coming on later will get the same info from the computers.’’
‘‘Good. We’re out of here. I called Jox to give him the heads-up.’’ Strike lifted Anna, cradling her against his chest. Then he touched Red-Boar, completing the circuit. He was pissed enough, the route to Skywatch familiar enough, and Leah’s pull strong enough that he didn’t need a blood sacrifice to power the three-person transport—he was already there. All he had to do was close his eyes, find the thread, and yank.
The great room materialized around them, the floor slapping against the soles of his boots. He staggered and nearly went down, and then Jox was there, shoving a shoulder into his armpit to get him stabilized.
They were all there, Strike saw as his vision cleared. The
‘‘I’ve got her,’’ the
Strike reached out for Leah, took her hand. At the touch of her skin on his, he felt the zing of connection, the flow of energy that was theirs alone. And as the golden spark of the two of them together crackled in the air, Anna woke up, sucking in a deep breath and opening her eyes.
Only they weren’t her eyes, Strike saw with dawning horror. They were flat obsidian black.
‘‘I have a message for you,’’ she said, but it wasn’t her speaking. It was the
Everything inside Strike went cold and hard in an instant. ‘‘Tell me,’’ he grated.
‘‘The creator god dies because you have not acted.’’
Leah dug her nails into his palm. Strike tightened his grip on her and said, ‘‘Tell me how to save them both, the god and the woman.’’
‘‘For the god to live the woman must die. There is no other way.’’
‘‘There must be,’’ he rasped. He refused to believe the gods had set him up only to fail her, only to force him to make a choice between the life he wanted and the duty he’d been born into. There had to be another way.
‘‘There is not.’’ The
With that, the
Now, it was time for her to leave.
The gray-green mist swirled around her, forming a funnel, a vacuum that drew her away from the reality of Skywatch. She felt herself being sucked down, felt herself accelerating without moving.
The outside world dimmed, and her heart cried out for the people she’d loved—for Dick and Lucius, for her brother and the others.
She heard Strike call her name from far away, heard the crash of furniture being overturned, and men shouting. Arguing. Then pain flared in her palm, bright and white amidst the deepening dark gray, and a hand gripped hers.
Power blasted through the connection, jolting through the mist, and suddenly that someone was there, inside her head, shouting at her.
‘‘Gods damn it, this way!’’ He tugged her away from the funnel, away from the
And she woke up staring into Red-Boar’s eyes.
That night, which was the night before the equinox, Leah eased away from Strike’s sleeping form and watched the faint light of the desert starscape play across his strong features.
Something lodged tight in her throat: a wish, maybe, or a prayer.
Or maybe, in the end, it was hers, too.
She touched his face and the strong line of his shoulder, and saw his fierce expression lighten, as though he’d felt her caress even in sleep. Her emotions shuddered very near the surface, strong and frightening. Technically, they’d known each other for nearly three months, since the summer solstice. If she believed that what had happened before would happen again, then by her relationship clock their time was up. But she didn’t want it to be, damn it. She wanted . . .
She wanted the impossible. She wanted him to choose her even though it meant going against logic, against his advisers, hell, against the gods.
Restless, she rose from the mattress, pulled on a pair of loose yoga pants and one of his T-shirts, and padded from the room, headed for the kitchen. The halls were dark, the mansion quiet around her, suggesting that everyone else was asleep, or close to it.
It was a freeing thought. She’d grown used to living with the others and having to create the illusion of privacy. Now, it felt good to be alone in the night.
Until she stepped into the kitchen and saw Jox.
The