Chapter 43 #2

“They're beautiful.” His eyes filled with wonder. “I expected. . . I don't know. Something cold. Something wrong. Something that would make sense of my father's warnings.”

“This is what they really are,” I said softly, letting the threads dance around us like golden lovers. “Not weapons. Not corruption. Just. . . life. Connection. The threads that bind all things together—including us.”

He reached forward with trembling fingers, letting one thread brush across his knuckles. The magic responded to his touch—not wildly, but with gentle, welcoming warmth. A flicker of recognition that made his breath catch and his eyes go wide.

“It's warm,” he said, amazement coloring every syllable. “It's. . . it knows me somehow.”

“It recognizes what I've known all along,” I whispered, stepping closer until there was nothing between us but shimmering water and desperate need.

“You're not just some enemy to be converted, August.” My hand pressed over his heart, feeling it thunders beneath my palm.

“You're mine. The threads know it. My soul knows it.” I looked up at him, letting him see everything I felt.

“And you've known it too—every time you've looked at me like I'm the only thing in your world worth saving.”

For a heartbeat, the world held still—the water, the mist, the air between us sang with possibility.

I could see the shift happening in his eyes, years of conditioning cracking like ice in spring thaw.

But the cracks were still small, tentative.

The foundation of his beliefs ran deeper than desire, stronger than want.

“I want to believe you,” he said quietly, his hands tightening on my waist like he was afraid I might disappear.

“But it's harder than I thought it would be.

Seeing this beauty doesn't erase what I've been taught to expect—the destruction, the madness my father claims follows those who dabble in such things.”

The doubt in his voice should have stung. Instead, it only made me want him more—this man who was brave enough to question the beliefs etched into him since childhood, who was willing to risk his soul for the chance that I might be worth it.

“Then let me show you more,” I whispered, and let my magic spiral higher, turning the air around us into liquid gold. . . but then something changed.

The threads circling around us began to shimmer with sudden, violent intensity, their gentle dance becoming wild, erratic. My magic slipped from my control like silk through desperate fingers, and a chill that had nothing to do with the water raced down my spine.

“Lily what is going on?”

The pendant at his throat was reacting—I could see it in the way his free hand flew to it unconsciously, in the sharp widening of his eyes. The golden threads were being pulled toward that small piece of metal now, drawn like iron to a magnet with increasing desperate urgency.

“Something's wrong,” I breathed, my hands shaking as I tried to recall the threads. But they wouldn't obey. “I can't—August, I can’t control them—”

The pendant pulsed.

Not with light, but with a resonance that seemed to vibrate through our bones. The threads flared brilliant gold, and suddenly I wasn't controlling them at all. They were responding to the pendant, to whatever power lay dormant within it, awakening after years of silence.

My breath caught as understanding bloomed like ice in my chest. “August, the necklace. . . it’s not just a keepsake.”

But the threads had already surged toward him in a rush, overloading the space between us, tangling, becoming a net of power that neither of us could control. Golden threads coiled around my limbs like shackles. The water came alive—brutal, hungry, inescapable.

The world tilted.

The threads yanked me backward with brutal force.

I went under before I could scream, water flooding my mouth, scorching my lungs.

I thrashed against it, but the magic held me down like iron chains.

The surface vanished above me in a shimmer of silver.

The weight gave way to silence—not devouring, but beckoning—like the Weave itself had reached through the water to hold me.

Through the water, through the panic, through the darkness eating at my vision—I saw her. Not with my eyes. With something deeper. A figure—female, defiant, magnificent in her fury—but the details remained maddeningly hazy, as if I were looking through tears and time itself.

The vision wavered, shifted, showing me glimpses. Chains. Whispered words in darkness. A sense of organization, of hope building in impossible circumstances.

Ysella.

The vision shifted, and I saw other faces—Weavers I didn't recognize, but their expressions were the same. Determined. Hopeful. They weren't just surviving—they were planning something.

She's organizing them, I realized with a surge of desperate hope. She's building a network from inside the prison. A rebellion born in chains.

A hand—August’s hand—outstretched and haloed in gold like a God reaching through the darkness.

A voice—ancient, familiar in a way I couldn't name—whispered through the vision. “Bridge.”

The word resonated through me like a struck bell, carrying weight I didn't understand. Not a bridge over water. Not a connection between places.

Something bigger. Something that made the threads themselves shiver in recognition.

But before the image could solidify, the vision cracked like ice, reality reasserting itself with violent force as arms found me in the water—strong, desperate, pulling me back to a world where I could breathe, where August's heart was hammering against mine.

August.

I broke through the surface with a gasp that sounded like resurrection.

“Lily!” His arms were steel bands around me, crushing me against his chest like he could anchor me to this world through sheer force of will.

He was shaking—this controlled, lethal hunter was trembling as he held me.

“Don't ever—” He couldn't finish, burying his face in my wet hair instead. “Don't ever do that to me again.”

He pulled back, wiping a tear from my cheek. “What happened? You just. . . Christ, you sank like something had claimed you.”

The raw anguish in his voice nearly undid me. I coughed up more water, my mind still reeling from visions that was more real than the present moment. “The pendant,” I gasped, my fingers finding the chain at his throat. “August, it's not just a keepsake. It's a focusing stone.”

His hand covered mine instantly, and I could see the realization dawning in his eyes—not just that his mother had been a Weaver, but that he'd been carrying a piece of her power against his heart all these years. A legacy written in gold and magic and hope.

“That's impossible,” he said, but his hand went to the pendant at his chest, fingers trembling.

“She left it for a reason,” I said, struggling to catch my breath, to make sense of visions that defied understanding.

“For you to find it. For me to find it in my time. For it to awaken when touched by magic again.” I gripped his shoulders, feeling the way he trembled against me.

“August, I saw her. Ysella. She's alive, and she's not just surviving—she's building something. A resistance. From inside the prison.”

His arms tightened around me instinctively, his earlier doubts about magic forgotten in the face of my distress and this earth-shattering revelation. “Are you hurt?”

The possessiveness in his words sent heat spiraling through my chest despite everything. “I'm not hurt,” I assured him, though my hands were shaking like leaves in a storm. “Just shaken. I've never experienced anything like that before—visions so vivid, so real.”

“Neither have I,” he said grimly, his thumb tracing the pendant that had changed everything between us. “This thing—it's never done anything like that. It's just been. . . a memory. A connection to someone I thought was gone forever.”

We stood there in the shallows, both of us breathing hard, the weight of discovery settling between us.

August's arms remained locked around me, protective and possessive, his philosophical struggles with magic replaced by something far more primal—the need to shield what was his from forces beyond his understanding.

“The vision,” I whispered, pressing closer to his warmth. “The last part was unclear, but I heard a single word: 'Bridge.' I think. . . I think it means something. It seemed important. Like a title. Like a purpose.”

“We should return to camp,” he said finally. “The others should know about this—about what the pendant can do, about your vision.”

I nodded, though I made no immediate move to step away from his embrace. The intimacy of the moment—his hands on my skin, the way he'd unhesitatingly dove into the magic-touched water to save me, the vulnerability we'd both shown—was too sacred to break.

“August,” I said softly, looking up into eyes that held storms and starlight in equal measure. “Thank you. For trusting me enough to try, even when it went against everything you've been taught.”

His expression grew tender in a way that made my knees weak.

“Thank you for showing me there might be more to this world than my father's version of it.” He cupped my face with both hands, his touch achingly gentle.

“I don't know what happens next. I don't know if I can unlearn twenty-two years in a single morning.

But I know I cannot lose you. Won't lose you. Not to the Weave, not to my father, not to anything in this godforsaken world.”

The words hung between us like an oath, heavy with promise and possibility. When he helped me from the water, his touch remained careful and reverent despite the heat that still burned in his eyes—as if I were something infinitely precious that had almost been lost to him forever.

As we prepared to return to camp, I caught August looking at the pendant with new eyes, his expression a mixture of wonder and wariness. The easy acceptance I'd hoped for hadn't come, but perhaps that was for the best. Real change, lasting change, took time.

And despite the interrupted vision and all the questions that remained unanswered, we had taken a step that could never be undone. He had seen magic's beauty and its danger. He had chosen to trust me over a lifetime of conditioning.

Most importantly, when something had tried to drag me into the dark, he hadn't hesitated to follow.

Whatever the pendant had tried to show me about bridges and rebellions would have to wait. For now, it was enough that August looked at me like I was worth fighting for. Like I was someone he believed in. That I was worth saving.

It was more than a beginning.

It was everything.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.