Midnight Kisses (Shifter Island #1) - Leia Stone Page 0,41
how to answer that, but we didn’t have time to discuss it now.
Two of the selkies charged us, and I scanned the area for something—anything—I could use as a weapon.
“Here,” Rage snapped, shoving his sword at me, his only weapon.
I wanted to ask him if there were more deadly weapons secretly scattered about, but there was no time. Hopefully, he had something else to use against our attackers.
Hefting the weapon, I shifted my stance and zeroed in on the two selkies.
A fireball soared through my peripheral vision, startling me. I glanced at Rage, who was conjuring another sphere of live flame.
“I hope you know how to use that.” His gaze dropped to the sword, and he shook his head.
Like he didn’t believe me capable and he was mad he had to babysit me.
“You worry about your fireballs,” I snapped. If he thought I’d spent the last nineteen years in Montana picking apples, he had another thing coming.
The selkie warrior on the left dodged the fiery mass and lunged at me with his machete. I stepped forward and swung to meet his blade. The clash of metal rang through the cafeteria, interrupting the female’s song. I slid in closer and followed up with an elbow to my opponent’s nose, smiling at the satisfying crunch of bone and spurt of black blood.
He grunted and doubled over.
Rookie mistake.
Both hands on the hilt, I rotated and clobbered the man right in the temple with the pommel.
As he dropped, I spun to meet my next foe.
Only, no one was there. With a moment to breathe, I scanned the cafeteria, trying to absorb the scene. All of the students still stood rigidly, staring at the singing woman while Rage, Justice, Honor, and Noble, all with little foam earplugs, fought the selkies. Maybe Justice had been busy shoving earplugs in his brothers’ ears. If the cafeteria was equipped with swords and earplugs hidden under tables, then maybe this was a regular occurrence.
Rage hurled another ball of flames, his lip curled in disgust. But magic could be just as hard to wield as a sword, and the flames crashed two feet from its intended target, extinguishing on the ground upon impact.
I pried a deadly machete from the unconscious male selkie’s fingers and closed the distance between me and Rage. “Here,” I said, returning Rage’s blade now that I had my own. “I hope you know how to use it.”
Take that, asshole.
He plucked it from my hand, giving me a small glare. “You worry about yourself. I’ve got this.”
He rotated and swung the massive blade in one fluid movement. The two selkies advancing on us screeched and tried to get out of the way of its deadly arc.
One of the selkies darted to the side, but the other…
The metal slid through him from shoulder to hip like a hot knife cutting through butter. One second, he was standing; and the next, his knees buckled, and his torso toppled forward.
Rage obviously didn’t need any help. Which meant I needed to protect the frozen students, specifically the five Harvest girls whom I’d grown to love. If Evil Barbie got whacked during this attack … oh well.
Miss Mariah Carey was keeping everyone entranced. Only those with earplugs seemed fine. I should probably have pressed my father further when he spoke of selkie powers.
Spinning around, I spotted a large kitchen knife on the counter and scooped it up.
Jackpot. Could never have too many weapons.
I glanced across the cafeteria and spotted Kaja, frozen but safe in the corner with Nell. Her other three sisters stood just behind them. No selkies were advancing on them. However… my gaze landed on Honor and Noble, who were cornered by four selkie warriors.
The pair were outnumbered; we all were.
We needed the ratios to change. I needed to stop this damn song.
Blood rushed in my ears as I sprinted forward, bumping the inert Evil Barbie—totally by accident—and I forced my attention to narrow until only my target existed. Sorry, selkie, your show is getting canceled.
“Nai!” Rage yelled, his voice buzzing in the distance, a mixture of panic or anger. “Stay put!”
No time for chitchat. I didn’t care if he approved of my battle plans.
Tipping my wrist back, I flicked the kitchen blade just as I had a billion times in the woods of Montana. The slender silver knife sang as it sliced through the air, and the female selkie’s voice became a wet gurgle as a thin line of blood beaded on the right side of her neck. Her