Huntress, Black Dawn, Witchlight (4 page)

“I’ve seen it,” Hugh said, and for a moment Jez’s heart stopped. Then it started again as he continued, “In other people, I mean. I’ve seen people our age who found their soulmate, and it’s really true; you can see it in their eyes. The
Old Powers really
are
rising, Jez…for good and for evil. That’s what’s behind all these other changes.”

Jez sat very still. “And so what happens if they keep rising?”

“What happens is…” Hugh paused and then looked at her. “It means a time of darkness is coming,” he said simply.

“A time—?”

“Of serious darkness. The worst. We’re talking the end of the world, here.”

Jez could feel gooseflesh on the back of her neck, where her wet hair touched her skin. She might have been tempted to laugh if it were anybody else telling her this. But it was Hugh, and he wasn’t joking. She had no desire to laugh.

“But then it’s all over,” she said. “There’s nothing we can do. How can anybody stop the end of the world?”

“Well.” He ran a quick hand through his hair, pushing it off his forehead. “That’s why I’m here. Because I’m hoping
you
can.”

CHAPTER 6

“M
e?”

Hugh nodded.


I’m
supposed to stop the end of the world?
How?

“First, I ought to tell you that it’s not just me that believes all this about the millennium. It’s not even Circle Daybreak that believes it. It’s the Night World Council, Jez.”

“The joint Council? Witches
and
vampires?”

Hugh nodded again. “They had a big meeting about it this summer. And they dug up some old prophecies about what’s going to happen this time.”

“Like?”

Hugh looked slightly self-conscious. “Here’s one. It used to rhyme in the original, I think, but this is the translation.” He took a breath and quoted slowly:

“In blue fire, the final darkness is banished.

In blood, the final price is paid.”

Great, Jez thought. Whose blood? But Hugh was going on.

“Four to stand between the light and the shadow,

Four of blue fire, power in their blood.

Born in the year of the blind Maiden’s vision;

Four less one and darkness triumphs.”

Jez blinked slowly. “What’s blue fire?”

“Nobody knows.”

“‘Four to stand between the light and the shadow…’ Meaning to hold off the end of the world?”

“That’s what the Council thinks. They think it means that four people have been born, four Wild Powers who’re going to be instrumental in whatever’s coming, whatever battle or disaster that’s going to destroy us. Those four can stop the end of the world—but only if all of them fight together.”

“‘Four less one and darkness triumphs,’” Jez said.

“Right. And that’s where you come in.”

“Sorry, I don’t think I’m one of them.”

Hugh smiled. “That’s not what I meant. The fact is, somebody around here has already reported finding a Wild Power. Circle Daybreak intercepted a message from him to the Council
saying that he’ll hand the Wild Power over to them if they make it worth his while. Otherwise he’ll just sit tight until they’re desperate enough to agree to his terms.”

Jez had a sinking feeling. She said one word. “Who?”

Hugh’s expression was knowing and regretful. It’s one of your old gang, Jez. Morgead Blackthorn.”

Jez shut her eyes.

Yeah, that
sounded
like Morgead, trying to shake down the Night World Council. Only
he
was crazy and nervy enough to do that. He was stubborn, too—perfectly capable of letting disaster come if he didn’t get his way. But of all the people in the world, why did it have to be him? And how had he found a Wild Power, anyway?

Hugh was speaking again softly. “You can see why we need you. Somebody has to get to him and find out who the Wild Power is—and you’re the only one who stands a chance of doing that.”

Jez pushed hair off her face and breathed slowly, trying to think.

“I don’t need to tell you how dangerous it is,” Hugh said, looking into the distance again. “And I don’t want to ask you to do it. In fact, if you’re smart, you’ll tell me to get lost right now.”

Jez couldn’t tell him to get lost. “What I don’t understand is why we can’t just let the Council take care of it. They’ll want the Wild Powers
bad,
and they have a lot more resources.”

Hugh glanced back at her, startled. His gray eyes were wide with an expression that Jez had never seen before. Then he smiled, and it was an incredibly sad smile.

“That’s just what we can’t do. You’re right, the Council wants the Wild Powers. But not so they can fight the end of the world. Jez…they only want them so they can kill them.”

That was when Jez realized what his expression was. It was gentle regret for innocence—
her
innocence.

She couldn’t believe how stupid she had been.

“Oh, Goddess,” she said slowly.

Hugh nodded. “They want it to happen. At least the vampires do. If the human world ends—well, that’s their chance, isn’t it? For thousands of years the Night People have had to hide, to live in the shadows while the humans spread all over the world. But the Council wants that to change.”

The reason Jez had been so slow was that it was hard for her to imagine anybody actually wanting to bring on the Apocalypse. But of course it made sense. “They’re willing to risk being destroyed themselves,” she whispered.

“They figure that whatever happens, it’ll be worse on the humans, since the humans don’t know it’s coming. Hell, some of the Night People think
they’re
what’s coming. Hunter Redfern is saying that vampires are going to wipe out and enslave the humans and that after that the Night World is going to reign.”

Jez felt a new chill. Hunter Redfern. Her ancestor, who was over five hundred years old but looked about thirty. He was bad, and he practically ran the Council.

“Great,” she muttered. “So my family’s going to destroy the world.”

Hugh gave her a bleak smile. “Hunter says the Old Powers are rising to make vampires stronger so they can take over. And the scary thing is, he’s right. Like I said before, the Night People
are
getting stronger, developing more powers. Nobody knows why. But most of the vampires on the Council seem to believe Hunter.”

“So we don’t have much time,” Jez said. “We have to get the Wild Power
before
Morgead makes a deal with the Night World.”

“Right. Circle Daybreak is fixing up a safe place to keep the Wild Powers until we get all four. And the Council knows we’re doing it—that’s probably why that ghoul was following me. They’re watching us. I’m just sorry I led it here,” he added absently, with a worried look around the room.

“Doesn’t matter. He’s not telling anybody anything.”

“No. Thanks to you. But we’ll meet someplace different next time. I can’t endanger your family.” He looked back at her. “Jez, if the Night World manages to kill even one of the Wild Powers—well, if you believe the prophecy, it’s all over.”

Jez understood now. She still had questions, but they could wait. One thing was clear in her mind.

“I’ll do it. I have to.”

Hugh said very quietly, “Are you sure?”

“Well,
somebody
has to. And you were right; I’m the only one who can handle Morgead.”

The truth was that she thought nobody could handle Morgead—but she certainly had a better chance than any Circle Daybreaker. Of course, she wouldn’t survive the assignment. Even if she managed to steal the Wild Power out from under Morgead’s nose, he’d hunt her down and kill her for it.

That was irrelevant.

“He hates me, and I hate him, but at least I
know
him,” she said out loud.

There was a silence and she realized that Hugh was looking at her oddly. “You think he hates you?”

“Of course. All we ever did was fight.”

Hugh smiled very faintly—an Old Soul look. “I see.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“It means—I don’t think he hates you, Jez. Maybe he has strong emotions for you, but from what I’ve heard I don’t think hate is one of them.”

Jez shook her head. “You don’t understand. He was always gunning for me. And if he found out I’m half human—well, that would be the end. He hates humans worse than anything. But I think I can fool him for as long as it takes to get the Wild Power.”

Hugh nodded, but he didn’t look happy. His eyes were
bruised and tired. “If you can pull it off, you’ll save a lot of lives.”

He knows, too, Jez thought. That I’ll die doing this.

It was some comfort that he cared—and more comfort that he didn’t understand
why
she was doing it. Sure, she wanted to save lives. But there was something else.

The Council had tried to mess with Hugh. They’d sent a stinking
ghoul
after him. They would probably send something different tomorrow—certainly, they’d keep trying to kill him.

And for that, Jez was going to wipe the floor with them. Hugh wasn’t any kind of fighter. He couldn’t defend himself. He shouldn’t be a target.

She realized that Hugh was still looking at her, with pain in his eyes. She smiled to show him that she wasn’t afraid of dying.

“It’s a family affair,” she told him—and that was true, too. “Hunter’s my great-great-great-great-great-grandfather. It’s only right that I stop him. And if anything happens to me—well, one Redfern less is probably a blessing to the world.”

And that was the last part of the truth. She came from a tainted family. No matter what she did, who she saved, or how hard she tried, there would always be vampire blood running in her veins. She was a potential danger to humanity by her very existence.

But Hugh was looking horrified. “Don’t you ever say that.” He stared at her for another moment and then took her by
the shoulders, squeezing. “Jez, you’re one of the best people I know. What you did before last year is—”

“Is part of me,” Jez said. She was trying not to feel his warm grip through her T-shirt, trying not to show that his little squeeze sent a shock through her entire body. “And nothing can change that. I know what I am.”

Hugh shook her slightly. “Jez—”

“And right now, I have to get rid of that ghoul. And you’d better be getting home.”

For a moment she thought he was going to shake her again; then he slowly let go of her. “You’re officially accepting the assignment?” The way he said it sounded as if he were giving her one last chance not to.

“Yes.”

He nodded. He didn’t ask
how
she planned on getting back into a gang that she’d abandoned, or getting information from Morgead, who hated her. Jez knew why. He simply trusted that she could do it.

“When you know something, call this number.” He dug in a different pocket and handed her a square of paper like a business card. “I’ll give you a location where I can meet you—someplace away from here. We shouldn’t talk about anything on the phone.”

Jez took the card. “Thanks.”

“Please be careful, Jez.”

“Yes. Can I keep the articles?”

He snorted. “Sure.” Then he gave her one of those sad Old-Soul smiles. “You probably don’t need them, though. Just look around. Watch the news. You can see it all happening out there.”

“We’re going to stop it,” Jez said. She reconsidered. “We’re going to try.”

 

Jez had a problem the next morning. The problem was Claire.

They were supposed to drive to school together, to ensure that Jez didn’t cut school. But Jez had to cut school to go find Morgead. She didn’t want to imagine the kind of trouble that was going to get her in with Uncle Jim and Aunt Nanami—but it was crucial to get to Morgead as soon as possible. She couldn’t afford to waste time.

At the first major stoplight—and there weren’t a lot of them in Clayton—she smacked her forehead with her palm.

“I forgot my chemistry book!” She unfastened her seat belt and slid out of the Audi just as the light turned green. “You go ahead!” she shouted to Claire, slamming the door and leaning in the open window. “I’ll catch up to you.”

Claire’s expression showed her temperature was reaching the boiling point. “Are you crazy? Get in; I’ll drive back.”

“You’ll be late. Go on without me.” She made a little fluttery encouraging motion with her fingers.

One of the three cars behind Claire honked.

Claire opened her mouth and shut it again. Her eyes were
shooting sparks. “You did this on purpose! I know you’re up to something, Jez, and I’m going to find out—”

Honk. Honk.

Jez stepped back and waved goodbye.

And Claire drove off, as Jez had known she would. Claire couldn’t stand the peer pressure of cars telling her to get moving.

Jez turned and began to jog for home, in a smooth, steady, ground-eating lope.

When she got there, she wasn’t even breathing hard. She opened the garage and picked up a long, slim bundle that had been concealed in a corner. Then she turned to her bike.

Besides Hugh, it was the love of her life. A Harley. An 883 Sportster hugger. Just twenty-seven inches tall and eighty-seven inches long, a lean, light, mean machine. She loved its classic simplicity, its cold clean lines, its spare body. She thought of it as her steel and chrome thoroughbred.

Now she strapped the long bundle diagonally on her back, where it balanced nicely despite its odd size. She put on a dark full-face helmet and swung a leg over the motorcycle. A moment later she was roaring away, heading out of Clayton toward San Francisco.

She enjoyed the ride, even though she knew it might be her last one. Maybe because of that. It was a dazzling end-of-summer day, with a sky of September blue and a pure-white sun. The air that parted for Jez was warm.

How can people ride in cages? she thought, twisting the
throttle to shoot past a station wagon. What good are cars? You’re completely isolated from your surroundings. You can’t hear or smell anything outside; you can’t feel wind or Power or a slight change in the temperature. You can’t jump out to fight at an instant’s notice. You certainly can’t stake somebody at high speed while leaning out of a car window.

You could do it from a bike, though. If you were fast enough, you could skewer somebody as you roared by, like a knight with a lance. She and Morgead had fought that way once.

And maybe will again, she thought, and flashed a grim smile into the wind.

The sky remained blue as she continued west, instead of clouding up as she approached the ocean. It was so clear that from Oakland she could see the entire bay and the skyline of San Francisco. The tall buildings looked startlingly close.

She was leaving her own world and entering Morgead’s.

It was something she didn’t do often. San Francisco was an hour and fifteen minutes away from Clayton—assuming there was no traffic. It might as well have been in another state. Clayton was a tiny rural town, mostly cows, with a few decent houses and one pumpkin farm. As far as Jez knew, the Night World didn’t know it existed. It wasn’t the kind of place Night People cared about.

Which was why she’d managed to hide there for so long.

But now she was heading straight for the heart of the fire.
As she crossed the Bay Bridge and reached the city, she was acutely aware of how vulnerable she was. A year ago Jez had broken the laws of the gang by disappearing. If any gang member saw her, they had the right to kill her.

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