Brothersong (Green Creek 4) - Page 262

Each door we passed slammed shut.

We held on to each other. Gavin was at my side, and when he heard me from inside a door, telling him he was too fucking big to get on the bed, to get off, he turned his head toward me. “You love me.”

“Yes.”

“Ghosts.”

“Yes.”

The door closed.

The clearing was bigger than it was in real life. It felt like we traveled miles. Hours passed. Each door was a little piece of memory, a map of the road taken. Dad was there. Grandad was there. Elijah was there. Richard Collins was there. Osmond growled, and Pappas said he could feel his tether shredding into pieces. David King said, “Not yet,” and a witch who lived in a house by the sea overturned his cup, bones spilling out and rattling on the table. “Fairbanks,” he said. “What you seek is in Fairbanks.”

When we reached the other side of the clearing, we were all shattered. I could barely breathe, but Chris was there, his hand on my shoulder. Tanner tapped my hip with his fingers. Rico linked his arm through Bambi’s, and she held hands with Dominique. Jessie was pale, but my mother whispered in her ear, telling her that she was loved, that she was packpackpack, even as a younger version of Jessie demanded to know why she wasn’t good enough for Ox, why he couldn’t see what Joe wanted from him.

Kelly said, “It hurts. All of this.”

Mom said, “I know.”

And Joe shouted, “Ox? Ox!”

His voice echoed around us.

I held my breath.

Then, in the distance, Oxnard Matheson said, “Here. I’m here.”

Joe ran.

We followed.

The doors thundered as they closed around us, their frames rattling as the voices began to shriek. They screamed why and please and sing you need to sing the song of wolves.

Joe howled as he ran.

We joined in.

It was a wolfsong.

A ravensong.

A lovesong.

A heartsong.

A feralsong.

A brothersong.

In the trees along the edges of the clearing, wolves howled in response. Their songs bowled over us, and the ground below shook, the moon above pulsing brightly.

We reached the edge of the clearing.

There, sitting in front of a small door, was a man.

His hands were on his knees.

He was nude, and his skin was unmarked.

Tags: T.J. Klune Green Creek Fantasy
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