“You are freaking out over nothing.”
Dillon covered his face with his hand. Macy gasped.
Way to work a girl up rather than calm her down.
That yawning chasm inside Charity spilled out more lava. The world went hazy for a moment before it solidified in crystal clarity. Anger and rage seethed inside her, fueled by embarrassment and hurt from the foolish things he kept saying.
Uncertainty and vulnerability curdled into something unspeakably volatile. The strange hum in her body exploded.
She connected a punch to his solar plexus. Surprise spread over his face as he was blasted backward. Clearly he hadn’t seen that coming.
That made two of them.
But whatever she’d tapped into felt great. It was a high unlike anything she’d ever experienced. Wild and unruly, her hands shot out faster than lightning, connecting blows that would cripple a human.
He wasn’t human.
He blocked a kick and then a punch, apparently unsure whether he should engage.
“Fight back, bro, she’s on fire,” Andy yelled.
Devon blocked another punch but didn’t realize it was a decoy, and got a kick to the thigh. He stumbled backward, out of the kitchen and into the sitting room. The failing light from the sliding glass door framed him. And then he took Andy’s advice.
He hammered two fists at her midsection, aiming for areas that wouldn’t leave lasting damage. He was faster than fast, almost on par with the mid-level vamps. On some level she knew that, yet it seemed like normal speed to her now.
She swiped a strike out of the way, grabbed his wrist, and yanked. His fall forward turned into a large step. She hammered a punch into his kidney. The wind exited his lungs, but he was already moving. He grabbed her and threw, and she went airborne across the room.
“Yield!” Devon yelled, his voice infused with fire and power.
She hit the wall and fell to the ground. “You yield! I like flying.” Up a moment later, with elation singing through her blood, she crouched. Ready. She was just getting warmed up.
“I’m serious, Charity, yie—”
Charity kicked, missing. A fist sailed past her face. She blocked the next punch and ducked in, slamming her fist into his side. Then she was airborne again. She hadn’t seen that one coming!
A table rolled away as she tumbled to the ground. Why hadn’t the fall hurt more?
She got up slowly this time, noticing he didn’t advance. He was trying to throw her around to get his point across—I’m bigger, stronger, and a superior fighter. I am better than you.
“Yield,” he called, standing straight and tall at the other end of the room. “Or I will make you yield.”
She cocked her head to the side, the hum of her body so loud that she wondered if anyone else heard it. “Let’s see if you like flying, too.”
“Charity, no—”
She pushed her hands toward him. The air compressed, and electricity surged and then exploded from her. The sliding glass door shattered behind Devon and then he flew out, catching the wind like a tumbleweed. Halfway through the flying arc, he twisted and an aura of magic surrounded him. Fur erupted and his teeth grew. He landed on four feet and then shook off his tattered clothes and bits of glass.
She stared at the huge black wolf, the electricity now crackling between her fingers.
Until she glanced upward.
Shapes moved among the trees in the growing darkness, keeping to the shadows so stray light from the sunset couldn’t touch their flawless skin. Predatory eyes stared at her as she stood bare-handed in the ruined doorway. A blur of movement, more perceptible than it ever had been, had her BFF appearing among the dozens of vampires, a small smile curling his shapely lips.
“I see you have found your father’s gift, Arcana,” he called to her, his musical voice pleasing despite his creepiness. “Let us hope you are still ignorant in all the ways to use it.”
She didn’t know what that meant. She did know that Vlad wasn’t planning on waiting for Roger.
“How many vamps does it take to bring down that ward?” she asked Devon’s pack.
Devon now faced the vamps and backed up to stand directly in front of her. He let out a wicked snarl.
“Yes, the puppy has merit, I shall grant you,” Vlad said. “He might’ve made a worthy adversary one day. Alas, I must extinguish him tonight before he can grow into his mantle. Is not that the term he uses for my children? Extinguish? Such a callous word. So unfeeling.”
“They have plenty,” Rod mumbled from