Read Blood in Her Veins (Nineteen Stories From the World of Jane Yellowrock) Online

Authors: Faith Hunter

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Urban, #Contemporary, #Paranormal

Blood in Her Veins (Nineteen Stories From the World of Jane Yellowrock) (82 page)

I whirled my swords and forced the Gray Between to fracture and split around me. The fight slammed back into real time. The
arcenciel
slithered through the drainpipe and into the kitchen in scant seconds. Her wings billowed open. Knocked by a wing, the kitchen table and everything on it went flying or sliding across the house to crash into the back wall. The kitchen window blew out into the street as the other wing encountered it.

Eli cut the dragon in a half dozen places. Clear goop splattered. She roared, mouth open, long tongue lashing. I lunged with the long sword. Stabbed her in the mouth with the sword, the blade piercing her tongue to the roof of her mouth. She jolted back at the last instant. The steel missed her brain, if her brain was located in her skull.

The
arcenciel
screamed. In a single flash, she flew through the broken, unwarded window and into the street. Taking my sword with her. I grabbed a frill and leaped with her. Slamming my shoulder into the window jamb on the way through it. I heard and felt the
crack
of my collarbone. My right arm went numb. I lost my grip on the rainbow dragon.

That's not good.

Jane bad hunter. Stupid kit to ride prey through small hole.

I landed in the street, tumbling. Rolling over the injured shoulder with a pain that screeched through me like a predator's fangs. As I rolled, Beast
sent a blast of pain-deadening adrenaline through me, and I caught a single breath that didn't hurt. I made it to my feet fast, still holding the vamp-killer, left-handed.

Molly rushed through the front door, throwing jagged bars of blue and green power-bolt bombs at the dragon. They quickly went from sharp-edged energies to crumpled slags of dying power. The bombs that didn't bounce off her, the rainbow dragon seemed to simply absorb, taking in all the magical attacks.

Eli joined the fight with a steel sword, but the
arcenciel
hit him with her tail, sending him flying. My sword was still pinned in her mouth. Steel keeping it in the present flow of time, which was what I had hoped. Guessed. Whatever.

And up until now, excluding the broken collarbone, the fight was going the way I had hoped. From the uptown side of the street, lights glided into long streamers. Soul. The cavalry to the rescue.

She whipped faster than my eyes could follow, wrapping Opal up in her much greater energies. Molly saw what she was doing and turned in a circle, her arms wide, both hands open, sketching a circle in the air around her, and then around Opal. Together the witch and the mature
arcenciel
wrapped the juvie
arcenciel
up in magic. When the writhing, angry rainbow dragon was secured, a light flashed and Soul appeared in the street in human form, her long skirts flowing in a breeze I could see but not feel. Deftly she pulled the sword from the creature's mouth and tongue and tossed it toward me. The captured
arcenciel
made a keening sound of anguish and woe.

I stepped back, hitting solidly against Eli's chest as he caught the sword out of the air. My partner secured my arm at my waist with his, wrapping himself around me, holding my sword upright at an angle near us in his free hand. “Broken collarbone,” he said into my ear as Molly and Soul stood together in the street, studying the tangle of energy that was Opal. The two magic workers walked back and forth, speaking in low voices. I didn't particularly like the way Soul's eyes kept dropping to Molly's baby bump, clearly outlined in the pajamas, but there was nothing I could do now. The water droplets of time would have to figure it all out themselves.

Opal stretched and bit at the energies. Acid rose in my throat at the
thought of having to fight again right now. “Yeah,” I said, struggling against the nausea of the broken bone, time bending, the fight, and now, the fear. “Kinda figured that.” My words were slurred by the tusks. Shivers wracked through me, making the pain much worse for a moment. When I got a second breath I smelled Eli's blood.

“You're hurt.”

“Just a scratch.”

I pushed him away with my good hand and caught a spurt of blood into my face. “I don't think so,” I said, blinking fast. I followed the blood to his upper arm and wrapped my knobby, über-strong fingers around his biceps and tightened them into a pressure bandage. Then I chuckled, though it wasn't anywhere near my usual laugh. He was holding my injured arm in place. And I was holding his.

Soul walked over, her arms crossed over her ample bosom, her gauzy, flowing gowns no longer fluttering in a breeze I couldn't feel. She looked me over, and I realized it was the first time that the PsyLED agent had ever seen me in my half-Beast form. Some people might have been taken aback, but Soul seemed composed in the face of pelt and big-cat fang tusks. She said, “Thank you for making the right choice.”

I probably should have kept my mouth shut, but I had never been very good at that. “So . . . ,” I said. “You had been sitting around watching the fight between Opal and me for . . . a while.”
Though bubbled time makes that term insubstantial at best,
I thought. “Watching and probably judging.” I frowned at her, wondering what Soul would have done had I taken another road. As part of PsyLED and also as an
arcenciel
, she had a wide scope of power. If I had killed the
arcenciel
, would she have had the rule of some arcane, possibly prehistoric law to kill me? Or go back in time and kill me before I killed Opal?

Soul pulled a scarf from a pocket and pushed my bloodied good hand away from Eli. She tied the scarf around my partner's wound and immediately the pulsing arterial blood stopped. Eli's face, which had held a hint of pain, eased back to its neutral, natural mask of nothingness. “This scarf has a healing working in it,” she said, adjusting the knotted scarf. “It's self-renewable and powered by the sun, so when you finish with it today, simply wash it out and hang it in a window.”

“What about me?” I asked.

“I haven't a thing for broken bones or timesickness. Your skinwalker energies will have to help you there.”

The fact that she knew I was sick from bending time reaffirmed that Soul had been watching the whole fight. I pressed against Eli's helping hand and wrapped my bloody good hand around my own elbow, keeping it close to my side. I could take care of myself. Eli was holding my unsheathed sword. Not the smartest thing to do while in close proximity to another person. That thing was sharp.

Soul walked to Molly, who was now sitting on the low steps of the front porch, her sock-clad feet on the sidewalk. “I'm sorry Opal attacked you,” Soul said. “Free will is something my kind believe in, and I will make certain that she doesn't repeat her actions against you and yours. But you should know that the child you carry has the potential to change the timelines for Opal and her progeny, and the closer that timeline gets, the harder it will be for her to restrain her survival instincts.”

Molly raised her head to Soul, emotions I couldn't begin to name moving beneath her skin. Her face was pale and wan in the dulled streetlights, but her expression firmed when she said, “Do you have some kind of evidence for that speculation, or are you just trying to make me mad?”

“I would never attempt to anger an Everhart.”

“Damn skippy,” Molly said.

I smiled slightly.

“So how did you know about my baby?”

Soul tilted her head and her long silver hair slid forward, the waves catching the meager moonlight. “I see your child in the timelines. There is significant data to suggest that the baby will be a witch and will ride Opal, trapping her in a crystal at a time when she is carrying an egg. And the egg will die. And so will Opal's line. There is less evidence to suggest that your child will partner with Opal to some end. That is the way you should bring up your child if you wish it to live long and prosper. Agreement and harmony, compromise, understanding, a mutually beneficial bargain.”

“That's the plan,” Molly said sharply, obviously stung that her parenting and witch-teaching skills were being called into question over her unborn baby.

Soul nodded once and made her way to the
arcenciel
, tapping it on the snout and leading it back up the street, changing as she moved into her own
arcenciel
form. No one looked out the windows, no cars attempted to drive down the street, nothing disturbed them or us. It had to be
arcenciel
magic, something put in place by Soul while she watched us fight. Nothing else made sense.

The glowing lights of the rainbow dragons faded and died, but not before Opal swung her head back and looked at Molly and Eli and me. Her glowing eyes were baleful and full of promise, half-hidden by streamers of reflective frill and horns bright as crystal. I had a feeling that Soul wouldn't be able to keep the young dragon in check for long.

•   •   •

Back inside the house, I stood in the foyer watching as Eli and Alex made sure the house was habitable, plugged in the fridge, got the coms and cameras back up on the city's grid, put the skull that had caused all the trouble back into my closet on the high shelf, and started an early breakfast. The smell of bacon quickly filled the lower story. Molly was curled on the couch talking with Big Evan on her cell, discussing magic and ways to fight light. I heard her tell him that Angie had been a perfect angel and hadn't even gotten out of bed. “She's still asleep, the little darling. I think the binding is going to stick this time. . . . Yes. We done good.” She laughed, her happiness like crystal tones on the air.

I pursed my lips, tracking my goddaughter to my room by scent. Angie had done something magical to her mother, to keep her from knowing that Angie was up and around. And then I had . . . interfered. Now Angie's scent was angry. Maybe tantrum angry.

Eli had put my weapons on the floor. I took both by the hilts and strode into my room, totally ignoring the little girl sitting in the middle of my bed, looking mutinous. I sheathed the weapons, double-checked that the skull was back where it belonged, and finally turned to Angie.

If I hadn't been hurting, I might have crossed my arms, spread my feet, and stared her down, but I was feeling more pain than I had expected, now that the fighting was over and the effect of adrenaline was wearing off. Every breath ached like lightning, and I knew exactly how
that
felt. So instead of trying to look stern, I leaned my weight against the wall by the closet and slid to the floor, to sit with my back against the wall and
my knees bent up. I reached out to Beast and sought my human form, what little of me was left in the tangled mess of our coiled and twisted genetic structures. I teased the human strands out and let myself fall into my human form, hearing my collarbone scrape and snap back into place. The pain of the healing was stabbing, grinding, and electric, and for a moment, it seemed to fill all of who I was and all of who I might ever be.

And then the pain drenched away, fast as storm water sliding down a gutter. I held up my hands and made sure I was human. Eight fingers, two thumbs. Thin shavings of Eli's crusted blood dusted into my lap. I touched my face—skin—and touched my teeth—human—and pulled out my T-shirt to peek down at my chest. I was always afraid I would come back only partway and have furry boobs, but I had skin. Good.

Angie was watching, silent, her face red, but her scent was less angry than before I shifted. This was the first time I had shifted in front of her, and she understood that it was a measure of trust. My shifting in front of her was a proclamation of her maturity and of our friendship.

“So. What's up?” I asked her.
How lame? Stupid!

“You can do . . .” Her hands made little circles in the air. “You can speed up. You can move faster than I can see.”

“Yeah.”

“I tried to do it too.”

“Yeah.”

“Did you stop me?” Her face started to flush again, and I smelled her beginning anger.

“Yeah. You want to know why?”

Angie narrowed her eyes at me. I placed one hand on the floor at my hip and propped my weight on it. With the other hand, I kneaded my belly. It growled loudly. The two half shifts and the fighting had left me weak and starving, but sometimes there were more important things than food. I watched Angie, reading the emotions that flashed across her face as she considered my question.

“I guess,” she said, as if the words were dragged out of her.

“Because I get really sick when I move fast. The last few times, I threw up blood.”

Angie sat up straight. “You puked blood? Ewwwww.”

“I know, right?”

“Did it stink?”

“Yeah. It did. And I was so sick afterward that I had to shift back to human to not end up dead.”

“You think I would puke blood and end up dead if
I
moved fast?”

“I think it's possible. And because you're my godchild I had to stop you from doing something that would hurt you. The same way I'd have to stop you if you wanted to jump off a cliff to see if you could fly.” I cocked my head at her and my hair, still trapped under my shirt, but no longer bound in the scrunchies, slid forward on my shoulder. The scrunchies dropped to my waist in a little nest of knitted material that itched, but I'd have to wait to scratch that one until Angie was pacified. “You know what being a godmother means? Not a fairy godmother like in fairy tales, but a real godmother?”

“Daddy says it means you can spank me if I'm real bad, but I don't believe him. You would never hurt me.” When I didn't reply she asked, “Is going fast being bad?”

“Can you fly?”

Angie tucked her chin at my seeming non sequitur.

“Let's say you had a spell that you thought might let you fly, and you wanted to jump off a cliff to see if it worked, instead of testing it by jumping off your back deck. I'd have to stop you from jumping off a cliff. And if you were really grown-up enough to test that spell, you would never have thought of testing it by jumping off a cliff in the first place.”

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