Chapter 106 : Portal to Home

*Lena*®

This place, whatever it was, was a land of eternal sunshine. I wondered if I may have dreamt about itat some point during my childhood, and maybe that dream had spurred the creation of my owngarden realm.

Everything was too beautiful and too good to be real, and as we gathered in the clearing under thegentle rays of a forgiving sun, I felt a pang of regret at the idea of leaving.

We'd only spent a day here at the most, enough time to rest and eat. Xander and Zeke spent muchof the last several hours in quiet conversation, but their eyes told me they were plotting somethinggrandiose, something... violent. I tried to stop myself from thinking of what would need to comenext. Next was war, next was c*****e, and even in her seemingly infinite wisdom, Andromeda hadlittle answers for us.

Xander was upset by this and accused her of purposefully talking in riddles. Oliver was too wrappedup in the mate bond he felt in this place to focus on anything, or anyone, who required hisattention. But something changed in him as we prepared to leave, and Andromeda noticed thechange, although she hadn't spoken a single word to him and left him to her acolytes instead.“They said there is no one by the name of Elaine here," Oliver said, his voice laced with hurt.Andromeda twisted one of his glossy, copper-blonde curls around her finger as she circled him, herwide mouth curving into a smile.

“She was here, but she left. You'll see her again.”

“I haven't seen her at all,” he said in a whisper, his cheeks coloring as he lowered his eyes. Xanderwatched him with a careful gaze, then glanced at me, those dark eyes heavy with emotion.

The only thing Oliver had ever wanted was his mate. I'd known that since we were just children. He'dthought that was Hollis, and maybe even for a moment, he'd thought that had been Abigail as wellHe'd followed that bond here, and it had dropped him right at the doorway to the place whereElaine had been, at least for a moment. Now, she was gone.

“People can just come and go?" Xander asked.

Andromeda shook her head, folding her arms over her lap as her acolytes scurried around behindher, readying the book for its journey. They were wrapping it in silk and tucking dried flowers withinthe folds of fabric.

"Your witch was seeking her friend, and through our seers was able to locate him-"

“She's looking for Henry,” Xander said beneath his breath, glancing at Oliver with a quick nod thatsaid, “We'll talk about this in a moment," as he turned his attention to Zeke, leaning to whisper intothe vampire's ear.

Penny was hovering beside me, her eyes fixed on Zeke as she wrung her hands. The two of themhad been notably absent when the group of us sat down for a picnic a few hours earlier, and basedon the glow of her skin and the sparkle in her eyes, I had a sneaking suspicion I knew exactly whatthey'd been up to.

I watched as Xander and Zeke nodded at each other, their plans finalized, and then he wrapped anarm around Oliver's shoulder and led him away to talk in private. My stomach was in knots, mythroat tight and my mouth dry. My time spent in Crimson Creek felt so simple compared to this. Thefate of my world was hanging in the balance, and I was at a loss as to how to stop it.

“It's imperative the book is given to your aunt as soon as possible,” Andromeda said as she glided inmy direction.

I swallowed past the lump in my throat, tilting my chin upward as I looked into her eyes. “It's a longjourney to Winter Forest from Crimson Creek"

“It's a single minute from this realm to Winter Forest,” Andromeda said with a girlish chuckle,waving her hand in dismissal. She removed one of the many rings she wore on her fingers, turningthe ring over in her palm before handing it to me. It was ancient, the band glistened green withpatina as I held it into the light. A smooth, rounded piece of jade was the other stone within itssimple setting.

Jade, like the kind that could be found along the beach in Winter Forest, like the jade my father hadmade into wedding rings for himself and my mother. I met Andromeda’s eyes and she smiled."Come, it's time to go," she beckoned, and I stepped forward, taking her outstretched hand. My freehand laid over the swell of my belly, which seemed to be doubling in size every day. I had a slightwaddle to my gait now, and I could feel the baby moving sometimes, but not often. It wasimpossible to calculate how far along I was now, especially since so much time was passing in thepack lands in our absence.

We'd been in this place for two weeks, maybe less.

That could have been months back home.

What were we walking into once we breached the rift between our realms?

Xander came up behind me, Oliver by his side. I turned to look at Penny, who was standing hand inhand with Zeke. Zeke nodded at me in farewell.

"He's going to replace Henry and Elaine, and bring them back here,” Xander said quickly as we left theclearing and began walking through a dense, overgrown forest.

Andromeda led the way, and we walked in silence, followed by the acolytes, one of which wascarrying the book.

We stepped into a new clearing, dark and shadowed by a mix of trees that wouldn't normally growtogether—willow trees with thick trunks and billowing branches that brushed the ground, mingledwith towering spruce and birch trees with white, chalky bark.

I could smell the salt and wood stove smoke as we neared a temple made of ancient stone, grownover with moss.

“This is how Morrighan and I used to visit each other,” Andromeda said with a long, wistful sigh. Shelost herself in a memory for a moment, a sadness blurring her features, but then she snapped backto reality and turned to me. “You look like her, you know-such fair, delicate features.”

"Were you friends?"

"Oh," Andromeda smiled sadly, tearing her gaze away from mine as she exhaled deeply with hereyes now fixed on the temple. “Yes, we were friends. I would say... if my kind had the blessing of amate bond, we would have shared the bond, her and I. I loved her, so very much. But, we were ofdifferent realms, different peoples.”

Pain flashed behind her eyes for a split second before she blinked, then she turned back in the wayshe came, motioning for the acolytes to step forward with the book. They tried to hand the book toXander, but Andromeda shook her head, pointing to Oliver instead.

“It's for him to give to her,” Andromeda said, nodding at Oliver, who looked a little stunned as hegathered the silk-wrapped book in his arms. Andromeda looked between Xander and me, thennodded in farewell before walking away.

I turned to Xander as the clearing went quiet. Oliver shifted his weight uncomfortably. We'd beendressed in fine clothing, with Oliver and Xander dressed in leather and dark fabrics, and myself in apale blue dress that brushed my ankles as I walked. Andromeda had brushed my hair, her strokescausing it to lengthen until it was nearing my waist, and she twisted it into long braids that shewove into a glistening silver and moonstone crown.

She'd mentioned in passing that it had been a gift, and I realized as I reached up to touch themoonstones that it had been a gift to her from Morrighan. Who else could have worn silver withoutit burning their skin, but the daughter of the original Moon Goddess?

“Do we just... go in?" Oliver asked, his eyes shining like two different colored gems in the lightfiltering down through the canopy of trees.

“I guess so," I breathed.

Xander ran his knuckles down the back of my upper arm, then knitted his hand in mine. “Wheredoes this lead?" he asked.

"Home," I said, and took a step forward, then another, and another, until I was standing at thethreshold of the sanctuary that felt so familiar and yet like it had been plucked from a distantmemory.

I opened the door, needing Xander's help to push it open, and all three of us stepped inside.Cobwebs covered every surface. The dust was thick, and the air was stale. Xander paused to lookaround, releasing my hand from his so I could walk forward

I ran my fingertips across the tops of the pews as I walked toward the altar. Oliver huffed a breathbehind me, choking a bit on the dust. Moonlight poured in through the stained glass windows,drifting down in dusty rays of silver over a spray of white roses that sat at the base of the altar.“Where's the portal?” Xander asked. His voice echoed, but was absorbed into the sound of rushingwaves, and muted voices. Xander stepped toward the window to look outside, and Oliver walked upbehind me to peer at the roses over my shoulder.

I thought I heard my aunt Kacidra, of all people, chattering away. Then... was that aunt Maeve'svoice laughing in return?

I turned around, my body going rigid as my mother appeared in the doorway of the temple, herbody dusted with snow and her clothes soaking wet. The flashlight she held in her hand wasshaking, her golden brown eyes wide and unblinking. Oliver turned to look at her, a sigh of reliefleaving his lips.

But Mom looked as though she'd seen a ghost. She wasn't moving. Her breath was caught."Mama?" I said, taking a step toward her. “Mama? Wake up!"

She blinked and brought her hand to her temple, her breath trembling as she closed her eyes andshook her head. She kept them closed for several seconds, then opened them again.

"Oh, my Goddess," she breathed, dropping the flashlight. Tears welled in my eyes as we began torush toward each other. I threw my arms around her, and she pressed me into her chest in a tightembrace.

"You looked like you saw a ghost," Oliver quipped, and Mom choked on a laugh.

"You won't believe me,” she whispered, her cheek pressed against mine as she raised her head tolook over my shoulder at Oliver. “I've seen this very moment before.”

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