Just as I emerged from the stacks there was a loud crashing noise, followed immediately by the tinkle of glass.
"There! He's there!" Ulfur cried, rising from the ground and pointing at a shattered window.
"Karl?" I asked.
"I'm here," came the shaky, somewhat muffled reply. I ran to the window and looked out, voices calling behind me indicating that other library patrons had heard the crash.
"Did he take anyone else?" I asked softly.
"No. We wouldn't let him," Hallur said with grim victory in his voice as he faded to a translucent state. He limped slightly and appeared to be bleeding, but grinned. "He'll know better than to attack the lot of us again, he will."
A woman behind me, assumedly a librarian, stopped next to me and started pelting me with questions.
"I'm sorry, I'm American, I only speak English," I told her, clutching my side where a stitch pulled painfully.
"What has happened here?" the librarian asked, switching into flawless English. She waved a hand toward the window as others arrived, all of them viewing the display with confusion and ire.
"It looks to me like someone went through the window," I said, peering out of the shattered window to a tiny patch of greenery. A few people who evidently had been strolling through the area were clustered together, pointing at a direction opposite the library.
"I will call the police," the librarian said with thinned lips. She gave me a piercing glance. "You will not leave."
"No, of course not," I lied, giving her a bright smile.
She evidently issued orders to the other librarians, herding the patrons out of the bits of shattered glass. I waited until they had gone about fulfilling her commands before turning back to my ghosts.
"Come on, folks. We've got to find you all a new hiding spot."
I smiled at the patrons who stood in the stacks, chatting about what happened. They stopped talking when I flung myself out of the window, managing to tear the leg of my pants on a shard of glass I'd been taking pains to avoid.
"Do not hurt yourself, Pia," Ingveldur called as they drifted out the window after me. "Oh! You are bleeding. Hallur, the reaper is bleeding."
"So am I. That Ilargi was a tough one. But we were stronger." His face sobered. "But it wasn't enough to save Jack."
"I know you tried," I said as we hurried away. "It's my fault, really. If I was any sort of a proper Zorya, I'd have had you to Ostri by now."
"Do not blame yourself," consoled Marta, clutching Karl's arm and sending him a look of love so profound it brought tears to my eyes. "If it was not for you, the Ilargi would have taken Karl, too."
"No, you all saved him," I said, feeling the full extent of my guilt.
"We were near the end of our strength," Ulfur confessed. "We could not have opposed him much longer. He ran because he heard you."
I felt moderately better, but strengthened my determination to see that my friends received their reward. If I couldn't take them, then I would move heaven and earth to find someone who could.
We managed to get away from the area just as the police sirens were heard, although I kept looking over my shoulder as we headed for the open spaces and busy area that was the waterfront park.
"Where are we going?" Ulfur asked as we pulled up en masse at the edge of the park.
"That is a very good question. I wish I had an answer to it." I scanned the area, looking for somewhere safe to hide for a bit while I made some plans. My arm burned with an increasing pain that I put down to the fading of adrenaline. I garnered some odd stares as people noticed the blood flowing down my arm, driving me to take up a position under the trees on the far side of the park.
"Pia, you are hurt. You should see a doctor," Marta's soft voice chided me.
I knelt in a slightly damp bed of discarded fir needles cast down by the tall tree that shielded me from the sight of the rest of the park, rocking for a moment as I tried to get a grip on the pain now radiating with increasing intensity from my arm.
"We should get to safety," Agda said, her voice even reedier than normal. "That Ilargi may come back."
"We can take care of him," Ulfur said, flexing his muscles in that time-honored male attitude of bravado.
"Aye, and just how are you expecting to do that?" Agda asked, squatting a few feet away from me. "I'm all done in. I don't think I could so much as move that pebble if my life depended on it."
There were murmurs of assent from the others.
My head swam suddenly.
"Pia?" Marta's face came into view. "She's fainting!"
"I'm all right, just a bit woozy from the loss of blood," I said, wrapping my tattered sleeve around the bleeding gash. The pain from that act almost left me retching. "I've got to find somewhere safe for you guys. Only I don't know of anywhere safe, and Alec might be captured, and Kristoff is gone off who knows where, and I don't even know where Magda is, and if the Brotherhood people find out I've been seen letting a vampire drink my blood, they may not listen to me…"
"Weeping never served anyone," Agda said, peering at me as tears of self-pity welled in my eyes. "You've got a brain, child, use it."
I sniffled back the unshed tears and remembered the cell phone Alec had shoved into my hands. I'd stuffed it into my pocket absentmindedly as I made my escape from the restaurant. I pulled it out now with a minute sense of hope. I might not be high on Kristoff's list of people he was willing to aid, but he wouldn't turn his back on Alec, would he?
I brought up the phone's address book, quickly finding the number for Kristoff.
"What is she doing now?" Hallur asked, studying the cell phone with interest.
"She's calling someone. That's a mobile phone. I've told you about them. All the fishermen in the village have them," Dagrun said with the voice of a teen who can't believe how stupid adults are.
"I've told you not to hang around those docks." Ingveldur rounded on her. "They're too rowdy for a young lady."
Dagrun rolled her eyes. "I'm dead! They can't do anything to me! Besides, how do you expect me to keep up on things if I stay along the shore with the rest of you?"
"You might be dead, but I'll not have a daughter of mine making sheep's eyes at the local fishermen," the ghost I assumed was her father said gruffly.
Kristoff's short, "Yes?" in my ear interrupted the scene.
"Kristoff? This is Pia. I know you're pissed at both Alec and me, but I could really use your help." I described in succinct sentences the happenings of the last half hour.
The ghosts, prompted by Dagrun's description of a cell phone, crowded around with their heads pressed closely to mine so they could hear.
"Where are you now?" Kristoff asked in a weary voice.
"At the north end of the park, near the cliff. Behind a tree."
The silence that followed was rife with annoyance. "Stay there. I'll fetch you as soon as I can."
"You'd best be hurrying," Old Agda yelled. "The reaper is bleeding something fierce."
"I'm fine," I interrupted. "Just get here as soon as you can. I have a feeling the police are going to be crawling over this area any minute."
I slumped back against the hard face of the cliff that edged the park, closing my eyes in an attempt to keep a handle on my emotions, the sounds of the seagulls and ghosts as they chatted seeming to blend and blur in my mind until they lulled me into a state of unawareness.
Fingers on my wounded arm roused me from my stupor. Sharp eyes of the purest teal considered me when I jerked upright.
"You came," I said without thinking, a little spike of hope starting anew within me.
"You asked me to," he answered. His brows pulled together as he gently removed the wad of cloth I'd tried to bind around my arm. "This is deep. It is still bleeding."