The P.J. Stone Gates Trilogy (#1-3) (22 page)

BOOK: The P.J. Stone Gates Trilogy (#1-3)
7.04Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

His iridescent green eyes flared brighter as he looked at me. “I will not break your trust, but I cannot be in your presence any longer for the moment. Call for me when you need me for your plan. I will always be there for you when you need me.” He met my eyes with a longing so intense I shivered, and just like all the times before, he simply disappeared.

I began to sob as I realized that ridding myself of Khol wouldn’t be an easy task. He wanted me, thought of me as his already, and he wasn’t even human. What if he eventually lost his patience and hurt Bryn? What if he tried to kill him? I had no idea if a Guardian would be any match for a dragon, and I really didn’t want to find out. I would protect Bryn at any cost, but that was something to worry about at another time. I needed to focus on figuring out a plan to stop my latest vision.

I wiped at my tears with the back of my arm and turned to face Jeremy and Jenna. The two of them started to rush towards me, but I lifted up my hands to stave them off. “No, I’m fine. And even if I weren’t, we don’t have time to worry about it now. We need to figure out what to do about my vision. We have to save all those people.”

Jeremy’s features were lined with tension, and his eyes seethed with anger, directed towards Khol, I assumed. “Fine. But we are going to have a conversation about what just happened. I need to know how to protect you from—whatever he is.”

I wasn’t going to argue with Jeremy that it wasn’t his place to protect me, or that I didn’t think he really could anyways, so I decided to placate him for the time being. “Okay. But not now.”

“And me,” Jenna chimed in, studying my face with that look she got when I felt like she was seeing too much. “I need to know
everything.”
She caught my gaze and narrowed hers at me. Yep, she picked up on a lot more than I’d probably wanted her to, damn Speakers.

“Yeah, okay.” I growled. “But not now; now is the time to plan out what we’re going to do to stop my vision.”

Both Jeremy and Jenna nodded agreement in unison. It almost made me want to laugh—almost.

 

Chapter Fourteen

 

We had been able to narrow down where the school from my vision was by the cheerleader uniform that had been on one of the victims. Then, by browsing school websites, I had recognized the entranceway from my vision as well. As luck would have it, the school was only a thirty-minute drive from where we were, which would have given us plenty of time—if it hadn’t taken us all night to figure out where we were going.

We were currently all packed into Jenna’s bright yellow VW Bug, speeding towards our destination. And by all, I meant me, Jenna, Jeremy, and yes, even Khol. Why Khol had felt the need to go with us in the car was beyond me, but I had a sneaking suspicion it had something to do with Jeremy, and that he wanted to simply spend more time with me. Ever since that lifelike vision of Bryn, Khol had been almost clingy.
Dragons, clingy
. . .
Who would have thought?

“So when we get there, you point out this guy to us, and Khol and I will take him out. You and Jenna aren’t to go anywhere near this mess, in case something goes wrong,” Jeremy stated firmly.

“Yeah, sure, whatever,” I grumbled, none too happy with the situation. I wanted to help, too, damn it! But after the umpteenth time of me arguing my case, and both Jeremy and Khol threatening to tie me up and to not let me go at all, I finally gave in. I should have been happy that they could at least agree about something—but I wasn’t. My plan to get off the sidelines wasn’t exactly panning out for me.

“Sure, no problem,” Jenna added, obviously not feeling as put out by everything as I was. I shot her a glare. Maybe if we had both argued my point with Jeremy and Khol, we would have won. “Stop glaring at me, P.J. I’m not going to take your side just for the hell of it. They’re kind of right about this one, as much as I hate to admit it.”

I replied by turning away to glower out the window. Maybe she was right, but I didn’t have to let her know that.

“There is no point for you to be there after you indentify this boy from your vision. I would only be worried about you if you were there with us. That could cause me to make a mistake,” Khol spoke softly, bringing his warm palm up to touch my cheek from the backseat. I hated the fact that my body wanted to lean into the warmth he offered, hated that my body wanted more—so much more—from him.

“Hey. Get your hands off of her,” Jeremy growled. “She isn’t yours.”

“Oh, but she is mine, and I will touch her whenever and however I wish.” Khol shifted as he pushed his massive frame into the space between the front two seats and pulled me to him, crushing his lips to mine. I barely had time to process what was going on before Khol’s tongue invaded my mouth in an aggressive kiss. Sparks of warmth seemed to erupt across my skin as all coherent thoughts fled my mind. Then the car swerved, and Khol pulled away from our embrace.

“Stop! Just stop!” Jenna yelled. “No kissing and no fighting in my car! We’re on a mission here, people, and it doesn’t include a sword fight over who gets to mouth rape P.J. first!”

I slumped back into my seat, my face heating. “That wasn’t my fault, and no one gets to mouth rape me because I already belong to Bryn.” I peered around the edge of the seat to see Khol and Jeremy glaring at each other. What was I going to do with the two of them? They just couldn’t seem to get it through their thick heads that I belonged to Bryn already. If anyone got to mouth rape me, it was going to be Bryn. Of course, we would have to be using a very loose definition of rape if that were the case. In fact, it would only apply if rape suddenly meant
willing participant
when it came to Bryn.

“We’re here,” Jenna said as she threw the car into park. My head snapped up to see a high school that looked pretty much like any other high school, except this one apparently had murderous aliens enrolled.

I gulped, the reality of the situation finally hitting me. We were going to do this; we were actually going to do this. I kept staring at the school as I stepped out of the car and began walking up the front walk as if caught in a tractor beam. I heard Jeremy and Khol talking to me, and yet I couldn’t look away, especially when I saw the girl from my vision—the cheerleader—alive and well, and talking animatedly to a group of girls. “This is it. This is really the place,” I whispered. I felt a large warm hand wrap around mine, and I looked up to meet Khol’s electric green eyes. “Won’t your eyes, and well, how you look, stand out too much?” A thought that—as bizarre as it sounded—I hadn’t even considered until that moment.

“No,” Khol said with a tiny smile. “I can look human when I want to.” And just like that, his eyes went matte to look like regular, everyday, green eyes. Nothing else changed really, but with his eyes looking normal, the rest of him looked normal, too. Well, if you could overlook how drop dead gorgeous he was . . . So okay, maybe normal wasn’t the best word to use to describe Khol, but he did at least look human.

“Why didn’t you ever do that before? I mean, at least when you first met me, so I didn’t freak out as much?”

“I wanted you to see me as I truly am. I want no secrets between us.”

“Oh,” I said and looked away.
He is good
. And yep, if Bryn weren’t in the picture, I’d probably already have given him what he wanted: me. I cleared my throat and scanned everyone around us as we moved closer to the front doors. I glanced back to see Jenna waiting in the car with a frown on her face as she watched us. I hated to admit it, but I kind of, sort of wished I were back there with her.

“Ready?” Jeremy asked as I reached for the front door of the school. I turned to take in his solemn face and then looked up at Khol, who had an almost identical expression plastered across his own. I nodded once in affirmation before stepping into the main entrance of the school.

All noise seemed to stop for me. It was as if the ocean were rushing inside my ears, and a weird sense of de´jà vu settled over me. I scanned all the faces around me, intent on finding the one I was looking for, but I didn’t see him yet. What I really wanted to do was yell at everyone to run, to warn everyone that a crazy alien masquerading as one of their peers was about to use them for target practice. And yet I knew it would be useless. Hell, maybe the alien would shoot me first, if that’s what I did, because he would know I knew the truth, and he would try to take me out. “I don’t see him,” I whispered, hoping Khol and Jeremy heard me. Khol simply squeezed my hand, and Jeremy stayed silent. I knew they were both scanning the crowd for danger, not liking that I had to identify the alien from my vision for them. If this guy didn’t show up soon, the both of them would probably carry me back to the car because they didn’t like putting me in danger any longer.

And of course, that’s when I saw him. His dark Emo hair was hanging in his face, and as he walked in the front door, he flipped his hair out of his eyes and looked right at me. I felt myself go ashen as I tried to alert Khol and Jeremy, my voice seemingly stuck in my throat. The Emo kid’s eyes narrowed as he studied me, wariness showing as he took in the sight of Khol and Jeremy flanking me, even if they hadn’t spotted him yet. My arm rose on its own volition and pointed straight at Emo Alien Boy. “That’s him,” I squeaked, tugging on Khol’s arm. “That’s him,” I squeaked again.

Khol moved first, shoving me behind him, just as Jeremy reached for his power to do—well, I’m not exactly sure what because Emo Boy wasn’t going to hang around to let me find out. He pivoted on his heels and made a mad dash for the front door. “Go!” Khol commanded, “I’ll protect her.” Jeremy barely glanced at Khol before he took off running after Emo Boy. I started to move forward in an attempt to engage in the chase, but Khol had other ideas. He swung around, scooped me up in his arms and suddenly we were back in my bedroom. He deposited me on my bed before giving me a stern face and narrowing his eyes at me, which, by the way, were glowing again. “Stay,” he growled before disappearing.

I stared in shock at the empty spot where Khol had just been, anger slowly bubbling up to the surface of my consciousness. I couldn’t believe he’d just done that to me. And why the hell hadn’t he just
popped
the lot of us over to the school instead of making us drive if he could transport other people?

“You get your ass back here right now, Khol!” I hissed into my empty room, knowing he would somehow hear me, or at least know what I was feeling. I got no response. A few moments went by, and then a few more, and still nothing. That was it; I wasn’t going to just
stay
like Khol had demanded. I wasn’t a damn puppy.

I made my way downstairs to the kitchen, and even though I was supposed to be at school, my parents were both at work so I knew I’d be in the clear. I scooped up the keys to my father’s car, knowing that it would be here because he carpooled into the office and it wasn’t his turn to drive. Normally, my father wouldn’t let me come anywhere near his car. I’d even learned to drive in my mother’s car, but what he wouldn’t know wouldn’t hurt him. At least I hoped he wouldn’t know when all was said and done.

I only paused for a second before starting up my father’s brand new Audi something. Honestly, I don’t speak car, so I had no idea what model it was, just that it was an Audi.
And new, and shiny, and very pretty
, I thought as I inhaled the fragrant aroma of new car smell. I really hoped I didn’t wrap it around a telephone pole or run it into a ditch. I certainly wasn’t receiving any good driver awards anytime soon. I was lucky I’d passed my driver’s test at all—it only took me three tries.

I tentatively eased my way out of the garage, which I didn’t hit, so that was a step in the right direction. I stopped at the end of the driveway and adjusted the mirrors one more time before peeling out onto the street. My lips turned up in an involuntarily smile as I sped off to my destination. Thirty minutes? More like fifteen at the rate I was driving.

 

 

I was about five minutes away from the school when something, or rather someone, caught my attention: Emo Boy. I stomped down on the brake, screeching to a halt, causing him to swivel around to look at me. Why hadn’t Jeremy or Khol caught him? Where the hell were they? I sat frozen in the driver’s seat of my father’s car just staring at Emo Boy, when I saw him reach back into his trench coat. I swore as I watched the shotgun emerge from hiding and point in my direction. Uncertainty sprang to life in me. I didn’t know if I should simply duck and cover, or run him down. After all, he was pointing a gun at me. The alien smiling from inside Emo Boy was enough to let me know that he was about to pull the trigger, so I ducked just as the front windshield of my father’s car exploded all over me.
Shit, he’d definitely notice that.

Other books

Traitor by Rory Clements
Hold Me Down Hard by Cathryn Fox
The Hamlet Warning by Leonard Sanders
Our First Christmas by Lisa Jackson
Reaper's Property by Joanna Wylde
Cain's Blood by Geoffrey Girard