your parents. I wanted to know everything I could about them. And youโre just as brazen as she is, you know. In all my years, no one has ever spoken to me with such hostility as you do, but she comes in a close second.โ
Perhaps her mother wouldnโt be so disappointed in her after all. All the years Signa had spent obsessing over fitting into a particular moldโinto what sheโd believed everyone expected of herโperhaps it was all for naught.
He couldnโt know how grateful she was for him in that moment. He couldnโt know that, as glad as she was to hear him speak of her parents, she was reminded deeply of her own loneliness. But at Deathโs side, slipping her hand in his, she realized she neednโt endure that alone. There was no pretending. No lying about what she wanted or molding herself into someone else. With Death, Signa could be wholly herself.
With him, she wasnโt so lonely.
She lowered her head upon her shoulder, smiling as Death tensed with surprise. โTell me what itโs like across that bridge.โ
He rested his chin upon her head. โIf you really want to know, Iโd be more than happy to invite you in and keep you to myself for eternity.โ When she nudged him on the shoulder, Death laughed. โItโs a place thatโs kinder than the living world. There are no needs, no wants, no fear.โ
โSo why donโt you spend more time there?โ
Death brushed his thumb across the back of her hand, and her skin burned with want. โI will do whatever I must to protect that place and its people. But being there for too long is exhausting. I cannot share in their pleasures, Little Bird. There is no family waiting for me, and itโs possible some of my wants will never be settled, no matter where I am. Seeing themโbeing in that placeโis a reminder of that. Besides, I find the living world far more entertaining.โ As someone still struggling to find her place, Signa could relate. Death was the most hated man in the world, and even here in the afterlife, he didnโt fit in. It was no wonder he came across as so prickly. She probably came across the
same way.
โI chose a man in his eighties.โ Signa knew at once what he was referring to, and the words were a bruise upon her mind. โHe would have had another ten years, though they wouldโve been ones wrought with pain in his bones. Heโs there, on the bridge.โ Death nodded ahead.
Signa didnโt want to look at the man sheโd condemned to save Blythe, but he deserved at least that much. She hugged her arms around her stomach and forced herself to acknowledge the stout, short man whose life sheโd stolen. Ten years was a long time. Even with pain, what things might that man have done with his life? What memories might he have made? What joy might he have felt?
โI donโt like doing that, Signa.โ The shadows drew around them like a curtain, shielding the bridge from view. โWeโre toying with Fate, who is not someone to be played with. Do not ask me again to take the life of someone whoโs not ready to be claimed.โ
The words sank into her and burrowed deep within her soul. She became smaller, curling in on herself.
โIโm sorry I asked that of you.โ She trembled when she spoke. โBut if you hated it so much, thenโฆ why did you do it? Why did you listen to me?โ
When he turned to her, the moonlight shone upon him in a way that reminded Signa of a painting, wisps of shadows like brushstrokes upon a canvas. โBecause I have waited an eternity to meet you, Signa Farrow.โ The words were a balm she clung to, relished. โTo me, you are a song to a soul that has never known music. Light to someone who has only seen the darkness. You bring out the absolute worst in me, and I become vindictive toward those who treat you in ways I donโt care for. Yet you also bring out the best in meโI want to be better because of you. Betterย forย you.
โIn all my existence, Iโve asked only for one thingโfor one person who might understand me, and whom I could let myself touch. When I touch someone, I see the life theyโve lived in flashes of memories as they die. But the first time I touched you, it was your future I saw. A glimpse of you in my arms, dancing in a beautiful red dress beneath the moonlight.โ He tilted her chin up and Signa shivered, savoring the touch.
โYou are what I want.โ He drew his hand away. โI know I cannot force you to want me in return, but say that you do, and I promise that I am wholly and unequivocally yours. Say that you do, and I will make this world everything for you, Signa.โ
The words struck hard. For so long sheโd wanted nothing more than to be a normal girl, without Death lingering in the shadows of her life. Sheโd dreamed of how sweet it would be, only to find the taste bitter on her tongue. She could spend her life at Everettโs side, keeping one ear out for gossip, feeling trapped and weak and stifled. And all the while she would remember that there was somethingโ someoneโthat had once made her feel so alive.
A normal girl wouldnโt be able to save her cousinโs soul. A normal girl wouldnโt be able to sit upon this bank,
staring at the bridge into the beautiful afterlife.
For so long sheโd been fighting who she was, in favor of who others wanted her to be. Sheโd had enough.
The answer was thereโit had always been there. She turned her head up to him, lips a breath from his. โI believe that I have always been yours, Death. As you were made for me, perhaps I was made for you. For I want to feel the way I feel when I am by your side forever. I want to feel the way I feel when you touch me.โ
He let out the softest breath as the darkness within him ignited, and he became the night itself.
He was the fire of the stars. The dazzle of the moon. The darkness of the shadows, and the caress of wind against her skin as that darkness drank her in like she was the finest wine.
Signa knew before she wound an arm around his neckโ before she pressed her chest against hisโthat there would be no turning back. When they kissed, his touch broke something within her. Something small and timid. Something that had been holding her back for too long.
It didnโt matter who other people believed her to be. It
didnโt matter what they thought of her.ย Thisย was who she was, and she was ready to embrace it.
โYou are no soft thing to be coddled.โ His voice was soothing as the seasonโs first rain, and she shivered from the way it glided upon her skin. โYou are bolder than the sun, Signa Farrow, and itโs time that you burn.โ
Death pulled her into the forest and laid her upon the cold ground. His lips kissed down the length of her neck and to the top of her corset. She tried to steal a look at him, but the mist and the shadows obscured him. She could have tried harder, but in the end it didnโt matter to her what Death looked like. What she felt for himโhow she wanted himโwas bone-deep and aching.
In her almost twenty years, sheโd never felt so alive. She was without abandon, her hands slipping through the shadows to curl in his hair and on his shoulders, her lips on his mouth, his neck, every bit as starved for him as he was for her.
Lace by lace her dress was undone, the silk slipping from her skin. He leaned back to admire her laid bare beneath the stars, dark hair unbound and spilling over her fair shoulders.
Never had Signa been so exposed, yet she didnโt hide herself from him, nor did she shy away from the shadows that encircled her bare thighs. Signa guided his hands over her waist. Over her breasts and her hips, and then lower, shivering with pleasure beneath his touch.
โYouโre sure you want this?โ he asked, almost as though he couldnโt believe it. As though he expected her to come to her senses and force him away.
But Signa no longer viewed Death as someone dangerous. He was thrilling and freeing, and she wanted him more than sheโd ever wanted anything.
โI have never been more sure of something in all my life.โ She cupped her palm against his face, easing him down so that his body covered hers. Her kiss was tender
but firm in her desire, hoping she could ease his worry. That she could show him she wanted this every bit as much as he did.
Whether it was the kiss or the words that undid him, he groaned and kissed her full on the mouth. He didnโt hesitate after that. His lips were on her thigh at once, kissing up the bare skin until she gasped, head falling back as her body melted beneath his touch.
His shadows traced her hip bones, slipping to the sensitive place his lips had once been. She exhaled a soft breath, any tension sheโd felt loosening itself. Every touch was fire upon her skin, searing into her and commanding her attention. For once nothing else mattered. No inheritance, no spirits, nothing but his body as it covered hers, and the deep aching of want that filled her.
He groaned as he pressed into her, and Signa soon felt herself coming unbound.ย Sheย was the darkness of the shadows, now. The one making him bend and stretch and twist, taking all he offered, all she wanted.
She wrapped her legs around him as the yearning built, keeping him close as something within her mounted. It wasnโt justย himย she felt. It was the night itself, shadows and darkness and stars that exploded within her as she came undone.
A growl escaped his throat as she arched beneath him, and he fisted her hair in one hand. His muscles tensed as she pulled him close, kissing his neck and lips and all she could get of him until he growled her name and lost himself within her, shadows curling around her as he collapsed beside her.
Signa unwrapped herself from him, satisfaction on her lips.ย Sheย was the one who made Death twist to her whim. She was the one who made him whisper her name as she tipped her head back to the sky, and she rather liked that.
Signa laced her fingers through his, and he brushed his thumb over the back of her hand in long, content strokes.
โI have waited for you for millennia, Signa Farrow.โ There was a silky husk to his voice now, too pleased for his own good. โSince the dawn of this earth, I have waited. You are mine, and I am yours. And together, this world is ours.โ