Salem's Revenge Complete Boxed Set (78 page)

I push forward, shouting, “Wait! Wait!”

The crowd gives way when they notice me, and fierce whispers of “The Resistor!” race along like a brushfire.

There’s no room for fear when I step between the humans and the Necros, and yet it’s still there, sucking my breath away, shaking my knees. They’ve rejected me already.

“This isn’t right,” I say. The crowd goes silent.

“Raising the dead isn’t right!” Cameron shouts, and the crowd agrees with a roar.

I shake my head. “I used to believe that, too, and it’s still hard for me to understand. But the dead are gone already. Their souls aren’t with their bodies anymore, and they would want to help, even from the grave.”

“That’s sick!” Cameron shouts, and the crowd adds their agreement.

“Kill them! Kill them all!” the crowd roars.

The bruisers in the front move forward, some of them cradling crowbars and sticks. One of them even has a strange-looking gun, and I can tell by the purple barrel it’s one of Huckle’s magical ones.

“No!” I yell, desperation cracking my voice. “Please, listen!” No one listens, the mob charging like an angry bull.

That’s when I get bailed out by the very person I’m fighting against. Cameron Hardy raises his arms and shouts, “Stop!”

They stop instantly, like he’s pressed the pause button on some life-controlling remote. Like they’re the pawns on his own personal chessboard, available to be moved in whichever direction he chooses.

“There has been enough death,” he says. “We have to take the higher road. We are not like
them
.” He says ‘them’ like it’s a dirty word, pointing a single finger at Mr. Jackson. “We invite the Resistor to join us, but we will not force him. To the rest of you I ask: Will you follow me to a better place?”

The question is barely out of his mouth before every man, woman, and child, as one, answer “Yeah!” in a deafening cry surely heard throughout all of Alliance.

“We leave under the cover of night,” Cameron Hardy says. “But first we must hold a trial for our unlawfully detained brother and sister.” He steps down from his makeshift platform and walks away, the crowd following in his wake like a pack of dogs on a leash.

Chapter Seventeen

Hex

 

G
rogg is Grogg again. Hex smells his butt and he scampers away, ducking behind a tree. Hex moves
through
the tree and pounces on the mud troll, pinning him to the ground. “Why?” Hex barks. “Why’d you do it?”

Grogg tilts his head at an angle. In his creaky voice, he says, “Old Master commands it. We must obey.”

Hex isn’t surprised Grogg can understand him. Grogg is a magical being, after all. “Rhett is my master,” he barks. “But I only obey him if it’s the right thing to do.”

Grogg scrunches up his face and some of the mud sloughs off, revealing yet another layer of mud. He looks at Hex quizzically. “How do you do this thing you speak of?” he asks.

Hex licks Grogg’s face and rolls off, allowing the troll to sit up. “No matter how many masters we have, we still have a choice,” he barks. “We are the only master that truly matters.”

Grogg pinches his muddy cheeks and twists his malformed ears. One of them pops off and Grogg rolls it into a ball. He pops it in his mouth, chewing slowly, as if deep in thought. A moment later, his missing ear pops out from the side of his head. Hex chuffs and chases his tail gleefully. “See,” he barks. “You did that without anyone telling you to. And it was amazing!”

Grogg seems to be inspired by Hex’s encouragement, grabbing his ankles and lifting his brown, clumpy feet over his own head like a contortionist. But he doesn’t stop there. He keeps going, his knees melting into his shoulders, his feet arcing down his back, past his rear, and back into place again, his knees reappearing from somewhere south of his torso. Delighted, Hex leaps into the air, allowing butterfly wings to sprout from his back, fluttering rapidly to propel him into a hover a few feet off the ground.

Letting out a husky chuckle, Grogg springs into the air, wrapping his arms around Hex’s neck and hanging on tightly while Hex flies them over the trees, past buildings, above creeks and fields and mountains and valleys. When Hex twists around to look at his passenger, Grogg’s head is spinning like a top, taking in the scenery with unabashed excitement.

“See!” Hex barks, and he doesn’t mean just the beauty of the landscape. He means the beauty of freedom.

“Yes,” Grogg grunts. “I see.

“Will you help me rescue my friends?” he barks.

“I will try,” Grogg says.

Chapter Eighteen

Laney

 

I
’m not really hungry anymore. In fact, I don’t think I’ll ever be hungry again. Without even bothering to clean my spew from her dress, Chloe fed the rest of the slugs to Bil, who ate them happily. For someone who said “Hunger is nothing,” he had quite an appetite.

Chloe left us after that, ignoring me when I hissed, “Get us out of here!” as she walked away.

So we’re still screwed. Well, I’m screwed, I don’t think Bil cares either way. He’s been muttering something under his breath for a while now, but I can’t understand him. I gave up asking him to speak up, because he just ignored me anyway.

My arms and legs ache from being held so tightly in one position for so long. I’ve got a headache from the band wrapped around my forehead, and from the knock I took on the noggin last night. And there’s an annoying drip coming from one of the stalactites that’s making me want to rip my hair out one strand at a time—but I can’t even indulge in self-abuse with my arms strapped.

With nothing better to do, I close my eyes and try to sleep, but Bil’s incessant whispering makes it impossible.

“Better…,” he says. There’s more, the word a part of a longer sentence, but I can’t make it out, the hissing echoes bouncing off each other and turning the words into garbled mush.

“What’s better, Bil?” I ask, running out of patience. And I might be slightly curious as to what the inner workings of a madman sound like.

His peripheral vision meets my peripheral vision. “This way,” he says. “Better this way.”

That’s
what he’s been muttering for two hours? God, I wish I had my Glock right now. I’d shoot him, and then shoot myself. A stab of laughter chokes me. That wouldn’t work, of course. Bil would just be able to Resist my magic bullets, and I’d end up vaporizing myself.

“There’s nothing about our situation that’s better,” I say. “So please shut the hell up, Bil Nez.”

“No!” he says loudly, and for a second I think he’s responding to me. But then he says it again. “No!” Along with: “Yes.” The internal battle continues on. “No! Yes! No! Yes! Stop it stop it stop it better better better…better…this…way…” The last word trails off in defeat, and he starts sobbing.

“Bil?” I say.

“Who is that?” he asks.

“Take a wild guess.”

“Laney?”

Thank God, I think. The real Bil Nez is back. The one I dislike, but not quite enough to hate. Things are looking up. “The one and only,” I say. “Welcome back to the land of the sane.”

“Where are we? Why can’t I move? What happened?”

“In a cave. Magical straps. Caught by Flora.” I’m tempted to tell him about the bellyful of slugs he’s got, but that would be just plain mean, even for me.

There’s silence as he takes a moment to process my snap answers. “Why aren’t we dead?” he asks next.

“I think Flora is collecting Resistors, so you get a free pass for now. Me, I’m bait for her to complete her Resistor collection.”

“Rhett.”

I say nothing.

“She thinks no one will be able to stop her once she has all the Resistors,” Bil says, getting up to speed in a hurry.

“Pretty much,” I say.

“But she won’t be able to force us to use our Resistance to help her,” Bil says. “I’ll just go to my other place if she tries to torture me. And Rhett would die before he’d let himself be used by Flora again.”

“Doesn’t matter. She’s already got one Resistor who
is
willing to help her. Keeping you and Rhett squirrelled away is enough for her, then at least no one else can use you against her.”

“We’ve got to get out of here,” Bil says.

“You think? I’ve got a plan, but it involves breaking most of our bones to escape these straps, so if you’ve got anything better…”

Instead of answering, Bil says, “What did I do while I was…gone?”

“Nothing much,” I say. “Provided dozens of nuggets of wisdom, spoke in tongues, ate slugs, the usual.”

“Very funny,” he says, but on the edge of my vision I can see the corner of his lips quirk up. Sometimes the truth is the hardest to believe.

“Flora seems to like you,” I add. “I think she’ll like the other you better than this you.”

“At least someone does,” he mutters.

“Hey, the other you was kind of growing on me, too,” I say, keeping my voice steady.

“Really?”

“No, not really.”

“Oh.” I can’t miss the misery in his voice.

“Sorry,” I say. “I just—I deal with things by making jokes.”

“At the expense of others,” Bil says.

Uh. Yeah. I guess he’s right. I don’t really mock myself nearly as much as I probably should. I try to think of a good one. “Uh, I’m so fat that I don’t care that the internet is broken because I’m already worldwide.”

Silence. I guess I shouldn’t choose standup comedy as a viable career path.

Bil says, “But you’re not fat.”

“It’s just a joke.”

“But it makes no sense unless you’re fat.”

I sigh. He’s right. I suck at making fun of myself. “I invite you to do better,” I say.

“You’re encouraging me to make fun of you?”

I probably have it coming. “Yeah.”

“Your voice is so husky you could be a coconut,” Bil says.

I laugh because it’s so stupid it’s funny. “Nice.”

“No wait, I got one. Your voice is so husky you could be a man pretending to be a girl for Halloween.”

Less funny. “Is my voice really that bad?”

Bil grins. “Nah. I’m just making a point. Not so much fun when you’re on the receiving end, is it?”

“Guess not,” I say. “Sorry. If you can stop doing stupid stuff and saying stupid things, it would really help me to tone down the jokes.”

“You’re hopeless,” Bil says, which makes me realize I’ve insulted him even as I’ve apologized for insulting him. Damn, this is going to be harder than I thought.

Footsteps urge us into silence. They’re louder than Flora’s silky footfalls and more certain and confident than Chloe’s timid ones. Whoever it is stops between us, and I can barely make out an obsidian outline of a person.

I can hear breathing.

“What do you want?” I snap, tired of whatever game is being played.

“You’re the girlfriend of the last Resistor,” a female voice says. “I remember you. You tried to kill me and my Master with your pathetically inadequate toy gun.”

Oh gosh. It’s the other Resistor. No, not just some random Resistor, I remember. The sister Rhett never knew he had. Rain Carter. From the sounds of it, she doesn’t even know Rhett’s her brother. Do I tell her? Will it help or make things worse? “You can’t protect that retractable-clawed witch forever,” I say. “If I don’t kill her, someone else will.”

“Maybe. Maybe not,” she says. “But I will go on.” Her voice sounds strange. Almost tinny, like it’s echoing in her mouth even before it echoes in the cave. This girl has some serious issues.

“Why did you come? Has this become some kind of human zoo so you and your Shifter buddies can come by and gawk at us? Want me to grunt like a monkey or something?”

“I came to speak to Bil Nez,” she says.

“Why hello there,” Bil says in his deepest voice. Gag. If we’re pinning our hopes on Bil’s ability to seduce Rhett’s sister, then we might as well season our slugs with cyanide and call it a day.

“We need your help,” Rain says.

“I bet you do,” Bil says. Although I have nothing in my stomach, I almost dry-heave.

“To win this war,” she clarifies.

“Screw you,” Bil says, and I want to cheer. I feel a swell of pride.

“The humans won’t accept you,” Rain says. “You’re not like them. Your parents are magic-born, and although you didn’t get the same gifts as them, you got different gifts. Special gifts.”

“I’m not five years old,” Bil says. “I don’t believe in the Tooth Fairy or Easter Bunny anymore.”

“What about Santa Claus?” I ask, jumping in.

“A fat, jolly man who traverses the whole of the earth in a single night, all the while keeping track of the good versus bad kids? C’mon, try your fairy tale on someone with a little less experience,” Bil says.

I laugh at that. He almost sounds…like me.

“What the hell are you even talking about?” Rain says, stepping forward where I can see her better. Even from the corner of my eye, the resemblance to Rhett is striking. She’s a big girl, not someone you’d want to get into a fight with. She wouldn’t be slapping, she’d be hammering. She’s tall, close to six feet, with broad shoulders and wide hips. Her lips are full, dark around the edges and pink where they meet, pouting out slightly on the bottom. Her eyes are a darker brown than Rhett’s, closer to Martin Carter’s color, almost black, but bigger. If her stare wasn’t so sharp, she could almost be considered doe-eyed. If she didn’t look so angry, she could almost be pretty, in an I-want-to-devour-you-for-breakfast kind of way.

I don’t respond and Bil doesn’t either; apparently he’s taking her in as well. I wonder if her resemblance to Rhett will make him more or less inclined to pursue her affections. I’m really hoping for less.

Standing between us, she seems uncertain, rocking from one foot to the other. As if she’s waiting for something. Finally, she says, “I don’t know—I want to—Fine. You’ve made your choice.”

“Wait,” I say, but she’s already spun around and out of sight, the echoes of her footsteps making her exit sound like a stampede rather than the retreat of a single individual.

“That was odd,” Bil says, and coming from him, that says a whole lot.

 

~~~

 

We’ve discussed it to death and agreed on nothing. Bil wants to play along, to pretend to switch sides, and then later try to sabotage the Shifters. I’d rather wait and see how it plays out, at least for now. I don’t say it, but I don’t exactly trust that the real Bil will stick around long enough to carry out his proposed plan. And who knows what the other Bil will do when pressed by Rain again. He might even help them, which could be disastrous on so many levels.

We’re still arguing when Bil suddenly groans. I can barely make out that he’s closed his eyes and opened his mouth wide. As if he’s in pai—

“It hurts!” he howls.

“What?” I say, helplessly watching my fellow schemer’s body strain against his bindings, clearly in serious agony.

“He…wants…to…get…inside…me! Argh!”

I’m more than freaked out, but there’s nothing I can do except to provide verbal encouragement for Bil’s fight against some invisible foe. “Fight back! Keep him out! You can do it!” If I had a boom box I’d press play and the
Rocky
theme song would erupt from the speakers.

“Can’t! Too strong!”

“You can!” I say. “You are stronger!” A skeptical thought shoots through my mind, but if this is some kind of an elaborate joke, I will get my revenge later. At least, if I’m not eaten by a panther first.

And then, as quickly as whatever force came to assault him, it’s gone, leaving Bil panting and breathless. “Oh gosh”—huff huff huff—“oh man”—more breathing—“it’s over. I think it’s over.”

“What was that?”

“I—I think it was a wizard,” Bil says.

And then he passes out.

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