“No!” I hissed, kicking him aside. My foot made contact with his leg, just above his knee. The crack of bone pierced the air and he yelped, stumbling backward. But it was too late. Whatever substance he’d just injected into me was acting fast. My legs lost their feeling even as I tried desperately to stand up. They became paralyzed. Julie dipped down suddenly, pulling out a black sack from her robe.

I extended my claws and swiped upward. She dodged and whispered to the others, “Restrain his arms.” As the three vampires left grabbed hold of my arms and fought to press them to the ground, Julie forced my head upward and slipped the sack over it, blocking my vision.

“No!” I growled.

I was lifted once again, even as I continued to struggle and swipe. They carried me away from the box. Although my vision was gone, it became clearer than ever that they were climbing up a slope.

And then they stopped.

“Here,” Julie said.

They lowered me to the ground. Although my legs were still motionless, at least my arms were unhindered by their grasp. I reached up and removed the sack, able to take in my surroundings for the first time as the vampires stepped out of reach of my claws.

My heart skipped a beat. I forgot how to breathe as I took in a chillingly familiar sight.

The sky was shrouded with dark, murky clouds and tinged with an eerie, crimson hue. There was a complete absence of vegetation and sprawling all around me were black mountains with peaks as pointed as knives. I lay beneath one such peak, on a cluster of level rocks. A few feet away from me, the ground dipped. I propped myself up with my hands to glimpse a wide, black hole in the ground. A crater.

I’d seen this before.

I’d been here before.

This was the place of my first vision. The place Arron’s traitor wife had brought me as an infant. The place where the Elder had first left his mark on me. And now, where the Elder would reclaim me.

I twisted back to face the vampires who’d carried me here. My eyes locked with Julie’s. Her gaze was no longer stoic as I’d expected it to be—rather, there was almost a trace of… guilt? Regret?

“I’m sorry,” she mouthed. Her eyes lingered on me for several more seconds before she turned on her heel and raced away with the other vampires, disappearing from view over the edge of the mountain. Their footsteps echoed as they clambered down the rocks, fading into the distance.

My eyes traveled back to the crater.

It hit me only now that even though I was no longer in the box and I was unprotected by any jinni, I still didn’t feel the Elder rising up within me to take over my mind. I realized why. He had no more need to beckon me back to Cruor. I’d already arrived.

I couldn’t even begin to imagine why Julie would deliver me to the Elder’s doorstep when she knew what it would mean. Why she was on the Elder’s side, and apparently working for him all along. What she could possibly stand to gain from it. But it didn’t matter. I was here.

An icy wind swept up from nowhere.

“Benjamin.” Goosebumps ran along my skin as a low whisper echoed up from the crevice. Faint at first, as though it traveled up from the deepest chambers of the mountain. But gradually, it grew louder. And louder.

Even the parts of my body that weren’t paralyzed froze as the whisper drew nearer.

A crimson mist formed above the crater. The whisper no longer echoed. It hissed straight into my ears, as though just feet away from me. The reddish mist thickened and turned black. The chilling voice stopped repeating my name and instead said, “Welcome back.”

So this was where my journey had led me.

Hortencia’s initial prediction had been accurate after all. For all my fighting to change the fate she’d foretold, this was where it had brought me—right into its clutches.

As my arms jerked backward in a futile attempt to distance myself, my right hand knocked against a weight in my robe pocket. A weight that I hadn’t realized I still carried with me. My shaking hand dug into the pocket and withdrew the small vial Arron had given me outside Breccan’s cave. Although made of glass, it had miraculously survived all this time.

Staring down at the swirling, light blue liquid, Hortencia’s last words shrilled in my mind:

“When the road forks, your route will be clear. Either a destroyer or hero of realms you shall be.”

As the black mist thickened into a fog and began to glide toward me, it couldn’t have been clearer that this was my fork in the road. Once it reached me, the Elder would surround me just as it had done when I was a newborn. Only this time, it wouldn’t leave me.

As for my route… the oracle had said that there would be two.

But in my eyes, there was only one.

Forcing open the glass vial, I shut my eyes and thrust the opening to my lips. I filled my mouth with the elixir and took rapid gulp after gulp. It felt like acid on my tongue, burning down my throat as I swallowed.

A bloodcurdling scream emanated from the black fog and it gathered speed, but as I forced down the last of the liquid, the Elder was too late.

CHAPTER 31: VIVIENNE

Derek and Sofia still hadn’t returned. I knew how much it would mean to my brother to be here for the birth of my child. It saddened me to think that he’d likely miss it. Corrine was expecting my waters to break at any time. She’d been in and out of the room all day, and she was due to pay another visit within the next hour to check in on me.

As I rested in my and Xavier’s bed, I looked down at my large stomach, protruding beneath a cotton nightgown. Xavier leaned against the headboard next to me on the mattress, his arms around me, gently stroking my belly. Liana sat in a rocking chair on my right. No words could express the joy I’d felt to be reunited with my best friend again. Of course she’d been thrilled to see that I was expecting a baby. I could still hardly believe that she was here, returned with Cameron and her two beautiful children. And yet, as we talked that night, my mind kept drifting elsewhere.