Blue Moon: Blood Moon Trilogy #3 (34 page)

BOOK: Blue Moon: Blood Moon Trilogy #3
5.19Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“It’s wired to our hands only,” Vince informed me, making me feel better. “It won’t open for anyone else.”

Alistair joined us in the kitchen and cast the cloaking spell like he promised. Like the barrier spell, I could feel the energy pulsing in the air, assuaging my fears just enough that I felt comfortable leaving.

Outside, we all headed for the vehicles and were preparing to get in them when Alistair stopped us. When we looked at him, he had a huge grin on his face. “Whether on foot or by car, you’ll never make it to the base of the mountain in time. I’ve got a way to transport us all there within a few minutes…if you’re interested. All I need is for one—or several—of you to visualize the area while I cast.”

Nick closed the door to his truck and led the rest of us toward Alistair. He stood in the middle of the driveway, the gently falling snow landing in his dark hair and on his shoulders. He looked to each of us intensely before his gaze settled on me. “You. You’re the one I need. Your memories are strongest.”

Nervous, I stepped forward. Alistair extended a hand, and I placed mine in it. He closed his eyes and took a deep breath in, urging me to do the same. “I need you to clear your mind of everything,” he said in a soothing voice that rolled over me like a rush of warm water. Energy flowed through him, passing through his hand and into mine. It had a strange calming effect over me, and I found it easy to clear my mind.

“Focus on your breathing,” he commanded. “Think back to the compound—even if it’s the area just outside. Take me there.”

Even though I’d done everything I could to forget the compound and everything about my time there, I found myself unable to keep the memories from breaking through the dam with a rush. My pulse started to race until it was all I could hear. I could feel my panic levels rising, and my hand twitched in an attempt to pull away when Alistair tightened his grip infinitesimally.

“Breathe, Brooke.” I did as he instructed. “It’s just a memory. Let me see it.”

I opened my mind again, breathing deeply and trying to keep the breaths even. I walked back through the woods, passing trees that were familiar, even if they looked like every other tree in the area. Soon enough, I came to the clearing, and about twenty feet ahead of me was the hidden door to the compound. There was a chill in the air as I stared at the door, still ajar like the last time I’d seen it.

The wind whipped around me, biting at the skin on my face. I could feel my subconscious trying to bury the memory again, but I suspected I had to hold on for Alistair’s cast to be effective.

When his hand fell away from mine, severing our connection, my eyes snapped open as the electric current beneath my skin dulled, then disappeared. Before I could take a look around, my stomach lurched and my head spun, similar to how it would feel on a fast-spinning carnival ride.

My knees wobbled, and I could feel myself slowly sinking to the ground to regain my balance. A pair of arms wrapped around my waist, pulling me toward a body. Based on the lack of heat, I knew it wasn’t Nick. Still dazed, I turned to see Alistair had me. His brow was creased and his smile was apologetic.

“The trip can be quite disorientating. Motion sickness isn’t uncommon, especially for the conduit.”

He seemed to be speaking fluidly, but my brain had trouble registering the words correctly for a moment or two as my eyes adjusted to my surroundings, soon settling on the slightly open door in the side of the mountain.

“We’re here,” I said, my voice hoarse. “H-how?”

Alistair’s smile widened. “Magic.”

Attempting a laugh, I pulled away from Alistair, feeling a little steadier on my feet. I noticed the Pack around us, all shaking the vertigo from their own heads. Nick approached me first, his skin surprisingly pale—almost a little green.

“You good?” he inquired, swallowing thickly.

I nodded. “”Yeah. Fine.” I noticed his eyes travel down to my stomach, and I placed a shaking hand over it. “We’re both fine.”

Nick breathed a sigh of relief before turning toward the door. His nostrils flared and his brows pulled together. “They’ve been here recently,” he announced, forcing us all to attention.

Jackson came up on my right, inhaling deeply. “Far as I can tell, there’s no one here now.”

“Then we move forward,” I ordered. “Carefully. This place is huge. There could still be some of them in there. We need to find the files on their research and get the hell out. We only need to know what we’re up against and some way to fight it.”

We all moved forward, but when we were about seven feet away from the door, I felt an intense pulse. It was brief, ebbing almost as quickly as it had swelled, and it knocked me back a step.

“Huh,” Alistair said from right behind me.

Nick and Jackson turned around simultaneously. “What is it?” Jackson demanded.

“You don’t feel that?” I asked, the hair on my arms standing on end as I stepped forward again.

“It’s a barrier spell,” Alistair announced. “Though, it’s old…weak.”

“And Brooke can feel it?” Roxanne asked. “How?”

“She was the conduit I used to get us here,” our shaman friend explained. “She’s still sensitive to the magic we use.”

I watched as Alistair stepped forward, his eyes following some kind of invisible arc in the sky. He remained silent, reading the air as I suspected it hummed even louder around him than it had around me.

“The cast is old, barely even functional anymore,” he informed us. Then he paused, eyebrows knitting together in confusion. “The spell is familiar, though.”

“Familiar? Like, compared to the one you used back at the house?” Vince spoke up.

“Yes and no,” Alistair replied, turning toward us all again. “Every Shaman has a…signature, if you will. Each cast follows a specific script in order to be successful. However, once the spell has been activated, the energy carries a part of the Shaman who cast it.” His eyes closed, and he inhaled deeply as though he was reading the energy around him.

“You know who it is,” I deduced. “Don’t you?”

“While I can’t be certain, I can feel the strength and experience…” He inhaled deeply, almost like he was reveling in the feeling around him. “It’s intoxicating.”

“That’s all well and good,” Roxanne said, pulling Alistair from his blissful state. “But do you know which of you was working for a coven of blood-sucking freaks?”

Alistair’s eyes snapped open, glazed, and recognition sparked in them. “Melinda?”

“Who?” I questioned.

Alistair appeared to be in shock. “She’s our equivalent to a Pack Alpha. She ensures all rules are being followed and hands out sentences to those who disobey.”

“So, is it common practice for your kind to work with vampires?” Nick asked. Something told me he already knew the answer to that, based on the annoyed look on his face.

This sobered Alistair. “Not at all. We’ve only ever shown our allegiance to the Pack,” he replied.

“Then why would she have thrown in with the vampires?” Jackson demanded, advancing on Alistair menacingly. “Is this some kind of trap? Is that why you lured us here the way you did?”

I sensed Jackson’s anxiety rise above his anger. He wasn’t just angry; he was afraid that he was right and this might actually be a trap.

A fresh wave of fear washed over me as Alistair stammered and backed away from Jackson. “What?” N-no! Of course not. I had no idea she was in league with them! Gianna must have offered her something she couldn’t refuse.”

“Or had something that belonged to her,” I interjected, suspecting that was probably more likely the case.

“The spell is old, barely even stable,” Alistair continued to scramble. “It’s months old…close to a year, maybe?” The expression on his face transformed from fear to revelation.

“What is it?” I asked.

“About ten months ago, Melinda and her children had gone out on a spiritual quest. The girls had just come of age, sixteen being the year that their powers come to fruition. They were gone much longer than any other quest, but they eventually returned, so we didn’t think anything of it.”

“All of them? They all returned?” Nick double-checked, and Alistair nodded.  “And they seemed normal?”

“Actually, no. The girls seemed out of sorts, and Melinda refused to talk about the quest. It lasted for a few days, but eventually they began to act as though nothing had happened. It was strange, but we’d all just thought maybe they got into a fight out there…it wouldn’t have been the first time.”

“So you think Gianna threatened them?” I pressed.

“Possibly, yeah.”

I turned to Nick. “It would explain why someone so loyal to the Pack might turn on them and help the enemy.” He nodded in response. “Well, let’s dig a little deeper. Maybe we can find something inside to corroborate your theory.”

We moved as a unit, carefully navigating the inner halls of my former prison. Even though I’d been back once since my initial escape, the anxiety I felt grabbing at me was still ever-present. I was able to tune it out just enough to focus on the task at hand.

Staying in groups of two, we split up. Nick and I went into the room that looked like a lab. Flashes from my time in here, being poked with needles, shocked with tasers, and deafened with high-frequency sounds, distracted me. My chest tightened with panic, and I had to take a minute to remind myself that I was safe. I wasn’t strapped down to the overturned metal slab. I wasn’t collared and locked in a silver-laced prison cell. I was free, and I was here on reconnaissance. I was here with my pack, searching for proof of Gianna’s plans to create hybrids.

“Brooke?” Nick spoke up, his concern audible. “You alright?”

Closing my eyes, I nodded. “Yeah. Just give me a sec.” After several deep breaths, I opened my eyes and started rifling through the files on the floor. I went through the first few, collecting the ones that looked like they had some decent information and tossing the others aside.

I was just about to move on to the fallen filing cabinet when there was a flicker of light a few feet away followed by the brief sound of static and an iron door slamming shut.

I walked toward the source of the light to find Nick leaning on a desk, watching something on a computer monitor. There was a clear CD case on the desk with “SUBJECT THIRTY-SEVEN: BARRY” written on it and a timestamp for just over three months ago.

The name sounded familiar, and soon I remembered Cordelia had mentioned him shortly after my abduction. She’d said he’d been killed when he refused to fight her.

The image on the monitor was black and white, but clear. There was a man with a large build banging on the two-way mirror and screaming for them to let him out. I imagined Bobby laughing behind the glass, and I could feel my anger percolating until I heard the door open and close on the computer again.

Another body appeared from the lower right corner of the monitor, and I soon recognized Cordelia as she slowly wandered into the room. Her shoulders were slumped, hair hanging loose around her face and shoulders. Anxiety gripped my chest tightly as I anticipated Barry attacking her. I knew she survived their confrontation, but she’d never given me the details of that day.

Barry whipped around to face her. The look in his eyes was murderous, and I held my breath, waiting for the first strike. It surprised me when it came from Cordelia.

“What the hell?” Nick muttered under his breath.

We watched as Cordelia thrust a flat palm into Barry’s chest, sending him flying back into the wall and cracking it slightly from the force. Barry pushed himself to his feet, holding a hand over his chest as he struggled to breathe. Cordelia cocked her head to the right, then to the left, assessing him as she shifted her weight from one foot to the other.

“Whenever you’re ready,”
a voice called out over an intercom in the recording. It didn’t take long for me to connect it to Bobby.

Cordelia looked over her shoulder, and the grin that slowly spread across her face was chilling as she stared directly into the camera. Even with the black and white picture, I noticed Cordelia’s eyes darken, light shadows slowly spreading to just over her cheekbones, almost vein-like in appearance.

I recognized the snapping of bone and could see the transformation happening beneath the loose clothing she wore. Something that took me by surprise was the lack of discomfort as her body shifted and grew, but that shock was soon amplified when I watched her body grow to twice its size as the wolf emerged, still standing on two feet.

Other books

Chaos Quest by Gill Arbuthnott
Ghost Sniper: A Sniper Elite Novel by Scott McEwen, Thomas Koloniar
The Legend by Shey Stahl
The Lacey Confession by Richard Greener
One-Eyed Jack by Lawrence Watt-Evans
The Secret Diamond Sisters by Michelle Madow