"Unleash your creativity and unlock your potential with MsgBrains.Com - the innovative platform for nurturing your intellect." » English Books » 🔰🔰"Prince of the Tower" by Aimee Clinton

Add to favorite 🔰🔰"Prince of the Tower" by Aimee Clinton

Select the language in which you want the text you are reading to be translated, then select the words you don't know with the cursor to get the translation above the selected word!




Go to page:
Text Size:

It was why I continued my resolute trek through the darkness, alone.

This was what she wanted.

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong.

She didn’t want to live forever. Didn’t want to be tied down by any bond but those she’d already forged in the mortal world. She would not accept the immortal life I’d tentatively offered her. And I… Whatever pain I felt at our parting was merely a taste of what would await me if she’d chosen to stay. If I’d allowed myself to give in to the call inside me. I couldn’t keep her, even if she’d wanted me to. I couldn’t allow myself to care for another human. My already broken heart would shatter to dust when, in a few short years, she left me.

It was better this way. Better to let her go now than to watch time destroy her. To watch as her body bowed and crumbled under the laws of mortality.

Wrong.

“I know!” I snapped, halting in my tracks in an attempt to silence the clanging chorus. My voice echoed around the cavernous space, and several filthy bloodsuckers scuttled higher up the walls. “I know.”

The day was young, and with any luck, she’d be long gone before the sun set and these vermin crept out of their hole to hunt.

I screwed my eyes shut. In the weeks since I’d been awoken from my slumber by the softest of kisses, I’d been unable to close my eyes again, plagued by the last moments of Taryn playing out in my mind. My nightly torture. But now, the image of Aliza, pale and limp, pinned beneath the monster drinking her dry, had burnt itself against the back of my eyelids alongside the other horrors. I’d thought I’d lost her too. I’d held her in my arms and begged her to stay with me. I’d meant it in every sense.

Stay with me. Don’t die. Don’t leave. Don’t marry him. Stay with me.

And now I’d let her go.

My heart pounded a desperate beat, imploring me to heed its call. I couldn’t. I couldn’t take her away from the life she loved. I couldn’t ask her to give up a single thing, not for me. Not when I had nothing to offer but hopelessness. Not when I was too broken to remember who I was without my shroud of agony. Not when I knew she didn’t feel for me the way I did for her.

I’d be content to spend the next handful of decades knowing that, somewhere, she existed, and remembered me with some shred of fondness. After that… after that I didn’t know if I could keep my word. How could I live knowing her life had blazed by, extinguished by the ruthlessness of time?

Wrong.

I let out a roar, raking my fingers through my hair. Letting her go was the right thing to do. It had to be. Because if I was wrong…

Who was I trying to fool? Despite my best efforts, she had broken through my walls of fractured rubble, and she had woken me up, literally and figuratively. Mortal or not, I already cared for her. More than that. It was too late to guard what remained of my heart.

I turned back the way I’d come, stumbling over slick rock in my haste. I had to be certain. I had to tell her, and if I was wrong, as I was almost certain I was, then I had to hear it from her own lips. If I didn’t, I’d never know another moment’s peace.

I was almost at the rift before I realised that the warning toll in my head had silenced the moment I’d changed my mind. The right direction at last.

Something was wrong.

How I knew, I couldn’t say, but I felt it as soon as I set foot in Fairy Glen.

Aliza was nowhere to be seen, and while that made perfect sense, considering the time I’d wasted, it didn’t explain the quickening of my pulse, or the needling of electricity beneath my skin. It didn’t explain why every nerve in my body refocused, searching for a sign.

The birds had ceased their ear-splitting racket. What had silenced them? They certainly hadn’t been diverted by my earlier arrival with Aliza.

Taking a cautious step away from the shadows of the rock, I peered around, searching for anything out of place. I didn’t know the mortal world, but hunting was the same in any terrain, and my instincts told me there was something here for me to see.

The muggy breeze shifted direction, stirring the lock of rogue hair that perpetually fell into my eyes, and I felt it. Magic on the air, dissipating rapidly, but still fresh.

Another sweep of my eyes failed to find another living soul. I ventured further into the open, my body tense, my senses straining. A wink of light caught my attention, drawing me to a patch of grass not far from where I’d kissed Aliza goodbye.

The blades were trampled flat, torn in places, and though that was enough to chill my blood, it was the sight of her phone, abandoned, that sent a rush of ice over my skin. The device was alight, an image of Aliza and I staring up at the grey sky above me. Tentatively, I picked up the phone. There she was, with her head thrown back, her face glowing with laughter. And that was me, staring down at her with a smile I couldn’t remember giving, my eyes soft with adoration. My heart stilled. It was right there, as plain as day in the way I gazed at her. She knew. If she’d seen this, there was no way she couldn’t know.

It didn’t matter.

Slowly, I rose from my crouch, surveying the surrounding area. A slightly trampled trail through the dense grass led to the spot I’d discovered, and stopped. As though she’d disappeared into thin air. Which, I knew with a sinking sense of dread, was exactly what she’d done. The hint of magic on the air, the lack of tracks, the struggle. The dropped phone. Aliza had carried that little rectangle everywhere. She’d almost killed us both to save it. There was no way she’d leave it behind, unless she hadn’t been given a choice. Unless she’d been taken.

I could think of only one person who’d do such a thing.

Stowing the phone in the inside pocket of my cloak, I fought down the storm of questions warring in my mind and conjured an image of the waterside entrance to the Blood Gate, where Saeth awaited my return. The air pressed in, crushing against me as I slipped between worlds.

39I Won’t Be Doing Any Of That

Aliza

This isn’t Idris.

Darkness pressed in, forcing the air from my lungs, and all I could think was that it wasn’t Idris dragging me through empty space. It wasn’t Idris’ hand crushed against my face, hard enough that I thought my nose might break. It wasn’t Idris’ body pressed against my back, or his arm like a vice around my middle.

The air lightened, making my body seem as weightless as a bubble, but the darkness remained. Most of it, anyway. My knees buckled, trying to throw me, retching, to the ground, but my captor had no intention of releasing me. They hauled me along, seemingly unaffected by the teleportation, heedless of my useless legs. The toes of my hiking boots dragged along the ground.

Fight.

I couldn’t. I wanted to, but teleporting robbed me of my faculties at the best of times. I was as useless as a newborn calf, stolen from its mother and headed to slaughter. I tried to suck in a breath, but the hand clamped over my face blocked my airways with unyielding strength. The ache in my chest grew. It wasn’t from teleporting at all. I was suffocating.

As though that knowledge was the code to rebooting my body, I twisted, grappling at the stranger’s hand. I raked my nails over skin, earning myself a hiss against my ear. I kicked with all my strength, driving my heel back, hoping to find a kneecap. I made contact, for all the good it did me.

My eyes began to adjust to the darkness, even as the edges of my vision clouded. A thin, arching line of light appeared ahead. The pearly gates? The end of the tunnel? Should I stay away from the light, or rush toward it? I had no choice in the matter.

Are sens

Copyright 2023-2059 MsgBrains.Com