Chapter 4
The rain had kept most
people inside and for that Teresa was grateful. As it was, she kept
her head down as she half ran through the neighborhood toward
Elena’s clinic. Now that she knew for certain the feds were after
her, she realized that any number of others could be hunting her,
too.
The Magic Police seldom worked alone. If they were
here, then agents from BOW, the Bureau of Witchcraft, couldn’t be
far behind. For all she knew, members of both agencies were already
scattered throughout Sedona, looking for her. Even weakened by the
white gold attacking his system, her Eternal had realized that the
men in the desert probably weren’t the only
ones here searching for her.
He was right.
She could feel it. There were others. Here in
town. Looking for her.
Since the moment the world had been alerted to the
existence of witchcraft, ten years before, no witch had been safe.
Throughout history, but for a few instances, women of power had
kept themselves hidden, letting the world believe that magic was no
more than a legend. Until the day that one woman accidentally set
loose a power she wasn’t even aware of and burned her former
husband to death in front of hundreds of witnesses. That woman,
Mairi Jameson, had in turn been burned at the stake a few months
later.
Fear and panic had erupted all across the planet.
In the last ten years, no woman suspected of witchcraft lasted very
long. There were internment camps scattered across this country and
every other nation. Women were jailed, without trial, without being
able to face their accusers. And most of them were never heard from
again.
Ironic, Teresa thought with a grim smile, that
fear of a common enemy had united the planet in a way it never had
been before. Religious wars had gone the way of the dinosaur as
nations that had once considered themselves enemies joined forces
to track down women of power. The only war today was the war
against witches.
Teresa shivered again, dismissing her dark
thoughts as she bolted through the cold, driving rain that drenched
her. She sprinted across the street and hurried down an empty
sidewalk. Stores on either side of the street were open, their
interior lights splashing puddles of gold into the encroaching
night.
Too many shadows, she told
herself, sending uneasy glances left and right as she quickened her
steps, her bootheels splashing in the wet.
She slammed into someone and jolted back, fear
rising up, then sliding back down as she looked at the woman who
had stepped out of a dress shop.
“Excuse me,” she muttered.
The woman looked at her as if she was crazy, then
scurried away. These days, it didn’t pay for a woman to draw
attention—even for something as seemingly innocent as a
conversation with a stranger. You never knew who might be
watching.
At that thought, Teresa sent a quick look around
the rain-drenched street. She couldn’t see a soul except the woman
she had just bumped into. That should have made her feel better.
Instead, she felt a cold crawl along her spine, as if there were
unseen watchers keeping tabs on her every movement.
She started walking again, flicking another quick
look over her shoulder as a half block farther along, she ducked
into the doorway of Elena’s clinic. The CLOSED sign was on the
door, but there was a light on in the back of the building.
Teresa knocked, rapping her knuckles wildly
against the glass. “Come on, Elena. Be there.”
As if she’d been conjured, Teresa’s friend stepped
into view, irritation stamped on her features until she recognized
Teresa at the door. Then she hurried over, unlocked it and pulled
her inside.
“Teresa, what are you doing? Are you crazy or
didn’t you notice it’s raining?” She took a step back, relocked the
door and shook her head. “You’re soaked.”
“Yeah, I noticed.” As warmth seeped into her,
Teresa looked out the window at the pouring rain and the deserted
street beyond. Shadows loomed all around, but they were
empty—nothing seemed to be hiding, biding its time. So far. She
didn’t see anyone out there, but the tingle at the back of her neck
that told her danger was close was only getting stronger. Yes, it
was just a feeling. But it was one she couldn’t afford to
ignore.
Turning back to her friend, she blurted, “Elena, I
need your help.”
“What is it?”
“MPs.”
“Oh, my God.” Elena’s face paled and her dark
brown eyes went wide in alarm. She threw a quick look at the
street, then grabbed Teresa and pulled her deeper into the clinic,
away from the windows and any prying eyes. She hustled her past the
narrow coffee table scattered with magazines, past the waiting room
chairs and down the hall into her own office. The scent of burned
coffee stained the air along with the scent of fear and, of all
things, Teresa thought with an unexpected smile, bubblegum. But
then, Elena did treat a lot of kids at her clinic.
“Where are they?”
Teresa looked at her best friend and felt Elena’s
fear as starkly as she did her own. Not surprising, since they’d
grown up together, the two of them sharing every major and minor
milestone along the way. They’d met in first grade and had bonded
over their mutual disgust of boys.
As the years passed, they’d seen each other
through misery and laughter, triumph and pain, and each of them had
grown into her own gifts. Teresa’s was a legacy of power, while
Elena had the gift of healing. They were true sisters. Not of
blood, but by choice.
They were family.
Elena was short, a little too curvy for modern
fashion and far too smart for her own good. If she asked all the
questions Teresa knew she wanted to, it would only make things more
difficult for her. Her wide brown eyes were worried and her short
black hair looked as if she’d already shoved her hands through it a
hundred times that day.
“I lost the guys chasing me in the desert,” Teresa
finally said in answer to Elena’s question. Though she wouldn’t
tell her friend just how she’d left those
feds behind. Even knowing about the existence of witchcraft didn’t
negate the fact that a man made of fire was pretty hard to believe.
“But there’s no reason to think those guys were alone in this.
There are probably more of them here in town.”
Her friend sent a wary glance toward the front of
the clinic, then said, “You’ve got to get out of here, Teresa.
Don’t even go back to your place. I’ve got some money here. It’s
not a lot, but—”
“No.” Teresa pulled in a breath and said, “Money’s
not what I need.” If she needed it later, she’d find an ATM
somewhere far, far away from here and make a withdrawal there.
“What I do need is some medical stuff. The
… man who saved me was shot. He’s still got the bullets in him and
I have to get them out.”
“Bullets? As in more than one?” Elena shifted into
practicality in the blink of an eye. “How bad is it? Major
organs?”
She moved to get her black bag that she kept fully
stocked at all times. All her neighbors knew that if they had a
problem, even in the middle of the night, they could go to Elena
and she would help. With her credentials, she could have practiced
medicine anywhere. But she’d chosen to come home. To be a permanent
part of the neighborhood where they’d grown up.
“I’ll be ready in a minute and—”
“No.” Teresa stopped her with one quiet word. When
Elena looked at her in question, she continued. “You can’t come
with me. It’s too dangerous. Too risky. If they know about me, then
they’ve done their homework and they know you’re my best friend.
Elena, they’ll be watching you.”
“I hadn’t thought of that,” Elena admitted grimly,
then narrowed her eyes. “Which means they could be watching the
clinic right now.”
“Possibly,” Teresa said, feeling that odd prickle
of danger at the back of her neck again. “But I had to risk coming
here. You don’t have to risk your
life.”
“It’s my life.”
“I won’t let you,” Teresa told her.
After several long, tense seconds, Elena muttered
a curse and said, “Fine. I’ll give you what you need.”
“Thanks. I owe you.”
“No, you don’t.” She walked to the clinic supply
cupboard and started rummaging around. “You said he’d been shot.
How badly?”
“Bad.”
Elena looked at her. “Is he dying?”
“No.” Teresa was sure about that at least. Her
Eternal was immortal. Shot to hell, in pain and losing his magic to
the cloying pull of white gold, but he wouldn’t die. “I just need
something to dig the bullets out with and—”
“Right.” Elena continued to riffle through the
contents of the cabinet, tucking surgical implements, gauze
bandages, alcohol, antibiotics and pain pills into her bag. Then
she handed it over. “Take this and get moving.”
“Thanks, Elena. Knew I could count on you.” She
started for the door, then stopped, turned and came back. Throwing
her arms around the other woman, Teresa gave her a hard, fast hug.
“You should disappear for a week or two, Elena. You don’t want to
be around here when they don’t find me.”
“Don’t worry about me. Just make sure they
don’t find you.”
Teresa hugged the bag to her chest. She had to
leave, but there was more to say before she did. “Have you seen any
strangers in the neighborhood today?”
Elena rolled her eyes. “You mean besides the
dozens of tourists hoping to step into a vortex and find the
answers to the universe? No.”
“Right.” Teresa frowned, glanced warily down the
hall at the front windows and at the rain-drenched street beyond
the glass. No one was out there now, but that didn’t necessarily
mean a damn thing.
“Elena …”
“Save it. I’m not going to run out on my patients,
Teresa.” She folded her arms across her chest and shook her head
for emphasis. “You have responsibilities—well, so do I.”
She had known even as she suggested it that Elena
wouldn’t run. “I don’t want you getting hurt because of me.”
“If I’m hurt, it’s not on you, Terry,” Elena said,
reaching out to take her friend’s hand. “It’s on the freaks who are
chasing you.”
“Small consolation if you’re dumped in a prison,”
Teresa told her. Just the thought of her friend becoming one of the
disappeared women terrified her. She could take fear on her own
behalf. That was the legacy of witchcraft. But Elena’s only crime
was knowing a witch. Sadly, these days that was all it took.
“God, you’re stubborn.”
Elena managed a weak smile. “There’s a news flash.
Look, I know you’ll be leaving. But once you’re safe, find a way to
let me know, will you? You don’t have to tell me where you are.”
She paused and admitted, “In fact, it would be better for both of
us if you don’t. But at least let me know you’re alive.”
“I will,” she promised, hugging her best friend as
if it were the last time. And maybe it would be. When she stepped
back, she said softly, “Elena, don’t tell anyone you saw me
tonight.”
“Who would I tell? Not like I’ve got a social
life.” She tried to smile again, but nerves, sorrow and fear chewed
at the edges. “Where will you go?”
Good question. Teresa
didn’t have a clue where she and her mystical bodyguard would end
up. Her grandmother’s visions had predicted the rise of her magic.
The coming of a tall man who would protect her. And a dangerous
task whose ending was unclear.
Thinking about the Eternal waiting for her sent a
ribbon of heat winding through her system and she really didn’t
want to so much as acknowledge it. She hadn’t expected to feel such
an immediate draw to the immortal meant to be her mate. And it
worried her.
Right now Teresa would have given a lot to talk
with her abuela. To get some advice. Maybe
another peek at one of her visions. But her grandmother was home in
a tiny village in Mexico. Another bright flash of fear shot through
Teresa at the thought of her grandmother alone and unprotected.
What if the feds went after her? Sure, her
visions would probably alert her to incoming danger, but she would
still be alone.
Alone.
“Oh, God,” she said suddenly as something else
occurred to her. “Chico. He’s alone at my house.”
Elena stared at her, clearly stunned. “You’re
being chased by armed nutcases who have already tried to kill you
and you’re worried about your bird?”
Yes, she was. Okay, sure, he was given to her by
Miguel, her abusive bastard of an ex-boyfriend. But that didn’t
change the fact that she loved that little rainbow lorikeet. Chico
was family, too. Besides her grandmother and Elena, Teresa was
pretty much on her own. Her parents had died five years ago in a
car accident and being an only child meant she had no close
relatives. The multitude of relatives she had in Mexico and Spain
didn’t count with her, since she didn’t know them well and never
saw them. She couldn’t leave town and let her lorikeet starve to
death inside her empty house.
“I could go and get him,” Elena began to
offer.
“No. No, you stay away from my place,” Teresa told
her quickly. “I mean it, Elena. In fact, I want you to act like you
hate my guts. Spit on the street if someone says my name.”
“I will not,” her friend huffed angrily.
“You will, too,” Teresa told her, reaching out to
grab her hand in a hard squeeze. “You’ll tell anyone who will
listen that you found out what I am and tried to report me but you
didn’t because I threatened you or something. Do whatever you have
to do to stay safe. Do you understand me?”
“You expect me to—”
“To stay alive,” Teresa finished for her.
“Damn it, Terry …”
“Please, Elena,” she said softly. “If you love me,
then do this for me. And don’t worry about Chico. I’ll get him
before we leave.”
“You can’t go home—”
No, she thought, but Rune, her immortal Eternal,
could go there for her. And she planned on making him do just
that.
“Don’t worry.” Teresa headed for the front of the
clinic, but before opening the door, she peered through the window
and shivered at the thought of stepping out into that cold rain
again. Added to that misery was the very real possibility that
someone was watching Elena’s clinic right now, hoping to spot
her.
“At least go out the back door,” Elena said as if
reading her mind.
“Good idea.” She should have thought of that.
Would have, she assured herself, if there weren’t so many wild and
frantic thoughts racing through her mind. After all, why tempt the
fates any more than she had already?
She followed her friend through the clinic, their
footsteps echoing on the floor tiles. Rain drummed on the roof and
at the windows, pounding a beat so quick and steady, it urged
Teresa to move faster.
At the door, which led into a short alley, Elena
reached out for another hug. “Be careful,” she warned
unnecessarily.
“I will,” Teresa promised, still clutching the
black medical bag to her chest. “You watch your back, okay?”
Nodding, Elena opened the door as quietly as
possible; then Teresa slipped through without a sound and lost
herself in the drenched shadows.