I turned the knob and lifted my fist, but no one was there, oddly enough. I glanced in the hallway and saw no one. Confusion and suspicion grew inside me, for I was sure that I heard a knock. I didn’t make it up. That’s when something on the ground caught my eye. It was wrapped in a plastic bag.
Bending down, I tentatively picked it up. I didn’t hear ticking, so it wasn’t a bomb. And it wasn’t sharp, so it wasn’t a weapon, either. But that begged the question…what was it?
Giving another quick glance in the hallway, I closed my door and slowly walked to the bed. I sat down, placing the bag in my lap. My curiosity was screaming, so I untied the slapdash knot and found a small note. Without looking at the rest of the bag’s contents, I read the note:
I know why you’re here. But don’t worry, I won’t tell. In fact, I want to help you. That is why I left you this. Read it and know that you are still a stranger to true power. And in order for you to accomplish your goal, you need true power. By reading this, you will know what to do, and I am willing to help you defeat the man who slaughtered your entire family. I am always here, waiting for you to unlock your true potential. I can help you.
I must have read the note three times before I realized that looking it over more wouldn’t help me discover who it was that wrote it. Then I remembered the bag in my lap. My hands reached inside it, retrieving a journal. All that suspense built up only to be broken down, because it was just a book.
I studied it, frowning. It may have been just a book, but I had to admit there was an uncanny air about it. The binding was huge. The cover’s corners were torn. The brown leather was aged, almost charred. My fingers traced the sides of it. Feeling something, I turned it over and saw a golden lock.
This thing was locked shut.
Honestly, I couldn’t say that I’d ever seen a more ominous book.
I searched the bag for the key, but it wasn’t there. A small smile formed on my lips as I remembered what my body could do.
Gently, I placed my index finger on the lock. I exhaled and felt my skin tingling and changing to form to the clasp. I twisted my finger and felt the book unlock. Before opening the book fully, I brought my finger to my face, taking in the fact that I could now break in to his house without leaving a trace.
What a nice trick to have. Too bad I didn’t realize I could do this sooner. It would have come in handy in many situations.
The key disappeared into my skin and I rubbed the leather cover in curiosity before opening it.
Chapter Fourteen – Kass
My eyes stared at the bandages on my hands. When Gabriel was done fighting with Raphael, it was going to be my turn. The only problem was that I never wanted it to be my turn. I was afraid that either me or Raphael would snap and try to kill the other person. For real.
I don’t even know which one of us would snap first. Lately, I’d been pissy with him, so it might be me. But then again, Raphael had been getting pissy with me too, so it might be him. Or, maybe we’ll both snap at the exact same time and both of us will kill each other simultaneously. That’d be a sight to see.
Gabriel body-slammed the ground next to me. I watched his back rise and fall with his breath. He turned his face to me and said, “That…was…exhausting…”
Max perked up. “Personally, I didn’t think it was that bad.”
A smirk spread across Gabriel’s face. “Yeah, well, personally you only fought him once. I fought him a lot more than that.”
As Max sighed and said “True,” I flexed my knuckles and got on my feet.
Raphael waited for me with an intolerant look on his face. Which was great, because when he gave me looks like that, I wanted to wipe them right off his arrogant face by punching him with all of my might. And right now was the only time I could do that with no consequences. That made me smile wickedly.
“Get ready,” Raphael snapped at me.
I held up my tensed fists. “I am ready.”
For moments we stood there and waited for the other person to make a move. I could wait here all day. Raphael’s eyes slowly met mine as he decided to swing a foot by my face. I bent backwards and narrowly missed it.
I fell to the ground on purpose and lifted my legs up to his stomach. In a split-second, I was pushing Raphael back with a swift double kick. I kept my legs going, and in the same motion, rolled back onto my feet.
Raphael threw a punch at my stomach, and it was too late for me to avoid it. A sharp pain erupted in my chest. The wind had been knocked out of me with a single blow. He was good, strong.
Instantly, I felt another jolt of pain in my head, but he hadn’t hit me there…which left me to ponder just what was going on with me lately.
I clutched my head and was too preoccupied with this sudden pain to avoid Raphael’s second punch that sent me soaring through the air and landing on the ground, facedown.
I spit out sand as I wearily stood up. Wait a second. Sand? I glanced around and saw that I was back in the desert, in the village where all were dead because of someone named Crixis. I couldn’t help but wonder if I was finally going to see his face.
I noticed a woman and child running. The child had the orange amulet around his neck, giving me the indicative sign that they were the wife and son of the black armored man. The man was long dead by now. I didn’t even know these people and I felt terrible for them. There wasn’t a doubt in my mind that Crixis was going to come and kill them both.
If only I could get my hands on him. If only I was really here. If I was, then I could stop all this from happening.
They were running to the horses. The wife hastily helped her son onto a tan mare and was in the process of climbing onto it herself when a gust of wind brushed by and the horse collapsed, dead with a vast gash through its head. She and her son ran to another horse, but soon they were all falling on the desert ground, as dead as the first one.
The woman cradled her son behind her back and frenetically scanned the surrounding area. A man wearing golden armor appeared holding a golden sword. Even though I was ten feet away, I could still see Crixis’s chest muscles rippling under the desert sun.
Oh, my God. I frowned with distaste at Crixis. He wore a black helmet, the same black helmet that her husband had on. What a sicko. He must have taken it off the husband’s corpse and put it on, figuring…what? That it would bother the wife and son? What a psychopath.
I could only see his unsettling smile and his bright green eyes.
Those eyes.
I’d seen those eyes before. But on who? Why couldn’t I think? His defined chin, the way he walked… God, I’d seen it all and I couldn’t think of who he was. If only he would just take off his helmet.
“Why…” the wife sniveled. “Why are you doing this?” Hot, wet tears streamed down her dirt-caked face.
“Because she asked me to,” Crixis answered back. “Why else?”
“You don’t have to…” she pleaded with him. “Please let us go. We’ve done nothing!”
“Yes.” Crixis handled his long, slender, magnificent sword. “You have. You chose the wrong man. Did he even tell you what he really was? A Shifter. Not a man. Your child is just like him.”
“That meant nothing to me. I loved him.” A rebellious look crossed her face. “I will always love him. Don’t you know anything of love?”
A grin appeared on his face. “Are you going to lecture me on it? Do no such thing. Love is not real. All it truly is…is lust. Love is simply dignified lust. And you pathetic humans live for it. Love cannot conquer all. Love cannot stop me.”
“Love can change you,” the wife said as she gripped her son harder, “if you allow it.”
“This talk bores me. Let us finish this so I can be off.” Crixis swung his sword through the air before dropping it on the sand. In a flash he vanished from their sight.
The woman held her son, unmoving. The next instant Crixis was behind her, tossing the son out of the way and grabbing her violently. With a snarl, I saw his teeth grow.
His Vampire teeth. His Daywalker teeth. He furiously brought his head down to her neck and ripped her throat out.
Soon she was dead and he dropped the body. His face dripped mass amounts of blood as he searched the barren landscape for the boy. Within seconds, he found the child. He flashed in front of the boy, making him stop and clumsily fall to the ground. The boy’s eyes were filled with fear as he tried to get back on his feet. But he couldn’t. All he could do was stare at Crixis, the man who killed his father. The man who massacred this whole town in a matter of minutes. The Daywalker whose mouth dripped his mother’s blood.
Crixis’s greedy green eyes settled on the orange amulet that was tied around the boy’s neck. “Before you, boy,” he spoke heartlessly, “there was only one Shifter left. Your father. I should know. She sent me to wipe them out years ago. Your father was a result of me failing her. She used him up until she no longer needed him, and now he’s dead.”
Crixis kneeled down so he was at the boy’s level, staring into his wide, teary, orange gaze. “But now there’s you.” He touched the amulet, glinting it in the sun. But instead of tearing it off, he let it go and stared into the boy’s damp eyes. “She wants you dead.” A sly smile came on his bloody lips. “But I’m not going to kill you. Never know when a Shifter might be useful. Run. Run and always wear that amulet.”
Crixis grabbed the boy’s face, forcing him to look him in the eyes. “Tell them what happened here. Tell them it was her. Do you understand?”
The boy nodded, stood up and ran into the desert, alone. Whether the boy survived or perished in the desert, I hadn’t a clue.
I watched as Crixis sighed and rose to his feet. His tanned arm reached to the black helmet. In moments it was spiraling toward the sandy ground. He shook his head, getting his black hair out of his vivid emerald eyes. Even though I wasn’t really here, I felt his intense gaze go through me.
Oh…crap.
I knew who Crixis was.
Reality came crashing down upon me like a ton of bricks. Raphael’s foot was coming down on my face. It was like I didn’t miss a thing, even though I had a long vision. At the last possible second, I came to my senses and rolled out of his foot’s way.
I stood unenthusiastically. That was a close one, and yet I didn’t care. I was done with this fight. I was done. Why? Because my vision was very troubling.
I stood still as I rose my hand while Raphael was charging at me. He stopped, his eyebrows went together. He blinked his confusion off and asked me, “What is it? We barely just begun.”
“I know, but…” I searched for the right words to say. “…I can’t do this right now.”
“Do what? Spar with me?” Raphael was taken aback. And I didn’t blame him. I was always one for a fight.
I nodded and started walking away, unrolling the bandages that I tied a little too tightly around my hands. I felt Gabriel’s and Max’s eyes on me, but that didn’t stop me. I kept going. I couldn’t stop. I needed to go home and lock myself in my room.
Raphael was beside me in seconds, saying, “What’s wrong, Kassandra?”
“I have to go home,” I replied without stopping to look at him.
He moved in front of me. I didn’t plan on stopping, but hands on my shoulders forced me to stop and stare into his light gaze. “What is going on with you?”
I pursed my lips, studying his expression. “Does the name Crixis mean anything to you?”
Instead of saying no, like I hoped he would, he glimpsed back to the two boys, saying, “Go home. Kassandra and I need to talk.”
Gabriel skipped over to us in a flash. “What do you need to talk about? You’re not going to have a hot and steamy affair, are you? Because, if so—”
Raphael’s eyes narrowed. “I believe I said to go.”
“Oh,” Gabriel was taken aback at the irritation our tutor showed. “Okay. Then we’ll see you at home, Kass. Come on, Max.” He put an arm around the small boy. “I’ll show you what you can do with that hair of yours.”
I stayed silent as Raphael took my arm and led me back inside the church. I sat in a random pew as he made sure all the doors were closed. Raphael knew about Crixis. I hoped not. I wanted my instincts to be wrong.
But maybe this was a good thing, because I could find out what he knew about him.
Raphael sat uneasily beside me, a good foot away. Fine with me. He didn’t need to be any closer. Just because I had the teeniest crush on him when we first met him and thought he looked attractive in his priest’s clothes didn’t mean I wanted him any closer. It didn’t mean that I trusted him.
He finally spoke, staring me straight in the eye, “Where did you hear that name?”
My eyes squinted. “Where have you heard it?”
“Kassandra, don’t play these games with me,” he told me abrasively. “Now is not the time.”
I chuckled. “When is the right time to play games with you?” I said without realizing how weird that sounded. “Pretend I didn’t say that.”
Raphael’s face was like stone when he said, “Happily.” He got quiet.
He was probably waiting for me to say where I heard that name. But I didn’t want to say. Telling him would also involve telling him about my visions and dreams, and that was something I didn’t want to elaborate on. He didn’t know about them, and as far as I was concerned, he could stay in the dark.
“What do you know about him?” I asked, finally breaking the awkward silence that had spread through the entire church.
“I will tell you everything, if you do the same for me,” Raphael said, tilting his head, causing a lock of his hair to fall into his face.
“Okay,” I said. “What do you want to know?” My curiosity about Crixis was killing me, and to alleviate it…there was one thing I had to do—the one thing I never, ever wanted to do.
Raphael didn’t miss a beat. “Where did you hear that name?”
If he didn’t miss a beat, then I must have jumped a beat, because I started to answer before he even finished the question. “My vision.”
At least the cat was out of the bag with someone other than Gabriel.
“What,” he spoke, “do you mean by that?” Raphael’s eyes were full of confusion and bewilderment, which might have actually been a first. He kind of looked cute like that, with that quizzical expression on his face.
I shook off my mental anguish and replied, “I see things. Sometimes when I’m dreaming. Other times when I’m awake. Sometimes I see the past and sometimes…I see the possible future.”
He loosened his neck piece and said, “When did this start?”
“About three years ago. When Gabriel first met that one girl. The one who had twenty Nightwalker pets and planned on feeding him to them. She almost killed us both.”
“And…you had a vision about Crixis,” Raphael put the pieces together.
“Exactly. Well,” I corrected myself, “more than one, actually. A few of them.”
“Were they…” Raphael paused. “…consistent?”
I nodded, noticing his worried face. Why did he look like that?
“What did you see?”
I brought up my legs to the wooden pew and sat on them, making myself more comfortable. After all, these pews were hard and my butt was starting to hurt. “I saw him with this woman.” I detected the relief in his eyes, and also some understanding of who I was talking about. “And she ordered him to attack and kill everyone in this village. And he did.” I decided to leave out some details, because why would Raphael need to know every, single thing?
Raphael was not saying anything, so I prompted him, “Your turn. Who is he?”
“Crixis was…” Raphael’s serious gaze landed on me, making me squirm a bit. “…a very bad Demon. He was what you like to call a Daywalker, but he’s unlike any Daywalker you’ve ever met. John and his brother, Kirk, was it? They are nothing in comparison.”
“Even when—” my voice shook.
Raphael nodded. “Even when John was un
der the darkness of Osiris. Crixis was a plague on this world. Thousands of humans were destroyed by him in mere hours, and hundreds of other Demons were as well.”
“How was he that powerful?”
“He was sired by one of the oldest Vampires and his hatred fueled him,” Raphael answered me, finally tearing his eyes away from mine. “He found a way to gain power from those he killed. He was unstoppable…”
“Was? So he’s dead now?”
Raphael nodded. “Crixis was killed by one of the original Purifiers. His Demonic presence no longer haunts this world.”
Suddenly, I stood up. “Okay, phew. That’s a relief,” I laughed out. I spun on my heel and began walking out of the church.
Raphael stood and yelled after me, “That is all you wanted to know?”
“Yep!” I waved as I exited the decrepit church. When I was a reasonable amount away from it, the fake smile on my lips disappeared. A strange feeling twisted in my gut, and worry hovered over me like clouds on a rainy day.
He lied.
Raphael lied to me, even though he told me he’d tell me everything I wanted to know.
I asked if Crixis was dead, and he said yes. Raphael lied to me. He lied. How could I trust anything he’d ever told me or taught me before, when I knew now that he was a liar? When I knew that Crixis wasn’t dead, and that he was extremely alive and well?
When I’d seen him and his fiery red eyes myself?
Chapter Fifteen – Raphael
After Kass left, I remained in the same place. I couldn’t believe myself. Why in the heavens did I lie to her?
I told her that Crixis was dead, when in truth he couldn’t be farther from it.
A liar I never thought I would be, but ever since coming here, to this town—ever since I began teaching them—it seemed I did nothing other than lie. Wear a mask that I never took off.
The Nightwalkers Saga: Books 1 - 7 Page 38