Beatrixâs home isnât very big and wouldnât suit a claustrophobic person, but itâs cozy in its own way.
The walls are painted a deep brown, and wooden shelves line them with books and trinketsâthings most people would ignore rather than buy if they stumbled across it. Old books take up most of the shelves, loose sheets of paper hanging out of some of them. It smells like herbs and spices in here, as well as old, wet paper. Taper candles are neatly placed throughout the cottage, the flames lit, their wax melting and dripping onto whatever surface it can reach.
Beatrix hums as she moves through her home. She reminds me of the psychic woman from my world who swore Iâd never find love. What a time that was.
âRight this way,â Beatrix chimes. She leads us through her living roomâpast two brown chairs, a wooden coffee table, and lamps on the side tables that look like theyâll break with a simple breathâuntil weâre greeted with an oval table near the kitchen that seats four.
âHave a seat,â Beatrix says, taking the chair closest to two double doors. She sits and folds her hands on the table. I take the chair to her left, and Caz claims the chair on the opposite side. Alora remains standing, choosing to watch while Proll stands guard behind her.
When I look down, there are foreign symbols etched into the table. Triangles with lines, oblong circles, and other shapes Iâve never seen before.
âHow did you get here?â Beatrix asks, fixing her eyes on me. âI assume it happened quicklyâa suction in and then a sudden drop?â
âYes,â I say. âIt was exactly like that.â
âAnd, let me guess. This dark soul found you.â She jerks a thumb at Caz, who flares his nostrils. I get the sense he hates being talked about like heâs not in the room.
âHis wolf found me first, actually.â
Beatrix smirks, and Cazâs jaw ticks. Then his eyes swing to the right, dropping to the floor, and he tenses in his chair. I frown and lean over a bit to see what heâs looking at. At first, I donât see anything, not until it moves. A spiderâbut itâs unlike the spiders where Iâm from. This one is big, black, and hairyâlike a miniature tarantula.
Beatrix looks at the ground with him and continues a smirk as Caz slides his chair to the left.
What? Is he afraid of the spider?
âWorry not,â Beatrix says, grabbing an empty jar from the shelf near her. She removes the lid, scoops up the spider, gives the jar a light shake, then replaces the lid. Once the lid is secured, she places the spider on the table right next to Caz, and I watch as Caz draws in a deep breath before putting his focus ahead again. âThose spiders can be pesky. They love my home. Sometimes I feed them. That oneâs named Ori. Or maybe Ori is in the kitchen and this one is Hurn. Hmm. Iâm not sure.â
Cazâs jaw pulses. âCan we get on with this, please?â he demands.
âOf course. Lend me your hand. You as well.â Beatrix extends both arms in opposite directions so Caz and I can take them.
Caz frowns at her hand before carrying his gaze up to hers. âIs there another way this can be done?â
âTouch,â Beatrix says, smiling at him. âYou hate it, you poor thing. You have no idea what youâre missing out on by covering yourself up so heavily.â She sighs, as if bored with him. âDonât worry. Youâre from my world. I donât exactly need to touch you to see what will come.â She looks at me. âBut I do need your hand.â I place mine in hers, and she wraps her dark, nimble fingers around it before closing her eyes.
As she does, the room darkens, a heavy shadow hovering above us, and I refrain from gasping as the lights flicker. Some of the symbols on the table illuminate in a striking neon purple, each one coming alive as Beatrix inhales then exhales with her eyes still shut.
I glance at Caz, who keeps his eyes fixed on Beatrix, then switch my sight to Alora who is watching it all, fascinated. Beatrix grips my hand tighter, hers becoming cold like ice until finally, the glowing symbols turn back to normal, the lights stop flickering, and she opens her eyes, exhaling again.
She turns her gaze to mine, not blinking, then she turns to Caz. âShe must be gone within the next week.â
âHow do I get her back?â he asks without hesitation.
Beatrix pushes out of her chair and marches through her tiny home. My eyes follow where she goes, and she stops in front of a tall bookcase, snatching a book from the third row, and returning to the table. She drops the thick book and flips it open, fingering through the pages.
âYou were right, Alora. They share a Cold Tether.â
Alora nods, as if she knew it all along.
âItâs been so long since Iâve encountered this kind of Tether though,â Beatrix goes on, a dip forming between her brows. âWhat you two have is powerful. IâI havenât seen this kind of Tether in so long. The kind pulled from two universes. âYou can hear his thoughts.â Beatrix is still flipping through the pages. âAnd the longer youâre around him, youâll eventually begin to feel his pain. And he will feel yours. Here.â Beatrix lands on the page sheâs been looking for and places a finger on it. âThe Cold Tether,â she says. âThe Cold Tether is so powerful, so extreme, that within only a few days, things can become fatal for both of you. The more you two are together, the more dangerous it will become for you to be around one another.â
âHow?â asks Caz.
âYeah, how?â Because last night, Alora made it seem like a Cold Tether was a beautiful thing. Now this Beatrix woman is telling me itâs a fatality?
âThere is a Vakeeli being who hunts for Cold Tether mates and harnesses their energy because itâs pure and still has the power of the Regals. It wants to keep it for itself, use it for to grow stronger. And it has, with time.â Beatrix flips the page, and a chill runs down my spine when she reveals an image of something Iâve seen beforeâsomething from my nightmares.
Itâs a figure in all black, wearing a hood. Itâs sketched on the page in what looks like charcoal, so the image is smeared, but the crescent eyes are as red as blood. Itâs similar to the grim reaper, but deadlier, scarier.
âThey call it Mournwrath. It isnât defined by gender, and according to legends, it does not have a face, yet it can turn into anyone it wants to get what it needs. It has hunted the Cold Tethered since they were created by the Regal, Selah. It was over a century ago that I last encountered a couple with a bond like yours. Two days later, they were found dead. Their bodies were pale, their faces sunken in, as if all the life had been drained out of them, and their skin was cold. Colder than the ice of Luxor.â
I work hard to swallow. I donât know what Luxor is, but the way she describes it sounds serious.
âThat sounds like the couple from Vanora,â Alora murmurs, her face ashen. âNo one could explain their deaths.â
âYes,â Beatrix goes on. âI warned that couple; I knew that if they stayed together, theyâd probably not see the next weekâthat Mournwrath would look for them, absorb their Tether, feed off of them like a leach, until they were no more. They didnât listen.â Beatrix looks between us. âI get the sense you two donât very much care for each other, so the sooner you separate, the better.â
âOkay, but how do I get back home, to my world?â
âRight. Here.â Beatrix flips the page again, revealing a paragraph written in very small script. âYouâll say this chant in the place you dropped. Wherever you landed is where your portal home is. Youâll see it open when you say the words, and itâll take you back. But when you return, he cannot be there.â She turns her eyes to Caz. âIf youâre near the portal, thereâs a possibility that a trace of you may trickle into her world, making it much easier for Mournwrath to find her. And believe me, it will haunt her, if it hasnât been already. Itâll get inside her head, make her think crazy things just to get her to open the portal back up. It can only feed when youâre together and in loveâwhich will happen, whether you want it to or not.â
âTrust me. We wonât have to worry about that,â Caz declares, and I roll my eyes because I knew a smart-ass remark from him was coming.
âIs there no way to stop this thing regardless?â I ask.
âThereâs always a way to stop something,â she says, smiling a bit. âBut whatever method is used is not heard of. You see, the Cold Tether is so rare that when one encounters it, itâs too late to learn what to do or where to go next. Many believe Selah had a way to work around it before her disappearanceâa possibility for the Cold Tether to last without being attacked by Mournwrathâbut after so many centuries, Mournwrath has only become stronger and is practically unstoppable. We can only learn when the Tethered are together, and when they agree to become one, or as I said, fall in love. Thatâs when the bond is most powerful. I believe you two have been safe thus far due to your clear disdain for each other.â
âSo, I say a chant in the forest where I landed, and itâll take me back home?â I ask. âThat sounds easy enough.â
âItâs that simple.â Beatrix scribbles something on a sheet of paper and slides it across the table to Caz before slapping the book closed. âGo today, back to where you came from. Get it done and get it over with. And whatever you do, donât go falling in love along the way. Itâll only make your lives harder.â
I push to a stand just as Caz does. âAs I said before, youâll have no concern there. No oneâs falling in love. Sheâll be home before we all know it. Thank you for your time, Beatrix.â
Alora smiles graciously at Beatrix, but just as she starts to speak, the house shakes, like an earthquake is passing. Trinkets on the shelf clatter, the windows rattle, and the floor vibrates beneath my feet. I look across the room at Caz, who is drawing his gun, but itâs too late.
An explosion so powerful rips a hole in the side of Beatrixâs house and causes everyone to fall.