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Authors: Kim Richardson

Elemental

BOOK: Elemental
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ELEMENTAL

Soul Guardians Book 2

 

By

Kim Richardson

 

SMASHWORDS EDITION

*****

 

PUBLISHED BY:

Kim Richardson on Smashwords

 

 

Elemental, Soul Guardians Book 2:

Copyright © 2011 by Kim Richardson

 

 

 

Smashwords Edition License Notes

 

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.

 

 

 

 

SOUL GUARDIANS

* Book Two *

 

ELEMENTAL

 

 

 

 

By

KIM RICHARDSON

 

Chapter 1

Lighting Strike

 

 

 

 

 

KARA AND A LITTLE BOY STAND TOGETHER,
alone in a small river. He clutches her hand. The cool water tickles their toes. A fine mist rises and twines around them, and Kara smells the faint stink of rotten flesh. Something touches her toes. She looks down.

White hands reach up out of the water and claw at her ankles. She jumps back, pulling the child with her. More hands reach out all around her. A thick black mist rises and blankets the stream. Long tendrils coil around their legs, like white snakes. Kara screams and kicks at the mist.

A stench of iron overpowers her. The mist parts. Kara struggles for her balance. She stands in a river of blood. The little boy has blood to his thighs. She is nauseated.

She hears a splash.

A figure, in the river…a man, no…the twisted human head and diseased torso that rise up from the river grow out of a confusion of human and insect guts on the back of a hideous monster. Long insect-like legs thrash towards her, black and razor sharp. Boils and sores cover the monster’s skin, like leprosy. Its red eyes glow in the black mist. It snaps its jaws.

The child lets go of Kara’s hand. He is dragged under the bloody river. Kara bends down and waves her hands around in the blood, searching for the boy.

A sob. Kara looks up.

The creature has the child. It grabs the wailing boy by the neck and squeezes. It opens its mouth. Blood trickles down its yellow pointy teeth. Slowly, it brings the screaming child towards its wet mouth…

 

Kara woke up with a start.

Her heart pounded hard against her chest.

She blinked through eyes crusty with dried tears and sweat. Still half asleep, she sat up on her bed with her arms stretched out before her, ready to save the little boy from the monster. She brushed her sticky bangs from her sweaty forehead and waited, calming herself, till the effects of the dream wore off. She’d been crying.

She wiped her face, and her eyes slowly adjusted to the early morning light in her room. Dark shadows became focused. Her demon and angel paintings covered the walls like wallpaper. They looked even more sinister in this light. She shook off a chill.

The paintings were part of a story Kara needed to tell. Fresh from her nightmares, she had taken her paintbrush and painted the recurring stories again and again. She told herself it was sort of therapeutic, and that perhaps, one day, the nightmares would stop.

After a while, her mother refused to go into her room. Kara remembered that her mother had thrown her hands in the air and screamed that the monsters were out to get them.

But to Kara they were only paintings. She figured they couldn’t hurt anyone.

5:00 am—still too early to get up for school. She forced her eyes shut and fell back onto her bed. The faint snore coming from the second bedroom down the hall confirmed that her mother hadn’t woken to Kara’s screams. That comforted her. Her mother worked long hours, she deserved a good night’s sleep.

Every night Kara dreamt of horrifying monsters, and of a scared little boy with tangled blond hair and blue and white pajamas…about to be eaten. She’d wake up screaming the moment the child disappeared into the monster’s mouth.

Kara let out a long breath. She couldn’t fall back asleep.

She swung her legs off her bed and tip toed to her dresser. The pine floor boards creaked. White paint pealed from the dresser’s top and legs, giving a false antique look. A few knobs were missing from the top drawers, and Kara had used dried up pens as knobs. She picked up a metal picture frame.

The glass cover was cracked and chipped. Kara held it close. A man with disheveled brown hair and a friendly smile held up a little girl with long brown pigtails and yellow overalls. Kara’s chest tightened. She could barely remember that day anymore. Her father’s image had drifted away. He had died when she was only five, and Kara couldn’t remember him at all. She traced his face with her finger. What she would give to have a real dad. Maybe her mother would be a little saner if a man was around. Kara felt an ache in her heart. And with a sigh, she placed the frame back on the dresser.

Kara’s face stared back at her through the cracked mirror. She forced a smile. Today was her seventeenth birthday. Seventeen was supposed to be the age when girls fell in love and went off to college to follow their dreams. Her smile fell. Kara’s summer job barely gave her enough to help pay for groceries. She could never save enough for college.

A cockroach skittered up her mirror and stopped right in the middle. It was eye level with Kara, its two biddy black eyes stared up at her with eerie intelligence. Its antennae twitched nervously.

BAM!

Kara removed the book from the mirror and tossed the dead roach into her garbage can. She felt guilty about killing the insect. She pursed her lips and glanced at the mirror again. She should be happy, she knew. But she felt empty inside. A part of her was missing, like a car missing a wheel so it couldn’t drive. For months now, she had moped around school, not wanting to do anything besides paint and read books. Even her best friend Mat avoided her. Two weeks ago at lunch time, he told her that hanging around with her was making his brain melt. She was making him depressed. Without Mat to support her, she felt even more lost and confused. She tried to shake off the feeling, but nothing worked. She felt alone.

The soft chirping of birds reached her ears. Kara smiled. Even though they annoyed her sometimes, they sang beautifully. The chirpings became louder, more intense. Then she heard the loud cawing of crows, lots of them

Strange
, Kara thought to herself.

She sneaked over to her window sill. The wood floors were cool under the balls of her feet. She pressed her head against the glass and looked out. Nearly twenty crows were perched in the tall maple trees. With their heads bent, they cawed at something below that Kara couldn’t see. She strained to look through the branches. A chill rolled up her spine.

Her heart caught in her throat. There in the middle of the road was a little boy—the same little boy from her dreams.

Kara flattened her nose against the glass as she stared at the small figure in pajamas waddling down the street. He was barefoot. In August, the Montreal weather was still warm, even in the early hours of the morning. She watched him plant his feet and steady himself. The little boy shuffled past parked cars. Newspapers rolled around him, caught in the invisible wind.

I have to go get him
, Kara said to the window. She made up her mind and pulled on a pair of grey sweat pants and a sweater. With a click, she opened her bedroom door and stepped into the shadows. Careful not to wake her mother, she stealthily crept across the dark hall and ran out her apartment’s front door.

She jumped down the stairs two at a time and bounced into the lobby. She caught her breath and pushed open the glass doors. The air outside smelled of wet leaves and grass, cool against her skin, hinting on the approaching autumn. Grey puddles littered the sidewalks, and Kara jumped to avoid them. She ran to the spot in the street where she’d last seen the little boy.

He was gone.

The street was very quiet. And Kara noticed that the birds had suddenly stopped chirping. The wind died. Kara shivered. A chill crawled up her back, and her heart hammered in her ears.

“Hey, little boy!” she said in a hushed voice, not wanting to wake up the neighborhood. “Little boy—where are you?”

She jogged past the spot and stopped. She dropped to her knees and searched beneath the parked cars. Nothing.

He couldn’t have gotten far. He’s just a little boy
, she thought. Kara took a few steps forward and stopped. The hairs on the back of her neck stood up. She felt something wasn’t quite right, an inkling that told her to run—

And there he was.

Kara held her breath. She could see him clearly now—not the child, but a handsome stranger she had seen before. He leaned against a parked car, his arms crossed over his chest. The stranger’s gaze locked onto her. Kara’s heart stopped. He was tall and lean. A brown leather jacket embraced his powerful shoulders, and he wore ragged jeans with a tight T-shirt that emphasized his muscular chest. He stared at her with a silly almost-there grin painted across his face. With barely there dimples, his face was unmistakably gorgeous. Too perfect. The kind of face which sent millions of butterflies jolting in the pit of her stomach. Kara had given him the nickname, hot stalker—her gorgeous shadow.

What the hell is he doing here at this hour?

She scowled. Something didn’t make sense to her. Part of her felt the excitement of having such a good looking guy gawk at her like that, but the other part gave her goose bumps—and not the good kind. There was something very creepy about the way he looked at her.

Hot stalker combed his messy blond hair with his fingers and turned around. He caught Kara’s eye, and looked away, pretending to be interested in some parked cars. He didn’t look anything like the Jeffrey Dahmer serial killer type to Kara—the kind that dismembered and ate their victims, like some kind of exotic stew. No, he had such a gorgeous mouth, she couldn’t bring herself to imagine him eating anyone. Kara couldn’t figure out why he was stalking her. With her lack-of-bosom and her invisible curves, she didn’t have much to offer the opposite sex in to the way of looks. What was so engaging and ‘stalk-o-licious’ about her? Nothing. And that made her very suspicious of him. Things that are too good to be true—usually are, she realized, especially when they involved her.

She tore her eyes away from him for a moment, to look for the child again. Dark shadows lurked along the quiet street, and Kara felt herself tense. But nothing else moved. The boy was nowhere in sight. And when she looked back at her hot stalker, he had vanished as well, as though he were a figment of her imagination.

I’m seriously losing my mind
. Kara thought as she brushed her bangs from her face. A light drizzle cooled her hot cheeks, and Kara welcomed it—

Something moved in the corner of her eye.

At first, she thought it was her hot stalker returning. But she quickly realized it wasn’t him. This man had white hair and pale grayish skin. He wore a dark tailored suit, and Kara believed it looked expensive and out of place at this hour of the morning. He leaned against a lamp post across the street. Even from a distance she could tell there was something very wrong with his eyes.

They were black. And they were watching her.

BOOK: Elemental
12.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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