Lili St Crow - Reckoning

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The electric finale in
bestselling author Lili St. Crow's Strange Angels series! Nobody expected Dru Anderson to survive this long. Not Graves. Not Christophe. Not even Dru. She's battled killer zombies, jealous
, and bloodthirsty suckers straight out of her worst nightmares. But now that Dru has bloomed into a full-fledged svetocha—rare, beautiful, and toxic to all vampires-the worst is yet to come.
Because getting out alive is going to cost more than she's ever imagined. And in the end, is survival really worth the sacrifice?
DRU ANDERSON'S NOT AFRAID OF THE DARK.
BUT SHE SHOULD BE.

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Fingers against my face. Cold, with the prickle of claws behind them. He scraped at my skin gently, like he enjoyed the feel of it. Something in me roused, knowing I was in terrible danger. It struggled for the surface . . . and couldn’t make it .

Take her away,” Sergej said, and giggled .

* * *

No chain cuffed to my wrist. No need for it now. I was as weak as a sick kitten. Dibs held the cup of water to my lips; half of it spilled down my T-shirt. Tears slicked his cheeks. I blinked at him. There was a buzzing in my ears, and everything looked two-dimensional.

The touch was weak, too. Contracting, like a slug with salt sprinkled on it. Thin and washed out, the world with most of its color removed, all its solidity evaporated. Just a television show, light played on a flat screen.

“Dru!” Dibs, sobbing now. “Dru, please, wake up. Wake up .”

I don’t think I want to . But I was doing this for him, wasn’t I? So I tried to focus through the haze. My mouth wouldn’t quite work right.

“Dibsh?” I slurred. Tried again. “Shamuel?”

Because I’d always thought it was kind of funny when Christophe called him Samuel . A weird, floaty laugh came out of me, my lips loose and numb. I sounded drunk.

He made a low hurt noise. That snapped me back into some kind of sense.

Buck up, Dru. You’re still breathing. Things could be worse .

As “comforting things to think” went, it kind of sucked.

I forced my eyes to open all the way. It wasn’t the cell. It was a bedroom. No windows, the blank stone walls faintly sheened with something like greasy sweat. But the bed was a four-poster, done in faded pink, hanging curtains fuzzed with what looked like a century’s worth of dust. A small brass lamp on a flimsy black-painted nightstand, its shade a bell of dark pink Tiffany glass, Art Deco and probably worth something. There was also a cut-crystal water pitcher. My left-hand fingers itched a little, and a terrible lassitude filled every inch of me.

A girl I’d hung out with in seventh grade had told me about having mono once. About being so tired she didn’t even want to get up to pee. About how her whole body didn’t even seem to belong to her. Just a lump I was hanging around in until a bus came , was the way she put it.

Sarah. Her name was Sarah Holmes. She had black hair .

I hadn’t thought about her in ages. We’d moved on after Dad and I cleared out a roach-spirit infestation and did a little hexbreaking on the side. But now I wanted to see her again and tell her that I understood. And to apologize for promising to be her friend, when I knew I was going to be leaving.

Dibs’s face loomed over mine. His eyes were red and inflamed, and his cheeks were chapped under the tearstains. He looked like he’d been crying for a long time.

Christ. Locked up in this room with me almost dead on the bed? No wonder .

“Hi,” I croaked. “Don’t cry. It’s okay.” For some reason that set him off again, but I didn’t worry about it. I was thinking through mud, each separate thought very slow and stretched out. “Dibs. Kiddo. Calm down.”

“I c-c-can’t s-s-smell you!” The water glass shook in his hands. “You were s-s-so still, and I—”

“Whooooaaaa.” I drew the word out. “Chill, Dibsie. Calm down. Nice and easy.” I am comforting a submissive werwulf. Wow . For some reason it seemed funny. Horribly, bleakly funny. It would take too much energy to laugh, though. “How . . .” I struggled to find the right question to ask. “How long? Have I been . . . out?”

“Hours,” he whispered. “I was scared.” Half-defiant, his lower lip pooching a little. There was some grit in Dibs, even if he was sub. He certainly didn’t take any crap when it was time to bandage someone up.

“Me too, kid.” I tried to move, got pretty much nowhere. But I felt a little sharper now. The aspect ’s warmth was gone; I never thought I’d miss it. It was freezing in here. The cold crept into my fingers and toes in a way that should have alarmed me. “Dibs. My hand. Left hand.”

“What?” As usual, once he got something to do , he calmed right down. The stutter eased up and the frantic jittering in his muscles settled into an occasional twitch. “Oh, yeah. Blisters and stuff. I b-bandaged it. Looked pretty rough, and not healing r-right. What is it?”

I don’t know. A hex so bad it burned me, but it’s turning out to be useful . I didn’t have the energy to explain. “Poke it.”

“What?” He stared at me like I’d lost my mind.

“Poke it. Squeeze it.” Give it a beat and dance to it, just make it hurt . I brought my attention back with a start. “Make it hurt.”

“But—” He set the water glass down. “Dru.”

“Make. It. Hurt.” I didn’t have any patience left, either. “Please.”

“Okay.” He leaned over me, grabbed my left hand, and squeezed with more than human strength.

A lightning bolt went up my arm, detonated in my shoulder. I yelped, Dibs yelped too and dropped my hand. He was all the way across the room before you could shout Dixie, pressed up against the dark, weeping stone wall. For just a moment the Other shone out through his wide fearful eyes, a flash of orange snarling, and fur rippled under his skin, not quite breaking free.

Even if he was shy and frightened, Dibs was still wulfen. He could kick some serious ass if he was motivated.

The trouble, I guess, was getting him motivated enough to forget he was scared.

The jolt of pain cleared my head. It also made the touch ring like a bell, expanding for a brief second before I dropped back into my tired aching body with a click, the exact same sound as Dad chambering a round.

Okay . I propped myself shakily on my elbows. Random curls fell in my face, and I tasted copper. My mouth was dry and aching. My teeth weren’t sensitive at all. Well, that was a relief—but there was none of the aspect , and the world looked dull. It could’ve been just the dim pinkish light.

Or maybe I was just seeing with normal eyes now.

If I was, how did people live like this? With shutters over their eyes and cotton wool in their ears? It was worse than being blind.

My arms gave out. I sank back down into the bed. It was chokingsoft, and my nose tickled from the dust. But I felt clear. Like I was made of glass, drained and wiped clean. At least I could think now.

I licked my lips, wished I hadn’t. My dry tongue rasped, and the bloodhunger at the back of my throat was a slow creeping burn. “Door. Locked?”

Dibs eased away from the wall. “Nothing to pick it with, either. I checked. I thought if I c-could g-get you o-out—”

“Calm down , Dibs.” I appreciate the thought. Really, I do . I focused on breathing. In, out, in, out. “Okay. Anything in here that can serve as a weapon? Is the bed breakable?”

“Wood. Not hawthorn. I could break it up, maybe make stakes, but they’ll just laugh at us before they take off our heads like Pez dispensers.” He swallowed hard, his chin lifting. His curls fell back, and for a moment I got a flash of what he’d look like if he ever got older, instead of being teenage all the time.

Pez dispensers? You’re gruesome. That’s good . “Good point. Can I have some more water?”

I didn’t really need it. I just wanted to give him something to do while I poked at the beehive inside my head and figured out something amazing that would get us out of this.

Unfortunately my beehive wasn’t producing much beyond a steady whispered oh my God we’re all gonna die and prolly me first, hooray and oh shit .

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