my eyes. Alberta's face was filled with concern, and Dimitri now hovered behind her. More shadowy shapes flitted across my vision. Most were indistinct, but I could have sworn I saw something that looked like a skull mixed in with the darkness. I blinked rapidly, and it all disappeared. Alberta turned to one of the flight attendants. "Can you get her something to eat? And find a painkiller?"
"Where's it at?" Dimitri asked me. "The pain?"
With all of this attention, my explosion suddenly seemed excessive. "It's a headache...I'm sure it'll go away..." Seeing his stern look, I pointed to the center of my forehead. "It's like something pushing on my skull. And there's pain kind of behind my eyes. I keep feeling like...well, it's like I've got something in my eye. I think I'm seeing a shadow or something. Then I blink and it's gone."
"Ah," said Alberta. "That's a migraine symptom - having vision problems. It's called an aura. People sometimes get it before the headache sets in."
"An aura?" I asked, startled. I glanced up at Adrian. He was looking at me over the top of his seat, his long arms hanging over the back of it.
"Not that kind," he said, a small smile turning up his lips. "Same name. Like Court and court. Migraine auras are images and light you see when a migraine's coming on. They have nothing to do with the auras around people I see. But I tell you ... the aura I can see ... the one around you ... wow."
"Black?"
"And then some. It's obvious even after all the drinks I've had. Never seen anything like it."
I didn't exactly know what to make of that, but then the flight attendant returned with a banana, a granola bar, and some ibuprofen. It was a far cry from French toast, but it sounded good on my empty stomach. I consumed it all and then propped a pillow up against the window. Closing my eyes, I rested my head and hoped I could sleep the headache off before we landed. Mercifully, everyone else stayed quiet.
I had drifted off a little when I felt a slight touch on my arm. "Rose?"
Opening my eyes, I peered at Lissa as she sat in Eddie's seat. Those bat-winged shapes flitted behind her, and my head still hurt. In those swirling shadows, I again saw what looked like a face, this time with a wide gaping mouth and eyes like fire. I flinched.
"You're still in pain?" Lissa asked, peering at me. I blinked, and the face was gone.
"Yeah, I - oh no." I realized what she was going to do. "Don't do it. Don't waste it on me."
"It's easy," she said. "It hardly fazes me."
"Yeah, but the more you use it... the more it hurts you in the long run. Even if it's easy now."
"I'll worry about that later. Here."
She clasped my hand between hers and closed her eyes. Through our bond, I felt the magic welling up in her as she drew upon spirit's healing power. To her, magic felt warm and golden. I'd been healed before, and it always came through to me as varying temperatures: hot, then cold, then hot, etc. But this time, when she released the magic and sent it into me, I didn't feel anything except a very faint tingle. Her eyelids fluttered open.
"Wh - what happened?" she asked.
"Nothing," I said. "The headache's still going strong."
"But I..." The confusion and shock on her face mirrored what I sensed in her. "I had it. I felt the magic. It worked."
"I don't know, Liss. It's okay, really. You haven't been off the meds that long, you know."
"Yeah, but I healed Eddie the other day without any problems. And Adrian," she added dryly. He was hanging over the seat again, watching us intently.
"Those were scrapes," I said. "This is a five-alarm migraine we're talking about. Maybe you've got to build back up."
Lissa bit her lower lip. "You don't think the pills permanently hurt my magic, do you?"
"Nah," said Adrian, head tilted to the side. "You lit up like a supernova when you were summoning it. You had magic. I just don't think it had any effect on her."
"Why not?" she demanded.
"Maybe she's got something you can't heal."
"A headache?" I asked in disbelief.
He shrugged. "What do I look like, a doctor? I don't know. Just telling you what I saw."
I sighed and placed a hand on my forehead. "Well, I appreciate the help, Liss, and I appreciate your annoying commentary, Adrian. But