
First in an all-new paranormal romance series
CAUTION : readers MAY feel the heat coming off the
pages.
They are the Sentinels...
Three races
descended from ancient guardians of mankind, each possessing
unique abilities in their battle to protect humanity against
their eternal foes—the Synestryn. Now, one warrior must
fight his own desire if he is to discover the power that
lies within his one true love…
Helen Day is haunted
by visions of herself surrounded by flames, as a dark-haired
man watches her burn. So when she sees the man of her
nightmares staring at her from across a diner, she attempts
to flee—but instead ends up in the man’s arms. There, she
awakens a force more powerful and enticing than she could
ever imagine. For the man is actually Theronai warrior
Drake, whose own pain is driven away by Helen’s
presence.
Together, they may become more than
lovers—they may become a weapon of light that could tip the
balance of the war and save Drake’s people…
Excerpt June 27, Olathe, KS
The man who was going to stand by and watch while Helen
burned to death liked his coffee black.
Helen looked up from her menu and, across the little
diner, she saw him sitting there, not twenty feet away. He
was the man of her dreams-or more accurately, of her
visions. Technically it was just one vision. Over and
over. She was going up in flames while he watched. Smiling
at her.
"See something you like?" asked Lexi, the diner's only
waitress on duty. She'd been working at Gertie's Diner for
only a couple of months now, but there was something about
her that made Helen trust her enough to share things no
other living person knew, including Helen's vision of her
own death. "Cook's gone for the day, so all we have left is
meat loaf, baked chicken, and pot roast. Pick your poison."
Across from Helen, her dinner companion, Miss Mabel, sat
low in the red vinyl booth. Her age-hunched shoulders
barely cleared the table. Her gnarled hands gripped the
laminated menu, which wavered so much Helen wasn't sure how
she could read it without getting motion sickness.
"How's the meat loaf?" asked Miss Mabel.
Lexi was a petite twenty-something with a killer body and
a brain to match. What she was doing waiting tables in
Olathe, Kansas, living in her car, was a total mystery to
Helen-one Lexi refused to solve no matter how many times
Helen asked. She'd offered to let Lexi stay with her until
she found a place, but Lexi said she wouldn't bring trouble
to Helen's doorstep when she clearly had enough of her own.
Lexi leaned down until her short, white-blond spikes
threatened to poke Miss Mabel in the eye. "You'd be safer
eating two-day-old roadkill, which is what I'm guessing
Paulo used to make the meat loaf. He left early when I
started asking questions about it. Smart man."
Miss Mabel blanched a little. "Definitely no meat loaf.
I'll take the pot roast."
Lexi winked and wrote it down on her pad of order slips.
"How 'bout you, Helen? What can I get you today?"
Helen tried to focus on her menu as she held it up to
shield her face so Vision Man couldn't see her. Her hands
trembled, making the words blur. She was already on the
verge of panic. If he caught her watching him, she was sure
she'd lose it completely.
Helen wanted to scream at Lexi to throw the pot of
scalding coffee into his lap and run away. Instead, she
fought her rising panic for a chance to learn something
about him in the hope of escaping the vision. She sank
lower in her seat and tried to pretend that everything was
fine, which she did with flying colors. Helen had a lot of
practice at pretending everything was fine.
"I'm not sure," said Helen to stall for more time, hoping
her hands would stop shaking so hard she could read the
menu. Against her better judgment, she eased the menu aside
so she could take a quick peek. Maybe she'd imagined it was
him.
Nope. It was Vision Man. In the flesh.
He listened to what one of the men sitting across from
him was saying while he sipped his coffee. One thick arm
was sprawled out across the back of the booth and she could
see some sort of tattoo peeking out from under Vision Man's
T-shirt sleeve. Strands of hair, maybe? Vines? She
couldn't be sure at this distance and she didn't think
staring long enough to figure it out was a smart move. She
did not want him to notice her staring. She didn't want him
to notice her, period.
He had thick brown hair that was just getting long enough
to show off a bit of curl. And that was the only thing
about him that looked soft. He had high, almost sharp
cheekbones with deep hollows beneath. His mouth was pressed
into a hard, flat line as he listened to his friend, his
expression grim, almost angry. The muscles in his jaw
bunched as if he was grinding his teeth, and Helen had the
distinct impression that he was in pain. Lots of pain.
Good. It served him right for watching her die. Not
that he'd committed that particular crime yet, but he would.
She knew it like she knew the sun would set in a few
minutes. There was nothing fake or distorted about her
vision. She'd tried for years to find some flaw, some speck
of doubt that what she saw was real. Tried and failed. And
now she knew that her time was nearly up. The man in her
vision was this man, not an older version of him.
Helen was going to die soon. Maybe tonight.
Grief and fear swelled up in her chest and she fought
them down. Focused on her breathing and relaxing each
little muscle starting at her fingertips. She'd learned the
technique from her therapist, who was convinced she was
suffering from some sort of delusion. All she had to do was
face it and it would go away. Well, she was facing it now
and it wasn't going anywhere. Fifty thousand dollars and
many years later, she was still just as deluded, but at
least she could keep the fear at bay. Breathing and
relaxing was the only way she knew to control the panic.
The only way to keep herself from screaming in terror.
Burning alive. What a fucking gruesome fate.
She'd tried to prepare herself for this, but she'd
obviously failed. It was too soon. She wasn't ready to die
yet. There was still so much work left to be done. So many
people who needed her help.
"You okay?" asked Lexi, her pale forehead puckering with
a frown. She glanced over her shoulder to where Helen kept
trying not to look. Vision Man and two others sat drinking
coffee and eating pie as though they had all the time in the
world. Man, wouldn't that be nice.
"Those guys bothering you?" asked Lexi, sounding more
worried from Helen's lack of response.
"Uh, no." Just breathe. That's all she had to do.
Breathe in. Breathe out. "I'll have the pot roast, too."
Lexi turned back around. "Now I know something's wrong.
You never eat red meat."
"Yeah, well, you can't live forever," said Helen.
Lexi's petite body stilled and Helen could almost hear
the wheels in her head turn. "Holy shit! That's him, isn't
it?" asked Lexi in a near whisper.
Helen wished for the millionth time that she'd just kept
her mouth shut, or that Lexi wasn't quite so intuitive.
Lexi should have been a bartender or an interrogator instead
of a waitress, the way she was able to get a woman to spill
her guts.
Miss Mabel's scarlet lips turned down in a disapproving
frown. "I thought I'd quit hearing talk like that when I
retired from teaching high school."
"Sorry, Miss Mabel," said Lexi, patting the older woman's
hand. "Pie's on me tonight as payment for my potty mouth."
"Forget the pie, tell me about the man." Miss Mabel
twisted her bent body around in her seat so she could see
where Lexi had been looking. Not that the men were hard to
spot, seeing as how they were the only other customers in
the diner tonight at nearly nine-well after the dinner rush.
Helen felt a frantic bubble of fear rise up inside her.
"Don't look!"
"You never told me you had a boyfriend," said Miss Mabel
as if it was the crime of the century-a huge betrayal of
their friendship that she'd kept a secret.
"He's not my boyfriend. Stop looking!" She was begging,
on the verge of panic. What if he noticed them looking?
What if he walked over here right now and looked at her with
that half smile on his face-the one he wore when he watched
her die? This could be her last few minutes on earth and
the only solace she could find was that her will was updated
and all the money she'd inherited from her mother would go
to help pediatric burn victims.
Lexi-bless her-shifted her slim hips so that they were
between the men and Miss Mabel's wide, obvious gaze. Helen
knew that if the men did bother to look over here, one
glance at Lexi's ass would be enough distraction for any
red-blooded man to forget what he'd just been thinking.
Miss Mabel struggled to get her frail spine to cooperate,
but couldn't manage to out-maneuver Lexi-not with her
waitress reflexes. The old woman gave a frustrated sigh.
"You either tell me what's going on or I get my walker and
go over there and find out for myself."
Lexi gave Helen an apologetic grimace. "I should have
kept my mouth shut. If you want, I'll kick them out."
"That wouldn't really help the whole
trying-not-to-get-noticed thing I'm working on here," said
Helen.
"Why don't you want those men to notice you? Are they
stalkers? Should I call the police?" asked Miss Mabel. "I
knew I should have bought one of those cell phones."
"No," said Helen, trying to think fast enough to outwit a
woman who had taught public school for thirty years. "He's
just a guy I have a crush on. I don't want him to know."
"Why not? You're a lovely girl and you should just go
right over there and ask him out. That is how it's done
these days, and if I'm not too old to know that, then
neither are you."
"I can't do that." Helen slid down deeper in the booth
seat and lifted the menu up to shield her face again.
"Well, then, I will. You need a man, Helen. I'm not
going to let you end up old and childless like me." And
with that declaration, Miss Mabel reached for her walker at
the end of the booth, positioning it so she could stand.
Helen had to get Miss Mabel to stop before Vision Man saw
her. Maybe if Helen got out of here unnoticed, there would
still be time before she died. Even if it was only a few
more days, or even hours, Helen wanted every one of them.
"You can't. He's married." The lie slipped out so
smoothly it surprised Helen. It was the first time in her
life she'd ever lied to a teacher, and already her stomach
was turning sour.
Miss Mabel's head whipped around faster than Helen would
have thought possible, considering her frail neck and the
weight of the giant bun she wore held up by a single yellow
number-two pencil. "You're lusting after a married man?"
She whispered it as if just saying the words was a sin.
"Oh, honey, don't you know that can only end badly?"
Thank you, God. Miss Mabel swallowed the lie. "I know,"
said Helen, hanging her head, still strategically placed
behind the menu. "That's why I'm staying away from him. I
can't help the way I feel about him, but I can keep my
distance."
"See that you do," said Miss Mabel, slipping into her
lecturing voice. "Maybe we should just go now and have
dinner elsewhere."
Hallelujah! "Good idea. We can go anywhere you like,"
Helen told Miss Mabel. They always went out to eat on
Tuesday night, and Helen couldn't stand to disappoint her,
not even if her world was spiraling toward its end. She'd
spent the past ten years trying to do something meaningful
with her life. She wasn't smart enough to find a cure for
cancer and she wasn't strong enough to join the military or
brave enough to join the police or firefighters, but she
made a difference to a few dozen shut-ins, bringing them
food and company or just getting them out of the house for a
few hours. It wasn't much to her, but it was to them. She
saw it in their eyes every time she showed up at their front
doors and every time she left. For some of those people,
she was all they had and that was enough for her. It had to be.
"I think it's too late to escape," said Lexi. "He's
looking this way."
Helen lowered the menu enough to peek over it and sure
enough, Lexi was right. Vision Man was looking right at her.
***
Drake saw the pretty young woman trying to hide from him.
Under normal circumstances, he wouldn't have looked twice
at a human-pretty or not-but something about her tugged at
his attention. Every time he looked at her, some of the
grinding pressure inside him eased. The fact that she was
trying not to get noticed only added to his curiosity.
"Have either of you ever seen the woman with the braids
before?" he asked his buddies, Thomas and Zach.
Thomas swiveled his head around, leaning so he could see
past Zach. He shrugged one massive shoulder. "Not that I
can remember."
"Sorry, man," said Zach, an appreciative grin on his dark
face.
"You're looking at the waitress," scolded Drake.
"Yes, I am."
Unapologetic as ever, Zach rubbed a hand over his jaw and
watched the waitress with the nametag that read LEXI wiggle
her behind.
Drake thought about calling Zach on how easily he was
distracted, but he knew it wouldn't do any good. Besides,
nothing important ever got by Zach. He could look at all
the women he wanted and if things went to hell, he'd still
have his sword in his hand faster than any of the three men
at the table. Which was good, considering their mission.
He, Zach, and Thomas were hot on the trail of the
Synestryn demons that had taken Kevin's sword after they'd
slaughtered him, and the last thing he needed right now was
a distraction. This suburban Kansas town was crawling with
demons. Literally. Or at least it would be once the sun set.
Drake checked his watch. Eight thirty-two. Nine minutes
to sunset. Then Logan would show up and they all could get
back to work. That left him eight minutes to figure out who
this woman was and why she was hiding from him.
Drake got up and went to do just that.
The waitress stepped in his path as if she could actually
stop him. How cute. He doubted there was whole five feet
of her unless he included those ridiculous blond spikes
sticking out from her head.
"Can I get you some more coffee?" she asked with a
cheerful, fake smile.
"No. My friends could use a refill, though." Zach had
been eyeing the waitress all night, and as far as Drake was
concerned, he could have her. She was just a little scrap
of a woman-too fragile for any of the really fun stuff.
The shy brunette on the other hand...she had potential.
He'd seen her come into the diner with the old lady, being
so careful to help her walk without damaging the older
woman's pride. She was all soft curves and glowing warmth.
Her light brown hair fell forward over her shoulders in
twin braids, drawing his eye right to her breasts. As if he
needed any help finding those. She filled out her tank top
and then some, which he dutifully noticed. She was a couple
of inches taller than average, and all that extra height was
in her legs-long, curvy, bare under the cuffs of her khaki
shorts. All of her was curvy and soft and feminine and
Drake hated that he'd noticed.
He had more important things to think about-like killing
off a slew of demons-and it was hard enough to keep his
focus on his work when the pain was getting worse every day.
He sure as hell didn't need some soft, curvy distraction.
The waitress hadn't taken the hint and she was still
barring his path. Not a good idea considering he never let
anything get in the way of something he wanted-certainly not
something that weighed about as much as a week's worth of
laundry.
"How 'bout some more pie?" she asked.
"No, thanks." He picked her up under her arms, like a
child, and set her aside.
"Hey!" he heard her sputter behind him, and almost
expected her to jump on his back.
"I got her," said Zach, his voice deep and satisfied with
the task of keeping Lexi at bay.
Drake glanced over his shoulder and saw the waitress
staring at Zach as if he were about to eat her whole. Maybe
he was. Zach was into human women. As often as possible.
Drake felt a half smile tug at his mouth. "I just bet
you do."
The brunette had given up hiding behind the menu and had
started to gather her purse and sunglasses to leave. Not
bloody likely. At least not until he was ready to let her
leave.
Drake covered the distance between them and placed one
hand on the back of the booth and the other on the table,
caging her in. She'd scooted to the edge of the seat, but
with Drake standing in her path, she had nowhere to go. He
leaned down, letting her know with his body language that
she was trapped.
He liked her face, the smooth curve of her cheek, the
fullness of her mouth. She'd stayed out in the sun too long
today and her nose and the top of her cheeks were pink. She
wasn't drop-dead gorgeous, but she was lovely. From here,
it was easy to see fear brighten her hazel eyes, bringing
out chips of gold and green.
She was afraid of him. He had no idea why, and he sure
as hell didn't like it.
"Please let me go," she said. Her voice was quiet.
Soft, like the rest of her, and it stroked over his senses
like a caress.
A weightless warmth shimmered through him, washing away
decades of tension and torment. For the first time in more
than a century, Drake was no longer in agonizing pain. He
let out a slow breath of relief. The ever-expanding
pressure of the power he housed no longer beat at his
insides, seeking an exit, trying to pound its way through
flesh and bone. Every rioting bit of energy inside him
quieted at the sound of her voice as if listening.
Without the pain that had been his constant companion for
more years than most people lived, a wave of dizzying relief
threatened to buckle his knees. He gripped the seat and
table to keep himself upright, but he couldn't keep his eyes
from closing, just for a moment. The joy of simply not
hurting was so intense it was nearly its own kind of pain.
He wasn't sure how long it took him to regain his senses,
but when he did, she was staring at him, wide eyed and
trembling.
"Who are you?" he demanded.
She blinked twice as if shocked by the question.
"Please. Just let me go. I don't want to die."
Die? What the hell? "I'm not going to hurt you," he
told her, his tone a little more gruff than he'd intended.
He'd spent his too-long life defending humans from the
Synestryn at great personal cost. There was no way she
could have known that, but it still pissed him off that she
would jump to the conclusion that he was here to hurt her.
What he really wanted was to touch her and see if she
felt as soft as she looked. All those smooth, womanly
curves were driving him a little crazy. And crazy was the
only explanation for what he was feeling-this uncontrollable
need to touch a woman he didn't even know. A human woman.
Maybe she was blooded-a descendant of the Solarc-and that's
why his reaction to her was so strong. He'd never
experienced anything like it before even with a blooded
human, and he wasn't entirely sure he liked it. The
pain-free part was nice, really nice, but nothing that good
came without a price.
"I need to get Miss Mabel home. It's getting late." Her
mouth quivered a bit and damn if he didn't want to bend down
and kiss her to make it stop.
This was insane. Drake pulled in a deep, steadying
breath, but only managed to fill his lungs with her scent.
Lilacs. She smelled like lilacs.
Drake didn't have a freaking chance of resisting her. He
was a goner, completely over-the-edge insane. He leaned
down until his nose was tucked into the curve of her neck,
and breathed her in. There was nothing he could have done
to stop himself, and the fact that she didn't flinch away
only made him that much crazier.
The silky strands of her braid teased his nose and the
supple band of the luceria around his neck hummed happily,
sending a shiver shooting down his back. He felt something
shift inside him. Deep and hard, almost painful. This
woman had changed him somehow, with her mere presence, and
he would never be the same again.
Whoever she was, he was keeping her.
***
Helen didn't dare move. Not with Vision Man standing so
close, nearly touching her. She felt his warm breath spread
out over her neck, swirl up around her ear.
He was purring-a low, deep sound of satisfaction-and that
purr resonated inside her.
All she could see was the side of his thick neck where it
joined his shoulder, the curl of his dark hair, and a
section of the necklace he wore-some sort of iridescent
choker about a quarter inch wide. Every color imaginable
swirled inside the supple band as the lights of the diner
played off its surface. She felt the urge to touch it to
see if it was as slippery as it looked, if it was warm from
his skin.
Instead, she hugged her purse more tightly against her
chest, holding still, praying he'd move away from her before
she lost her head and stroked her finger over the band.
She was breathing too fast, making herself dizzy. She
closed her eyes to block out the sight of him so she could
calm herself, but instead the vision flashed in her head,
driving everything else away.
He was standing a few feet away. It was dark all around
them and the only reason she could even see his face was
that the fire that consumed her body reflected off the sharp
angles of his cheeks, the shadowed ledge of his jaw, the
strong tendons in his neck, the wide span of his shoulders.
Mirrored flames danced in his golden brown eyes and a proud
half smile tilted his mouth. She could smell her flesh
burning, could feel the heat consume her. The pain of her
blistered skin as it blackened was too much to bear. She
screamed, begging death to come claim her.
Reality snapped back into place, washing the vision away.
Helen sucked in a desperate breath. She wasn't dead. At
least not yet. The bright lights of the diner seared her
retinas, and the smell of burning flesh was replaced by that
of onions and french fries. A draft from the air vent
overhead cooled her skin, making her shiver.
She forced her body to relax, to remember where she was.
Just breathe.
Her lungs expanded, pulling in the scent of the man who
had her trapped. Soap. Coffee. Clean male skin. He
smelled nice. Safe. And if that wasn't the most ridiculous
thing she'd ever thought, then she didn't know what was. If
there was one person on the planet who wasn't safe for her
to be near, it was him, no matter how he smelled.
He was still only a scant inch away, giving off that low
purr that resonated in her chest. Helen wasn't sure if she
wanted to push him away or stroke her finger over the
intriguing curve of that choker he wore. Something about it
tugged at her memories, though she was sure she'd never seen
anything like it before.
He hadn't been wearing it in her vision. The realization
dawned on her. His throat had been bare. His shirt had
been different-not the black cotton he wore now, but
lighter. Tan. With some kind of tree printed on it.
The details of her vision didn't match what was happening
right now, which meant she was safe, at least for the moment.
Some of the panic drained out of her, making her feel
weak, boneless. She knew she should push him away or scream
or do something. Even if he wasn't here to watch her die
tonight, he was still too damn close.
He leaned a fraction of an inch closer and wrapped his
long fingers around one of her braids. On his finger he
wore a ring that matched his necklace and it flashed in an
intriguing pattern of swirling colors that made her want to
stare. An insistent tug on her braid tipped her head back
and she was sure she'd felt his lips brush along her neck,
her cheek.
Helen shivered and heard a small moan lift from her
mouth. Every cell in her body stood at attention from that
one little touch. Her skin grew warm and her abdomen
tightened against a jolt of heat. She wanted something she
couldn't name. Needed it. It wasn't just desire. It went
deeper than that. Bone deep. Soul deep. He had something
that belonged to her and she wanted it. Even if it killed her.
His lips slid over her cheek, barely touching. Maybe not
even touching, just stirring the fine hairs along her skin.
Whatever he was doing, it was wonderful, fear or not. She
felt as if she was being filled up with energy. She felt
more alive than she ever had before. All from a barely
there touch from the man who would watch her die.
Freaking irony.
***
From somewhere far off, Drake heard the old woman gasp in
shock and he struggled to pull himself back to reality. By
the time he'd made the long, long journey to the
here-and-now, his fingers had wrapped themselves around one
of the brunette's braids so that her head was tilted back to
the optimum angle for a slow, deep kiss. Perfect.
He would have done just that if it hadn't been for the
way she was clutching her purse against her chest like a
shield. She was still afraid of him. Shit.
"Give me your name," he ordered her, not caring how rough
his voice sounded. He needed her name. Hell, he needed a
lot more of her than just that, but with the audience they
had, he was going to have to settle for that small piece.
"Helen Day."
God, he loved the sound of her voice, so soft and sweet.
He closed his eyes again, letting the sound of her, the
smell of her, sink into him. He could spend half a year
just listening to her talk, letting the gentle sweep of her
voice soothe him.
He was way too wrapped up in how he could make the small
space between them even smaller when he heard a warning
shout from Thomas half a second too late. Miss Mabel's
walker slammed down over his head, sending pain screaming
over his skull.
"Go back to your wife, you...you man-whore!" shouted the
old woman, raising her walker for another strike.
Whore? Wife? Drake had no idea what she was talking
about, but he didn't stand there long enough to ask. He
could already feel a lump swelling up on the back of his
skull. The old woman might look frail, but she packed one
heck of a wallop.
Drake reached for Miss Mabel intending to carefully take
the aluminum weapon from her hands before she hurt herself.
Or him.
He was too late. Thomas was already on the case and had
taken the old lady into his burly arms, holding her
carefully despite her struggles.
Helen stood up, pushing her way around Drake to get to
the old lady. "Let her go!"
Thomas ignored her, still holding on to the old woman,
trying to calm her down with soothing words. "I'm not going
to hurt you, ma'am. None of us are going to hurt any of
you. Isn't that right, Zach?"
Five feet away, Zach had Lexi pinned against the
countertop by the cash register, nearly bent over backward.
She was fighting him, pounding and clawing at him, but Zach
accepted her blows, grinning like they tickled.
"Hey, she's the one trying to hurt me. I just want to
talk." Zach's voice dipped lower and his grin widened.
"But I'm willing to play if you want, honey. I don't mind
if you like it rough."
Lexi growled and lashed out at Zach with her fists.
From the corner of his eye, Drake saw Helen start to make
a dash toward Thomas and the old woman, but Drake was
faster. He snagged her by looping an arm around her waist
and pulling her up against his chest. It was a mistake. As
soon as he had her soft, curvy body against his, his brain
started to shut down. From a vague, fuzzy distance, he
could feel her fighting to free herself, pushing and pulling
at his arm. He could hear her frightened voice calling her
friends' names. He could sense the panic inside her, the
frantic strength that increased with every swift beat of her
heart. He just couldn't seem to figure out what it all
meant or what he should do. All he knew was he couldn't let
her go. He needed her.
This whole situation had gone completely out of control,
but he just didn't care. He had Helen in his arms,
reluctant as she was, and he didn't hurt anymore. For the
first time in decades, he felt good. It was such a shock
that it left him reeling, staring stupidly at the part
between her silky, dark braids. He wanted to bend down and
kiss the smooth skin at the nape of her neck so bad it made
him shake.
Drake had bent to do just that when his grip failed and
Helen slipped out of his grasp.
Pain slammed into him with a tangible force that drove
him to his knees right there on the chipped tile floor.
Power flooded him and ripped through his veins, hammering
his bones with pounding agony. He was sure every one of
them had been broken, that his organs had been pulverized.
Nothing else could explain so much pain. He couldn't stand.
Couldn't see. Couldn't breathe.
The power he housed inside his body had grown slowly,
steadily, over the course of years. The pressure had
increased over decades, giving him a chance to get used to
the pain it caused. But now it all came flooding back
inside him in the space of an instant and his brain couldn't
adjust. His body couldn't function. At the gray edges of
his mind, he heard himself scream, a terrible, high-pitched
noise. He knew he was dying, but right now that was a good
thing. It would all be over soon, but it couldn't be soon
enough.
***
Helen wasn't sure what she'd done to Vision Man to send
him to his knees, but she didn't stop to worry about it.
Miss Mabel was still trying to get away from the big bruiser
who held her and it looked as though she was running out of
steam.
Lexi, on the other hand, was holding her own against the
third man. He'd pushed her down so that she was almost
lying on the counter near the cash registers. "Stop
fighting me before you hurt yourself," he told her.
Lexi knocked the toothpick dispenser to the floor, making
it spew toothpicks everywhere. She got one knee between
them and pushed, but it didn't work.
The man simply pressed his body down harder onto hers
until she had no room to maneuver. "Are you done yet?"
Her hand fumbled over the counter until she found the
metal stand used to collect order tickets and jammed the
sharp spike into her captor's arm.
He looked down at the metal sticking out of his skin and
smiled. Actually smiled. "Good shot, woman." He sounded
as if he was proud of Lexi, which was completely insane, but
at least Lexi was still able to fight.
Miss Mabel wasn't, and Helen wasn't sure how she was
going to get her free. The man who held her was huge.
Tall, wide, muscular. He probably outweighed her and Miss
Mabel put together.
"Let her go," demanded Helen, racking her brain for what
to do now. Pick up a chair and hit him? No, she might hit
Miss Mabel. Throw a sugar shaker at his head? She might be
able to hit him without hitting her friend.
Helen was out of ideas, so she went with the best one she
had. She grabbed for the closest sugar shaker, but before
she could throw it, the giant stepped forward and simply
handed Miss Mabel to Helen. She wasn't sure what had
changed his mind, but she didn't question her good fortune.
She gladly took over the job of supporting Miss Mabel. He
was careful with her frail body, gentle. He took his time
making the transfer and then when she was clear, he shot to
the floor where Vision Man was writhing.
"Zach!" he shouted. "Need a little help here with Drake
when you're done playing with the girl."
The man who had pinned Lexi-Zach-let her go, ripped the
spike out of his arm, and set it back on the counter, bloody
tickets still in place. Lexi had barely regained her feet
before he was also at Vision Man's side. Zach turned to
Helen, glaring at her. His pale green eyes stood out in
stark contrast against his brown skin, almost looking as if
they were lit from within. "What did you do to Drake?"
Helen held Miss Mabel a little tighter, turning her
toward the exit. They were getting out of here as fast as
possible. "Nothing. He was the one attacking me."
"He didn't do anything more than try to talk to you. You
were the one who freaked out. What did you do to him?" he
demanded.
Vision Man-Drake, they'd called him-was still convulsing
on the floor, his body bowing in a powerful arc. He'd been
screaming a moment ago, but now he made these horrible
choking sounds, as though he couldn't breathe. The veins in
his neck and temples stood out and something odd was
happening to the shimmery choker he wore. The colors in it
were seething, swirling in a mix of reds, oranges, and
yellows. Thin tendrils of smoke drifted up from the
necklace and a matching ring on his left hand. Helen could
smell the scent of burning flesh-just like in her vision.
The man who had held Miss Mabel checked his watch, his
expression grim. "Three minutes until sunset. Logan isn't
going to make it in time to save him."
Zach stood up and took a step toward Helen. Lexi had
recovered her mobility and found a giant knife somewhere
behind the counter. And she held it like she knew what she
was doing.
Could this night get any weirder?
Zach must have seen Lexi moving toward him, because he
turned and pointed a thick finger in her direction. "Stay
out of this. It doesn't concern you."
"The hell it doesn't. They're my friends."
"And Drake is mine." Zach turned to Helen. "Let the old
woman go and come here." It wasn't a request and Helen was
certain that if she didn't do as he said, someone was going
to get hurt when he made her do it, probably Miss Mabel.
This was it. Helen was fairly certain that she'd reached
the end of the line. She wasn't about to take Miss Mabel
with her, so she settled the frail woman down on a seat and
gave her what she hoped was a brave smile.
Miss Mabel clutched Helen's arm with weak, gnarled
fingers. "Don't go, honey."
"I'll be fine," she lied. Helen turned back toward Zach
and took a step forward.
The big guy was holding Drake down so he didn't hurt
himself thrashing around, but it didn't look like an easy
job. Drake was strong-his arms and legs thick with muscle.
She could see all that strength tighten his body against
the convulsions. The big guy took an elbow in the stomach
for his effort, letting out a pained grunt. Zach had a hold
on Drake's legs, but he didn't take his eyes off Helen. She
was sure that if she didn't keep moving toward him he'd come
for her.
Man, she didn't want to be here right now. She didn't
want to be in the middle of this mess, completely confused
as to what was happening and totally freaked out to be
getting closer to a man who made her feel better with an
almost touch than all the real touches from all the other
men in her life put together.
"He's going to be fine," she told them, taking another
half step forward.
"How do you know?" asked Zach.
Great. Now she'd gone and backed herself in a corner.
She couldn't exactly tell them that she knew he'd be fine
because he had to live long enough to watch her die. "I
just do."
Another half step and she was close enough that Zach
reached out his long arm and grabbed her by the wrist.
"Whatever you did, undo it."
"I didn't do anything! I swear. All I did was push his
arm away and he fell over."
Zach's heavy brow wrinkled for a second, then those pale
green eyes of his went wide as if he'd just figured out what
had gone wrong. "Come here," he demanded, tugging her down
to the floor until her hand was pressed flat against Drake's
stomach-his bare, hard, warm stomach that should have been
completely covered by his T-shirt, but wasn't. All that
writhing had worked it up over his ribs and she could see
half of a large tattoo running up over his left side. It
was a tree, inked in lifelike colors and perfect detail.
Every swirled knothole, every twist of the tree's roots was
so realistic she was sure she could almost feel the rough
texture of the bark beneath her fingertips. Fine tendrils
of roots spread down over his stomach and disappeared
beneath the belt on his jeans. She refused to think about
where they led.
Her fingers touched his skin, and it didn't take two full
seconds for Drake to relax. Both men looked at her in
shock, then looked at each other, sharing some secret
guy-speak. She had no clue what was going on, and at this
point she wasn't sure she wanted to know. All she wanted
was to take Miss Mabel back home and crawl into a deep, hot
bath for about a week. She was fairly certain she couldn't
burn alive in a bathtub and it was the only time she ever
truly relaxed.
"You're coming with us," said the big guy. His bright
blue eyes scanned Drake's body, concern pulling at his brows.
"No, I'm not," said Helen.
Zach let go of Helen's wrist and stood up. She should
have pulled away and headed for the door, but something
stopped her. Something was happening beneath her hand.
Drake's skin heated and she was flooded with that odd rush
of energy she'd felt before. It filled her up inside, like
a warm light, finding all the cold, dark little cracks and
holes inside her. There was a faint buzzing sensation and
the taste of honey in her mouth, the smell of rain in her
nose. She felt light. Buoyant.
This wasn't right. It felt incredibly good, but it
wasn't right. This wasn't supposed to happen. Couldn't be
real.
She started to pull her fingers away, but Drake's hand
caught hers before she finished lifting them from his skin.
His fingers wrapped around her wrist and she could feel
that disturbing hum of energy sinking into her where each of
his lean fingers met her skin.
He sat up, looking alert and coherent, and she felt the
soft knit of his shirt pool against her wrist. He held her
hand in place and leaned forward until there was barely two
inches between them. "I'm not letting you get away again.
Not until we figure out what this thing between us is."
It was a vow. She could feel the power of it settle
around the two of them, shutting out the rest of the world.
This wasn't real. This wasn't happening. A lot of
strange things had happened to her throughout her life, but
this was way off the weird chart. "There is no thing
between us."
He gave her that half smile from her vision. "There is now."
Behind him, just inside the window that led to the
diner's kitchen, orange flames erupted, spewing up like a
geyser.
Fire. The smell of burning skin.
Helen's world collapsed down to a pinpoint of panic she
couldn't escape. It sucked her in and robbed her of oxygen.
She couldn't even remember how to breathe.
Start Reading BURNING ALIVE Now
 Sentinel Wars
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