Authors: Jennifer Quintenz
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Coming of Age, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Teen & Young Adult
hooked his fingers into the crack and what had looked like a carved section of the column turned out
to be another concealed door. Lucas opened it, revealing a tightly curved spiral staircase leading up.
“Where do you suppose that goes?” There was a decidedly mischievous glint in his eye.
“Well,” I said, as if resigning myself to an odious task. “Mr. Landon did give us an assignment.”
“True. This might be on the quiz.”
The spiral staircase was so narrow you had to watch where you put your feet; each tread narrowed
from about eight inches to almost nothing as it connected in the center of the spiral. It took a bit of
concentration to walk up, and I knew coming down would be another challenge.
But the climb was worth it. Lucas and I reached the top of the stairs to discover we were in a cozy
little viewing balcony overlooking the main sanctuary. Very cozy, actually—we could barely move
without bumping into each other. Sheltered in our hiding place, we had the perfect view of the
sanctuary. Just above us, a stained glass window depicted a beautiful saint, haloed in light, holding an
arrow over her heart.
Something drew my attention back down to the level below. A lone figure stood in the center of
the sanctuary. A familiar feeling pulled at the edge of my thoughts, but before I could place it, Lucas
spoke.
“Beautiful.” He was so close, his breath stirred the hair against my neck. I was suddenly aware of
the warmth of his body behind me and ached to lean back into him. My heart quickened. I tried to
tamp it down. We couldn’t act on these feelings. We had made a promise to the Guard, to our families.
But beyond that, I’d sworn to myself to never,
never
let myself risk Lucas’s safety again. And yet,
right at this moment, none of that seemed to matter.
I turned in his arms.
Whatever reassuring thoughts I might have had about Lucas’s and my self-control, I overestimated
it.
I don’t know which of us moved first. Our lips brushed and I felt the sudden swell of the Lilitu
storm inside me, straining forward, waiting for one moment’s weakness in my self-control to drain
Lucas of his vitality. I pulled back from Lucas as if stung.
“We can’t.” I cringed at the sound of my voice, hoarse with emotion. “We can’t.”
“Braedyn,” he started. I traced my fingers across his lips, thrilled at the soft warmth of the touch. I
bit my own lip and turned aside.
“We promised,” I said.
“I know. I just wish—” Lucas pulled away from me, and I could see the struggle on his face. “This
would be a lot easier if we knew when the waiting part would end.” He smiled, that lopsided smile that
made him look in the same moment vulnerable and worldly. “Too bad Sansenoy didn’t leave you his
number.”
“Right. Because, you know, why not just call and ask?”
Lucas pitched his voice an octave higher than normal, and I realized he was imitating me. “‘So,
Sans, that whole becoming human thing, when do you figure that’s going to happen? ‘Cause my
boyfriend and I have some plans.’”
“I do not sound like that!” I said, punching him in the arm for the poor impersonation. But I
couldn’t stop myself from giggling.
“Ouch.” Lucas smiled, rubbing his arm, clearly pleased to have won a laugh. “Hey, can I ask you a
question?”
“What?”
“Why haven’t you told Murphy?”
The question caught me unprepared. When I’d told Lucas of the angel’s offer to make me human,
he’d been so thrilled, I’d stopped halfway through. There was a part I hadn’t told him. I hadn’t told
him about the caveat. Because if I slipped up, if I used my Lilitu powers to hurt someone badly
enough, I would cross a line. My soul would be too tainted to ever be redeemed, and my chance of
becoming human would evaporate as completely as a drop of water spilt on the hot desert floor. That
was why I hadn’t been able to bring myself to tell Murphy, my father. I couldn’t bear it if Dad pinned
all his hopes on me becoming human, and then I lost control and crossed the line. It would crush him.
I’d told myself it was better he not know, but keeping this from him was getting harder and harder. I
forced myself to smile. “I just haven’t found the right time.”
Lucas nodded, but I could tell he didn’t believe me. “What exactly constitutes the right time to tell
your dad that you might actually get to live a normal, healthy life?”
“It’s—” I took a deep breath, then went for a half-truth. “The Guard needs me right now. As a
Lilitu
. I don’t want to distract anyone with thoughts of what might happen someday.”
“
Might?
” Lucas looked genuinely surprised. “What’s this ‘might’ business? You got a guarantee
from an angel that you could be human one day. How does that leave room for ‘might?’”
I dragged my eyes back to the sanctuary. “Yeah. No, you’re right.” I forced a lightness into my
voice, hoping that would put an end to the discussion. But Lucas heard the fear behind my words.
“Braedyn?”
I didn’t respond, not trusting myself to speak.
“You don’t have to hide anything from me.”
“I know.” Still my words came out too brightly to be believed.
Gently, he cupped one hand under my chin and lifted my face. “What are you not telling me?”
I reached up to take hold of his hand, but I didn’t pull it away from my face. After a long moment,
I came to a decision. “Okay,” I breathed. “But not here.”
Lucas’s brow furrowed, but he didn’t say anything. He simply nodded. I returned to the spiral
staircase. I could feel him watching me all the way down.
I emerged from the hidden staircase, trying to get my breath back under control. It would be too
humiliating to start crying on a school field trip. I turned to face a row of shadowy statues, pretending
to study the carved figures while I quickly thumbed moisture out of my eyes. I turned back to the
sanctuary, scanning the room for my friends. If I hadn’t been so distracted, I would have seen her
sooner. As it was, I only caught the motion of her darting from behind a statue out of the corner of my
eye. I barely had time to react, shying to the side as she attacked.
That tiny movement probably saved my life, not that I had time to appreciate my good fortune.
One moment I was twisting to shield myself from an unknown attacker, the next I was skidding across
the floor, pain lancing through my shoulder, and she was there, on top of me, lips pulled back in a
snarl.
I reacted without conscious thought, my muscle memory kicking into action. I drove my knuckles
into the woman’s throat, which should have flattened her. She barely reacted, but her grip loosened
enough for me to plant my feet against her ribs and kick her off of me.
I heard someone scream. Lucas shouted. And then she was diving for me again. I threw my body to
one side, rolling onto my feet and spinning around, hands up and ready for a fight. She was already
mid-lunge. I was dimly aware that she was the woman I’d seen earlier, slipping through the gate into
the mission’s inner garden.
She collided with me before I could do more than block her punch. The force of her blow sent me
staggering back a few steps. I faced her, frantic, but hard as I wracked my brain I knew I’d never seen
this woman before in my life. Could she be a spotter? Maybe a member of the Guard from a different
unit? I held out my hand—a gesture of truce.
“I’m not your enemy.”
She lunged for me again, swinging her other arm with more force. I saw the tire iron with just
enough time to drop. It sailed through the air where my head had been moments before. Ice gripped
my stomach. Whoever this woman was, she was not playing around. That blow was meant to end me. I
tried to run past her but she caught me by the scruff of my shirt and jerked me back, hard. I hit the
ground with a sickening thunk, red and black swirls overtaking my vision. When they cleared, I saw
her standing over me, tensing to swing the tire iron for my head.
Lucas hit her like a freight train, bowling her over before the killing blow could fall. A wave of
nausea rose in my throat but I pushed it down and forced myself to roll to my knees.
Lucas was wrestling with her for the tire iron beside a bank of stained glass windows. She released
the iron suddenly and Lucas, unprepared, lost his balance. Before he could recover, she turned,
punching him savagely in the solar plexus. Lucas dropped the tire iron. It struck the ground, impacting
with the sound of a clanging bell. Something was wrong—Lucas gasped for breath with a horrible, wet
sound. He dropped to his knees, unable to do more than struggle for oxygen.
The woman picked up the tire iron and turned back to Lucas, hunched over on the ground before
her.
“No!” My voice sliced through the sanctuary. The woman turned toward me, and I saw again the
lifelessness of her eyes. My breath came out in a ragged hiss of realization. “No.”
The woman left Lucas, bearing down on me. I realized that I had to end this fight, and I had to do
it now. Nothing would make her stop, and the next time I went down, there would be no one there to
save me.
I charged toward the woman. She lifted the tire iron to strike, but at the last moment I dropped,
skidding toward her across the slick, polished stone, feet first. I connected solidly, the force of my
kick shoving her up and back.
No surprised flickered through those dead eyes as she hit the stained glass window. The glass
exploded behind her like a shower of multi-colored gems, clearing the way for sunlight to flood the
sanctuary with blinding intensity.
I skidded to a stop beneath the window and threw my arms over my head protectively. Tiny
fragments of stained glass showered down. The silence was profound, but brief.
Screams sounded inside and outside the sanctuary. I couldn’t summon the energy to look up.
“Braedyn!” Lucas called, voice hoarse.
I moved my arms away from my head gingerly, and slivers of glass tinkled to the ground. Glass
littered the floor around me. Lucas was half-crawling, half-scrambling forward to meet me. I dragged
myself up into a sitting position.
Lucas threw an arm around me. In seconds we were surrounded. Mr. Landon was shouting, his
usually jovial face a mask of panic. Annie was screaming into the phone, eyes streaming. And beyond
them, a shell-shocked crowd of my classmates watched in horrified fascination.
The only thing that felt real was Lucas’s arm around me. I realized I was clinging to him
ferociously when Mr. Landon tried to pull us apart.
“Are you hurt?” he was asking. “Braedyn, are you hurt?”
“Don’t,” I whispered, tightening my grip on Lucas’s shirt. Mr. Landon pulled back helplessly.
“How long?” he asked Annie. “How long until the ambulance gets here?”
I didn’t hear Annie’s response. I was looking at Lucas’s face. “Did you see?” I whispered. “Did
you see her eyes?” Lucas nodded grimly. So I wasn’t crazy. The woman who’d attacked us?
She was a
Thrall
.
We were still clinging to each other 15 minutes later when the paramedics arrived.
Chapter 2
As far back as I could remember, the moon had been a comforting beacon in the darkness. But tonight,
the thin crescent sliver seemed distant, unfeeling. My shoulder ached. A student who’d seen the attack
reported that the woman had leapt for me, clubbing that tire iron across my shoulder. I supposed I was
lucky that the fracture was my only serious injury from the day. Most of the large stained glass shards
had fallen out of the window with the woman. The few smaller fragments that had rained down on me
left only superficial cuts on the skin of my hands and my lower back. My jacket had ridden up during
my slide across the floor; otherwise, I might have escaped with even fewer cuts. My arm was bound
up in a complicated sling, but I knew I’d only have to wear it for a few days, not the month or more
the doctors had prescribed. There were a few perks to being Lilitu. One good night’s sleep would ease
the pain, three or four would heal the fracture completely.