got hurt and your powers are off.”

“I don’t care.”

“I do.”

“You have memories of everything we did the last four months, Bran. I don’t. It’s unfair.”

“I know.” He reached behind me and retied the strings of my bikini top. “You can mind-blend with me and retrieve them whenever you like. We will create more memories. I promise.”

I blew out air, closed my eyes then rested my cheek on his chest. His heated skin smelled so good. Of sun and sea. And it bugged me that he was so rational. Why couldn’t he ever let his emotions rule his head? I know he loved me, wanted to be with me in every way. Worse, he was right this time. We couldn’t make out until we were sure about the extent of my injuries, the damage the demons did to my Psi energy. Even the thought of mind- blending with him scared me. What if whatever the demons did to me was contagious and I passed it on to him?

I lifted my head off Bran’s chest and sat up, forcing myself not to stroke his bare chest. He was pure muscles, six-pack, and warmth.

“Are we really going after the demons?” I asked.

“Yes.” A smile filled with anticipation curled Bran’s lips. “Vengeance is the only thing demons respect. We want to catch them while they’re still celebrating and with their guard down.”

A hollow feeling settled in my stomach. Fear was fast becoming my constant companion and it sucked. If facing those demons would help me overcome it, I was in. “Okay. Let’s do it.”

Bran grinned. “I’ll tell the others. They weren’t sure you’d want to come with us.”

I bristled. “Why wouldn’t I? I’ll be fine, but we can’t mind-blend.”

A frown chased the smile from his lips. “Why not?”

“The demons probably contaminated my energy, Bran. If I mind-blend with you, I could do the same to you.”

He tucked strands of hair behind my ear. “Don’t worry about me. I want to do this. You recovered in twenty-four hours when you blended with Lottius. If it makes you feel better, we can give your mind a couple of days to recover then give it try.”

I opened my mouth to argue, but he put a stop to that before I uttered a word. He cupped my chin and ran a thumb across my lips. His emerald eyes heated and his head dipped as though to kiss me. Then he stopped, confusion flashing in his eyes.

“I have to go.” He disappeared and reappeared by the door. “Change and head to HQ. Mrs. D is expecting you.”

I shook my head. I should be empowered that I had that kind of effect on him. Usually, I was. Now his behavior just annoyed me.

I took a quick shower, then pulled on the standard hunting clothes—black pants and a matching T-shirt. Inside the bathroom, I studied my reflection. Nothing was out of place. Same slanted green eyes stared at me. Same multi-colored red hair. My skin, inherited from my gypsy grandmother, was more tanned than usual. I couldn’t see any changes to explain my heightened powers.

I hated feeling out of sorts, hated not knowing what surprises my body hid. My father was a nature-bender with unknown lineage, so there was no telling what blood flowed in my veins. Maybe one day I would turn into smoke like a Lazari, grow horns or a tail like a Werenephil, or worse, start craving blood like a Nosferatu.

Hating the direction of my thoughts, I splashed water on my face and teleported to HQ.

“I already dispatched several members of my security team to the island.” Mrs. D, the head of security and my former English lit teacher, said as I entered HQ’s main office. She and Remy frowned when they saw me. I gave them a weak smile, which only made them frown harder. “They’ll keep an eye on the portal in case the demons return. As for the students, I’ll confer with the chairman and see what he decides to do about them. Come here, sweetheart,” she added, beckoning me forward.

She cupped my face and peered at me from above her rhinestone glasses, her colorful bangles jingling. “I was told you fainted while fighting demons.”

I shrugged.

“Shrug all you want, but fainting and memory loss are symptoms of something serious,” she scolded. “How are you feeling?”

“Okay. The bump is gone.” The headache was still there, but no one needed to know that. Remy continued to stare at me with a weird expression.

“And your memories?” Mrs. D asked.

“They are coming back.” It wasn’t exactly a lie. I remembered a dark place.

“Were you holding the dagger when they attacked?”

“I was and now it’s not responding to me.”

“Leave it with Master Haziel.”

I sighed. I didn’t want to be grilled by my trainer yet. He could smell my lies a mile away. At the same time, I couldn’t disobey an order from Mrs. D.

“Where did you say the others went?” Mrs. D asked as I walked away.

“To the library,” Remy said. “They are trying to figure out the words Lil yelled after she fainted.”

“I said something?” I asked, turning to face them.

“Bran and I were creating the fake iceberg islands and weren’t there when you were attacked,” Remy explained. “Sykes said you fell and started talking in the ancient language, but even they can’t agree on what you said. They hoped the librarian might help decipher the words.”

“Ms. Laylah is very knowledgeable and will do whatever she can to help,” Mrs. D said. Laylah had better not give them anything on the Tribe.

Not sure I’d heard Mrs. D’s thoughts correctly, I studied her expressionless face. I didn’t usually hear others’ thoughts unless I eavesdropped, yet her thoughts had floated to me as clear as though she’d telepathed them to me intentionally.

The Tribe. Why did that word sound familiar? I racked my brain for an answer and only made my headache worse. And why would Mrs. D pretend she didn’t know the identity of the demons, or ‘the Tribe’ as she called them?

Civilians in the inner rooms also continued to look our way instead of at their computer screens or the clairvoyant images they were communicating with. Their wariness streamed my way, the distance not lessening the intensity. I raised my shield to shut them out, with little success. Instead, their thoughts trickled through.

The junior Cardinals should be told the truth…

We should go back to Xenith until this blows over…

If the Cardinals don’t find the Summoners, we are in trouble…

Summoners. The word echoed in my head like a distant memory too. Going on a hunch, I asked, “Have we found the Summoners yet, Mrs. D?”

She blinked. “Excuse me?”

“The Summoners. Have you found them?”

She frowned. “Where did you hear that word?”

“It just popped in my head. The other word is the Tribe. I know I’ve heard them before, but I can’t remember from where. What do they mean?”

Her eyes narrowed, the pupil slitting like a cat’s. “I don’t know. When you remember where you’d heard them, let me know. Now run along and take that dagger to Master Haziel.”

Liar, I wanted to yell. “So you and the senior Cardinals haven’t identified these demons even though one attacked us a week ago.”

She frowned at my combatant tone and for one brief moment, I thought I’d given myself away. I smiled, but I must not have been very convincing, because she continued to stare at me suspiciously.

“No, we haven’t. With Coronis’ minions on the loose, there’s no telling what new breeds are out there. And yes, the Cardinals have taken to naming new breeds of demons in order to differentiate them from each other. Maybe that’s where you heard those words.” She glanced over my shoulder and added quickly, “Ah, there you are,

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