âNo!â I screech.
Iâm running.
Iâm running with no thought of the consequences of my actions.
None of it matters.
Nothing matters if any of us are gone.
âVane!â
I shove through the men, heart hammering in my ears, and leap off the cliffâs edge.
The wind rushes up, freezing the air in my throat.
Vane is falling and falling, his back to the ocean below.
âDonât,â he mouths.
It reminds me of the same warning he gave me back at the lagoon before he finally gave in to me. When he told me not to run. When he tried to save me from himself.
But I donât need saving.
Not then and not now.
the shadow asks.
, I tell it.
The shadow stirs again and there is a sensation deep in my throat that feels like something wanting to crawl its way out.
Vaneâs clothes flap around him as the ocean grows nearer.
I reach out, stretch my arm as far as itâll go, stretch my fingers until they ache.
âGrab my hand!â I yell at Vane.
He grits his teeth.
, I say to the shadow, Darkness pulses at the edge of my vision.
Vaneâs brow furrows, confusion narrowing in his eyes.
âGrab my fucking hand, Vane!â
Darkness envelops us. I can no longer see the ocean or feel the cool spray of the waves.
The shadow ribbons around Vane and me and I yelp with relief when I feel his fingers lock with mine.
I wrap my body around his as the darkness wraps around us and propels us forward at the last second.
Just enough to miss the rocks, but not enough to miss the ocean.
We slam into the surface at such high velocity, the water feels like a thousand needles on my skin.
Vane latches on to me as the waves spin us around and around and the current drags us against the sharp coral reef. I can taste blood on my tongue.
We come up for air, only to be dragged under again.
Finally the ocean spits us out, gasping and bruised and bleeding on the sandy, chilly shore.
I collapse on top of Vane, both of us panting, sucking in oxygen.
âYou shouldnât have done that,â he says and hangs his head back into the sand.
âDonât tell me what to do.â
He groans and I remember heâs deeply injured and scurry off of him.
âGet up. We need to get you somewhere safe so you canââ I push his shirt aside to get a better look at his wound. âWhat theââ
He lifts his head and scans his chest. âThatâs not possible.â He yanks the material aside and pats at his pale skin. âWhat the fuck?â
âAre you healed?â
Up on his feet, he yanks his shirt completely off and if we werenât under attack with his life hanging in the balance, I would take a celebratory moment to appreciate the sight of him.
Thereâs nothing on his torso. No cuts marring his flesh or his tattoos. No festering wound. Not even a bruise.
âDid I heal you?â I ask.
He frowns as he considers it. âI would say unlikely, but anything is possible with the shadows. No two are alike and they react differently with each person. Butâ¦â He pats at his chest again, then runs his hands down his abs checking for more injuries.
âWhat is it?â I ask.
âI donât feel different. I can still feel something that resembles the shadow.â
âWell there will be plenty of time to figure it out later. After we destroy him.â I start down the beach toward Maroonerâs Rock, but Vane grabs my hand and yanks me around.
My wet hair slaps at my face.
âYou are not going back there.
are going home.â
âI donât need to be coddled, Vane. I just saved you.â
He rolls his eyes. âIll-conceived at best.â
âBesides, if anyone should be going home itâs you. You were mortally wounded just minutes ago with your shadow torn out andââ
He growls and his violet eye goes black.
I take a step away. âVane?â
âFor once, Win, I wish you would fucking listen to me.â
âVane!â
âWhat?â he barks.
âYour eyes are black.â
He rushes over to a tide pool and looks at his reflection.
The words I choose while reaching out to Vane echo in my head.
Thatâs what I told the shadow.
âVane, I thinkââ
He turns around and meets my gaze.
Even though his eyes are black, I can still sense him searching mine.
I know he can feel itâwe are sharing the Neverland Death Shadow.
The shadow is split between us.
Vane grabs my hand and turns it over in his. There is a spark of warmth where our skin meets. Like warm honey on a summer night. A sense of familiarity and likeness.
âThatâs impossible.â I can barely hear him over the roaring of the waves.
âYou just said anything is possible with the shadows.â
âDonât use my words against me.â
I curl my fingers around his. âWe can debate this later. Letâs go destroy what remains of those who would seek to destroy us.â
His jaw flexes and his black eyes glint with the promise of violence.
âLetâs show Holt how we feel about his threats.â
Vane nods, wraps an arm around my waist and tucks me into his side as he pulls us into the air.