best counter
Search
Report & Feedback

Chapter no 22 – KANE

A Promise of Peridot (The Sacred Stones, #2)

I had been staring at the sealed entrance of Reaperโ€™s Cavern for what felt like hours. Though grief beckoned like a siren, I wouldnโ€™t succumb just yet. Instead, I focused on my bewildermentโ€”how could I have been so supremely foolish? How could I have let both Arwen and Mari slip through my fingers?

Fedrik moaned as Griffin attempted something with his leg behind me. After a few long, tedious inhales and the stomp of boots, Griffin arrived at my side. I was still confounded by my own horrible, inexcusable decision-making when he surveyed the solid rock next to me. โ€œHowโ€™s the staring going?โ€

โ€œHowโ€™s the prince?โ€

โ€œHe needs help.โ€

โ€œWe have to wait for Arwen. We canโ€™t risk an infirmary. The towns are swarming with Amber soldiersโ€ฆโ€

A miserable groan pulled our eyes to the tree where Fedrik leaned, trying to adjust his position. Griffin hadnโ€™t been wrong: the princeโ€™s face was nearly gray, his leg tied off with a tourniquet below the knee.

โ€œThat leg will be septic soon,โ€ Griffin said. โ€œWe should get him back to camp.โ€

โ€œWe canโ€™t. Not yet.โ€

โ€œYou think I want to leave them?โ€

I knew we had to help Fedrik, but I couldnโ€™t move. Couldnโ€™t or wouldnโ€™t, I wasnโ€™t sure. The solid, cratered stone mass before me taunted me. I couldnโ€™t leaveโ€”wouldnโ€™t leave withoutโ€”

Mariโ€™s voice pierced my thoughts like an arrowhead. โ€œHoly Stones, there you are!โ€

Thank the Godsโ€”

Griffin moved like a man possessed, bounding for her. He reached Mari just as she cleared the tree line, only to stall a foot in front of her. A loaded pause followed as he scratched his arm before saying, in relieved greeting, โ€œWitch.โ€

Mari only huffed and walked around him. โ€œFedrik, are you all right?โ€

Fedrik grimaced in response, his eyes elsewhere. He and I were both staring at the same leafy green spot in the jungle Mari had just passed through.

Waiting.

A beatโ€”

And then another.

Before my eyes stung. Before my hands clenched into fists. Before acid burned my throat.

โ€œWhere is Arwen?โ€ Mari asked first, her voice smaller than Iโ€™d ever heard it.

Fedrik looked stricken. โ€œShe isnโ€™t with you?โ€

My whole body went still, my pulse halting in my veins. โ€œYou were just with her.โ€ My sight had gone red, like a fog of blood. โ€œWhat do you mean, where is she?โ€

Griffin smoothly stepped in front of Mari, his face a mask of calm. โ€œFuck, Griff, Iโ€™m not going to hurt her,โ€ I bit out. โ€œMari, tell me what happened.โ€

The witch swallowed audibly. โ€œWe escaped the treasure room and made it through this terrifying stone maze, then an avalanche of rock barreled toward us. We were exhaustedโ€”Iโ€™ve never run so much in my entire life, but even Arwen was tired, I could tellโ€”โ€ She paused to swallow again. โ€œIt was horrible and so much faster than us. We kept going deeper into the caves until we saw a corridor that opened to the jungle, and sheโ€ฆ sheโ€ฆโ€

Finish the thought before I rip it from your tongueโ€”

โ€œShe saved me. She used her lighte,โ€ Mari said quietly, โ€œto protect us both and push me in, even though there wasnโ€™t enough time for her. She would have been crushed, so she kept running. I tried to go back, but the tunnel was impenetrable because of the landslide. I tried a disintegration spell, but it didnโ€™t affect the stone, and I donโ€™t have my spell books, andโ€”โ€ Another swallow. โ€œAll I could do was hope she made it to you first, but nowโ€ฆ I donโ€™t know where she is.โ€

For a moment, it was silent. Nothing but the caws of birds and the humid breeze rustling the waxy leaves around us.

โ€œI have to go back in.โ€ I wasnโ€™t even sure if Iโ€™d spoken the words aloud.

โ€œYou heard the witch,โ€ Griffin said. โ€œThereโ€™s no way back in.โ€

โ€œArwen is probably trapped in there. Her greatest fear. I have toโ€”โ€ I couldnโ€™t think. What could I even do? I turned to Mari. The look in her eyes told me my expression was as horrifying as it felt on my face. I tried to compose myself. โ€œMari, you have to do something.โ€

โ€œLike what?โ€ She clutched Briarโ€™s amulet again.

โ€œA locator spell,โ€ Fedrik groaned against the tree, his face very pale.

โ€œI just told you.โ€ Her voice grew frantic. โ€œI donโ€™t have my grimoires. I donโ€™t know these spells off the top of my head. Iโ€™m not an encyclopedia.โ€

This was not the time for Mari to doubt herself. As if reading my thoughts, Griffin held her gaze and said firmly, โ€œYou know enough. What aboutโ€”โ€

โ€œOh yes, you know all the spells! Rattle them off for me, will you?โ€

I nearly knocked myself unconscious. โ€œPlease, Mari. Skewer the commander with your wit later. Think now.โ€

Griffin, the brave bastard, stepped closer to her. โ€œClear your mind and think of your grimoires. Youโ€™ve read them all cover to cover.โ€

Mari chewed her lip. โ€œMaybe a binding spell? To tie one of us to her. Itโ€™d be like running around blindfolded, but theyโ€™d know if they were getting closer. Theyโ€™d be able to feel her.โ€

โ€œMe. Send me. Do it now.โ€

โ€œI need a memory of you and her to bind you together.โ€

A dark cloud passed over the shining sun, and a chill crawled up my spine. โ€œWhat kind of memory?โ€

Mari shut her eyes. โ€œAnything with a strong emotion.โ€ She raised her hands to the sky, fingers taut and spread wide toward the tree cover, and murmured words in a language I didnโ€™t recognize.

โ€œThere was an evening.โ€ I cleared my throat. โ€œA few months ago, when she spoke during a forum I held. She had great insight. I remember feeling unbelievably proud of herโ€ฆ the way she braved the room. I knew my people still scared her, and yetโ€”โ€

One of Mariโ€™s eyes peeked open. โ€œIโ€™m going to need more than that, Kane. You have to actually feel something.โ€

Rare heat flamed up my neckโ€”I didnโ€™t embarrass easily. โ€œFine,โ€ I gritted out. The memory she needed bobbed to the surface from where Iโ€™d suppressed it the past few months.

โ€œThe night the wolfbeast attacked Arwen.โ€ I prickled against Fedrikโ€™s and Griffinโ€™s curious eyes. โ€œI had been flying back from Willowridge. The whole way home, I was kicking myself for leaving her. I had thisโ€ฆ feeling that something would happen to her while I was gone. That I would be punished somehow. Perhaps because we had grown so close the night before. Or because the people I cared about so often wound up dead.

โ€œWhen I got back, I raced to her room. I was going to make up some flimsy excuse for visiting her, but she was gone.โ€ My knuckles went tight against the memory of her empty bedroom. โ€œIt was like finding a limb missing. Running through the woods, I think I made a promise to every God for her safe return. And when I found her in that clearingโ€ฆ saw her blood leaking onto the forest floorโ€ฆ

โ€œI thought my very heart lived outside my body in that moment, and I watched it wither and die. I would have given my own life ten times over to save her from that pain. From the fever, the nightmares, the agony. It was the longest night of my life. When she awoke the next morningโ€”healing, laughingโ€”it was like dawn breaking over a thousand years of darkness. Sheโ€”โ€

โ€œItโ€™s done.โ€

I hadnโ€™t noticed the wind swirling around usโ€”or that Iโ€™d closed my eyesโ€”but when I opened them, Mariโ€™s hair fell softly around her face, and thin, reedy leaves fluttered back down to the ground.

Like a bath of light and warmth, I felt Arwenโ€™s spirit flitting about inside my chest.

Aliveโ€”

She was alive.

I clutched at my heart. โ€œSheโ€™s all right.โ€

โ€œThank the Stones,โ€ Mari breathed. โ€œYou should be able to sense where she is. The feeling of being tied to her will intensify as you get closer. Once you touch, the spell will end.โ€

I made sure I still had my sword and gathered my pack.

โ€œWeโ€™ll meet you back at camp,โ€ Griffin said. โ€œWe wonโ€™t risk finding a healer in Frog Eye unless we have to.โ€

I nodded and took off toward the layers of greenery ahead of me.

The sensation of my hands being tied stopped me in my tracks. Monkey shouts and bird calls were swallowed by pure silence as I looked down, but my arms hung at my sides, despite the feeling telling me otherwise.

โ€œWhat is it?โ€ Griffin called.

Fearโ€”true, genuine fearโ€”hammered through my heart.

โ€œI thinkโ€ฆโ€ I could feel what Arwen felt. Could feel her being tethered to something, my back mirroring hers, bound to some kind of pole. โ€œI think someone has her.โ€ My voice was hoarse.

Horror knotted both Mariโ€™s and Fedrikโ€™s faces.

I didnโ€™t waste another moment before hurtling for the trees.

You'll Also Like