NO SPILLED GUTS,
NO GLORY
What the heck was going on?
Gasping, I dropped to my knees. “Cole?” I whispered, frantically crawling toward him. The pistol clinked against the floorboards, reminding me of a ticking clock.
I hated ticking clocks. An entire life could be altered in a single second.
I released the weapon and pressed two fingers into his neck, feeling for a pulse. Don’t be dead, don’t be dead, please, please, don’t be dead. And yeah, okay, I knew death wasn’t the end for us. Look at my sister. But I wasn’t ready to lose any part of Cole.
Thump...thump. Thump...
Thank God! Slow, but strong. He was alive.
His eyes fluttered open. “Ali?”
“It’s okay,” I said. “You’re okay. You’re going to be okay.”
“What happened?”
I surveyed the damage. There was a hole in the shoulder. Blood soaked him.
“Someone just shot you, I think. Right in front of me. That someone could still be out there. We could still be targets.” The two halves of my brain were at war—hope versus dread—screwing with my focus. “What should I do?”
“Bind.” He spoke softly, the word little more than air. “Shoulder.”
Of course. Yes. I knew that. But...binding his shoulder wouldn’t do much good. Blood was gushing out of him. He needed fire; it would cauterize.
Slayers could produce fire; it was necessary to kill zombies. I could produce fire. When summoned, the flames crackled at the ends of our fingers. We pressed them into zombies, and the heat spread, purified, burning away evil and darkness. Eventually, zombies exploded. For some reason, I could flame from head to toe and only a moment of contact was needed to end a zombie.
When used on humans, the fire healed...sometimes. Sometimes it caused final death, just like with zombies.
It had healed me, and it would heal Cole. We were both slayers, and that was the key distinguishing factor between healing and exploding.
Right?
I had to try. He wouldn’t make it otherwise. He was hemorrhaging strength, his head lolling to the side. His lips were starting to turn blue, his skin chalk-white.
Frantic, I closed my eyes. Humans were made of three parts. The spirit, the source of life, was bound to the soul, which consisted of the mind, will and emotions. Both were housed inside the body, the outer shell. With a deep breath in...out...I forced my spirit and body to separate; it was like removing a hand from a glove. Because zombies were spirits, they could only fight other spirits. I’d learned to divide like this at a moment’s notice.
Cold air enveloped me. Without the insulation of skin and muscle, my spirit felt the temperature drop what seemed like a thousand degrees.
“What are...you doing?” As a slayer, Cole could see into the spirit realm. Could see me.
Couldn’t pause to explain. When it came to stuff like this, I was so new I had trouble multitasking.
Light, I thought, and the ends of my fingers heated. I peeked...flames crackled all the way to my wrist. Good, good. I reached inside Cole’s shoulder.
His breath hitched. That was it, his only reaction. Even still, I knew his pain was off the charts. Been here, done this. He’d basically just received third-degree burns on his soul. But he hadn’t turned to ash, so I would consider this a win.
I dismissed the flames and returned my spirit to its proper place with a simple touch, then studied Cole. His color was back to normal. That quickly. I grabbed the shirt he’d discarded and wrapped the material around the still-bleeding, but now-charring wound.
What next? I didn’t know if there were bad guys with guns trained on the open window that was allowing flurries to bluster inside the room. I didn’t know how many bad guys were in the house, shooting at Mr. Holland—or if Mr. Holland was still alive.
My insides twisted into a maze of painful knots.
No matter what, we couldn’t—wouldn’t—leave without him.
“Can you walk?” I asked.
Cole’s jaw clenched with determination. “I don’t...care if I...can. I will.”
Despite the pauses in his speech, his timbre was stronger. Not just because of the emergency cauterization, I was sure, but because his bones were reinforced with iron-hard resolve, and his muscles pumped full of courage.
“I’ll find your dad and meet you—”
“No.” His tone was inflexible, meant to stop any argument. “We stay together.”
“Time is of the essence.”
“Don’t care. My dad. My decision.”
Very well. “We need more weapons.” I crawled to the gun he’d dropped and slid it to him. Then I continued on to the nightstand and claimed the minicrossbow he had stashed there.
Cole struggled to his knees. “I’ll go through...door first. You stay...on my heels. Got it?” He yanked a backpack from his closet, grimaced.
No, I didn’t get it, and I wouldn’t do as he’d demanded. The strong led the weak, not the other way around.
“I’ll go first.”