Defying Destiny

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by Olivia Downing


  CHAPTER 35

  Nash started awake. An unfamiliar sound

  had pulled him from his exhausted

  slumber. It took him a moment to realize

  Maralee’s terrified whimpers had woken

  him. She was on the far side of the pallet,

  curled up, trembling and crying out in her

  sleep. Her oblivious suffering gnawed at

  his chest. He crawled across the pallet

  and took her firmly by the shoulder, giving

  her a hard shake.

  “Maralee.”

  “No,” she groaned. “No!”

  “Maralee, wake up,” he demanded

  more forcefully, shaking her vigorously.

  “Maralee!”

  She cried out, still lost in the horror of

  her dream. Nash panicked. This was no

  ordinary nightmare. It was as if she

  couldn’t be awoken from it. He feared she

  would remain trapped within it forever.

  “Please, Maralee, wake up,” he

  murmured, drawing her against him in the

  darkness, holding her face pressed against

  his rapidly beating heart.

  She fought his hold for a moment and

  then relaxed against him. Though her

  nightmare seemed to have subsided, Nash

  continued to hold her. He knew she hadn’t

  been having nightmares for the past

  several days. He wondered what had

  brought this one on. When he had

  convinced himself that she was sleeping

  peacefully, he loosened his hold and

  eased away from her slightly. Her

  unprovoked, terrified scream, startled

  him. She sat up beside him, breathing

  hard, tears flowing unfettered down her

  cheeks, as at last, she awoke from the

  dream.

  “Maralee?” he whispered, reaching

  out to touch her in the darkness.

  She started when his fingers brushed

  her side.

  “Nash?” she murmured, as if she

  wasn’t sure it was him.

  “It’s me,” he assured her. “You were

  having a nightmare. I tried to wake you up,

  but...”

  “Just a dream,” she whispered,

  covering her trembling lips with her

  fingertips. “Just a dream.”

  “Were you dreaming about your family

  again?” he asked her, sitting up beside her

  and placing a comforting arm around her

  lower back.

  “Y-yes,” she whispered, “and other

  things.”

  She surprised him when she forced

  him onto his back and rested her head on

  his chest, breathing hard as tears dripped

  from her eyes and trailed over his bare

  skin.

  “Just a dream,” she murmured. “Just a

  dream.”

  “Maralee?” he questioned, deeply

  concerned.

  “Don’t speak,” she insisted. “I need to

  hear it.”

  He tried listening for a moment, but he

  didn’t hear anything at all. “Hear what?”

  he asked finally.

  “Your heartbeat.”

  He stroked her hair and stilled his

  breathing so she could listen to his

  heartbeat. He didn’t understand why it

  was suddenly so important to her, but it

  seemed to soothe her. At least her tears

  had stopped dripping down his side.

  “Are you better now?” he asked after a

  while.

  She didn’t answer, but he knew she

  wasn’t asleep, because her hand trailed

  down his belly. His pulse accelerated

  with awakening desire and she sighed

  with contentment. Her touch became

  bolder, teasing and deliberate, suffusing

  him with pleasure and desire. She took his

  cock in her hand, rubbing her palm along

  its length. His heart raced faster and faster

  until his need for her consumed him. He

  shifted onto his side, trying to tumble her

  onto her back, but she held onto him,

  pressing her ear more firmly to his chest.

  “Maralee, let me,” he begged, his

  hands seeking her pliant flesh but found

  her to be rigid and unyielding.

  “No,” she said, trembling as she clung

  to his chest and refused to let go.

  “Then why were you touching me like

  that?” he growled irritably.

  “I wanted to hear your heart beat

  faster,” she whispered. “Please let me

  stay here a little longer.”

  “Tell

  me

  what’s

  wrong,”

  he

  demanded. “Why are you acting like this?”

  “I just wanted to know if it sounded

  different when you’re relaxed or excited,

  happy or sad, angry or calm. I know the

  heart feels different inside when you

  experience emotions, but I wanted to

  know if it sounded different.”

  He relaxed, holding her close to his

  chest, his frustration evaporating. “Can

  you hear what I’m feeling now?” he asked

  her, concentrating on the love he felt for

  her. It always seemed to make his heart

  flutter like the wings of a butterfly,

  perhaps she would be able to hear it if she

  listened closely.

  “N-no,” she whispered and burst into

  tears.

  “Don’t cry anymore, Maralee,” he

  begged. “If you can’t hear it, I’ll tell you

  what it feels like.”

  She sobbed and nodded wordlessly.

  He stroked her hair as he whispered to her

  in the darkness. “Right now my heart

  aches. It feels like my ribs are crushing it

  because I can’t stand for you to cry.”

  “I’m sorry,” she whispered, wiping at

  her tears. “How does it feel when you’re

  happy?”

  “Like it’s swelling with warm air,

  trying to rise into the sky.”

  “I want to hear what it sounds like

  then,” she said. “Tell me the next time you

  feel that way so I can listen.”

  He smiled. At times, she was almost

  childlike, and at others very much a

  woman. “It feels that way now, because

  you’ve stopped crying.”

  “It doesn’t sound any different,” she

  said. She continued to listen silently for

  numerous minutes. Her warmth was

  soothing and he found himself nodding off

  to sleep again. He heard her words just

  before he drifted away, though their

  importance didn’t register.

  “I’ll never allow this heart to stop

  beating.”

  CHAPTER 36

  Long after Nash had fallen back to sleep,

  Maralee continued to listen to his

  heartbeat. She didn’t want to sleep ever

  again. She couldn’t stand the idea of him

  dying, and to see it happen by her own

  sword, his blood dripping over their

  combined hands, was more than she could

  bear. Why did she keep dreaming this

  horrible thing? And why did she keep

  dreaming about the sons she would never

  create with Nash? If one thing was

  impos
sible, then the other had to be as

  well. She almost had herself convinced of

  this when she moved away from him and

  found her discarded clothes.

  She dressed in the dark, grinning when

  she found she couldn’t lace her pants. The

  string was snapped. She considered

  crawling back into bed with him and

  driving him to that frenzied state once

  again, but decided against it. They had to

  find a way to break this curse and if they

  lingered in bed all day, they would never

  make any progress.

  She washed up in the water closet and

  changed into pants she didn’t have to hold

  up with one hand, before venturing to the

  kitchen to steep some strong coffee. There

  wasn’t much coffee left, most of the

  supplies they’d bought when she had first

  arrived were dwindling. They would have

  to make a trip to Sarbough soon, or she

  would have to learn to subside on a pure

  meat diet.

  Cup of coffee in hand, she moved to

  the living area and reclaimed her book

  from her knapsack. She sat down at his

  desk and lit a candle for more light than

  the dawn offered. She didn’t bother to

  light the fire, thinking that perhaps the

  combination of strong, black coffee and

  chilly air would keep her awake. She took

  a sip of scalding liquid and opened the

  book, skimming the first few pages. She

  sighed. The sage had gone into a lengthy

  and detailed discussion about the ways

  Burl had tried to prove his immortality.

  She had never been an avid reader. She

  wasn’t patient enough to wait to find out

  how it ended. She never got more than half

  way through a book before she turned to

  the back and read the ending. After half an

  hour of reading, she did exactly that,

  turned to the last few pages and began to

  read.

  So saddened was I, that brothers could

  become such embittered enemies, I

  formulated a plan to draw them closer. If

  one had to depend on the other, they

  would be forced to work out their

  differences and find peace between them.

  I gave my own son the power to break the

  curse if he so chose, at least temporarily,

  on the night of every full moon. He had

  been born with the crescent moon on his

  forehead and thus it became the sign of his

  power. A permanent solution was up to

  him as the newly ordained Wolf Guardian.

  If he was ever to find a permanent peace

  between his mother’s people and his

  father’s then he would have to break the

  curse on his own.

  His only clues would be found in the

  dreams of the woman he loved, but only

  under the circumstances that she was

  human. My fondest wish for him is that he

  might come to accept both sides of

  himself: the Wolf, which he clings to

  desperately, and the human which he

  obsessively denies, just as he has denied

  that I am his father.

  One sentence jumped out at Maralee

  as she read. Clues in the dreams of the

  woman he loved, but only if she were

  human? She reread the passage several

  times, hoping that somehow she had

  misinterpreted the sage’s final words. It

  couldn’t be. It just couldn’t. Nash’s death

  could not be the answer to the curse. It

  was simply impossible. And even if it

  were the answer, he’d never do something

  like that just to break the curse. Would he?

  “Yes, he would,” she whispered, a

  tear tracing a path over her cheek. “That is

  why I must never tell him what I dream.”

  She heard the bedroom door open and

  Nash’s soft footsteps approach. She turned

  to the front of the book and pretended to

  be reading it from the beginning. She

  tensed when his paused behind her, hands

  sliding over her shoulders and then lower

  to cup her breasts.

  “I was dreaming about you,” he

  murmured, leaning over the back of the

  chair so he could kiss her just beneath her

  earlobe. “I woke up determined to make

  my dream a reality, but you were

  missing.”

  “I couldn’t sleep,” she said. “I thought

  I should start trying to figure out how to

  break this curse.”

  “Did you find anything yet?” he asked,

  leaning over her to look at the book.

  “No,” she lied, reaching behind her to

  find him naked and ready to claim her

  body as his. “That must have been some

  dream,” she murmured huskily.

  “I’ll show you,” he promised, in a low

  growl, and pulled her from the chair to her

  feet.

  His hands were trembling as he

  worked at removing her clothes. She

  grinned at him impishly. “Let me do this,”

  she murmured. “You’ve already damaged

  one pair of my pants.”

  “I’m sorry,” he growled, kissing her

  roughly, backing her into the kitchen. Her

  own fingers were trembling now as she

  made short work of her clothes and stood

  naked against him. He touched her

  eagerly, leaving no sensitive spot on her

  body untouched, unkissed. When he had

  her breathless and needy, he lifted her

  onto the kitchen counter.

  “Here?” she gasped, surprised as the

  cool counter touched her bottom.

  “It started here in my dream,” he told

  her, covering her mouth as he slowly took

  possession of her body. He tore his mouth

  away from hers and rested his forehead on

  her shoulder so he could watch as he

  possessed her body. “Then on the sofa, my

  desk, the water closet, the front porch…”

  She chuckled. “That was some

  dream,” she whispered. She wished that

  she had dreams like his.

  Moments later, he was shuddering

  against her. “Damn,” he cursed. “I guess I

  won’t make that dream a reality after all.”

  Maralee wrapped him in a tight

  embrace. “Dreams aren’t meant to become

  reality.”

  “I always believed that our dreams

  were the deepest reflections of our heart,”

  he said.

  She drew him closer with her arms

  and legs.

  “Maralee, I’d like to breathe now,” he

  gasped.

  “Sorry,” she murmured, slackening her

  grasp marginally.

  “Are you tired?” he asked. “You

  didn’t get much sleep last night.”

  “You kept me up half the night,” she

  complained, hiding her happy smile by

  pressing her face to his shoulder.

  “Did you ever go back to sleep after

  your nightmare?” he asked, caressing her

  thick mane of black hair spilling over her

  back and his hands.

  “No,” she admitted, “b
ut I’m all right.”

  “Why don’t you take a little nap while

  I start studying that book of yours?” he

  suggested, a note of concern in his deep

  voice.

  “No!”

  He drew away from her and looked

  down at her with questioning eyes. She

  avoided his gaze.

  “I mean…I’d like go back to bed for a

  while,” she said, “if you’ll join me. I was

  left unsatisfied that time.”

  “Well, we can’t have that,” he

  murmured, “but I’m starting to see a

  pattern here.” He tucked a finger beneath

  her chin and lifted her face so he could

  look at her. She expected him to question

  her reasons for requesting his presence in

  bed, but he seemed to want to give in to

  her demand. When he claimed her mouth,

  his kiss was as hot and passionate as ever.

  He drew away from her, breathing

  raggedly, his eyes glazed with passion. “I

  swear, Maralee, you’re going to drive me

  to an early grave.”

  “Don’t say things like that,” she

  whispered, her heart felt as if it were

  being squeezed in a strong fist. “Please.”

  “Don’t look so upset,” he urged gently,

  touching her cheek. “I didn’t mean it

  literally.”

  She knew that, but it still bothered her.

  “Take me to bed,” she urged, forcing a

  playful smile.

  His answering crooked grin made her

  heart throb. “That’s the smile I’ve

  missed.”

  Her second smile was genuine.

  “Oh, I’m definitely taking you to bed

  now,” he growled, scooping her off the

  counter.

  “Nash!” she protested as he spun on

  his heel with her in his arms and carried

  her down the hall. She was laughing when

  he laid her on the pallet, but her giggles

  were soon replaced by sighs of pleasure.

  He was gentle and slow for once, giving

  her languid pleasure and taking none for

  himself. She honestly didn’t mean to fall

  asleep.

  CHAPTER 37

  Nash decided that either Maralee was

  utterly exhausted or he was losing his

  touch. He hoped it was the former,

  because at this point, he thought he’d die if

  she rejected his loving. He stared down at

  her in the dim light creeping through the

  open door to make sure she was actually

  asleep. He could only conclude that she

  was when his explorative fingers didn’t

  even pull a sigh from her slightly parted

  lips.

  “I guess we’ll finish this later,” he

 

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