Last Kiss Goodnight - By Gena Showalter Page 0,119
life without me, did you?” Jecis said, a hint of madness in his tone. Madness, fury, and evil. Pure evil. “Thought some disgusting otherworlder would care for you in ways I could not?”
He had no idea she could hear him, she realized. A fact she could use to her advantage. She just had to figure out how.
“Well?” he demanded.
“Yes,” she said, happy to discover there wasn’t a tremble in her voice. “I did. I do.”
Surprise widened his eyes, and he stomped toward her. I will not cower. When he reached her, he grabbed her arms in a painful vise grip and shook her. “I loved you.” Spittle rained over her face. “How could you betray me like this?”
“You never loved me.”
“I gave you everything.”
“You gave me nothing but pain and sorrow.”
He raised his hand to hit her, but rather than back down, rather than plead for mercy he would never show, she lifted her chin. The surprise returned, now magnified, and he slowly lowered his arm.
“You’ve changed,” he said, and he didn’t sound happy about it.
“I have.” And she would never go back to the way she’d been. She had traveled too far down this current road, had gone from cowardly to courageous. Even looking back, she couldn’t see where she’d started. “How did you get here?”
“A little man, Dr. E, came to me. He told me where to find you and vowed to empower me in ways I could only dream of . . . if only I vowed to kill you.”
Kill you. The words echoed in her mind, leaving an empty ache in her chest. “And did you agree?”
He flashed his teeth in a parody of a smile. “I did. And you deserve to die, after what you did to me. But first,” he said, “I’m going to teach you the same lesson I taught your mother: Leave me and suffer.”
He motioned Matas forward.
Her former guard walked over, bent down, and, straining under the muscled weight, hefted Solo over his shoulder. So badly Vika wanted to lash out, to do something, anything, to save him. But she didn’t. Not yet. Right now it was three against one, and she had no way to transport Solo. Solo, who had not moved or made a sound since falling. What had her father done to him?
“With the power Dr. E has given me,” Jecis said, “I can create stronger solar flares. I can choose where I end up, when I end up—up to a certain point. I can only go short distances, but the more I do this, the better I become.” He raised his arm, mumbled a string of words she didn’t understand—words that lifted the fine hairs on her body and left a sour taste in her mouth.
Suddenly white lightning speared the air just in front of her, creating a split in the ether. The edges were drenched in fog, but through the center she could see . . . outside the cabin. Cold, wintry air even blustered inside the garage.
Jecis jerked her through, and a second later, she was standing outside, in the exact spot she’d seen. Matas and Audra followed, and the pocket of air closed behind them.
“One more, and you’ll be home,” Jecis said. Once again he raised his arm, mumbling, and once again lightning lanced down, creating a crack in the air. A curtain that had just been opened, revealing another location on the other side.
Revealing the nightmare she’d left behind. The circus. Only, now it was surrounded by sunshine and light.
Just before Jecis could tug her through, a ferocious roar resounded through the night.
“What was that?” Audra whispered.
“Come,” Jecis commanded, his gaze roving the distance.
The injured white tiger leapt from the darkness and slammed into him before he could take a single step, propelling him off his feet and onto the snowy ground. He maintained his hold on Vika and took her with him. On impact, oxygen burst from her lungs.
Her father howled with pain as the tiger bit into his arm, dragging him several feet, shaking him. Finally Jecis released Vika, but only to throw a bolt of lightning at the tiger, causing the animal to fly backward.
“No!” she screamed, attempting to jump up but slipping on the ice.
A bleeding Jecis stood, grabbed her, and jerked her through the new opening. This time, Matas and Audra didn’t walk through but ran, practically pushing her out of the way.
Another roar, and she could hear the frantic clomp of the tiger’s paws against the ice.