Branna never wept.
“Come back, come back. I can’t heal this wound. I can’t stop the bleeding. Come back.”
“I’m here.”
She let out a sobbing breath, looked from the wound to his face with tears running down her cheeks. “Stay with me. I couldn’t reach you. I can’t stop the bleeding. I can’t— Oh, thank God, thank all the gods. It’s healing now. Just stay, stay. Look at me. Fin, look at me. Look in me.”
“I couldn’t heal him. He died with my hands on him. It’s his blood on my hands. His blood on me, in me.”
“Hush, hush. Just let me work. These are deep and vicious. You’ve lost blood, too much already.”
“You’re crying.”
“I’m not.” But her tears fell on the wound, and closed it more cleanly than her hands. “Quiet, just be quiet and let me finish. It’s healing well now. You’ll need a potion, but it’s healing well.”
“I won’t need one.” He felt steadier, stronger, and altogether clearer. “I’m fine now. It’s you who’s shaking.” He shifted up to sit, brushed his fingers over her damp cheeks. “It may be you who needs a potion.”
“Is there pain now? Test your arm. Move it, flex it, so we see if it’s as it should be.”
He did as she asked. “It’s all fine, and no, there’s no more pain.” But he glanced down, saw the sheets covered in blood. “Is all that mine?”
Though she trembled still, she rose, changed the sheets to fresh with a thought. But she went into the bath to wash her own hands, needed the time and distance to smooth out her nerves.
She came back, put on a robe.
“Here.” Fin held out one of two glasses of whiskey. “I think you need this more than I.”
She only shook her head, sat carefully on the side of the bed. “What happened?”
“You tell yours first.”
She closed her eyes for a moment. “All right then. You began to thrash in your sleep. Violently. I tried to wake you, but I couldn’t. I tried to find a way into the dream, to pull you out, but I couldn’t. It was like a wall that couldn’t be scaled, no matter what I did. Then the gashes on your arm, the blood flowing from them.”
She had to pause a moment, press her hands to her face, gathered back her calm.
“I knew you were beyond where I could reach. I tried to pull you back. Tried to heal the wounds, but nothing I did stopped the blood. I thought you would die in your sleep, trapped in some dream he dragged you into, blocked me out of. You’d die because I couldn’t reach you. He’d taken you from me when it seems I’ve only gotten you back. You’d die because I wasn’t strong enough to heal you.”
“But you did just that, and I didn’t die, did I?” He slid up behind her,
pressed a kiss to her shoulder. “You cried for me.”
“Tears of panic and frustration.”
But when he kissed her shoulder again, she spun around, wrapped around him, rocked. “Where did you go? Where did he take you?”
“He didn’t take me, that I’m sure of. I went back to the night Cabhan killed Daithi. I saw Sorcha. I spoke with her.”
Branna jerked back. “You spoke with her.”
“As I’m speaking to you. You look so like her.” He brushed her hair behind her back. “So very like her, though her eyes are dark, they have the same look as yours. It’s the strength in them. And the power.”
“What did she say to you?”
“I’ll tell you, but I think it’s best to tell all of us. And the truth is I could use some time to sort through it all myself.”
“Then I’ll tell them to come.”
She dressed, asked him no more questions. In truth, she needed the time herself, to settle, to put on her armor. Not since the day she’d seen the mark on him had she felt the level of fear, of grief she’d known that dawn. She asked herself if feeling so much had blocked her powers to heal him, to bring him out of the dream. And didn’t know the answers.