Water drenched her from a little black cloud that appeared over her head. She pushed her soaked hair out of her eyes and glared at the bear. “You’re funny. I should call you Baloo.”
The bear’s left shoulder twitched. She was willing to bet tomorrow’s lunch that it was laughing at her.
Julian grimaced as Cyn twisted painfully beneath the sheets. Shit. This wasn’t going at all the way he’d expected. She was reacting as if she was in pain, her body shuddering and sweating. His hands itched to heal a wound that wasn’t there. For the first time in his life Julian battled his Bear. There was nothing he could do for his mate. She was on her own.
A low moan drifted from her lips and his Bear turned frantic, striving to break through Julian’s control, to heal the damage that had to be there.
Shit. What the hell had Cyn done now?
“Thirty-six bottles of beer on the wall, thirty-six bottles of beer,” Cyn sang under her breath. She was lying on her back, staring at the clouds drifting lazily overhead. Her hair was almost dry, and she’d gotten most of the blood off her skin.
At her feet was the white bear. It still sat there, unmoving. Staring. It no longer creeped her out. Now it just…bored her.
“Julian is much quieter when he comes to visit me.”
Damn. I still had thirty-five bottles to go. “I bet. Super Bear isn’t much of a talker.” She leaned up on her elbows and blew her bangs out of her eyes. “Okay, that’s wrong. He talks, it just takes a while to get anything out of him that means something.”
The bear huffed out something that sounded suspiciously like a laugh.
“See? You get what I’m talking about.”
“Yes. I understand more than you think.” The bear lumbered to its feet, its massive head hovering over her. Suddenly Cyn didn’t feel so much like a warrior as a late-night Taco Bell snack. “There are many things in store for you, Cynthia Reyes-DuCharme, and not all of them will be pleasant.”
Big bear head in the way or not, Cyn was on her feet, the staff in her hand, before the bear could blink. “Is Julian in danger?”
The bear was looking at her with approval. “Yes.”
Her heart stuttered. “Shit. I knew it.”
“So you did.” The bear’s head lifted; it sniffed the wind. “Change is coming, whether it is wanted or not. Two becomes one, one becomes three. Bear knows the way, but Fox holds the key.” Its eyes focused on her again. “Guard my child well, warrior. He will need you in the days to come.”
She nodded. Guarding Julian was a given. “Can you tell me what’s going on?”
“It is not permitted for me to tell more than I have. There are decisions that must be made on your own, decisions that will influence those that others will make. Your strength and courage will take you far, but do not dismiss what your heart tells you.”
“I’ll try.” It was the best she could offer.
“You will.” The bear began to glow. “It is time for you to return. Your mate is frantic with worry. He fights his Bear, fearing you are injured.”
Suddenly it all made sense. She’d heard Julian discuss Bear as a person rather than some amorphous concept. “Wait. You’re—”
She was hurtled into the darkness, her question unasked and unanswered.
Chapter Twelve
She took a deep, gasping breath, and Julian sagged with relief. She was all right.
Her eyes opened, and it was the most beautiful sight he’d ever seen. They were deep brown and frightened. He wrapped himself around her cold body and breathed in her scent.
She smelled of Bear. She’d been accepted. He peppered kisses across the mating mark. “You’re all right.”
She tugged his braid before stroking his back. “You’re shaking.”
He just hugged her tighter. She’d terrified him. He’d thought Bear had taken a dislike to her and ripped her soul to shreds.
“I feel like I went a few rounds with that big-ass bear. Ow.”
He flinched. “Did you?”
“Did I what?”
“Fight Bear.”
“No.” She tugged on his braid again, harder this time. “We sang the beer bottle song and had a cozy chat. All we needed were s’mores and a campfire.”
He laughed, the hysterical edge to it surprising him. “I bet he loved you.”
“Oh yeah. He invited me back for tea, once the bleeding stopped.”
Bleeding? His Bear wailed, but Julian could sense no real damage had been done to her. If there had been spiritual wounds, Bear must’ve healed them. That was beyond even Julian’s power. “Tell me everything.”
“That might take a while.”
He settled in more comfortably, cradling her close. She rested her head against his chest and he damn near howled like a wolf at the feeling of rightness. “We have time.”
“Let’s see. There was a long, dusty road with sharp, pointy rocks. I expected a Gorn to pop out any minute and challenge me to a duel. And did I mention I was naked?”
Julian chuckled. Only his Cyn would think of a classic Star Trek episode while wandering in the spirit world.
“I came to a crossroads and saw a glass of water that was half full.”
Interesting. He’d found a book on his first journey. “What did you do with it?”
“Drank it.”
He blinked. “Oh.” He shouldn’t be surprised. He’d picked the book up and tried to read it. It had surprised him when it disappeared out of his hands.
“What? I was thirsty. Anyway, one branch of the path seemed pretty much the same as the one I was already on. The other was chock full of thorns and stones.”
He winced. “Let me guess which one you took.”
“Hey, I played Dungeons & Dragons. You never take the easy path. There’s always a trap at the end of it.”
“This wasn’t a game.” If only she’d taken the other trail…
She rolled her head until they were eye to eye. “You took the easy way, didn’t you?”
“Not easy. Different.” Who the hell would willingly walk down a path full of sharp stones and thorns? It seemed like a remarkably stupid thing to do, deliberately inviting pain that way. The other path might have been longer, but it was no less challenging.
Wariness crept into her expression. “I didn’t have to go down the thorny path?”