This touch is my own, driven by nothing other than my need of him.
But the moments stretch, and I do not burst into flames—there’s only the gentle warmth of his skin on mine.
He’s waiting too, for me to lift my eyes from our hands, to start breathing again, to show him I am all right. When I meet his gaze, he steps closer, fingers sliding up to circle my wrist until his thumb rests against my quickened pulse. He breathes again, the air gentle as it puffs on my upturned wrist.
“Oh, Nimh.” His voice is a bewildering, tantalizing mix of sadness and longing, as his eyes fall to the place where he’s holding me. “I wanted it to be me too.”
My own breath catches, and for a few heartbeats we stand there, frozen together. His hand tightens around my wrist, just briefly, like a fleeting concession to the desire to hold all of me with such fierceness—and in that moment I find I would quite like to be seized that way.
But then he’s shifting again, his thumb moving across the heel of my hand and then sweeping across my palm, gently uncurling my fingers so that he can place something there with his other hand.
With a flash of recognition, I see that it’s the protection stone I made for him that morning we parted ways atop the cliff near the western mountains, when he believed I meant to destroy the world and I believed he meant to leave it for his own. He’s wrapped it in thread the color of my robes, the color of the sash he wore in my name.
Now, he presses it into my palm and uses both his hands to
curl my fingers around it.
“Don’t give up,” he murmurs, drawing me closer so gently I scarcely notice the step I take that erases that last little distance between us. “I know you think they’ve all abandoned you—that no one believes in you anymore.”
Slowly, almost absently, he rubs his thumb across my knuckles, as if savoring the texture of my skin beneath his. I cannot speak a reply, for he’s stolen my voice—I can only nod, my own heart a confusing tangle of grief and desire.
“I believe in you,” he whispers, raising his eyes from our hands. His mouth curves a little when his eyes meet mine, the half-hidden smile rueful and fond. “I always believed in you. Before I believed in any of the rest of it, I believed in you.”
Then he bows his head and presses his lips to my curled fingers. His mouth is soft on my skin, though his lips are firm as they form the shape of a kiss, draw back, and kiss again, as though he cannot quite help himself.