The sickness was claiming her, piece by piece, robbing her of faculty and function alike.
She was going to die from whate’er this was.
Good-bye—she wanted to say good-bye to Wrath. If she could not reverse this, at least she could bid him sweet love as she went unto the Fade.
Summoning the dredges of her life force, she pulled against the rope that locked her unto her passing, yanking with desperation, praying for the strength she needed to see him one last time.
In response, her eyelids lifted slowly and only partway, but yes, she saw her beloved, his head bowed, his body collapsed beside their bedding platform.
He was weeping openly.
Her mind commanded her hand to reach out, her mouth to open and speak, her head to turn unto him.
Nothing moved; nothing was uttered.
The only thing that came of it was a single tear that gathered itself at the corner of her eye, plumping up until it lost hold of her lash and slipped down her cold cheek.
And then it was done, her lids re-closing, her good-bye given, her strength done for.
At once, a white fog boiled up from the corners of the black field of her vision, the wafting rolls of it replacing the blindness that was wrought upon her. And from out of its curls and strange illumination, a door arrived to her, coming forward as if birthed from the cloud.
She knew without being told that if she opened it, if she reached out for the golden knob and opened the portal, she would be welcomed unto the Fade—and there would be no going back. She was also aware of a conviction that if she did not act within a prescribed time, she would lose her chance and become lost in the In Between.
Anha did not want to go.
She feared for Wrath without her. There were so few to be trusted at court—so many to be feared.
The legacy left by his father had been a rotten one. It had just not been evident at the start.
“Wrath…” she said unto the fog. “Oh, Wrath…”
The yearning tone in her voice echoed around, rebounding in her own ears as well as the white-on-white landscape.
Looking upward, she had some hope that the Scribe Virgin would appear in robed splendor and take pity on her.
“Wrath…”
How could she depart the Earth when so much of her would be left behind—
Anha frowned. The door before her seemed to have moved back. Unless she had imagined it?
No, it was retreating. Slowly, inexorably.
“Wrath!” she shouted. “Wrath, I don’t want to leave! Wraaaaaaaaaath—”
“Yes?”
Anha screamed as she wheeled around. At first, she had no idea what was confronting her: It was a little boy of mayhap seven or eight, black of hair, pale of eye, his body so painfully scrawny, her immediate thought was that she must feed him.
“Who ever are you?” she croaked. And yet she knew. She knew.
“You called me.”
She put her hand upon her lower belly. “Wrath …?”
“Yes, mahmen.” The young focused on the door with eyes that seemed ancient. “Are you going to cross unto the Fade?”
“I have no choice.”
“Untrue.”
“I am dying.”
“You do not have to.”
“I am losing the fight.”
“Drink. Drink of what is in your mouth.”
“I cannot. I cannot swallow.”
The cadence of their words was increasing, faster and faster, as if he knew she was running out of time … and by extension, he was, too.
Those eyes of his, such a pale green … and there was something strange about them. The pupils were too small.
“I cannot drink,” she repeated. Dearest Virgin Scribe, her mind was muddled beyond measure.
“Follow me and you will be able to.”
“How?”
He held out his hand to her. “Come with me. I shall take you back home, and then you will drink.”
She looked to the door. There was a pull to it, a draw that made her want to reach out and complete the cycle that had started as soon as she had fainted unto the floor.
But what she felt toward her son was stronger.
Turning away, she gave the portal her back. “Return me to your father?”
“Yes. Back to him and to me.”
Walking forward, she clasped the warm palm of her son instead of the knob of the door, and lead her on he did, escorting her out of the white fog, away from the death that had come for her, toward …
“Wrath?” she whispered into the darkness that claimed them both.
“Yes?”
“Thank you. I did not want to go.”
“I know, mahmen. And someday, you will repay me thus.”
“I will?”
“Yes. And all shall be well—”
She didn’t hear the rest of what he said: Just as a suction had pulled her under, a sudden explosion propelled her outward, the push hitting every part of her at the same moment. And then a great wind hit her in the face, stripping her hair back, rendering her breathless.
Anha knew not where she would end.
All she could do was pray that what had come to her was in fact her progeny … and not some demon to mislead her. The only thing worse than not going back would be to be cheated of an eternity with those whom she loved …
“Wrath!” she screamed into the maelstrom. “Wraaaaaaaaaaath…!”
THIRTY-ONE
Trez knew that none of this should be happening.
Not the way he’d taken Selena’s throat instead of her wrist. Not that crazy-ass shit on the bed. And really, totally not the fact that she was laid out on the fur rug, her br**sts bare to his eyes, her sex ready for the taking, her scent all about the aroused.
“Take me,” she said in the sexiest voice he had ever heard. “Teach me…”
Her stare was dead to marks on his, and on some level, he didn’t understand. She’d turned him down before, and then … now she wanted him?
Who cares. His erection throbbed. Who cares! Take her! She wants us!
Us. Like there were two parts of him. And actually, that wasn’t as moronic as it sounded. His c**k was, in fact, talking on its own at this point.
“Selena,” he groaned. “Are you sure? I get any more of you, anywhere … and I’m not going to be able to stop.”
Hell, he was barely holding on to this pause.
She reached her hand out and ran it up his forearm, stroking him. “Yes.”
“I shouldn’t be doing this,” he heard himself say.
Shut up! Sit down!
Great, now he was channeling Howard Stern’s father.