by Lisa Daniels
Whatever she had felt inside, Bree’s face was back to the normal smile and her attitude lighthearted as she moved through the small town. Not quite a half hour passed before she was approached by a man and a woman. The woman was wringing her hands and the man looked distraught as they approached her.
“How can I help you?” she asked the couple as they couldn’t seem to find the words to talk.
They shared a frightened look before the man said, “It’s our children. You see, they have been ill and we don’t know what to do.”
Bree nodded, “Let’s go see what can be done.” She moved her hand indicating that she would follow them.
Without a backward glance, the couple began moving into the woods. Bree raised an eyebrow but followed them. The walk went further and further from the road and all forms of human civilization, but there was no doubt that she was following two humans.
Finally, the women turned to Bree and gestured toward a small cave, “I’m so sorry miss. We’ve had to live in a cave after our home burned down. And now I’m afraid-” the woman burst into tears.
The man put an arm around her shoulders. His eyes were on Bree as he said, “Please, miss. Please save our children.”
Bree looked at the cave, then at the couple. Extending her arms in an exaggerated stretch, she let out a very loud yawn. The couple looked at each other, but Bree ignored them and spoke to the area around her. “You can come out now.” She held her arms out and moved toward the cave, “You got a defenseless little medic here, so what is it you want? Apart from a long, painful death from your own stupidity.” There was a threat to her voice that reverberated around the area. As if to emphasize her point, there was an unexpected thud that shook the ground. Though it wasn’t anything she had done, Bree did not allow it to distract her.
She heard the hiss of steel behind her as the couple each pulled a weapon. “Yeah, you were far too ugly to be any kind of a woman.” She spun to look at the pair.
They leered at her as nearly two dozen men emerged from the forest. Bree was unfazed as they circled around her. Stifling a yawn, she looked at the fools as they leered at her.
Suddenly, she felt a tingling sensation that put her on edge. Her eyes darted around as she looked for the source of the disturbance. “Alright, which one of you is the shifter.” There were confused looks from the men, “I know one of you is, it’s not like you can hide that kind of power. Which one of you is it? Because I know you can tell that the lot of you are in much bigger trouble than just the Medics’ Association.”
The tallest of the men looked down at her, a wicked grin on his face, “We don’t know what you are talking about, but we sure do love that confidence. I hope you can keep it up because it’s been a long time since I felt any real spirit with a woman.”
Bree gave him a cold look before closing her eyes. She could hear the men approaching, but her attention was outside of the circle. Her brow furrowed as she opened her eyes. “Hey shifter, I know you are hiding in the woods. Why not come out and fight me instead of sending these pathetic things at me? I know you are quite powerful, so why not give me a real challenge?” The men around her were getting angry as she was addressing some strange presence and almost completely ignoring them.
The one who had played the woman growled, “I’ll show you who’s pathetic!” He charged, his sword raised above his head.
The instant that Bree turned to look at him, the man froze. He was just a few inches away, his sword ready for a downward chop. Where his body had been in full motion just a second before, he now could not move a muscle. And all of his muscles were screaming out in pain as they tried to move forward against an unseen force. The pain intensified as the other men stood and watched in horror. Slowly, Bree moved a hand up as if she were asking for money, a look of boredom on her face. “Yes, it is well done. It isn’t anything new as far as pathetic people I’ve seen, but it is a good reminder of just how insect like humans really are. You do realize that you are holding that all wrong, and only a fool opens himself up to easy attacks by doing that with his arms.” There was clear disdain in her voice as she critiqued his fighting stance. Her hand raised up a little more and the man’s feet left the ground. The sound of his whimpers began to echo louder around the area. “Oh, the words you say,” Bree gave him a seductive look before turning her attention back to the unseen shifter. “Fine, I suppose I’ll open up and let you see since I really do not feel like playing this game.” Bree dropped her hand and several things happened at once. The man who had been suspended over the air let out an ear-splitting shriek and collapsed in a heap at her feet. He was bleeding from several wounds and it was clear he was dead. The chest and other luggage appeared out of nowhere and dropped in the spaces around her.
The men stood back for a second confused as to what had happened. Then all as one, they charged at her. Bree sighed and slowed time around herself. She walked through the men quickly dispatching them before they could fully comprehend their position. To them it appeared she was moving at an impossibly fast pace. They were wrong. Creatures like Bree almost never needed to move fast.
Bree had taken care of all but four of the men when time resumed itself. It would be a while before she could use it again, but there was little need to be concerned. Holding out her hands, two swords seemed to materialize out of the air. Moving with less skill than Annora, she sliced through two of the men before they even realized she was armed. The remaining two circled her.
The one who appeared to be the leader leered at her, “A little witch traveling like a medic. Afraid that people won’t be hospitable if they knew what you are?”
Bree released the swords and they disappeared back into the air, “Shifter, I know you are there.”
“I’m talking to you bitch!” The man lunged at her, Bree held a hand up at him as if he were a naughty child, and the man froze. A pain in her side reminded the woman that there as another man still alive. Looking down she watched as the man pulled a dagger out of her side. The man she had been holding, fell to the ground and rose with his weapon at the ready. Bree looked at him with a curious expression as she heard a sickening sound behind her. It was the sound of metal tearing into flesh. Though she didn’t see what happened, Bree did watch the look on the man’s face in front of her. His eyes went wide in astonishment, then a strange metallic weapon seemed to sprout out of his head. He crumpled in front of her.
Bree’s head turned toward the forest. Standing there with his arms folded across his chest was the man who had kept her from falling just outside of the Palace Paradise. His arms bulged under the clothing he wore, and she found that their positioning drew her eyes to scan his entire form. Last time she had gotten a good look at his face, this time, her eyes wanted to drink in the rest of him. He was tall, probably about half a foot taller than her. It looked like he spent most of his days working out. Then again, most young shifters did. It was only with great reserve that Bree had been able to keep herself from taking most of the shifters she encountered to more private quarters. They were truly beautiful creatures, much more so than humans.
His face was unreadable as he spoke, “Why should I come out? I’m not with them.”
Chapter 3
A Painful Reminder
Bree’s heart skipped a beat as she looked at him, “I can see that.” She staggered before she remembered about being stabbed. The man continued to stand there, his expression unchanging. Bree put a hand on her side and muttered a few words. The blood stopped flowing and the skin repaired itself. A couple of seconds later, Bree was tapping the place where the wound had been. “That’s going to leave a mark.”
“I’m sure you will be alright,” the man was moving forward. Bree’s eyes turned to look at him, her heart racing in a way that was unhealthy after all of the magic she had just used, not to mention the serious injury that had just healed. “Well, you have me out here, but you will have to forgive me for not wanting to fight.”
Bree finally remembered her
self. Allowing her smile to spread across her face, she looked up at the man, “Afraid you might lose?” Her eyes danced with the possibility of the challenge.
The man looked down at her, “Not particularly.” His eyes took in her face, but he was not looking at the rest of her Bree realized with a hint of disappointment.
“So you’ve taken on someone like me before?” She was able to hide her disappointment with her usual flirtatious approach to dealing with men.
He snorted, “Hardly. I’ve never encountered a sorcerer or sorceress before. I thought they had died out a long time ago. Something about forbidding them or something.”
Bree laughed, “Yes, the old ones did die off, but you know how creatures are, can’t help but see what fresh horrors they can make after enough time has passed. The folly of believing that they know better.”
“That’s a human condition, not a humanoid one.” He looked down her with no emotion.
With a sigh, Bree conceded his point, “Yes, I suppose I have been spending so much time with humans that I forget that it’s really only them.” A line creased her brow, “It appears you don’t exactly avoid them either. That’s not exactly normal for shifters. And you aren’t the first one I’ve encountered in the last couple of days.”
The man opened his mouth to respond, but closed it, “What kind of shifter did you encounter?”
Bree shrugged, “He didn’t say. Or it’s more like,” she paused and looked thoughtfully at the man, “he refused to say. Not that I expected him to say. He was traveling with a second gen Pixie though. Are you tracking him?”
The man looked at her, the skepticism very obvious, “You couldn’t tell? You.” He cleared his throat, “I would think that a sorceress would be able to tell without trying.”
Bree scoffed, “Wow, such a high opinion of my kind based on no experience with us.”
The man walked around her a little, his eyes on her face, “It’s not an opinion. It’s the little information that I have on those with immense magical power. Your kind nearly ended the world on five separate occasions before being exiled and then condemned to extinction.”
Bree shrugged, “It’s probably the human in us that keeps us from fulling doing the right thing.” A knowing smile played on her lips.
The man studied her, “You still haven’t told me why you didn’t know what kind of shifter he was.”
“And you still haven’t told me if you are tracking him or not. I believe my question was first.”
The man looked away for a moment and sighed, “I’m not looking for him.”
“Ahh, you know someone who is though.”
His startling reddish eyes trained back on her face, “So you honestly couldn’t tell?”
Bree bit her lip, “I could. But I don’t like to barge in on people’s thoughts like that.” A seductive smile bloomed on her face, “I had already interrupted him and his companion working on making another baby.”
If not for the blush on the man’s face there would have been no way to tell that he registered what she meant. “That must have been rather embarrassing.”
Bree chuckled, “It wasn’t anything I hadn’t seen many times before.”
The man gave his head a very small shake, “I wasn’t talking about for you.”
Bree gasped, then narrowed her eyes as a sly grin replaced her smile, “Oh, you really don’t like me, do you?”
The man moved his eyebrows in a way that indicated that he was indifferent. “I don’t know you and have no intention of getting to know you. I am merely being polite and talking as you had asked me to.”
“If that is the case, don’t let me detain you. I just thought you were part of that group and would have preferred something a little more challenging.” She kicked one of the corpses around her.
With a bow, the man turned to leave.
Bree was shocked, “That’s it?”
The man stopped and turned to look at her, “You said ‘don’t let me detain you’ and I am taking you at your word.”
Bree clucked her tongue, “If you will only stay to talk because you are scared of me…” her voice trailed off.
He turned to face her, then he walked toward her, “I am not afraid of you. I just understand enough to know that fighting you is a stupid mistake and I have more pressing things to deal with than a meaningless challenge.”
Bree pouted as she looked at him, “I’m alright with not fighting, but couldn’t I thank you for your assistance?”
“It is unnecessary. You needed my intervention like I need a little house with a white picket fence.”
Bree’s laugh was melodic and beautiful as it echoed off of the rock behind them. She walked toward him, her hand extended, “I’m Bree.”
The man looked down at her hand, then up at her face. Without extending his own hand, he responded, “Calixto.”
“Will you not shake hands?”
“The weapons I’m hiding will not be found by feeling my hands, nor will yours, so it seems pointless.”
“You do realize that it has evolved into a form of politeness, don’t you?” She gave him a pointed look.
“Yes, human civility. I have seen enough of that. I have no desire to adapt any of it.”
“Speaking from personal experience?”
The man paused to look at the sky. When his eyes turned back to her, there was a sad expression in them, “What did the shifter you encountered look like? Did he have any tattoos or markings?”
Bree furrowed her brow, “He was just a little taller than me, at least I think he was. We didn’t exactly look at each other from equal footing.” She emphasized the last word and her heart skipped as the blush emerged on the man’s face again, “He was sinewy. There was no bulk to his muscles, but his entire frame was covered in…he was muscular.” She frowned and looked away, “He did have a tattoo.” She patted her upper arm, “Right here.” Her eyes looked into the man’s, “It was a very elegant looking dragon. Does that mean something?” She added the question when Calixto leaned back and sighed.
“And you said that he had impregnated the pixie who was with him?”
“She wasn’t full blooded, more human than pixie. I can’t imagine what the child will be like with so much mixed blood.”
The man gave her a wry look, “You are one to talk.”
Bree looked at him for a minute, then burst out laughing, “I know, right? I’m the epitome of living mutts.” She brought the subject back to where she wanted it. “So, you know someone looking for him?” She didn’t need his response to know that was right.
“He’s not part of my clan, but I know the clan head looking for him. They are so close, but I seriously doubt that Elian and his people will even realize it.” Calixto shrugged, “Not my business though.”
“Has he run away from his people?” Bree felt apprehensive as she remembered her discussion with Phelan. “From the way he talked, I thought Phelan was on a mission for them.”
Calixto muttered, “This is none of my business.” A warning look in Bree’s eyes forced another sigh out of him. “I think he is probably trying to atone because he was exiled after something humans did to a woman in his charge. They nearly killed Phelan but-You know what, you go back and talk to him. I have my own problems without getting dragged further into this. The Fiend has been sent up this way to deal with the problem that resulted from that attack, and I have no desire to run into him. I am going to finish my task and return home.”
Bree stepped closer to him “Calixto,” her eyes looked into his, “is there anything I can do to help?” She placed a hand on his arm.
He looked down at it, a look of shock on his face. His eyes moved up and met hers, and Bree thought she saw fear behind them. Quickly, he stepped away from her. “What could a sorceress do?”
“A lot.”
He frowned at her, “We deal with our own.”
Bree tilted her head to the side and looked at the man. She wanted him so badly she could not let him sli
p away. “Sometimes the best thing I can offer is a break from whatever bothers you.”
The man looked at her, “I am the head of my clan. There will be plenty of time to break when I retire or die.” His face was serious, but there was curiosity in his eyes.
Bree smiled and reached a hand up to his face. Her smile faded as she looked at Calixto, “I’m afraid.”
Calixto forgot to shake her hand off as he looked at her in shock, “What could you possibly fear?”
Bree shook her head, “I don’t want to be alone forever. Even my friends are always at arms length.”
Calixto looked down at her, and it was clear that he knew exactly what she meant. “It’s lonely being so powerful.”
Bree nodded and looked toward the forest. She knew exactly what she needed to do to get what she wanted, it was completely instinctive to her, but in this case it required that she opened up in a way that she hadn’t done since it had just been her and Annora. It scared her, but her instincts would not let her stop. Her mind was laughing at the entire situation. The man in front of her appeared to be solid cold, all business, but she was telling him the worst secrets about herself. How was that going to go well?
Without any warning, she felt warm arms wrap around her. Leaning forward, Bree rested her face against Calixto’s chest and pressed into him. “This isn’t the life I want to live. I don’t want to live this way.” To her surprise, the young woman found she was choking back tears. Not the kind that she used to fool humans, but the honest kind that she hadn’t tasted since she was ten years old.
A warm hand rubbed her back as a soothing voice murmured over her head, “It will be ok. We all have things we must do, but we must trust that someday it will make us happy. It may not be the lives we want to live, but life isn’t about us.”
Bree wrapped her arms around his back and cried silently. A few moments later, he pulled back a little and brought a hand under her chin. Forcing her to look at him, Calixto gave her a faint smile, “You will be fine. If this is not the life you want to live, but it is the life you need to live to feel whole, then you are on the right path.”