Avenger

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Avenger Page 18

by Heather Burch


  Nikki dropped onto the bed again. “But then what?” With bent knee, she pivoted to study Vegan’s face. “What happens after … you know.”

  “After we die? Well, we don’t have a writ like the humans do.”

  “A writ?”

  Vegan smiled. “Oh, sorry. A written word. A covenant.”

  “Yeah, they’re safe and we’re dogmeat.” It was hard for Nikki to imagine a being who would call someone into service then reject them. And yet Vegan seemed so sure about the future, so confident.

  “It’s not like that. Some spiritual laws pertain to every living creature.”

  “What do you mean?” Nikki asked.

  “Things like seed time and harvest, sowing and reaping. You don’t have to coax a seed to grow. You plant it in the ground and everything around it works in harmony to produce a plant — that’s seed time and harvest. A sunflower seed won’t produce an apple tree — that’s sowing and reaping.”

  “Okay, thanks for the lesson on spiritual laws. It’s good to know.” Nikki grabbed her by the shoulders. “But Vegan what happens to us?”

  “We’ve made a choice to serve the Throne. In knowing his nature, we assume that on the Great and Terrible Day of Judgment, we’ll be allowed entrance into heaven, though we may never be able to enter the holy city or the Throne Room because of our ancestors.”

  “Wow, hillbilly cousin again.” Nikki’s hands dropped to her sides.

  “No. Heaven isn’t like that, nor is the one who created it. He made room for us. I’m sure he did, Nikki. Just as sure as I know a seed will grow if it’s placed in the ground.” She paused a moment. “At the same time, he can’t go back on his word. That would make him a liar. Our ancestors, the fallen, were never to enter the Great Kingdom again.”

  “Are you telling me God found a loophole in his own contract?”

  “He flung the stars into the sky and told them to stay, and they do to this day.” Her eyes glistened with an adoration for this being that Nikki couldn’t quite grasp. “No. He didn’t find a loophole. He knows the end from the beginning. I think he made the concession at the beginning of time when he was still measuring out the waters of the seas.”

  “You’re saying he made a concession before one was needed? That sort of staggers the mind, doesn’t it?”

  Vegan’s eyes widened. “Indeed. His desire is that none perish. Even the hillbilly cousins. But there’s a delicate balance he has to maintain as well. The Fallen mated with human women in an attempt to destroy the bloodline.”

  “Destroy it how?”

  “Maybe destroy isn’t the right word. It’s more like infect it. The fallen angels wanted to corrupt the human bloodline by introducing fallen blood. God could have just wiped them and all their offspring off the face of the earth. But he didn’t.” Vegan smiled. “Because he knew one day Nikki Youngblood would be born. And he already loved her. He made a way for us, Nikki. He called us into service because he loves us. We’re the ultimate army.”

  “Thanks, Vegan. I’ve never looked at God like that.” Silence followed while Nikki contemplated the goodness of a creator who would make concessions for offspring of the very beings sent to destroy his plan. “I just don’t understand why God created people if he knew what a huge mess they were all going to end up in.”

  “Because they’re worth it.”

  Nikki’d had enough of this conversation. It was too much to try to grasp when she was still so new to all of it. “Have you talked to Zero today?”

  “On the phone early this morning. I plan to stop by later.”

  “Be sure and take a package of Watermelon Zinger juice boxes. He loves them.”

  Vegan’s brows rose. “Did you try to bribe him?”

  “Yeah, snuck out this morning.”

  “And?”

  She shrugged. “And nothing. He’s as tight-lipped as you.”

  “Remember, Nikki, concentrate on who you are now. Not who you were.” Vegan rose and slipped her dainty pink toes into her equally delicate sandals. Who would ever guess at the immortal weapon she actually was? Gliding across the carpet as if she were floating, Vegan left the room.

  Nikki sat alone in the quiet space. Though the other girl’s suggestions about leaving the past alone rang true, the desire to know outweighed it. Damon knew the truth. But no matter how desperate she became, she’d never go to him for the answers. He’d hurt her for the last time.

  A sound interrupted her thoughts. A ringing that came from the corner where her backpack sat. Nikki frowned and took a couple steps toward it.

  It stopped momentarily, then began again. She dug inside and found a cell phone, and wondered where it had come from. She’d ditched her last one eons ago. When she could stand it no longer, she answered. “Hello.”

  Vessler’s voice crackled through the line, and Nikki nearly dropped the phone.

  “We didn’t get to finish what we started, Nikki.”

  His voice crawled through the receiver, setting her skin on alert. Twinges danced and tingled across her shoulder blades. “I have nothing to say to you.” Her voice was flat. Dead.

  “Really, my lady? Don’t be cross. We have much to share. And there is still much work to be done.”

  “How’d you get this phone into my backpack?” The idea that Vessler had access to her was more than unnerving. Instinctively, she shot a look to the window and the world beyond as if he’d be there, on the other side of the glass. Fury erupted in her gut. “How are your legs?” She just couldn’t resist the reference to their last encounter, when she’d incapacitated him with two well-placed bullets.

  “Practically healed.”

  Nikki worked to keep her voice steady as her body began to shudder. “Gunshot wounds don’t heal that fast.”

  “Ah, the miracles of modern medicine.”

  No, it was impossible. She’d watched as each shot sank into his body, creating a spurt, then a wide wet section of blood down one pant leg then the other. The wounds had nearly drained his lifeblood. No way—even with the very best medicine — could he have healed. Raven had once suggested that Vessler was on some kind of hyper-powered steroids. Maybe he was right.

  She started to hang up, but a whimper in the background caught her attention. “What is that?”

  “What?” Vessler asked, innocently. “Oh, that sound? That’s Zero. He says to tell you hello, and the next time you want to come visit, don’t. You’re much too easy to follow. He says to bring drink boxes — the Watermelon Zinger you bought this morning at the grocery store would be wonderful.”

  Her heart sank into her stomach and the blood drained with it, leaving black splotches before her eyes. No. No. What had she done?

  Muffled words echoed through the phone line. “Don’t tell him anything, Nikki. He can’t hurt me.”

  “Can’t hurt you? Really?” Damon said with a grunt.

  Zero yelped in pain.

  Her hand flew to her mouth, where she stifled a cry. Her heartbeat intensified until it drowned Zero’s voice. Slamming her fist onto the bed, she pleaded, “Damon, let Zero go. Please, he can’t help you.” She chewed her lip, gripping the phone with both hands. “Look at him. He’s the weakest Halfling alive.”

  From beyond Vessler’s phone, she heard Zero’s weak voice. “Thanks a lot, Nikki.”

  “True,” Vessler conceded. “He’s weak. Not like you. You possess the strength of an army.”

  “So, you’ll let him go?” Hope dared enter her heart.

  “Sure. If you’ll come and take his place. And if you tell the others, I’ll kill him.”

  Nikki’s breathing matched her heart rate while her mind spun, searching for solutions. Zero ran the network. His life was worth more than ten of Nikki’s. He’s the hub, the link that keeps Halflings connected all over the world. Zero was gold … and she was paper.

  Her eyes slid shut. “Yes,” she agreed. “I’ll come.”

  Chapter 21

  I’m just saying that male Halflings are strong
er than females. That’s all.” Vine shrugged and took another bite of a hot dog.

  Winter sighed. If Vine thought he’d convince the three females, he was clueless.

  Will chuckled and turned the meat on the backyard grill. “Vine, I’m going to give you a piece of advice. Having lived for thousands of years, I’ve learned one universal rule that has transcended eras and ethnicities. Never tell a female she’s weaker.” Glimmer and Winter both nodded agreement from their sunny perches, stretched out in chaise lounges.

  The girls spent most of their waking hours on the back porch now, or congregated in the living room or backyard with the other Halflings, waiting for the faintest scent of trouble. Winter, even though she was better with patience than the other two girls, was starting to feel somewhat like a caged animal — no battle, no hell hounds to fight.

  Vegan caressed a wilted plant in a terra-cotta pot.

  The enemy had been extremely quiet. And that fact didn’t bode well with Will, Winter could tell. He’d been around too long, seen too much, to look at this as a reprieve.

  “That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.” Glimmer stood, took a hot dog Will offered, and dropped her free hand onto a cocked hip.

  Uh-oh. Vine was about to get a lesson in girl power. Will stifled a grin and shared a poor, innocent Vine look with Winter.

  Vine shrugged. “It’s obvious males are stronger.” His attention was on his lunch, and with his head down he smeared the bun with ketchup.

  Glimmer’s eyes leveled on him. “Is that so?” Her voice deepened to lethal.

  The tone brought his head up with a snap. A storm swirled in Glimmer’s gaze.

  Hot dog half hanging from his mouth, he chewed quickly and swallowed hard. “Uh.” His eyes flashed an SOS to Will.

  Will raised his palms as if to say, “You got yourself into this, get yourself out.”

  Vine set the rest of his dog on his plate and rose. “I didn’t mean anything by it. It’s just that —”

  Glimmer stepped closer, cutting off his exit. “That what?”

  He stumbled back a step. Off balance, he plopped into the chair. “Um. Just that …” His gaze darted around the back patio looking for help. But Glimmer, Winter, and Vegan outnumbered him, and Will was neutral. Vine’s only possibly ally, Raven, had disappeared inside to get a root beer.

  “Well, males were originally angels. And the females were human. So, I mean, it makes sense. Angels are stronger than humans.” His flashed a quick smile, hoping he’d diffused the situation.

  “So true,” Glimmer agreed, sweetly. She batted her eyes, just before they turned to ice. “Let’s go out in the yard and put your ideas to the test.”

  “I wouldn’t,” Raven said, stepping onto the patio with a half grin on his face. “Don’t let that little-boy-lost demeanor fool you. Vine is an expert warrior. One of the best I’ve ever seen.”

  Vine threw him a grateful look that replaced the deer-in-the-headlights one.

  Vegan, who’d been watering the nearly dead potted plant, placed the greenery on the porch. “Glimmer is a marksman. With bow and arrow, she can nail any target from over a hundred yards away.”

  Raven laughed and dropped into one of the deck chairs. He popped the top on his root beer. “That’s got to be helpful in hand-to-hand combat,” he said, wryly, and slurped the liquid from the can. “Which, by the way, is what we’re involved in nine times out of ten. For those of us who’ve seen much battle.”

  Glimmer drew a quick gulp of air. “We’ve seen plenty of battle. Haven’t we, Winter?”

  “Like Will, I’m staying out of this one.”

  Raven’s lips curled into a sadistic grin. “I’m sure you’ve seen plenty, Glimmer. From your safe hundred-yard distance. Look, we’ve seen you fight. Honestly, you could stand to brush up a little.”

  Vegan faced off with Raven, Glimmer with Vine. Four perfect bodies, taut and ready to fight. Will shook his head while electricity crackled on the patio. If anyone were walking by, they’d swear an actual storm brewed around the Victorian home. Will heaved a breath. “Teenagers,” he mumbled. But the skirmish was interrupted when Mace threw the patio door open. “Has anyone seen Nikki?”

  Winter stood. “Yes. Two hours ago she told me she was going to lie down for a while. She’s in her room.”

  “No, she’s not.”

  Zero wouldn’t cry again — he’d promised himself. For countless hours, they’d taken turns beating him and he could feel life slipping away. He tried to wriggle his fingers. Yes, still working.

  A cold, concrete floor inside a jail cell-sized cage was his new home. The entire room had finally emptied of people, and he was alone. He tipped his head up in an attempt to assess the extent of his injuries. Every muscle ached with each breath, but he willed himself to draw the next. He could taste blood through lips too swollen to be his own. His limbs were bruised and maybe some were broken. Wounds took longer and longer to heal. This is worse than death.

  After the last beating, he’d been thrown behind the thick metal bars. Titanium, of course. Sitting on the floor beyond the cage, and just beyond his reach, was a glass of water. He scooted painfully to the bars, lugging his dead weight. He couldn’t move his lower body, so he pulled himself forward with his hands, dragging his legs behind him like a kite tail.

  Am I paralyzed? He forced the terrifying thought from his mind. Zero, the gimpy-legged Halfling. As if he wasn’t enough of a misfit already.

  At the bars, his head fell forward until it was resting against the cool metal. He could feel the titanium zapping what strength he had, but the water was so close. He squeezed his eyes shut and tried to concentrate on Vegan. He couldn’t access her face. Or her laugh. With his eyes closed, all he saw was fist after fist coming at him, paired with the clatter of bones cracking and breaking, and the scent of blood.

  A chair scraping the floor drew his attention. He turned his sore neck toward the noise.

  Expensive, pointed-toe shoes. Perfectly worn-in jeans. Until the guy squatted — putting himself at Zero’s level. If only I could raise my head enough to make out a face. The guy must have been in the chair until he’d come closer, quietly sitting there watching the Halfling suffer. Now he was about five feet away, sitting on his haunches and studying his captive.

  “We haven’t been properly introduced. I’m Damon Vessler,” the man said, hands planted on his knees. His gaze roamed over Zero. “Oh dear. It would seem as though my boys got out of hand. I’m terribly sorry.” He smiled as if apologizing for bumping into someone at the grocery store. “Now” — he tilted back slightly — “you must be the one they call Zero. I hear you run the network.”

  Zero swallowed dry, sandpaper air and glanced at the glass of water.

  “Would you like that?” Vessler pointed. “Tell you what, share a bit of information with me and I’ll give you the water.”

  “Give me the water,” Zero rasped. “And I’ll use the glass to slit your throat.”

  Vessler’s nostrils flared. “You’re not playing very nice.” He pulled a gold toothpick from his shirt pocket and slid it into his mouth. “Doesn’t Zero mean nothing?” Vessler’s eyes flashed. “One minus one?”

  “Yeah,” Zero said in a hoarse whisper. “And you want information from me. What does that make you?” He chuckled, winced. “Oh, I know. Less than Zero.”

  Vessler shoved off the floor. Smooth leather shoes stepped toward the glass of water. Drawing back, he kicked it at Zero.

  Glass shattered when it hit the bars. He closed his eyes in time to avoid the shards as they flew at him. Water and bits of broken glass splashed his face.

  “What was all that computer equipment doing in your underground space? Is that where you run the network?” Vessler demanded. “And what’s the network’s purpose?”

  Zero sucked the bits of water from his lips. “Computers? Is that what those were? I thought they were just bulky paperweights.”

  Vessler erupted. “Don’t play games with
me, boy!”

  Zero grinned. “That’s Lost Boy.”

  Vessler strode to the bars, grabbed Zero’s arms, and yanked. Zero’s head clanged against the titanium, sending a shock wave through his already-aching system. Again, he tried to conjure the image of Vegan.

  Vessler grabbed him by the throat. “Tell me what you know.”

  Choking, Zero tried to pry his fingers beneath Vessler’s powerful hand. Vessler squeezed harder.

  Black spots materialized before his eyes. Everything started to fade … fade … “All right,” he said, words barely a whisper. “I’ll tell you.”

  Vessler dropped to his knees to look Zero eye to eye. “What do you know?”

  “I know …” Zero rubbed a hand across his throat. “I know …”

  Vessler’s gaze was wild as he visibly held his breath.

  “I know … zero.” He slid back from the bars before Vessler could grab him.

  Vessler roared and thrust his arm through the bars. Face wedged against the titanium, he managed to snag Zero’s collar and the necklace beneath, using both to drag him back to the bars. After manacling Zero’s wrists, Vessler dropped to the floor, pressed his feet against the cage, and jerked Zero’s head into the bars again and again.

  Slam after slam, Zero felt metal smash his face and collarbone. Finally, Vessler stopped, focusing with terrifying steadiness on the necklace from Vegan. Zero began reconsidering his vow not to bawl, because if Vessler knew how to use the necklace, Vegan could be drawn into this pit as well. Zero couldn’t let that happen. He had to protect her.

  “What’s this?” Vessler asked, back to his sorry-I-bumped-into-you-at-the-grocery-store voice. “Did your mother make that for you?”

 

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