The Undoing (30 page)

Read The Undoing Online

Authors: Shelly Laurenston

BOOK: The Undoing
12.31Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
C
HAPTER
T
WENTY-FOUR
S
ki jerked awake, body still ready to fight, but soft hands pressed against his shoulders, and softer lips kissed his forehead.
“Shhh. You're safe.”
Knowing it was Jace, he pulled her close, ready to defend her even though his head hurt and he hadn't opened his eyes yet.
“Oh!” she gasped, laughing a little. “Don't worry. We're
both
fine. No need to protect me.”
She pulled away and Ski turned toward the voice, blinking, trying to get his eyes to adjust without his glasses. They overcompensated, bringing Jace's image in so close it was like she was right on top of him. He blinked again, but now it was like she was halfway across the room. Ski knew it was because his head hurt. He had the makings of a solid migraine and that always made it tough to quickly adjust his eyesight so that he could see like a human and not someone blessed by a god. But with his brain hurting, it was simply too much work.
Thankfully, Jace put his glasses on his face and he could see her just fine. At least his eyes could move . . . unlike the actual owls Protectors had been based upon. That's why their heads turned so far. Because their eyes didn't move at all. And that's how the Protectors had started out, too. But that made them more vulnerable to attacks by Crows and Ravens, so Tyr eventually fixed the issue . . .
Oh, gods. He was thinking too much. When his brain hurt, it overcompensated by thinking more than usual. It analyzed, debated, constructed . . . anything and everything the brain could do to work through pain.
Like right this second, he was wondering how the ancient Protectors had managed before glasses were invented. Something he really shouldn't be worrying about.
Jace carefully adjusted the frames of his glasses behind his ears and smiled down at him. “Better?”
“Much. Thank you.”
She brushed the hair off his forehead. “Are you all right?”
“I have a headache. I dealt with the Carrions well enough . . . didn't see that gate, though, until it collided with my head. To be honest, considering the speed I was going, I'm lucky the damn thing didn't take my head clean off. For instance, if you take the square root of—”
“Okay,” Jace cut in. “Let's not square-root anything. Not much of a math girl. It's not my thing. I like words. Are you sure you're all right?”
“I can't stop thinking. Analyzing. My head really hurts. My brain does that when it hurts.”
“I'm not surprised it hurts.” She winced in empathy. “You have such a knot.”
“I'll be fine. I just need to stop thinking.”
“Yeah, I've tried that . . . it's impossible for some of us. But good luck!”
That almost made him laugh. “Help me sit up?”
She placed her hand against his back and Ski sat up, legs over the side of the bed, his feet slapping against the floor. He was still dressed, boots and all.
Did it take a long time to make boots? Probably not now, what with all the children in factories putting together the pieces. Child labor . . . morally reprehensible and yet, it was still happening. He should do something about that . . .
“You're doing it again,” she warned.
“How can you tell?”
“Because you're staring at me, but I can tell you don't see me. It's like I'm sheer glass. It's strange.”
“Sorry.”
“Don't apologize. My ex used to accuse me of the same thing.” She gave a short chuckle. “Of course, that was because it was easier to pretend he wasn't there or I was somewhere else.”
Ski nodded, focusing on the sound of her voice and innocuous rambling. It gave his brain something to concentrate on rather than all the millions of random thoughts in his head at the moment.
He noticed for the first time the bandages on Jace's throat and arms. “What happened?”
Jace shrugged. “Decay and death.”
In no mood to ease his way around this conversation the way he usually could, he just asked, “What?”
“I went into a rage.” He could tell that. Her eyes were puffy from crying. “Attacked one of the Carrion. His skin touched mine . . . and now I'm permanently disfigured.”
Ski put his hands to his forehead. His head
hurt
. He hadn't had a headache like this since he was rammed into a wall by a Giant Killer when he was eighteen. “No, you're not.”
“I'm not?”
Ski just reached over and, without looking at her, yanked off one of the bandages.
“Ow!”
“Sorry.”
“Hey.” Jace scrambled off the bed and went to her dresser mirror. She grinned when she saw her skin back to normal. She removed the other bandages. “Oh, thank God,” she finally said. “I don't want to sound vain—”
“You're not vain.”
“—but I was worried my skin was going to stay like that. Like part of me was rotting off.”
“If you hold on to the Carrions for too long, you'll rot to death. Until there's nothing but bones and dead flesh left for scavenger animals to prey upon.”
When Ski's response led to nothing but silence, he looked up to see Jace gawking at him, eyes wide, hands still pressed against her skin.
“Sorry. When my head hurts, I'm like every other Protector you've met.”
“Tessa might have something for you.”
“Good. I'm assuming the All-Clan meeting has been moved up.”
“It's tonight. In two hours.”
“I need to be there.”
“Okay.” She came back to the bed and knelt beside him on the mattress. “There's just one thing, though . . .”
Ski stared at her, waiting for her to tell him what that “just one thing” was. But the longer they looked into each other's eyes, the worse he began to feel.
Finally, realizing what she was asking of him, he barked, “No!”
“He saved your life.”
“I don't care!”
“Please. For me.”
“No. Absolutely not. Just so we're clear here, Jacinda, your pussy's not worth all that suffering.”
Instead of being insulted, she leaned in closer, gaze locked on him, until he had to admit, “All right, it is! But this isn't fair!”
“For me. Please.”
“My head hurts.”
“For
me
.”
He couldn't fight her. He wanted to. He wanted to get up and walk out and never see her again. But he knew that wouldn't happen. He was in too deep.
“Fine.”
Grinning, she grabbed his hand and pulled him to his feet and out into the hallway.
“Kera!”
Kera came out of another room, dragging an unhappy Vig Rundstöm behind her.
The two Crows pushed the men together until they faced each other, barely inches apart, neither man willing to look at the other.
By Tyr's missing hand, how had Ski gotten into this?
“Well?” Jace pushed.
“Well what?”
“For me. Please.”
“Stop saying that!” Ski let out a very angry but resigned breath. He looked directly at Rundstöm and snarled, “Thank you for saving my life.”
The Raven stared at Ski a moment before bellowing, “
Now you owe your soul to me!

“Ludvig Rundstöm!” Kera yelled before Ski could punch the bastard in the face.
“You promised!

“He does owe his soul to me. It's a blood oath!”
“So you're telling your half-black girlfriend that you're into slavery?”

No.
Of course not.”
“Then do it right,” she bit out between clenched teeth.
It took the Raven a moment, lips in a tight line, unwilling to open to say the next words. But he finally relented under the withering glare of his girlfriend. “You're welcome.”
“See?” Kera asked. “That wasn't so hard, now, was it?”
“It's not the way of our people!”

Times change!
” she bellowed back. “You're also not allowed to drag me off by my hair and call me your property! It's called progress, Viking!”
 
The All-Clan meeting took place in a cavern underneath Catalina Island. There were many underwater caves and caverns on Catalina but this one was hidden from non-Clan eyes.
And All-Clan meetings were the only time the Crows didn't have to worry about sea travel. The Claws of Ran would not send the seagulls to attack the Crows so they could be dragged to the ocean floor to drown when they fell from the skies.
Not that any of that kept the Crows from enjoying the ocean when they wanted to, but they did all go into it knowing it might end up a fight to the death.
Once they reached the cave entrance, they walked for about a half hour until they entered the cavern. A circular space with nine sections that jutted out of the rock in rows, creating stone benches. In the center of the nine sections was an empty space. Before each section was the god's rune that represented a particular Clan, and in the center of the room was a circle of all the runes, pulsating with protective power.
The whole cavern reminded Jace of the Coliseum except that no bloodshed was allowed. This was a place of safety and quiet, thoughtful discussion . . .
Kera turned to her. “What's so funny?” she asked, loud enough to be heard over the yelling.
“Just amusing myself.”
“So I'm not wrong.” Kera threw up her hands. “This is ridiculous!”
No, Kera was not wrong. This was all very ridiculous. The Nine Clans of Southern California had
literally
only been in here for about twelve minutes, but as soon as Josef saw Chloe, the fight was on, and everyone else just happened to join in.
It was funny to watch, too. At least for her. Each Clan stayed in its designated area, behind the correct runes, while they pointed and yelled at each other.
Every once in a while, Jace would look over at Ski and they'd smile at each other. She knew he wouldn't intervene until everything calmed down; then he'd negotiate.
Until then, they sat back and watched the Silent loudly argue with the Isa, who gestured inappropriately at Holde's Maids, who threatened hexes on the Claws of Ran, who spit seawater at the Giant Killers, who sexually harassed the Valkyries, who told the Ravens to kill the Killers, and the Ravens agreed because anything was better than listening to Josef fight with Chloe while the Crows told the Silent that the Isa were planning to kill them.
Jace didn't go to many All-Clan meetings. Not since one of the Killers pushed her out of the way and she tore his ear off, then burst into tears. But Chloe wanted all those involved in today's nightmare at this meeting.
Still, everything was manageable and typical of an All-Clan meeting—until the Carrion were mentioned. That's when everything sort of fell apart. Mostly because no one knew what to do.
The Carrion had never been part of the Nine and they were rarely on this plane of existence. It was said that once one went to Helheim, Helheim was where one stayed. There was no getting out unless Hel released you, and she didn't release anybody. Even Odin himself couldn't force her to do anything she didn't want, including release the god Baldur, whom the other gods had loved so dearly.
She was, perhaps, the most powerful of the Aesir gods, which was why the idea of Gullveig joining forces with her was definitely terrifying.
And yet . . . here they all were. Arguing. As if that would somehow fix their problem. It wouldn't. It was simply a waste of their time.
Too bad Kera had no tolerance for any of that. She'd been to war-torn countries, fighting to protect others and the United States. So the old Viking ways were not sitting well with the newest Crow.
At least that's what Jace assumed when her friend suddenly stood up and bellowed like the drill sergeant in
Full Metal Jacket
, “That is enough!”
Shocked that someone was interrupting what Erin called the Ritual of Yelling Vikings, the entire cavern fell silent, everyone focusing on the “new girl.”
“Do any of you understand what the fuck just happened today?” Kera demanded. “Gullveig is building an army with the Mara and the Carrion. And from what I can tell, the Carrion are the Nordic equivalent of the Red Army during the worst Eastern Front winter. So sitting here, listening to you
bitches
argue over bullshit is not something I'm willing to do.”
“Well,” the leader of the Silent, Brandt Lindgren, said, his voice dripping with condescension, “what would
you
suggest, since you seem to have such brilliant insight.”
“Watch your tone, Lindgren,” Vig growled. “Or I'll tear out your tongue.”
“No,” Kera said, raising her hand at her boyfriend. “I want to answer this, Vig. Because you know what I won't do?” she asked Lindgren. “I won't waste my fucking time with your bullshit.”
Erin leaned over and whispered to Jace, “Okay, I kind of love her.”
Jace had to agree. Kera was cutting through all the usual ridiculousness and getting right to the heart of the matter. Her Marine sensibilities simply wouldn't let her do anything else.
“We also can't waste our time arguing here. In a cave.” Kera looked around at the Clan members. “We need to come up with a plan. We need to stop Gullveig.”
“How? Even the gods couldn't.”
“They stopped her, they just couldn't kill her.”
“And you think that
we
can?”

Other books

Tete-a-Tete by Hazel Rowley
Poison in the Blood by Bachar, Robyn
Sweet Trouble by Susan Mallery
Sargasso Skies by Allan Jones
Midnight Thunder(INCR) by Vicki Lewis Thompson
Sherlock Holmes by Barbara Hambly
The Reluctant by Aila Cline
Moving Forward in Reverse by Scott Martin, Coryanne Hicks