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Attack

Page 13

by Rachel Starr Thomson


  “You shouldn’t be. I am going to wreck you before this is over. You are going to hate me.”

  “That won’t happen.”

  They were in a field, surrounded by shadows—a cornfield. Sam had lit a fire. His family and others were crowded around it, but David sat back, away, in the darkness, his soul twisting and gnawing with grief. And with guilt.

  His baby.

  His little girl.

  She had been in the back part of the house, asleep.

  He could not have saved her.

  But he should have, he told himself, he should have run into the flames and tried. Or died.

  But the Spirit had kept him alive. This was an election. A predetermined fate. As was hers. There was a reason. A plan.

  Yet his soul still twisted, still churned. He did not cry but writhed in the darkness.

  And Mary, facing her own grief and fear of twenty years ago again, found it easier to let go and lose herself in his pain.

  Just before her own mind faded completely into his, she heard a voice somewhere, speaking it seemed from the moonlit sky above.

  But no, that wasn’t right. The voice was from another place.

  April.

  Saying, “What is that?”

  Chapter 11

  Richard stationed himself in the parking garage where he could watch the elevator that led to her apartment, and, bored after a while—and concerned that he would miss something—he created a circuit for himself, stalking from the garage to the street outside where he could scan comers on all sides to the lobby where he could watch who went up, and back to the parking garage. A doorman questioned him and he told them he was working for Melissa. She confirmed it when the doorman called.

  For which he was grateful.

  His own restlessness and pacing reminded him of April, who tended to run when she wanted to work something out. His usual tendency was exactly the opposite: to sit, to find a quiet place, to sink deeply into prayer and be caught up in the rush of Spirit, there to forget himself, to almost leave his body, to transcend.

  He felt he ought to do that now, but for some reason he could not quiet himself.

  He couldn’t shake the sense of guilt over having cut Melissa off from her healing.

  He knew, even as he admitted that to himself, that he was thinking foolishness. The hive, the children, the demonic powers that had controlled them—they were not trying to help Melissa. Even if they had the capability of holding the cancer at bay, even if they could cheat death for a time and help her cheat it, they were doing nothing for her good. All was a plot, all a scheme to destroy her along with everyone else.

  And yet when he searched his heart, he found that he could not blame her questions or her choices. She was right. He had been asked to die, but only in battle, only knowing he was a victor. He had never been asked to face what she was facing, or to justify it to himself: to explain why the Oneness, the source of all true life, could not stop death from eating away at his body and truncating a gift and calling greater than most would ever know.

  It didn’t make sense.

  He also confessed, as he paced the sidewalk outside the building and then scanned the lobby for what seemed like the hundredth time before taking the elevator to the parking garage yet again, that he cared about this girl more than he had cared about anyone in a long, long time.

  Oneness was a strange thing. It bound all together in a single body, but some would always be closer than others. There were those who were close by proximity and common calling—like Mary. He and she were like two fingers on the same hand, always about the same work, deeply connected and believing in one another almost more than they believed in the greater ideal of the Oneness. It was that way because it had to be; the Oneness was infinite but every member finite; they could only be close, functionally close, to so many.

  Others were close because of how their personalities meshed or because of a history together.

  Melissa was something different.

  He knew as he walked his circuit that if he found anyone threatening her, he would die to keep her safe and count it nothing.

  He could not put a name to it. He asked himself if this was romantic love—if, after all, he might become one of the few Oneness who married. But it was not. It was something more stable, more deep even than that.

  He could only describe it to himself as calling.

  He was meant to love her. He was meant to keep her safe. She was meant to be a part of him like a strand of his own DNA.

  He realized, with a sudden understanding that literally shook him where he stood, that he could not stand the idea of losing her.

  She could not die.

  It was unthinkable.

  But you’re asking her to, a voice said. That’s what you want. For her to give up all ties to the powers that are keeping her alive and choose to die instead, just to prove that you are right.

  Just to comfort you in your own convictions.

  Your own conceits.

  He stopped and buried his face in his hands, forcing himself to breathe, to seek, to calm.

  To pray.

  Spirit, he breathed. Spirit.

  It was like calling into a well. Nothing answered but the echo of his own voice, yet he felt a sense of depth—perhaps a far distant stirring.

  I have never doubted you, he prayed. I have never doubted. Not until now. Help me.

  He lifted his eyes at the sound of the elevator doors opening, and there she was.

  He was in the parking garage, and she got off the elevator with a sort of awkward grace, holding out her hand to him. Gone were the evening gown and the high heels. She wore a flowing skirt and a sleeveless shirt, casual but beautiful.

  “The doorman told me you were stalking around like a . . . well, like a stalker. You told him you were working for me?”

  “I am working for you.”

  She smiled, and it creased the corners of her eyes. “I know. I thought, since you are getting a workout pacing all over the place, I should feed you dinner.”

  “How did you know I was still pacing?”

  “I called downstairs and asked.”

  He smiled. Now that she mentioned it, he was hungry.

  And glad to be back in her presence.

  They rode the elevator in companionable silence. She gave him another smile just before it dinged and the doors opened to the penthouse.

  The smile vanished two seconds after they stepped out.

  “What are you doing here?” she said. “Who are you?”

  A smiling, well-dressed young man with a square jaw and blond hair rose from her couch. His accent, faintly European, set off every last alarm bell Richard had.

  “Oh, you don’t mind,” he said. “I came to enjoy dinner with you both. And to help you.”

  “You didn’t answer the lady’s questions, Clint,” Richard said. “Who are you, and what are you doing here?”

  Movement from the kitchen momentarily distracted him, and he caught sight of black clothing and a smirking expression.

  Alex.

  “You know who I am,” Clint said. “You both do. As far as what we are doing here—well, you might say we are closing a net.”

  * * *

  There was a storm coming.

  Tony could see it from the ridge behind the cottage. It was massing in the sky over the water, dark clouds hovering low and menacing. A breeze, deliciously cool but somehow threatening, was blowing straight at the land.

  “Tony.”

  Angelica’s voice was sharp. He turned. “What?”

  “Jordan’s gone.”

  His heart sank. “What?”

  “He’s gone. I could have sworn he was there a few minutes ago, but he’s gone now and I can’t find a trace of him.”

  “Get everybody searching.”

  “Spread them out? Are you sure that’s smart?”

  He knew what she was asking.

  He felt it too.

  There was an attack coming.
/>
  No, they couldn’t spread everyone out. Not even to find Jordan. They had to get them safely clustered in the cottage, where the shield was strongest, where they could be best defended.

  He wished Richard was here.

  He turned and eyed the coming storm again. He thought he could see creatures in the clouds, wings and eyes, armour and swords.

  He was imagining that.

  It was just a storm.

  But an attack was coming.

  “Get everyone inside,” he said, changing tacks in a moment. “Be ready—for anything. I’m going after Jordan. If I can’t find him and we run out of time, I’ll come to join you.”

  And we run out of time.

  They both knew what he meant by that.

  She nodded, drew her sword—out of thin air, it looked like, but Tony could feel his forming in his hand too, whether in response to the demons quickly arriving or just to his own anxiety, he couldn’t say. She rushed off toward the cottage, calling for Susan Brown. Enlisting help in getting all of the kids back.

  Thunder rumbled, and Tony turned back to the cliffs.

  Jordan, he thought, would have gone in one of two directions:

  Down the road, back toward civilization.

  Or down the cliffs.

  Both away from the shield.

  He had no idea which way to check. He closed his eyes and tried to pray, not his strong point in the spiritual disciplines of life in the Oneness, but one that came naturally in a situation like this—a plea, a desperate call for insight.

  He didn’t know whether he was answered, but he felt drawn toward the cliffs.

  He started on the path he and Jordan had explored earlier that day, the storm before him in a vista of dark grey and gathering electricity, gathering thunder. He was plunging into that looming threat.

  Going demon hunting.

  No, he told himself, going boy hunting.

  But he feared he would find both at once. Both together. And both needing to be fought.

  Reese, Mary, Richard, he thought. Wherever you are, whatever’s going on, hurry.

  We need to win this fight.

  And we need to win it fast.

  * * *

  The storm had blown up fast—too fast, unnaturally fast. April watched it come, letting the sword form in her hand. Chris was taking in the sails, and he called on his mother to give him a hand.

  Diane cast a pointed look at Mary and David as she appeared from the hatch. “So they did it?”

  The two were stretched out side by side, eyes closed, looking as though they were asleep.

  Or dead.

  “I don’t know what they’re doing,” Chris said, testy, “but I hope they hurry up and finish, because what’s coming I can’t fight.”

  April’s eyes were fixed on the gathering clouds. A bolt of lightning broke through the grey, momentarily slashing silver over the dark sky.

  Diane, coming up beside her as she followed Chris’s instructions, leaned closer to her and followed her gaze to the clouds.

  “It’s not natural, is it?” she asked.

  “No. I don’t think so.”

  “Can you see demons?”

  “I can feel them.”

  Diane sighed and flexed her hand. “So can I.”

  April cast her a compassionate glance. “Best just to let it form. You don’t want to be caught without defense. And I think they may attack very quickly.”

  Diane went back to her work, head bowed until April said a sharp, “There.”

  She looked up and saw them too: the edges of wings in the clouds, the leer of eyes. They were forming as they had in the warehouse: a core, without bodies or need of them. It wasn’t common for such a gathering to be able to form so far away from land. They needed something to feed off of, something from which to draw energy and form. When they had a source, a core attack was powerful. The demons weren’t limited by bodies or able to be cast out.

  “What are they drawing from?”

  “Maybe David.”

  Diane cast another almost panicked look at the two lying on the deck, lost in some inner world.

  They had come out here to convert him or kill him.

  They hadn’t really asked what would happen if they ran out of time.

  * * *

  Deep in the past, David was still wracked with pain and guilt over losing his child—and still believing, fervently, almost blindly, in the Oneness. That the Oneness gave meaning not just to his life but to his loss. That the Oneness would make it all worth it in the end. That the Oneness meant he could transcend all this—the burns, the pain, the heartbreak.

  The hunting.

  Mary, deep in David’s soul, felt it all and knew her own heart, somewhere far away, was breaking.

  Her own heart, somewhere far away, knew what he would become. She didn’t know why. Only that he told her it was her fault.

  Pushing through the heartbreak, trying to stay with him and not withdraw in her own sense of pending loss and grief and guilt, she found another one: a heartbreak mingled with joy. Sam was here. Sam and his children and his wife. Her twin, her family.

  She had forgotten how much she missed them all. Time had dulled it. But they were here, sitting around their little campfire in the cornfield, huddled around the burning husks, whispering and comforting each other and her.

  She still could not see herself, but she still knew she was present. She knew that her niece was curled up in her lap, snuggling against her, and that Sam often turned to her and whispered something that brought her strength.

  There were others with them as well. Others came throughout the night, pulled by the magnetism of Oneness to the hidden place in the cornfield. The group grew, all united and yet separated in their various griefs, so that Mary felt she was justified a little in having forgotten David’s presence that night. The details of who and where and when had blurred in the smoke and the darkness of the night.

  Sam spoke to them all, the whole group in their woundedness. He reminded them of what they were: servants of mankind, expressions of the Spirit, keepers of the world. He told them that darkness would not triumph though it tried with all its fury.

  They had only just begun to sleep, to calm enough to really rest, when a teenager broke into the clearing, gasping, his sides heaving from a long and desperate run.

  “They’re coming,” he choked out.

  No one asked precisely who—or what.

  They simply pulled themselves up and kept going.

  And David, denied the opportunity to truly sink and grieve, felt as he ran the first glimmerings of real despair.

  Perhaps it was the juxtaposition—Sam’s words of encouragement and victory followed so quickly by the news that they were still being hunted. That it wasn’t over with the blast and the incalculable losses. That more loss was coming.

  It got harder as they went. Somewhere along the line, he had been injured—he couldn’t remember where. Perhaps back at the house, perhaps while fleeing down the country roads. His ankle was swelling and getting harder to walk on. The group began to pull ahead of him, farther and farther, he and a few others who lagged. The part of his consciousness that was Mary didn’t know them, but David evidently did.

  They drew back and finally veered away in a different direction.

  “We might as well split up,” one of them said. “Give the demons a split target to follow.”

  They knew, when they said that, that they might give their lives so the others could get away.

  They believed in that kind of sacrifice.

  David believed in it.

  The main road was leading through cornfields. A farm road, it was dirt and gravel, uneven and full of potholes. They chose to veer away to the right, hoping to make it back to a clearer, paved public road. As much as that might make them easier targets to find, it would also help with injuries—David wasn’t the only one limping on a bad leg at this point—and get them closer to potential help if something did happen.
/>   The plan failed. At first the road did hit pavement, giving them hope, but after some time of stumbling through the dark, it turned into a narrow, ridged dirt road that plunged into the woods.

  They kept going. They didn’t know what else to do. They paused once, wanting to discuss it, but for all of them the sense of something on their heels was so strong that it pushed them back into motion.

  Any hopes that the trees were just a small stand, something they would be out of in minutes, died away as the woods got thicker, the moon disappeared completely behind tangled branches and the remaining leaves of fall, and the sounds of autumn insects droned louder.

  Soon they were stumbling through total darkness.

  David’s ankle twisted and gave out. He sprawled on the ground, too exhausted even to cry for help.

  Someone noticed anyway. There were four of them in the splinter group. One turned back, a young woman. Tried to help him up.

  He was too tired, too hurt.

  “Just leave me here,” he rasped.

  He didn’t know if they would have.

  At that moment the sense of being hunted shifted:

  To a sense of being surrounded.

  There was nowhere left to run.

  It wasn’t just dark now; it had turned thick—like the air was made of tar, too thick to breathe, too thick to move in. David could not get up, could not move. Pressure on his chest grew until he thought it would burst.

  He tried to move his arms, to push himself up, but it seemed as though they had sunken into the earth, and the earth itself was holding them in a vice.

  From the trees directly in front of him, he heard a laugh.

  A young man stepped out of the darkness. How they could see him, David didn’t really know. There was no light—nothing to illuminate him. Yet he was clearly visible, dark on dark.

  He looked perhaps college age. Blond hair, a strong jaw, clothing that would have fit in at an elite prep school.

  He spoke with a faintly European accent.

  “You have come so far,” he said. “You did not really think running would do you any good?”

 

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