“King of the Wolves, what do you wish for the rest of them?” one of the phantoms called on a prompt.
That was when I looked around and took everything in.
It was gruesome.
But we’d been joined by others, and not just the phantoms.
The humans had left their houses. Some were sticking close to their doors, standing on their stoops. Some had wandered into their yards, though not far. All of them held weapons, guns, baseball bats, knives.
I didn’t know if they were worried about us or if they got it together to come and help.
It didn’t matter.
It was done.
I kept looking and saw at each end of the block, cop cars were angled in, their lights flashing, the cops out, bracing their weapons against hoods and roofs, using the cars as shields.
“Are we sure how long Lilah’s light will hold?” Callum asked.
“We’re not sure of anything,” Abel replied.
“Then incapacitate them and contact The Council,” Callum ordered the phantoms.
They nodded and most floated off.
One remained behind and shared, “The Council is aware of your location. Reinforcements will be here within five minutes.”
“Little late,” Cain muttered.
I sighed.
The phantom drifted away.
“How can they incapacitate them?” Leah asked while leaning heavily against Lucien.
“They feed on energy and sometimes they can be…greedy,” Callum answered. “In this instance, it might make them ill.” He jerked his head to the scene behind us as phantoms swooped down on the motionless supernaturals who then dropped to their sides or backs like they were narcoleptics. “All that negative energy. But they can purge it when they get to somewhere safe where it will dissipate and not infect another being.”
“Ah,” Leah murmured.
Suddenly, Lucien transferred her weight to Callum and stalked off.
We all watched.
Then, noting his destination, we all quickly followed.
He stopped, looking down at his father, who was on his knees.
“Yield,” he whispered.
His father stared up at him, mute.
I gasped as my next vision was Lucien holding Etienne aloft by his throat.
“Yield!” he thundered.
“Neh…ver,” Etienne forced out.
Lucien hauled him to within an inch of his face.
“Then you will burn,” he growled and, with no further ado, tossed his father aside.
Etienne barely landed before I felt Abel’s body jolt.
I whipped around, panic instantly having a stranglehold on me that we had new aggressors.
Then I gawked.
The girl in the pink camisole and polka-dotted pajama pants was hugging my man around the middle.
My heart squeezed.
“Come here, Amelia!” a woman standing on the sidewalk shrieked.
The girl tipped her head way back.
“I’ll never forget you,” she whispered. “Never. I’ll never ever forget you.”
Abel lifted a hand and dropped it to the top of her head.
She grinned. It was weak, it was shaky, but she managed it.
Then she let him go and ran to her mother, leaping over bodies, sliding on blood and gore.
We heard vehicles. Some of us looked one way, others looked the other, and we saw army green Jeeps and sparkling black SUVs angling in behind the cop cars.
“Let’s go home,” Leah said, getting close to her man and hugging him from the side.
He slid an arm around her shoulders.
She reached out and grabbed Callum’s hand.
Callum lifted his other hand and dropped it on Cain’s shoulder.
Xun shouldered in and wrapped his arms around Leah and Callum. Ryon, Calder, and Caleb pushed in and connected. Ursula did the same. Jezza and Flo, helping a hobbling Ruby, joined us.
Abel pulled me close and took Cain’s hand, lifting them up and moving their bodies close so their hands were tucked to their sides.
Even though Abel gave me a tug, I stayed removed.
And I did this to look up and down the street.
Finally, I shifted forward, reaching out to clasp hands with Lucien, and I did it with my head thrown back, shouting, “We are The Three!”
And on a radiating circle of blue light, our huddle disappeared.
So we missed the cacophony of human cheers.
* * * * *
In a home somewhere in Idaho, a husband and wife embraced, his eyes rimmed with red, hers wet with tears.
In a pub somewhere in London, a bartender called to the unruly crowd, “Pints! All around! On the house!”
In a convenience store somewhere in Florida and on a street in New York City, perfect strangers embraced, smiles quivered, and tears flowed as all experienced sweet relief.
And in an apartment somewhere in Washington DC, a woman listened to a newscaster, quietly sobbing.
But she did it smiling.
* * * * *
In a Café Somewhere in Nevada
The cheers deafening behind her, Naomi kept her eyes to the screen.
Then she lifted them to the ceiling.
Her prayer was short and silent.
I never doubted, but even so, thank you.
Once done, she turned around and shouted, “Lemon meringue pie all around!”
The cheer of jubilation split her ears.
But they didn’t care about pie.
Knowing this, Naomi smiled.
* * * * *
Abel
Abel opened his eyes and lifted his head.
He felt his mate stirring beside him, but he saw Jian-Li sitting on the bed and felt her hands clamped tight around his and Delilah’s.
A tear dropped down her cheek as she caught his gaze, and her lips were trembling when she spoke.
“Welcome back, tian xin.”
He grinned at her, and when he felt Delilah lifting up, he helped her, sweeping her in one arm at the same time he caught Jian-Li in his other.