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Shadowed Blade (Colbana Files Book 6)
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“You smelling anything yet?” I asked Doyle.
“Maybe. I—”
He never really had a chance to finish that thought.
Up ahead, I heard somebody, Mike, I think, call out a warning.
“Hold up, guys…this…whatever it is, it’s getting stronger.”
“Unless it’s life or death, you can figure it out while we move,” Pilar said and as I looked up to tell her to stop, it happened.
Time shifted and spun away on me.
It was like I’d been flung straight into the past.
Spikes sprung up, out, from the sides, while something swung down from the air. More of them, mounted on what might have passed for an oversized child’s swing, save for those thick, deadly spikes.
All of the shifters reacted with fluid, easy grace, moving out of the way. But in the time it took them to not be where there was a spike, more of them came up and arrows started to rain down.
Fast…so fast.
I’d only ever once seen somebody who could shoot like that.
SHADOWED BLADE
By
JC DANIELS
Copyright © 2016 Shiloh Walker, Inc
Cover Design © Angela Waters
Cover Image © Shiloh Walker
Chapter One
It was just pure dumb luck that I found her at all.
The… Well, I can’t say it was a house, but it had been her home. She’d left it weeks ago, maybe longer. It was dying, too.
Granted, when I’d been sent out to look for her, I’d thought maybe it was another wild goose chase—the first job had been a pain in the ass, too.
But this one…
Hell.
I was staring at a dryad.
A real dryad.
She turned her head and stared at me with eyes the color of good, strong oak. In her hand, she had a branch she used to draw circles in the earth.
After a few seconds of us studying each other, she went back to looking out over the river, her gaze sad.
“What is it you want?” she asked, her voice reedy and thin.
Like she was fading, dying as swiftly as the tree she’d left behind.
As I fumbled for an answer, she lifted the branch and plucked off one of the leaves. They were still green. But the moment she plucked that single leaf away, it withered, shriveled, and then it was dust—even before it hit the ground.
“I…” Uneasy, I licked my lips. “Your tree is dying.”
“No.” Those dark brown eyes came back to mine. “It is already dead. It died when I left it. It just hasn’t figured that out yet. It will. But that isn’t what you want.”
“Why did you leave it?”
“Because the wind whispered it was time.” She lifted a shoulder and the wispy strips of cloth that made up her garments drifted with the movement before settling back into black. She was more naked than clothed—covered at her breasts and hips. Her skin was a mottled mix of brown and tan. She could stand in the trees and scarcely be seen, but standing out here on the side of the road and gazing into the river, she stood out.
That was how I’d found her.
I’d been heading back to East Orlando, carefully thinking through the call I’d have to make, when I saw her. I’d been driving the backroads, mostly because I wanted to think, and all the traffic on the main roads annoyed me.
The last thought I’d had before caught sight of the woman had been…I never should have taken this stupid job.
My current client—I now realized—was a self-important, pompous prick. But I’d accepted the contract, and for another three weeks, I was giving him twenty hours a week for work of a sensitive nature. His term, not mine.
The first job, I’d been asked to find out if there was any truth to the rumors of a Green Man who might be living in Alabama—he had a locale and a few names; he wanted me to look around and see what I thought. I’d also been asked to talk to the families of a couple missing NHs while in the area. Missing non-humans was why I’d taken the damn job to begin with.
Missing people. He had connections.
There weren’t many who had more connections than the President of the United States of America, after all.
When I’d told him I didn’t see the connection between a possible Green Man and the disappearances, he’d pointed out that a Green Man would have ways of seeing things happening in nature that I could never see.
Well…true enough.
But if there was something weirder than a shifter in those decaying woods, then I hadn’t felt it.
My boss hadn’t seemed bothered when I’d been unsuccessful. But I hadn’t wanted to tell him I’d found a dryad’s tree…and no dryad.
Right now, though, I wanted even less to tell him I’d found the dryad.
“The wind told you it was time?” Raking her up and down with a look, I shook my head. “What else is the wind telling you to do?”
“The wind tells me to do nothing.” A serene smile curled her lips as she plucked off another leaf. This time, when it shriveled and faded, she seemed to fade a little more, too.
Oh, shit.
“Is that from your tree?” I asked softly.
“Yes. All that is left, all that is living.” She plucked another leaf. “Once it is gone...”
“So why are you killing it?”
“Because unlike Albus, I am not strong. I cannot stand up to pain and torture. Even cutting down a single tree would break me, and he has much more in mind than cutting down trees.”
Abruptly, she wrenched a handful of leaves, four, five, six… Dust blew around me and I rushed to her as she swayed, then staggered. She felt lighter than air as I eased her down. Her skin felt like the smooth bark on a young tree. “What are you talking about?”
She just shook her head. “It’s been a long time coming. This…this is best. I’ll see Albus soon.”
She tried to fumble a few more leaves off but her hands shook too much.
“Please.” She looked at me.
My phone rang.
She continued to watch me with those calm, patient eyes. Patient, solid. Like an oak.
I took the branch and stripped the remaining leaves off as the phone rang again.
By the third ring, she was withering away, turning to nothing but dust and ash that blew away in the soft, chilly fall breeze.
I answered the fourth ring.
“Ms. Colbana, I was calling for an update.”
“I found her.” Dragging a finger through the dust, I rose to my feet and stared down. Even the branch was gone. “She’s dead, sir.”
“He’s pissed.”
Shanelle Maguire was a beautiful bitch and she delivered the words in a stark voice as she dropped into the chair across from my desk.
“I gathered that.” I’d just finish talking to him myself. Whitmore was a pain in the ass. “Did he send you here to snarl and snap at me in hopes of making me do better?”
She snorted. “Like that’d do any good.” She skimmed her hands back over her hair in what I’d come to realize was a nervous habit. Beautiful bitch or not, I’d come to sort of like her over the past ten days. She was blunt and didn’t hold back the truth, something I could definitely appreciate. She was also manipulative as hell—something I less appreciated—but she knew how to make things happen. “Look, I was standing out—”
“This is my shocked face.”
“Shut up,” she said, sighing in annoyance. “I heard you explaining what happened. What were you going to do? She wanted to die. Although…wow. Picking leaves off a tree branch—that’s crazy.”
“Dryads have a connection to their chosen trees.” I shrugged and thought of the forest giant I
’d gone back to look at before returning home. It hadn’t turned to dust, but it was dead. It had been an oddity, standing there in the middle of the forest where so many trees had already gone brilliantly orange and yellow, but its leaves had been green…mostly. Some, though, had been going brown. Not yellow or orange, the way you’d think.
But brown.
All the leaves had been gone the second time I saw it and the branches hung despondent, as if the tree’s strength had simply drained out of it with the life of the dryad gone. I’d touched the bark and it had crumbled under the light pressure.
A few storms, a few hard rains, and it would come crashing down.
“So she just lay there, plucked the last few leaves and died, huh?” Shanelle wasn’t even looking at me. She was staring off at nothing, looking about as tired as I felt—although I doubted it was for the same reason.
“Faded into dust,” I said, carefully dancing around the fact that I wasn’t telling the complete truth. I’d had to do the same with Whitmore, but for some reason, I was reluctant to explain that I had been the one to strip away those few remaining leaves.
Whitmore had really wanted to talk to that dryad.
My gut was all twisted and hot as I remembered what she had said.
“Because unlike Albus, I am not strong. I cannot stand up to pain and torture. Even cutting down a single tree would break me and he has much more in mind than cutting down trees.”
Who was Albus?
Who was the he she’d been referring to? I had a bad feeling it might be my client—but there was no way I could even try to figure that out without questioning him; everything in me was saying Don’t…
I thought of asking Shanelle, probing gently. I knew how to dance around things and be subtle. It wasn’t my greatest skill, but I could do it.
While I was debating, though, the door swung open.
The sight of the man standing there was enough to distract me, though.
“Justin...”
I hurtled across the room and caught him up in a hug so hard, he was laughing and wheezing at the same time. “Careful there, Kit…I break.”
I didn’t care. “You’re awake.”
“Seems that way. Although if you keep squeezing the life out of me...”
Two weeks ago, Justin had almost died. The first week, he’d been in a coma. He’d started to stir, but another friend of ours, Colleen had used her healing to put him back under.
“The swelling in his brain has gone down, but there’s still a lot of healing to do—the area of the brain that controls magic has been heavily damaged and the longer he rests, the more likely it will be that he’ll regain full control.”
We’d agreed. He needed to stay asleep for a bit longer, but Colleen could only hold him for a few more days before she had to bring him back.
“I didn’t know she was letting you up today.”
He patted my back when I sniffed.
Absently, I’d realized Shanelle had left and I still needed to talk to her. But that could wait.
Chapter Two
The tent was crowded.
Outside the tent wasn’t much better.
“I really don’t want to be here,” I said tiredly.
Next to me, Justin stood there, his face emotionless but there were tiny lines of strain around his eyes. I knew he wanted to be here even less. The stink of death and pain around this place was hurting me—I couldn’t imagine what it was doing to a witch.
I could have pointed out to him that he’d been the one to insist he come along, but what was the point? He’d spent the past couple of weeks sitting around doing nothing. I would have been bored too.
“I think we need to make Colleen brew us up some margaritas, whip up some tacos and such, that sort of thing.” Crossing my arms over my chest, I stared the opening of the tent that yawned open in front us. “It’s her fault we’re here.”
Justin didn’t respond.
“Are we going in or not?”
Finally, he turned his head and looked at me. “You realize she really is healing people?”
The sharp green light of his eyes cut into me.
“I…” I stopped and huffed out a breath. He’d made it clear more than a few times, but I’d done my best to avoid thinking about it. Healing people. That was why we were here.
There was somebody inside that tent—she called herself Frankie. And according to what people were saying, she could heal cancer, broken bones, HIV, lupus. I didn’t care what people said. But Justin had seen the people there—one of the healed. He’d lain eyes on some of those sick people, he’d seen the sickness inside them. Then a day later, he’d seen the health.
“You can’t cure cancer with magic,” I said. Just as Colleen had said to Justin and I a few days ago, before we’d left Orlando.
We—no, I had been sent north on a job. Justin had been slouching around the office, going out of his mind from boredom, if you ask me. He’d had come along not long after the details of the job came in, had started nagging me about following along, but then he’d been there when Colleen called, all but hysterical.
And that that sealed it.
“No.” Justin frowned, his mouth going tight. “You can’t. So apparently, she’s doing something that’s either more than magic…or something totally different.”
He jerked his head toward the tent. “Come. They’re getting restless.”
Crouched on the floor, surrounded by the stink of vomit, I remembered few things clearly.
Colleen’s voice, practically pleading…She’s telling people she can cure them, Kit. Magic doesn’t cure cancer!
A woman’s laugh. You’ll want to enjoy this.
Pain. It sliced through my head.
Justin. In my office. There had been a job—I remembered that. When? A few days ago? A few weeks? A lifetime? Let me come with, Kitty. I’m going crazy sitting around here.
My head.
Another thought—no, memory, worked free. Justin. She’s doing something that’s either more than magic…or something totally different.
Something moved in front of me and I tried to swing out instinctively. “Easy, Kit. Easy...”
Justin.
That was Justin.
“Well, hell.” A woman’s voice that time. I knew that voice...
I swallowed as bile rushed up my throat and the taste of vomit was enough to make me start puking again—almost.
I didn’t want to throw up again.
Especially not here. I’d just thrown up on her shoes and I didn’t want to be anywhere around here.
“Get your friend, boy,” a deep, intense voice said from behind me. The sound of it made me flinch and that made me want to cry, but I feared doing even that, the pain was so severe. “You must go, both of you.”
I tried to wobble back onto my heels, the first step in getting to my feet, but it took more effort than I’d expected and I wasn’t even close to steady when I finally managed a somewhat upright position. I could see the man now. Recognition flickered, stirred. Big and dark haired and lean, deadly eyes.
Deadly.
They narrowed on me for a ponderous moment and it occurred to me that I should be smart and get away. That was what I should do. But I couldn’t get my body to cooperate.
Justin knelt by me, eased me upright. “Come on, Kitty.”
I did manage to sneak a look at him, but he was too busy staring at the other two in the room. The woman had dismissed us, her back to me, but the man...he was still scrutinizing us like a couple of bugs.
“Go,” he said again, the order clear.
We went.
Something akin to real fear was knocking in my belly and I didn’t want to be anywhere around this guy—or the woman. As Justin eased me toward the door, I glanced at her.
My heart froze.
She was staring at me from one of the reflected images cast by a mirror on the wall.
And she was smiling.
“It didn’t work, did it?”<
br />
It was the first time Justin had spoken in nearly two hours.
Thanks to the delay we’d taken at Colleen’s request, we were a few days late in starting this job and we hadn’t gotten to our destination until well after midnight.
We were parked in front of the building we’d been told was ours to use for the duration of this current assignment but so far, neither of us had made any attempt to get out.
I was personally a little afraid of moving. My stomach had finally settled and my head no longer felt like a melon that had been split open with an axe. Now it just felt like somebody had installed an automated battering ram in my skull.
Absently, I reached down and touched the hilt of my sword. More than once during the drive, I’d done that very thing, reached for my blade. Her grip felt warm and I resisted the urge to curl my fingers around her, pull her into my lap and stroke her—the way a scared child might pet a dog.
“Nothing’s changed, Justin,” I said tiredly. Then I did grab my sword. With my free hand, I shoved the door open and braced myself before standing up. My entire body protested the movement and my stomach threatened a savage revolt, but after a few seconds it quieted.
Damn good thing. I wasn’t sure if I could have handled a session on my knees. If I’d started throwing up, I might have just thrown myself on my sword and gotten it over with.
Eying the dark shadow of the building looming over us, I started forward. My steps were unsteady lurches that sent the world spinning around me. If I ever got my hands on that woman…
Frankie’s face flashed through my mind and despite the bravado, a shiver of uneasiness worked through me. She’d been freaky. Freaky, fast, scary, and the big guy with her had been just as bad. Justin joined me and when he slid a steadying arm around my waist, I didn’t have the energy to tell him to leave me alone.
The building hadn’t seemed so far away when I’d looked at it from the car, but now…
“I feel like calling in dead,” I told him sourly.
“You are looking rather corpse-like.”