Chapter 24

The eight navy SEALs were all trained professionals, ready to demonstrate their skills. In military fatigues, black vest, compact submachine gun in his hands, Sam looked lethal. Kelly now saw another side of him, the quiet professional who got the job done.

“What’s the plan, Shay?”

Though he was the lead officer, Dakota deferred to Sam. They were a team.

“Wait inside and get the drop on them from in here. On my word.”

With smooth efficiency, the men set out on their assignments, moving the vehicles to conceal them, arming with extra clips. Kelly’s throat tightened as J.T. and Dallas lifted Colton’s body with extreme care and placed him in the back room.

They were much less careful with the other body.

Then, as the SEALs went into the farmhouse to wait, Kelly looked at Sam.

“I’m not leaving. I’m here with you, all the way.”

Tension turned his jaw to granite. “Wait inside, Kel. I’m not risking your life. You’re the one they want dead.”

She reached up and kissed his cheek. “I love you,” she whispered. “I don’t care if your team knows, or if anyone else knows. You stay alive for me, Sam Shaymore.”

Leaving him standing alone on the porch, like a brave sentinel, Kelly went inside into a corner bedroom facing the porch and cracked the window so she could hear.

Time crawled to a stop. Kelly shifted restlessly but heard nothing from the other SEALs. They were so quiet. Patient.

Finally a car pulled into the driveway. Senator Robert Rogers got out and saw Sam on the porch in full battle gear.

“I see you’re dressed to kill Arcanes.”

“Not Arcanes. You, you son of a bitch, are under arrest.”

Rogers laughed. “And exactly who are you arresting? Me or...”

The handsome features blurred, shifted, changed.

“Or my wife.”

In an elegant black suit and black heels, Moira Rogers faced Sam. “Excuse the boring dress. I’m in mourning for my husband.”

Sam’s stony expression never changed. “Who are you? Are you the real Moira Rogers, or did you kill her, as well?”

“There’s only one of me. I’m an original. Poor Robert, he didn’t stand a chance. I killed him the day before you and your men rescued Billy from the island. And then I assumed his powers and took his place.”

“Then who took yours?”

Moira’s smile was sly. “A Phantom friend imitated me. He made an excellent duplicate and did not mind playing the role of a woman. He respected women, unlike Robert. My husband was a vain man. He never believed a woman could hold power. Not like your commanding officer, a true gentleman. So courageous. I knew he’d bring a tidy profit.”

Moira laughed. “One does need financing to start a war. I couldn’t risk withdrawing that much cash.”

“You sold Curt to those...things?”

“Centurion demons will pay for the right victim. They needed a courageous man for their wolf bitch to torture. They gave me one million for his delivery. All it took was a lure of children in trouble and Curtis came running.”

“The Elemental children we rescued were never endangered, were they? It was all a ruse to cast suspicion on Arcanes and trap Curt.” Sam narrowed his eyes. “And you’re the one who sent the email to Sight Finders, to stir up fear about a genocide.”

“There is a genocide planned, only of Arcanes, not Elementals. I prefer to call it an extermination of cockroaches.”

“Then why did you try to drown me in Honduras?”

“Because of who you are, Samuel Shaymore.” Moira flicked a hand. “I needed you dead, and if I could use you as a sacrifice, all the better. But it was more important to eliminate you any way possible. If you died, Allen would resign. His sole motivation is protecting you from trouble. There’d be gridlock on the council, because those old windbags would take forever to replace him. Chaos. No authority to stop me from whispering how Arcanes should be destroyed.”

“So you kidnapped your own son to get the ball rolling.”

“Billy isn’t my son! He’s the bastard of Robert’s kept Arcane whore, his secretary, Catherine. Robert wanted an heir. I couldn’t have children, so we adopted Billy and Robert pretended he was mine. All these years, humiliating me. After everything I’ve done, raising his bastard as my own child, helping Robert navigate the political waters in Washington, Robert started getting soft on the Arcane problem. He said he loved her and wanted a divorce.”

Jealousy had tipped Moira over the edge. Kelly stared outside at the woman, seeing a mirror image.

Kelly was an Arcane resenting privileged Elementals.

Moira was a privileged Elemental resenting Arcanes.

The senator’s wife allowed insecurity about the younger, prettier Catherine to overshadow everything. Moira’s power, wealth and status meant nothing. Hatred had blinded her to the tremendous good fortune of simply being born into status.

Oh, gods, it can’t be too late for me. Sam, I promise you if we get out of this, I’ll let you go. I love you, and I want you to be happy, be it with an Arcane, an Elemental, it doesn’t matter.

“But you can’t complete the transformation to a Dark Lord. I saw the spell book. You didn’t have the children or the Mage for the sacrifice.” Sam spoke in a calm voice but gave hand signals to his teammates to start moving in.

Kelly saw a shadow slip outside.

Moira laughed, the sound like fingernails against a mirror. “My transformation is complete.”

He scoffed. “Elemental Mages can’t be Dark Lords. We don’t carry the sickness within us. It was written in the ancient book of spells for Arcanes.”

“You misread the book. It’s a book for Mages, not exclusive to Arcanes. The council decided long ago the book was too dangerous and had copies destroyed. But the Arcanes had hidden a copy in a small village in Honduras, right beneath Elemental noses. I gathered together a few Arcanes imprisoned for sedition, paid them well and promised power if they joined me and led me to the book of dark spells. And then I killed them. All the while I had my real supporters, Phantom Elementals who feel as I do and would do anything to exterminate the Arcane species. One pretended to be your commanding officer. And the others lowered themselves to pretend to be the hated Arcanes in order to carry out my plans and fool the council into thinking there was an Arcane threat to kill all Elementals.”

Her voice dropped to a thin whisper. “The ancient texts called for the blood of a courageous Mage. Gender isn’t exclusive. So I killed the bitch. And Catherine had plenty of Arcane nieces and nephews to complete the sacrifice. She proved her courage when she tried to stop my Elemental Phantom supporters from killing them. It was almost too easy, pretending to be Robert and luring the children into attending a party for Catherine.”

Horror pulsed through Kelly.

“There are good and honorable Elementals who will stop you and force others to listen to reason,” Sam said quietly, his gaze never leaving the woman.

“But they cannot. Far more powerful is an Elemental who chooses the path of darkness.”

The woman’s features began to change, darkening, her mouth turning into a red, wet slash. Beginning the transformation into a Dark Lord.

* * *

Standing on the porch, confronting the power-crazed woman, Shay saw the last piece of the mosaic fall into place.

He’d had a hard time killing the Mage in Honduras where they’d been ambushed because the bastard was a shape-shifting Phantom Elemental with powers equal to Shay’s. Only these Elementals had unleashed spells from the forbidden book of spells and learned to call the darkness, trebling their powers.

Two clicks on his radio. Everyone was in place.

He readied his weapon as the woman shimmered, a sinister black glow pulsing off her body like a dark force field. She was no longer anything remotely human, her eyes yellowed and bulging, a skeleton stretched over flesh, the Death Mask now visible even to Shay.

Talons emerged from her fingertips,

“Now,” Shay yelled, aiming his assault rifle.

Bursting out of their cover, the SEALs opened fire. Moira flung streaks of black energy at the rounds, turning the bullets into dust.

“Juice it up,” he yelled to the others, the code they used to resort to their powers.

Tossing aside his weapon, Shay began flinging energy bolts in a steady stream. But Moira opened her arms wide and the white light shriveled, turning into darkness as it made contact with her skin. She was absorbing his powers, siphoning them like a vacuum.

Now he understood with terrible clarity why his people were terrified of Dark Lords. They didn’t fear the darkness inside Arcanes, but the darkness inside themselves turning them into a creature that could not be destroyed.

Enraged, he lifted his hands to the sky, calling forth the elements. Dark thunderheads swirled above. Shay culled down the lightning.

He flung a bolt directly at Moira, who staggered backward.

Sully teleported across the grounds and tackled her. There was a sickening crack as Moira’s body dropped like a flour sack.

“Target down,” Sully said into his mic.

But even as he spoke, Moira stood, her neck at an impossible angle. She straightened her head, turned and hit Sully with a power burst, sending him flying backward into a tree. His teammate’s skull hit hard, and Sully dropped down, unconscious.

Darkness gathered in the air, a foulness that made it difficult to breathe.

“Fall back, everyone but Shay,” Dakota yelled into the radio. “Shay, everything you’ve got at her!”

Shay pulled every ounce of power from the thunderclouds, feeling the sizzle and crack of electricity invade his body. He forced the power to his hands and directed light streams into the Dark Lord. Blood streamed from Moira’s lips.

Screaming, she flung currents of dark magick, but her aim was erratic. One hit the house and shattered a wall. Another exploded a maple tree. Powerless to move under the constant barrage of white light, the Dark Lord kept firing her powers outward.

Shay kept up the constant pounding of his powers into the woman, feeding his magick. He felt his energy drain. He couldn’t keep it up.

They would all die here. As Moira staggered backward, temporarily incapacitated, he retreated to cover inside, trying to regroup his powers.

Kelly ran to his side. “You need me, Sam. You need us.”

He wanted to shout at her to get back, but the answer to the Dark Lord’s destruction came in a clear flash of memory.

Teamwork. She held up his pendant. “Merge your powers with mine through the triskele. Alone, we’re strong enough, but together...”

“We’re practically invincible,” he finished.

Like the SEALs, working as one unit. He and Kelly were their own unique team. They could fight this. Sam laced his fingers between hers and squeezed.

“You with me on this, Denning?”

She smiled. “All the way, Shaymore.”

Still, they needed more. They needed...everyone.

“Jammer, J.T., Dakota, Dallas, Renegade,” he shouted into his mic. “Use your powers and let’s destroy this bitch for good!”

They rushed outside. Jammer directed water from a nearby cistern, sending it spiraling at Moira’s mouth with the power of a fire hose. As she fought this new threat, J.T. used his telekinesis to hurl nearby rocks the size of bowling balls at her head. Stunned, Shay watched the Dark Lord’s skull collapse and then regenerate.

“More,” he yelled. “Keep it coming!”

The dark streams of magick were weaker now. J.T. sent a boulder the size of a Ford pickup truck into Moira. She collapsed but then rolled the boulder off her torso. The three Draicon wolves shifted and rushed the Dark Lord, snarling and tearing into her. A vicious black liquid oozed from several jagged wounds. Shay looked at Kelly.

“Let’s fry her.”

In unison, they fired a bolt of white energy, searing the screaming Dark Lord. She began to morph into a shapeless mass. And then Moira flung out one last stream of dark power. The energy sailed into Kelly’s chest, searing her flesh, sending her screaming backward.

Shay kept firing, knowing Kelly needed him but also knowing he must finish this. Then the Dark Lord finally burst apart, black blood splattering the nearby trees.

Only her head remained intact, white bone against black dusty ground.

Shay ran to Kelly. She lay gasping for breath. Her rib cage rose and fell too rapidly.

She was dying.

Over by the tree, Renegade administered to the injured Sully, helping him to his feet. The big SEAL rubbed his head as if he had a helluva headache.

Dakota propped up Kelly’s feet to keep the blood flow to her head.

Shay ripped apart Kelly’s shirt and stared at the blood pumping out of the chest wound. Using her shirt, he tried to stanch the flow.

“What’s her blood type?” Dallas asked, kneeling beside Kelly. Dallas was the team’s medical corpsman. He fished a packet out of his vest and ripped it open.

“O positive.” He stared helplessly at Kelly. “I know, because I took her to the hospital years ago when she got hurt.”

“Jammer, get your ass over here. I need a donor, now!”

He quickly swabbed Jammer’s arm and slid the needle into it. His teammate lay on the ground, his head turned toward Kelly. “Hey there, little Arcane. You start perking up now, hear?”

Blood flowed from Jammer into Kelly. But her face remained pale and still, her eyes closed. After a few minutes, Dallas pulled out the makeshift IV.

“No use draining him anymore,” he said quietly.

“I can take it,” Jammer protested. “Dallas, get that needle back in me.”

But Dallas shook his head, dark eyes filled with regret.

Hearing a screech of tires, Shay glanced up as Admiral Keegan Byrne, dressed in civilian attire, slid out of a black limo. Dark shades covering his eyes, Stephen, their vampire friend and military asset, assumed the classic military position by the car.

“Damn. It’s all over.” The admiral scowled at Stephen. “I told you to drive faster when we found Rogers had left D.C.”

Stephen gave a laconic shrug. “I warned you to let me stop at the drive-through for a quick snack. I can’t move fast when I’m low on reserves. That blonde looked quite delish.”

“Sir?” Dakota’s gulp was audible. “We, uh... How...”

For the first time, the Draicon werewolf was at a loss for words.

Byrne smiled. “You pigheaded adrenaline junkies didn’t think I expected you to obey an order to hide when this was going down, did you? Pity. I never took you for thumb-sucking sissies who quiver behind their momma’s skirts.”

The SEALs glanced at each other.

“Hooyah, sir, my momma wears leather pants,” Sully put in.

“Glad to know you’ve got our six, Admiral,” Dallas added. “But why the order?”

Byrne’s gaze hardened. “Mage against Mage, this damn business of Elemental and Arcane. Once we all were the same, working together. Like SEALs. When that dies, everything else is shot to hell. Might as well pack it in.”

“You tested us, to see if we’d forsake Shay to save our own careers,” Dakota realized.

“Worked, too. Unless you don’t give a damn and just wanted a joyride.”

“Not with Dakota driving, sir. He makes Stephen’s driving look like NASCAR,” Renegade put in.

The Admiral grinned and then sobered as he glanced down at Kelly. “One of our people,” he murmured, kneeling down and squeezing her hand. “How she’s holding up?”

Shay struggled to check his emotions. “She’s dying, sir.”

“You have to let her go, son.”

As Byrne reached for her neck, obviously to feel for a pulse, Shay snarled and cradled her tight against his chest.

“Don’t touch her.”

“Let her go, son,” Byrne said gently. “I know you care. I’d never try to presume I know what you’re going through. But if you love her, you have to release her spirit.”

Rage clawed to the surface. “No. I’m not letting it go, not letting her go, and if you think I’m going to step back and let this happen...”

He drew in a trembling breath. “Go to hell. I’m not leaving her. Not like last time. Maybe if I had stuck around long enough to listen to her, all this never would have happened.”

Maybe if he had, Kelly would be walking and talking and laughing, instead of lying so deadly still, her face pale gray, fighting for every exhale and inhale.

He stroked her damp hair. “Fight, sweetheart. Keep fighting. Don’t you dare give up. You have to keep going.”

The other SEALs shuffled around, looking stricken. Renegade dug a boot heel into the dirt. Shay leaned down, brushing away a damp tendril of hair from her ashen cheek. “Kelly Denning, listen to me. You sacrificed a personal life to save hundreds of Mage children. If you want to save more, you’re going to hold on and fight, because I won’t be accountable for what’ll happen to me.”

He leaned close, loaning her strength from his rage and his grief. “Fight, dammit. You’re not a quitter. You never give up, never surrender. So don’t give up now.”

Her breathing grew so shallow Shay could barely hear it. As he laid her back down, Shay felt the powerful vibrancy of her life fade. He glanced at Byrne, an ancient, powerful Mage, with secret depths of knowledge.

“Help me, but dammit, don’t tell me to let her die.”

Compassion flared in the admiral’s eyes. “She needs your strength, Shay. Your powers.”

Fear snaked through him. His powers? He’d been drained and depleted. How the hell could he give anything?

“I have nothing left. Both of us gave all to destroy the Dark Lord.”

An inscrutable look crossed the Mage’s face. “You have more than you know. Your magick, your essence as a Mage, may heal her. If you surrender all your powers to her through a White Light ritual, she’s got a fighting chance.”

Shay stared at Kelly. “Tell me what to do.”

If he drained his powers, he’d become as helpless as a human. Lose everything.

“Being a SEAL means everything to you, Shay.” Renegade looked stricken.

“Not everything.” He laid a hand on her pale forehead. Kelly had given him his life back. He’d been dead for years without her.

“Let’s do it,” he said roughly.

Byrne gave an approving nod. “Take the triskele and put it around your neck. Then place your hands on her temples and focus all your magick.”

It seemed to take too long, as blood oozed out of Kelly, her breathing growing more and more shallow. A faint white light glowed from the silver triskele.

Shay closed his eyes, listening to the words Byrne instructed him to use. He began the ancient chant, raising his face to the sun’s warm caress.

“Spirit of Air, transform me. Spirit of Fire, fill me with your energy. Spirit of Water, flow through me. Spirit of Earth, ground me with your knowledge. I call you forth to drain my essence of Mage. Pour your healing spirit into this woman I share my breath with, my body with, my life with. Take all from me, for I am yours and I willingly surrender myself so that she may live.”

Strength leeched from his limbs. Shay felt his heart slow, felt something reach inside him and yank. A great whoosh fled his body, a burst of golden air spiraling out of the triskele, spinning into the air and then slamming into Kelly’s body.

Exhausted, he sank back on his haunches. Pink returned to Kelly’s cheeks, flushing her body with a rosy glow.

Shay flexed his hands. Nothing. Not even a weak flicker. Then he saw that Kelly’s chest rose and fell with life. He pressed his cold lips against her warm mouth, feeling her breath escape. She turned her head, those wide blue eyes opening.

“Hey,” she said weakly.

Emotion clogged his throat. Too overcome to speak, he kissed her.

“Trying CPR again, Shaymore? Or just needing an excuse to kiss me?”

“I never need an excuse to kiss you,” he whispered.

Overwhelmed with gratitude, he sat back. As he struggled to his feet, his legs gave way. Shay collapsed. Hellfire, he was so weak. Deeply ashamed, he shook off Dakota’s offer of help.

Byrne watched him. “Is it worth it, son?”

Shay nodded roughly.

The admiral’s expression shifted. He laid a hand on Kelly’s forearm as she closed her eyes with a sigh. “Kiss her again.”

Shay stared. “Now?”

“Need a reason? You’re a Mage, like me.”

The old fox actually grinned. Something was fishy. But Shay bent down, touched his lips to Kelly’s...felt electricity stirring in the air...

POW!

Energy snapped, crackled and shot from Kelly into him. Hellfire, it felt like lightning zinging through his veins. Shay’s lips locked to Kelly’s as the energy flowed through them, in them, around them. Finally, the white light faded.

Dizziness overcame him as Shay sat back, guts on fire as if someone poured a fifth of good Kentucky bourbon down his throat.

“Easy son. Takes a minute,” the admiral told him.

Slowly, Kelly sat up, her hair standing comically on end. “What, ah, was that?”

“Standard bonding ritual. Sharing of powers. Shay gave you all his powers to heal, so I siphoned them back from you into him. You’re equal now. And if you don’t invite me to the wedding, I’ll be mighty pissed off. More than if you don’t name your firstborn son after me.”

They exchanged glances, color tinting Kelly’s healthy cheeks.

“Of course you do need a secondary channeling source, such as a pendant, or an old geezer Mage who’s been around longer than dirt.”

Byrne winked at the stunned SEALs. “Haven’t done that in years. Gives the ticker a good thrill, and other parts, too. Remind me to get a bottle of champagne for the wife tonight. Hell, it’s not even a Saturday.”

“Admiral,” Shay said, too choked with emotion to speak.

“You’re a good operator, Chief Petty Officer Shaymore. Too good to lose. I’m not giving up one of my SEALs just because a nasty-ass bitch went on a power trip. Your CO agrees. I promised I’d look after his team while he’s healing.”

“How is Curt?” Shay was almost afraid to ask.

The admiral sobered. “Physically, Dale’s progressing. But this scarred more than his body. SOB is too tough to admit it. I’m mandating two months of medical leave.”

He glanced at Dakota. “As his executive officer, you’re in charge, Lieutenant, until your CO returns to active duty. Or I can replace Dale, if all of you wish.”

A rousing chorus of “hell no” from Shay and his teammates. Byrne grinned.

“Thought so.”

Shay flexed his hand, feeling new strength and energy. Kelly laced her fingers through his. “This is the third time you gave my life back to me, Sam.”

“Guess that means I’m committed and I’d better marry you, like the old geezer says.”

Shay winked at the admiral as the other SEALs laughed.

Byrne nodded. “You’ll both be fine. Don’t forget, Shaymore.” His green gaze grew distant, as if peering into an ancient past. “Giving of power willingly to save another means an emotional bond that cannot be broken. Only death can sever it.”

Cupping her face, Shay kissed Kelly, a long, lingering kiss, feeling her breath return with each delicious exhale.

It was the most wonderful feeling in the world.

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