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There had to be another way to-

David's hand became a skeletal claw. His skin was turning the color of clay.

I had no time to think about it. I jumped to my feet and ran, threading through the maze of boxes,

shoving over obstructions, hurdling what I could and climbing what I couldn't to make the most

direct route back to the vault. I was trembling with fear by the time I arrived, because precious

seconds were ticking away, and upstairs David was dying. . . .

The vault was locked. I remembered David closing it and spi

I had no choice. I reached out with all the Earth power at my disposal, ripped the locking

mechanism to pieces, and slammed the heavy metal door aside like so much cardboard. It ripped

loose of the hinges and tipped, hitting the concrete with enough force to shatter stone.

I scrambled over it into the vault.

I lunged for the book, opened the latch, and began flipping pages. I need something to save him,

I was thinking hard, trying to direct the book to meet my desperate need. Anything. Show me how

to save him!

A page flipped and settled, and my eyes focused on symbols. I heard the whispers again, felt

them rushing through me like wind, and had time to wonder if this was the right thing to do, the

smart thing. . . .

But then it was too late. I felt my lips shaping sounds, heard my voice speak without my

understanding what it was saying. On the page, each symbol lit up in fire as it was spoken,

burning like miniature suns until I could barely see the rest of the scripture.

Midway through, I felt dry, aching, drained body and soul. It was taking my power to fuel itself,

and I still didn't know what it was designed to do. Doesn't matter, I told the part of my self that

was screaming, the part that was in charge of self-preservation. If I don't, he's gone.

I had to take the chance.

As I spoke the last word, the entire book flared hot and white, and the force leaped from the

pages into the center of my chest, knocking me down in a heap. I felt a sickening, sideways

motion, as if the world had been twisted into a rubbery pretzel around me, and when I opened

my eyes, I was lying facedown on industrial looped carpet, smelling dust and mold. I rolled over,

gasping, and felt every muscle and nerve in my body shriek in protest.

I had no idea where I was, but it seemed that I was all alone. Nothing moved in the shadows

around me, as far as I could see. The room looked like a deserted hotel ballroom, but one that

had seen its last happy dances long ago. The carpet I was draped across was old and filthy, and

the remaining furniture was a drunken muddle of broken chairs, listing tables, and fouled linens.

My brain was racing frantically, but my body was slow to follow. I managed to force muscles

into enough order to get me to my hands and knees, and then to my feet, though I had to keep a

hand on the dusty wall to brace myself. Apparently, Dji

comfortable way to travel, or the most accurate, since I'd been trying to arrive at the place where

the Sentinels were hiding out. . . .

I heard voices outside, in a shadowed hallway. I quickly crouched behind a table as a flashlight

speared sharply through the dark, sweeping the room. It was a casual check, but I heard footsteps

coming farther into the room, and risked a look. There were two people, one with the heavy

flashlight in hand. I knew their faces in the backwash of light: One was Emily, Earth Warden,

and an occasional adversary; the other was even less comforting-Janette de Winter. I'd last

seen her in the De

perfect, and diamond-hard as ever.

And just by being here, she was proving out my suspicion that she was a Sentinel.



''Do you feel anything?'' Janette asked. I concentrated on concealing myself, aetherically

speaking; minimizing the blaze of power around me, drawing in all my senses until I was

nothing but simple human flesh. If they were looking for a Warden, they'd miss me.

The flashlight played slowly around the room again in a methodical progression,

counterclockwise. I was at the nine o'clock position, and I concentrated harder as the light

crawled over the detritus in the room, heading my way.

It illuminated something strange; then there was a flash of movement, and then all hell broke

loose.

They hadn't been looking for me. They'd been looking for Kevin, and he was on the offensive.

Fire streaked out of his hand in a flat plane, slammed into the two women, and knocked them

back. Emily shrieked, but Janette reacted quickly, damping down the flames before they were

injured and setting up a glittering shield that splashed Kevin's assault away in a rolling orange

stream. It ignited dry carpeting, brittle walls, and broken furniture in an instant bonfire.

Emily, who could control wood and metal, grabbed an entire tractor's worth of furniture and

slammed it toward Kevin with shocking violence and power. I knew her; she hadn't been nearly

that strong before. Kevin tried to dodge, but there was no way he could win; Janette was lining

him up in the crosshairs for her own assault, and he had no way to stop Emily at all.

As Kevin backed toward the wall, he tripped and went down, rolled into a crouch, and

instinctively covered his head with both arms as the wall of furniture tumbled toward him.

I put up a wall of power around him, and both Emily's flood tide of furniture and Janette's

flaming wave broke against it at the same time. Again, I was shocked by the force of what they

were wielding; it was all out of proportion to what most Wardens would have used, even in

extremity. Kevin was strong, but he couldn't have equaled even one of them, much less two in

direct conflict.

I could. Barely.

I stepped out from behind the table. I considered a snappy a

really, it wasn't necessary; both the other Wardens-no, Sentinels-were already turning and

looking for me. I felt them lock on and acquire the target, and I shook my hands lightly to loosen

myself up.

''One chance to live,'' I said. ''Where's Ortega?''

I couldn't really tell their expressions, not from across the room, but their body language

suggested my sudden appearance wasn't just a surprise; it was a real shock. If I'd been hoping

that would throw them off balance, though, the surprise was mine; Janette hesitated for barely a

second before I sensed a surge of power traveling invisibly through the wall next to me, and the

paneling around me burst into white-hot flame. I ignored it. Playing their game was a sucker bet,

and I needed to get to Kevin before they could separate us and use us against each other.

I gathered up the heat vortex being generated by Janette's flames and sent it spi

both the Sentinels. Neither of them were Weather Wardens, and they weren't trained on how to

defuse such things; instead, they scattered to get out of its way. I kicked off my shoes, picked

them up, and did a broken-field sprint across the ballroom toward Kevin. When I reached him, I

grabbed him by the collar and yanked him out of the tangle of burning chairs and tables

surrounding him. ''Where's the Dji

chin toward the doorway. ''Ortega! Have you seen him?''

''Yeah,'' he said, and coughed again, with deep wracking spasms that made my chest hurt to

hear them. ''Outside. They had him.''