Elemental Darkness (Paranormal Public Series) (34 page)

BOOK: Elemental Darkness (Paranormal Public Series)
7.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Why’d she have it
in the first place, though?” Lough breathed. “I mean, it’s awesome that it isn’t in the wrong hands, but not so much if it got her killed.”


She was probably keeping it for my dad,” I said softly. “He was king, after all.”

Ricky held up a hand. “What are you talking about?” he asked. “Mom being killed by whats
-its, and your dad, our dad, a king of huh?”

“I’m sorry,” I said to my little brother. “I owe you an explanation.”

Ricky snorted. “You owe me like a hundred of them. Or, you know, more than that. I’ll tell you when you’ve explained enough, but basically for the rest of your life, any time I want you to explain something you better do it on the spot.”

I nodded. “Sure. That can’t possibly go badly.”

“Let’s get out of here,” said Lough. He pointed to the crown. “But you should probably wrap that up first.”

I nodded and did as he suggested.
It wouldn’t be healthy to be seen with the crown of the elementals, or even half of it.

“But where’s the other half?” Ricky asked.

“Charlotte,” said Sip slowly, “I bet I know where the other half of the crown is. If your mom had it, that is.”

Yes, of course. We both knew: t
he thistle box I had hidden in Astra, which I needed the Key of Light to open.

“What does this mean?” Sip whispered.

“It means I have the elemental crown,” I said.

“And are the rightful heir,” Lough added.

“If you think I’m bowing, you have another thing coming,” said Sip warningly.

“Let’s get back to Public,” I said. “I need to tell Dacer and I need to get to the box.”

“What’s Public?” Ricky asked. Seeing the looks on our faces, Ricky threw up his hands. “Why do I bother.”

“Oh, Ricky,” said Lough, clapping the younger elemental on the back, “Paranormal Public is just the tip of the iceberg.”

Before any of us moved I remembered something and smacked my hand against my forehead. “I meant to ask Lisabelle about Risper,” I said, frustrated that I could have forgotten. He had disappeared at the start of the semester and nothing had been heard of him since.

“Oh,” said Ricky, his gray eyes lighting up. “She gave me this when she thought she had saved me and was leaving the first time.” He pulled a crumpled piece of paper out of his pocket. “She looked sad when she di
d it, but I didn’t know why.”

My hands were full with half a crown, so I motioned for Sip to take the note. With trembling hands she opened it and read:

 

Risper failed. The Globe White was with the Eriksons. It is now with the Darkness Premier. They’ve also found the Fang First, and thanks to Paranormal President Caid, they know where to look for the Mirror Arcane.

 

My heart stopped for what felt like the millionth time that night as I threw the note down and
headed toward the front door.

Sip, Ricky, and Lough hurried after me.

But I knew we were already too late.

“CHARLOTTE, SIP, LOUGH?” The frantic voice calling for us was Rake’s.

I crashed through the door, the force of my blow throwing it off its last hinge so that it clattered to the ground and slid down the steps. I was forced to stop while it fell, so while I waited, I looked around frantically for my vampire friend.

Rake was standing on the lawn amidst the chaos of the demon attack on my childhood home. His shirt was tattered and there was a bruise blooming on h
is cheek. He’d been in a fight. He was breathing hard, and his eyes were filled with pain.

“Public,” he panted. “Public was overrun.”

I fell to my knees. After all that, they’d gone after Ricky so that I wouldn’t be there. They hadn’t found out that I snuck away on weekends, but they had lured me away by going after the one thing they knew I couldn’t resist. And now all the paranormals would pay the price.

“What now?” Lough asked softly.

Sip had pulled a first aid kit out of the backpack she’d tied to the broom, and now she started to tend to Rake’s wounds. He tried to protest, insisting that he wasn’t that badly hurt, but she quelled him with a purple-eyed look.

“We have to go to Public,” I said. “Everything is there.”

“We can’t go,” Lough argued, “not if Malle’s taken it back over.”

“I thought she was on the side of the paranormals, or at least that’s
what she’s been pretending,” I whispered.

I glanced around. It was cold. There was no snow on the ground, but a sheen of frost gave the world a silver tint, and the horizon was just beginning to welcome dawn. The sky was thick and gray with streaks of rain. Even the clouds looked like they were crying.

“I don’t know,” said Rake. “All I know is that I was sitting in Cruor and a black wave came toward me. It was demons. Thousands of them. They had already overrun the grounds.”

“If we can’t go back to Public,” said Sip, “where do we go?”

“We could go to my parents’ place, or yours,” said Lough.

They both glanced at me, waiting to see what I’d say. Ricky and Rake also waited. I thought
for a moment, tugging on my lower lip with a dirty finger.

“No,” I said slowly, as ice flowed through my veins. “They aren’t the only ones who can attack something that doesn’t belong to them. We don’t go to Public and we don’t go to your parents’ places.”

I looked at each of them in turn. “We go to Vampire Locke and we finish this.”

The Nocturns had taken my peace and quiet. They had taken Keller and they had tried to take Ricky. I was done being nice. The winds had change
d. It was time for them to pay.

 

 

The End

 

~

 

By Maddy Edwards:

 

One Black Rose Series

One Black Rose

August

Autumn

Susan’s Summer

 

Paranormal Public Series

Paranormal Public

Elemental Rising

Elemental Shining

Elemental Dawn

Elemental Fire

Elemental Air

Elemental Earth

Elemental Darkness

 

Spiral Series

Spiral

 

 

 

Other books

Cracks in the Sidewalk by Crosby, Bette Lee
The Splintered Gods by Stephen Deas
All Your Wishes by Cat Adams
Silence by Becca Fitzpatrick
Creeps Suzette by Mary Daheim
The Will to Love by Selene Chardou
Obsession Wears Opals by Renee Bernard
InTooDeep by Rachel Carrington
Negotiating Point by Adrienne Giordano