For his own son too.
Only one thing is certain: A war is coming, and he wants to keep Rhett and Xavier as far away from it as possible.
~~~
As my days surround me
with the bitter eyes of a betrayed wolf,
my nights haunt and destroy
without compassion,
bruising my heart and crushing my soul.
This Broken Life, Rhett Carter
Chapter One
Rhett
Present Day
More than Six Months after Salem’s Revenge
Sometimes a journey begins so comfortably, just a familiar step forward onto an oft-travelled path. And other times, well, that first step is shaky and foreign, as if an invisible force is pushing backwards against your chest, driving the breath out of your lungs, bruising your muscles and bones.
My latest journey begins like the latter scenario, only the heaviness of my anger propelling me through that invisible barrier, smashing it to bits. In my mind I see the Reaper’s face, split in two, one half smiling and warm and the other dark and cold. Which is the real Mr. Jackson?
I shake my head, realizing it doesn’t matter because she’s gone. I force the words to my lips, but don’t speak them: Beth is gone. The thought sends lava through my veins, which seems to be the only thing that wards off the heavy blanket of sadness threatening to suffocate me.
Silently I plot my revenge on the Necros, relishing the thought of shoving my sword through the Reaper’s neck, like I once had the opportunity to do. If he’s still alive, that is. And what of Xavier? I know I shouldn’t blame my ex-best friend, but it’s hard not to when all I can think about are Beth’s empty eye sockets. The Necros made her into a monster and he helped them.
As a familiar sliver of fur rubs against me, I know I should be thankful that my friends are here by my side. There’s Hex, my magical German shepherd (his fur still brittle and singed from the bomb blasts), Laney, and Trish; the latter stares silently ahead, rarely blinking. They’re all I have left in this world.
The tattooed Chinese characters on Laney’s neck catch my eye. She told me they mean ‘family,’ which is something she’s been ashamed of ever since her magic-born parents tried to kill her. But she still has her sister, Trish, and that counts for something these days.
We’re being less careful now that we’re miles away from Pittsburgh. Miles away from the hole in the ground that used to be Heinz Field—the old Necros’ lair. We’re heading south and east toward what was once called Washington D.C., but has been renamed New Washington. The last president is dead—killed during Salem’s Revenge—but Vice President Washington supposedly managed to survive, taking over leadership of what’s left of the human population. According to what we’ve heard, the humans are finally fighting back, and that’s something I want to—no, have to—be a part of.
The southbound highway is empty, save for the occasional abandoned car, motorcycle, or Walmart tractor-trailer. I pretend the smears of red on the asphalt are paint streaks.
Gray, swollen rainclouds hover overhead threateningly. Miles in the distance, they seem to reach for the ground like ghostly hands. A storm’s coming, one way or another.
“It’s weird seeing you without your shotgun,” I say to Laney, trying to break the awkward silence that’s arisen ever since we argued about my plan to get to New Washington.
“The magged-up Glock Tillman Huckle gave me is all I need now,” Laney says, her voice monotone.
I force myself to chuckle. “Because of the never ending ammo?” I ask, raising an eyebrow.
“And the fact that it seems to target magic-born completely on its own,” she says, finally meeting my eyes. I wait for the sparkle that’s usually there, but there’s nothing but deep blue wells of emptiness.
I swallow and look away. Am I making the right choice? Beth’s face appears before me, perfect and beautiful, her eyes closed—is she sleeping? No. Her eyes are stitched shut, hiding the blindness inflicted upon her reanimated body. Rhett-t-t-t, she says in my mind. I grit my teeth and remind myself of all the evils carried out by the magic-born.
“This is insane,” Laney mutters.
I open my mouth to utter a sharp response, but then close it. I don’t want to argue anymore, especially because she’s right. Fighting the witches and warlocks is insane.
“Nothing to say, Rhett?” Laney says, not addressing me by my last name, like she usually does.
“I don’t want to fight with you,” I say.
Laney pulls up short, whirling on me, her golden-blond hair flying around her face, her bright blue eyes flashing anger. Trish—who looks more like a miniature version of Laney than ever—and Hex wander a few steps further, but then stop, too. “Then don’t,” she says. “We can go north, where it’s cold and there’s unlikely to be as many magic-born. We can hide. We can survive.”
I shake my head. “I can’t. I want to, but I can’t.”
“That’s bullcrap and you know it.”
“You don’t understand anything,” I say.
She pushes me, hard. And despite our size difference, I stumble back two steps. “I don’t understand?” Her fists are clenched, her face screwed up in anger. “My parents tried to kill me and my sister is a witch. You’re not the only one who feels pain. The only difference is that I’m smart enough to avoid getting hurt again.”
She’s right, of course. Everyone’s been through hell and back, and I’m certainly not the only one to have lost someone. And yet…I can’t let it go. Not when there’s someone left to be punished.
“I’m sorr—” I start to say, but before I can finish the apology Laney’s punching my chest, my arms, my stomach, her fists flying everywhere, her face red and fiery, her mouth an angry snarl. “God, Laney, what the hell?” I say, trying to grab her fists, to corral them. Eventually I get one, then the other, and when she tries to kick me I spin her around and hold her tightly from behind.
She drops to the ground, pulling me with her, and her body starts to shake.
And that’s when I hear it—her sobs.
And she shakes and she cries, her tears streaming like swollen rivers, and I just hold her as it starts to rain.
~~~
The abandoned farmhouse is drafty and has a slightly rotten odor inside, but we can’t be choosy these days. And it has two shelves of canned goods in the pantry, which we eat cold while the rain drums on the rooftop.
Laney hasn’t said a word since Hex licked her face and convinced her to stop crying and continue onward. In this case, Hex’s magic was simply being a dog, inexplicably able to cure sadness with nothing more than a lick and a wag of his tail.
I think she’s embarrassed, but I’m not about to say that.
Truth be told, I’m scared to death. Laney’s not really a crier.
As Hex scarfs down a can of ground meat and Trish draws circles in the dust, I try to get things back on track. “The Pyros and Volts and Destroyers were all traitors to the Necros,” I say.
Laney says nothing, just shoves her spoon into an empty can that used to hold green beans. At least she still has her appetite.
“But who are they working for?” I continue, throwing the question out there. “They don’t seem like natural allies, and yet, they banded together easily for the battle. Surely they must be getting orders from somewhere.”
Laney cracks open a can of lima beans and starts shoveling them in her mouth.
“If we can just figure out who’s leading the magic-born, perhaps we can hit them where it’ll hurt the most,” I say.
“I thought you hate the Necros,” Laney says, her mouth still full. She doesn’t make eye contact.
“I do,” I say, but right away I think of Xave. Do I hate him, too? “But it doesn’t matter—they’re all dead anyway.”
“Maybe not all,” Laney says, after swallowing a big bite. “Some may have escaped.”
“Maybe,” I say, feeling an unwanted thrill in my chest at the
prospect of Xave being alive. “But that’s why we need to get to New Washington. We can finally find out what’s going on. And Trish will be safe there,” I add, because I know that’s Laney’s number one priority.
“New America hired Bil Nez to try to kill you.”
“Only because they thought I was working with the Necros,” I argue.
“The End works for New America,” Laney says.
I picture the sadistic group of witch hunters racing away from Heinz Field in their Hummer, having destroyed many of the witch and warlock Wardens protecting the Necros. Their leader, the ex-mixed martial arts fighter named Graves, flashes me a sneer of victory. And yet…
“They’re helping to destroy the magic-born,” I say.
“Not just the magic-born,” Laney says. “Anything that moves. They’d kill my sister, you know.”
“Not if she kills them first,” I say, lowering my voice.
Laney’s eyes widen and her mouth drops open. “What did you say?”
It’s something I’ve been thinking for a long time. Something I probably should’ve kept as a thought. Too late now. “Trish is very powerful, Laney, surely you see that,” I say.
“And?” she says, crossing her arms across her chest.
“Hiding her away will only delay the witches from finding her. Instead, her powers could be used to beat them. We have to take every advantage we can get if we’re going to win this war.”
I wait for the explosion, my heart pounding in my chest, but it never comes.
Instead, her reaction is worse. “I have nothing left to say to you, Rhett Carter,” Laney says quietly. “Maybe you’re not who I thought you were. Trish is just a kid and you want to use her powers?” She shakes her head in disappointment, which seems far more painful than her hitting me. “Seems like you’d fit right in with The End. Maybe you should see if they’re still taking applications.”
Her words sting, but I’m not about to be deterred. I’m still doing this for the right reasons. “I’m not on their side,” I say. “I’m on our side. Humanity’s side.”
“What about Trish and me? What about Hex? If we continue down your path of revenge will you use us until we all end up dead? Is that what you want? Do you want your only friends to die?” Her voice is rising and I’m worried she’s on the verge of another breakdown.
“Laney, I’m glad I met you and Trish, but I didn’t leave Mr. Jackson’s house all those months ago to make new friends. I left to find old ones. I left to find…” I can barely choke out her name. “…Beth.”
“Thanks. Sorry that meeting me wasn’t a priority. But just a reminder in case you’ve forgotten: Beth. Is. Dead,” Laney says, dropping her voice to a whisper. “We’re not.”
“You think I don’t know that?” I say, feeling sudden and unexpected anger at her for reminding me of all I’ve lost. “I’m a Resistor, Laney, one of the few who can naturally fight off the witches’ magic. If anyone can get revenge, it’s me.”
“Well, I don’t care about revenge,” Laney says. “And neither does Trish.”
“That’s your choice, isn’t it?” I say, purposely egging her on.
Laney looks like she’s about to explode, but before she can respond, her sister pounds her little fist on the floorboards.
Simultaneously, Laney and I jerk our heads to look at her. She stares back, her gaze flitting back and forth between us.
And then she speaks the first word I’ve ever heard her say.
Chapter Two
Laney
“See,” my sister says, her tiny voice ringing out crystal clear like a wind chime.
I feel my eyes widen and the tingle of goose bumps rising from my skin, both on my arms and the back of my neck. I look at Rhett, whose mouth is slightly open. He’s as shocked as I am.
“Trish?” I say, looking back at my sister. She hasn’t spoken a single word since the night she screamed and killed our parents, and yet her first word doesn’t so much as crack or shudder.
She doesn’t repeat the word, just points to the floor, where she’s been carving lines into the dust. Not lines—letters. Words.
“Do not fear for me,” Rhett reads, running his finger along Trish’s message etched in the dust.
My heart stutters and I suddenly feel short of breath. “Trish,” I say. “What does that mean? Fear what?” The words in the dust seem to turn black and I have the sudden urge to smear them with the heel of my hand, but I know it’s just a trick of the fading daylight and staring at them for too long.
“See,” she says again, repeating her first word. And then a second word: “Remember.” And then, as if nothing has changed, she lays down next to Hex, her hand absently stroking his fur.
“What was that?” Rhett says, his firm jaw set even tighter than usual.
“How the hell should I know?” I say sharply, feeling the familiar tug of anger in my chest. Why did Xavier have to bring Beth back to life just to have her die again in front of Rhett? If that hadn’t happened, maybe I could talk some sense into him. Instead, it’s like talking to a fireball that refuses to be doused. And behind my rising anger is a question I wish to God wasn’t there:
Why am I not enough for him?
Stupid, stupid, pathetic girl, I think.
I grit my teeth and get up. “Laney,” Rhett says, also standing.
We’re a full five feet away from each other, but he feels close enough to touch. “Yeah?” I say, remembering how it felt hitting him, how strong his chest and arms felt beneath each blow. Like he was impenetrable. Like he really was Superman, the nickname I gave him after he nearly sacrificed himself trying to save people. And now he wants to play superhero again.
He’s practically twice my size and I tried to fight him?
I laugh to myself at my own stupidity. It reminds me of when I switched schools for the third time in three years and this bully everyone called Big Sue decided to make it her mission to make me look like an idiot in front of my classmates. Eventually her tormenting became so humiliating that I challenged her to a real fight after school. I was suspended for three days after losing that fight, wearing two black eyes for a couple of weeks; but Big Sue never messed with me again. Yeah, fighting above my weight class has become somewhat of a pattern for me.
“What?” Rhett says, raising an eyebrow as I continue to laugh at myself.
I know my frivolity is just a lame attempt to avoid talking about what my sister just did. “Nothing,” I say. “Sorry I hit you earlier.”
“I think you bruised me,” Rhett says sternly, but he’s smiling. At least we’re both avoiding talking about Trish.
“Can’t take a hit, eh? I thought you were a manly man.”
“You hit hard,” Rhett says, still smiling.
“I’m going to take a leak,” I lie, pushing through the back door.
“Be careful,” Rhett says. “Shout if you need anything.”
“I think I can handle peeing,” I say, “even if I don’t have an aimer.” I let the door slam behind me. I head straight for a spot behind a large bush, out of sight, relishing the cool rain on my face. I glance back once through the window to see Rhett’s dark skin appearing even more shadow-like in the fading daylight. Ducking behind the green foliage, I feel the tears threatening to push their way out once more.
What the hell?
I don’t know what’s making me crazier, that my sister finally spoke or that my best and only friend wants to use her to help him get his revenge.
Or it could be that it’s my time of the month again, and there’s only one thing worse than having your period while on the run: having your period while on the run during the witch apocalypse. I’m glad I found some undamaged tampons at the gas station we passed the other day.
Stupid crying. Stupid Rhett. Stupid witches. Stupid period.
I feel like I’m on a brakeless runaway train that’s falling apart on the tracks. No wait, even the tracks are breaking.
Blinking furiously, I fight off t
he tears. Even if I can’t convince Rhett Carter, The Avenging Witch Hunter, to take a different path, I have to be strong for my sister. I can’t let her get involved in Rhett’s vendetta. She’s just a kid. An all-powerful witch who kills people and explodes missiles with screams, yeah, but still a kid.
Even still, my tears earlier and the tears that threaten now aren’t for her.
They’re because of what I know I have to do.
And in that moment, with my face moist with rain but not tears, I make my decision.
Chapter Three
Rhett
Every time I try to make conversation, she stares at me like I’m a monster, so eventually I give up.
Unable to bear the silence any longer, I go to bed early, stretching out on a plush, wide couch that’s only mildly dusty. My eyes flutter closed and weariness rolls in.
My eyes flash open when I feel something beside me. “Who’s there?” I say to the dark.
“Shh,” Laney says, slipping onto the front of the couch. Her body nestles against mine, instantly warming my skin. One of her arms wraps around my chest, hugging me from behind.
Given the strain between us during the day, I’m shocked. At the same time, I feel the burn of shame on my cheeks, countered only by an unexpected burst of excitement in my chest, speeding up my heart.
I’ve hugged Laney before, even kissed her once—well, she kissed me—and it felt good, but never like this. Never so…intimate. No, this isn’t right. Not when Beth’s only just been…
Not when I just watched Beth…
I feel her legs against mine, and I know I need Laney now more than ever before, and yet I keep pushing her away. And that’s when I realize: Even though it feels like it just happened a few days ago, Beth’s been gone for months, living only in my dreams and memories.
Even still, the shivers of excitement rolling down my spine as Laney spoons me feel so wrong. The smile that spreads across my face feels so out of place, so foreign, like happiness is a fictional emotion that only belongs in stories.