Avenger (30 page)

Read Avenger Online

Authors: Heather Burch

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #General, #Religious, #Christian, #Fantasy

BOOK: Avenger
8.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Raven.” Mace shook him. “I need your help. You know the lab. I can’t leave her with these butchers. I need to find her … body.”

Raven swallowed and nodded. One hand released Mace’s arm to swipe away the tears. “I know where she might be. You go to the front of the building and work your way back, I’ll start here.”

“If you know where she might be, let’s go there.”

“It’s just a guess, and we need to hurry.”

“Why? Most of the Omega employees fled after that explosion.” As he spoke, he noticed a shift in Raven’s posture.

“The explosion was no accident — the whole building is wired to blow. Mace, we have about two minutes to find her and get her out.”

“Raven, what did you do? The authorities are on the way. They’re going to search the building for evidence to put Vessler away.”

“You can yell at me about this later. Right now, we have to find Nikki.” He looked at his watch. “We’ve only got a minute and forty-five seconds. Go!” He shoved Mace and ran toward the back of the lab.

Mace stumbled toward the front, scanning rooms as he went. Time was running low, and he began to wonder if they’d find her. But then he heard Raven yelling for him. Mace bolted to the main aisle. His legs gave way beneath him when he arrived, forcing him to cling to a door frame.

Nikki’s lifeless body was draped in Raven’s arms.

No, no, no. God
,
please
. Her hair swayed with each pounding step, the only sign of life left in her body. She was pale, and when Raven stopped at Mace’s feet, he held her out to him. “Take her. You should carry her out.”

He thought she’d be heavier, but compared to the sorrow he bore, she felt like nothing in his grasp. For a moment, he cradled her. “I’m so sorry I failed you, Nikki.” Mace brushed strands away from her face. He sucked in a breath when he saw her brutally damaged skin. His grip tightened, a poor attempt to protect her from what she’d already suffered.

“Mace, go. I’m right behind you.”

He tried to turn, but his legs were concrete.

“Mace, go!” This time, Raven turned him toward the front door. Just thirty feet away. Raven shoved him. “Go. We’re almost out of time.”

Somehow Mace’s legs began to move, and soon he was racing to the door. Once they made it through, Mace turned to point Raven to the tree-lined parking lot … but he didn’t see Raven. He spun completely around, his eyes skimming past Winter, Glimmer, and Vine, who had rushed toward him. “Where’d he go?”

Glimmer was shaking her head, mouth covering her face as she stared at Nikki. Mace shifted his focus to Winter. “Where’s Raven?”

It took her a moment to answer. “He hasn’t come out.”

“Vine!” Mace dropped Nikki in the younger boy’s arms. “Don’t let anyone back in. The place is loaded with explosives.” He turned and bolted for the lab door; his foot cleared the threshold just as a blast hit him like a cannonball to the chest and threw him backward to the ground. A giant fireball erupted from the door and spewed over his head. For a moment, he thought the incinerating heat might melt his skin. Around him, screams rent the air and pandemonium broke out, people running in all directions. Before him, the lab was a hallowed cave of smoke, flames, and debris.

Mace crawled over the shards of glass that littered the area, his eyes fixed on the burning doorway. Raven was still inside. He’d lost his soul mate and his brother in the same day.

Smoke billowed over Mace’s face, enveloping him in its darkness. His only thought a futile prayer running through his head. “No.
Please
. I can’t lose them.”

There was noise behind him. An irritating one calling his name, pulling him from the blackness. Mace fought it. This new darkness was beautifully simple. But the sound kept tugging him. First a request, then an order. He wished whomever it was would stop and let him enjoy the dark, inky sea he was sinking into, but then he recognized the voice.

The next voice was Winter’s. “Mace, it’s Nikki. She needs you.”

Sheer will caused him to drag his eyes open and reject the dark he had wanted to succumb to. Vine and the others were there, and through the noise and the haze they helped him stand and stumble to the spot where Nikki’s body lay. People parted as he neared her. Her pale form looked asleep there on the green grass, almost like she was waiting on a kiss to awaken her. But Nikki was gone. And even though he knew — had begun to accept—still, his mind continued to pray.

Many were standing around him as he knelt to her, and he could barely stand entering an atmosphere so heavy with sadness. Someone had arranged her hair so it framed her face perfectly. A tremor, small but noticeable, made its way through the crowd that had all but closed the two of them in. Mace took Nikki’s hand in his. He bent forward and put his head on her stomach. And one more time, he prayed.

He couldn’t stop himself; his spirit was determined. He’d
pray every minute of every hour of every day of every year if that’s what he had to do to survive in a world without Nikki.

Someone gave his hand the lightest of squeezes. A collective gasp exhaled from the crowd. Someone whispered “Stop,” and his head moved against Nikki’s stomach again. But he didn’t remember moving an inch. Mace shot to his knees and stared down at her open eyes.

“Stop praying, Mace. I’m here,” Nikki whispered.

Everything went black around him. Someone — Vine? — caught him by the shoulders and held him fast while he tried to breathe.

He blinked away the haze, looked down at his hand locked in hers. She squeezed, little more than a tremor, but she did indeed move. Mace stared at her hard.
Am I hallucinating? Am I just seeing what I want to be true?
Then came her voice, a little stronger in tone.

“I was with him. It was beautiful. We walked by the River of Life and I drank. He took my hand. You know what he said?”

Mace couldn’t speak. Alive … she was really alive. Vine bumped his shoulder. And he remembered she’d asked him a question. He shook his head, the only response he could manage.

Nikki moved, which caused her to wince. “He said, ‘You can’t stay here.’ And I was frightened, because I knew Halflings weren’t promised heaven. But he told me that wasn’t why. I couldn’t stay because you, Mace, wouldn’t let me.”

And then Nikki passed out.

Nikki awakened to unfamiliar smells and the sound of someone shuffling across the room. She tried to focus.


Mace
!” someone hollered. A familiar voice. Lilting and beautiful.
Vegan
.

Mace appeared at Nikki’s bedside and snapped his wings closed. He dropped to his knees and kissed her hands, her hair, her face. For a moment, she thought she was dreaming. But his feathery touch seemed so
real
.

“Where am I?” she whispered. The words were a gruff croak through a sand-dry throat. A horrid contrast to the perfect angel kneeling beside her.

“In my arms,” he said, scooping her off the bed and onto his lap. “That’s all that matters.”

She tucked her head against his chest in the safe circle of his arms. He surrounded her so completely, so fully, it left no room for fear. He dipped a finger beneath her chin, and she realized his breaths were as ragged as her own.

Still weak, she glanced around the room, struggling for equilibrium. Giant rock walls, tall windows, and a wide wooden door. Viennesse.

“We’re in Europe. You’ve been unconscious for three days.”

“I was in … I saw …” The lab, Vessler, the cage rushed to her mind. “Zero?”

“Shh.” Mace nuzzled her closer. “He’s fine. Cranky as ever though. Right now he’s downstairs with Dr. Spong fighting about where to set up the new computers.”

“New computers?” she echoed.

“Didn’t you hear?
Zero runs the network
.” Mace smiled, bright cerulean eyes sparkling and filled to their depths with love. “He said you called him a girl.” But even as he spoke, he pulled her closer, as if to integrate their bodies so there’d be no distinction where one ended and the other began.

She supposed three days was a long time to watch your
perfect match fight to survive. When she smiled, her lips cracked, and she winced. “Think I may need some lip balm.”

“No,” Mace corrected. “I’ve been waiting for days to kiss away your boo-boos.”

She tilted her head back, letting it fall against his shoulder. “Did you hear me tell Krissy you’d done that? That was forever ago, Mace.” Not long after the beginning of this journey, shortly after her hands had been burned in the laboratory fire the night they’d confiscated a computer. A computer containing a file with Nikki’s name on it, with the words
Genesis Project
. If only they’d know then it was a clue she was Vessler’s prized creation.

“Yes, I heard you talking to Krissy that day. And I couldn’t think of anything else afterward.”

“That’s a terrible waste of your time,” she teased. His chest pressed against her, his scent wafting over her. Hints of soap from a recent shower, the cotton of his shirt, that faint tinge of spearmint all invaded her senses as he dipped closer to her mouth.

“And why was it a waste of my time?” His hand roamed over her shoulder, down her spine, and flattened against her back.

“Because you don’t need an excuse.” Her hands circled his neck, fingers sifting through his dark-blond hair. Nikki’s lips met his. They were warm, moist, filled with anticipation and want, and a hint of sugar cookies. But mostly the promise of peace.

They were interrupted by a flock of Halflings, some materializing in the room with loud snapping wings, some opting for the more conventional method of running through the large door. “Wow,” she said to the huge group. “You guys move fast.”

Zero grinned. “All our ancestral homes were built with rooms large enough to leap in and out. It’s good practice while we’re training.”

“Whoa, whoa,” an unfamiliar voice hollered. She heard a crash at the window. Half in, half out, giant wings and one arm clung to the sill.

Mace shot a disgruntled look toward the window and shook his head. “That’s Crash.”

Two Halflings grabbed the arm and tugged him inside.

“Hoo-wee!” Crash said in a thick southern accent. “Y’all see that?” He leaned out the window and almost fell, clambering for the sill again. Somehow, his wings got tangled in the drape. He smacked at the thick cloth until he noticed every set of eyes in the room watched him. He flashed them a crooked smile. “I was follerin’ Vine, then he cut left, but I was headed right. He was gonna show me this perty place. Then he shoved me into the wall.”

Vine face turned pink. “I didn’t shove you into the wall,” he said through clenched teeth. “And don’t tell people I was taking you to a ‘pretty place.’ It makes me sound like a little girl. I was going to help you work on your landings somewhere safe.”

Vine moved next to Glimmer. Beside her, Winter sat down on the edge of the bed, and in one corner, Vegan was arranging the various plants and flowers that seemed to cover the room. Their scent saturated the space, offering life in great bundles of green and splashes of red. Nikki took in the other faces, several she didn’t recognize.

Then, her heart thudded and a sick sensation rolled through her empty stomach. “Where’s Raven?”

Gold and blue gazes ricocheted around the room. Glimmer dropped her head in her hands and let the tears fall.

Mace pulled Nikki closer, but she felt his chest constrict. “He …” His stomach convulsed, and when she searched his eyes, she found only pain. “He didn’t make it out.”

She shook her head to clear it. “What?”

Silence answered her.

She pushed away from him. “No, no. That’s not possible. You … you saved us. Zero and me. If we got out, he could.”

Mace swallowed and looked away. “No, Nikki. There was an explosion.”

“Couldn’t he have leapt?”

“The hallways were too confined. He brought you to me and went back to stop more explosions from happening. The FBI was coming to investigate Vessler. Raven knew they’d need something concrete, so I think he went to stop the charges.”

Nausea rolled through her system. She grabbed Mace’s shirt and buried her head. “I’m so sorry,” she finally uttered, mouth quivering. “He’s gone?” But the very idea seemed inconceivable to her. Life without Raven.

“He made a choice to sacrifice his life for our protection.” Around her, the Halflings all nodded. Glimmer hadn’t raised her head from her hands, but tears fell in streams from her fingers. Several tried to sniff back their own tears, but the pain filtered through the room, unmanageable in its scope. “We have to honor that sacrifice. Even if this journey is over, there’s still much work to be done. We must be ready to fight, Nikki.”

She sucked in a firm breath and tipped her head back. “Then we’ll fight.” She raised a weak fist into the air. “For Raven.”

A room full of Halflings answered. “For Raven.”

Will materialized at her bedside. Bright blue eyes smiled at her. “You’re looking fit, Miss Nikki.”

“I just heard about Raven, Will. I know you loved him like a son.” The words poured out of her before she could stop them, or even think about them. Will had sacrificed much. All for his Lost Boys.

His face collapsed, but his words were even and sure. “As a heavenly angel, I am not engineered to feel love as the humans do.” He squared his shoulders. “Raven will be missed. His sacrifice was great.” Will nodded, lips thinning. “A good fighter. A good soldier.”

“A good son,” Nikki insisted.

The giant of a man’s shoulders began to quake. Not even a breath moved the air in the room. For a moment, life seemed to stop.

Dropping his head into his hands, Will wept.

Later that night, sitting in the gathering room of the mansion, Will hushed the Halflings with the only phrase able to stifle thirty teenage voices. “Heaven whispers.”

Twenty male and ten female Halflings had been ordered to reside at Viennesse until further instruction. And while Will was somewhat used to the level of madness, the other caretakers were going crazy.

Normally, males and females crossed paths sporadically, but they were never meant to reside in large groups in a single dwelling for extended periods of time. Will worried what the implication might be.

Other books

The Locket by Bell, K J
Composing Amelia by Alison Strobel
Two Graves by Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child
Angry Young Spaceman by Jim Munroe
Story Thieves by James Riley
The Great Night by Chris Adrian
Extinction Game by Gary Gibson