Read Kin Online

Authors: Lili St. Crow

Kin (15 page)

TWENTY-EIGHT

T
HE
S
PYD
ER
WAS
A
NICE
CHUNK
OF
AUTOMOBILE
,
cornered like it was on rails and purred like a kitten even though Cami didn't ask of it even a quarter of what it was capable of. The interior was butter-soft leather and smelled faintly of new car and lemon.

Cami drove agonizingly slow, obeying every traffic law to the letter. She even stopped
twice
at stop signs—once next to the sign, pulling forward to see what traffic was coming, and stopping again. It was like ripping out your nails, one at a time.

Still, it was kind of soothing to just lean against the door, put her fevered forehead against the glass, and listen to them try to make awkward conversation while the tires hummed. They tried to draw her out, but she didn't want to talk about it beyond
I came home and found her, that's all
.

They didn't ask why she skipped, or why she looked like she'd been rolled around in bushes and mud. The cop hadn't asked either.

When someone found the body—or when she told someone—he would probably remember, though.

Katrina Rufina
. She kept repeating the name, wishing the syllables could drown out the noise in her head. Why wouldn't the kin speak her name? Had she . . . maybe they didn't talk about her because she'd done something awful? Could that be it?

It's not what she did. It's what they did. To her.

“—Thorne,” Cami said, and Ruby jolted out of the roaring.

“What?” She stared at the water on the window, fat beads rolling down. The lightning had backed off, but the rain showed no signs of slacking.

Cami punched the defroster. “I said, everyone's looking for Thorne. They're under strict orders not to hurt him, to bring him to Gran. Nico thinks—”

Words burst out of her. “He didn't do it. He couldn't have.”

So much for staying quiet.

“Do what? All they're saying is that he's missing.” Ellie, folded up in the backseat, leaned forward, her elbow resting on the side of Ruby's seat. “I've tried locator-charms, but no dice, and Livvie won't let me do anything real high strength. The charmstitcher keeps scaring her.”

Because your stepmother almost broke your charming. Or that thing you were staying with almost did.
Ruby suppressed a shiver. “Everyone's looking for him.”

“I thought
you'd
know where he was.” Cami stared past the wipers, their steady rhythm a heartbeat. Her slight frown of concentration just made her more beautiful.

Ruby's entire body itched. “Well, I don't.”
If I did, I wouldn't tell anyone. Not until I could talk to him
.

Ellie made a clicking noise with her tongue. She smelled like expensive fabric softener, a faint edge of active charming like cherries, and the good green of approaching rain. “We were kind of relieved you'd skipped, until we both got called out of class. Did you know Nico even tried to walk into Juno's? Mother Hel had to come out on the steps and talk to him.”

“I don't think I've ever seen him so polite.” Cami's shy laugh, soft and musical, shriveled everything up inside of Ruby.

How could she
laugh
, with everything going on? Ruby sank her teeth into her lower lip, just on the edge of drawing blood. Again.

It sort of helped.

Not really.

Ellie made the peculiar little chuffing noise, not quite a laugh, that meant she was amused. “Well, at least he's got
some
sense.”

“Not as much as I'd hoped. But it's developing.” Cami turned right, then left, then right again, and they were three blocks from the cottage. “Ruby . . . are you s-sure you want to go home? I mean, it's probably better if you're . . . with us. You know?”

“I need to be home.” Her lip stung as she forced herself to say it quietly. “We've got a guest. And if—
when
Gran comes home, it has to be clean.”

The Spyder crept along, its wheels pushing water aside. The windshield wipers kept doing their job, like the idiots they were.

“Conrad,” Ellie said finally, and Ruby almost gave a guilty start. “So . . . maybe we can come in and meet him?”

Oh yeah, that'll go over really well.
“Now's not a good time.”

“Well, when is?” Ellie persisted.

“Ell . . .” Cami sighed.

Ruby gathered herself. “When it is I'll let you know. Let me out here, Cami.”

She kept the Spyder to a creep. “It's still r-raining.”

“I could get out and walk faster than this.”

“Don't.” Ellie's fingers on her shoulder, rubbing a little. “We want to help, Ruby.”

There's nothing you can do.
“You've got your own problems.” She played with the door-catch, scraping her broken nails over the silver bar. She wasn't even wearing any polish.

“You
are
our problem.” Ellie squeezed a little.

Ruby almost flinched.
Maybe that's what Conrad thinks too. That I'm his problem
. “I'm nobody's problem.”
Besides, I'm a selfish bitch, remember?
She stared out the window, willing the cottage to appear. Everything was blurring, running together.

Or maybe it was just that her eyes were leaking.

“That's not true.” Cami pulled to a stop. “We're your
friends
, Ruby.”

Funny, how she remembered being in the driver's seat, and trying to convince Ellie of the same thing.
Stop being a selfish bitch
.
I realize it's your default, but just try.
“There's nothing you can do right now. Thanks for the ride.”

She was out of her seatbelt in a hot second, and out in the rain before Cami could say anything else.

The flagstones were a little slippery, and the front door was still open. As if Gran wanted fresh rain-washed air, or she was expecting someone.

But Gran was in a hospital bed. She was old, and it wasn't like kin to just
collapse
.

Maybe she didn't just collapse. You ever think of that?

Of course she had. She'd been spending the entire time sitting there trying
not
to think about it.

Maybe once she got inside, she could just close the door and go upstairs. Lie down. Rest. Figure out how to fix the gigantic mess that had just descended on the world.

She trudged through the rain, her left maryjane flopping a little and her eyes still welling with hot water. She didn't see the gleam in the upstairs window, a pair of eyes watching her from the guest room. Golden eyes, narrowed and thoughtful.

And frightfully, scarily empty.

PART IV:

WHAT SHARP TEETH

TWENTY-NINE

E
VERY
WINDOW
AND
DOOR
O
N
THE
FIRST
FLOOR
WA
S
open. She wrestled them closed, her arms aching savagely as if she'd been playing hang-me-man all day in the Park with the cousins. With that done, she made her way upstairs, step by painful step. The dishes were washed and the floor freshly mopped; Tante Sasha had probably run home to make dinner for her family. She had three boys, and they were all growing. The silence said she'd taken Conrad with her, though she hadn't left a note.

Ruby wanted a shower, but just getting into dry clothes was all she had time for. Because after that she would clean the house from top to bottom, so that
when
Gran came home, she could see that Ruby had been responsible and grown up, a good kingirl.

Jeans, tank top, a cerise silk jumper—the one she'd met Conrad at the train station in, it felt like a lifetime ago. Her uniform was filthy, her socks worse, and nothing was going to save that left maryjane. There was one tiny luckcharm still clinging to the strap; she stuffed it in her pocket and started dragging a comb through her tangled, air-dried hair. Her schoolbag lay on her bed, a rain-darkened blot, and it would probably leave a mark on the comforter.

Her head had turned into cotton fuzz. It was a welcome change from the roaring.

Dry socks felt good. Her old battered trainers were just right. She gathered up her uniform, holding it crumpled in a ball at arm's length as she smelled the sweat and fear and desperation on it.

Underneath, the faint brassy note of that awful, awful sight.

She turned, meaning to head out the door and down to the utility room—the whole uniform, blazer included, needed a good soaking—and dropped the entire ball, letting out a choked cry.

Conrad leaned against her doorframe, his eyes reflecting gold from the overhead light. For a moment they were too big and luminous, and a ripple ran through him as if he was going to shift, the points of his ears lengthening . . . and receding.

Ruby's heart threatened to explode. “Mithrus
Christ
!” she hissed, forgetting how much he didn't like being told what to do. “Make a little noise next time! You
scared
me!”

“Sorry.” He didn't look sorry. Instead, he looked thoughtful. “Where are you going?”

“Downstairs, to put this in the . . . have you been here the whole time? Did Tante Sasha go home?”

“So many questions. You always ask a lot of them.” He nodded, as if he'd said something profound. “I think it's time we talked.”

I don't have time for this
. “I've got to get the house cleaned up. Plus I have to make dinner. When Gran comes home—”

“Is she coming home, then?” Why didn't he sound interested?

“Of course she is.” Ruby bent to pick up the stinking uniform. “I mean, she's stabilized. That's what the cop said.”

“Cop?”

“Yeah. Haelan. The one who came . . . came by and said . . .” She straightened, slowly. “Why were all the windows open? And where were you? Did you just come home when Gran—”

“Ruby, shut the fuck up.” Calmly, quietly. “Or I will beat the shit out of you.”

Her jaw dropped. She stared at him.

He held up his hand, slowly, and something fluid silver dangled from it. Alive with its own light, it twisted and turned, curling around his fingers. Its scales rasped against his skin, and Ruby's entire body chilled.

It was a collar. Those scales would draw tight around the throat, and the
shift
would be inaccessible. Your senses would dull, only mere-human instead of the sharpness of kin. No more fullmoons either, unless the keyholder decided you could control yourself.

If he was holding the collar, he had the key, too.

“This is for your own good.” Almost kindly. He stopped leaning against the doorframe, drawing himself up, and the small satisfied smile he wore made his face into a stranger's. His teeth were very white. Kin-white. “Your grandmother would agree.”

She took a single step back.
What do you know about what Gran agrees about? You're Grimtree, you're a guest.

“Don't make this hard.” He moved forward, and his smile widened. His boots crushed her uniform, and in a blinding flash, Ruby saw the mud—dried now—coating them.

The same as the mud on her maryjanes.

“You were in the Park,” she whispered. “You were . . . you . . .”

A zing, like biting on charmed tinfoil, all the way down her spine. Her brain refused to put the pieces together, but her body knew.

A snarl drifted over his face, a cloud over the sun. “You go poking in where you don't belong. It's going to take some training, but you'll learn.”

Training?
“What are you
talking
about? Look, put that thing away. You can help me make dinner, and we'll just—”


Don't tell me what to do!
” he screamed, and lurched forward.

THIRTY

A
FTERWARD
SHE
WASN
'
T
QUITE
SURE
WHAT
HAD
HAP
PENED
. She only remembered bits and pieces. First the red flare of agony when he backhanded her, kin strength making the blow just short of neck-snapping force, and a welter of confusion with her desperate screams and his growling roar. The bed—she'd fallen, half-sideways, and was scrabbling, the comforter tearing and her fist tangling in the strap of her schoolbag.

He grabbed her hair as she slid off the bed on the other side, her scalp searing red-hot as she tore free, and somehow she was on her back, her knees drawn up, and she
kicked
, catching him square in the jaw. He went over backward, the collar making a jangling sound as it was flung in an oddly perfect arc, smacking against her bookshelf and spilling downward.

Somehow on her feet, lunging for the door, trainers slipping in the pile of damp uniform, and she was in the hall, hearing his cheated howl behind her.

He's going to be so angry
.

A noise—breaking glass. Had he broken the window? Her mirror? Bad luck, just like in a feytale.

He was in the Park
, a cold, rational, almost-adult voice in her head spoke up, quietly and calmly.
Get out of here, Ruby, before he kills you too
.

She blundered down the stairs, trapped in the syrup of a bad dream. The nightmare just kept getting worse, and worse, and she was beginning to suspect there was no waking up.

She'd locked the front door, and now her fingers plucked at it, clumsy with terror. Heavy footsteps on the stairs behind her, and that awful, rasping, jangling sound.

“Quit running. I
love
you. You're my way out, Ruby.” His nose sounded clogged—had she broken it? Oh, God, he was going to be so
angry
, and after weeks of seeing what he could do when he was just
irritated
she just didn't even, oh
God
, her fingers would not work on the deadbolt, just scrabbled blindly. “We'll just get this on, and then you'll be mine. All mine.”

Mithrus please oh please—
the lock suddenly yielded, she ripped the door open and almost tripped over the threshold.


Ruuuuuuby!
” he roared behind her.
“YOU'RE MIIIIIIIINE!”

The roaring was all through her, a red madness, and sky-tears spattered her face and hands as Ruby fled into the gathering, rainy dusk.

Other books

Not Stupid by Anna Kennedy
The Sexy Vegan Cookbook by Brian L. Patton
Corsair by Baker, Richard
Demons Prefer Blondes by Sidney Ayers
Nightmare At 20,000 Feet by Richard Matheson
Dame la mano by Charlotte Link
Money by Felix Martin
A Decent Interval by Simon Brett