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"When you asked me to be with you months ago, how had you planned for this?"

"I would have trusted Lark to carry letters on," he said. "Now we each have a target on our back."

"I couldn't ask you to do another seven-century stint." He'd told me and Jack that immortality was the utterest hell. "But I couldn't handle it either. I'm not built to be alone. Aric, if something happened to you . . . I couldn't . . ." Losing them both? There was no tourniquet tight enough. "Winning the game would be my absolute worst nightmare."

Voice gone gruff, he said, "You truly mean that."

I nodded. "We need to figure out another way to preserve our memories."

"We could bargain with the Fool--"

"Out of the question." I inhale a breath, then softened my tone. "What about Circe? Maybe we could ask her to cast a spell."

"Though we might not even trust her not to kill us?"

Good point. "Beggars can't be choosers."

"We'll talk to her." He reached for me, pulling me closer. "Come here."

I went into his arms, and for a time, I didn't have to think at all. . . .

44

Day 511 A.F.

"The unclean one!" Lark called when I stopped by her room. She was sitting on her bed, in the middle of a pile of animals.

Aric was finishing up some other translations, so I'd told him I would go check in with Lark. Secretly I wanted to make sure she wasn't planning our murders with all her animals and such. "Are you taking a break?"

"A few minutes. Just to rest my wings. I mean, my falcon's wings." She waved to the bed. "Cop a squat."

I waded through animals, then scooted a grumpy badger family out of the way so I could sit beside Lark.

"You're making the boss happy," she said. "Like a thousand times more happy than when you two hit it off before. I heard the man whistling the other morning. For real?"

"For real." I reached over and plucked feathers from her hair.

With an irritated growl, she shook her mane out.

I insistently tucked her hair behind her ears. "Your ears are getting pointed."

She slapped her claw-tipped fingers over them and hissed at me.

"I think they're adorable."

With a wary expression, she lowered her hands. "Whatever." Fretting her lip with a fang, she said, "Do you think Finn'll be cool with my changes?"

"I do. In past games, he loved your animal attributes. I have a memory of him telling you so."

"Really?" That got her to smile. "I'm so ready to get back together with him. When he was at Fort Arcana, we passed letters via falcon, really getting to know each other. I'm a goner for that boy."

"Cyclops was supposed to lead him to you." As soon as Finn's leg had healed enough for him to ride. "What happens now if you find him?"

Fidgeting with a claw, she said, "My falcon can reel him in."

"Reel him in . . . where? Back here?"

More fidgeting.

"Oh, shit. Seriously, Lark?" Aric would have an aneurism.

She finally met my gaze. "Where'd you think we'd go? Either Finn stays or I leave. You wanna get rid of me?"

"No, not at all." I sighed. "I don't know what I was imagining. Maybe that he would have a pad nearby, one as tricked out as his old one. You two would date." If he was even still alive.

"Will you help me with the boss?"

"Once you find Finn, I'll try to talk to him. But I can't promise anything."

"Thanks, Eves." She grinned widely, flashing her sharp fangs, reminding me why Aric would balk hard at this. Finn might be my ally, but he was still an Arcana. "So what's it like to, uh, live with someone?"

"I thought it would take some getting used to, but it's been easy." Because Aric and I fit together seamlessly. Plus he was turning out to be a perfect husband, no training necessary.

This morning, I'd awakened to find a bloom in a vase beside the bed. He'd grown the rose himself, had planted the seed two months ago.

Roses could be difficult to grow from seed, so for him to have made the effort . . . and to bring forth a bud . . .

He'd given me the very first one.

A white rose, like the one on his flag. I'd painted it; he'd grown it.

Symbols, waypoints. The rose connection between us had spanned centuries and was ongoing. Just like Lark and Finn's infinity connection endured.

I tilted my head at her. "You're not really asking me about living together, are you? You're trying to girl-talk with me. About sex."

"Duh." She rolled her eyes. "I've never done it--girl-talk or the deed--and you have, so . . ."

"So you want to know what sex is like?" Aric and I did spend a lot of time at it.

Early on, he'd coaxed me to describe in detail every sexual dream I'd had about him--so he could recreate them. Last week in the dance studio, he'd fulfilled another one. After I'd danced for him, he'd peeled off my workout clothes, lifting me atop the barre so he could lick my damp skin, wedging his hips between my thighs. . . .

I told Lark, "It's exciting." Understatement. As he and I discovered what our bodies could do together, we experimented a lot. Just this morning, that white rose had led to some kissing and then more.

Much more.

I nearly fanned myself, quickly diverting my thoughts from that memory. Clearing my throat, I said, "Imagine the thrill you get from flirting--when your stomach knots and your toes curl and you can't catch your breath--and multiply it by a thousand."

Lark got a dreamy look on her face.

"I think Finn will make you really happy."

Her pointed ears twitched. "Are you happy with Death?"

I was madly in love with him. So why was his wedding ring still in my pocket?

Yesterday I'd headed to the training yard early, determined to give him the ring. He'd been on horseback, looking as devastating as ever. . . .

His body went tense when he caught sight of me. That's my husband. He dismounted and stalked toward me, spurs ringing, his gaze gleaming in the dark like a shower of stars. "I missed you, wife." His expression was possessive--and intent.

Pulse racing, I stepped back. He moved closer. There I was, stalked by Death, and I had to fight the urge to run into his arms.

/> He maneuvered me till my back met the stable wall. He dipped down to kiss my neck, having quickly discovered how sensitive I was there.

I sighed, just about to give him the ring . . . when snow started to fall.

He felt me stiffen and pulled back to search my face. "What is it, love?"

I gazed up at him and lied: "Not a thing."

Now I told Lark, "I'm crazy about Aric."

"That's not what I asked, Eves. Are you happy?"

"When I'm with him and I can forget everything that's happened, then I . . ." I what? "Then it's good."

Her expression said she didn't really believe me, but she was going to let it go. "When I get Finn back, I wanna sleep with him. A lot."

"Paul's got contraceptive shots."

"Sweet! I'll leave the breeding to my animals."

I made a sound of agreement. Sing it, sister. "Why are you breeding them so much?" She'd been committed to it before, but never like this.

"I'm nervous all the time, and it makes me feel safer. It's like stress-eating. Consider it stress-breeding."

"Why are you nervous?"

"Because we've got freaking Poseida out there, threatening to tsunami us! I'm not pointing a claw or anything, but I'm pretty sure the river ate one of my tigers."

"Come on, no, it didn't." I scoffed, but did I really know? Probably not a good time to tell Lark that Circe was . . . moving among us.

"The Priestess might like you and the boss, but who am I to her? I don't want to go the way of that tiger."

"The fictional tiger victim that was fictionally eaten?"

She raised her chin. "If the water gets much higher, the menagerie will flood."

Waves did lap at the compound gates. Each time Aric had planned to talk to Circe about working a spell for us, the water had frothed. I'd held him back.

"You saw her tidal wave," Lark said. "How big was it?"

I admitted, "As tall as a skyscraper."

"What's to stop her from destroying us all? From destroying all my animals?"

"Nothing." The Priestess could swat us like flies. "There's nothing we could do to stop her. But we trust her not to hurt us. Just like I trusted you not to rip out my throat when Cyclops slept in my bed." Sometimes he still scratched at the door at night and whimpered in vain. I spoiled him with treats to compensate.

"Trust, huh?" Lark said, adding in a strange tone, "That's about all we have."

"What does that mean?"

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