Amira watched from the trees. She covered her face as the woman sank to the ground. The look on Nathan’s face was raw, his emotion clear.
He loved the woman he’d just stabbed.
Amira stifled her tears, wanting more than anything to spare them both the pain they had to be feeling. Nathan was a myth among angels and spirit guides, untouchable, unstoppable and willing to do whatever it took to do his job.
Like murder his OTL in cold blood.
She was proud of him yet horrified as well. He’d just made the most personal sacrifice of all. Would it break him, the way losing someone had broken Troy?
Turning away, she struggled to center herself, to push away all she’d learned the past few weeks. She’d followed Nathan here, wanting to talk to him but also wanting to make sure Kaylee was safe after the visit from Zyra.
The past few weeks were overwhelming, if she let herself dwell on all that occurred, nothing but a series of events that only seemed to get worse.They weighed on her heart, and she grappled with her emotions. She wanted to experience what it was like to be a human, to live in a world of contradictions. If she’d known the depths of sorrow and anger she’d learned about the past few weeks, would she have done it still?
Amira wanted to curl up at the base of the tree and sob, as much for Nathan as herself.
Right now, he needed support. She couldn’t imagine he was going to make it through this well. She had to save him. And Troy. And herself.
Wiping her tears, Amira stood and started out of the trees. She froze a few feet from the tree line. Unable to hear the new cars approach, she barely registered that two of them were there before it was too late to stop. They pulled in beside Nathan’s, blocking him from view. Nathan was carefully placing Kaylee in the backseat of his car.
A man got out of one vehicle and smashed a tire iron across Nathan’s head as he emerged from the backseat.
Nathan dropped hard.
The man motioned to someone in the car, and a familiar woman got out. Zyra drew a weapon and aimed it down at Nathan.
A flash of light and the scent of sulfur reached Amira, indicating a shot she couldn’t hear had gone off.
She sank into the darkness of the trees, praying for Nathan. Zyra tucked the gun away and leaned into the backseat where Nathan had been, no doubt checking on Kaylee. A flash of light came from the car. It wasn’t a muzzle flash this time, but a burst of light that faded slowly, lingered, then died.
Zyra was sucking in a huge amount of energy from the Other Side and those with her. Amira felt the flow around her. Instinctively, she recognized that Zyra was trying to bring the host back.
What did Zyra want with Kaylee, if not to kill her and send Shadowman to Hell?
Zyra stood and wobbled, catching herself against the car.
Light blinded Amira as more cars approached. The scene before her quickly became chaos. Gunfire flashed from the direction of the newcomers towards Zyra’s group, and the two factions opened fire on one another. A form darted discreetly from one of the newly arrived cars towards Nathan’s.
Amira hid behind a tree, peeking around to see what happened.
Moonlight glinted off the knives and necklace of the man creeping up to Nathan’s car. He was a blond man with black-tipped hair. He slid into the driver’s seat, unnoticed by Zyra’s party. He started the car and floored it, spewing rocks and gravel as he fishtailed out of the overlook area and down the hill towards the main road.
His people followed, laying gunfire behind them as they went.
Zyra was standing in the middle of light from the headlamps of one of her cars, yelling, her face flushed. She signaled her people towards the cars, and they, too, raced off after the man who had the host’s body.
Amira watched them all go. When the dust cleared, one body remained on the ground. How Nathan hadn’t been run over or shot more than once, Amira didn’t know, except that he truly was blessed.
She ventured away from the trees slowly at first, gaze darting around for signs of trouble, then darted forward.
“Nathan!” she cried, dropping beside him.
There was blood everywhere. Though she knew spirit guides were immortal, she panicked anyway, recalling that the same woman who shot Nathan had somehow been able to kill Scott, too.
Amira placed her hands over the wound in Nathan’s chest, trying to remember what she’d seen on a crime TV show about helping someone who got shot.
Nathan’s body was radiating heat hotter than Troy’s, a sign the energy from the Other Side was working to heal him. She added in her own energy, knowing it was nothing compared to what it had been before, but hoping she could help.
“Wake up, Nathan!” she told him. Tears blurred her eyes at the feel of his warm blood flowing through her fingers.
Someone grabbed her, startling her. Amira started to struggle. He was much stronger than her spun her around easily.
“Troy!” she exclaimed, at once relieved.
Troy looked pissed. “Why the fuck did you leave me there?” The grip on her arms was tight.
“Nathan’s hurt.”
“He can heal. Just leave him alone. What’re you doing here, Amira?”
She didn’t know what to say, rattled by the evening and mesmerized by his anger. It was born as much of concern as anything else, and she wanted to know if it was solely for Nathan or if her OTL had begun to realize he belonged with her.
“Are you okay?” Troy’s features softened.
She nodded then held up her hands. They were covered in dark blood, the sight of which distressed her.
“Scott didn’t heal, Troy,” she said, near tears. “Will Nathan?”
“Yes. He’s too stubborn to die.”
After a brief hesitation, Troy wrapped her in his arms. His warmth and masculine scent helped calm her, and she hugged him back, loving the feel of his body against hers.
“Troy, they took her,” she said into his shirt.
He shifted one arm to lift her chin once more. He touched her face gently, brushing the tears from under her eyes.
“Who took who?” he asked.
She swallowed hard. “The host. Nathan killed her.” Her eyes watered more as she remembered the look of utter desolation that crossed Nathan’s face. “Zyra shot him then tried to take her, but someone else beat them to it. There was a firefight and then they all left.”
“Amira, you don’t run off like that again,” Troy said, his features serious. “You understand? You’re mine to protect.”
Like the stones were hers to protect.
She gasped suddenly, aware the stones she’d given Kaylee had fallen into the hands of someone else completely, someone she couldn’t identify.
“What?” he asked.
Who had the host and the stones? Amira didn’t answer, unable to fathom the depths of how badly she’d screwed up. Even if the people had the stones, they wouldn’t be able to read them, and she kept the one that would lead to the gateway. She hadn’t been able to use the blue stones anyway – but Kaylee could.
Logically, she knew the stones belonged with Kaylee, but terror fluttered through her at the thought of anyone finding the other girls before she could warn them.