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He followed her lead without hesitation, hovering over his body and then slipping back down into his shell like smoke, his wolf following. Once he was inside, she heard a rattling intake of air and saw he was trying to breathe.

“Help me,” she cried. “What now?”

Suddenly, Tarron was crouching at her side. “I’ll give him a bit of my blood to speed the healing. Then you give him some of yours to bind him to you forever. Together we will gift him with immortality, though he likely would’ve had that anyway as your Bondmate. Now it will be a sure thing.”

“All right,” she said gratefully. “Let’s do it.”

The prince went first, slashing his wrist. Without wasting a second, he held the sliced skin over Zan’s blue lips while she pried his mouth open. The first drops fell into his mouth, but there was no movement. And then, without warning, he latched on to Tarron’s arm and sucked like a newborn. A murmur rose in the room, growing in excitement.

When he’d taken enough, Tarron gestured to her. “Your turn.”

Encouraged, she repeated the process using her own blood, thinking it was strange to be feeding him as one would a vampire. But she was for anything that helped him to heal.

“That’s enough,” the prince said. “Now we take him back to the stronghold and get him into the infirmary. With any luck, we’ll see signs of improvement within a few hours.”

“Do you think he’ll be well that soon?” She stroked her mate’s hair again, unable to stop touching him.

“No. I expect it will be days before we know whether his brain has recovered from the damage it sustained today. But don’t lose hope.” His smile was gentle.

“I won’t.” The tears flowed anew, but this time she could handle them.

Her mate would live. She couldn’t ask for anything more.

* * *

He had thought he was dead, for good.

Still, he hadn’t been able to go into the light that beckoned from beyond the chamber of suffering. To give his soul over to the gorgeous white presence that promised eternal happiness, peace among the angels. That hadn’t sounded so bad.

Except Selene wouldn’t be there.

He didn’t know what to do, and so he’d hovered, watching everyone he loved fall completely apart over his death. Not only his mate, but Jax, Nick, Hammer, Aric, Ryon, Micah, Nix, A.J., and the rest. Even Tarron, who’d known Zan only a short time, seemed full of sorrow.

I wanted to tell you that I love you so. I thought I had time. I’m sorry I waited. I love you. Love you.

Her words had torn at his heart, made it not just difficult, but impossible, for him to go. He had known how she felt, of course, but hearing the words spoken aloud was his dream come true. How could he leave now?

And then a miracle. Thanks to his mate having a very special gift of her own, he was pulled back into his body.

Opening his eyes was too hard, so he contented himself with listening to the sounds of his mate and his Pack brothers’ joy that he’d been brought back from beyond. That eventually, he’d be all right. He relished his mate’s warm hand holding his as he was lifted and placed on a gurney, the nearness of her sweet scent.

He basked in her repeated declarations of love, given freely where she’d once been wary and unsure. Her feelings bathed him like the warm waters of a whirlpool, all of the sadness and struggle being cleansed and washed away.

The gurney bumped and rolled along, but there was no pain with the movements. Just a bone-deep exhaustion that threatened to drag him to the depths. He sensed he wouldn’t die now, but neither did he want to let go and sleep. He wanted to spend every second soaking up his mate’s love.

The cool air of the outdoors caressed his skin, and in seconds, the gurney was being loaded into a vehicle. An ambulance, most likely. Selene had to let go of his hand temporarily, but soon clasped him again as she climbed in and they shut the doors.

When the vehicle started rolling, she began humming a song to him. No words, just a soft tune, something low and pretty. Romantic.

I didn’t know you could sing.

Hardly singing. He heard the laughter in her voice in his head. I can’t really carry a tune. More like expressing my happiness.

Keep doing it. I like hearing you.

Okay, but you have to promise to sleep so you can recover. Deal?

Deal.

And so, his mate’s unnamed song lulling him, he finally gave in to healing slumber.

Fourteen

When Zan awoke to find his mate at his bedside, he blinked to be sure he wasn’t dreaming. “Selene?”

Her head snapped up, the magazine on her lap falling to the floor, forgotten. “There you are! It’s about time, too. How are you feeling?”

He considered that. “Good, I think.”

“Nothing hurts?” Bruised shadows colored the skin under her tired eyes. She looked worn-out. Anxious.

“Nothing,” he assured her. “Have you been getting any sleep, baby?”

She gestured to the other side of the bed. “Tarron had a twin bed brought in for me.”

“But it doesn’t look like you’ve been using it much.”

She smiled ruefully. “Guilty. But I couldn’t sleep until I knew for sure you were coming back to me.”

“Sweetheart, you had to know I would,” he said, taking her hand. “You brought me back. No way was I leaving again.”

“I know. But the past few days, worrying about you, especially after what happened . . .” She swallowed hard, her eyes filling with tears.

Reaching up, he brushed away a stray drop from her cheek. “Hey, now, none of that. I’m fine, and I’ll be out of here before you know it.”

Sniffling, she composed herself. “You’ve been asleep for four days. Melina said after you wake up, you could be out the next day, or the day after. As long as you continue to take it easy and lay off the healing for a while.”

“For how long?”

“At least six more months.”

“Shit. I don’t know if I can promise . . .” But one look at the worry on her beautiful face and he knew he could do it. For them. “All right, yes. Six months. I promise.”

Her relief was palpable. “Thank you.”

“For us? Anything,” he said with a smile. “I won’t risk ruining my health or at worst, killing myself. Again.”

She cleared her throat, looking uneasy. “Well, that’s the thing. I’m not exactly sure you could kill yourself now, at least not by overtaxing your body.”

He studied her curiously. “Hey, that’s great. But I have to ask, why not?”

“You remember that as a born wolf, I’m immortal, right?”

“Yeah. You told me that you and Nick both are, as is most of your clan.”

“Right.” She looked uneasy. “The point is, I have a gift. I’m a Spirit Catcher. That’s how I was able to pull your spirit back into your body so you could be healed.”

He nodded. “Even when I was dead, I gleaned that much. That’s a wonderful gift to have.”

“I think so, too, though I’m not sure it would work on anyone but you. I’d rather not find out.”

“I get the feeling there’s more?”

“Yes. When I was successful in bringing your spirit back, it was necessary for both Tarron and me to feed you some of our blood. For healing. Only it has a side effect—you’re now immortal, just like me.”

His mouth fell open, and he gaped at her. “No way.”

“Way.”

“I’m frigging immortal?” he blurted.

“Are you upset?” Her teeth worried at her bottom lip, and some of her anxiety began to return.