still compete in the race. We could leave from here on Friday just like Iâd originally planned. That is, we could if I could make it out of bed by then. And what had Rafe meant when heâd said Night thought the arrow tip may have been ensorcelled? That didnât sound good. But I had all day tomorrow to worry about me. Right now, I wanted to know how Rafe was doing.
âAnd you?â I said to him. âAre
you
okay?â
âMe?â
âYes, you. I know you almost ran out of
potentia
.â Just because I hadnât died didnât mean I didnât still want to tell him what Iâd wanted to tell him on the train.
âRafe,â I said slowly. âIf I die during the race . . . promise me you wonât feel responsible.â
He gave me a sardonic look. âIâm your Guardian, Noon,â he said in a dry voice. âOf course Iâm going to feel responsible.â He frowned and bent down to open one of the drawers in the bedside table. The table and the bed frame were both made of white enameled cast iron. The furniture and the slightly antiseptic smell were the only indications that I was in a convalescent house.
I wanted to tell Rafe thatâs not exactly what Iâd meant. That Luck, and Luck alone, was responsible for when someone died. But maybe Rafe didnât believe that and wouldnât appreciate hearing it. And he
had
managed to keep me alive against all odds during the trip down here. Whether it was Luck, faith,
potentia
, or simply Raphael Sinclairâs sheer will that I remain alive, who was I to argue?
I handed Rafe the empty glass of water and was just about to close my eyes again when he held up a pack of gauze, tape, and some sort of ointment.
âWhatâs that?â I said warily.
âI think you know,â he said. âHold still.â
Rafe peeled back the covers and, with no warning, started to untie the strings that held my tunic together.
âWait!â I cried (although my voice was so weak, it sounded more like a squeak). âWhat are you doing?â
âChanging your bandage,â he said patiently. âIt might be uncomfortable, but it wonât hurt.â
âHave you done it before?â
No one worries about being seen naked when theyâre near death. Holding on to life (or wishing you were dead if the painâs that bad) is all anyone thinks about. But now that I wasnât in agonizing pain or hovering near death, my natural modesty returned. Baring my demon mark during a fight was one thing. Baring anything lower than thatâfor any reasonâwas quite another.
Rafe laughed. âNo, one of the Mederies has been. But itâs not like itâs complicated andââ
He interrupted himself as something occurred to him. âAre you
shy
, Noon? About me . . . undressing you?â
He grinned.
I felt the blood rush to my face. It betrayed emotions Iâd rather Rafe not have seen. If I didnât think about him in
that way
, I wouldnât be shy, right? And I didnât. Think about him in that way.
Except that I just had.
I tried to clear my throat, but the sound came out as a hiccupy grunt.
Iâd probably best shut up now,
I thought and leaned back on the pillow.
I tried to relax.
But it was hard when Rafe started to untie my laces again.
In the end, however, it was much less awkward than I thought it would be. Nothing untoward was revealed. Rafe untied the laces at the top of my tunic and then peeled the shirt down just low enough to see the bandage heâd be changing. My chest was unbelievably sore too, so once Rafe got to work, there was nothing suggestive about anything he did. And when I got a look at the arrowâs entry point, it was off-putting to say the least.
My demon mark was gone, obliterated by a thick, nasty looking, dark slash that was crisscrossed with stitches.
âAnd they say â
X
marks the spot,ââ I
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