Married To Darkness-Chapter 386: Morning Bathe & Reflection
Chapter 386: Morning Bathe & Reflection
"She was there," he said softly, stepping forward.
Salviana’s breath caught. "You saved her; thank you"
"I felt her. She was waiting. Just needed us to come back for her."
A sob escaped her throat, muffled by her hand. "I’m happy you’re back," she whispered, tears sliding silently down her cheeks—but this time, not from grief.
Alaric gently touched her face, brushing one away. "You saved us. You brought us back."
Behind them, Lucius finally collapsed onto the damp grass, legs sprawled like a man who had just escaped the underworld itself. Jean was up.
His eyes had followed the retreating fog, its slow crawl back across the lake—less like smoke now and more like a living thing. A creature slinking back to sleep.
A sudden cough broke the stillness—wet and gasping.
"Jean!" Salviana scrambled forward, eyes wide as she stirred on the ground in Lucius’s arms. Her body was cold, her breaths shallow, but she was alive.
Her lashes fluttered, and she blinked at the light. "What... happened?"
"You’re okay." Lucius hugged her tightly, helping her sit upright as she coughed again and leaned against him, disoriented but breathing.
She looked up at him with fogged eyes. "I thought I heard her."
"You did," he said gently, pressing his forehead to hers. "She heard you back."
Jean let out a breath, somewhere between a sigh and a sob. She buried her face in his neck, and for a moment, there was only the wind and their tired, aching hearts.
"We need payment," he murmured bitterly hugging Jean, though the words didn’t quite bite. "For solving this mystery. For this land."
None of them answered. Because there was no price for what they’d done... and no true closure either.
Jennifer was gone.
But she wasn’t lost.
She had found peace. She had found her child. The fog no longer had reason to whisper.
And she had said goodbye.
After a while they mounted slowly. Jean and Lucius shared a single horse, her arms clinging tightly around his waist, her head resting on his back. Alaric lifted Salviana into the saddle beside him, her hands trembling faintly as they settled around him. Soar, their midnight horse, snorted as if sensing the solemnity of the ride.
"Let’s go home," Alaric murmured.
And together, they rode through the dawn, away from the lake that had taken and given, haunted and healed. The fog had quieted. The shadows had lifted.
But the story was not yet over.
Not for them.
Not for Wyfhaven.
"Let’s go to the inn and continued what we came for after a bathe,"
The ride back from the lake was quiet. Tension still buzzed in the air like a held breath. The sun had begun to rise behind the misty hills of Wyfhaven, casting soft gold and pale pink across the waking sky. Dew glittered on the leaves. The fog that haunted the night had thinned into a harmless haze.
Alaric rode with Salviana in front of him, his arms around her waist, steadying her as her head rested against his chest. Lucius rode ahead, unusually silent—grieving, burning, and calculating all at once. Behind them, Linz followed, a thoughtful expression on his face.
As they approached the inn, the scent of baked bread and sea salt filled the air. A new day in Wyfhaven.
"We should rest," Alaric murmured near Salviana’s ear. "Then continue what we came for."
Salviana nodded faintly. "And bathe."
Lucius didn’t look back. "Good. I’ll get water from the lake later. You two—get some strength."
The innkeeper, Lindsay, greeted them with a wary glance but quickly ordered her workers to prepare baths. No one asked where they’d gone or what they’d done. Wordless, understanding glances passed between the staff. This was not the time for questions.
In the private guest suite upstairs, a clawfoot tub was drawn in the marble-tiled washroom. Steam rose from the hot water, curling into the air like lazy ghosts. Rose petals floated across the surface. Lavender oil had been added, filling the room with calming warmth.
Alaric leaned against the doorway, watching as Salviana walked slowly into the room, undoing the buttons of her tunic. She paused at the window, letting the soft morning light wash over her pale skin. She didn’t look at him, but she felt his gaze—steady, warm, intense.
"You’re staring," she said quietly.
"I always do," he answered.
She turned to him finally, her eyes soft and guarded all at once. "Why?"
"Because you’re real. And because I love you." His voice dropped lower.
"I almost lost you last night and I don’t think I could bear that." she sighed.
"I’ll be with you forever,"
Salviana didn’t speak. She unfastened the rest of her clothes and stepped into the water, her breath hitching at the heat. She sank slowly, the warmth soothing every bone in her body.
Alaric followed, removing his coat, his boots, the layers of mud-slicked armor until he was bare, beautiful, and silent. When he stepped into the bath behind her, the water rippled, and his arms came around her shoulders without a word.
She leaned back into him. Let herself melt there.
"I kept dreaming of her scream," she whispered. "Of the way the fog wrapped around her. I couldn’t move."
Alaric kissed the curve of her shoulder, then rested his forehead there. freёweɓnovel.com
"I know. I saw it too."
His hands slid slowly down her arms, careful, reverent.
"You’re warm," he murmured.
"I’m trying to be," she said. "You’ve been cold for too long."
"I’m a vampire," he deadpanned.
The silence between them was no longer heavy—it was tender. Full of unsaid things. His lips brushed the side of her neck, his thumb caressed the bend of her elbow.
"I don’t want to lose anyone else," Salviana said. It didn’t look like it, but she lost her family.
"You won’t," he promised.
"You don’t know that."
"I do," he said, tightening his arms around her. "Because now I’m not letting you out of my sight. I will burn this world before it takes something from me again."
She turned slightly, her lips meeting his—slow, searching, sorrow-tinged and sweet. Not a kiss of passion, but of survival. Of gratitude. Of love, clung to like a ship in the storm.
They bathed like that. Quietly. Together.
Letting the heat soak away the horror of the night.
Not knowing what the next would bring.