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Curses, Fates & Soul Mates

Page 36

by et al Kristie Cook


  “Project!” Brock yelled again before punching a Shadowman in the head. “It’s the only way we can save you.”

  “Hurry!” Asia called out as she ran for another.

  Leave our bodies? Here? They had to be kidding. Or was this how they planned to kill us?

  “You have to trust us,” the older woman said as she came to my side and squatted between Jeric and me.

  A Shadowman flew at her and knocked her across the sidewalk. Spike dove at me. His hand pressed into the raw wound of my arm, sending more venom into my system. My body weakened even more, and my vision began to dim.

  “Jeric,” I thought to him, but he didn’t answer.

  “Do it already!” Asia yelled.

  With great effort, I slid my hand over to Jeric’s that lay limply by his side. The tips of my fingers curled into his, but he didn’t respond. I turned my head as much as I could. He lay perfectly still, his body a bloody mess.

  “Jeric!” I screamed in my head, but no reply came, not even a flinch.

  The older man came in our direction, swinging a long blade at several Shadowmen. Their bodies turned to smoke.

  “They’ll go away if you do it,” he said.

  “But what about our bodies?” I cried, staring at Jeric’s gory form even while Spike continued to feed off me. “We can’t just leave them!”

  “We’ll take care of you,” the man said. “That’s what we’re here for. But you have to do it, or you’ll both die!”

  Panic swelled inside me. This didn’t make sense. We’d leave ourselves vulnerable, easy kills for the Shadowmen or the others. But instinct told me to project.

  “That’s your soul talking to you, little bird,” Uncle Theo had once said. Could I trust him? Could I trust my instinct?

  I didn’t have a choice.

  Finding the physical bliss that led to my soul exploding from my body wasn’t possible under the circumstances, but somehow my soul managed to release itself.

  “Jeric?” I said, not feeling his presence with me. “Jeric!”

  I looked down on his body, and he stared up at the sky—not at me but through me—not moving except for a blink of his eyes. Spike left my body and leapt over to Jeric’s. My soul whisked down and the blond Shadowman jumped back. I hovered right over Jeric.

  “Project with me,” I ordered, but he didn’t respond.

  Spike and other Shadows swarmed in on him.

  “No!” I yelled. The energy of my soul, though weaker than usual, looped a circle around him, pushing the Shadows away. “You can’t have him!”

  I hung close to him, close to his heart, as close as I could get without entering his body.

  “Jeric, please,” I pleaded. “Come with me.”

  But I was afraid it was already too late. A bluish tint covered the skin that hadn’t been shredded and bloodied. His lips were white. A sob wracked through my soul.

  “Jeric! Come to me,” I begged anyway. “Come with me, and we’ll be okay.”

  The Shadowmen came closer again but I warned them off once more.

  “Hurry!” Asia yelled again. Could she tell if I’d left my body? That Jeric hadn’t?

  “Come on, baby,” I muttered, my soul weakening even more.

  I didn’t know what to do. My soul couldn’t leave him. I couldn’t go to the Gate without him. Maybe I could pull him with me, if I could only grasp his soul. I dared to push against Jeric and soak into his body, hoping I could mix with his soul and help him out. His energy felt heavy, dragged down by his dying body. And cold and dark.

  Several Shadows bombarded us with my spirit halfway in Jeric’s body. Spike’s white face came within inches of my soul, his mouth opening wide over Jeric’s chest.

  We were both going to die.

  CHAPTER 40

  The solitude of silence filled my head once again. Brock’s and his people’s mouths moved as they fought nearby, but I could no longer hear their thoughts. It was kind of disturbing to have those voices in my head, but it’d been kind of nice, too, to hear something besides my own thoughts. Especially Leni’s voice.

  My body felt like it’d been through a meat grinder and then thrown into the ring for Cain Velasquez to use as a punching bag. And although I could feel every raw nerve-ending, I couldn’t move. Even my eyes refused to roll to see how badly Leni was hurt. Her soul felt far away, our connection weak, but at least I knew she was still alive.

  Something touched my fingers—Leni’s curling into mine. I tried again to move, but my fingers wouldn’t return the gesture. Her panic rose like a wave and crashed over me, and I hated knowing she was freaking out. Over me.

  I didn’t deserve her. She didn’t deserve this. I’d really messed up this time.

  I’d been so afraid of bringing her here, but I’d been the real danger. She’d been right, but I hadn’t listened to her. I’d given in to my own fear and hatred of bullies, but instead of fighting or actually listening, I’d run. Jumped. And brought her to her death.

  I’d been the one to kill her again after all.

  My heart fell cold at the thought of losing her again. I could feel her pulling away from me—or me from her. Our souls being Separated once again. Mine as cold as my heart. My whole body frigid and numb.

  A ghostly image floated over me. Leni? She’d died already? No! But the anger I should have felt rising never came. Only more numbness. I blinked, wishing I’d just die, too.

  A trickle of warmth seeped into my body, into my soul, followed by a tugging sensation. Another ghostly face with ink-black eyes beckoned me. It was time to leave this broken and battered body. Time to leave this world once again. My soul slid out, but the tether to my body remained.

  A dim light shone around me, and I felt Leni’s presence.

  “I’m sorry,” I tried to say to her, but my energy felt sluggish, heavy and still cold. Darkness crept in around me.

  “Don’t do this.” Leni’s thoughts surrounded me, but from a distance. “Stay with me, Jeric.”

  “I can’t, babe. Gotta go. It’s better for you this way.” I didn’t know if she could even hear me. Feel me. Whatever. I could barely feel myself. Only long, icy fingers digging into my soul.

  “No, Jeric. You won’t take the blame for this.”

  “I should have listened to you. Let you light my way.”

  “I screwed up, too. But it’s all about right now. You listen to me now, and follow my light.”

  I so badly wanted to. I wanted to rejoin her, to soak into her soul and let her warmth immerse into mine. But she needed to be free from me and the destruction I brought to everyone.

  Darkness pulled at me with those cold fingers, testing the tether my body held to my soul, like the wind tugging on a balloon tied to a child’s wrist.

  “No, Jeric,” Leni screamed around me. “Don’t do this! You stay with me!”

  But I couldn’t help it. The tether loosened, almost free. Darkness blanketed my frigid soul, making it even colder.

  “Jeric, please,” Leni begged. “Don’t give in. Nobody blames you. Only you, and you have to let it go. I can’t lose you.”

  Her pain wracked at me, making me feel worse. The Dark began to descend. And then . . . there. Blackness. I was almost free. Free from the physicality of this world. Free from feeling. From self-hatred. From fear. I could give in and be done with it all. Never again have to think about my brothers or Jacey. About my parents or my sister. Or Leni—the only one I was really to blame for. Micah’s Marine brothers, my parents and sister had been fucked-up situations, but not my fault. I knew this, but survivor’s guilt runs deep. Especially time after time after time. But Leni . . .

  “I jumped with you, Jeric. I didn’t listen to myself. I didn’t follow my instinct. I’m as much to blame for this, if not more. If you leave me, if you go Dark, I will have to live with that forever, and I’ll never forgive myself.”

  That wasn’t right. I wanted to yell at her, to tell her not to do that to herself, but the Dark continued to cl
ose in. But she must have felt something.

  “See? It’s stupid, isn’t it? So let go of the guilt. Free yourself. Come back to me.”

  But it was too late. Her light dimmed more, faded into the distance as I drifted off to the Dark, my body barely holding on to the tether anymore.

  “No,” Leni cried, her voice on the other side of the world. “No, Jeric! Choose love. Follow my light. Please. You can’t leave me. You promised me never!”

  A pull from somewhere else other than my body. A light, far, far away, beckoning me. Tugging at my soul.

  Leni.

  I wasn’t only tethered to my body, but also tied to her. And she refused to let go.

  I had promised her never, and as much as I’d done to this girl—to this soul—I was not breaking this promise.

  Her light grew brighter, closer, swirled around me . . . and into me. Her warmth heated my cold soul. Her love renewed my dying energy. Every fiber of her soul clung to mine, mixing and melding, and we became one again. And I don’t care who you are, that was better than any prince-fucking-charming kiss.

  The light around us bloomed brightly over our bodies. Together, we streaked toward the blond Shadowman who hovered over my chest, and we smashed into his physical form. A high-pitched siren wailed around us as we devoured his darkness with our light. More shrieking sounds tore through the night as the rest of the shadows of the Lakari scattered. Flying away as if we were the sun and would turn them to ash. They all disappeared, and the two Guardian couples blew out a collective breath below us, then gathered around our bodies.

  “We’ll take you to the Gate.” Mira’s voice came from around us before her image appeared—looking like her, sans glasses, though not quite there. Ethereal, I thought was the word. Leni’s uncle appeared as well.

  The pull of the Gate was stronger than ever, tugging us out toward the middle of the water. We didn’t exactly need to be shown the way.

  “Will you trust us now?” Theo asked, and I felt as though that was specifically aimed at me, although Leni and I were a swirling, hot mess of energy at the moment.

  “Of course we do,” Leni said, apology and regret filling her voice.

  “Yes,” I agreed, knowing I’d already screwed up bad enough for one night.

  Mira and Theo’s forms turned toward our bodies. Asia and Brock easily picked us up as though we were made of paper and carried us into the building. The other two seemed to be standing guard, their eyes to the sky, watching.

  “We’ve never been this far away from our bodies,” Leni said.

  “You’ll be fine,” Mira said. “After you’re Forged, you’ll even be able to appear to each other, separate, yet still connected.”

  “Come now,” Theo said, and he floated over the water where shadows still lingered.

  “Like hell,” I muttered.

  “You’re safe in this state,” Theo said. “You are light; they fear light.”

  “Then why didn’t we do this sooner?” I demanded. I’d learned my lesson to trust them, but that didn’t mean I couldn’t ask questions. Especially when they could have protected us better. “Hell, why didn’t your guards down there project if it would drive them away?”

  “Somebody has to care for the bodies,” Mira said as she moved across the water as well. “And after that stupid jump you two made, you were in no shape for it. Now hurry! The sooner you’re Forged, the faster you’ll heal.”

  I didn’t ask any more questions. Still joined as one, we moved slowly at first, feeling the tugs to our bodies as though our souls were elastic bands being stretched tight. As we pulled farther and never snapped back, though, we picked up speed. We followed Mira and Theo’s rush farther out from shore until we reached the place in the water between the bay and the Gulf. There was no mansion, though. Only a tiny island barely big enough to hold a single, though huge, weeping willow tree.

  “Is this even the right damn place?” I asked, suspicion rising again, then soaring when Theo and Mira suddenly dove into the water. “What the hell?”

  Leni ignored my apprehension.

  “It’s the tree from the journal,” she said excitedly. “We’re here. It’s . . .” Our souls felt out for the Gate. “It’s under the water.”

  With confidence in her instinct, she dove our light down into the water. Pushed us down, down, down, deeper than this part of the harbor should have been, until we finally hit the sandy bottom. When we did, bright beams of light flamed from the sand in front of us.

  A warm feeling swarmed around and through us.

  “The Gate welcomes you,” Mira said.

  I moved us closer to it. Theo held his hand out, blocking us.

  “Not yet,” he said. “Before you can accept the powers of the Gate and be Forged, you must understand the Gate and the expectations of you. If all goes well, you’ll be Forged. Made stronger, faster, less fragile. Given certain gifts that will allow you to fight the Lakari better. Then, you’ll be ready for your first mission.”

  “How?” we asked.

  “By the Gate’s energy,” Theo said.

  “The Gate to all the worlds,” Mira answered before we could ask. “Also, a shortcut to a special part of the Space Between. As Guardians, your primary job is to guard the Gate to keep souls from passing through it, in or out. The only souls you can allow to leave Earth through this Gate are the Broken ones so they can rejoin their other halves.”

  “You cannot allow any souls through the Gate and into Earth,” Theo added more directly. “Enyxa is trying to open it for more of her Lakari to swarm through. You can’t allow it.”

  “Understood.” Thankfully, Leni felt the same need as I did to say this although we both had enough questions to interrogate them for hours. “If that’s our primary job, what are our others?”

  “You help the Broken and the Lost,” Mira said. “After Separating their souls, Enyxa sets them on an endless loop to the same worlds, keeping them from finding each other. This is why Earth is becoming so populated. And so hopeless. You will help these souls before they grow Dark. This is the service you chose for this life cycle in the Space Between. Do you still accept it now?”

  How could we not? I knew what it was like to be ripped apart from Leni’s soul, when she was Jacey. Almost felt it tonight. Nobody should have to endure that. And nobody should have to live increasingly miserable lives searching for true love they’ll never find.

  “What if we don’t?” Leni’s energy created the question, and I understood when I felt her emotions running through us.

  “We don’t know,” Mira admitted. “Nobody has ever denied, especially you, from what we understand.”

  “Will we go back to how we were?” Leni pressed. “Will my parents remember me?”

  “Little bird, I understand—”

  “Will they remember me?” she repeated.

  “We really don’t know,” Mira said. “It’s possible, but your physical bodies likely won’t make it if you don’t accept and Forge. So even if your parents do remember, they will be burying their daughter shortly.”

  Leni’s emotions spiked within us. I tried to pull her in tighter, but we were already as close as can be.

  “Leni,” I murmured to her, “if we die, your parents will have to live with the grief, and we’ll have to start over. We’ll be separated for another twenty or so years.”

  “This is what you chose in the Space Between,” Theo reminded us. “Your whole lives—and many other events—have been based on that choice.”

  Leni’s energy shuddered through us as she recalled everything we’d been through, more me than her. And she decided. We wouldn’t let it all happen for nothing.

  “We accept,” we finally answered.

  “Very good,” Mira said. “But before you may be Forged, now you must understand yourselves. Jeremicah, you finally released yourself from blame, the only reason you made it this far. But you must understand life on Earth is messy. Things happen. You can’t control everything. You especially c
annot control Jacquelena. You must forgive yourself when you are at fault. You must trust yourself and your Twin Flame. Remember, she is your light.”

  “Jacquelena,” Theo said, “you must believe in yourself and trust your instinct. Know that your Twin Flame is there to catch you if you fall, but don’t be afraid to take risks. You will have to take many in this life. You two must be able to trust yourselves and each other, as well as your guides and the other members of the Phoenix. Listen to your instinct. Trust each other. Work as a team. If you cannot do all of these, you will fail in your duties for the Phoenix. Do you understand?”

  After everything we’d been through and barely survived, how could we not?

  “We understand.”

  “You may enter the Gate,” Theo said, stepping away from the lights shining upward from the sand.

  After a few beats of hesitation, Leni and I knitted the energy of our souls as closely together as possible, and moved into the circle of light. The beams shot up higher around us and became a solid wall of light enclosing us in a cylinder and pulsing a rainbow of colors. For no more than a second, holes appeared in the round wall, and we barely caught glimpses of entrances to other worlds. The openings filled in with color before we could see anything beyond.

  The water disappeared, as though drained through the sand below us, and bright light filled the cylinder, followed by intense heat. Our souls welded together as white-hot pain seared through us. A force pressed us harder into each other, compressing us, melting us, shaping us, broiling us. We silently screamed as we were pounded into each other, heated again, and molded more, repeating the process until I thought we’d become nothing more than embers and ashes. Then finally.

  Cold water poured over us.

  We strengthened.

  We hardened.

  We were Forged.

  After some time, minutes or hours we didn’t know, the light faded around us. As it did, Leni pulled away from me. Her soul did, but yet, it also remained in mine and mine in hers. By the time the lights dimmed into the sand, we were separate, yet still connected, and staring at each other. She looked like her normal and uninjured self, curls and all, though not quite there. Her soul gave the image of her physical body. I looked at myself doing the same, then I reached out for her hand, and my soul could feel hers clasping mine.

 

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