Read Revealed Online

Authors: Evangeline Anderson

Revealed (42 page)

“That’s all you care about,” Rast accused her. “Power.”

She smiled. “What else is there? And speaking of power, without your wings, you have none. I’d advise you to fine a nice room in the lower halls and spend your days in quiet meditation. Leave the little female to your rival and the ruling of
First World
to
me
.”

“I’ll never—” Rast began but a curse from Y’dex cut him off.

“Nadiah, you little fool! Come back? What are you doing?”

Rast tore his eyes from the high priestess and saw something that made his heart jump into his throat. Nadiah was standing on the very edge of the mesa, beyond the boarder of blue-grey bushes. She was swaying, barely holding on to one of the slender, vine-like branches and looking like a strong breeze might blow her over the side at any minute.

“Nadiah,” he whispered. “Please, sweetheart, be
careful
.”

“I’m sorry, Rast.” Her lovely dark blue eyes were filled with despair. “But I’m not going back to Tranq Prime. I…I’d rather die than do that. Than be without you and be stuck with Y’dex.”

“Nadiah…” Y’dex was slinking toward her, the look of intense concentration still on his face. “Nadiah, come here. I command you to come here right
now.
” Suddenly, he lunged for her.

With a cry, Nadiah stumbled back, trying to elude his grasp. And then, without a another sound, she fell off the edge of the mesa and into the wide blue sky below.

“Nadiah!” Her name was torn from Rast’s throat—a cry of despair and devastation. Without thinking what he was doing, he ran forward, toward the spot where she’d disappeared.

“Rast,” he heard Sylvan shout. “Rast, you can’t!”

He paid no attention. The itching in his shoulder blades had become a fierce burning now, as though someone had doused his back in gasoline and set it alight. But Rast didn’t care—didn’t care about anything but getting Nadiah back. Or dying with her if he couldn’t.

Without hesitation he dived over the edge of the mesa, aiming for the rapidly descending female form in the fluttering white gown. He felt his shoulder knock into something solid as he went and dimly heard a hoarse gasp in his ear. But only part of him registered that Y’dex was also falling, screaming and flailing as he went. Most of his mind was completely occupied with the idea of getting to Nadiah.

Have to get her. Have to hold her,
he thought disjointedly as he streamlined his body, making himself into a living arrow aimed at his target. He didn’t know why but it seemed very important that he feel her in his arms one last time. Even if they were both destined to smash into the desert floor below, he wanted to do it with Nadiah pressed to his chest as she whispered his name.

They were both falling fast but he weighed considerably more and soon he was right beside her in mid air. The ground was coming up rapidly to meet them and he knew he had only seconds before they made impact.

“Nadiah!” he shouted and she turned her head, a strangely serene look in her dark blue eyes. Rast held out his arms and suddenly she was in them, her white gown fluttering in the wind like so many feathers.

Feathers,
he thought and wondered why it should seem so important.

“I love you,”
she mouthed and he nodded and held her close.

This is it,
he thought as the sandy ground reached up hungrily to greet them.
This is where we di—

Suddenly the ground swooped away and they were sailing upward again. Rast was dimly aware of something extending to either side of them, something shining and silvery and nearly translucent in the green sunlight.
What the hell?
he thought, frowning.
Are we hang gliding somehow? But where did the glider come from? And how—?

“Rast!” he heard Nadiah laughing in sheer delight and looked to see her grinning at him. “Your wings,” she shouted over the wind whistling in their ears. “You have
wings
—you saved us!”

“Wings?” He was dimly aware that the horrible burning pain in his back was gone and yes, the strange hang glider like things on either side of them
did
appear to be attached to him somehow. He could feel the drag of the wind, the push and pull of the air currents deep in his shoulders as they glided along. But he wasn’t making any kind of effort to fly—it was almost as though he didn’t have to. As though the wings that had miraculously sprouted from his back knew how to take the initiative and keep him aloft themselves. Except…how the hell could that be?

Don’t worry about how,
whispered a little voice in his brain.
Worry about what comes next—what you can do to cure Nadiah.
Looking to his left, he saw they were flying close to the holy mountain. In fact, they were almost at the level of the
Healing
Gardens
now.
That’s it,
he thought.
That’s where I need to take her. Have to get her to the fountain so she can drink and be healed.

The minute he thought it, the wings stroked through the sky and their position changed subtly.
 
Holding Nadiah close to him, he searched for a good landing place. It was time to do what he’d set out to do in the first place—heal the woman he loved.

Chapter Thirty-three

 

Nadiah was dizzy from the great height she and Rast were soaring at. Dizzy but exhilarated too. Though they were much higher than they had been on top of the mesa, she felt no fear. She was safe in the arms of the male who loved her. Safe and serene.

The moment was both beautiful and surreal. They went gliding through the air with Rast’s huge, silvery wings stretched to either side of them, the feathers flashing in the sunlight. The sky vaulted overhead like a huge blue bowl and far off the sharp cries of avian hunters rang out. Nadiah had never felt such joy.
This is how it’s supposed to be between the Challa and his Lyzel,
she thought.
This joy, this pleasure and love and excitement. He takes her flying often—it’s one of the things that bonds them together.

She didn’t know how she knew that, but somehow she did. This flight—this
mating flight
—was a sacred ritual between the Counselor
 
and his female. It had been lost for centuries but now that Rast was here, back where he belonged, it could be resurrected, like all the old customs.

Looking down she saw Sylvan and Sophia waving at them and the high priestess standing there with a stricken expression on her face.
She never expected him to get his wings,
Nadiah thought and knew it was true.
She wanted him tied to
First World
for the extra power it would give her but she thought she’d be able to use him as a puppet while she was the power behind the throne—literally.
Well,
that
wasn’t going to happen. Rast wasn’t the type of male likely to allow another to dictate to him. Maybe the high priestess should look for another line of work.

“There—the
Healing
Garden
,” Rast said and her attention was torn from the high mesa and directed to the lush, verdant garden which grew from the side of the mountain.
Another oasis,
she thought.
An oasis of healing.

And it was healing she desperately needed. Now that the first wild exhilaration of flight had worn off, she was beginning to feel both the fever and the severed bond. The fever made her shiver with cold one moment and hot as an oven the next, while the broken bond felt like a deep blood vessel in her soul which had been cut. From its ragged end, all her strength was rapidly leaking away.

“Rast,” she whispered. “Hurry. Please hurry.”

“Going as fast as I can, sweetheart,” he promised as they hovered over the small patch of green and purple jungle. “I’ve just never done this before. Not quite…sure how to land.”

But as he spoke, the wings seemed to sense his desires. The silvery feathers cupped the warm desert air gently and slowly, they descended. Soon Rast’s feet touched the ground and the wings folded surprisingly small and flat against his back.

“Nice… landing,” Nadiah murmured. She wanted to examine his new wings, to look around the
Healing
Garden
which reminded her of a wilder version of the sacred grove back on the Kindred Mother Ship. But her run to get away from Y’dex and the rush of excitement during the flight had used up her last reserves of strength. Grey and black blotches were appearing in her vision which made it hard to see…hard to think. Dimly she was aware of her own raspy breathing.

“Hold on, sweetheart.” Rast sounded nearly panicked as he held her close to his chest and began striding through the underbrush. “Just got to find the fountain. It’s gotta be around here somewhere—this place really isn’t that big. I just…”

He stopped suddenly and Nadiah wondered why. “Rast?” she whispered, having to force out the words. “Rast is…is everything…all right?”

“No,” he whispered brokenly. “No. Oh,
no.”

She wanted to ask what was wrong, wanted to comfort him and tell him she loved him no matter what. But the grey and black blotches had grown until they obscured her entire field of vision.

Nadiah didn’t want to faint—she was afraid if she did, she might never wake up again. The idea of never again opening her eyes, of never seeing Rast’s smile or hearing his deep laughter made her want to cry.
Please,
she thought.
Please, I don’t want to go. I’m not ready. Not ready to leave him.

But though she tried desperately to stay with him, the combined weakness of the fever and the severed blood bond were too much. Her last sight was of Rast’s eyes—his truegreen eyes which had marked him as a Kindred from the first, even before his blood. Rast looked back at her and she saw those eyes were filled with tears.

Then she saw no more.

* * * * *

 

“No! No, it can’t be.
No!”
Rast pounded the stone side of the empty fountain with helpless rage. It wasn’t
just
empty, either. The elaborate structure—which was carved with all kinds of alien beasts he didn’t recognize—was bone dry and looked like it had been for centuries.

“A drink from the fountain of the
Healing
Garden
was said to cure any illness, no matter how severe.”
The words echoed in his head, teasing him—mocking him.
A drink—she just needs one drink.
But there was none to be had.

Well then, I’ll heal her myself. Maybe if the bond is restored I can give her some strength, keep her going a little while longer until I can make that priestess bitch cure the fever.
Closing his eyes, Rast concentrated with all his might—reaching out to the woman in his arms, trying to find the connection that had so recently been between them. Before, on Tranq Prime, he’d been able to feel the blood bond with no problem. But this time there was…nothing. Just nothing. It was like feeling around in a dark room for a light switch that wasn’t there.

He didn’t know how long he tried before he realized it was useless. Before he simply held her close, his tears falling on her pale, unmoving face.

She was gone and there was no bringing her back.

He looked hopelessly at the dry fountain. There would be no healing drink for Nadiah—no sudden and miraculous cure for the woman he loved. Everything that had happened—their frantic flight to
First World
, his unbreakable vows to stay there always, the desperate dive to the sandy floor of the desert—all had been for nothing.

Nothing.

His last foolish hope had been dashed to smithereens the way he should have been when he dove off the mesa. As he would have been if the wings hadn’t suddenly manifested at the last possible moment.

Fucking wings
, he thought savagely.
What good are they now? What am I supposed to do with them except look like a freak?
Twisting his head, he stared over his shoulder to glare at them bitterly.

Though they had moved seemingly of their own volition earlier, now the wings were folded flat against his back. In fact, they seemed almost ready to melt back into his skin making him wonder if they might be reabsorbed by his body whenever they weren’t in use.

Use them now.

Rast jumped. It sounded like a thought but the idea had clearly come from outside of his head. From somewhere in the
Healing
Garden
.

“What?” he said. “I mean, hello? Is anybody there?”

Only silence greeted his words and he felt like a fool. Who was he talking to? He was going crazy with grief, so upset he was hearing voices. He—

Use your wings. Enfold your beloved.

Okay, that time he had
definitely
heard something and it wasn’t just in his head.

“How?” he asked and then answered his own question by flexing his shoulder blades. The huge, shining wings came out at once, as though they had been waiting for his summons. To Rast, they felt like an extra pair of arms and hands sprouting from his shoulders. Imagining them like that, he concentrated on getting them wrapped around himself and Nadiah’s still form, lying in his lap.

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