hadn’t been drinking enough, and was newly injured.
Battered mortals lay on the ground all around them.
“I’m here, tell me what’s happened.”
She shook her head in confusion. She couldn’t hear, could barely speak. “Help . . . me. . . .”
He clasped her in his arms, tracing her back to her home.
“No!” she shrieked, thrashing against him. “Back. Go back!”
Lothaire steadied his breathing, struggling to match his heartbeat to Elizabeth’s frantic racing. As her heartbeat began to grow loud in his ears, Lothaire briefly closed his eyes—seeing into her mind, speaking directly into her thoughts.
Her lips trembled. Another pair of tears streaked down her face.
At length, she nodded, and he wanted to bellow with satisfaction.
She jerked, eyes going wide, then she pressed her lips against his wrist. When she softly sucked, pleasure rippled through him, but he ordered himself to focus, reminding himself that his Endgame was at stake.
As she drew strength from him, beginning to mend, he said,
Suddenly, he saw pandemonium.
An explosion in a mine, dozens of men trapped . . . Elizabeth trying to trace her relatives out as rocks continued to fall . . . She could only take one at a time, quickly weakening . . . Another explosion burst her eardrums . . . A support beam swung down, striking her torso, damaging something internally.
Images of one after another arose. Twelve men left. Lothaire memorized them.
He traced away, but as their immediate bridge broke, he thought he heard her say,
Two little tasks: find key mortals, get back to Elizabeth.
Inside. Total blackness. The gloom engulfed him, the kind of darkness found only underground. Even he strained to see down here.
The dust stung his eyes and filled his lungs, as if they were compacting with dirt.
He froze in comprehension. He could be buried alive down here.
With violent shudders, he struggled to breathe. A cold sweat beaded his skin.
He’d told Nïx that he’d go back to the grave for Elizabeth.
No, focus! Two little tasks. Elizabeth would want him once he saved her family.
He clenched the first boulder in his way, heaved it to the side. Then another. Yelling with effort, he began clearing his way through the tunnel.
All the while, the ceiling bowed precariously above him, support beams cracking under their burden.
As silt rained over him, he shuddered anew. Focus!
At last, he spotted lights from the miners’ helmets. Most of the men were unconscious, but all had heartbeats. With the dust obscuring their faces, he couldn’t discern Elizabeth’s relatives from the others.
Which meant he’d have to save all of them, and sort later.
The ones still conscious recoiled from him.
—“Who the hell are you?”
—“Your . . . eyes!”
—“What are you?”
He grabbed the men’s collars, tracing six at a time, dumping them in that scorching field and quickly scanning their faces to tally the Peirces.
But he still hadn’t found the relative Elizabeth secretly loved the most—her uncle Ephraim. Lothaire traced deeper, deeper, straining to see.
Just when he spotted the man a short distance away, Lothaire heard another ominous quake.
He snatched up her uncle and traced him, tossing him into the field before returning. One man was still unaccounted for, a cousin.
Lothaire had saved his Bride’s
But she trusted him, trusted him to save any who lived.
He scented the spark too late. . . .
Lothaire had come to her. Had he come
Ellie was healing with every second, his blood like rich, warm rocket fuel compared to the animals’ blood she’d been forcing down.
Her hearing was already back, her internal injury mending.
She was no longer petrified for her family—because Lothaire
But immortal or not, if the coal dust ignited down there, he could . . . die. Beset with anxiety—for
She couldn’t lose him again. Her eyes began to tear up, blood pooling. What was taking him so long? She shivered, remembering the falling rocks, the coal in her lungs—
She gasped. “Oh, dear God.” He’d dreamed of being buried in the earth, trapped. She’d tried to sooth his agonizing nightmares.
So many had already been saved. Hasty head count. Every single one of her relatives, some of them badly injured, was accounted for. So why hadn’t Lothaire returned?
Then she noticed that one of her third cousins was helping the others, but he had no dust on him. He hadn’t been in the mine earlier—yet she’d shown him to Lothaire as one of the missing.
Filled with dread, she traced inside the mine, immediately dropping to her front as flames shot over her. There hadn’t been fire before!