The Starborn Saga (Books 1, 2, & 3) (39 page)


Copy that.

I don’t hesitate to crush the door underneath my invisible fury. It falls to the ground in a crumble and a startled Christopher and Sadie stare at me like I’m a ghost.

“Mora?” Christopher asks.

“It’s you!” Sadie says. 

e’th=ke IWe’ve got to get out of here,” I tell them. “We’re out of time.”

“How?”

“Out of time,” I say. “Come on!”

They follow me out of the room and down the hallway, but we’re stopped in our tracks by a group of armed guards blocking our way. At the front of the group is the interrogator who told Sadie he would kill Christopher. He stands tall, unarmed. He has a dark, thin beard that frames his face. His eyebrows are unusually sharp and turned downward. His mouth seems stuck in a perpetual scowl. More notably, there is a thin scar in his scalp leading to his right ear which is missing the top half.

“It’s Commander Green,” Sadie whispers to me.

“Mora,” Green says. “I’m surprised to see you here.”

“I’m not afraid of your guns,” I tell him. 

“From what I hear, you have no reason to be,” he says. “You killed a colony’s worth of Screven Guards. Why should I think we could take you on in this little hallway?”

“You know I didn’t kill those guards. Jeremiah ordered it.” Or maybe he doesn’t know. Perhaps he’s just been fed lies to help increase his desire to kill or capture me.

“Commander,” I say, “it’s time you let me and my friends out of here.”

Green smiles at my words as though I’m a child that just said something foolish. “You know I can’t stop you from going, but I want you to hear me out on one thing.”

He’s stalling me, that’s all this is. It’s a way for the others to have time to get to Aaron. It’s dangerous, but as he talks, I close my eyes just briefly to see how Aaron is doing. 

He’s got a couple of colonists messing with the engine. He’s doing everything he can to get the engine to fire up. Behind him, maybe a few hundred feet away, Screven guards are speeding toward him, yelling out on their speakers to get away from the vehicle. 

Opening my eyes, I can hear Commander Green continuing to speak.

“That’s all Jeremiah wants. Peace.”

“Lies,” I say.

Without a blink, I steal the guns from the guards standing behind Green. With the rifles floating in the air in front of them, I smash them into each of their heads, knocking them to the floor. Green ducks, but not in time to miss the butt end of one of the rifles hitting him in the temple. As we step over the groaning victims, Sadie and Christopher both pick up a rifle and begin to follow me. 

Outside of the Vault, Christopher takes down two guards with a shot to their chests, but that doesn’t stop a car full of guards speeding toward us. My first and only instinct is to flip the vehicle from the front end. With a swing of my arms, the vehicle lands on its topside. Christopher lets off a burst of bullets into its gas tank until the entire thing explodes. I feel the heat up and down my left side. 

We sprint up to the main road where more guards take aim at us. For a brief moment I close my eyes to find Aaron. 

The vehicle has started and he’s screaming down the street toward us with three Screven vehicles in tow. Each of them is spitting bullets at him and it looks like our chances of escape are nearly impossible. When I open my eyes, I can see him barreling down the hill. 

Bullets fly past. Christopher and Sadie are shooting as much as possible, doing everything they can to fight off the swarming guards. My attention is on Aaron. Stepping forward, I raise my hands to make myself visible to him. I think he sees me. 

He’s driving as fast as the truck will let him, equipment jostling around in the back. A bullet slaps off his side mirror. He’s riding for us fast. Hfordth="2em">e won’t be stopping. Even from this distance I can tell he’s looking at me. He needs me. 

Closer and closer he comes until he screeches past us, slamming on his brakes nearly making a full circle around us. I step forward, facing the three vehicles, arms outstretched. Before the Screven vehicles can even put on their breaks, I concentrate on each of their wheels, crushing them inward. Two of the vehicles do an instant barrel roll towards us as the other one flips frontward onto its top. 

With bullets popping all around us, Aaron yells for us to get in the truck. Without hesitation, I run for the truck and so does Christopher. But Sadie isn’t so fast.

I’m in the bed of the truck with all the equipment before I even realize that she isn’t with us. When I look out, she’s on the ground, a pool of blood soaking the dirt under her. 

“Sadie!” Christopher yells out. He runs to her, scooping her up in his arms, doing everything he can to get her to the truck. I try to deflect bullets away from them, but it’s impossible to be a shield from so many directions. A mist of blood spouts into the air as a bullet rips through Christopher’s torso. 

I curse loudly and jump from the truck, pulling the two of them from the ground with an invisible rope. They slam into the side of the truck, and I know it’s too rough when they hit, but we’re out of time. If we stay here any longer, we’ll all die. Aaron gets out and helps me get them into the bed. More vehicles are on their way, and my abilities are becoming exhausted. It’s not unlike the feeling of when I had overexerted myself the last fight I had here in Salem. I run to the front seat of the truck and Aaron slams on the gas. 

“Hold on!” he yells out as we crash through the signs and rip through the tape of what used to be Salem’s gate. 

As we speed away from Salem, I look through the rearview mirror and all I see are two unconscious bodies and surveillance equipment covered in blood. Who knows if any of it is still usable?

For all we know, the entire trip could have been a waste, and Aaron and I might be the only survivors in this truck.

The Screven guards don’t follow us. They know better. Aaron keeps driving until we meet our other truck so we can check on Sadie and Christopher. The moment we step out of the truck I can hear moans coming from Christopher, silence from Sadie. 

“I’m okay,” he says. “I’m okay.”

“I’ll be the judge of that,” Aaron says, pulling him up by the collar to a sitting position. Christopher winces at the movement. 

I run over to the side of the truck and reach a hand to Sadie’s neck, feeling for a pulse. It’s faint. 

“How is she?” Christopher calls out. 

“She’s not going to make it if you don’t work your magic,” I say. “Heal yourself and get over here.”

“I can’t heal myself,” he says through labored breaths. “That’s not how it works.”

I look at him in confusion. “But I saw you heal. You healed me the other day.”

“Yes, but I can’t heal myself.” He pushes Aaron’s prodding hands away and stands to move over to Sadie. “The bullet passed through me. One thing I do have is a good sense of whether or not a wound is fatal.” He looks at Aaron. “I’ll survive. Sadie, on the other hand, will not survive if I don’t help her now.” 

  Aaron and I stand just behind Christopher as we wait in anticipation of this miraculous gift. The wound is through her chest and there is another straight through her leg. She would bleed to death if Christopher weren’t here. 

He wraps his hands around hers and squeezes them tightly. 

For several long seconds, he winces in pain, even lets out a sharp yell as he accepts her pain as his. I can’t help my wide eyes as I watch her wounds close. Within moments, her skin is as pure as before she was shot, though bloodstains remain on her clothes. 

Christopher, however, is writhing in pain. He grabs at his chest and leg, falling to the ground, coughing, wheezing. 

“What’s wrong?” Aaron asks, trying to make Christopher’s descent to the ground easier.

“He’s taking her wounds,” I tell him. “He’ll be alright, I think.”

“This one was bad,” Sadie says from behind me. 

I turn sharply to see a completely conscious and healed girl watching her brother writhe in pain. 

“He doesn’t usually have to heal wounds like this,” she continues. She gets up from the back and rushes to his side. “If he takes on too much he could die.”

She bends down close to him, rubbing his shoulder, trying to get him to calm. Her soothing voice helps him a little. 

The radio sounds from my back pocket. There has been all kinds of chatter since the fight, but this is the first time that I’ve registered its noise. I pull it out to hear the voice of Commander Green.


…groups out on the edge. I’m taking three vehicles with me. Commander Green out.

“They’re coming,” I say, dropping the radio to the ground. “Can he walk?” I ask Sadie. 

“Yes,” Christopher says. “Yes, I can walk.”

Sadie helps him stand and he limps over to the side of the truck. Aaron gets into the driver’s seat and turns the key. Dead. 

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” he says. “Mora, can you get the equipment into the other truck? We’ve got to get out of here before this
Commander Green
gets here.”

Of course I can. I just don’t know if we have enough time. I move to the back of the truck, focusing all of my energy on lifting the equipment. Within a few seconds we’re ready to go. Sadie and Christopher are in the back bed; Aaron is in the driver’s seat. We could be driving away, but I can hear the engines coming. 

“Mora, get in,” Aaron says. 

I shake my head at him. “No. There can’t be a pursuit. These are Screven guards on our tail, not colonists. These guys have real weapons.”

“I don’t have the electricity to help you,” he says. 

“I know. Sit tight.”

I walk in front of the other truck and wait for the Screven vehicles to come around the next bend. One, two, three…four of them, fully loaded and ready to fight. I shake my head as Commander Green rises out of the top of the front vehicle through the sunroof. Other guards sit out on the sides of the windows of each vehicle, weapons in hand. Though I’m beginning to weaken, I don’t see why I couldn’t take on this group of guards. I’m glad they’re coming straight at me. I can focus better this way.  

But they don’t come at us like mad men. In fact, Commander Green is holding his hands in the air as if he’s trying to surrender. I glance at Aaron behind me and he shakes his head.
Can’t trust them.

The vehicles come to a stop about thirty yards away from us. 

“You must know by now, you can’t just wear me down,” I say. “You come at me like this, I will win.”

“Yes, I know,” Commander Green says, hopping off the top of the vehicle and to the ground. The other guards gothme aet out all around him. I make sure to keep an eye on every single one of them. 

“That’s why I’m here to talk.” 

“We have nothing to discuss.”

“You may feel that way, but I don’t.”

I sigh. “Say what you want and get out of here.”

A grin forms at the side of Green’s mouth. His thin beard twitches a little when he is about to speak. 

“Jeremiah still considers you a very powerful potential ally.”

“What are you talking about? He framed us. He set all the colonies against us.”

“Because you went against him first,” Green says. “All can be made right again on both sides should you decide to work with us.”

“What do you want exactly?”

Green’s sharp eyebrows dart downward and he lets out a huff as though the answer was clear. “To get rid of the greyskins, of course. That has been our goal from the beginning.”

I can’t help but wonder if he knows that Jeremiah actually created the greyskins in the first place. I wonder if he knows how much of a monster his leader truly is.

“We
are not here to negotiate,” I tell him. “Turn and leave, or suffer the consequences. You know what I’m capable of.”

“Yes,” he says. “I do.”

Behind him, several of his guards pull out weapons I’ve never seen before. 

“Guards,” he says. “Fire on Mora and the truck.”

With the sound of a thousand rockets going off, each of the guards lets off what looks to be some kind of missile. Of course, just like a bullet, I’m able to stop these things in mid-air. I don’t know why he thinks he can just win like this. 

With a shove, I send the tiny missiles back from where they came, setting off explosions all around the Screven guards. The force of the blast nearly knocks me off my feet, but I’m able to maintain my composure. Flesh burns, and men scream out in pain as they try to snuff out their own flames. Smoke fills the air and there’s no way they would be able to follow us now. I tried to warn them. I told them to go back, but they wouldn’t listen. 

I run back to the truck and get into the passenger side. 

“That was…bloody,” Aaron says. “Where’s the commander? Did he get hit?”

I look through the haze of fire and smoke, but I can’t see anything clearly. Surely the man must have been incinerated or something because there is no sign of him.

“Get us out of here, Aaron.”

Without a word, he puts the truck in gear and drives off.

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

 

I feel like I’ve spent the entire day at Salem, but it’s only around seven in the morning. Through the back window, I call out to Sadie to see how Christopher is doing. She says that she’s gotten the bleeding in his torso to stop, but he’s in terrible pain. 

I look at Christopher’s face and can see that he’s pale as a ghost. Blood covers the bed of the truck surrounding his body. If the bleeding hadn’t stopped soon, he would not have made it. 

“You never told me there were two of them,” Aaron says as his left hand hangs out the window, cutting the air that passes. 

“I didn’t know either.”

othmehere wer

“That Commander Green guy seemed to know you.”

“Oh, we had a nice conversation before you drove over next to us,” I say with a sarcastic smile. 

“I didn’t see him out there when I drove in.”

“He was in the Vault,” I say. 

“The Vault? What were you doing in the Vault?”

“Getting those two.”

“You were planning on going into the Vault without telling me? Are you insane?”

Other books

The Spindlers by Lauren Oliver
Waco's Badge by J. T. Edson
The Facades: A Novel by Eric Lundgren
Evie's War by Mackenzie, Anna
Death Delights by Gabrielle Lord
The Rathbones by Janice Clark
Armies of the Silver Mage by Christian Freed


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024