Witches (Runes series Book 6) (3 page)

Lala lala lala… hmm-mmm… Lala lala lala…

I tried to drown out his words as I slowly pulled the backpack away from his line of vision. I wasn’t sure what Ellie just did, but air left Beau’s lungs in a rush and a quick glance over my shoulder made me wish I hadn’t.

I went into hyper speed as I searched the pockets of his backpack. More dirty socks. Candy wrappers. Bikinis. More condoms. I got a few visions I didn’t want to see and one that was very helpful. I now knew how he’d gotten a gun
, but I still didn’t see where he’d hidden it. Stupid visions.
I slowed down, frustration setting in.

“Get your sorry ass down here, boy!” came from upstairs.

“Damn it.” Beau growled. “Don’t go anywhere,” he said and closed his laptop. He grabbed a T-shirt from the floor. By the time he pulled it on, I’d disengaged my invisibility runes.

I blocked his path.

“What the…
 
Fuck!” Eyes widening, he scrambled to get away from me. He bumped the edge of the bed and struggled to stay on his feet as he put some distance between us. “Raine Cooper? What are you doing in my house?”

I hadn’t thought this far. My plan had been to find the gun, take it, and leave without revealing my presence. I improvised.

“What name did you call me?” I asked, faking ignorance.

“This is not funny, Raine. How did you get in here?”

“I don’t know who this Raine is, but if that’s the image you’re seeing then that’s what your mind conjured. Why you may ask? It’s what Mortals do when they see me.”

His jaw dropped. Then he shook his head as though to rattle his brain into place. “What?”

“I’m your, uh, Norn.” I hated using that name, let alone admitting I was one, even though I was embracing my destiny. When he stared at me blankly, I added, “I’m what you Mortals call a guardian angel and I’m here to help you. The projection you see here,”—I waved a hand to indicate my body—“is what your mind chose.”

He swallowed, ran his fingers through his hair, and grimaced. “You’re screwing with my head, right? You’re right here in front of me. I can see you.”

“And now you don’t.” I engaged my invisibility runes and watched him look around in panic, cursing up a storm. I reappeared again and he grew paler. “Like I said, I’m your guardian angel and I’m here to make sure you don’t do something stupid, Beau Hardshaw.”

He gulped and blinked. “Stupid?”

“You have a gun that doesn’t belong to you. I want it.”

His eyes darted to his bed. “How do you know that?”

I sighed. “Because I know things, Beau. Remember the guardian angel part? Randy showed you his father’s collection after school today and you took one.” Randall Meyer’s father was a survivalist with enough weapons to start World War Three. “Give it to me.”

Beau frowned and stared at me, thinking things through. “I meant to return it.”

“After using it.”

He shook his head. “I’m not going to use it. I just want to threaten the ass-hat with it.”

“Except it will go off.” He was beginning to believe me. “You are an amazing baseball player with a bright future ahead of you, Beau. Don’t blow it. He’s not worth it.”

Thuds came from upstairs followed by a scream. A tortured look entered Beau’s eyes. “He’s hurting her. I have to go.”

I moved and blocked him. “No.”

“He won’t stop until I give him a different target.”

Which explained the discolorations on his left cheek. Earlier, at school, he’d fibbed about sliding into a plate during a game and hurting himself. As a right-handed pitcher, he’d do everything to protect his right arm, which meant all his defensive bruises would be on his left. The tattoos could be covering scars from years of abuse.

Anger slammed through me. “I’ll take care of him, Beau. Just give me the gun.”

He glanced toward the door and I could see him trying hard to decide whether to trust me or not. More thuds, followed by, “You stupid bitch. You think you can hurt me?” More thuds and screams.

“The gun, Beau,”
I said firmly and with a confidence I didn’t feel. Beau wasn’t the
type
of guy a girl ordered about.

He reached under his pillow and pulled out a gun. I didn’t know anything about guns, except you cocked it and pulled the trigger to shoot. I gripped the middle and made sure the muzzle was pointing away from me.

“Stay here,” I said. Beau opened his mouth, but I shook my head. “No. Stay. I don’t like to be interrupted when I work.”

I engaged my invisibility runes, moved into hyper-speed, and created a portal. Beau stared around in confusion, probably wondering where I’d gone. His stepfather stood over his mother while she cowered in the corner of the room by the stove. She was holding her arm, just like in my vision. He had the empty box of canned beer in his left hand.

“You stupid woman. You can’t do a simple thing unless I tell you over and over again how and when to do it.” He raised his fist.

“I wouldn’t do that if I were you,” I said calmly.

He whipped around, ran his eyes over me, and leered. “Who are you? One of Beau’s
girls
? Get out of here before I show you what a real man can do.”

“Real men don’t beat up helpless women and children, Joe Hardshaw,” I said, sliding the gun behind the knife holder.

“This is my house, girlie. No one touches my things.” He reached for his wife.

Moving fast, I closed the gap between us and gripped his wrist before he made contact. He stared at me as though I was crazy.

“You little slut,” he growled, and stale breath fanned my face. My stomach rebelled. He tried to push me, but I had engaged strength runes. I twisted his wrist and a yowl escaped his mouth. He dropped the box and tried to jerk his hand from my grip, but he couldn’t break my hold.

 
“Names? Really?” I twisted again and he adjusted his body into a weird shape to relieve the pain. “One more twist and I’ll snap your wrist, Mr. Hardshaw. Stop struggling and listen carefully to what I have to say.”

“How…” He took a swing at me with his other hand. I caught his beefy fist and squeezed hard. “Aw, my fingers,” he moaned.

“I’m really trying hard not to hurt you, Mr. Hardshaw. If I squeezed hard enough, I would crush your bones.” His face twisted in pain. “If you rammed me with your head, you’d only split your skull. If I pushed you, you’d fly through the window behind you, taking the counter and the sink with you. Now, are you ready to listen?”

He nodded.

“Good.” I let him go. “Don’t move.” I turned and offered the wife a hand, but she cringed. “It’s okay. I’m not going to hurt you. I’m here to help.”

“Watch out!” Beau yelled.

I turned to see his stepfather lunge at me. I ducked, grabbed his arm and yanked. He tethered on his heel, then he went down, taking the counter with him. I lifted him by his tighty-whities, which gave me a nasty view of his butt crack. Didn’t want to see or smell that.

I pushed him against the counter, careful not to break another section of it. He had bruises on his arms and back. “I’m trying to be nice and you’re not helping,”
I said, annoyance lacing my words.
Beau was attempting to help his mother to her feet. “Don’t move her.”

“She needs to see a doctor. The bastard broke her arm this time.” He glared at his stepfather.

“No, call 911. Her arm
is
broken.” Beau looked ready to argue. “Please.” I needed to erase their memories and I couldn’t if they left. He nodded and reached for the phone. I focused on his stepfather.

“I’m here to protect your wife and son, Joe,” I said. “If you ever hit one of them again, I’ll know and I’ll come for you. You haven’t seen what I can do. I’m strong and I’m fast. I’m relentless when I want something and mean when pissed. Everything about you pisses me off, Joe. Do you understand?”

He nodded, fear clouding his pale blue eyes.

“They won’t remember what I did here tonight, but I want you to remember me. I know everything about you, Joe Hardshaw. You’re a bully and you drink too much. Touch them again and I promise you, you won’t live to see another day.” I stepped back and removed my artavus. His eyes went to it. Beau was squatting by his mother consoling her, but his eyes were on us. Any second, I knew the police and EMTs would come barreling toward their house.

I turned my back to Hardshaw senior, knowing he wouldn’t dare attack me again. “I have to go now, Beau. If he hurts her again, I’ll know.”

“How?” Beau asked, glancing at his stepfather before focusing on me.

Yeah, that was a good question. How, genius?

“I’ll know,” I said with a confidence I didn’t feel. I glanced over my shoulder at his stepfather. “See you around, Joe. Be good. You’ve been warned.”

I used invisibility runes to disappear, etched forgetful runes on Beau and his mother, and walked across the room to get the gun. Now to return it to Randy’s before his father finds out
it’s
missing.

“What are you doing?” a woman’s voice
cut through the air
and my stomach dropped. That annoying, arrogant voice sounded way too familiar.

I turned, expecting to see the Norns assigned to me, the bane of my existence, and found myself facing a couple instead. Relief coursed through me. They were not the ones. Catie, Marj, and Jeannette, as I liked to call my Norns, always appeared to me together. It didn’t matter whether they were men or women, they were always in threes.

The guy was handsome, tall, and slender with pitch-black hair that reminded me of Torin’s hair, except Torin’s was thicker and more luxurious. This guy was a walking ad for tattoos, which blended with his runes. The sleeves of his coat were rolled up and he wore biker gloves like Torin’s. He was handsome with unforgettable violet eyes. The woman was exotic with high cheekbones and slanted eyes. She reminded me of someone, I just couldn’t remember who.

“Follow us,” she said and created a portal.

“What are you? Valkyries? Grimnirs?” The sound of an ambulance and flashing lights drew closer. “I gotta go.”

The woman moved fast and blocked me.
“No, you’re not going anywhere. You just stole our soul.”

Her tone of voice didn’t surprise me. Most reapers were arrogant. But to stop me from leaving?
“Excuse me?”

“You heard me. We were supposed to reap him,” she pointed at Beau’s stepfather, “tonight. You interfered.”

Grimnirs. The trench coats should have warned me. I didn’t want to antagonize them. “I saved his son from a fate worse than death tonight, guys. That’s better than a soul bound for Hel. Maybe he just needs a little nudge to change his ways.”

They looked at each other and shook their heads. “You can’t interfere with our reaping by changing what is meant to happen.”

“I’m a Norn-in-training, Grimnirs, so yeah. I can.” I glanced over my shoulder at the kitchen. Beau stayed with his mother while his stepfather lumbered to the door and opened it for the EMTs.

“Thugs broke in here and attacked my wife and me.
They ran that way
,” Mr. Hardshaw pointed down the street as he continued to lie. “If our son hadn’t come upstairs, they would have killed us.”

“Where’s your wife, sir?” an EMT asked.

“This way. I think they broke her arm and ribs.”

What an a-hole. From the look on Beau’s face, I couldn’t tell whether he bought his stepfather’s story or not. Maybe I shouldn’t have runed him.

While the EMTs went to get Beau’s mother, his stepfather talked to two police officers,
repeating the same lie about a break-in by thugs he couldn’t identify because it had been too dark.
Someone gave him a blanket. Through the door, I could see neighbors stepping out of their homes to gawk.

The Grimnirs were arguing softly, but the girl gave me a look that said she wasn’t going to leave until she spoke with me further. Her partner hadn’t said anything since they’d arrived. I had a feeling nothing bothered him much.

“I have to return this gun before the owner finds out its gone. I’m sorry you didn’t reap the douchebag, but I couldn’t let Beau kill him. He would have ended up in jail, which would have been a waste of his potential. He has an amazing arm.” The Grimnirs scowled. “Baseball.”

“We know what you meant,” the woman
said through clenched teeth
. “That doesn’t make it right. And you’re not a Norn yet.”

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