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The Reaping

The Reaping (The Fahllen #1)(73)
Author: M. Leighton

So, with a smile back on my lips, I determined right then that the world and all its troubles could wait, for a few days anyway. I was going to take time to enjoy the nearest thing I’d ever have to normal—love.

EPILOGUE

Once we were inside, I opted for a shower before our talk. As crazy as it sounds, I was more anxious to scrub away the last twenty-four hours than I was to be in Derek’s arms. And that was pretty darn anxious.

After I’d wet my hair, I closed my eyes and turned my face toward the spray. All at once, a barrage of imagery flashed behind my lids—blood and teeth, black eyes and pale faces, unimaginable pain—followed by a series of screams that sounded strikingly similar to my own.

Startled, I turned my head and opened my eyes. I was relieved to find that I was still in my shower (alone), but a nagging sense of dread and urgency plagued me after that. It pretty much ruined my languorous shower experience so I set to work scrubbing and then got out to towel off.

Steam had fogged the mirror so I took my towel, as I’d done a thousand times in the past, and wiped it clean. When I lowered my arm, I froze, confused by what I saw. My reflection moved when I did, wrinkled its brow when I did, but it didn’t look like I’d expected it to.

The hair was jet black and the eyes were darker, black even, as if the pupils were dilated. The skin was chalky white and the lips ruby red. I leaned closer, as did my reflection. I reached up to touch my hair. My reflection did the same. I pulled a lock around in front of my face. What I saw was my hair, my blonde hair. Though it was nearly a white blonde, I still recognized it as my own.

With a gasp I looked back into the mirror. My reflection was smiling. And I was not.

I squeezed my eyes shut, counted to ten and then opened them again. My reflection hadn’t changed. She was still raven-haired and smiling at me, only wider now. She looked on the verge of laughter.

And then she spoke.

“What’s the matter, Sis? Cat got your tongue?”

“What the—”

“Didn’t you think there would be consequences?”

“Consequences? For what?”

“For playing Fahl. That’s a big no-no. It’s something that’s just not done.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” I said, and I genuinely didn’t. But whatever it was, it didn’t sound good.

“Well, you can play dumb if you want, but it won’t change anything. What’s done is done.”

“What’s done? What are you talking about?”

Grey’s smile turned cruel and cold. “For one, thanks to you, we’re stuck with each other, linked through mirrors. You know, opposites and all that. We’re kind of like the fair and balanced way to reap. Each of us has a chance, neither of us gets a head start.” She sneered and leaned in closer to the mirror. “Now you can never escape me. Never outrun me. You can’t hide inside your pathetic little life anymore.” Her bark of laughter was harsh and without humor. “You can try to stop me, Sis.” She hurled the term like an obscenity. “But you never will.”

With that, she threw something over the other side of the mirror so that all I could see was my own reflection, replete with blonde hair, staring back at me.

Dressing quickly, I found Derek in the kitchen, cooking of all things. The smell of bacon and eggs teased my nose just as the toaster popped its payload up.

“Smells good,” I said appreciatively. It didn’t hurt that Derek was the chef either. He tossed a sexy little smile over his shoulder, one that did funny things to my belly, not to mention what seeing him barefoot and bare-chested did to the rest of my organs. But now was not the time to explore those kinds of feelings. We had much of a serious nature to discuss. “So, I just had a visitor,” I said, pausing for dramatic effect. “In my mirror.”

Derek turned completely around, spoon in hand, his expression sober. “Really?”

“Yep. My dear, sweet sister.”

Derek eyed me suspiciously. “What did she want?”

“She tells me that we’re linked somehow through mirrors. I guess things will go on like they have been. Grey out wreaking havoc and me trying to stop her.” Even as the words left my tongue, I was already correcting them in my head. I wasn’t going to try to stop her. I would stop her. I’d stop her from taking souls before they had a second chance. I’d stop her from turning people into bloodthirsty monsters. I’d stop her from ruining even one more life.

“That looks serious,” Derek said, frowning.

“What? Oh,” I said, realizing that I was frowning more than he was if the ache between my eyebrows was any indication. “Sorry. I was just thinking.”

“Weren’t we going to leave all this alone for just a little while?”

Shaking off the troubling thoughts, I slid my hands down Derek’s chest to his belly then around his trim waist, reveling in the glide of his silky smooth skin beneath my palms.

“Yes, we were. And I can think of many other things I’d rather be focusing my attention on right now,” I said, rising onto my tiptoes and nipping at his lower lip.

********

Later that night, we were watching a DVD when I was suddenly and inexplicably overcome with the urge to call Leah’s parents.

“Can you pause that? I should call the Kirbys, see if they’ve heard from Leah.”

“Alright,” he said, raising his arm to let me up.

I pushed myself off Derek’s chest and rose to my feet, walking casually to the kitchen. I heard the sound of the television change when Derek switched to the local news. As I punched in the Kirbys’ number, a reporter’s words caught my attention. I listened to it with half an ear as the phone rang on the other end.

Official reports claim the cause of death was a wild animal attack, though police are uncertain how the animal gained entrance into the couple’s home. Police are still searching for the couple’s only child, Leah Kirby, a seventeen year old senior at…

Right then, deep down, I just knew that Leah had killed her parents. She was not just lost to the police now, she was lost to me, too. Whether or not a soul could ever recover from such horrific deeds I didn’t know, but for Leah I was pretty sure there was no coming back. Not for her. It would be too hard, too much of a fight. And Leah wasn’t strong, she wasn’t a fighter. She was just gone—long gone.

Another thing I was certain of was that my role in her life was over. She was playing for the other team now and we were all playing for keeps. I couldn’t afford to let my guard down around her again.

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