Sky Ghosts: All for One (Young Adult Urban Fantasy Adventure) (Sky Ghosts Series Book 1) (14 page)

BOOK: Sky Ghosts: All for One (Young Adult Urban Fantasy Adventure) (Sky Ghosts Series Book 1)
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“Dammit, what are you doing??” he squealed, making her wince.

“Let go of me, monkey! I have one more gorilla to carry!”

She unclasped his hands on her arm, and he grasped her belt instead, staring at the shining city below with horror.

She approached the window again.

“Okay, Chad, now you! Get out here!”

Chad showed up inside the window frame and squatted on the windowsill, looking cautiously outside. It made him dizzy, seeing the distance between them and the streets down there. And not that he didn’t trust Jane – he just didn’t believe it was possible, couldn’t imagine her carrying both of them. She was waiting, her look wild, her face splattered with blood, and her tangled hair flying around her like black ropes.

“Are you sure??” he shouted, and when he did, his voice shook with despair.

“Yes! Come closer!” she shouted back, reaching out to him with her other hand.

Chad leaned forward, sliding his fingers through her thick weapons belt and holding on tightly. He felt the air boil around him as she seized hold of his shirt and carried him away. They flew to the side so they wouldn’t attract the Beasts’ attention, and paused there.

And then, when they all were gone, Pain did what she had planned to do.

A heavy vase hurled through the air like a rocket and smashed into the mirrored ceiling, filling the room with the sound of breaking glass. The mirror shattered into pieces and fell on the Beasts’ heads, its shining rain bringing more blood and wound, some parts big enough to knock a person out. Their voices rose to a chaotic chorus, and they backed out of the room, shaking the shards off and cursing. A satisfied grin glimpsed on her face as she put the katana in its sheath and ran to the window, smashing the glass into powder with her boots. But just as she prepared to jump, her sister’s voice pierced the howling wind.

“Behind your back!!”

She whirled around, finding the Beasts in front of her, their weapons unsheathed and their eyes shining with fury. She didn’t even have the time to use her sword, so she just hit one of them in the chest, hearing his ribs crack under her foot. As he tumbled over the couch, another one was on her already, clutching her arms and trying to get to her neck, but he only got a broken nose when she hit him with her forehead, and then a knife in his side. The Beast let go of her, gasping from surprise and pain. She bent and jerked his feet from under him, sending him flying into the huddle in front of her with such force that some of the Beasts got knocked off their feet and struck the floor. Their bawling got even louder, and for a moment they all froze, gaping at Pain in astonishment. She stood by the window, her chest rising and falling heavily, and even her battered looks didn’t diminish the lethality with which she was looking back at them.

She pulled her katana free – slowly and deliberately, like an artist picking up a brush before creating a masterpiece – and flashed a ferocious sneer at the Beasts.

“Okay, boys,” she muttered through her teeth, “now you’ve really pissed me off.”

And as they lunged at her in a squalling, roaring mob, the blade swished through the air, cutting someone’s head off and then another and one more. The battle continued with even more intensity while Jane was sweating outside, her hands already growing numb.

“I understand that you’re having the best of fun in there, but you gotta give me a hand here EVENTUALLY!” she shouted, hoping that her sister would hear.

“Just give me a sec, I gotta finish here!” Pain shouted back.

“No, you don’t! Knock them out, get out here, now!”

The answer was an ear-splitting clatter from the inside along with the sound of more glass breaking, and then someone screamed, and Pain laughed ecstatically. Jane rolled her eyes, wondering if anybody actually lived in this building, since no one had yet shown from the windows or called the police.

“Is there more glass left in that room?!” she asked loudly.

“It was THE TABLE!” Pain exclaimed triumphantly, and right after that, another scream resounded through the walls. “Hang on one more second!”

“Hang on?? Easy to say! What am I, a goddamn helicopter??” Jane yelled, breathing raggedly. “It was a stupid, stupid idea, and we’re all gonna- ”

Her speech broke off with a scream suddenly when the three of them went down, as if they broke off some invisible hook, rushing to the shimmering streets below. Their screams mixed together, and there was one more, laughing with dark satisfaction: one of the Beasts clutched Chad’s feet, pulling them all down. He was big, and they were falling along the skyscraper’s side swiftly, windows flashing behind them. A searing pain shot through Jane’s leg as Dave grasped it in panic, his eyes the biggest ones she had ever seen.

“Do something, do something, Jane!!” he shrieked, jerking her wildly.

She shot him a glare that was half-fury, half-despair.

“Stop humping my leg! It’s not helping!” she barked out, “Chad, get the hell rid of him!!”

She could feel sweat beading on her forehead as she tried to give them more time before they would hit the ground. Chad kicked at the Beast obediently, but he only grabbed his foot and twisted it, making him cry out. An angry snarl escaped his mouth then; he put his foot on the attacker’s head and pushed off of it, leaping upward. His fingers closed on a knife that protruded from Jane’s belt, and a moment later he brought it down, sinking it in the Beast’s throat up to the hilt.

For a moment Jane’s breath caught in her lungs. This was so not what she had expected him to do. But then she realized they were halfway to the ground, so she focused on regaining their position in the air once the Beast unclasped his hands and tumbled toward a parking lot. They were still lowering, though. Too much effort was spent on slowing the fall with their attacker tagging along. Now that his body had probably attracted people’s attention, there was no way they could go down. Dave was silent, just gripping her leg with his face pressed against her hip. Chad, on the contrary, got panicked more and more with each second.

“Jane, dammit!!” he screamed, as if it could help the situation.

She looked up, seeing only the empty black sky above, and disappointment knotted in her chest.

“Pain!!!” she shouted, hoping that her sister was done with the Beasts already, but there was no answer. They had no more than a few seconds before they would hit the ground, and her mind was torn between yelling at her and being scared into silence. So she shut it all out and did the only thing that she knew to do.

She closed her eyes, releasing the air in a slow exhalation, and let it all go.

She got back to the time when she was only learning to control her flight, unsure of her moves, senses, and power. She could only be sure of one thing then, what her parents had told her, that to guide her body meant to set it free, first of all. That she needed to feel the wind, the speed, the gravity before she could use them. And this was what she did now.

They began to rise slowly, and somewhere in the background she heard Chad groan,

“Jane, don’t! Leave it the way it is!”

She didn’t listen to him, blocking it all out as floor after floor disappeared below them. To focus in a situation like this one was almost impossible. The adrenaline rush was too strong, the enormousness of consequences of her failure too overwhelming, so she couldn’t afford thinking about it. She immersed into the flight instead, and was actually surprised when it did help, because to be honest, she didn’t believe she would be able to carry both Dave and Chad.

Somewhere above them, Pain’s voice cut through the night:

“Jane!!”

“Down here!” she responded, gathering all her strength for these two words.

In a second Pain was beside her and grabbed Chad’s sweatshirt. Jane looked at her in surprise.

“He’s heavier, I’ll carry him,” Pain explained.

“What’s with the Beasts?”

“All done, but we gotta go! There can be more any moment. Let’s get to the nearest tunnel, follow me!” And she disappeared in the darkness in a flash with Jane following her a little slower.

After just a couple of minutes they landed in a narrow alley not far from a manhole. Pain headed straight to it, tearing off the cover on the run and pushing Dave to the hole.

“Get inside!”

He tried to protest, catching hold of her jacket, “What if someone’s down there?”

“There ain’t nobody! Go!” She practically shoved him into the hole, and they heard him land with a thump.

Chad stopped a little away from them, breathing heavily and trying to calm down after the awful flight. He just stared at the girls, feeling drained. In a dim light of a street lamp that shone far from them, he could make out their pale faces, their hair pasted to the temples with sweat. Their gear was tattered, especially, Pain’s. He could see their skin through it, covered in blood. The sight brought a rush of bitter sorrow, and he frowned and shook his head slightly. The sisters were looking at him with troubled eyes now, as if sensing what he was thinking about. Wearily, he came up to Jane and handed her the knife, earning a surprised look from Pain. Jane took it without a word and slipped down the manhole, smooth as a cat.

Pain waved for him to go next. Feeling like a blind kitten, he landed softly beside Jane and Dave. Pain moved the cover closer to the hole and got in, pausing to bar it with a metal bolt to block the entrance.

“What the hell just happened?” Dave inquired right away. “Is it always like this??”

Pain sighed before the answer.

“No, usually there’s no blood hunt on our clients,” she said coldly.

Jane shot an irritated glare to where her voice came from. Hearing how Dave’s voice shook, his breath fast and heavy, she stepped closer to him and gripped his shoulder reassuringly.

“Don’t think about it, think of something else,” she said, “What were you doing two weeks from this day, where have you been?” she tried to distract him.

For a few seconds he just breathed, gathering his thoughts, but then his uneven voice sounded again,

“Thai. I was on Walking Street,” he said unsurely.

“And what did you see there? Think of what you saw there,” Jane suggested.

“Eww, I don’t wanna think about THAT! Oh God, I think I’m gonna throw up, oh God,” he sounded even worse now, and Jane actually panicked this time. She didn’t know how to deal with hysterics, because usually Pain just knocked out their wards before they would get the chance to see anything. She couldn’t even imagine how Dave must have been feeling after getting a nice front row view of the whole gore-fest. Belatedly, she remembered that Chad must have been in shock, too. She paused for a moment, trying to hear him near, but there was nothing.
Did he pass out?

Meanwhile, Dave seemed to be unable to keep quiet.

“You closed the manhole, why did you close the manhole??” He turned to where Pain was standing. “What if it was closed when we got here?”

“Then we’d have to find another one,” Jane answered for her sister. “Usually they’re open, Beasts don’t get in. We’ll open this one later, but now we need to take precautions.” She couldn’t stop herself from peering around, trying to see at least something, but they were in a complete darkness now.

“What are we gonna do next?” Dave’s desperate voice shot a couple of octaves higher as he said it. “We don’t even have a map! We’re gonna wander here till we starve to death!”

Jane sighed, giving up. Instead of answering him, she turned to her sister.

“Do you still have your flashlight? I must have dropped mine somewhere.”

“Nope…” Pain shook her head. “My pocket was sliced through.”

She looked down mechanically, finding with her trembling fingers a gap in her gear and idly poking through it. Then she turned to the wall, running her hands across the cool metal surface. Her fingers ran against something warm and soft – Chad’s shoulder – and she jerked her hand back, surprised.

“Sorry,” he murmured, and she heard him move to where Jane and Dave were standing.

“There is a secret locker by every entrance into the tunnels. There must be a map and flashlights,” Pain answered Dave’s question, finding a slot in the wall and picking at it with her fingertips. It was a small door of a locker, which opened with a squeak. “Here it is. Don’t freak out, although it’s odd that you’ve got any energy left after what we’ve just been through. Shouldn’t you black out or something?” she said to him in a remote voice, engaged in rummaging inside the locker.

“Do you have to be so mean to everybody? Is there a club for bitchiness management, like Alcoholics Anonymous?
‘Hi, I’m Pain, and I kill shit’ – ‘Hi, Pain!’
Because, seriously, I think you should visit it,” Dave snapped back with resentment.

She ignored his tone and replied in a distracted voice,

“I’m not mean to everybody. I’m only mean to people whose intellectual level is awfully lower than mine…” She took a flashlight and pointed it at Dave, pressing the button. A blinding ray shot across the tunnel, making him wince and duck away from it. However, in the next second it died, and she cursed.

“Here it is, your wonderful miracle-box with non-working flashlights!” Dave gloated beside her.

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