Castle. I raced down the stone stairs into the depths, Grey at my side. We needed to see the seer—needed the confirmation that we’d broken the curse.
I was certain we had, and Grey no longer felt the beast inside him, but I needed to hear it.
We’d approached the castle under the cover of night like last time, but we’d come with a better plan. Meeting Silviu again was out of the question, so the Shadow Guild had come along. Mac, Eve, Seraphia, Quinn, Beatrix, and Cordelia were all currently outside, creating a massive disturbance on the side of Silviu’s mountain.
We’d waited while they set off hundreds of Eve’s fireworks. Unlike human fireworks, they formed monsters and armies, all made of light and fire. It looked like a legitimate attack. It would act like one as well, fooling Silviu for at least a little while. Long enough for us to get our answers, hopefully. And as expected, Silviu had run outside, along with Remington and all the guards in the castle.
Grey and I had made our move, darting through the main entrance and heading toward the seer’s underground lair.
“This is how we should have entered the first time,” he said as we raced down the stairs. “I never should have expected him to be reasonable.”
“It worked out in the end.” I panted, exhausted from the all the sprinting. “How far are we?”
“We’re nearly there,” he said. “Only a couple more flights.”
“Thank God.” There were so many that I’d lost track. If we ran into Silviu, we could fight him. With the Shadow Guild at our backs, we could take out the creepy vampire and all his guards. But it’d be better to avoid it.
Finally, we reached the bottom of the stairs. The enormous cavern echoed with our footsteps, the cool mist making goosebumps rise on my skin. Long icicles hung from the black rock walls.
“I can’t believe it lives down here,” I said.
“I’m not sure live is the right word for it.” Grey reached for my hand, and I gripped his tightly.
As we walked deeper into the cavern, I prayed the seer would come to us. Prayed it would have the answers we sought.
The mist surrounded me, touching every inch of my skin with an inquisitiveness that shouldn’t be possible. But this mist was the seer. It began to swirl, a breeze making my hair rise off my neck, then coalesced in front of us, thickening until it fell to the ground with a loud splash and formed a puddle. The opalescent water lapped at the tips of my boots.
It was all so eerily similar to last time, when we’d started out on this journey.
The water rose upward, forming the same ethereal figure with indistinct features and no discernable gender. Wisdom radiated from the seer, making me feel warm inside.
Grey and I bowed, rising slowly.
“You are back,” the seer said, its voice slow and steady.
“We’ve broken the curse,” I replied.
“We believe,” Grey said. “But we would appreciate if you could confirm it for us.”
The seer moved around us, circling us slowly. My heart raced as it drifted, its magic wafting around us. When it returned to stand in front of us, its form slipped into Grey, the white mist disappearing.
He stiffened, his brow furrowing. I shivered, remembering the odd sensation from our last visit.
After a few minutes, it drifted back out of his body.
Well? I bit back the words.
“The curse is indeed broken,” it said. “Your death severed that dark bond, though you are still mates.”
Joy, warm and bright, filled my chest. “And when I brought him back, everything went okay?” I hoped I hadn’t screwed something up for him.
“He is as he should be,” the seer said. “No longer immortal. Still a vampire, but mortal now, like born vampires.”
Grey’s shoulders relaxed, and I knew it was with relief. He’d been worried about living forever, having to watch me die.
“Is there anything else you could possibly tell us?” I asked.
“Hmm.” It watched us, crossing its arms. Clearly debating something. “Did you cause the commotion outside a short while ago?”
Grey hesitated, then said, “Yes, that is our doing.”
It was impossible to be sure, but I thought it smiled. “Good. That Silviu is a miserable bastard. I enjoy his annoyance. Therefore, I will tell you that you will grow old and die together. When your time on Earth is up, you’ll travel to the same afterlife.” Its voice sharpened. “But don’t use that as an excuse to go do stupid, dangerous things.”
Elation exploded