"Dreamfever" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moning Karen Marie)CHAPTER 1Hey it’s me—Dani. I’m gonna be taking over for a while. Fecking good thing, too, ‘cause Mac’s in serious trouble. We all are. Last night everything changed. End-of-the-world stuff. Uh-huh, that bad. Fae and human worlds collided with the biggest bang since creation, and everything is a mess. Fecking Shades loose in the fecking abbey. Ro through the roof with it, screaming that Mac betrayed us. Ordered us to hunt her. Bring her in dead or alive. Shut her up or shut her down, she said. Keep her away from the enemy, because she’s too powerful a weapon to be used against us. She’s the only one who can track the I know stuff about Mac that she’d kill me for, if she knew I knew. Good thing she doesn’t know. I never want to fight Mac. But here I am, hunting her. I don’t believe she spiked the Orb with Shades. Pretty much everyone else does, though. They don’t know Mac like I do. I know Mac like we’re sisters. No way she betrayed us. Seven hundred thirteen of us alive at the abbey at five o’clock last night. Five hundred twenty-two No sign of her yet. But we’re headed in the right direction. There’s an epicenter of power in the city, reeking stinking nasty Fae as toxic as the fallout plume from a nuclear explosion. We all feel it. Taste it. Practically see the mushroom cloud hanging in the air. We don’t even talk to one another. Don’t need to. If Mac’s still in Dublin, that’s where she is, straight ahead. No way any But I’ve got this sick feeling in the pit of my stomach … Bull-fecking-crikey! I don’t feel sick. I Mac can take care of herself. She’s the strongest of us all. “‘Cept me,” I mutter, with a swagger and a grin. “What?” Jo says behind me. I don’t bother answering. They already think I’m cocky enough. I have reasons to be cocky. Uh-huh, I’m Five hundred twenty-two of us closing in. We fight like banshees and can do some serious damage, but we’ve got only one weapon—the Sword of Light—that can kill a Fae. “And it’s If the Unseelie hadn’t taken the power grids down last night, turning the whole city into a Dark Zone, I’d’ve come after Mac sooner, but Kat made us hide like cowards ‘til dawn. Pissed me off, but she had a point. When I’m moving like that, it Crashed and burned cars everywhere we turn. I thought there’d be more bodies. Shades don’t eat dead flesh. S’pose other Unseelie do. The city is spooky quiet. “Slow down, Dani!” Kat yells at me. “You’re speeding up again. You know we can’t keep up with you!” “Sorry,” I mutter, and slow down. With what I feel up ahead and this stupid sick feeling in my stomach— “Not Whatever we’re headed for, whatever’s throwing all that fallout into the sky, is more Fae power than I’ve ever felt before, all clumped together in one place. The way we work things, the other I kill. We range out like a net. Five hundred strong. Drape ourselves, Aw, crap! Or “Stop,” I hiss at Kat. “Tell ‘em all to stop!” She cuts a hard look my way but bites a sharp command that rips down the line. We’re well trained. We move together and I tell her my worry: that Mac’s in there, in serious trouble, and if the big-bads throwing off all that power are sifters—which most of the big-bads are—she’ll be gone the second we’re spotted. Which means I’m going in alone. I’m the only one who can sneak-attack fast enough to pull it off. “No way,” Kat says. “No choice, and you know it.” We look at each other. She gets that look grown-ups get a lot and touches my hair. I jerk. I don’t like to be touched. Grown-ups creep me out. “Dani.” She pauses heavily. I know that tone like I know the back of my hand, and I know where it’s going: Lectureville on a runaway train. I roll my eyes. “Save it for somebody who cares. Newsflash: It ain’t me. I’ll go up”—I jerk my head at a nearby building—”to get the lay of things. Then I’m going in. Only. When I. Come. Back. Out.” I spit each word. “Can you guys can go in.” We stare at each other. I know what she’s thinking. Nah, reading minds isn’t one of my specialties. Grown-ups telegraph everything. Somebody kill me before I get one of those Play-Doh faces. Kat’s thinking if she makes the call against me and loses Mac, Ro’ll have her head. But if she lets “I need the visual snapshot myself, or I could end up grabbing the wrong thing. You want me coming out with some fe—er, effin’ fairy in my hands?” They rip me a new one when I cuss. Like I’m a kid. Like I haven’t spilled more blood than they’ve ever seen. Old enough to kill but too young to cuss. They make a pit bull poodle around. What kinda logic is that? Hypocrisy pisses me off worse than most anything. Her face sets in stubborn lines. I push. “I “Rowena said alive or dead,” Kat says stiffly. She left “It sounds like she’ll be dead soon and our problems will be solved” hanging unspoken. “We want the Book, remember?” I try reason. Times I think I’m the only one in the whole abbey that’s got any. “We’ll find it without her. She betrayed us.” Feck reason. Pisses me off when people jump to conclusions they have no proof for. “You don’t know that, so stop saying it,” I growl. Somebody’s fist is holding Kat’s coat collar, got her up on her toes. It’s mine. I don’t know who’s more surprised, her or me. I drop her back on the ground and look away. I’ve never done anything like that before. But it’s Mac in there and I have to get her out, and Kat’s wasting my time big-time with total BS. Her mouth sets with tiny white lines around it, and her eyes take on a look I get a lot. It makes me feel mad and alone. She’s afraid of me. Mac isn’t. One more way we’re like sisters. Without another word, I give my feet the wings they live for and vanish into the building. From the rooftop, I stare. My fists clench. I keep my nails real short; still, they gouge blood from my palms. Two Fae are dragging Mac down the front steps of a church. She’s naked. They drop her like a piece of trash in the middle of the street. A third Fae exits the church and joins them, and they stand, imperial guards around her, heads swiveling, surveying the street. The raw sex they’re throwing off blasts me, but it’s not like V’lane, who I’m gonna give my virginity to one day. I’m as obsessed with sex as anybody, but those … things … down there … those incredibly— I wipe my face. My fingers come away red. My eyes are leaking blood. Freaky. Kinda cool. Vamps got nothing on Fae. I close my eyes, and when I open them again I don’t look directly at the things guarding Mac. Instead, I take a wide-angle image of the scene. Every Fae, fire hydrant, car, pothole, streetlamp, piece of trash. I map objects and empty spaces on my mental grid, lock it down tight, calculate margin of error based on likely movement, slap it over my snapshot. I squint. A shadow moves in the street, almost too fast to see. The Fae don’t seem to know it’s there. I watch. They don’t respond to it. No heads swivel to follow it. I can’t focus on it. Can’t make out its shape. It moves like I move … mostly. What the feck? Not a Shade. Not a Fae. A blur of shadow. Now it’s hanging over Mac. Now it’s gone. Bright side—if the Unseelie aren’t noticing it, they shouldn’t notice I catch the glint of Mac’s spear in a red-robed man’s hand. He’s carrying it at arm’s length from his body. Only Seelie or humans can touch the Seelie Hallows. He’s one or the other. The Lord Master? They have Mac. They have the spear. Don’t know if I can grab both so won’t try. Would chance it if it wasn’t Mac. They hurt her bad. She’s bloody everywhere. She’s my hero. I Instantly, I’m cool and perfect and detached from everything. I’m the Shit. It’s the most massive high in the world! I zip from one freeze-frame to the next. No in-betweens. I’m on the roof of the building. I’m in the street. I’m between the guards. Lust— I grab Mac. Freeze-frame. Heart in my throat! Shadow-thing blocks my path! What I’m past it. Hear Fae shouting behind me. Then I’m screaming at Kat and the crew to get their asses in there, grab that spear, and kill those bastards. Mac in my arms, I freeze frames as fast I can, heading for the abbey. |
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