Huntress, Black Dawn, Witchlight (13 page)

BOOK: Huntress, Black Dawn, Witchlight
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Now she looked to see if Claire would actually faint or just fall down.

Claire did neither. She just shut her eyes. “You know the really insane thing? I believe that.” She opened her eyes again. “But—I didn’t know you
could
be. Half and half.”

“Neither did anybody else, till I was born. I’m the only one.” Jez examined her cousin, realized that she really wasn’t going to faint. When she spoke again, her voice came out more challenging than she meant it to. “So now that you know, Claire, what are you going to do about it?”

“What do you mean, what am I going to do?” Claire glanced around, then her voice dropped as her eyes glinted with interest. “Look—do you, like, have to drink blood and everything?”

“Not anymore,” Jez said shortly. What was this? Who would have thought that studious, straitlaced Claire would have such an interest in vampires?

“But you mean you used to?”

“Before I came to live with you guys. I thought I was a full vampire then. But I found out that I could live without it, as long as I didn’t use my powers.”

“You’ve got powers? Really? What kind?”

“No kind. Look, enough with the questions. I told you, I’m not a vampire anymore.”

“And you’re not evil.” Claire said it flatly.

Jez looked at her, startled. “What makes you say
that
?”

“I heard what you were talking about, saving the world and all. I didn’t understand it, but it sounded like you were on the right side. And—” Claire hesitated, then shrugged. “And I know
you,
okay? I mean, you’re arrogant and stubborn and you never explain anything, but you’re not
evil.
You just aren’t—inside. I can tell.”

Jez laughed. A real laugh. She couldn’t help it.

Of all people, Claire. She’d misjudged this girl who was her own age but had nothing else in common with her. Her cousin had unexpected depths.

“Well, thanks,” she said. “I try not to be too evil—these days.” Then she sobered. “Look, Claire, if you really think that, and if you really believe that the stuff you heard was true—”

“About the end of the world? I don’t believe it. I mean, I heard it, and I believe you believe it—and when I first heard it I kind of believed it, but—”

“Just—skip the rest and plain believe it, Claire. It happens to be the truth. And I’m trying to do something about it.”

“Something about a Wild Power, right?” Claire wasn’t sagging anymore. She looked almost excited. “But what’s a—”

“You don’t need to know. The point is that if you want to, you can help me.”

“I can? Really?”

“You can help me by going back to school and forgetting
that this ever happened. You can help me by keeping my secret and not ever saying a word about this to anybody. And, incidentally, you’ll be keeping your family safe at the same time.”

Claire looked away, worked her jaw. “This stuff you’re doing is pretty dangerous.” It wasn’t a question.

“Very dangerous.” Jez stepped back. “And I’m late for it right now. So do we have a deal? Will you help me or not? Can I trust you?”

“Or otherwise you’re gonna kill me, right?” Claire looked at her sarcastically.

Jez rolled her eyes. “Don’t tempt me. Seriously, are you going to help?”

“No.”

Jez froze, looking down at the shorter girl.
“What?”

“Jez—don’t get mad, but I don’t think I
can.
Not that way.” Claire was looking back up steadily, her small face serious and surprisingly determined. “I mean how can I possibly just walk away, after hearing all that? If everything you said is true, how can I
forget
?”

“You can because you have to. We all do what we have to do.” Jez looked around the station. Another train should be coming any minute. She simply didn’t have time to spend convincing a human to stay out of business that would kill her. To properly explain it to Claire would take days.

All she could do was ask for something she never would have imagined Claire could give her.

“Claire…there’s no way I can convince you or
make
you do what I want. But I’m asking you—” She let out her breath and went on: “I’m asking you to trust me. I’m asking you to walk away and at least try to forget this. And to believe that
I’m
trying the best I can to do the right thing.”

Claire kept looking at her steadily for a moment. Then, all at once, the dark eyes filled. They turned away, and Claire’s throat moved once as she swallowed. Then, slowly, she nodded.

“Okay,” she whispered. “I mean—it’s okay for now. I mean, I guess I can talk to you later about it.”

Jez let out her breath. “That’s right.”

Claire stood there for another second, then straightened her shoulders and turned away. But just as suddenly she turned back, looking tense and almost explosive. “There’s something I have to say to you.”

Jez glanced down the tracks. No train. “Okay.”

“It’s—it’s…that I’m sorry. I’m sorry I bugged you and tried to get Mom mad at you and everything. I was just—I was jealous because they let you get away with anything, and…” She shook her head fiercely and then went on, shrugging grimly as if she hated to admit it. “And, yeah, because you’re so gorgeous and confident and everything. It made me feel bad and I wanted to hurt you. So. Anyway. There. I’m sorry.”

She started to walk away, wobbling a little.

“Claire.”

Claire paused, then turned around.

Jez spoke a little hesitantly around the obstruction in her throat. “It’s okay. And thank you.”

“Yeah.” Claire grinned and gave a little shrug. “See ya later.” She turned around and started walking again.

See ya, Jez thought. She felt suddenly tired and strangely emotional. There was too much inside her: sadness and relief and worry and a new feeling for Claire. She crossed her arms and looked around the station, trying to relax, taking deep, even breaths.

And saw two werewolves coming straight for Claire.

CHAPTER 15

J
ez recognized them immediately—not the individuals, but the type. They were ’wolves, and they were thugs. Somebody’s hired muscle.

She didn’t have her stick, but she didn’t need it. She could feel a dangerous smile come to her lips; part anticipation and part sheer fury. Suddenly she wasn’t tired, wasn’t sore, wasn’t anything but perfectly in tune with her body and dying to use it as a weapon.

She launched herself like a streak of red lightning, passing Claire easily and knocking the human girl flat before landing in front of the ’wolves. A guy and a girl. They snapped to attention in front of her, each dropping into a fighting stance.

Behind her, she could hear Claire say,
“Ow.”

“Good morning and welcome to the Bay Area,” Jez told the ’wolves; then she snap-kicked the girl in the face.

The girl flew backward. She wasn’t out of commission, but
it had wrecked the joint attack they had been about to make. The guy knew this, but he was a ’wolf, so instead of waiting for his partner to recover, he growled and threw himself at Jez.

Oh, Goddess, this is too easy. As he drove a punch at her face, Jez turned sideways and let his fist whistle past her. Then she threw her left arm around his left hip, holding him in what was almost an embrace. A deadly one, though. At the same instant she slammed her left hand up to his chin, striking with enough force to stun him.

He staggered in her arms, snarling. Bristly hairs erupted on his face.

“Sweet dreams, Fido,” Jez said. She hooked her left leg around his right just below the knee and brought him crashing to the platform. His head hit the concrete and he went limp.

Somewhere behind Jez, a sort of thin shrieking had begun. Claire. Jez ignored it, and ignored the two or three people scrambling for the stairs—avoiding the down escalator because it was right beside Jez. She was focused on the female werewolf, who was back on her feet.

“Do yourself a favor and don’t even try anything,” she said, grinning. “You’re way outclassed.”

The girl, who had reddish-brown hair and a feral expression, didn’t answer. She simply showed her teeth and lunged for Jez.

With both hands reaching for Jez’s face. You’d think they would
learn,
Jez thought. Especially after what just happened.

Even as she was thinking it, her body was making the right moves. She grabbed the girl’s leading arm with both hands, then twisted, pulling her off balance. She took the girl down with a pull drop, flipping her to the platform. As soon as the girl was flat Jez locked the arm she still held and began to apply leverage against the elbow joint.

“Don’t move or I’ll break your elbow,” she said pleasantly. The girl was writhing in pain, spitting and struggling and hurting herself worse.

Absently, Jez noticed that Claire had stopped shrieking. She glanced up to make sure her cousin was all right and saw that Claire was on her feet, staring openmouthed. Jez gave her a reassuring nod.

Then she looked back at the female ’wolf. Now that the fight was over she had the leisure to wonder what was going
on.
There were plenty of people who might want to kill her, but she couldn’t think of any reason for them to target Claire. And they
had
been targeting her; Jez was sure of that.

This was no random thing. This was two ’wolves attacking a human right in public, in front of witnesses, as if they didn’t care who saw them. This was something planned, something important.

She gave the girl’s arm a little twist, and the girl snarled wildly, glaring at Jez with reddish eyes full of animal fury and hatred.

“Okay, you know what I want,” Jez said. “I need answers,
and I don’t have much time. What are you doing here? Who sent you? And why do you want
her
?” She jerked her head toward Claire.

The girl just glared harder. Jez applied more pressure.

“Look, I can
make
time for this if I need to. I can do this all day. After I break this elbow I’ll do the other one. And then I’ll break your ribs, and then your kneecaps—”

“Filthy halfbreed scum,” the werewolf snarled.

Jez’s heart gave an odd lurch.

She tried to quiet it. Well, now, that was interesting. Somebody obviously knew her secret. And since they’d been going for Claire, they knew Claire was connected with her….

They knew about her family.

Jez saw white light. She threw sudden pressure against the ’wolf’s elbow joint. The girl screamed, a sound more of anger than of pain.

“Who hired you?” Jez said softly, each word coming out like a chip of ice. “Who sent you after my cousin?”

She stared into the reddish eyes, trying to reach into the girl’s soul and yank an answer out of her.

“Nobody messes with my family,” she whispered. “Whoever sent you is going to be sorry.”

She couldn’t ever remember feeling so angry. And she was so focused on the girl, so intent, that it wasn’t until Claire screamed that she realized someone was approaching behind her.

“Jez, watch out!”

The yell woke Jez up. Without releasing her hold on the female ’wolf, she turned around—just in time to see a male vampire stalking her. He must have come up the down escalator.

And behind
him,
unbelievably, was Claire, running and getting ready for a flying tackle.

“Claire, don’t!” Jez yelled. She struck the female ’wolf once, with deadly accuracy, on the side of the jaw to knock her out. Then she sprang toward the vampire.

But Claire was already grabbing him—a completely futile and foolish gesture. He whipped around and seized a handful of dark hair, and then he was holding Claire in a choke hold, putting her body between him and Jez.

“One more step and I’ll break her neck,” he warned.

Jez skidded to a stop.

“You let go of my
cousin,
” she spat.

“No, I really think we need to talk first,” he said, the beginnings of an ugly grin on his face. “You’re the one who’s going to give answers—”

Jez kicked him.

A roundhouse kick to his knees while he was busy talking. She didn’t worry about keeping it nonlethal. She only cared about breaking his hold on Claire.

It worked. He lost his grip, stumbling sideways. Jez grabbed Claire and thrust her out of the way, shouting “Run! The escalator’s right there!”

But Claire didn’t run. “I want to help you!”

“Idiot!” Jez didn’t have time to say that Claire
couldn’t
help her; could only hurt her. The vampire had recovered and was moving toward her in fighting position.

He was big, probably over two hundred pounds. And he was a full vampire, which gave him the advantage of strength and speed. And he was smarter than the ’wolves; he wasn’t just going to lunge. And Jez didn’t have a weapon.

“Just keep behind me, okay?” she snarled under her breath to Claire.

The vampire grinned at that. He knew Jez was vulnerable. She was going to have to keep half her attention on protecting Claire.

And then, just as he was about to make an attack, Jez heard the smack of footsteps on concrete. Running footsteps, with a weird little hesitation between them, like somebody with a limp….

She flashed a look toward the stairs. Hugh had just rounded the top. He was out of breath and bleeding from cuts on his face. But as soon as he saw her and the vampire he waved his arms and yelled.

“Hey! Ugly Undead! Your friend missed me! You want to have a try?”

Hugh?
Jez thought in disbelief. Fighting?

“Come on, hey; I’m here; I’m easy.” Hugh was hopping toward the vampire, who was also flashing looks at him, trying to assess this new danger while not taking his focus off Jez.

“You want to go a few rounds?” Hugh dropped into a boxer’s pose, throwing punches at the air. “Huh? You want to try for the title?” All the time he was speaking, he was dancing closer to the vampire, circling to get behind him.

Beautiful, Jez thought. All she needed was for the vampire to shift his attention for one second—just to glance behind him once—and she could kick his face in.

It didn’t work that way. Something went wrong.

The vampire tried to glance behind him. Jez saw her chance and made the kick, a high kick that snapped his head back. But somehow instead of falling backward the vampire managed to blunder forward straight at her. She could easily have gotten away—except for Claire.

Claire had obediently kept behind her—even when behind her meant standing right by the BART tracks, on the yellow metal squares that marked the edge of the platform. Now, as the vampire stumbled forward and Jez began to slide out of the way, she heard Claire gasp, felt Claire clutch at her wildly.

She knew what had happened instantly. Claire had tried to run the wrong way and was teetering on the edge of the platform. More, she was taking Jez with her.

There was a distant rumble like thunder.

Jez knew she could save herself—by getting rid of Claire. She could use Claire’s body as a springboard to propel herself away from the drop. That way, only one of them would die.

Instead, she tried to twist and throw Claire away from her,
toward safety. It didn’t work. They both lost their balance. Jez had the strange, surprised feeling one gets in the middle of a fall—where’s the ground?—and then she hit it.

It was a bad fall because she was tangled with Claire. All Jez could do was try to keep Claire away from the third rail on the far side of the track. The impact winded both of them and Jez saw stars.

She could hear Hugh screaming her name.

The distant thunder had become a roaring, whizzing sound, carried through the tracks underneath Jez. Down here, she could feel a rattling that wasn’t audible from above. It was a noise that filled her head and shook her body.

She knew absolutely, in that instant, that they were going to die.

Both of them. Crushed to pieces under the train. The white dragon would run right over them and not even know it.

There was simply no chance. Claire was clinging to her desperately, clawing Jez’s arms hard enough to draw blood, and gasping in the breath for a scream. And even if Jez had been a full vampire, she couldn’t have lifted Claire the four feet to the platform fast enough.

There was nothing to save them, no hope. No rescue. It was over.

All of this flashed through Jez’s mind in the single instant it took her to look up and see the train bearing down on them. Its sleek white nose was only thirty feet away, and it
was braking, but nowhere near fast enough, and this was it, the actual moment of her death, the last thoughts she would ever think, and the last thing she would ever see was white, white, white—

Blue.

It happened all at once, filling her vision. One second she could see clearly, the next the entire world was blue. Not just blue. Fiery, dazzling, lightning-shot blue. Like being inside some sort of science-fiction special effect. There was blue streaming and crackling and sizzling all around her, a cocoon of blue that enfolded her and shot past her and disappeared somewhere ahead.

I’m dead, Jez thought. So
this
is what it’s like. Completely different from what people say.

Then she realized that she could hear a faint shrieking sound beneath her. It was Claire. They were still holding on to each other.

We’re both dead. Or we’ve fallen into some kind of space warp. The rest of the world is gone. There’s just—this.

She had an impulse to touch the blue stuff, but she couldn’t move because of Claire’s grip on her arms. It might not have been safe anyway. Where it flowed over her, she could feel a sort of zinging and tingling as if all her blood were being excited. It smelled like the air after a storm.

And then it disappeared.

All at once. Not by stages. But it still took Jez several
moments to see anything, because her eyes were blinded with dark yellow after-images. They burned and danced in front of her like a new kind of lightning, and she only gradually realized where she was.

On the train tracks. Exactly where she had been before. Except that now there was a huge, sleek BART train two feet in front of her.

She had to tilt her head to look up at its nose. It was gigantic from this angle, a monster of white, like the iceberg that sank the
Titanic.
And it was stopped dead, looking as if it had always been here, like some mountainous landmark. As if it had never moved an inch in its history.

People were yelling.

Shrieking and yowling and making all kinds of noise. It seemed to come from far away, but when Jez looked she could see them staring down at her. They were at the edge of the platform, waving their arms hysterically. As Jez stared back at them, a couple jumped down to the tracks.

Jez looked down at her cousin.

Claire was dragging in huge breaths, hyperventilating, her whole body shaking in spasms. She was staring at the train that loomed over them with eyes that showed white all around.

A loudspeaker was booming. One of the people who had jumped, a man in a security guard’s uniform, was jabbering at Jez. She couldn’t understand a word he was saying.

“Claire, we’ve got to go now.”

Her cousin just whooped in air, sobbing.

“Claire, we have to
go
now. Come on.” Jez’s whole body felt light and strange, and when she tried to move she felt as if she were floating. But she
could
move. She stood up and pulled Claire with her.

She realized that somebody was calling her name.

It was the other person who had jumped to the tracks. It was Hugh. He was reaching for her. His gray eyes were as wide as Claire’s, but not wide and hysterical. Wide and still. He was the only calm person in the crowd, beside Jez.

“Come on. Up this way,” he said.

He helped her boost Claire to the platform, and then Jez scrambled up and reached down to help him. When they were all up, Jez glanced around. She knew she was looking for something—yes. There. The werewolves she’d knocked out. It seemed a hundred years ago, but they were still lying there.

“The other guy got away,” Hugh said.

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