“You’re learning,” she said. “That’s good. You can’t be a Djinn now, Cassiel. You have to be something else. It hurts, but it’s a true thing, what you are. You’re bound to the world now.”
I had always thought the Djinn more connected to one another—bound by the cords of power. But now I was seeing that humans were bound to one another, as well, in strange and difficult knots.
It should have felt like a trap. I would have thought it so once.
“You have to go back to them,” she told me. “I know it’s dangerous, and I know it won’t be easy, but your future doesn’t lie here with me, or with any Djinn. It’s with them. If you want to find the truth about what happened to your friends, you must go back.”
“Back,” I repeated. “Back to what?”
“To Isabel. To Luis.” The color of her eyes shifted between embers, flames, the pure gold at the heart of the sun, black, gray. “I know it’s difficult to believe, but a power has put you here for a reason, Cassiel.”
I sucked in an unsteady breath and wiped tears from my face. “I’m here because of Ashan.”
She smiled, very slightly, and raised an eyebrow in an expression so like her mother I almost smiled in return. “Is he not a power?”
Her voice was as faint as a whisper now, and the invisible wind blowing across her had whipped into gale force. Her hand slipped from mine and fell back into her lap.
“Wait,” I said. “Please. Tell me about the Ranch. They would have killed to protect it. It must be important.”
“It is,” she said. “It will be, to you.” Her voice faded to a thin ghost. “Go now. Isabel—”
She faded like a candle flame.
I sat for a moment, staring at the growing darkness beyond the windows, and then stood and began the long journey home.
Chapter 8
I WAS TWO miles outside of Sedona when I felt the earth grumble and mutter, and power stir around me.
So. They know where I am. It could have been the Wardens; it could have been the faceless enemy that Scott Sands had so feared. Whoever it might be, they were coming for me, and coming fast.
And I welcomed the opportunity for an open, vicious fight.
I opened the throttle on the Victory and bent low across the handlebars, and the road became a blur of black, yellow, and shifting shadows. No moon yet, and the last rays of sunset were fading into black. There were headlights on the road coming toward me, and they were bright enough to dazzle.
A car suddenly swerved across the line and skidded toward me. I swore under my breath. No time to stop, only a fraction of a second to decide. A Djinn could survive such a crash; I couldn’t.
I shifted my weight and steered, heading for the oncoming car, trusting instincts I hadn’t known I possessed.
The car brushed by me with inches to spare. The wind of its passage battered me, and I heard the thin, enclosed screams of those inside it. Not my enemies, only victims, trapped in a war they didn’t comprehend.
I couldn’t help them. If I stopped, I was dead. I had to hope that, having missed me, my enemies would release them to let them continue on their way.
Ahead, a large tractor-trailer shuddered, and the giant metal rack of cars it carried tipped and twisted as it jackknifed into my path. The entire rig crashed onto its side and skidded toward me, shooting dry sparks.
It blocked the whole road. No room to go around, and nothing but loose sand to the sides. If I went off the road, I’d crash, and if that didn’t finish me, I’d be on foot and an easy target.
I reached down into the earth and yanked a section of the road upward. The asphalt rose in a ramp, and then I was hurtling forward, leaving the ground in a long, flat arc.
The back tire of the Victory barely cleared the still-skidding wreckage. I couldn’t spare a breath for relief; I was coming down now, and I knew my driving skills were not equal to handling that challenge easily. My innate Djinn nature allowed me to learn quickly, but not completely.
I pulled at the road on the other side, giving myself a ramp to land on, and even so, the impact of the motorcycle’s tires grabbing hold almost overturned me. I controlled the wobbling machine somehow and focused ahead. Nothing could come at me from behind, not now; my enemies themselves had seen to it.
No, the next attack would come from ahead, or . . .
I had almost no warning, only an indefinable sensation on my left side. Just enough time to realize that speed wouldn’t save me this time.
I let go of the throttle and jammed on the brakes.
A massive off-road vehicle on tall tires, black as a beetle, roared out of the dark. It had no lights, but there was a glow inside it from the instrument panel, and it reflected off the panicked face of the driver. He was trying to steer, but the wheel was locked.
The giant beast was aimed directly at me.
I couldn’t get out of the way. He was too close, coming too fast, and as his front tires bit the gravel at the edge of the road, the truck erupted out of the dust with a roar and accelerated even more.
I flung myself and the motorcycle down, to the right. My side hit the road with a stunning impact, and a broad knife of agony tore through my body as the Victory’s weight slammed down on my right leg.
The truck’s undercarriage passed over me, reeking with hot metal and oil—a second of black terror, and then gone, spinning out of control off on the other side of the road, flipping in dust-devil showers of pale sand.
I had to get up, but when I tried, agony lanced through my right leg—broken or sprained.
For a precious few seconds, the power arrayed against me had nothing to throw at me. No oncoming vehicles. The ones it had used already were smoking wrecks.
Get up.
The leg, I decided between sobbing gasps, was not broken, only badly bruised and sprained.
Get up!
I struggled out from under the Victory, rolled over, and forced myself to my feet. I had to put most of my weight on my left leg, dragging the near-useless right, and it was an act of torture to pull the motorcycle to its balance point again. What had seemed so effortless and light in motion was cruelly heavy in stillness.
The Victory glittered in a sudden flash of headlights. Another oncoming vehicle. I gritted my teeth and calmed myself as I straddled the motorcycle.
It wouldn’t start.
“Please,” I whispered, and tried again. And again. On the third try, the engine coughed, caught, and roared.
I put it in gear and released the throttle. The bike leapt forward, back tire squealing and fishtailing, and the vibration felt like hot hammers pounding up and down my right leg. The lights smeared greasily in my vision, and for a black second I thought that my flesh would fail me.
I blinked, and the world steadied again.
The oncoming vehicle was large and dark, but I couldn’t see its details or edges. If it was another tractor-trailer jackknifing across my path, I might not be able to avoid crashing this time.
The oncoming vehicle’s lights grew larger, brighter, blazed like insane white suns. . . . . . . And flashed by me. No attack.
I gasped in a shuddering breath and jammed on the brakes again, bringing the Victory to an unwilling, skidding halt, because in the fraction of a second it had taken for the truck to pass me, I had recognized it. Black and chrome, with red and yellow flames.
Looking back, I saw brake lights blaze red, and heard the juddering shriek as Luis Rocha’s truck came to a halt crosswise in the road.
I stripped off the confining helmet, and the cold desert wind chilled my sweating face and fluffed my hair. It was a risk; it was Luis’s truck, but that did not mean it was Luis in the driver’s seat—and even if it was, the force that had attacked me had used innocents. It could just as easily use him, if it caught him unawares.