Obsidian (A Lux Novel)
Page 24
His shoulders stiffened. “It’s not like that.”
I took a deep breath. “I’m not going to tell anyone about you guys. I know the risks to you and to me if I did. You all don’t have anything to worry about.”
“And who are you for us to trust?” Mr. Garrison asked, his eyes narrowed on me. “Don’t get me wrong. I’m sure you’re a great girl. You’re smart and you seem to have your head on straight, but this is life or death for us. Our freedom. Trusting a human is not something we can afford.”
“She saved my life last night,” Daemon said.
Andrew laughed. “Oh, come on, Daemon. The Arum must’ve knocked you around. There is no way a human could’ve saved any of our lives.”
“What is it with you?” I snapped, unable to stop myself. “You act like we’re incapable of doing anything. Sure, you guys are whatever, but that doesn’t mean we’re single-celled organisms.”
A choked laugh came from Adam.
“She did save my life.” Daemon stood, drawing everyone’s attention. “There were three Arum that attacked, the brethren of one I killed. I was able to destroy one, but the two overpowered me. They had me down and had already begun reaching for my powers. I was a goner.”
“Daemon,” Dee said, paling. “You didn’t tell us any of this.”
Mr. Garrison still looked doubtful. “I don’t see how she could’ve helped. She’s a human. The Arum are powerful, amoral, and vicious. How can one girl stand against them?”
“I’d given her the obsidian blade I carry and told her to run.”
“You gave her the blade when you could’ve used it?” Ash sounded stunned. “Why?” Her eyes darted to me. “You don’t even like her.”
“That may be the case, but I wasn’t going to let her die because I don’t like her.”
I flinched. Dayum. An ache started in my chest, like a burning coal, even though I didn’t care.
“But you could’ve been hurt,” Ash protested. Fear thickened her voice. “You could’ve been killed because you gave your best defense to her.”
Daemon sighed, sitting back down on the arm of the recliner. “I have other ways to defend myself. She did not. She didn’t run like I told her. Instead she came back and she killed the Arum who was about to end me.”
Reluctant pride shone in my bio teacher’s eyes. “That is…admirable.”
I rolled my eyes, starting to get a headache.
“It was a hell of a lot more than admirable,” Dee interjected, staring at me. “She didn’t have to do that. That has to account for more than being admirable.”
“It’s courageous,” Adam said quietly, staring at the throw rug. “It is what any of us would’ve done.”
“But that doesn’t change the fact that she knows about us,” Andrew shot back, casting his twin a scornful look. “And we are forbidden from telling any human.”
“We didn’t tell her,” Dee said, stirring restlessly. “It kind of happened.”
“Oh, like it happened last time.” Andrew rolled his eyes as he turned to Mr. Garrison. “This is unbelievable.”
Mr. Garrison shook his head. “After Labor Day weekend, you told me that something occurred but you took care of it.”
“What happened?” Ash asked, obvious this was the first she’d heard of anything. “You’re talking about the first time she was glowing?”
I was like a glowworm, apparently.
“What happened?” asked Adam, sounding curious.
“I walked out in front of a truck.” I waited for the inevitable “duh” look, which I got.
Ash stared at Daemon, her blue eyes growing to the size of saucers. “You stopped the truck?”
He nodded.
A crestfallen look appeared on her face as she looked away. “Obviously that couldn’t be explained away. She’s known since then?”
I figured this wasn’t the time to mention that I had my suspicions before then.
“She didn’t freak out,” Dee said. She listened to us, understood why it’s important, and that’s it. Until last night, what we are hasn’t even been an issue.”
“But you lied to me—both of you.” Mr. Garrison leaned against the wall, in a space between their TV and an overstocked bookcase. “How am I to trust you now?”
A dull, stabbing pain flared behind my eyes.
“Look, I understand the risk. More than any of you in the room,” Daemon said, rubbing his chest where the Arum had shoved his shadowy hand. “But what is done is done. We need to move forward.”
“As in contacting the DOD?” Andrew asked. “I’m sure they’d know what to do with her.”
“I’d like to see you try that, Andrew. Really I would, because even after last night, and I’m not yet fully charged, I could still kick your ass.”
Mr. Garrison cleared his throat. “Daemon, threats aren’t necessary.”
“Aren’t they?” Daemon asked.
A heavy silence fell in the room. I think Adam was on our side, but it was clear that Andrew and Ash weren’t. When Mr. Garrison finally spoke, I had a hard time meeting his gaze.
“I don’t think this is wise,” he said. “Not with what…with what happened before, but I’m not going to turn you over. Not unless you give me reason to. And maybe you won’t. I don’t know. Humans are such…fickle creatures. What we are, what we can do, has to be protected at all costs. I think you understand that.” He paused, clearing his throat. “You’re safe, but we aren’t.”
Andrew and Ash looked less than thrilled by Mr. Garrison’s decision, but they didn’t push it. Other than exchanging looks with one another, they moved on to how to deal with the last Arum.
“He won’t wait. They’re not known for being patient,” Mr. Garrison said, sitting down on the couch. “I could contact the other Luxen, but I’m not sure if that would be smart. Where we may be more confident in her, they won’t be.”
“And there’s the problem that she’s a megawatt light bulb right now,” Ash added. “It doesn’t even matter if we don’t say anything. The moment she goes anywhere in town, they are going to know that something big happened again.”
I scowled at her. “Well, I don’t know what I’m supposed to do about that.”
“Any suggestions?” Daemon said. “Because the sooner she’s not carrying a trace, the better all of this is going to be.”
Yeah, because I bet he was looking forward to babysitting me again.
“Who cares?” Andrew said, rolling his eyes. “We have the Arum issue to worry about. He’s gonna see her no matter where we put her. All of us, right now, are in danger. Any of us near her are in danger. We can’t wait around. We have to find the last Arum.”
Dee shook her head. “If we can get the trace off her, then that will buy us time to find him. Getting rid of the trace should be the first priority.”
“I say we drive her out to the middle of nowhere and leave her ass there,” Andrew muttered.
“Thanks,” I said, rubbing my temples. “You’re so very helpful with all of this.”
He smiled at me. “Hey, just offering my suggestions.”
“Shut up, Andrew,” Daemon said.
Andrew rolled his eyes.
“Once we get the trace off her, she’d be safe,” Dee insisted and tucked her hair back, face pinched. “The Arum don’t mess with humans, really. Sarah…she’d been in the wrong place at the wrong time.”
They launched into another discussion about what was more important: locking me up somewhere, which didn’t make sense because my light could be seen through anything, or trying to figure out a way to make the trace fade other than killing me. And I seriously think Andrew believed that was a valid consideration. Asshole.
“I have an idea,” Adam said. Everyone looked at him. “The light around her is a byproduct of us using our power, right? And our power is concentrated energy. And we get weaker when we use our powers and use more energy.”
Mr. Garrison blinked, his eyes sparking with interest. “I think I’m
following you.”
“I’m not,” I muttered.
“Our powers fade the more we use them, the more energy we exert.” Adam turned to Daemon. “It should work the same with our traces, because the trace is just residual energy we are leaving on someone. We get her to exert her own energy; it should fade what’s around her. Maybe not completely, but get it down to levels that aren’t going to draw every Arum on Earth to us.”
That hardly made any sense to me, but Mr. Garrison was nodding. “It should work.”
Daemon scratched his chest, his expression doubtful. “And how are we going to get her to exert energy.”
Andrew grinned from across the room. “We could take her out to a field and chase her around in our cars. That sounds fun.”
“Oh, fuc—”
Daemon’s laugh cut me off. “I don’t think that’s a good idea. Funny, but not a good idea. Humans are fragile.”
“How about I shove my fragile foot up your ass,” I said, irritated. My head was pounding, and I didn’t find a single one of them funny. I pushed Daemon off the arm of the chair and stood. “I’m getting a drink. Let me know when guys come up with anything that won’t potentially kill me in the process.”
Their conversation continued as I hurried from the room. I wasn’t thirsty. I just had to get out of there, away from them. My nerves felt shot. Entering the kitchen, I ran my hands through my hair. Blissful silence eased some of the pounding in my head. I squeezed my eyes shut until small spots danced behind my closed lids.
“I figured you’d be hiding in the kitchen.”
I yelped at the sound of Ash’s quiet voice.
“Sorry,” she said, leaning against the counter. “I didn’t mean to scare you.”
Not sure if I believed that. “Okay.”
Up close, Ash was the kind of beautiful that made me wish I could drop twenty pounds and run to the nearest makeup department. She knew it, too. There was a confidence in the tilt of her chin. “This must be a lot for you to handle, learning everything and then facing what you did last night.”
I eyed her warily. Even though she wasn’t trying to snap my head off, I wasn’t going to relax. “It’s been different.”
A faint smile crossed her pouty lips. “What did that TV show say? ‘The truth is out there.’”
“X-Files,” I told her. “I’ve wanted to watch Close Encounters of the Third Kind ever since I found out. Seems like the most realistic of all the alien movies.”
Another small smile and then she looked up, meeting my eyes. “I’m not going to pretend we’re ever going to be best friends or that I trust you. I don’t. You did dump spaghetti on my head.” I winced at that, but she went on. “And yeah, maybe I was being a bitch, but you don’t understand. They are all I have. I’ll do anything to keep them safe.”
“I would never do anything to put them in danger.”
She moved closer, and I fought every instinct to back up. I held my ground. “But you already have. How many times has Daemon intervened on your behalf, run the risk of exposing what we are and what we can do? You being here is putting each of us at risk.”
Anger tore through me like a fire. “I’m not doing anything. And last night—”
“Last night you saved Daemon’s life. Great. Good for you.” She tucked her uber-straight hair behind her ear. “Of course, Daemon’s life wouldn’t have needed saving if you hadn’t led the Arum straight to him. And what you think you have with Daemon, you don’t.”
Oh, for the love of babies everywhere. “I don’t think I have anything with Daemon.”
“You like Daemon, don’t you?”
Smirking, I grabbed a water bottle off the counter. “Not really.”
Ash cocked her head to the side. “He likes you.”
My heart didn’t do a stupid little leap in my chest. “He doesn’t like me. You even said so yourself.”
“I was wrong.” She folded her slender arms as she studied me intently. “He’s curious about you. You’re different. New. Shiny. Boys—even our kind—like shiny new toys.”
I took a long drink of the water. “Well, this is one toy he has no intention of playing with.” When he was awake that is. “And really, the Arum…”
“The Arum will end up killing him.” Her tone didn’t change one bit. It remained flat, emotionless. “Because of you, little human. He will get himself killed protecting you.”
Chapter 26
“Honey, are you sure you’re feeling okay?” Mom hovered over the couch, frowning. She’d been at it all day since I’d woken up. “Do you need anything? Some chicken soup. Hugs? Kisses?”
I laughed. “Mom, I’m fine.”
“You sure?” she asked, pulling the afghan over my shoulders. “Did something happen at the dance?”
“No. Nothing happened.” Nothing if I didn’t count the billion text messages Simon had sent me, apologizing for how he’d acted, and the attack of the killer aliens afterward. Nope. Nothing at all. “I’m okay.”
I was tired after spending most of Saturday in a house full of arguing aliens. Two of them didn’t trust me. One of them thought I was going to be the death of Daemon. Adam didn’t seem to hate me, but he wasn’t overly friendly. I’d snuck out before the pizza they ordered arrived. Ash had been right. They were a family. All of them, and I didn’t fit.
When Mom left for work, I snuggled down and tried watching a movie on Syfy, but it turned out to be about an alien invasion. Their aliens weren’t beings of light, but giant insects that ate humans.
I turned the channel.
It was pouring outside—so hard I could barely hear anything over it. I knew Daemon would be nearby, especially until they figured out how to get me to exert enough energy to fade the trace. All of their suggestions involved the outdoors and extreme physical exertion, which wasn’t happening today.
The sound of rain was lulling. After awhile, my eyes were too heavy to keep open. As I was about to doze off, a knock on the door jarred me.
I threw the afghan off and padded over to the door. Doubting the Arum would knock, I opened the door. Daemon stood there, barely wet even though rain fell in sheets behind him. There were a few darker dots of gray across the shoulders of his long-sleeved shirt. I bet he used super-alien speed. Who needed an umbrella? And why in the hell was he in jogging pants?
“What’s up?”
“Are you going to invite me in?” he asked.
Pressing my lips together, I stepped aside and let him in. He moved past me, scanning the rooms. “What are you looking for?”
“Your mom’s not home, right?”
I shut the door. “Her car’s not outside.”
His eyes narrowed. “We need to work on fading your trace.”
“It’s pouring outside.” I moved past him, grabbing the remote to turn the TV off. Daemon beat me to it. The thing switched off before I pressed the button. “Show-off,” I muttered.
“Been called worse.” He frowned and then laughed. “What are you wearing?”
I glanced down, cheeks flaming. One thing I wasn’t wearing was a bra. Christ, how could I forget? “Shut up.”
He laughed again. “What are they? Keebler elves?”
“No! They’re Santa’s elves. I love these pajama bottoms. My dad got them for me.”
His smug grin faded a little. “You wear them because they remind you of him?”
I nodded.
He didn’t say anything. Instead, he shoved his hands into the front pockets of his jeans. “My people believe that when we pass on, our essence is what lights the stars in the universe. Seems stupid to believe in something like that, but when I look at the sky at night I like to think that at least two of the stars out there are my parents. And one is Dawson.”
“That’s not stupid at all.” I paused, surprised by how touching that belief actually was. Wasn’t it the same as ours, believing our loved ones were in heaven watching over us? “Maybe one of them is my dad.”
His eyes met mine then fl
itted away. “Well, anyway, the elves are sexy.”
And a serious, deep moment effectively smashed into nothing. “Did you guys come up with another way to fade the trace?”
“Not really.”
“You’re planning on making me work out, aren’t you?”
“Yeah, that’s one of the ways of doing it.”
I sat on the couch, quickly growing irritated. “Well, there isn’t much we can do today.”
“You have a problem going out in the rain?”
“When it’s almost the end of October and cold, yes I do.” I plucked up the afghan and placed it in my lap. “I’m not going out there and running today.”
Daemon sighed. “We can’t wait around, Kat. Baruck is still out there and the longer we wait, the more dangerous it is.”
I knew he had a point, but still, running around in the cold ass rain? “What about Simon? Did you ever tell the others about him?”
“Andrew is keeping an eye on him. Since he had a game yesterday, it faded most of his trace. It’s very faint now. Which proves that this idea is going to work.”
I snuck a peek at him. Instead of seeing the stoic expression, I saw the one from yesterday morning. The look in his eyes before he realized he was in bed with me. My body warmed. Stupid, stupid hormones.
He reached behind him and pulled out the obsidian blade. “This is another reason why I stopped over.”
The obsidian was shiny, glossy black as he laid it on the coffee table. It wasn’t glowing a mottled red like it had been when near the Arum.
“I want you to keep this with you, just in case. Put it in your backpack, purse, or whatever you carry.”
I stared at it a moment. “Seriously?”
Daemon avoided my eyes. “Yeah, even if we manage to get the trace to fade, keep this on you until we finish off Baruck.”
“But don’t you need it more than I do? Dee?”
“Don’t worry about us.”
Harder said than done. I stared at the obsidian, wondering how in the world I was supposed to stash this thing in my bag. “Do you think Baruck is still here?”