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The Black Blossom: A Young Adult Romantic Fantasy (The Healer Series Book 2)

Page 28

by C. J. Anaya


  “Why didn’t you let Victor or Ms. Mori do this once you brought her back? We could have verified that she was fine.”

  “She is fine.” Tie insisted. “I promise you, her mind is completely healed, but to answer your questions, I don’t trust Chinatsu. She’s only interested in forcing Hope to heal the veil. Victor…well, let’s just say neither he nor I are anxious for Hope to remember her past or the circumstances surrounding her death. I knew he wouldn’t help her to remember, but I also knew he was incapable of doing so.”

  James’ eyes narrowed. “Why? Why can’t he do what you have done? Why can’t he open her mind as you have?”

  Tie let out a heavy breath and looked at Hope, the one person in the world who truly loved him, the one person in the world who had managed to save him from his own self-destruction.

  He reached for her hand again and held it up, palm and fingers flat against his. A bright, iridescent glow spread out from their contact, and a black cherry blossom slowly sprouted and unfurled from the tips of their fingers. He heard James gasp in surprise, and Tie turned his head to look at him.

  “The prophecy has decreed that Victor and Hope must marry, but he can never heal her completely, never hope to help her ascend to a full kami, never join with her to heal the veil and never…” he choked back a tired sob threatening to escape, “…never restore to her the very memories that encompass the beauty, strength, and humility of who Hope truly is.” He watched as the black vine from the cherry blossom circled its way around both their wrists, binding them together as it had over and over every day since she had been admitted to the hospital.

  “Why?” James asked, clearly desperate for more answers. “Why has everything changed?”

  Tie watched as the black blossom continued to tighten the binding between Hope and himself before answering.

  “Because a thousand years ago, I committed the worst kind of betrayal and forced upon Hope something she never would have chosen for herself.” He pulled his hand from the woman he loved and watched as the black blossom disappeared, leaving dark wisps of magic in its wake. “I forced her to sever her tie with Victor and bound her soul to me. She’s mine now, forever, and even if I wanted to, I could never let her go.”

  Deep silence permeated the small space between Tie and James, interrupted only by the steady beeping of Hope’s unnecessary heart monitor.

  For The Reader

  I’d like to thank you for taking this journey with me and continuing on with the second book in The Healer Series. I hope you enjoyed reading the first two books as much as I enjoyed writing them. I’m a huge fan of feedback and would love to hear your thoughts on the series. Please consider leaving a review here.

  If you haven’t had a chance to grab your free copy of My Fair Assassin, you can get it here.

  Other Books by CJ Anaya

  The Healer Series

  The Healer: Book 1

  The Grass Cutter Sword: Book 3

  ***

  Double Booked

  My Fair Assassin

  Marry Your Billionaire

  Continue on in The Healer Series with book 3, The Grass Cutter Sword. Turn the page to read a sample chapter.

  Prologue

  Edana, 700 A.D.

  The day Edana died was much like any other, and yet her heart was filled with love, hope and happiness, cherishing the moments spent with an individual who had promised her an eternity of happily ever afters. With Katsu by her side she would never be subjected to death, illness or even injury. His gift of immortality granted her the opportunity to continue what she felt was her divine duty: to warn others of their own unnecessary deaths, receiving visions of how best to help them so that they too might live their own versions of a happily ever after. More importantly, however, she would finally have what she had yearned for most of her life: unconditional love from a man who valued her, not because of her own supernatural gifts, but because she was simply Edana, and he was simply Katsu.

  Before sneaking out of her small, thatch-roofed hut to join Katsu forever, she stole a kiss from her sleeping mother. The contact gave her another reassuring vision of how her mother’s life would end; in her sleep ten years from now, her spirit leaving her body as naturally as it had first arrived. There existed no better way to slowly slip through the veil than by natural causes.

  Edana felt relieved to never experience the crushing burden of warning her mother of some unfortunate accident or possible harm done to her by another. The best deaths were the ones fated to all of mankind, and she need never interfere with those.

  She stole away into the darkness of pre-dawn to meet with Katsu at the appointed place and time; a small bluff overlooking a beautiful chasm of rocky green foliage and a tiny, rippling stream of sparkling azure. She wrapped her woolen shawl closer about her person, though she hardly felt the cold of the morning due to the warmth spreading from the love within her heart.

  She was first to arrive at the bluffs and had a moment to breathe in the cool, crisp morning air, pondering on the circumstances that had brought her to this point. Only a few months had passed since she first met a wandering merchant by the name of Musubi, but the months blurred into a cacophony of emotional discoveries and eventually hope. He had wandered into her village with obvious purpose in his air and speech. Though his accent was strange and his appearance even more so, she had felt compelled to help him locate a young woman by the name of Thesbis. He left the nature of his business a secret, but she didn’t worry about his motives for his eyes were kind and his manner sincere.

  When she accidentally bumped into him without receiving a vision of his death, she had been overcome with shock and then an unrelenting curiosity. Contact with another human being always resulted in a vision of demise, whether natural, accidental or sinister in nature, but no visions manifested themselves in the presence of this intriguing man.

  In the weeks that followed, he sought her out more frequently, and she was only too happy to oblige, enjoying the presence of a man who allowed her to feel normal and accepted for once in her life. Though she exercised caution when initiating contact with him, every time he touched her she was blessedly free of any and all visions dealing with the manner of his death. She soon began to wonder if Death feared taking him.

  The day his friend Katsu came for a visit would mark the beginning of the end for her, though she hardly knew it at the time. The announcement that she and Musubi planned to marry was just as much of a surprise to her as it was to Katsu, and an unwelcome one by the look on his face. Though she ruefully realized she had never discouraged Musubi’s interest in her, her heart ached at the idea of marrying a man who had become a dear friend to her and nothing more. To marry him solely because he gave her a blessed reprieve from her visions would only end in her unhappiness and his. It wasn’t enough to build a marriage on, and yet what other options did she have as the village witch and outcast?

  Katsu remained in the village while Musubi left to make preparations for their wedding, promising to return within a few weeks to fetch her. During that time it seemed to Edana that Katsu felt it his duty to look after her on behalf of his friend.

  At first, he merely observed her as she worked in her garden, offering to lend a helping hand in cultivating the few vegetables she and her mother enjoyed. His regular visits gave them both the opportunity to broach different topics of conversation, some of a more serious nature, while others filled with the most wonderful sense of levity and true fulfillment. Though she had grown to know and care for Musubi, her heart longed for Katsu’s conversations and his opinions on any and every topic available. In short, she simply longed for him.

  A day before Musubi’s return, Katsu made his usual visit to her home with some surprising information to share.

  Musubi and Katsu were gods, chosen to perform specific tasks in this world, never to have soul mates of their own. He warned her of the endless life Musubi intended to impose upon her, and the possibility that she might not survive her ow
n ascension as a kami. Even now, she remembered their conversation in vivid detail.

  “Why are you warning me of Musubi’s deception?” she asked. “He is your friend, is he not? How can you slander his name if you are as close as you say?”

  “I merely wish to warn you, Edana. What you will be forced to give up and the risks involved are things that you must be aware of. It is only fair that I impress upon you the gravity of this decision so you may ask yourself if immortality is what you really want.”

  He moved closer and took a piece of her red hair in his hand, wrapping it around his finger and then gently giving it a small tug. The gesture brought with it emotions she had never once experienced with Musubi.

  “Please do not misunderstand me. Musubi is one of my oldest friends, and I greatly love and respect him, but he has spent all of his existence helping humans find their soul mates, the one person on this Earth who can make them completely whole. He cannot help but long for that himself, and I cannot blame him for taking the one thing he has never been allowed to have.””

  “And what one thing is that?”

  Katsu’s eyes held Edana’s as he quietly stated, “Love.”

  She swallowed hard, feeling a rush of heat spread across her cheeks. She took a step back, waiting for the rapid beating of her heart to subside and then drew in a steadying breath.

  “What if I wish to take those risks and give Musubi what he’s always wanted?”

  Katsu closed the distance between them again. “If that is your desire, then I will not stand in your way. You needed to be apprised of all of the facts. I couldn’t remain silent, even if Musubi is my best friend. It seems wrong somehow, just as it is wrong to keep hidden my own feelings concerning you.”

  Her mouth went dry at what she thought he insinuated. “I don’t understand your meaning.”

  He gave her a calculating smile. “If you want to risk your own mortality, shouldn’t you be risking it with the right person?”

  “And Musubi isn’t right for me?”

  “He is blinded by his feelings for you, but I believe he knows that you two are not meant for one another.”

  “Then who am I meant for?”

  Katsu looked genuinely puzzled for the first time. “According to Musubi, you are an enigma. He has received no clear reading on you and assumes he can take you for himself. If that is true, however, and the fates have chosen no one for you to love in this life, why not join a kami for all eternity...so long as he is the right kami for you.””

  “You believe that kami to be someone other than Musubi?”

  He smiled wide and placed his hands at her hips, drawing her closer to his person. “The right kami will ensure your immortality. Aligning yourself with one whom you hold no true love for will end in certain death. I believe the only kami you are meant to love is me. With our union, there will be no risks to your survival.”

  Katsu’s words should have alerted her to the truth right then and there, for he had never come right out and divulged the true nature of his feelings. He never once expressed his love for her, but merely hinted at it. Yet she was too carried away in her own feelings for Katsu to consider he might have ulterior motives.

  No. He had laid his trap perfectly, and Edana willingly fell into it. For the first time in her life she experienced that wonderful, terrible, earth-shattering level of love that blinds the sight, deafens all reason, and strips the heart bare for all the world to see.

  Standing on the bluffs overlooking the wide chasm and trickling stream beneath, Edana still awaited a happily ever after that would never come.

  “Edana.” Katsu’s gruff voice took her by surprise, and she turned around with a radiant smile upon her face, one that slowly slipped away once she beheld his furious countenance.

  She rushed to him. “What is it? What has happened?”

  “You did it, did you not? You informed Musubi that you held no love for him, that you would never marry him.”

  She looked at him in confusion. “I wasn’t quite as heartless as that, but yes, I told him exactly what we discussed earlier. While I love him as a dear friend, I must be true to my heart and follow it wherever it may lead, and it leads to you, Katsu.”” She placed a gentle, loving hand on his cheek, but he abruptly pulled back, steeling his eyes and glaring at her instead.

  The disturbing change in him baffled her beyond anything she could comprehend. Where had the man she cared for disappear to?

  He stood before her with an indifferent, almost triumphant expression upon his face. “I knew you never loved him. Just like any woman, you are quick to switch your loyalties to whatever circumstance betters your situation.”

  The hurtful accusations speared the very center of her heart and crushed her spirit. “I cared for him,” she cried, “and I will always consider him a dear friend, but I feel nothing more than sisterly affection for him. I didn’t refuse him without good cause.”

  “You did exactly what I stated you would do, exactly what I warned him you were capable of. He needed to understand what he risked his immortality for. What kind of friend would I be if I didn’t expose you for the unfaithful, loveless woman that you truly are?””

  Edana’s heart broke with each vicious word Katsu uttered. They inflicted the highest amount of pain. He wielded them as a weapon, like tiny shards of glass capable of penetrating her most tender and vulnerable places. She cried heavy tears as she slumped to the earth. “I love you, Katsu. Whether you believe it to be true or not, I love you more than I thought it possible to love anyone or anything.”

  “You love what I offered you. You love the thought of achieving an immortal state risk free. You love yourself more than the idea of being true to my friend.” Katsu’s anger on behalf of Musubi blazed across his features. “He shied away from telling you the truth until you had no choice in the matter, but I knew that to be a mistake. Your eye could be turned just as easily as the next woman’s. It is not his destiny to be saddled with such a woman as you. Nor is it mine.”

  Edana fell to her knees and lifted her hands in supplication. “Please, Katsu. You know this isn’t true. You know I had no intention of following through with a marriage to Musubi. Even if you hadn’t come along.”

  “I know no such thing. All I see is a faithless woman who will never have the chance to hurt my friend again. Goodbye, Edana.”

  * * *

  Katsu 700 A.D.

  An enormous amount of regret engulfed Katsu as he threw such hateful words at Edana and began to walk away. He convinced himself of her guilt. She deserved to be abandoned for so cruelly abusing the affections Musubi offered her. She deserved her own heartbreak for throwing aside Musubi’s love just as easily as she would Katsu’s if a better offer ever came along. He knew how these human women operated, and he had set out to protect his friend no matter the cost or the collateral damage. He was determined to save his friend from the kind of heartbreak he had witnessed a thousand other mortals experience in his expansive lifetime. He would save Musubi from his own fruitless desires, from the possibility of losing his own immortality.

  To save his best friend’s life.

  And he had!

  He damn well had!

  Why, then, did a massive hole rip within his chest as he continued to create more distance between Edana and himself?

  He pondered the idea of returning to her side, apologizing for the subterfuge, and at the very least helping the young girl to understand why a union between the two of them verged on the other side of impossible.

  He steeled his resolve further, recognizing his own weakness where a pretty face was concerned. There were plenty of other women to revel in before the day was through, but Edana he would cast off forever.

  In the end, did it matter who he spent his time with? Eventually, he would be saddled with his own fate; tied to The Healer and trapped in an arranged, loveless marriage for the rest of eternity. Why not live life to its fullest now?

  A terrified scream knifed through h
is musings, causing an unfamiliar sense of fear to course through him.

  Edana!

  He raced back the way he had come, reaching the bluffs with lightning speed, but unable to spot Edana anywhere. Turning in circles and surveying the land spread out before him, he came to an unacceptable conclusion, one which filled him with stone cold dread. He inched himself closer to the cliff’s edge, hoping against hope that his fears might not be realized. At the bottom of the rocky chasm he saw Edana, broken, bleeding, and barely alive.

  He dove to her side, hardly paying any attention to how he arrived or the temporary damage his fall inflicted upon his own body. He focused solely on Edana, wishing only to arrive at her side and save her before her heart drummed its last beat.

  When he reached her, her eyes took on a glint of recognition for just one precious moment, a moment that filled him with hope, relief and...love! He batted away the emotions, knowing he couldn’t afford to be distracted, and placed his hands on either side of her head. Just as he connected to her sweet spirit, she slipped away from him, away from his touch, away from his desperate grasp, and away from the surprising feelings her absence in his life evoked. Her bright spirit slid from this life to the next, through the veil and on to the other side where he would never be capable of retrieving her.

  “Edana,” he cried, shaking her though he knew it was pointless. “Edana...please, I...” Katsu wrapped his arms around her broken body and pulled her to his chest, not even attempting to muffle his sobs. The pain of her loss attacked the entirety of his ki, a terrible ripping sensation that shattered his senses and hollowed him from the inside out.

  She killed herself. Threw herself over the cliff’s edge because of him, because of his refusal to love and accept her. He hadn’t truly believed her professions of love, not until that very moment. The realization made him shake harder as he rocked back and forth with her in his arms.

 

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