Part 24 (2/2)
That would be a relief, to only have imaginary voices in her head instead of real ones.
She shook her head, tired of running, tired of the games. But what else was there? She glanced uneasily at Jamie as she set up wards around the room. They were in the tiny attic of an ancient inn. It was dangerous to rest where other people were, but neither of them could spend another night half-asleep on the freezing ground.
As soon as they got upstairs, Jamie fell headlong on the bed and pa.s.sed out. No one could fake those snores.
She wrinkled her nose, tempted for a moment to do a spell to mute the sound, but she surrendered the idea with a sigh. It was dangerous to cast unnecessary magick. Anytime she conjured anything other than a protective ward, she suspected it served as a beacon drawing Estefan right to her. She wasn't sure how he was managing to see it, but then there was a lot about his magick and what he had become that she didn't comprehend.
She shuddered at the thought of it.
How had Estefan become so evil? Or had he always been that way, and she, being so young and so love-struck, had never seen it?
She finished her wards and winced at the burning sensation in her left shoulder as she lowered her arm. During the fray in the cave, one of Estefan's lightning bolts had singed her, and she hadn't dared to use magick to speed the healing.
She hated Estefan for that and for so much, much more. She shoved Jamie over slightly, and he flipped onto his side but didn't wake up. She eased herself down onto the mattress beside him, being careful of her injured shoulder. Jamie's bag of weapons was on the other side of him. It made her nervous knowing that there was a gun within such easy reach.
Especially since it fired silver bullets.
She took a deep, steadying breath. After leaving the Circuit, they had doubled back to the cave and retrieved Jamie's weapons. They hadn't found the scrying stone, but regrettably, they had found the gun with the silver bullets. She had watched with intense interest, though, when Jamie had worked on the gun that would fire wooden bullets and explained how it worked.
It was almost perfected.
And she hoped and prayed that vampires couldn't outrun bullets like they did everything else. She and Jamie needed an edge, and as much as she disliked the gun meant for werewolves, she couldn't help but be very, very excited about this gun.
Jamie was still snoring as she struggled to clear her mind so she could go to sleep. Somewhere, out there in the night, Estefan was still coming after them. It was ironic-she was running from the guy who had spent years chasing her, with the guy whom she had spent years chasing.
And she didn't want either of them anymore.
She wasn't sure when or how it had happened, but her heart had set itself on Holgar. Funny Holgar, loyal Holgar, good Holgar. She'd always been drawn to the bad boys, but it was the best and n.o.blest man she'd ever met that she had fallen truly in love with. It had happened so gradually she hadn't even realized it-until that moment when Estefan had been torturing her and she'd been trying to take back her mind with thoughts of Holgar.
She was in love with a werewolf. If her family had still been speaking to her, she was sure they'd be shocked. There was probably something in their code that forbade such a love.
It didn't matter. She'd turned her back on them and now on the Circuit as well. She knew she should feel guilty about it, but she just couldn't bring herself to.
She squeezed her eyes shut and saw Holgar in her mind. What would he say when they saw each other again? What would she say? Would she have the courage to tell him how she felt?
She hoped so, but she worried she'd never get the chance to make that decision.
She drifted off to sleep and dreamed of Holgar, of staring into his eyes as she told him she loved him. And then the scene changed and she felt as if she were watching from afar as Holgar charged across a silvery landscape, leading a pack of werewolves. Or was he running from them?
She couldn't tell, but in front of Holgar there was a line of monsters, hybrids like from Russia, and vampires. Oh, G.o.ddess, there were so many!
Holgar crashed into them, bowling several over. Then Skye lost him, couldn't see him for the thras.h.i.+ng bodies. And then, finally, he appeared again. But her relief turned to horror as she watched a tall vampire who seemed to blaze like the sun rip out Holgar's throat.
”No!” she screamed, waking and sitting up. Her heart was pounding, and she felt dizzy and somewhat disembodied. Her cheeks were flushed, and she felt as if her entire body were on fire.
Cursing, Jamie leaped out of bed and landed in the middle of the floor, eyes wild, a gun in one hand and a stake in the other. ”What?”
And in that moment Skye knew two things for certain. What she had just seen in her dream was a glimpse of the future-Holgar dying at Lucifer's hands.
And Estefan had arrived at the inn.
They had run out of time.
CHAPTER TWELVE.
Predator, prey, the oldest game
Somehow it always ends the same
Prey a tangled ma.s.s of legs and head
The predator's fangs s.h.i.+ning red
You'd do well to know your place
You can not change name or face
For real hunters always thrive
And the hunted ne'er survive
DOVER, ENGLAND.
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