Authors: Jennifer Quintenz
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Coming of Age, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Teen & Young Adult
sunk your claws into him!”
“What is wrong with you, Cassie?” I spun on her, snapping. “You
know
me. Do you really believe
I’d do something like that?”
“I really believe,” Cassie hissed. I stared at her, at a loss for words.
“Wait a minute.” Lucas’s eyes narrowed. He grabbed Cassie and turned her to face him. “Cassie,
look at me for a sec.”
“And you,” Cassie spat. “You’re always defending her—”
Lucas slapped Cassie across the face, hard. Cassie staggered back, clutching her cheek.
“Lucas!” I spun on him. But he was watching Cassie, unsettled. Something about his expression
sent a shiver chasing over my skin.
“She’s been enthralled,” he said.
“How—?” I started.
“Unless she’s into girls, how do you think?” Lucas looked grim. Cassie rubbed at her face. She
seemed to be coming back to her senses.
“The incubus?” My mouth went dry. “But we only left her 20 minutes ago.” Another realization
struck me then, stabbing fingers of ice into my heart. “Lucas, Seth was with her.” Lucas read my
anxiety and turned back to Cassie.
“Where’s Seth?” he asked. Cassie didn’t answer. Lucas took her by the shoulders and shook her
roughly. Cassie’s eyes slid to his face, frightened. “Cassie, where’s Seth?” he asked again.
“I don’t know,” she said. “I’m not sure what—” She looked around, confused. “What’s
happening?”
I heard it then, a faint sound from behind the wooden doors. I grabbed Lucas’s arm. “Listen.” We
pushed closer to the door, straining to catch the sound again. Cassie hung back, curling hands around
her arms. She looked shell-shocked, lost. But I was focused on the door, and the sound I’d thought I’d
heard coming from behind the thick panels of oak.
“Braedyn?” It was Seth, his voice hoarse with tension. “Braedyn, is that you?” He must have been
whispering through the seam between the doors.
“We’re here,” I whispered back, kneeling to press my eye to the crack of the door. I could make
out Seth, sprawled on the floor, arms bent behind his back.
“You have to get me out of here,” Seth moaned.
“Are you hurt?” I asked.
“Uh, I don’t think so,” Seth said. I saw him struggling on the floor. “But I can’t move. I’m tied
up.”
“What happened?”
“I don’t know. One minute I’m talking to Cassie, the next minute—It’s him, Braedyn. I don’t
know how but he found us.” Panic threaded through Seth’s voice. “Cassie. Braedyn, I think he got to
Cassie.”
“She’s okay,” I said. I glanced at Lucas and he nodded.
“She was enthralled,” Lucas murmured through the door. “But there’s no permanent damage.”
Seth made a throaty sound that was half-whimper, half-sob.
Lucas glanced at me, tense. “Seth... how did you guys get here before us?”
“He—” Seth’s throat seemed to tighten. Each word was a struggle. “We were in the kitchen. Then
we weren’t.”
“The dream.” I looked at Lucas, feeling a chill spread over my shoulders. “He must have stepped
through the dream and pulled Seth with him.” Lucas nodded, his expression stony. It took more than
typical Lilitu power to use the dream space to create a bridge from one physical place to another. It
meant the incubus was strong. Very strong.
“Get me out of here,” Seth pleaded. “Open the door.”
“We can’t,” I said. “It’s barred from the inside.”
Seth slumped against the floor, suddenly petrified. “You—you should go,” he whispered. “Before
the seal opens. Run.”
“Don’t,” I said. “Seth, just—hang tight. We’re coming.”
I stood and faced Lucas. Lucas nodded once; he wasn’t leaving either. “The secret door?” he asked.
He didn’t need my response. It was the only option.
“Cassie, go back to your car,” I said. I didn’t stand around to see if she obeyed. We raced around
the side of the mission to the place where the secret door should be. Only we couldn’t find it. We
wasted minute after precious minute looking for it.
Finally, Lucas shook his head. “We’re running out of time.”
I glanced at the crest. That line of silver edging the mountain ridge was bright, heralding the
coming moonrise. I looked back at the mission and bit my lip, thinking. It was a solid building, much
more of a fortress than I’d ever considered before. The high garden wall, maybe 10 feet tall, skirted
the back of the mission. The walls were sheer cliffs of stucco, with no available hand or foot holds
until maybe 15 feet up the sides, where support beams for the balcony level protruded from the sides
of the mission. The only real weaknesses were the windows. The stained glass I’d kicked the Thrall
out of earlier was on the other side of the garden wall—but anyone inside would see me coming. The
other stained glass windows were at the top of the sanctuary.
“You’ve got to get in there,” Lucas said in a strained voice.
I spun on him, out of patience. “I’m open to suggestions.”
“Step through the dream world.”
It wasn’t what I’d expected him to say, and for a moment I could only gape at him.
“You’ve done it before,” Lucas said, reading my face. It was technically true. I’d stepped through
the dream world out of desperation, knowing my father’s life hung in the balance. Leaving aside the
fact that I wasn’t sure
how
I’d done it the first time, there was a bigger obstacle facing us than Lucas
realized.
“I—I cant,” I said.
“Excuse me?” Lucas gave me an incredulous look.
“I can’t do it,” I repeated. “We have to find another way in.”
“There is no other way,” Lucas said, raising his voice. “So unless you want the final battle to start
tonight, you’d better—”
“I don’t have the energy,” I said, cutting him off.
Lucas grabbed my shoulders, forcing me to meet his gaze. “What are you talking about?”
Shame burned in my cheeks. “You asked me not to visit your dreams, and I’ve never gone to
anyone else—” I swallowed. “It felt—It felt like cheating.”
Lucas released me. He looked suddenly ill. “You’re telling me—?”
“Even if I knew how I did it the first time, I couldn’t do it now. I’d need a solid week of dreams to
build up that kind of power—”
“Take it from me,” Lucas said. The muscle of his jaw jumped again. He knew exactly what he was
offering. “Kiss me.”
“
No.
” A vision flooded my head; a field of black roses, stretching as far as the eye could see. If I
kissed him, if I allowed myself to draw the energy I’d need to step through the dream, I’d risk doing
Lucas permanent damage—and I’d risk burning through the last shreds of my humanity.
“You see an alternative?”
“Not this—”
“You think I want this?” Lucas met my gaze solemnly. “We have one shot to stop a horde of Lilitu
from flooding into this world and it expires as soon as the moon crests that mountain.”
I could almost feel the moonlight pressing against the mountain behind us, threatening to flood
over the crest at any second.
“That much energy—” I looked deep within his eyes. “I’ll hurt you, Lucas.”
“Do what you have to do.” He was willing to sacrifice whatever was needed to keep the seal from
opening. A swell of emotion rose through me.
I faced Lucas, bringing my hands up to cradle his face. He flinched slightly, his bravado slipping.
He was afraid, but he kept his feet planted firmly on the ground. I leaned forward and kissed him
lightly on the cheek. I pulled back and saw the confusion behind his eyes.
“Tell my dad I’m sorry,” I whispered.
I turned and ran toward the garden wall surrounding the mission. I planted a foot against a
protruding stone in the wall and kicked off with my other foot. The force of the kick propelled me up
the side of the wall and I just managed to loop my hands over the top. Pain shot through the palm of
my injured hand, but I pulled with all my strength and scrabbled clumsily up to the top of the wall.
“Braedyn?!” Lucas shouted from the ground below. I didn’t look back.
I ran along the top of the wide wall and leapt for one of the protruding beams. I misjudged the
distance, landing hard across the beam and jack-knifing around it. Reflexively, I clutched my body
around the beam and miraculously kept from falling. I drew in a painful breath, then swung one leg
around to straddle the beam. Carefully, I stood, pressing my palms against the stucco wall for balance.
From this vantage point, I could just barely touch the edge of the Mission’s roof. I took a deep breath
and jumped. As soon as my feet left the beam, a paralyzing fear coursed through my body. If I missed,
I’d fall nearly three stories onto the packed earth below. I felt my body shift as gravity started to pull
me back down.
Convulsively, I threw my arms out, trying to grab hold of the edge of the roof. I slid back, stucco
scraping into the skin of my forearms-but my hands latched around the roof’s edge. I had to pull
myself up with my arms. My muscles burned, and the pain in my palm blazed white hot with the effort
—but I was able to pull myself up to the edge of the roof. I rolled over the lip of the mission’s roof,
landing on the hard stucco surface. I collapsed back, my body pooling like liquid. For a few moments I
just lay there, sucking in deep gulps of air. I felt an instant’s gratitude for Hale, Gretchen, Matthew,
and their ruthless training schedule.
No time to wait for my heart to slow. I stood and edged along the roof toward the stained glass
windows set into the walls of the sanctuary’s elevated ceiling. The windows glowed from within, and I
could make out the figures of saints against the night sky.
One of the figures near the end of a line of windows caught my eye. A woman, holding an arrow
over her heart. It was the figure poised over the balcony where Lucas and I had stolen a moment’s
privacy all those long months ago on the field trip. I made my way to the window, then searched the
roof for something I could use to break it. There was nothing.
I stared at the window.
It’s only a short fall,
I told myself.
Just to the balcony. Maybe eight feet down. No problem.
I pulled the back of my sweater up, wrapping it around my head and shielding my face with my
arms. I took a deep breath. Then I ran straight for the stained glass window, twisting at the last second
to impact it with my shoulder.
I crashed through the glass and my first thought was one of triumph—the thick sweater had proved
an effective shield for my head and face. But then I began to fall, my arms pin wheeling, and I realized
I’d overshot the balcony. The railing whizzed past my head, too fast for me to reach out and make a
grab for it. I was plummeting toward the stone floor and death or serious injury below—when the
strangest thing happened.
Time slowed.
I had an unwelcomed moment to consider my immediate future. Shards of falling glass twinkled in
the air around me, shimmering like diamonds suspended mid-air. We fell together, slowly, slowly. I
found I could force my body to move, even though it was trapped in this molasses-slow stream of
time. I twisted against the gravity pulling my body down. I managed to get my legs under me before I
connected with the ground. Each second was drawn out. My ankles bent, then my knees, then my hips,
each joint doing what it could to absorb as much of the shock of my fall as possible. I felt my muscles
bunching, my sinews straining against the force of the impact. And then the critical moment passed,
and the force of impact lessened. I had survived. I saw Seth, lying bound on the floor by the mission’s
massive oak entrance. His eyes were locked above me, face registering shock. Ever so slowly, his eyes
trailed downwards. Just as I realized time really had slowed-
It kicked back to real-time. I fell forward, sprawling on the floor in surprise.
“Braedyn!” Seth shouted.
I heard a meaty impact and searing pain lanced into my leg, sending a shockwave through my
body. A horrible, guttural scream tore itself from my throat. I whipped my head around to see the
gleaming length of stained glass protruded from my thigh. I stared at it, paralyzed by the sight.
And then my eyes shifted, and I saw
him.
The stranger. The man who’d set Angela’s office ablaze. He sat on the steps of the alter, just
beyond the seal. Watching me.
The seal. I realized-with a roiling wave of panic-the vessel was gone. Without the salt from the
vessel, I couldn’t stop the ritual. The door might not open instantly, but once moonlight struck the
seal, the ritual would be complete. The ancient magic would work on the seal slowly until dawn. And
then the seal would no longer prevent Lilitu from entering this world by the thousands.
“No,” I whispered. The world seemed to tilt. My head was spinning. Dimly, I knew this was shock.
I’d taken a serious injury and my body was trying to cope with the trauma by numbing my senses. But
I needed my head clear.
I closed my hand around the base of the large glass shard buried in my thigh. I pulled. The glass
came free in a slick rush of blood, and another wave of adrenaline slammed through my system. I felt