Chapter 55 #3

‘There is only one way this process goes,’ Kyor confirms softly. ‘Stide knows it. We all know it.’

‘No,’ Caz mumbles, wiping the tears as they roll down her cheek. ‘No.’

‘She cannot be rotting,’ Thessa sobs softly. ‘She cannot. It’s wrong!’ The words fracture as they leave her mouth.

It is wrong. None of us bother to deny it. All of this is so very, very wrong. And yet, here we are.

Continuing to shiver through the fever, Stide lifts her gaze to Kyor. If she feels fear, I cannot see it on her face.

‘A bolt to the heart will be quick and painless. If you would, wolf man?’

‘No!’ Thessa cries before Kyor can answer.

The word tears out of her, raw and ragged, as she drops to her knees beside Stide, clutching her hand as though she can anchor her to this world by sheer force of will.

‘Lightning will hurt. I will not have your last moments be in pain.’ Her bottom lip trembles violently. ‘I won’t have it.’

Stide’s gaze softens as it shifts to Thessa. There is so much in that look, and my heart aches for them both. I’ve seen it before, in Llinos’s eyes as she gazed at Caz right at the end. Gratitude. Love. Regret. The things never said.

‘How you still hate to see hurt,’ Stide murmurs gently. ‘Even though it is everywhere. When will you learn? Pain is an essential part of life. It teaches us lessons we should not ignore.’

Thessa lets out a broken sound, halfway between a laugh and a sob. ‘You’re impossible,’ she whispers. ‘Even now.’

A wraith-like smile flickers on Stide’s lips before it fades. Her eyes darken. ‘Help me. Let me reach Mortidem before it is too late. Before I become something that would hurt you.’

We wait in silence, knowing it is not our place to speak. Not our place to offer empty words of reassurance to a woman whose life has been forfeited because she chose to walk this path with us, chose to help fight the monster that wanted us because she knew we needed to survive.

As the air holds still, Thessa bows her head, her shoulders shaking.

A flurry of self-loathing strikes me. I was worried that Stide’s sickness would slow us down, would endanger us and delay my reaching the Issen.

What I would give to take those thoughts back.

I would go as slowly as we needed to keep that mottled green of the Rottings from claiming her. But such wishes are futile.

When Thessa finally looks up, her eyes are red-rimmed and resolute, the agonising decision carved into her face.

‘I won’t let you become a Rotting,’ she promises hoarsely. ‘I swear it.’

She goes to her pack and returns moments later with a drawstring bag. Her fingers tremble as she fumbles with the string.

Finally she opens it, and she hesitates only a second before drawing out a small vial, the liquid inside dark and still. It reminds me of a similar potion I made once – hemlock that I distilled for a similarly deadly purpose.

‘It’s fast,’ Thessa whispers, as though confessing a secret. ‘I’ve carried it for emergencies. For mercy.’ Her voice breaks. ‘I never thought …’

She cannot finish the sentence. She doesn’t need to.

Stide’s lips curve into a faint, grateful smile.

‘You’re prepared,’ she says softly. ‘Always prepared. I love that about you.’ She smiles even as she shakes, her teeth chattering.

‘And I love so much about you, Thessa Rok. I hope you know that. You’re my dawn.

For me, it has always been you. It always will be you. ’

Thessa chokes, pressing her forehead briefly to Stide’s hand before she straightens, wiping her tears with the heel of her palm.

‘I love you too, my very dearest friend.’

Stide smiles. ‘Thank you. Now do it. Do it before it is too late to save my soul.’

‘I won’t leave you,’ Thessa promises, forcing steadiness into her voice. ‘Not for a moment.’

Thessa uncorks the vial with shaking hands and brings it to Stide’s lips.

Her strength is seeping from her body, and yet the Quiet One swallows without hesitation, her gaze never leaving Thessa’s face.

Almost instantly, it seems as though her chest becomes thick and heavy, her breathing laboured, and now pain rises in me.

It is too much. Too similar to Llinos’s last moments, and I know I am not alone in feeling it.

Wordlessly, I fumble my way to Caz and lace my fingers through hers, feeling her pain in the force of her grip. Another friend lost before our eyes. Another casualty that will be added to the litany of scars that mar my heart.

‘Find happiness, my Thessa,’ Stide whispers, her gaze sliding to us and lingering on Caz, who sobs with hurt past and present.

Benny’s arm wraps around her as his own eyes glisten with unshed tears, his other hand gripping Ruben’s.

Pain swells in the air as Thessa leans down, pressing her forehead to Stide’s. The vial slips from her fingers. ‘I love you, my friend,’ Thessa repeats. ‘I’ll miss you so much. You know that, don’t you? You know how much I’ll miss you? I’ll miss you forever.’

But no answer comes from the Quiet One.

No sound will ever come from her again.

She’s gone.

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