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Swallowing Darkness - Laurell K. Hamilton [71]

By Root 494 0
I would ask more questions about their mutual dislike.

The bone gate collapsed at Mistral’s touch so that it was only a pile of debris. “Whatever held this place together is failing,” he called back to them. “We need to get the princess to safety before it collapses completely.”

Mistral picked me up, and carried me through the wreck of bones. Beyond the gate we could glimpse Sholto’s bedroom, and Henry’s worried face peering at us. The wall that had been as large as a cavern mouth was much smaller. I could actually see the stones knitting together like something alive, remaking themselves. They were strangely fluid; it was like watching flowers bloom, if you could catch them at it.

Mistral carried me through the opening, and we were back in Sholto’s wine and purple bedroom. Henry bowed to us, then went back to peering behind us for his king. The opening continued to grow smaller, and neither of them was hurrying. Was it some kind of ego contest? All I knew was that with all that had happened my nerves couldn’t stand watching them stroll toward the rapidly diminishing opening.

I called after them, “I will be really cross if you both get trapped behind the wall. We leave for Los Angeles tonight.”

The two men exchanged a glance, then they began to jog toward us. Under other circumstances I might have enjoyed the view of both of them running toward me, nude, but the wall was closing. If it closed completely, I wasn’t certain that we could reopen it. There were hands of power among the sidhe that could blast through stone, but neither Sholto nor Doyle possessed such a hand.

I called, “Hurry!”

Doyle broke into a run, spilling forward like some black, sleek animal, as if running were the purpose all that muscle and flesh had been designed for. I didn’t get to see him from a distance much. He was always at my side. Now, I was reminded that without my human movement to hold him back, he could simply move. Like wind, rain, something elemental and more than flesh. I had a moment such as I had not had in months. A moment to watch him and marvel that all that potential would love me. I was, in the end, so terribly human.

Sholto followed behind him like a pale shadow. For a moment I could only see my Frost. He was the one who was supposed to be at Doyle’s side. My light and dark; my men. Sholto was handsome and moved well at Doyle’s side, but he couldn’t keep up. He was a little behind, a little…more human.

Mistral said, “Ask the wall to stay open.”

“What?” I asked, and was almost startled to find myself still in his arms, still in Sholto’s bedroom.

He sat me down on the floor. “Stop staring at Doyle like a lovesick girl and tell the wall to stop closing.”

I wasn’t certain that the sluagh’s sithen would obey me, but I had nothing to lose. “Wall, please stop closing.”

The wall seemed to hesitate, as if thinking about obeying, then it went back to closing the opening. It was slower, but it had not stopped.

Doyle dived through the opening, doing a wonderful roll across the carpet, ending on his feet in a whirl of black hair and dark muscle.

Sholto dived through too, but ended up flat on the carpet in a spill of pale hair and breathlessness. Doyle was breathing heavily too, but he seemed ready to find a weapon and defend. Sholto seemed content to lie on the carpet for a time.

He gasped out, “Did the path get longer as we ran?”

Doyle nodded. “Yes.”

“Why would it get longer?” I asked.

Sholto got to his feet, and looked up at the ceiling of his bedroom. I gazed upward, but saw nothing but the stone.

“Someone, or something, is here.” He went to a wardrobe on the far side of the room, and got out a robe. It was gold and white, and didn’t match the room at all, but it did match his eyes and hair to perfection. He suddenly looked all Seelie Court, and if not for one bit of genetics that had given him those extra bits he’d have been terribly welcome at the Unseelie Court. In the far past, even the Seelie Court would have been happy to have him. But Sholto, like me, could not hide his mixed blood. There was no illusion deep enough

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