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Chapter no 65

Crave by Tracy Wolff

โ€ŒAllโ€™s Well that Endsโ€Œ

with Marshmallows

โ€œPlease?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ Jaxon looks at me like Iโ€™m from another planet.

I cuddle closer, bat my eyes like a windmill on high. โ€œPleeeeeeeeease?โ€

He lifts a brow. โ€œDo you have something in your eye, or should I call the nurse because youโ€™re having a seizure?โ€

โ€œUgh. You suck.โ€ I cross my arms over my chest and pretend to pout. But after three days of being cooped up in my bedroom, recuperating, Iโ€™m not sure how much of it is actually pretending. And even though I know I wonโ€™t be here forever, itโ€™s still awful. โ€œPlease, Jaxon? If I have to stare at these walls any longer, Iโ€™m going to freak out.โ€

Jaxon sighs, but I can tell heโ€™s deliberating, so I push my luck. โ€œCanโ€™t we go somewhere? Just for a little while? You can even carry me if I get too tired.โ€ I try the wholeย eye battingย thing again, lessย panicked birdย this time and moreย femme fatale. Or, at least, thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m going for.

โ€œYeah, like Iโ€™m going to fall for that,โ€ he says with a snort.

Which, okay. He has a point. Iโ€™m not real keen on him carrying me anywhere, especially now that things have calmed down around here. But still, the boredom is realโ€ฆ and getting more real every moment. โ€œCome on, Jaxon. I

know youโ€™re just following directions because Marise said Iโ€™m supposed to rest for a couple more days, but Iโ€™m not planning on joining the Iditarod. I just want to walk around for a few minutes. No big deal.โ€

He studies my face for a minute and must figure out what Iโ€™ve already decidedโ€”that Iโ€™m going out with or without him

โ€”because he nods reluctantly. Then stands up from where weโ€™ve been stretched out on my bed for the last two hours.

โ€œCivil twilight has set in, so Iโ€™ll take you outside for a little while,โ€ he says eventually. โ€œBut not far from the castle. And you have to promise to tell me as soon as you start to get tired.โ€

โ€œI will. I swear!โ€ Excitement races through me, and I spring up after him, then kind of wish I hadnโ€™t, considering myย everythingย hurts, especially my recently dislocated shoulder. Now that theyโ€™ve set it, itโ€™s a lot better than it was, but it still aches a lot. Not that Iโ€™m about to tell Jaxon thatโ€”partly because he might change his mind and partly because I know he blames himself for everything that happened with Lia.

Which is ridiculous, but Jaxon is totally the guy who balances the whole world on his shoulders and who takes the responsibility of that seriously, even if he never asked for it. So no way am I going to let him see how sore and battered I still feel. Not when that means giving him something else to beat himself up over.

โ€œSo what do you want to do?โ€ I ask in an effort to distract him from the fact that Iโ€™m limping more than a little.

Heโ€™s watching me with narrowed eyes and an expression that says Iโ€™m not fooling him. But he doesnโ€™t say anything

else, except, โ€œIโ€™ve got a couple of ideas. Why donโ€™t you get dressed and Iโ€™ll run and find a few things? Iโ€™ll be back in fifteen minutes.โ€

โ€œWe can meet downstairsโ€”โ€ I start but break off when he looks at me with both brows lifted. โ€œOooor we can meet here,โ€ I finish.

โ€œYeah, letโ€™s do that.โ€ He leans down and drops a kiss on my lips.

Itโ€™s meant to be quick, but I canโ€™t help wrapping my good arm around his neck and pressing myself against him as I deepen the kiss.

Jaxon goes still, but thereโ€™s a hitch in his breathing that tells me Iโ€™ve got him. Seconds later, he slides his hands down to my hips to pull me even closer. And then he scrapes a fang across my lower lip in a move he knows makes every muscle in my body go weak.

My breath catches in my throat as I open for him. As I press even closer. As I give myself up to Jaxon and the explosion of heat and joy and light that he sets off inside me with just a kiss. Just a touch. Just a look.

I donโ€™t know how long we kiss for.

Long enough for my breathing to grow ragged.

Long enough for my knees to tremble with each stroke of his fingers against my hip.

More than long enough for me to reconsider our walk outside now that things inside have gotten so much more interesting.

But eventually Jaxon pulls away with a groan. He drops his forehead against mine, and we just breathe for a while. But then he pulls away, and in a voice gone deep and growly

and oh so sexy, he says, โ€œGet dressed. Iโ€™ll be back in a few.โ€

And then, like always, heโ€™s gone between one blink and the next.

It takes me a little longer to recover. A full minute or so passes before my heart rate steadies and my weak knees feel strong enough to support me. Eventually, I get my act together and start getting dressed in the layers upon layers necessary to survive an hour outside in Alaska. My lips tingle the whole time.

Turns out, itโ€™s a good thing I hurried, because Jaxon is back, knocking on my door and letting himself in before I even have my socks on. To be fair, getting dressed takes a lot longer with a dislocated shoulder, but still. Even if I was completely healed, itโ€™d still be impossible for me to compete with Jaxonโ€™s speed.

Heโ€™s carrying a backpack, which he drops by the door when he sees me struggling to pull on my socks.

โ€œHere, give them to me,โ€ he says, kneeling down in front of me and gently resting my ankle on his thigh.

And just like that, my breath catches in my throat again. Because if Iโ€™ve learned nothing else in the time Iโ€™ve been here, itโ€™s that Jaxon Vega kneels for no one. Yet here he is, kneeling in front of me like itโ€™s the most natural thing in the world.

โ€œWhat?โ€ he asks as he slides the socks over my feet and past my ankles.

I just shake my head because what else is there for me to say? Especially when his fingertips linger on my calf, tracing patterns into my suddenly oversensitive skin.

I must look as flustered as I feel, because he just kind of

grins at me as he slides a second sock over the first before doing the same to my other foot.

I shake my head, look away before I end up melting into an actual puddle.

A couple of minutes later, after putting my boots on for me, too, Jaxon stands up and holds a hand out to pull me up.

โ€œHave you decided where weโ€™re going?โ€ I ask as we head for the door.

He picks up the backpackโ€”something Iโ€™ve never seen him carry if heโ€™s not going to classโ€”and says, โ€œYeah.โ€

I wait for him to elaborate, but this is Jaxon. He almost never shares more than he has to. Then again, as he gives me a wicked grin, I find myself not minding too much. If Jaxon wants to surprise me, who am I to say no? Especially when his surprises are usually so, so good.

We walk hand in hand through the halls and down the three flights of stairs to the front door. Almost everyone else is in the last class of the dayโ€”Jaxon should be, too, but heโ€™s ditchingโ€”so the common areas are nearly deserted. Which works for me. Iโ€™m still not ready to face most of them after everything that has happened.

โ€œAre you okay?โ€ Jaxon asks as we head out into the coldโ€” and down even more steps. Which is great. I mean, itโ€™s not like every muscle in my body aches or anythingโ€ฆ

Still, I nod, both because I donโ€™t want him to know that Iโ€™m hurting and because the biting cold kind of takes me by surprise. Which sounds ridiculousโ€”this is Alaska; I know exactly how cold it is outside. But itโ€™s still a shock to my system every single time.

I must not be hiding it as well as Iโ€™d hoped, because Jaxon takes one look at my face and says, โ€œWe could go back in.โ€

โ€œNo. I want to do something with you. Just the two of us.โ€

His eyes widen at my words, and the guarded look in his eyes drops away. For a second, just a second, I get to see the real Jaxonโ€”a little awkward, a little vulnerable, a lot in love with meโ€”and it takes my breath away all over again. Because I feel all of that and so much more around him.

โ€œThen letโ€™s go.โ€

We set out in the opposite direction that I went on my walk around the grounds that first day. Instead of going by the classroom cottages, we head across the pristine snow to the forest that takes up a lot of the school grounds.

We walk slowly, partly because the cold isnโ€™t that bad once I start moving and partly because walking in snow really isnโ€™t easy, especially when you were beaten half to death less than a week before. Eventually, though, we get to a little clearing in the forest. Itโ€™s not very bigโ€”maybe the size of my and Macyโ€™s dorm roomโ€”but there are a couple of benches to the side.

Jaxon drops his backpack on one and pulls out a tall black thermos. He takes off the cup at the top, then opens it and pours something into the cup. Then he hands it to me with a grin.

โ€œHot chocolate?โ€ I exclaim, delighted.

โ€œYeah, well, I figure you might want to lay off tea for a while.โ€

I laugh. โ€œYou make a good point.โ€ I start to take a sip, but Jaxon stops me. Then he reaches into his backpack and pulls out a small bag of marshmallows.

โ€œI donโ€™t know much about drinking hot cocoa, but I do know that it usually needs marshmallows.โ€ He pulls out a few of the small, homemade-looking squares and scatters them in my cup.

And I swear my heart nearly bursts, right here in the middle of a bunch of trees, as darkness slowly descends around us. Because even after everything weโ€™ve been through, Iโ€™m still blown away by how Jaxon always thinks about me. About what I might like or what makes me feel good or what would make me happy. And heโ€™s always, always right.

I take a big sip of the cocoa and am not surprised at all that itโ€™s the best hot chocolate Iโ€™ve ever had. โ€œSo who did you talk into making this for you?โ€ I ask, eyeing him over the rim of my cup.

He gives me a blank look. โ€œI have no idea what youโ€™re talking about.โ€ But thereโ€™s a shadow of amusement in the depths of his eyes that belies his words and makes me laugh.

โ€œWell, whoever it is, please tell them itโ€™s really good.โ€ He smirks a little. โ€œIโ€™ll do that.โ€

I take another sip, then hold the cup out to him. โ€œWant some?โ€

โ€œThanks, but itโ€™s not really my thing.โ€ Now heโ€™s full-on grinning.

โ€œOh, right.โ€ Which makes a million of the questions Iโ€™ve been accumulating for days rush back into my head. โ€œHow does that work, anyway?โ€

He lifts a brow. โ€œHow does what work?โ€

โ€œI saw you drink tea, but you donโ€™t drink cocoa. You ate a

strawberry during the party, but Iโ€™ve never seen you eat anything else. Exceptโ€ฆโ€ I trail off, blushing.

โ€œExcept your blood?โ€ he asks archly. โ€œWell, yeah.โ€

โ€œVampires drink water just like every other mammal on the planet, and tea is basically hot water. You start adding in milk and chocolate and itโ€™s a different story.โ€

โ€œOh. Yeah.โ€ That makes sense. โ€œAnd the strawberry?โ€ โ€œYeah, that was totally for show. My stomach hurt for the

rest of the night.โ€ Itโ€™s his turn to look embarrassed. โ€œReally? So whyโ€™d you do it?โ€

โ€œHonestly?โ€ He shakes his head, looks away. โ€œI have no idea.โ€

Itโ€™s not the answer I was expecting, but looking at him, itโ€™s obvious that heโ€™s telling the truth. So I let it go. And instead say, โ€œOne more question.โ€

โ€œThe blood thing?โ€ He looks both wary and amused.

โ€œOf course the blood thing! And theย going outside when itโ€™s lightย thing. I thought vampires could only be outside when itโ€™s dark.โ€

He looks uncomfortable for a minute, but then he squares his shoulders and says, โ€œThat depends.โ€

โ€œOn what?โ€

โ€œOn what kind of blood they drink. Here at the school, Foster serves animal blood. If we drink only that, we can be outside in the sunlight. If we choose toโ€ฆsupplement with human blood, however, then we have to wait until itโ€™s dark.โ€

I think about his comment in my room, about how we could go out, since civil twilight had started. โ€œSo when I got here, I saw you outside because you were only drinking

animal blood. But nowโ€”โ€ I blush, and itโ€™s my turn to shift my face away. Not because Iโ€™m necessarily embarrassed by what Jaxon and I do but because it feels so intimate to talk about the fact that heโ€”

โ€œYou mean, now that Iโ€™ve been drinking your blood on the regular?โ€

And the blush gets even worse. โ€œYeah.โ€

โ€œYes. I drank from you. And Cole. And then you again in the tunnels. So, no light for me.โ€

โ€œFor how long?โ€ I ask, because itโ€™s been days since the tunnels, and he definitely hasnโ€™t drank from me sinceโ€”even though Iโ€™ve kind of wanted him to. But apparently me nearly dying of blood loss has him less than eager to sink his fangs into my neck any time soon.

โ€œUntil the hormonal spike that comes from metabolizing human blood wears off.โ€ When I look mystified, he continues. โ€œItโ€™s like humans and insulin. When you eat high- carb foods, your insulin spikes and takes time to come down. When I drink human blood, my body secretes a hormone that makes it impossible for me to be in the sun. It takes about a week for all traces of that hormone to disappear. Animal blood doesnโ€™t trigger the same hormone.โ€ I count back in my head. โ€œItโ€™s been six days since the tunnels. So by tomorrow, you should be able to go out in the

sun again.โ€

He shrugs. โ€œProbably the day after to be safe. And thatโ€™s if I donโ€™tโ€ฆโ€

โ€œIf you donโ€™t bite me again.โ€ A sudden surge of heat flares through me.

Now heโ€™s the uncomfortable-looking one. โ€œSomething like

that, yeah.โ€

โ€œSomething like that?โ€ I put my cup down on the bench and wrap my good arm around his waist. โ€œ Or that exactly?โ€

He looks down at me, eyes dark and just a little bit dangerous. โ€œThat exactly,โ€ he murmurs. And I knowโ€”if I wasnโ€™t covered from head to toe in piles of clothes, he might very well be biting me right now. The idea gives me a thrill I donโ€™t even try to pretend away.

โ€œStop looking at me like that,โ€ Jaxon warns. โ€œOr Iโ€™m going to take you back to your room, and weโ€™re not going to do what I brought you here for.โ€

Not going to lie. Going back to my room suddenly sounds pretty good. Exceptโ€ฆ โ€œWhy are we here?โ€

โ€œWhy else?โ€ He reaches into his backpack and pulls out a long, skinny carrot and a hat. โ€œTo build a snowman.โ€

โ€œA snowman?โ€ I gasp. โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œFlintโ€™s not the only one who knows how to play in the snow around here.โ€ His face stays relatively expressionless, but thereโ€™s a bite to his words that has me wondering all kinds of things. Including if Jaxon could possibly be jealousโ€ฆ which seems absurd, considering Flint tried to kill me on three separate occasions. Not a lot there to inspire jealousy.

โ€œWell, are you coming?โ€ Jaxon asks as he leans down and starts scooping snow into a giant ball. โ€œOr are you just going to watch?โ€

โ€œItโ€™s a good view,โ€ I tell him, openly checking out his very fine assโ€”which is encased in way fewer layers than mine currently is. โ€œBut Iโ€™ll help.โ€

He just rolls his eyes at me. But he does wiggle his butt a littleโ€”which makes me laugh. A lot.

Itโ€™s not long before weโ€™re both cracking up as we stare at what has to be the worldโ€™s most lopsided snowman. Which makes sense for me, because Iโ€™m a San Diego girl. But Jaxon has lived in Alaska for years. Surely heโ€™s built a snowman before.

I start to ask, but thereโ€™s something about the way heโ€™s staring at our snowman that makes me hold my tongue. Even as it makes me wonder if maybe Jaxon hasnโ€™t had much time to play in his lifeโ€”even when he wasnโ€™t first in line for the throne.

The thought makes me sad as he looks around for stones to use for the snowmanโ€™s eyes. Heโ€™s been through so much in his life. It amazes me how he could have gone through all of that and still emerge on the other side, this boy who feels so much. Who cares so much. And who is willing to try to play for me.

It humbles me even as it makes me ache for him.

The ache only gets worse as I remember the question thatโ€™s been nagging at me on and off since I woke up in that infirmary three days ago. โ€œJaxon?โ€

โ€œYeah?โ€ Something in my voice must tip him off, because his smile fades into concern. โ€œWhatโ€™s wrong?โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve been meaning to askโ€ฆโ€ I take a deep breath and blurt out the question Iโ€™ve tried so hard to ignore. โ€œWhere did Hudson go? I mean, we saw Lia die. But where did the black smoke go? Did it die with her? Orโ€ฆโ€ I donโ€™t finish, because the thought is too horrible.

But Jaxonโ€™s never been one to sugarcoat thingsโ€”or avoid them. His face turns grim as he answers, โ€œI havenโ€™t figured that out yet. But I will. Because thereโ€™s no way in hell Iโ€™m

risking Hudson being set loose on the world a second time.โ€ Thereโ€™s such vehemence in his tone that it hurts to hear it,

especially knowing how much Jaxon has already suffered because of his brother. I hate that heโ€™s had to go through so much, hate even more that the threat of Hudson coming back will probably hang over us forever.

After all, itโ€™s hard to relax when a homicidal sociopath has it out for youโ€ฆand the rest of the world.

Jaxonโ€™s obviously better at dealing with his fear than I am, thoughโ€”or maybe itโ€™s just that heโ€™s had longer to live with the threat. Whatever it is, heโ€™s able to shoot me a real smile as he finally makes the snowman a face out of stones and the carrot he brought for the nose. โ€œCome on,โ€ he says. โ€œYou get to do the piรจce de rรฉsistance.โ€ He hands me the hat.

Itโ€™s the first time Iโ€™ve really looked at it, and when I do, it makes me laugh. And laugh. And laugh.

Because maybe I wasnโ€™t being ridiculous earlier after all.

Maybe Jaxon actually is jealous of Flint.

Jaxon just shakes his head at me. โ€œAre you going to put the hat on him or what?โ€ he demands.

โ€œOh, Iโ€™m going to put the hat on.โ€ I step forward and place the hat on the snowman before returning to Jaxonโ€™s side so we can both admire it.

โ€œWhat do you think?โ€ Jaxon asks after a pause. Although heโ€™s trying to make a joke, thereโ€™s a hint of vulnerability in his voiceโ€”a surprising need for my approval.

I turn back to our snowman, whoโ€™s lopsided and tilting to one side, and despite the chill, I almost melt again. To me, he looks perfect. Absolutely perfect.

I donโ€™t say that, though. I canโ€™t reveal to Jaxon that I see more than he ever imagined. So instead, I offer the only honest response I can. โ€œThe vampire hat is a really nice touch.โ€

His grin widens. โ€œYeah, I thought so, too.โ€

He reaches for my hand just as I reach for his, and it feels more than good. It feels right.

For the first time, I let myself consider what Lia said before she diedโ€”that I might be Jaxonโ€™s mate. I donโ€™t fully understand what that means, but as he pulls me close and his warmth spreads through me, I canโ€™t help but think that maybe I should find out.

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

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