The Lycan King's Healer
me just another co
was dead. Death is a funny thing like that; with some deaths, like executions or freak accidents, some people are killed before th
there would be no meat for the rodents to feast on. Dwindling, seemingly melting. Empty, devoid of my own
and this pained body and into the sky. Into bliss away from this cruel world where I
t the
to my sunken and sallow body. "You can
ipped through my soul–she is n
houted into the void.
not
son who knew I was even still existent was Emily's servant, who had been watching me slowly die. He did agree to inform Aldrich that I had im
tter; Aldric
is? Why must this be my fate, left here
Loathing consumed me, and I wished I could burn this cottage down with it. I wished I could b
, so our child was not remotely stabilize
s desperate to rescue my baby. The only thing in the world that I loved. Maybe
the pain worsened. My soul would be ripped into pieces by it soon. She was the on
e again. Let my baby and I live. I want my p
felt like my soul was being sh
*
of pale light. It shone over my cor
t I refused to leave the cottage out of s
g the room in moonlight. The dark floor looked like the o
whispered, echoing through
o the void, I must live
rare child. Rare
jected in the voice. As the moonlight saturated my
y soul begged, are you h
re to grant you life again; your bloodlin
uestioned. I'm an
oddess urged, for you and your sister, Danika, ar
re mysterious and very discreet; they kept to themselves during their time period
ermeating through my bodil
and medicine, had the ability to bring anything back from t
, remembering how pathetic and insignificant I felt in comparison to Prince Aldr
an guess with ease. You are one of them. Your species is very important, dea
nce Aldrich and I, I mutte
him, even more so. And you
and a bath and sunlight. But mostly,
urn, was a
arned, I will grant you life, but i
, who was treated like a clown then tossed away like a forgotten piece of gar
e to escape from the dust and death drowning in cobwe
*
ars
dr
ing to each other in the sky. And I admitted to myself, after
d time to analyze. I forgot about birds, about the details of life and the way the cl
r leave. A cottage to the right of a large willow tree caught my eye, and it looked like the most peaceful th
" a tiny voice echoe
I scanned the sunlit forest around me.
repeatedly calling for help. As a former soldier, it was
iction. I couldn't remember who last resided in it–probably one of the servants o
pproached the cottage. The soldier in me was gracious, but t
ndeed stuck, hanging out of