Of Blood and Bone (Chronicles of The One #2)(90)



“No. This is from you and for you.”

“I swear I didn’t—”

He took her arm, tapped a finger on her bracelet. “Solas don Saol. Your light brought life, and this is a tree of life.”

“A tree of life. There’s more than one?”

“Yes. They’re rare and special, but more than one. With this, you have given, and been given, a gift.”

“It will bear fruit for nourishment and healing and comfort.”

Mallick turned to her, folded his hands while the vision took her.

“Its roots embrace the goddess of earth. Its branches rise up to the sun god. Its leaves breathe life into the air, catch the rain. It will offer a home to birds, and their songs will sweeten this place for all time. It connects all things, the earth, the air, fire, water, magicks. What walks, what flies, what crawls join through it to the light.”

She turned to him, took his hands, and in her eyes he saw more than visions. He saw the woman inside the girl.

“It is not for me, Mallick the Sorcerer, but for you. You will find rest and comfort here when your work is done. This is my gift, our gift, for your loyalty and your service and your sacrifice.

“And here.” She lifted her hand. Fruit, like a deep rainbow, an array of jewels, swelled on the branches. “The fruits of life like the fruits of your devotion are come ripe at last.”

She lowered her hand, breathed out. “It’s yours. It’s for you. I see now, what I asked. What I could ask because of you.”

For a moment he couldn’t speak, and had to fight to find his voice, to steady it. “I’m honored. It is a great gift. It blesses what has become my home.”

“Is it? Home for you?”

“I’m content here, to live and to work when I’m not needed away.”

And he’d rest there, he thought, in the earth, under the tree, when his time ended in this realm.

“Now there are eggs to gather and a cow to milk. When we’ve done what must be done today, you should begin to make your good-byes.”

“Good-byes?” Surprise had her head jerking up. “We’re leaving? But I’ve got more than three weeks left.”

“Leaving will take time. Friends you’ve made here will want to fete you, make gifts. You should make gifts for those friends you’re leaving here. But our time here is ending. This tree is not only a great gift but a sign. You are ready.”

“You said just yesterday my form was sloppy and my defenses reckless.”

“So they were. And still, you’re ready. Get the eggs.” He picked up the bucket he’d set aside, walked out to milk the cow.

“I’m going home,” Fallon whispered. Then with a laugh, spun in circles. “I’m going home.”

Mick proved the hardest. He sulked, picked fights, stomped off.

“Be patient,” Mallick advised when she complained—again—about Mick’s attitude. “It can be hard to leave. It’s also hard to be left behind.”

She didn’t want to be patient; she wanted to punch him. Instead, she ignored him, as Mallick had been right about leaving taking time. There were parties and feasts and gifts. Last swims in the faerie pool, last races with the elves. And new revelations.

“If Mick keeps avoiding me, he’s never going to see me run all the way to the top of the tallest tree in the woods. And I won’t have to thank him for teaching me how to scale a tree in the first place.”

“You will thank him for his help, and his friendship, when you see him.”

“If I see him.” It hurt her heart she might not. “I guess I’ll thank him. I wouldn’t be able to run up a trunk, flip, and dive from branches, if he hadn’t shown me.”

Mallick sighed. “Think, girl.”

“About what?”

“Do you think such an ability can be taught to one who doesn’t have it already in her?”

“Well, he showed me how to … and I can sort of boost with … Wait. Are you saying I have elfin blood? My mother doesn’t. She never said my birth father did.”

“Are you The One only for witches?”

“No, but—”

“You carry all in you, in your blood and spirit, and so you hold all.”

“You mean I can run nearly as fast as some of the elves because I have … But the faeries? It’s not like I have wings.”

“You found their glade, swim in their pool. They come to you. You hear the voices of their smallest.”

“Yeah but … I don’t shift. Do I? Can I? If I can, why didn’t you tell me, help train me, help me find my spirit animal?”

“Think.” He sighed again. “You did find them.”

“The quests? But I can’t—” She broke off, understood. “I could—or will if I need—shift into those forms. But more, I can merge with them, all three, see through them. You did train me, in all of it. I just didn’t know. It’s why we came here, so I’d live close to the others, spend this time learning their ways, their people, their abilities. Free time, I called it.” She rolled her eyes. “I was still in training.”

“That doesn’t diminish your enjoyment. Go now, find Mick. You know very well you can find him. Say your good-byes to him. We leave tomorrow.”

Nora Roberts's Books