YA, Urban Fantasy
Date Published: 10-08-2021
Publisher: Phenomenal One Press
Who knew that taking a job at a High School Newspaper would weave Rei into an underground news operation? She’d stupidly sacrificed her family and was blackmailed into becoming a member of a Vigilant operation to save the unsuspecting human population in what most thought was Newport, RI. Rei was no longer living in ignorance, but knowledge came with a price. Love wasn’t an emotion she could give into when the ransom of her family’s life was at stake. Asher was sent to help her, but she felt he was sent to ensure she paid the debt owed in order to save her family. Rei didn’t relish being held hostage by Megan and her puppets or being thrust into interfering with a war instigated by magical beings, and their fight to control humanity. Rei had no idea how she could create a diversion that would save her, destroy an unimaginable evil, and teach her to love – again. Read other books in the Vigilant series: Insatiable Darkness, Caged Fire, Unbreakable Darkness, Scepter of Fire, Break the Darkness.
EXCERPT
Rei smelled blood. The metallic taste was in
her mouth, enveloping her senses. Sirens blared, but the throbbing in her head
hurt so bad she didn’t have the will to wake up fully. She had to open her
eyes. The accident. Her last thought before being
suffocated by the chilled waters beneath the bridge where they’d crashed was
that her sister, EmVee was thrown from the van. Her brother hit his head.
Dexter was drowning. Her mom and her twin brother, Reece… what happened to
them? It was her fault. She had to save them, get them away from here. She
struggled and jerked, feeling like she was fighting to get out of the
suffocating waters of the lake.
“Ah!” She fought the pain that coursed through her entire body and
pushed herself up. Rei’s trembling hands braced her on the hard cot in what
appeared to be the inside of an ambulance. Rei willed her body to move.
She tried to open her eyes. One was bandaged
closed, but the other was slightly crusted but opened. Rei’s vision cleared.
She raised a hand to the gauze covering her head. Everything on her hurt, but
suddenly, an energy she couldn’t explain rushed through her in waves, dulling
the pain, giving her focus.
“They are on us!” a gruff curse came from a medic near the light from a
window. The ambulance sharply whipped from side to side.
Rei slid off the hard bed, and her knees
buckled when she hit the floor. “God! Ah.”
She willed herself to stand and pushed her
back up against the wall, wincing at the burn in her side and on her head.
The crouching medic held on to a looped strap
in the corner of the ambulance van. The medic pointed a gun through the broken
glass window of the back-double doors. Several pops sounded, and the doors flew
open. Someone was shooting at them? At an ambulance? Why? Rei crawled backward,
grimacing at the pain.
“I can’t die today.” Rei searched for a weapon, anything she could use.
The bed slammed to the opposite side of the ambulance then surged at her. Rei
dropped to the floor, barely in time to keep her head attached to her neck.
The medic yelled a name, maybe the driver’s –
Rei didn’t know. The medic fired at what sounded like a motorcycle gang
outside. She could hear the revved-up engines in succession.
A huge explosion from a building or something
shook the vehicle. It caught the wind from the blast and reeled forward. Rei’s
petite form was jerked against the small cabinet of supplies then fell
backward, striking her throbbing head against the metal back wall of the
ambulance. The motorcycle riders didn’t relent though.
The medic shot several rounds from the gun he
thrust forward. The back door flung open then closed then open again. The shots
didn’t stop them. The dark smoke from the motorcycles kicked up. They swerved
from one side to another behind the speeding ambulance as if setting up for
another attack. A blue, glowing whip snapped through the opened door and
wrapped around the medic. He fought against the weapon around his neck and
braced himself by a foot against the wall within the cab of the ambulance. His
fingers wrestled with it as it tightened.
Rei could have sworn his hands turned to claws
as he tried to rip the glowing blue whip’s tail from his neck. The medic
roared. His teeth even appeared to grow into sharp points that protruded from
his mouth. Rei gulped back the putrid taste of vomit as she held tightly to a
small hook in the middle of the wall. She must be hallucinating.
“Grrrr.” The medic released an inhuman sound before the whip yanked him
out of the cab of the ambulance.
She had to be dreaming. Rei felt nauseous.
This couldn’t be real – could it? What kind of medicine did they put her on?
Rei shook her head. She felt clammy, sweaty. She had to get out of the
ambulance.
She blinked through her blurry vision while
searching for a weapon. She crouched lower, wondering how she would get out of
this alive.
Rei glanced at where the medic had fallen
before he was snatched from the vehicle. His gun would work. There it was in
the corner. She scrambled on her hands and knees to the tossed handgun. She
remembered her father’s summer hunting trips and wished she’d paid attention
when he told her how to shoot a stupid gun. Rei fumbled with the weapon,
vaguely remembering how to fire it. She couldn’t make out what was behind the
smoke from the ambulance.
Then two of the bikers appeared within the
sway of the smoke they kicked up. One of them, in a black leather suit and
helmet that covered his head, gave a hand signal to another. Rei squinted her
eye and swore the bike resembled her twin brother Reece’s motorcycle. It had to
have been stolen or a replica. Rei didn’t care. She wasn’t going with anyone
without a fight. She pulled the trigger, bracing for the kickback of the weapon
and – nothing. All of the bullets were gone.
The ambulance rocked to the left and up into
the air. “No!” Rei was thrown against the door frame. The bed slammed the wall
then rolled toward her. She kicked it away. It launched out of the door. The
impact of the ambulance hitting something hard bounced it down and then up. She
went flying, mid-air, and fell on the side of the breathing machine. She fell
forward. Every bone and muscle on her body throbbed. Smoke and dust from the
collision curled around the high blood-red moon Rei focused on trying to fight
the throbbing of her head. A motorcycle guy climbed up into the cab of the
ambulance.
Rei’s vision grew hazy. She fought to stay
coherent, but the ache drumming into the back of her head traveled to her eyes.
Rei tried to stand, but gravity sucked her down.
Someone caught her.
“I think she’s okay.”
Rei stumbled into the abyss of darkness once
more.
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