Matt Archer: Redemption (21 page)

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Authors: Kendra C. Highley

BOOK: Matt Archer: Redemption
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I unsheathed my knife. I didn’t want to kill this girl, but if she tried to attack me, I’d have to do something. “Are you Nocturna Maura? If you are, then you need to know Ann Smythe is dead, but told her covens to stand down. You shouldn’t be doing this.”

She crept closer even as I backed farther into the street. “Nocturna Maura. Children, the lot of them. I’m older than they are.”

Another scream broke out. “Yeah, because sixteen is ancient.”

“I’ve lived two hundred lives, Archer. You weren’t the only one born at the right time and place.” Her hands twisted into cruel claws. “I’ve been seeking full immortality, and now the Dark Master will give it to me.”

“You’re a demon,” I said, tightening my fingers around my knife’s bone handle. “I don’t like demons.”

Her eyes went from green to a sickening yellow. “Yaoguai, actually, but if you must use that crude term, then yes.”

“Matt! Get in here!” Will yelled from inside the house. “Something’s wrong with Xing Li. He’s … he’s … ”

“Dying?” Jie—or whatever she was—said. “Good. I poisoned his paint brush. Too bad you didn’t handle it, too.”

“Why not kill him before I got here?” Now we were circling each other. More screams and shouts came from the far side of the village. I didn’t have much time to finish this off before the next wave came. “Why not kill all of us when we first got here?”

“He had information we needed.” Her smile revealed fangs. “Confirming things we thought we knew, telling us things we didn’t. But he’d only speak to you, which is why he had to live until you came here. It’s like he suspected something was wrong with me these last few weeks, that something had gone awry with his perfect little girl.”

I’ll tell you what went awry with his perfect little girl,
Tink growled.
She never existed in the first place. I’m going to work.

My blood sang as her power latched on, while I tried to act like nothing was happening. Hard to do when it felt like my brain was going to ooze from my ears like candle wax. Still, I couldn’t signal to Jie that I was prepared for any attack she threw at me.

“You speak very poetic English for a Chinese teenager. I probably should’ve questioned that.” I glanced over my shoulder to see if the new danger was close, but a field of mist hid the village. Shots rang out, followed by shouted orders.

“That’s the problem with humans. They believe with their eyes,” Jie-Demon said in falsely sweet tones. “And guess what I’m going to make them believe today? That they should be
very
afraid of what comes out of the dark.”

This was going downhill fast. I stopped circling and held the knife loose and ready. “Yeah? Show me.”

Her eyes flashed brighter and her fangs lengthened. I dug my heels into the dirt, making sure I had traction to spring away if need be. The mist had become so thick, I couldn’t see Xing Li’s house and I had no idea if Will was still inside or had gone to check out the screams. A less rational part of me wondered if Dad was creeping around with a sniper rifle in his hand, looking for a way to bail me out.

I hoped he was.

Jie’s eyes spoke of malevolence and pain, and my blade matched her light with a blue glow of its own that slowly burned hotter until it was white.

I laughed low in my throat. “Now you’ve done it. Tink’s pissed with you.”

In between one heartbeat and the next, the demon girl was on me like a rabid fairy. She led with a blur of claws, and when I spun away, I found out the hard way that she’d faked me out. Like an extra out of a Bruce Lee movie, she whirled faster than I could track and landed a kick right in the center of my chest. Something popped on impact and I could barely draw breath afterward.

Seeing stars, I staggered back and bumped into something—the building across the street. Jie pressed forward, punching me square in the gut, which threw my head against the wall. No idea how I stayed conscious, but when she pulled back for another kick, I grabbed her leg and tossed her to the ground. Chest heaving, I brought the knife up to stab her, but before I finished the move, she had rolled out of the way and back onto her feet.

Matt Archer life lesson number ninety-seven: Kung Fu demons suck.

I lost her in the mist. I really wanted to call for backup, but not knowing where she was meant I had to keep quiet. If I couldn’t see her, maybe—maybe—she couldn’t see me.

I backed up against the wall so Jie couldn’t sneak up behind me. Until I could breathe without wheezing, I was going to let her do all the work.

“Tink?” I whispered. “Can you tell where she is?”

No, which is pretty disturbing. Wherever this beast came from, she’s very well camouflaged, both physically and spectrally.

Disturbing. Understatement for sure. The screams had moved farther way, like whatever was attacking the village was herding everyone toward the water. Occasionally I heard one of the men call out and once, Will answered. Unless Dad was out here searching for me, I was alone.

So I did something totally irrational: I closed my eyes.

I wasn’t sure why I did it, but in the back of my head, I thought about all the times I sensed I was being watched. It wasn’t because I saw or heard something. I
felt
it. I didn’t care if it sounded like a cheap faux-Jedi trick. Like Jie said—humans relied too much on their eyes. Time to find something that worked better.

I dragged in a slow, painful breath. The smell of rotting fruit, mingled with the faintest hint of sulfur teased my nose. Upwind. She was upwind. I thought about the wind chimes, how they seemed to move without any air. Which way had they swayed? Left. So she’d be to my right.

A faint scuff of a shoe catching a pebble on the road, also to my right.

Hold,
Tink murmured.
I feel her now. She’s close. Stay still.

Tink’s power thrummed through me, and holding still did nothing but let it build to nearly unbearable levels. I opened my eyes and waited. One heartbeat followed another and another, then the wind changed. A shadow moved in the mist, giving me enough warning to evade a kick to the head.

Instead, I ducked low and sprang outward like an offensive linesman trying to stop a blitz. Jie’s leg rammed into my shoulder, but I hung onto her hips and tackled her.

I whipped the knife to her throat, pinning her body under mine. She struggled, but even with demonic strength on her side, it was nothing compared to the power Tink gave me, and Jie couldn’t gain any leverage.

“What answers?” I growled. “What were you trying to confirm from Xing Li?”

She laughed, and the sound was guttural—nothing like what you’d expect to come out of a petite Chinese girl. “You already have all the answers you need. And now, so do we.”

I gripped her shoulders, pulled up her head and slammed it down. The real Matt, buried deep inside Tink’s rage, questioned this violence against a girl. Hunter Matt knew this
thing
wasn’t a girl. “What answers?”

“The Archer,” she said, eyes gleaming like a lizard’s. “It’s all there, and we know what it means. One last piece left to learn, locked away in words that mean nothing. Once we have that, we’ll have it all.”

I pressed the knife against her throat, nicking the skin. Blood welled up around the cut. “What words? Tell me!”

“No.”

In a flash, she grabbed my hand, a manic smile twisting her pretty face. Before I could stop her, she plunged the blade into her chest, laughing the whole time.

She died smiling.

Sick, reeling from what she’d said, I slumped back against the wall of the house and watched as blood saturated the front of Jie’s shirt. Answers—they had them. And now I couldn’t even ask. Not even Xing Li could help me; they’d taken him, too.

A scream startled me out of my funk. I couldn’t ask Jie, but there was something else out here, and I could sure as hell could ask
it
.

 

* * *

 

 

I plowed through the mist, occasionally bumping into lamp posts, small trees and once, a statue of Buddha. Hoping the fog would lift as I got closer to the water, I followed the shouts, screams and, yeah, those were growls in the distance. The trees grew denser, forcing me to slow down. Every second that ticked by made Tink more agitated.

As I crested a hill outside the village, the mist lifted, almost like someone raising a veil from the world.

And once I could see the battlefield, I really wished I hadn’t.

Two dozen men, women and children lay on the rich green grass, some dead, some dying, all hurt. Their blood made dark stains, distinct against each fragile blade. Kelly was kneeling by a boy, tying a tourniquet around his leg. He glanced up when I passed and pointed downrange. “The rest of the Pandas showed up. And there’s something else, but we haven’t gotten a good look at it yet.”

I nodded and took off at a sprint. The shouts of men fighting, of gunshots and grenades, were distinct now, coming from a dense copse of trees right at the edge of a small lake that had formed off to the side of the river. The grove shook and swayed as the battle raged.

Tink picked that moment to blast me with everything she had left. I stumbled a few steps, but kept my footing and charged into the trees without thinking about anything but drawing blood. Good thing, because the second I cleared the tree line, a huge black and white paw swung down from overhead and nearly knocked my head off. I skidded to a stop as a Panda dropped out of the branches with a snarl.

While regular pandas are gentle and cute, this monstrosity looked like it had stepped out of a nightmare. Tall, with human proportioned limbs, a thick body and the slitted eyes of a reptile that glowed a faint purple, the creature boasted claws like knives and teeth like something out of a sawmill.

“Hello, ugly,” I said. “How’s it hanging?”

It cocked its head, a lot like my older brother did when he was annoyed with me. Its response was in Chinese, but it sounded like, “Look who’s talking, asswipe.”

“Oh, you’re going to be a fun one,” I said. “I can tell.”

It chuckled and shook its arms out. I watched its shoulders to see which way it would move, but kept all my focus on the knife in my hand. The handle felt comfortable, ready. So did I, so when the monster swung in a left/right combination, I ducked right under its arms and stabbed it in the chest before it figured out where I went.

I was already moving on before it hit the dirt.

You’re in a mood,
Tink said, as I made my way toward the team.
I like it.

“Like it on your own time,” I said, slipping around another tree to crouch behind a moss-covered fallen log. I could hear Will shouting for cover—not much farther now. “What do you see out there?”

Touchy. But, as you wish.
She went quiet for nearly thirty seconds—a lifetime in the midst of a fight.
Two Pandas left. And him.

I wasn’t going to worry about
him
until I had to. “Okay. Let’s go.”

I crept forward, checking both the branches above, and any piles of leaves or depressions on the ground. A lot of places to hide out here, and I didn’t intend to be caught off guard. Once or twice I thought I saw something out of the corner of my eye, but it turned out to be a shadow.

“One got through!” Lanningham shouted. “Sir, do we engage?”

“Don’t engage. Not yet.” Johnson shouted back. “Where’s Archer?”

I had only five seconds to wonder what “got through” before a Panda, checking over its shoulder as it ran, came barreling through the trees right at me. It stopped short and shrieked.

“Hi there,” I said, smiling, sure it looked more like I was baring my teeth. “May I have this dance?”

This one was smarter than the first. It started backing away, toward the team. I wasn’t about to let it go, though, and I charged. Caught between a wielder and a hard place, its flight instinct switched to fight and it turned suddenly. Not expecting it, I couldn’t avoid the paw coming at my head. It grazed my temple, and the force was enough to slam me into a tree. I slid down and landed hard on my ass. My vision had gone kaleidoscope, and six abstract Pandas stalked over.

Tink growled and my eyesight sharpened with a snap to my forehead. I stayed limp against the tree, waiting. When the Panda bent to tear me open with its claws, I rolled away and slashed its calves. It howled and hobbled after me, but I was already up and I put the blade in its back.

With a reproachful whimper, it teetered and fell.

“I’m getting too old for this.” I felt along my hairline and my hand came away slick with blood. Despite Tink’s help, my vision was still haloed around the edges and I wobbled when I tried to walk. I crouched, taking deep breaths to clear my head, thinking a nap sounded good.

A small earthquake made the entire copse shiver.

“God almighty!” Blakeney yelled up ahead. “Can someone tell me what that thing is?”

I had an idea, which was proven right when I caught the scent of wood smoke.

Fire had arrived—and it was going to try to burn us out.

 

Chapter Twenty-Four

 

I staggered into a clearing and met up with Lanningham, who was staring into the trees across the way. A flamethrower hung loose in his hand. The ground had been churned up by boots and paws and claws, but by my quick count, the whole team was intact.

Including Dad, who was crouched halfway up a tree with an assault rifle. Now that was a familiar sight.

“What happened?” Lanningham said, sounding hoarse. “We’ve been looking all over for you!”

“Long story,” I said. The smell of smoke was getting stronger, and tendrils of gray were reaching into the sky not far from our position. “What’ve we got?”

“Something that doesn’t give a good goddamn about flamethrowers, that’s what we’ve got,” he said, pointing.

I took a few steps forward, squinting, and saw Will waiting at the other side of the clearing. Beyond that, deep in the trees, something huge and orange waded toward him. Its hide undulated, like ripples on the lake. What could make it waver like that? Were those scales? I stared harder, then recoiled.

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