Huntress, Black Dawn, Witchlight (5 page)

BOOK: Huntress, Black Dawn, Witchlight
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Idiot. Nobody can recognize you. That’s why you wear the full-face helmet. That’s why you keep your hair up. That’s why you don’t custom-paint the bike.

She was still hyper-alert as she cruised the streets heading for one of the city’s most unsavory districts.

There. She felt a jolt at the sight of a familiar building. Tan, blocky, and unlovely, it rose to three stories plus an irregular roof. Jez squinted up at the roof without taking off her helmet.

Then she went and stood casually against the rough concrete wall, near the rusty metal intercom. She waited until a couple of girls dressed like artists came up and got buzzed in by one of the tenants. Then she detached herself from the wall and calmly followed them.

She couldn’t let Morgead know she was coming.

He’d kill her without waiting to ask questions if he got the jump on her. Her only chance was to jump him first, and then make him listen.

The building was even uglier inside than it was outside, with empty echoing stairwells and faceless industrial-sized hallways. But Jez found her heart beating faster and something like longing twisting in her chest. This place might be
hideous, but it was also freedom. Each one of the giant rooms behind the metal doors was rented by somebody who didn’t care about carpets and windows, but wanted a big empty space where they could be alone and do exactly what they wanted.

It was mostly starving artists here, people who needed large studios. Some of the doors were painted in gemlike colors and rough textures. Most had industrial-sized locks on them.

I don’t miss it, Jez told herself. But every corner brought a shock of memory. Morgead had lived here for years, ever since his mother ran off with some vampire from Europe. And Jez had practically lived here, too, because it had been gang headquarters.

We had some good times….

No. She shook her head slightly to break off the thought and continued on her way, slipping silently through the corridors, going deeper and deeper into the building. At last she got to a place where there was no sound except the humming of the naked fluorescent lights on the ceiling. The walls were closer together here. There was a sense of isolation, of being far from the rest of the world.

And one narrow staircase going up.

Jez paused, listened a moment, then, keeping her eyes on the staircase, removed the long bundle from her back. She unwrapped it carefully, revealing a stick that was a work of art. It was just over four feet long and an inch in diameter. The
wood was deep glossy red with irregular black markings that looked a little like tiger stripes or hieroglyphics.

Snakewood. One of the hardest woods in the world, dense and strong, but with just the right amount of resilience for a fighting stick. It made a striking and individual weapon.

There was one other unusual thing about it. Fighting sticks were usually blunt at either end, to allow the person holding it to get a grip. This one had one blunt end and one that tapered to an angled, narrow tip. Like a spear. The point was hard as iron and extremely sharp.

It could punch right through clothing to penetrate a vampire heart.

Jez held the stick in both hands for a moment, looking down at it. Then she straightened, and, holding it in a light grip ready for action, she began up the stairs.

“Ready or not, Morgead, here I come.”

CHAPTER 7

S
he emerged on the rooftop.

There was a sort of roof garden here—anyway, a lot of scraggly plants in large wooden tubs. There was also some dirty patio furniture and other odds and ends. But the main feature was a small structure that sat on the roof the way a house sits on a street.

Morgead’s home. The penthouse. It was as stark and unlovely as the rest of the building, but it had a great view and it was completely private. There were no other tall buildings nearby to look down on it.

Jez moved stealthily toward the door. Her feet made no noise on the pitted asphalt of the roof, and she was in a state of almost painfully heightened awareness. In the old days sneaking up on another gang member had been a game. You got to laugh at them if you could startle them, and they got to be furious and humiliated.

Today it wasn’t a game.

Jez started toward the warped wooden door—then stopped. Doors were trouble. Morgead would have been an idiot not to have rigged it to alert him to intruders.

Cat-quiet, she headed instead for a narrow metal ladder that led to the roof of the wooden structure. Now she was on the real top of the building. The only thing higher was a metal flagpole without a flag.

She moved noiselessly across the new roof. At the far edge she found herself looking four stories straight down. And directly below her there was a window.

An open window.

Jez smiled tightly.

Then she hooked her toes over the four-inch lip at the edge of the roof and dropped gracefully forward. She grabbed the top of the window in mid-dive and hung suspended, defying gravity like a bat attached upside down. She looked inside.

And there he was. Lying on a futon, asleep. He was sprawled on his back, fully clothed in jeans, high boots, and a leather jacket. He looked good.

Just like the old days, Jez thought. When the gang would stay out all night riding their bikes and hunting or fighting or partying, and then come home in the morning to scramble into clothes for school. Except Morgead, who would smirk at them and then collapse. He didn’t have parents or relatives to keep him from skipping.

I’m surprised he’s not wearing his helmet, too, she thought, pulling herself back up to the roof. She picked up the fighting stick, maneuvered it into the window, then let herself down again, this time hanging by her hands. She slid in without making a noise.

Then she went to stand over him.

He hadn’t changed. He looked exactly as she remembered, except younger and more vulnerable because he was asleep. His face was pale, making his dark hair seem even darker. His lashes were black crescents on his cheeks.

Evil and dangerous, Jez reminded herself. It annoyed her that she
had
to remind herself of what Morgead was. For some reason her mind was throwing pictures at her, scenes from her childhood while she was living here in San Francisco with her Uncle Bracken.

A five-year-old Jez, with shorter red hair that looked as if it had never been combed, walking with a little grimy-faced Morgead, hand in hand. An eight-year-old Jez with two skinned knees, scowling as a businesslike Morgead pulled wood splinters out of her legs with rusty tweezers. A seven-year-old Morgead with his face lit up in astonishment as Jez persuaded him to try the human thing called ice cream….

Stop it, Jez told her brain flatly. You might as well give up, because it’s no good. We were friends then—well, some of the time—but we’re enemies now. He’s changed. I’ve changed.
He’d kill me in a second now if it would suit his purpose. And I’m going to do what has to be done.

She backed up and poked him lightly with the stick. “Morgead.”

His eyes flew open and he sat up. He was awake instantly, like any vampire, and he focused on her without a trace of confusion. Jez had changed her grip on the stick and was standing ready in case he went straight into an attack.

But instead, a strange expression crossed his face. It went from startled recognition into something Jez didn’t understand. For a moment he was simply staring at her, eyes big, chest heaving, looking as if he were caught in between pain and happiness.

Then he said quietly, “Jez.”

“Hi, Morgead.”

“You came back.”

Jez shifted the stick again. “Apparently.”

He got up in one motion. “Where the hell have you
been
?”

Now he just looked furious, Jez noted. Which was easier to deal with, because that was how she remembered him.

“I can’t tell you,” she said, which was perfectly true, and would also annoy the life out of him.

It did. He shook his head to get dark hair out of his eyes—it was always disheveled in the morning, Jez remembered—and glared at her. He was standing easily: not in any attack
posture, but with the relaxed readiness that meant he could go flying in any direction at any moment. Jez kept half her mind on watching his leg muscles.

“You can’t
tell
me? You disappear one day without any kind of warning, without even leaving a
note
…you leave the gang and me and just completely vanish and nobody knows where to find you, not even your uncle…and now you reappear again and
you can’t tell me where you were
?” He was working himself into one of his Extremely Excited States, Jez realized. She was surprised; she’d expected him to stay cooler and attack hard.

“What did you think you were doing, just cutting out on everybody? Did it ever occur to you that people would be
worried
about you? That people would think you were
dead
?”

It didn’t occur to me that anyone would
care,
Jez thought, startled. Especially not you. But she couldn’t say that. “Look, I didn’t mean to hurt anybody. And I can’t talk about why I went. But I’m back now—”

“You can’t just come back!”

Jez was losing her calm. Nothing was going the way she’d expected; the things she’d scripted out to say weren’t getting said. “I know I can’t just come back—”

“Because it doesn’t work that way!” Morgead was pacing now, tossing hair out of his eyes again as he turned to glare at her. “Blood in, blood out. Since you’re apparently not dead, you abandoned us. You’re not allowed to do that! And you
certainly can’t expect to just walk back in and become my second again—”

“I
don’t
!” Jez yelled. She had to shut him up. “I have no intention of becoming your second-in-command!” she said when he finally paused. “I came to challenge you as leader.”

Morgead’s jaw dropped.

Jez let her breath out. That wasn’t exactly how she’d planned to say it. But now, seeing his shock, she felt more in control. She leaned casually against the wall, smiled at him, and said smoothly, “I was leader when I left, remember.”

“You…have got to be…joking.” Morgead stared at her. “You expect to waltz back in here as
leader
?”

“If I can beat you. I think I can. I did it once.”

He stared for another minute, seeming beyond words. Then he threw back his head and laughed.

It was a scary sound.

When he looked at her again, his eyes were bright and hard. “Yeah, you did. I’ve gotten better since then.”

Jez said three words. “So have I.”

And with that, everything changed. Morgead shifted position—only slightly, but he was now in a fighting stance. Jez felt adrenaline flow through her own body. The challenge had been issued and accepted; there was nothing more to say. They were now facing each other ready to fight.

And this she could deal with. She was much better at fighting than at playing with words. She knew Morgead in this
mood; his pride and his skill had been questioned and he was now absolutely determined to win. This was very familiar.

Without taking his eyes from her, he reached out and picked a fighting stick from the rack behind him.

Japanese oak, Jez noted. Heavy, well-seasoned, resilient. Good choice.

The fire-hardened end was very pointy.

He wouldn’t try to use that first, though. First, he would go for disarming her. The simplest way to do this was to break the wrist of her dominant hand. After that he’d go for critical points and nerve centers. He didn’t play around at this.

A minute change in Morgead’s posture alerted her, and then they were both moving.

He swung his stick up and down in a perfect arc, aiming for her right wrist. Jez blocked easily with her own stick and felt the shock as wood clashed with wood. She instantly changed her grip and tried for a trap, but he whipped his stick out of the way and was facing her again as if he’d never moved in the first place.

He smiled at her.

He’s right. He’s gotten better. A small chill went through Jez, and for the first time she worried about her ability to beat him.

Because I have to do it without
killing
him, she thought. She wasn’t at all sure he had the same concern about not killing her.

“You’re so predictable, Morgead,” she told him. “I could fight you in my sleep.” She feinted toward his wrist and then tried to sweep his legs out from underneath him.

He blocked and tried for a trap. “Oh, yeah? And you hit like a four-year-old. You couldn’t take me down if I stood here and let you.”

They circled each other warily.

The snakewood stick was warm in Jez’s hands. It was funny, some distant part of her mind thought irrelevantly, how the most humble and lowly of human weapons was the most dangerous to vampires.

But it was also the most versatile weapon in the world. With a stick, unlike a knife or gun or sword, you could fine-tune the degree of pain and injury you caused. You could disarm and control attackers, and—if the circumstances required it—you could inflict pain without permanently injuring them.

Of course if they were vampires, you could also
kill
them, which you couldn’t do with a knife or gun. Only wood could stop the vampire heart permanently, which was why the fighting stick was the weapon of choice for vampires who wanted to hurt each other…and for vampire hunters.

Jez grinned at Morgead, knowing it was not a particularly nice smile.

Her feet whispered across the worn oak boards of the floor. She and Morgead had practiced here countless times, measuring themselves against each other, training themselves to be the
best. And it had worked. They were both masters of this most deadly weapon.

But no fight had ever mattered as much as this one.

“Next you’re going to try for a head strike,” she informed Morgead coolly. “Because you always do.”

“You think you know everything. But you don’t know me anymore. I’ve changed,” he told her, just as calmly—and went for a head strike.

“Psyche,” he said as she blocked it and wood clashed with a sharp
whack.

“Wrong.” Jez twisted her stick sharply, got leverage on his, and whipped it down, holding it against his upper thighs. “Trap.” She grinned into his face.

And was startled for a moment. She hadn’t been this close to him in a long time. His eyes—they were
so
green, gem-colored, and full of strange light.

For just an instant neither of them moved; their weapons down, their gazes connected. Their faces were so close their breath mingled.

Then Morgead slipped out of the trap. “Don’t try
that
stuff,” he said nastily.

“What stuff?” The moment her stick was free of his, she snapped it up again, reversing her grip and thrusting toward his eyes.

“You know what stuff!” He deflected her thrust with unnecessary force. “That ‘I’m Jez and I’m so wild and beautiful’ stuff.
That ‘Why don’t you just drop your stick and let me hit you because it’ll be fun’ stuff.”

“Morgead…what are you…talking about?” In between the words she attacked, a strike to his throat and then one to his temple. He blocked and evaded—which was just what she wanted. Evasion. Retreat. She was crowding him into a corner.

“That’s the only way you won before. Trying to play on people’s feelings for you. Well, it won’t work anymore!” He countered viciously, but it didn’t matter. Jez blocked with a whirlwind of strikes of her own, pressing him, and then he had no choice but to retreat until his back was against the corner.

She had him.

She had no idea what he meant about playing on people’s feelings, and she didn’t have time to think about it. Morgead was dangerous as a wounded tiger when he was cornered. His eyes were glowing emerald green with sheer fury, and there was a hardness to his features that hadn’t been there last year.

He does hate me, Jez thought. Hugh was wrong. He’s hurt and angry and he absolutely
hates
me.

The textbook answer was to use that emotion against him, to provoke him and get him so mad that he gave her an opening. Some instinct deep inside Jez was worried about that, but she didn’t listen.

“Hey, all’s fair, right?” she told him softly. “And what do you mean, it won’t work? I’ve got you, haven’t I?” She flashed out a couple of quick attacks, more to keep him occupied than
anything else. “You’re caught, and you’re going to have to let down your guard sometime.”

The green eyes that had been luminous with fury suddenly went cold. The color of glacier ice. “Unless I do something unexpected,” he said.

“Nothing you do is unexpected,” she said sweetly.

But her mind was telling her that provoking him had been a mistake. She had hit some nerve, and he was stronger than he’d been a year ago. He didn’t lose his temper under pressure the way he’d used to. He just got more determined.

Those green eyes unnerved her.

Move in hard, she thought. All out. Go for a pressure point. Numb his arm—

But before she could do anything, a wave of Power hit her.

It sent her reeling.

She’d never felt anything exactly like it. It came from Morgead, a shockwave of telepathic energy that struck her like a physical thing. It knocked her back two steps and made her struggle for balance. It left the air crackling with electricity and a faint smell of ozone.

Jez’s mind spun.

How had he
done
that?

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