Read Dangerous Creatures Online
Authors: Kami Garcia,Margaret Stohl
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Love & Romance, #Paranormal
“Apparently, trying to kick my ass,” Nox said.
Link turned to look at her. “Someone deserves a beatdown, and I’m really hopin’ it’s him, because I’ve been waitin’ to pound him since the day we got here.”
“Don’t hold back.” Nox closed his eyes. “Go ahead. Take your best shot.”
Ridley tried to pull Link away. “Are you out of your mind?” She yanked as hard as she could, but Link still didn’t budge. “I’m sorry about what happened. I don’t know what I was thinking, but you can’t just come barging in here and threaten me—or him—like that.”
“Actually, he can. And if he won’t, I will.” Floyd stepped into the center of the room, and her hands morphed into brass knuckles. “Illusionist-style. No Mortal rules. And none of that complicated conscience crap.”
She held up her fists.
Nox looked confused. “Take it easy, Fight Club. I’m not going to hurt either one of you.”
Link glared. “No, you’re not. The hurt is only goin’ to go one way around here. Admit what you did, and maybe we can figure this out.”
“What exactly am I admitting?” Nox asked.
Link hesitated, looking from Nox to Ridley. “Necro’s bad. She may not ever come back.”
“What?” Ridley felt her stomach begin to twist. “It’s that bad?”
Link’s face darkened. “Sampson said it was a Siren who messed her up.”
“Link,” Ridley began, shaking her head.
“Don’t tell me it was you, Rid. Tell me he put you up to it.” Link’s eyes were wild and red. “Don’t tell me he used that house marker on you and had you hurt someone.”
Nox and Floyd looked at him. Even Ridley looked surprised by the mention of her Suffer debt.
She shook her head. “Nox? He didn’t put me up to anything.” She touched Link’s arm.
“Really, Rid.” Link sounded desperate now. “Because I know you, right? You’d never actually hurt someone. You just wouldn’t.”
Ridley didn’t know exactly what Link was talking about, but she was pretty sure it was about more than Necro being hurt.
“Listen to me, Link. I didn’t do anything. Not to Necro or anyone else.”
Floyd’s expression hardened.
Link looked so relieved that Ridley thought he was going to hug her. “Good.” His voice wavered. “I believed in you. I stuck up for you.”
“You did?”
“I knew, deep down, all you were was a whole lotta big talk. You never mean to hurt anyone. You’re just one a those sea urchin kind a people. You’ve got spikes, all right, but that’s just because you’re scared a sharks. On the inside, you’re all soft.”
“Or at least, a great home for tiny fish,” Floyd added, irritated. “Can we cut the heart-to-heart and get on with the beatdown part already?”
Instead, Link looked from Nox to Ridley again. “If you didn’t do it, and he didn’t make you do it, then who did? Because Necro’s runnin’ outta time and if we don’t do somethin’, we’ll need a Necromancer to talk to her next.”
“It wasn’t us,” Nox said. The word echoed between them.
Us.
Link looked from Nox to Ridley. “Is that right?”
Slowly, Ridley nodded. “You know neither one of us would do anything to hurt Necro.”
Or you, Link.
Link shook his head, but he looked like he’d rather be shaking everything in the room.
And maybe throwing it all
, Ridley thought.
“Really? You wouldn’t hurt her? ’Cause there’s a gash on her neck, and it’s bleedin’ black blood,” Link snapped. “You saw it. If neither one of you did it, why is she headed to the Otherworld?”
“If Necro’s sick because of a cut on her neck, then it’s my fault.” Nox spoke softly, but they all heard him.
Link growled. “What are you talking about?”
“It happened when she was working for me.” Nox looked devastated.
“She cut her neck playing the keyboard?” Ridley asked.
Nox shook his head. “That’s not the only thing she does for me. She’s also my Necromancer. I never should have dragged her into this, but I need her.”
“For what?” Link asked.
“She’s the best Necromancer I know, and she has the strongest connection to the Ravenwoods I’ve ever seen.” Now it was Nox who couldn’t bring himself to look at Rid.
“The Ravenwoods,” Ridley repeated, feeling ill. “Of course. Abraham.”
This time it was Link’s turn to look sick. “Abraham? My Abraham?”
Nox nodded, his head in his hands. “I had to do something for them, and I needed Necro so I could talk to Abraham Ravenwood about it.”
“You’re his
spy
? Abraham Ravenwood’s errand boy? The man who ruined your family and killed your parents? You’re working for him?” Ridley was in disbelief. Nox was even more messed up than she’d realized.
Nox didn’t answer.
Ridley spat out the words. “And Necro knew?”
“No,” Nox said, looking up. “She has no idea. She just wakes up, without a memory of it.”
Link crossed his arms tightly. “What exactly did ole Grandpa Abraham want you to do?”
Nox glared at him. “It’s not important now,” Nox said. “I didn’t do it.”
Ridley looked incredulous. “How do we know that?”
“Because if I had, you’d both be dead.”
The room fell silent.
Link spoke up first. “You’re a real hero, and I bet it’s an interestin’ story, but we don’t have time for your crap. Not now. Necro’s dyin’. Your boy Sampson is some kind a Darkborn mojo detector, and he said a Siren did this to her, and that person is the only one who can save her.”
Nox sounded grim. “I didn’t cut her, but it’s my knife. It belonged to my mother. I lent it to Necro because I was worried that she couldn’t protect herself, given her gifts.”
Floyd looked like she wanted to beat Nox to death. “You mean when she’s working for you? Here’s a thought—what about if
you
protected her?”
Nox ran his hand through his hair. “It’s not that easy.”
“But talking to the dead is?” Floyd snapped.
Ridley was horrified. “No. You’re right. It’s better if she looks out for herself. Since according to you, she has
no idea
what’s going on.”
“Necro entered into a contract with me. The only thing she asked was that I wipe anything from her mind. I used an
Oblivio
Cast.”
“Why would she do that?” Floyd asked.
“She was scared. Her powers were getting in the way of everything else in her life. When I met her, she could barely get out of bed or play her music. She didn’t want to live like that anymore, but Necromancers are valuable to the wrong kind of people. She knew if she started playing out in the open again, someone would find her eventually. So she came to me for protection.” Nox sounded resigned.
“You’ve done a bang-up job so far,” Link said.
Nox ignored him. “The knife is Charmed. It was designed to subdue out-of-control spirits from the Otherworld. I didn’t know it could hurt a living Caster, aside from the blade itself.”
“Maybe you should’ve looked into that before you gave it to her,” Floyd snarled
“I saw her cut herself,” Nox said. “I didn’t know she would get sick from it. You have to believe me. I’d never hurt Necro. She’s the closest thing I have to a friend.”
Had
, Ridley thought.
Unless we can help her.
She held up her hand. “Wait, you saw her cut herself? And you didn’t do anything?”
Nox sighed. “She didn’t do it herself, not strictly speaking.”
“Then who did it?”
“Abraham Ravenwood.”
“Of course he did.” Link punched his fist through the wall, sending a spray of plaster dust into the air around him. “ ’Cause things weren’t bad enough already.”
He grabbed Nox by the collar of his shirt, and Floyd by the hand. “It’s time to make this right. Grab on to someone, Ridley.”
Link didn’t have to say the obvious. It wasn’t Ridley’s hand he was holding now.
I
t didn’t take long for Nox to strip the Charm from Necro’s blade. Once he did, all they could do was wait and see if the wound would heal. Even Sampson stopped making his grim predictions about Necro’s fate.
Still, nobody knew what would happen now.
The waiting part was the hardest.
Ridley stared at a poster of Sid Vicious. She moved down the wall to Johnny Rotten, then Social Distortion. X. Black Flag. Dead Kennedys. She didn’t know much about punk rock, but she was guessing she was looking at the hall of fame.
“The Necros? It’s a band?” She lingered over another ancient punk poster. “Is that where she got her name?”
Floyd nodded. “Nec’s from Toledo, Ohio. So was the band. I think she felt like it was meant to be.” She smiled. “Kind of like Link Floyd.”
“You start that again, Supertramp. I dare you.” Rid glared.
Link cut them off. “Speakin’ a Necro, how much longer you think we gotta wait?” He sounded worried. He’d been like that ever since Nox had undone the Cast.
“The real question is, how many places can a person stick a safety pin?” Rid shook her head, touching the Social D poster. Then next to it, Dead Kennedys. Every single face she could see looked like they should be in Necro’s family, or at least her band. Half of them were even more pierced than she was.
Floyd looked at Rid. “Nec loves Dead Kennedys. She says they’re her tribe.”
Ridley raised an eyebrow. “Necro has a tribe?”
“Sure she does. She has us,” Floyd said.
“You guys must be pretty close. I mean, to let her take over the walls like that.” Ridley fingered the edge of the X poster.
“Didn’t you ever have a best friend?” It was clear from Floyd’s tone that she wasn’t betting on it. “Or did you always live alone in that cave you call a heart?”
Ridley fixed her eyes on the giant X.
Don’t answer.
Don’t let her see.
Don’t give any of them that satisfaction.
“Cut it out, Floyd,” said Link, looking up. “Rid has a lot of friends and a big family, and she has me. She has all of us.”
Rid’s eyes met Link’s from across the room.
“We’re her tribe,” he said.
And it was true.
She felt like she was going to burst into tears, except she would’ve rather stabbed her own eyes out than break down in front of Floyd.
Only a groan coming from the low, rickety bed saved her.
“Holy Toledo,” Necro muttered.
Link grinned. “Hey, we were just talkin’ about that.”
Necro’s eyes fluttered open. “I feel like crap.”
“You look like crap, too.” Ridley smiled at her. She had never been more relieved to see a few more piercings and a blue faux-hawk.
“Hey, buddy.” Floyd took Necro’s hand. Floyd’s other hand bloomed instantly into a bouquet of flowers.
Necro nodded. “Can you make those chocolates?”