14. Henry #2
We continue down the trail at a slower pace, and Harlow’s previous terror seems to be forgotten.
She looks around, peering into the forest on either side, drinking in every inch of the scenery as if it will disappear the moment she looks away.
I suppose for someone who has lived her whole life behind big city walls, she’s feeling the impulse to soak it in.
The last few miles before the hill to Mountain Haven are quiet and uneventful .
“What will happen when we arrive?” she asks as we clear the forest and begin up the steep mountain trail.
“I wouldn’t expect a welcome party, if that’s what you mean. I’ll take you to bathe and you’ll have time to rest and have dinner in your rooms. You’ll be formally introduced tomorrow at dinner.”
She glances down the side of the cliff as Nightsong turns up a switchback.
“It’s better if you don’t look down,” I say.
She meets my gaze over her shoulder. “I think it’s better if I do.”
I’m startled by her defiance, even so far from home—by the way she didn’t flinch when I cut her hand and made her bleed all over the forest floor. This woman, who grew up in safety, seems so undaunted by danger.
The large stone wall of Mountain Haven finally comes into view as we round the bend in the trail, and Harlow gasps.
The sunset paints the cream stone brilliant orange.
She stares at it, transfixed by the vicious scar that marks the wall in a brighter shade of white—installed ten years ago when the Drained came and fractured our world.
“That is what survival looks like,” I say.
Every time I see it from the outside, I feel the same creeping dread up my spine. The fear comes in these moments as fresh as it was that night. I’m here and whole, but looking at my home from the outside, it’s almost comforting to see a monument of all we lost that night.
“They broke through.” Her voice is barely a whisper.
“They did.”
“But how? I thought they just broke through the doors.” She turns to look at me, her expression a mixture of horror and curiosity.
She is either the world’s greatest actress, or she really doesn’t know anything.
We crest the last hill, and the large metal doors creak open as my parents approach the gates.
Harlow sits a little straighter, her gaze darting around the entry.
“Looking for an easy escape, lovely?” I taunt.
“Just a prisoner sizing up her cell, my feral wolf,” she counters, her voice overly sweet.
As soon as Nightsong trots through the entrance, I feel the weight of eyes on us. Harlow keeps her gaze straight ahead, like she can feel it too .
As we wind through the narrow streets of Mountain Haven, Harlow’s composure slips. She gawks at the structured housing and the bustling little city we’ve built. “I thought you said you went to ground.”
“We did. For a year. While we rebuilt the walls.”
“I thought you said a lot of your people died.”
“They did.” I offer no further explanation.
She continues openly staring at the busy streets as we ride through the six levels of the fort toward Havenwood House.
The people pay us little mind. Though some stop to gape at her, most continue about their day, trying to get tasks completed before dusk.
When we reach the stables, I dismount and help Harlow down. She’s steadier on her feet than I expected her to be, but her hips must be sore.
Her guard dismounts and rushes to her side, looking at the blood matted to the slashes in her cloak.
She bats his hands away. “It’s a scratch, don’t fuss.”
Gaven gives me a look that would wither a lesser man. “You had a responsibility.”
Harlow presses a hand to his chest. “I’m fine, Gaven. Henry got me here in one piece.” She meets his gaze, her voice low. “I’ve seen worse.”
He frowns, but his shoulders relax and he takes a step back, folding his arms behind his back. “I’ll need a full layout of the manor with all entry and exit points, and I’d like to see Harlow’s rooms.”
“She’ll be staying with me,” I say.
I’m not sure what madness drives me to think it’s a good idea, but several of our guards are already crowding around the manor doors for a glimpse of her, and I’m not about to let her become a vulnerability to some lesser man who wants my place of power.
I did not fight this hard for this long to lose my chance at vengeance now.
My family didn’t suffer unimaginable losses and drag our people back from the brink of extinction so that I could let some bystander snatch away my vengeance.
My father gives me a side-eye, but it’s Harlow who crosses her arms and glares at me.
“That’s inappropriate for an unwed couple,” she says.
I clear my throat. “I meant you’ll stay in the adjoining rooms meant for my wife.”
She’s supposed to stay in guest quarters for propriety’s sake until the ceremony, but our people aren’t terribly traditional, and I want her close so that I know what she’s up to.
I hold out an arm for her to take. She threads her left hand through it, wincing when I bump her. I know she hurt that wrist.
“I’ll take you to the baths and I’ll heal your wounds.”
“That would be highly inappropriate,” she says, louder than she needs to.
“Are you suddenly modest, wife?” I say, my voice low.
“Are you suddenly unconcerned with appearances, husband? After spending all that time to perfect your hair?”
Bryce lets out a low whistle beside me.
“Surely you have a female healer who sees to women,” she says.
I grind my teeth. “Yes, but I am the best, and I am your fiancé, so I will do it.” I lean closer. “Plus, we should talk about house rules.”
Her face is awash with indecision as if she’s trying to predict if it’s better to fall in line or cause a scene. She glances at the warriors gathered by the entrance and nods once in acquiescence.
Harlow’s gaze passes over everyone. I know she’s assessing who has blessings from which Divine. She tosses one last glance over her shoulder at her bodyguard as I usher her inside.
I lead her down the hall toward the stairs to our private wing.
Harlow hesitates at the bottom of the stairs. “I thought you said we were going to the baths.”
“Changed my mind. We’re going to our private washroom upstairs.”
She stops suddenly, her gaze focused on our left, where a servant has propped the ballroom door open.
Harlow openly gawks at the ornate room, and I bite back a smile.
I like seeing her disoriented. She expected us to live like a bunch of savages, not to be more technologically sophisticated than her fancy city.
Being so remote has made us resourceful, and being much smaller than the city has made us agile in ways they simply can’t be.
“I’ll take you for a spin around the floor after our wedding, lovely,” I say.
She glares at me, releases my arm, and storms up the stairs ahead of me. She pauses at the top.
“Straight,” I say.
She walks down the hallways quickly, but I can see her counting the doors in her periphery, mapping the house in her head. Her training is much better than I expected. Given her status, I’d made a lot of incorrect assumptions about her.
“To your right.”
She places her hand on the door to our right and pushes it open.
Aware of her bodyguard following behind us, I turn and nod at the door across the hall. “Make yourself at home.”
He eyes me suspiciously. “She’s to be treated with respect.”
“I’ll afford her the same respect she does me,” I say.
He scrubs a hand over his face. “That’s what I’m afraid of.”
I grin and close the door behind us. I nearly run into her back when she stops just inside the door.
“This is your room,” she says.
“Our room.”
Her gaze goes to the bed immediately.
“Imagining our happily-ever-after, lovely?”
“More like imagining smothering you with those fancy pillows,” she snaps.
She crosses the room and steps through the closet, into the washroom. She runs her hand over the large stones on the edge of the tub.
“Sunstones for your bath. You put them in until the water is the temperature you like.”
She nods and places most of them in the tub. Then she turns and begins opening all the cabinets in the vanity, riffling through my things as if I’m not standing right there.
“Looking for something?”
“Gauze,” she says without looking up.
“You won’t need it. Once you bathe, I’ll heal you.”
She opens her mouth to argue but must think better of it. She crosses to the door on the other side of the washroom and pushes it open, standing in the threshold of her closet for a moment. “What are these?”
“Dresses for you,” I say.
“I already have clothes.”
“And I had more designed for you. A seamstress will take care of any alterations and fit you for additional clothing of your choosing.”
She holds up a hanger with dark lace lingerie .
“You’re welcome to skip undergarments if you prefer,” I say. “Your room is on the other side of the closet, so I’m close if you need me.”
She glowers at me, hooks the hanger on the bar, and steps back into the washroom. “Fine. Get out.” She peels off her cloak and tosses it at me.
The wound on her shoulder is worse than I thought.
Her sweater and undershirt are shredded.
She presses her palm to it, and it comes away bloody.
The scent of it hits me and I fight the impulse to yank off all the layers and look at how bad it truly is.
It’s only then that I realize her hand is still trembling.
I should not care if she’s hurt. I don’t care if she’s hurt—except that her being hurt reflects poorly on me, and it chafes that she won’t just let me fix it.
“You must be sore. I can help you?—”
“Get out of the Divine-damned washroom, Henry. I’ll be fine without you hovering.”
I back out of the room, close the door, and dart off to bathe somewhere else.
I t must not hurt that badly because Harlow takes an obscenely long bath. When she finally opens the washroom door to let me in, I’ve already bathed and changed.
Her skin looks light gray in my monochrome vision. She’s flushed, her skin dewy, damp hair dripping onto her robe.
She sits on the edge of the tub, and I kneel in front of her.
I lift my hand to heal her, and she flinches.
We both freeze. That reaction is one of a woman braced for a blow. Her eyes go wide, like she’s shown me something she didn’t intend to.
It’s such an obvious tell. I can’t decide if this is the act or if she’s so exhausted from our travels that this is the true moment where her mask has slipped.
“I would never raise a hand to you,” I whisper. “Unless you wish me to.”
She purses her lips. “I’ll be sure to let you know if I feel a pressing need for a slap. ”
I laugh in spite of myself. Thank the Divine. She’s still well enough to be sarcastic. “Let’s see that shoulder.”
She lets the robe slip, revealing smooth, pale skin marred by five jagged slashes stretching from her shoulder across her collarbone.
“Does it hurt?”
She pulls her damp hair out of the way with her good arm. “It’s just a little tender.”
I place my hand gingerly over the mark and her pain hits me, bright and blinding. Harlow is a liar. She’s in agony. Now I wonder if she was really shaking from shock after all or if she was just in more pain than I realized.
I press my magic into the wound, keeping my gaze fixed on the skin knitting back together.
Her eyes burn into me. “Your aura flares when you’re working.”
I hum in agreement.
“It also flares when you’re feeling possessive.”
Her observant nature is irritating. I don’t like that she has the upper hand.
“I don’t feel possessive. I feel responsible.” It’s easier to lie to her than it is to lie to myself. “I told you that the men here need to understand that you’re mine and I’m not afraid to show them.”
“They can’t see magic.”
“But they can sense it.”
“How?” she asks.
“A prickling feeling. It’s difficult to explain.”
She goes rigid.
“The itching will be worse because the wound was worse.”
She nods, squeezing her eyes closed.
The wounds heal perfectly. I leave my hand there until she finally blinks her eyes open.
“It will be tender for another few days, so you’ll have to take it easy. Now let me see your wrist.”
Not waiting for her to argue, I take hold of it. She winces. Her pale skin is mottled with bruises that are varying shades of gray to me, but likely purple to her. My fingers brush a lump in the bone, and the blaring white pain lances my mind.
I grit my teeth. “This is broken. ”
“I could have?—”
I set the bone, and she grunts, a guttural string of curses pouring from her mouth.
“Asshole.”
Taking her chin in my hand, I make her meet my gaze. “Don’t hide injuries from me.” I am so close to telling her that she can’t, but I don’t want to reveal anything about my magic in a fit of anger, especially when she already has the advantage of seeing auras.
I hold my hand over the broken bone and press the healing into her skin, down through the damaged tissue to the broken bone. Bones are harder to heal, slower, but after a few minutes, the break is mended, and I move on to reducing the inflammation around the injury.
I jump when she leans her forehead against my shoulder.
“I have never had an itch on the inside of my bones. Bleeding woods, that’s uncomfortable,” she murmurs.
The urge to apologize bubbles up, but I shove it down.
I remind myself that I don’t owe her anything. She is a means to an end. The moment I forget that will be my last.