ISKERA
The water is frigid. Unlike the scenty, foamy marvel from earlier, it is biting, shocking, freezing, and steals the very oxygen from my lungs.
I gasp, my eyes snapping wide as the temperature slams into my feverish skin. The fog in my brain doesn't vanish entirely, but it recoils, startled by the sensory assault. The icy shock forces my heart to slow its frantic, staccato rhythm, and the predatory roar in my blood dies down to a low, miserable simmer.
I splash, my limbs heavy and uncoordinated as I try to sit up. My nightgown is a sodden weight, clinging to my curves like a second skin, dragging at my movements. Vane stands over the tub, his own shirt dampened from my earlier struggling, his expression a wall of unreadable stone.
For the first time since I woke up in that nightmare, the pain in my head is manageable, replaced by the sheer, shivering reality of the cold. I look up at him through wet lashes, my body trembling so violently that my teeth chatter.
