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Authors: Rachel Higginson

Sunburst (Starbright Series) (26 page)

BOOK: Sunburst (Starbright Series)
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It didn’t make sense to me.

             
But then again, Jude didn’t make sense to me.

             
My mom pulled up to our house a little before five, and while I gathered the shopping bags into my hand she turned around and smiled at Jude. I was already thrown off by her behavior, but she shocked the hell out of me when she asked him to stay for supper.

             
“Would you like to stay for dinner, Jude?”

             
Apparently he was confused, too, because for several moments he just stared at her. Finally, and a little bit sheepishly he said, “Isn’t your house blessed?”

             
My mom laughed lightly, a little embarrassed. “Oh, right,” she said. “I forgot about the whole Fallen thing.”

             
“You forgot that I was Fallen?” He asked while sounding amused.

             
She didn’t answer him with words, just smiled brightly at him. Finally she said, “Alright, well, I’m sure we’ll see you around.” And then my mom just got out of the car and went inside.

             
What in the world?

             
I scrambled out after her, desperately trying to reach the safe haven of my house. I could easily leave Jude standing out here all by himself. I just wanted to erase the entire bizarre memory of him today.

             
“Does your mom usually invite her enemies to dine with you?” he asked sounding perplexed.

             
“I think you’re the first.” I shut my door and turned around. Jude was right behind me and just stood there, as if I wanted to talk to him some more. “I doubt she’ll ask you again though, so I wouldn’t worry about it.”

             
“Maybe I’ll ask
her
to dinner?” He waggled his eyebrows in a suggestive manner and I swung out and hit him with my garment bag.

             
“You’re disgusting.”

             
“If only you didn’t love me so much.”

             
“Ha!” I shook my head at him and started to walk backwards, away from him and away from his friendly/non-friendly ways. “If only.”

             
“Thanks for letting me tag along today,” he called out after me. “It was fun.”

             
I knew he was being sarcastic; he had to be. So I just waved him off and turned around. “Whatever, Jude.” I called out and then slipped inside my house.

             
I didn’t look back at him, or check to make sure he was gone. He was right, he was Fallen, he couldn’t even walk through the door. I felt safe in my home, sheltered from a world that wanted me dead and had expectations of me I couldn’t meet.

             
I felt cocooned in here, away from Jude or Aliah or Seth. This was a place filled with love and acceptance. I knew I couldn’t stay here forever- obviously not. But I needed to feel safe tonight.

             
“Mom, why did you invite Jude to dinner?” I demanded once my bags were thrown on my bed and she was loading the oven with a few frozen pizzas. “I’ve never seen you act so crazy in my entire life.”

             
She shot me a sly smile from across the kitchen. “He was on our porch earlier, Stella. And he walked freely on our land. It’s not just the house that’s blessed. It’s the entire property.”

             
“So what are you saying?” I felt dizzy all of a sudden. Nothing that was supposed to be true was. Everything was different than it seemed.

             
My dad walked in from the living room, remote control in hand and stared at my mother, waiting for her to explain.

             
“I’m saying he’s not entirely Fallen.”

             
“Um, yes he is.”

             
“Stella, that boy asked permission to smoke in my car, he stood on our land and found you that dress.”

             
“You found that dress,” I argued.

             
“Jude handed me that dress, kid. He’s not all bad. I know he was kidnapped as a child. Maybe…. maybe somehow he hung onto some of his original goodness.”

             
“Or he’s tricking us. Maybe he’s like Seven. She is clearly out of her mind with evil and we still can’t detect her or feel evil around her.”

             
“Maybe,” my mom agreed thoughtfully. “Or it’s something else entirely.”

             
“What is the something else entirely?” I asked carefully.

             
She laughed again, “I have no idea. But it seems smart to keep an eye on him. Make sure we know what he is up to.”

             
“This was the kid from the porch earlier?” my dad asked gruffly.

             
“The third to the contract,” my mom explained.

             
“Keep an eye on him, Stella,” my dad ordered. “He might be nothing. He might be our worst enemy.”

             
“Or….” I prompted because I felt unconsciousness coming on.

             
“Or, he might be a little of both. But either way, we need to know.”

             
“He makes me uncomfortable,” I groaned.

             
My dad pulled me into a side hug in commiseration. “It’s odd that we are dealing with the Fallen as much as we are. I know that. In all of history, I can’t seem to recall a situation where we interacted so much with them. Everything before now, before Seth, has been battle after bloody battle. I honestly, don’t know what to make of it.”

             
“And I don’t know what to do with it,” I added softly. It felt more like my responsibility than anything else. And because I wasn’t able to solve this problem, it also felt like my failure.

             
“They chose you for a reason,” my mom reminded me as if reading my mind. “You were handpicked for this task. Whether you know now or not, you have everything you need to handle this problem.”

             
“Still think I should go to prom?”

             
My mom smiled at me and my dad squeezed me in closer.

             
Laughing my mom said, “If you don’t, I’m going to! That dress needs to be worn!”

             
I laughed, too, because she was right. No matter how deadly or frustrating my life became, that dress was officially my first priority. Prom was only a week away and school would be out for the summer in three weeks. I could spend my entire summer looking for Seth if I wanted to. And I wouldn’t have to see Jude every day either.

             
So until then, the dress took priority. Besides, my dad was right. I only had a little over a year with Tristan left. I wanted to make this a good year. I wanted to make amazing memories with him that I would be able to keep with me forever. I would start with prom. I would start with holding on to him as closely as I could now.

             
And then, maybe, when I was forced to give him up entirely, I could keep a little piece of him with me.

             
That had to be true. Because the alternative was to lose a big piece of myself with him instead.

Chapter Twenty-One

 

             
It had been a long day. A really, freaking long day. But it was over.

             
Well for the most part.

             
I flung myself onto my bed, face down. Every muscle and tendon in my body screamed from the abuse I’d put it through. My veins hurt I’d pushed myself so hard.

             
Soccer was over, so I didn’t have to hold back anymore with easy practices and human standards. I got to demand the most from my body, push it to every last limit. And I had spent the entire afternoon and evening doing just that.

             
Then there was training.

             
And it wasn’t like Jupiter ever held back with me. Especially not now.

             
He was as single-minded as I was. And our session was made even worse because it had been so long since either of us had seen or heard from Seth. The fragile remains of decency were long erased from the empty place where his soul used to reside. There would be nothing left of goodness to guide him, no moral compass or voice of reason to whisper truth into his ear.

             
Three weeks was not that long to a normal person, but alone, with the Darkness and all the evil they had to offer, was more than a lifetime. With my frustrating innocence and straggling naivety, I honestly couldn’t even imagine what Seth had been through recently.

             
There was no way to even picture what life was like for him.

             
And I was positive I didn’t want to anyway.

             
A light tapping on my window grabbed my attention; I flopped my head to the side to make out Tristan’s face through the glass. My light was on, so he was mostly a dark shadow until he pressed his face directly against the glass. I smiled at him weakly and tried to pull myself into a standing position.

             
I failed. 

             
He pointed a commanding finger at me and then flashed a boyish grin. I sighed, because I really didn’t want to move, but I knew I was going to; I dragged my body off the bed.

             
I was a hot mess tonight. I was still in my baggy Mead High sweatpants that Piper and I swiped from the boys’ basketball team last year, and a black athletic tank top.

My katanas were thrown haphazardly on the floor along with a few daggers I’d been working with. The blades looked decidedly out of place among the piles of dirty clothes and random stacks of books. Actually, the middle of
my floor looked insanely booby-trapped.

I decided to keep it that way.

Carefully stepping over the death trap of sabers, I trudged to the window and opened it to the cool spring night. The weather was heating up, and the nighttime temperatures usually hovered around the high sixties, the perfect temperature for nighttime.

I half crawled, half flung my body onto the roof and then immediately cuddled up next to Tristan. He glanced down at me just long enough to drop a kiss on the top of my still sweat-soaked head.

“Rough night?” he asked, clearly enjoying himself.

“Did you know that Jupiter’s like
, a thousand years old?” I struggled to sit up straight and pull my hair back into a better pony tail. It was easy because it was so sopping wet with sweat.

Tristan chuckled. “I had no idea.”

“I swear to you, it’s like the older he gets the
meaner
he gets.”

“He must have a good multivitamin.”

“Don’t joke,” I groaned. “He kicked my ass all over the place tonight. It wasn’t even a competition.” My head flopped over of its own accord and landed on Tristan’s shoulder.

“It will come, Stel,” he promised and in that moment I needed to hear his encouragement. My soul
drank his words like water straight from a mountain spring.

             
“I needed to hear that,” I whispered.

             
He put his arm around my shoulder and pulled me against his firm side. He was so familiar, so natural that I just fit against him without even questioning it. My senses filled with him, like they always did- his masculine scent, his ripply muscles, the way he draped his arm across me. He brushed the tips of his fingers up and down the sensitive part of my side like he had done a thousand times before.

             
Tristan was everything I had loved my entire life. We fit together easily, understood each other above all else, and could speak with just glancing at each other.

             
He was the only thing I grew up knowing I wanted- more than the Protectorship that I was born to inherit, more than the safety of this planet that I was always afraid I wouldn’t be able to maintain, and more than the obscure future with a Warrior I hadn’t met until recently. Tristan occupied a place in my heart that held past, present and future.

             
So what part of my heart did Seth hold?

             
Or was it all his?

             
Was Tristan merely a rebellious delusion, a last desperate grab for something in my life that I could control when every other independent element had been taken from me?

             
“Ready for prom?” he asked in a rumbly, relaxed voice.

             
I was relaxed too. We hadn’t done this in a while. It was nice to be next to him, gazing up at the Stars, like we had done most of our childhood.

             
“I guess,” I smiled. “I have the dress and shoes. I’m prepared to spend all Saturday shaving my legs and plucking my eyebrows. So, yeah, as ready as I can be.”

             
“It takes you all day to…. shave?” he asked, obviously uncomfortable.

             
“Um, hello? I’m a girl. Yes, it takes me all day to shave. Besides, I feel like it should- like it’s part of the pre-prom ritual or something.”

             
“And the, uh, plucking?” Tristan sounded really uncomfortable but a huge part of me didn’t want to put him out of his misery.

             
I sighed, “Honestly, I’m not born with these eyebrows. Plus, I need to paint my toenails and there is other stuff to do. I was just saying, Saturday is going to be a full day of primping.”

             
“Huh,” he grunted. “It’s weird to me that you have to shave. Sometimes I forget you do normal things like that. Sometimes you’re just this incredible, out of reach Star to me.”

             
“All Stars grow hair when they’re in their human form,” I explained quickly. He was making me feel like an alien. “We’re very human-like in this form. Our bodies function the same way humans do until we light up. What’s weird to me is that when I turn into a human light bulb you barely bat an eye, but the second I tell you I shave my legs you act like it’s the craziest thing you’ve ever seen.”

             
“It’s just hard to believe, that’s all,” he said through a grin.

             
I decided it was better to just change the subject. “The point is, I’m ready for Saturday.”

             
“Me too,” he agreed, but something had changed in his voice. Goose bumps pebbled across my forearms and chest. “I’ve been ready for a long time.”

             
I cuddled closer to him and let out a soul-deep sigh. I had been waiting for this for a long time too.

             
But then he cleared his throat and I felt his body go tense. I recognized this as Tristan preparing for a serious conversation but when I tried to sit up to meet him eye to eye he just held me against his side.

“The thing is…. Um, I mean to talk to you about this sooner, but do you mind if we drive ourselves?”

“I don’t mind,” I assured him. “But why? Piper might be pissed off about it, but hopefully she’ll eventually forgive me.”

“She’s actually the reason,” he groaned. “She’s still mad at me for that whole lunch thing. “

“I know,” I tried for sympathy but didn’t exactly reach it. The two had been fighting for as long as I could remember and I was mostly over it by this point. “You should talk to her. You guys need to work this out.”

             
“I thought of a better solution,” he grinned down at me.

             
“She’s not going anywhere,” I argued quickly. “I’m not getting rid of her so stop asking.”

             
“I didn’t ask!” He said defensively and then added, “You didn’t give me the chance.”

             
I laughed despite myself and then wrapped my arms around his middle. “Please try to get along with her. I love her too.”

             
He made a noncommittal grunting noise but didn’t say no. I tilted my face up and kissed the underside of his jaw because I knew he would make an effort with Piper- for me he would make an effort.

             
He looked down at me and even in the darkness I could see how his eyes changed- deepened, darkened…. became something so indescribable and consuming I lost my breath.

             
We stayed like that for endless moments, until I knew he would kiss me, until there was nothing else left but for him to kiss me.

             
We both leaned forward until there was only a moment between us. My stomach erupted with butterflies and my skin tingled with anticipation. This was it. I had waited for this moment my entire life. Tristan closed his eyes. I closed my eyes. I felt the whisper of his lips against mine.

             
Suddenly a deafening rush of air exploded around us, and behind our closed lids the sky illuminated in the brightest, hottest light. I immediately threw my body over Tristan’s and screamed for him to keep his eyes closed.

             
The boom of landing hit three times and then nothing. The lights were extinguished and the nighttime resumed.

             
“Oh, no,” I groaned. My breathing was extremely elevated and my body was awkwardly thrown over Tristan’s as he lay splayed out on my roof. The shingles were rough under my hands but still intact as I pushed into sitting. “You have to go.”

             
“What?” Tristan looked at me like I lost my mind. Fear and confusion mingled in his green eyes and his whole body went tight with tension. “What just happened?”

             
“We have visitors,” I shrugged.

             
His jaw tensed and he reached for me, pulling me toward him.

             
“Good visitors,” I rushed to reassure him. “They’re on our side. I don’t know who they are, but they couldn’t land here if they were Fallen.”

             
“You’re safe?” he double checked.

             
“Oh yeah,” I agreed enthusiastically while my insides screamed that something wasn’t right. Nothing about that landing was right or acceptable. Something was going on. “But I should get down there, and you should definitely leave.”

             
He stared at me for thirty more seconds, debating on what he wanted to do and what he thought I needed him to do.

             
Finally he said, “Call me later.”

             
Not a request.

             
I agreed and then watched him climb down the side of the house like a spider monkey and jog out to his car that was parked at the end of my drive. I stayed there long enough to watch his taillights glow in the dark distance and disappear into the horizon.

             
Taking a big breath, I turned around and slipped back in my window. I was filthy, sweaty and disheveled, but I decided to see who was here before I worried about my appearance.

             
I slipped down the main stairs because I could hear voices in the living room. My dad was standing in the doorway, his back ramrod-straight and battle-ready. He turned at the sound of my footsteps on the stairs and offered me a bleak smile. The laugh lines around his eyes were pulled tight and his hair looked uncharacteristically messy as if he had been tugging on it.

             
“This is my daughter,” he announced, holding an arm out for me. I walked into his half embrace just as he finished, “Stella.”

             
“The Protector,” I heard mumbled in reply.

             
And then I was before the most other-world, most beautiful and striking Angels I had ever seen. These were not Warriors or Stars. These were the kind of Angels that sat in councils and meetings every day of their life, that never left the lower realms of Heaven. These were the beings I was never supposed to meet.

             
My father continued, “Stella, the Council has paid us a visit.”

BOOK: Sunburst (Starbright Series)
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