Chapter 112: The Next Adventure
Maeve
It was 7:00 in the morning, and the pale sunlight coming through the windows of the informal dining room off the kitchen was doing nothing to help illuminate the room.
Thad woken to Troy readying the boys for the day. He was trying not to wake me, but my sleep had been so shallow I had only been lingering on the edge of true sleep for several hours at that point. He was taking the boys to Ingra so I could rest, for which I was thankful, but the hour between 6:00 and 7:00 proved to be restless and lonely.
I wasn’t the only one who hadn’t been able to sleep. Gemma was seated across from me at the round table, stirring sugar into her coffee. Ernest was using his finger to swipe a taste of oatmeal against George’s tongue, and to his left sat Rowan, and then Troy, who was talking in a low whisper over the sound of coffee being sipped and silverware scraping against bowls of oatmeal with honey and cream.
Hanna was seated next to me, close enough that her shoulder brushed against mine as she reached for what would be her third bowl of oatmeal. She had color in her cheeks, and her hair was pulled away from her face in a tight ponytail. She looked rested, compared to the rest of us.
It was obvious no one wanted to talk about what had happened. But a stale silence lingered over the table. I slouched, looking down into my untouched breakfast, and
wondered what the hell was going to happen next.
“If… theoretically, that is, you could shift into anything… not just a wolf,” Gemma began, her voice breaking through the blanket of awkward silence, “what would you be?”
“Like an animal, or… object?” Ernest replied, momentarily taking his full attention from George, a spoon covered in oatmeal just inches from the baby’s face. George grabbed the spoon with his chubby fists and brought it to his mouth, giving me a huge, oatmeal-covered grin as I met his eye. I couldn’t help but smile at how pleased he was with himself.
“An object?” Rowan eyed Ernest with suspicion, “Like what? A toaster?”
“You could make everyone a nice snack after battle-” Ernest quipped, which elicited a hearty laugh from Troy.
“Well, I think I’d be an eagle or an owl, for example. I’ve always liked owls,” Gemma said curtly, annoyed that the men were ruining her game.
“I’d still be a wolf,” Rowan interjected, looking slightly peeved.
“Well, that’s no fun, Rowan. You wouldn’t want to be something like a bear or a mountain lion?” Gemma brought her coffee to her lips, arching her brow at him.
“Who would win in a fight? That is the question. A wolf or a mountain lion?” Ernest was fighting to wipe oatmeal from George’s face.
“Oh, a lion, for sure,” Hanna quipped, but the sound of her voice sent a hush over the table. None of us had heard her
speak since what happened in the caves.
An awkward few seconds passed, and I felt heat prickling against my cheeks. Why could no one talk about what happened? Even the “family meeting” led by Dad the night before had been silent, awkward. Everyone was too tired or too stunned to add anything to the conversation.
“I’d be a beaver,” Troy said, pouring himself another cup of coffee. Rowan looked shocked. 1
“A beaver? Why on earth-”
“Because I’ve had too dam… much of this conversation this morning.”
Everyone looked at him. Troy’s eyes were shining with mirth as he waited for the group to catch on to his silly joke. Ernest sputtered with laughter, and Gemma rolled her eyes. It took Rowan a moment too long to realize Troy’s ridiculous play on words, and the group immediately turned on him, saying he was the toaster of the group now.
| settled back against my chair, holding my mug of coffee in my hands as I watched the conversation take on a new air of ease. I caught Troy’s eye and smiled softly at him, hoping he caught the silent look of gratitude in my eyes.
The conversation went on without me. After several minutes, Hanna leaned into me, whispering softly in my ear.
“We need to talk,” she whispered. All I could do was nod.
Yes, yes we did.
The atrium was quiet, humid, and misty like usual. I was carrying Oliver in a wide circle, holding him against my shoulder. The other boys were sleeping upstairs with Troy, who had retired from breakfast with his heart set on a long nap, but Oli had been wide awake.
So, when I went down to meet up with Hanna, I took him with me.
He was wide-eyed as we walked around the atrium. He hadn’t yet gotten the hang of his hands, but occasionally reached out to place a shaky fist on a monstera leaf, often startled by the warm and dampness of its leaves. I watched him in awe, thanking the Goddess for his life, and mine.
Hanna was also walking around, no doubt gathering her thoughts. When we finally met in the center of the atrium, 1 placed Oli in her hands, watching as she instinctively gathered him to her chest. He cooed, snuggling close against the soft fabric of the sweater she was wearing, and promptly fell asleep.
“Maeve I think… I believe I could be pregnant,” Hanna whispered, her eyes downcast to the sleeping baby in her arms. I swallowed, nodding as I took a seat in one of the wicker chairs.
“We could get you a test-”
She shook her head, a whisper of a smile touching the corner of her mouth as she looked down at me.
“No, it’s early still.”
“What makes you think that you are? Is this because of what
Tasia said?”
“Yes, and she was right. I’ve met her, our daughter. I have every reason to believe that what the old woman from Lycenna, my great aunt, said is true… about the prophecy, about what this child will become. I just don’t know what that will look like, exactly. I’m scared, Maeve. She… when I saw her in my dream, when I was in the crystal cavern with Tasia, she was scared too. I’ve seen her twice, Maeve. The first time…”
She proceeded to tell me about the dream she had the night she slept with Rowan. She had finally reached the temple she had been dreaming about for years, standing on the shore just outside of its entrance. It was not the temple of the White Queens, nor any temple familiar to either of us.
And she had seen Rowan, but he was much older.
“He was wearing my ring,” she said, holding up her hand to show me the band of jade on her ring finger, “on his pinky. I didn’t have it yet, when I had the dream. But now…” She sat down on the couch opposite my chair, tilting her head as she looked down at Oli.
“Why was he wearing it?” | asked, an uneasy feeling wrapping itself around my heart.
“I die, Maeve, at some point during our daughter’s childhood. I don’t know how, or why. But when I saw them… when I saw our daughter inside the temple, she was crying. It was a funeral. Oliver was there, but I didn’t know it at the time. He hadn’t been born yet in reality. But his eyes… and his hair… oh Goddess, he will be the perfect mix of you both, Maeve. He was beautiful, and he will be close with my daughter in the future, I believe. He was comforting her.”
Her words hit me like a brick wall. I felt somewhat sick to my stomach as I fought against the feelings of dread bubbling through my system. “Have you told anyone else?”
“No, I haven’t.”
A silence passed between us. I eventually looked over at her, seeing her face expressionless, blank, as though she had already accepted this as truth long ago.
She described the girl from her dreams, who had been a young teenager in both visions. Long, straight white hair. Silver eyes flaked with the same color blue Rowan and I shared and lined with white lashes. When I asked her if she thought the girl was a White Queen already, at such a young age, she shook her head.
Hanna began to cry. I cried as well, my stomach in knots. Hanna had saved us all. We were free of the turmoil of the last year, but not her. Hanna’s trials had just begun.
“I know. I know she will be loved. But how am – she’ll be like me, Maeve. And so, so much more. What am I supposed to
“Hanna, the worst is over. Of that I’m certain. Tasia is gone. Lycenna has broken up. Carl is missing, and I don’t believe he’ Il cause us any more issues. Your father is the King of the West, and ally. It’s the dawn of a new era, and our children won’t know war… not like our parents did.
“We prevented a war ourselves, Hanna. You guided me and kept me safe while I found the stones. You protected my mother when I couldn’t. You bring Rowan so much happiness.
I can’t… I won’t think of a time, I refuse to think of it, when I don’t have you, when we don’t have you here with us. I won’t. It’s peace time, Hanna. You’re the Luna of Drogomor now. We have to let the rest go.”
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Sold as the Alpha King's Breeder
Yeah sorry full of crap clichés skipping chapters...
Really oh fn....off another weak heroine roll, her pack hated her, she was abused, why would she do this .... pfghhj off at another cliche novel. .... Nope...