Chapter 16
Myles was on the porch looking out over the water a half hour after dawn. He and the other wolves had gone into the forest to shift back. He hated leaving Addison, but he wasn’t sure she was ready to see all of that quite yet. Not to mention, he wanted a look at his wound first.
Addison slept like the dead after Minka put some salve on her feet and added some herb to her sweet tea. Otherwise, he knew she’d have been right there with him. Myles had remained near, patrolling the porch that went all the way around the small house even as his wound festered.
The wound itself was ugly, black lines branching out as the silver continued to poison him. He had no idea how much longer he had. Every breath was a struggle, but he fought because he wasn’t ready to leave Addison.
“Where did you get the clothes?” Minka asked as she came out onto the porch. She sat in one of the wooden chairs and drew her knees up to her chest.
“The truck Riley drove is Kane’s. We always keep clothes for such occasions.”
“Lucky for you.” Minka’s smile was soft, sad. “How are you feeling?”
“Like shit,” he said. He sighed loudly. “I never saw the blade. I knew Delphine had a bone knife in her hand, but I didn’t see a silver one.”
Minka dropped her feet to the ground and leaned forward in the chair. “Let me look at it. I might be able to do something.”
“You know as well as I that nothing can be done.”
“Let her look.”
Myles felt his heart plummet to his feet as he heard Addison’s voice. He’d remained to see her, but now that she was awake, he knew it would’ve been better if he’d gone off to die alone.
“Please,” Addison said. “Let her try if she can.”
Myles couldn’t form any words. When Addison came to stand beside him, her arms wrapped around one of his, there wasn’t anything she could ask for that he would deny her.
“Am I yours?” she asked.
Myles turned his head to look down into her hazel eyes. “For now and always.”
“Then I’ll fight for you, just as you fought for me.”
He shifted so that he faced her, careful to keep the wound on his left shoulder as hidden as he could. “I don’t want to give you false hope.”
“It’s better than giving up,” she replied softly. “Myles, against everything we found each other. I can’t explain the attraction or the...” she paused and swallowed loudly. “The love I have for you. I don’t want it to end.”
As if he would die now without fighting.
Myles touched her cheek. “My sweet Addison. You stole my heart the day you walked into the bar. I desired you, longed for you with such hunger. Then I got a taste of you. I didn’t want you in my heart, but you found your way there anyway. Wolves mate for life.”
Her eyes were shining with unshed tears. “So I’ve been told.”
“You’re mine,” he said thickly.
“Then don’t leave me.”
Minka rose suddenly. “Great. So y’all love each other. Let’s get down to business. Addison, go into the kitchen and look in the lower cabinet next to the sink. You’ll see a wooden box. Bring it. Myles,” she said and pointed to the chair she vacated. “Remove your shirt and sit.”
Myles stared after Addison as he did as Minka bade. He ground his teeth together while trying to pull off his shirt. Suddenly, someone gripped the neck of the tee and ripped it in half. He turned and saw Kane beside him.
“This looks like shit,” his brother said of the wound.
Myles shrugged his good shoulder. “Feels like it, too.”
Boot heels sounded on the porch, and a moment later Solomon and Court were standing in front of him. Myles couldn’t hold the gazes of his brothers. He couldn’t stand to see the sorrow or anger in their eyes.
Then Addison returned with Minka’s box, a small smile on her face that made Myles want to yank her against him and kiss her. It went against everything inside him to waste what little time he had on trying to heal the wound instead of kissing the woman he loved.
“This will work,” Addison said with a firm nod.
Myles grinned. “You don’t even know what Minka will do.”
“Doesn’t matter. It’ll work.”
Minka’s look of doubt that she kept hidden from Addison told Myles everything he needed to know. Magic or not, it would be a miracle if Minka were able to reverse the effects of the silver poisoning him.
Kane moved behind Myles, his hands upon his shoulders. Solomon moved to Myles’s right while Court walked to the left. There had been a few occasions when wolves tried to stop the silver, and not a single one of them had been painless.
“You should go,” Myles told Addison.
She lifted her chin. “Never. I’ll be beside you through it all.”
“I don’t know what will happen,” he said, concern about her welfare filling him. “I don’t want you hurt.”
“She won’t be,” Griffin said as he and Gage came to stand on either side of Addison.
Myles saw the quick look of interest exchanged between Minka and Griffin, but it was swiftly forgotten when Minka touched his wound. He pulled back his lips as pain ripped through him.
He gripped the handle of the chair but heard the wood crack beneath his hold. Instantly, he felt the hands of his brothers holding him in place even as he squeezed his eyes shut. He thought of Addison, of her tempting mouth and soft body. How unfair to find her only to have to let her go so soon.
Addison couldn’t stop the tears no matter how hard she tried.
She watched Myles’s body shudder in pain as his brothers held him in place.
The wound looked horrible, as if his body were rotting from the inside out.
And the dark veins spreading outward over his chest and abdomen, down his arm to his hand, and across his back showed how fast the silver spread through him.
Minka, for her part, was working frantically as she searched through herbs applying one after the other to no affect, her face lined with worry.
“Use your magic,” Griffin urged her.
Minka cut him a look. “I don’t have any.”
“Delphine thought differently. Find it, and use it. Or Myles dies.”
Myles was shaking from the pain, the black veins growing darker, thicker as the silver moved faster through him. Addison rushed to him, kneeling between his legs. She put her hands atop his.
No one stopped her or tried to push her out of the way. Was it because they knew Myles wasn’t going to live? She refused to accept that.
Addison turned her gaze to Minka. “You have magic. Delphine said you did. It’s inside you. Please, Minka.”
Minka looked from Addison to Myles and then took a deep, shuddering breath. She calmed herself and erased all emotion from her face. Then she placed her hands over Myles’s wound and closed her eyes.
Myles jerked, a low growl coming from deep within him. His eyes flew open, glowing yellow as his face contorted with pain. With his teeth beginning to lengthen and his nails growing long and sharp, Griffin tried to drag Addison away.
“No!” she yelled and pulled out of his grasp. “I’m not leaving him.”
“Addison!” Solomon yelled over Myles’s growls. “He wouldn’t want you hurt.”
She stood, Myles’s gaze locked on her. “I’m not leaving you,” she told him and took his face in her hands. Then she leaned down and kissed him.
Myles stilled instantly. When Addison pulled back, his blue eyes had returned. She smiled at him.
“Addison?” he whispered right before he went slack and his eyes shut.
“Myles!” she yelled and shook him.
This time it was Court who took a hold of her and pulled her away. Court held her tightly so there was no way she could get free. She watched as Solomon and Kane backed away with a grim look on their faces.
Addison looked over the porch to see dozens of people – werewolves – watching Myles in silence. She wiped at the tears and noticed Riley for the first time standing just inside the house with her arms wrapped around herself crying silently, her shoulders shaking.
“No,” Addison whispered. “I can’t lose him. I’ve lost everyone else.”
Griffin placed a hand on her shoulder. “Shh.”
She frowned at him but saw that his gaze was on Minka. Addison swiveled her head to the witch. Minka was hovering a few inches off the porch, a strange light surrounding her. Solomon started toward Minka, but Griffin moved with lightning speed, stopping Solomon with a hand on his arm.
“Leave her,” Griffin said in a low, dangerous voice.
Solomon’s gaze narrowed, his lips pulled back in a snarl. “Why?”
“Because her magic is being released. Look at your brother’s wound if you don’t believe me.”
Addison gasped when she saw the black veins on Myles begin to shrink in size and length until there was nothing but the ugly, festering wound. And then, even that began to heal.
“Impossible,” Court murmured.
Griffin was smiling as he said, “No, just not something any witch can do.”
Blood began to run from Minka’s ears and her nose as the last bit of Myles’s injury vanished, ending with a drop of silver that disappeared, as well. Minka went lax but was caught in Solomon’s arms before she could hit the floor.
Solomon stared down at her a moment before he gently lifted her and slowly walked her into the house past Riley. Addison shoved Court’s hands away and rushed to Myles, but he wasn’t moving. Kane and Court quickly lifted him and brought him to the couch inside.
As soon as he was laid down, Addison sat on the floor beside the couch, his hand in hers. She rested her forehead on his side and simply held him, praying that he woke.
It was dark when Myles opened his eyes. He grinned when he saw Addison asleep as she leaned against the couch. Myles was careful as he sat up, expecting pain, and when there was none, he looked at his shoulder to find that he was healed. There was a large scar, but no wound.
He gently gathered Addison in his arms and moved her to the couch. As he stood, he saw Minka and Griffin on the porch talking in low voices. The interest in Griffin’s eyes was obvious, and Myles suspected Minka might be interested, as well.