“Oh my God,” she repeated. More tears. “Is this a dream?”
Yes. He was asleep. If this was real or not, he didn’t want to question it. He just wanted to draw strength from it. If only in his dreams, if that were the only place he could see her, it would be enough. It would be more than enough.
“This is a dream.” Her tears lessened. She pulled away, but he held on. He didn’t want her to pull all the way away. She leaned back so she could look into his eyes. What he saw there had his rage going again. She knew this moment wouldn’t last. He would leave again. She said, “Lucas, if this is real or not, you have to know about her.”
He shook his head. “Stop, Davy. I just want to hold you. I don’t want to think of her.”
She stepped farther back. Her hands fell to his arms. Her fingers dug in, holding onto him with a cement grip. “No, but you have to. This is important. She’s going to destroy the only person who is a threat to her. She’s an innocent.”
He leaned back. “An innocent? She’ll never be innocent.”
“No. You don’t understand.” She clenched onto him even harder. Her fingers were turning white. “You think she’s all powerful. You think there’s no hope, but there is. Someone is missing. Who is missing? Ask yourself why they’re missing? And she’s not the innocent, but the innocent is the key. There are people coming. They will help. People you have forgotten about. People that you started in motion. Remember, Lucas. Think, Lucas.”
Wind started blowing around them. It was growing faster, starting to tug at him. Their time was ending. He was getting pulled away.
He didn’t want that. He wanted to only savor her.
“Lucas!” She framed his face with her hands. The wind was like a tornado. It tripled in power and she was yelling so he could hear her. “I can come back! You can bring me back!”
The wind was too much. It was a vacuum. He was pulled away and their hands held onto each other. He was in the air, but still, his fingers laced with hers. She was trying to keep him there, but right before he was yanked backwards, she yelled again, “Bring me back!”
Then, he was gone.
His eyes snapped open and he jerked upright. “Did you do that?”
The Immortal was on her sleeping bag. It was light out, and she turned her head lazily to him. “Do what?”
“My dream. Davy.” His breathing was ragged. “Did you do that?”
Her eyebrows knotted together and the corners of her lip curved down a bit. She sat up, straightening her dress. “No, but now I’m intrigued. What did you dream about?”
“Why do you lie?”
Her eyebrows arched high. “I’m not. I really want to know now. What did she say?” A half grin teased at her lips. “Did she tell you of my demise?”
“Someone is missing . . . the innocent is the key. There are people coming. They w
ill help. People you have forgotten about. People that you started in motion. Remember, Lucas. Think, Lucas.”
Davy’s words haunted him. They were ricocheting around him, and they felt so real. Her desperation was still with him. He could feel it. He could feel her.
He sat back down.
Davy had been there. Whether real or not, she was there. She was giving him a message. He shook his head and lifted his gaze. The Immortal was watching him. Her eyes were piercing. He asked, “Are you in my head?”
She didn’t respond. Her lips pressed together, then she stood up. “Let’s go. We’ve rested long enough. Neither of us is human. We don’t need that much sleep.”
She wasn’t in his head anymore. She started forward, but that realization echoed strong inside of him. She wasn’t in his head, and she was pissed about it. Then, did he dare hope, that could mean that Davy had been real?
He swallowed hard, painfully, but hope bloomed inside of his chest. It was small, but it was there.
He could bring her back.
Someone missing.
An innocent.
And people were coming back.