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2. The Shadows LORELAI Brax and I crossed through the portal, the magic stripping from us both. I gasped at the lightness it left me with—and the darkness. The weight of it was gone, but the shadows grew inside me as if they recognized where we were. I didn’t. It was so dark, darker than our white winter that consisted of constant night. It was as if every space had a shadow. I shivered as the cold bit into my skin through my clothes. Brax brushed up against me, his lips landing on my cheek. “We’ve got to get in the water,” he said, his own lips blue. The cliffs were dark; the water was ominous and black. I hesitated, fear trickling through me as my shadows filled every part of me. Whispers in the air had me spinning, but it was only the forest behind me, dark and terrifying. The forest seemed alive with things my human eyes couldn’t see. The purple magic of the portal was like a film in the air, and I chewed my lip. “Will anything be able to get through?” I asked. Brax shook his head. “No, not unless you let it. It’s your magic; it is still loyally bound to you. At least that’s how it usually works,” he said, his eyes darting over to the forest too. “That water looks terrifying,” I whispered, my voice raspy against the cold. The silence was even more intimidating than the whispers. Brax smirked and nodded. “Yeah, I’m not looking forward to this, so let’s get it over with, yeah?” He inched forward, his toes brushing the water. He hissed and pulled his feet back. “It’s f*****g cold,” he said. I shook my head. “I thought something was actually wrong.” He blew out a breath. “There is. The water’s going to give me frostbite on my f*****g balls,” he said, shivering. I laughed. “I guess you’re not used to feeling the cold, huh?” He shook his head. “Well, now you know how it felt going up that stupid mountain. Enjoy human,” I teased, and he smirked at me, shaking his head before wading in, trying to prove a point. I waited, still not feeling good about my ability to stay above water. “Can you see the cave?” I asked, and he frowned over at the cliffs, peering through the dark. But he shook his head. “No. But my shadows are pulling me toward it; they know where to go.” He shivered, and I nodded. Good, my shadows would too then. I waded in, gasping at the ice water hitting me. My n*****s pebbled painfully, and I winced. Brax moved over to me, and he was right, my shadows were calm, soothing my anxieties, and pulling me toward where we needed to go. “C’mon. We have to hurry up before the wolves get too wild without my magic,” I said, shivering. Brax nodded and started to swim in the direction of the cliffs. I eyed his movements: arm, kick, arm, kick. I could do that. Except it wasn’t as easy as it looked, and I flailed in the water. The splashes made me cough, my neck stretched to keep my face out of it, but I was a useless swimmer. Brax swam back over, lifting me onto his back, hiding a smirk. “I am definitely going to remember what that looked like,” he said laughingly and started moving his hands through the water, his legs pushing us toward the cliffside. “Why? So you can traumatize me with it?” “What? No way. I’m going to recreate it. In bed.” He grinned, peering over his shoulder, and I rolled my eyes. “Yeah, it’s the flailing woman position.” “Exactly what we want. Kai can get you making that ‘holding your breath’ face— he’s got a thing for his fingerprints on your throat, and then between me and Derik, I bet we can get your arms and legs going like that.” He laughed, and I clutched him tighter, smiling despite the hurt in my heart. It seemed wrong to enjoy anything when I didn’t have Zale back, but my alphas had a way of distracting me, helping me take a break from the guilt and mind-numbing helplessness. It was working. Brax smirked at me, and I kissed his cheek as we came to the cliff. I sometimes forgot that Brax was so connected with the water. Maybe his wolf magic was gone, but that didn’t take away from the fact that his entire ancestry was the water area pack, and that gave them something extra when it came to it. They had the lake in their area, which meant swimming was probably as easy as walking to him. “It is,” he said, his biceps flexing against me as he pulled me around, helping me float with him. “Small kicks of your feet. We’ve got to find this cave entrance, and I think it’s under the water,” he said, and my heart rate picked up. “I’ve never really been underwater,” I admitted. He shrugged. “It’s quiet. Peaceful. Just pretend you’re in a really big bath, sinking below the surface to collect your thoughts. I’ve seen you do that, so I know you can.” He was right; I did do that. I could do this. I nodded at him, ready to do whatever it took. “Your shadows should lead you to the entrance, but if you need to come up for air before going through, then do that; I’ll follow your cues,” he said, and I nodded, taking a few practice breaths. “I’m guessing you’re really good at holding your breath too?” He grinned, pulling my lips to his. “How do you think I stay between your legs for so long, Spitfire?” I laughed and shook my head. “Head out of the gutter,” I said, then took another breath. “Okay, let’s do this.” I sucked in as much oxygen as I could, holding it in my chest as I sunk below the surface with Brax’s hand in mine. I used the little kicks he’d said to, to move forward, but I didn’t need to. My shadows fueled my body, moving me toward the tall, black, jagged rocks that covered the lake bed. “Don’t touch them. We don’t know what they’re made of or what will happen if disturbed,” I heard Brax’s voice in my head. “Yeah, because my first thought was to touch the sharp, black rocks that look like they want to skewer me like a spit roast,” I said back, and he laughed down the link. “Spit roast, now there’s another idea for the bed later,” he teased, and I almost let out my air in a scoff. “I want her mouth,” Kai interrupted the link, and I ignored both of their s****l comments, trying to see through the dark water, avoiding the spikes of rock that kept coming out of nowhere. It was hard enough to see, but these things were making it harder. My shadows were helping though, avoiding them for me. Without them, I was pretty sure I would’ve messed this mission up at least four skewers ago. My chest and lungs started to burn as I blinked hard, panic rising as my shadows moved me faster. I didn’t know how long I had left before I needed to breathe, but it didn’t feel like long. Brax grabbed my hand and pulled me along with him, but I tugged the connection. He eyed me, and I pointed to the surface. Brax went to pull me up when his head snapped to the water behind him. He frowned and tugged me toward it. I wanted to protest, but my shadows were pulling me there too. I held the last of my oxygen inside, the burning ache in my chest getting worse and worse. “I think we’re close, or the shadows would’ve let us surface. Hold on, Spitfire,” Brax encouraged. “I’m trying,” I replied. ~“Don’t panic; you’ll use more air,” he advised. “I’m trying,” I repeated, and he kicked harder. Until he yanked me against him, and we came face to face with a wall of cliff. He put his palm on it, pressing against it, his eyes wide. I shrugged and felt along it, but I needed air.
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