Token of Darkness (17 page)

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Authors: Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

BOOK: Token of Darkness
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“Then …” Cooper drew a deep breath. “Is there … I mean, this sounds horrible to even ask, but if she’s really gone and there’s nothing else …” He trailed off, and looked to Ryan and Brent for help, but neither offered it. Cooper managed at last to put the words together. “You thought Samantha might have been in Delilah’s body, right? That means you think she
could
do something like that. What about this body? Once Delilah is back in her own, could this one maybe make it possible for Samantha to be alive?” He winced. “I know this girl was a friend of yours or something, but—”

“Samantha’s an elemental,” Delilah said. “She doesn’t need to use another body to have form. She should be able to create one, once she is bound to a mortal being.”

“She obviously isn’t powerful enough to maintain that
kind of connection, or she would have done it already,” Ryan said. “Using another’s form is probably the only option she has, and it is
not
acceptable. Delilah, if you knew Margaret, you would realize—”

“Stop talking like I’m not here!”
Samantha’s shriek made the panes of the windows rattle. “I don’t want that … that
thing!”
She reached forward, and Delilah tensed for a blow, but she could not have expected the sensations that followed.

Samantha didn’t hit Margaret’s body; she actually hit
Delilah
. Delilah felt herself shoved outward and upward. Disoriented, and fighting to regain some kind of control, she saw chaos break out. Samantha hit Ryan before he had any chance to defend himself, and as he crumpled, Samantha turned to the body on the hospital bed. Cooper, Brent, and Samantha were all shouting, the words overlapping each other but sounding muffled. All Delilah could tell was that Samantha had gone mad and was determined to kill the figure on the bed.

“You don’t have to!” Cooper shouted. “If you don’t want to—”

“She shouldn’t
be
here!” Samantha wailed. “She should be dead. She shouldn’t have lived!”

To Delilah’s surprise, Brent stepped forward, taking charge of the situation. He gripped Cooper’s bare arm with one hand, and then reached toward Samantha’s form with his other hand.

The shock waves that followed sent Delilah tumbling
backward into darkness … and then again into memories of fire.

Tears snapped and sizzled as they fell into the flames. What had she done?

“Tell me where you are!” she shouted. She could hear the screaming, but she couldn’t find the source. “Please!”

The fire was starting to get too hot, and the power she had summoned was starting to fade in the face of her despair
.

Delilah woke with a gasp, her body spasming as her lungs struggled to eject phantom water and smoke.
Her
lungs;
her
body. She was still in the hospital, but she was in her own skin. Now, what about everyone else?

C
ooper woke on a hospital bed, with his mother sitting pale-faced beside him. “How long have I been out?” he asked.

“Only a few hours, and you’ve just been sleeping naturally for most of it. Long enough for them to check your wallet and call me. Thank God the hospital had the sense to tell me you were all right before they told me you fainted,” his mother said, gripping his hand tightly enough that he winced. “They ran some drug tests, but those came back clean, of course. They’ve scheduled you for a CAT scan and an MRI to make sure nothing’s wrong. Your father wanted to be here, but the doctors said he needs to be on antibiotics for twenty-four hours before he’s out and about.”

Cooper nodded, the small movement causing his head to spin as he tried to piece together his jumbled memories
of what had happened. Samantha had gone berserk. Cooper’s idiotic suggestion had sent her into a frenzy far beyond anything he could have predicted. Then Brent … well, he wasn’t sure what Brent had done.

“How is Brent?”

“I take it the two of you had stopped in to visit with a cousin of his? I heard him telling doctors he hasn’t eaten in a while, and I gather he fainted, too. The doctors think your reaction may have been a result of the combined stress of Delilah’s condition, and your friend’s sudden collapse. Delilah is awake, by the way. They say she’s going to be fine.”

Well, that was something, at least. He just wasn’t quite sure what it all meant.

Shouting suddenly began across the hall, audible through the closed door.

“How dare you do this to me?” a woman shrieked. “Don’t you think I have better things to do than hike all the way here to pick up after you? Don’t you ever think about anyone but yourself?”

Cooper’s mother’s eyes went wide, and she stood up, seeming indignant.

“And they tell me they’re doing drug tests! Drugs! You’ve been stealing from the medicine cabinet, I’m sure of it. Don’t you know what I go through, when I get a call from the hospital, telling me my son has taken an overdose and passed out?”

“Oh, that’s
it,”
Cooper’s mother said, pushing herself up
and crossing the room in angry strides. “Excuse me,” he heard her say as she approached the woman who had to be Brent’s mother. “But do you
really
think that right here and now is the best time to yell at your son?”

“How
dare
you tell me how to speak to my own child?”

“First off, there has been
no
indication of drugs, so that’s quite an accusation,” she said. “Second, Brent probably passed out due to the fact he hasn’t
eaten
a decent
meal
in days. Third, he’s in the
hospital
, visiting his very ill friend, and obviously distressed. Far be it from me to tell someone else how to raise her child but you are out of line.”

A nurse interrupted before the argument could escalate much further. “Ladies, why don’t you come downstairs with me, and we’ll get some coffee?” the nurse suggested. “This kind of disruption isn’t good for any of the patients.”

Cooper was sure his mother only agreed because she knew it was the best way to convince Brent’s mother to stop yelling at Brent.

As soon as the three of them were gone, Brent emerged. He was moving with a strange deliberateness, and seemed a little unsteady on his feet as he crossed Cooper’s room.

“That was your mom?” Cooper asked.

Brent winced. “Apparently.” He shook his head. “The doctors say I’m good to go, at least. I guess they want to keep you overnight for observation?”

“That’s what I’ve been told,” Cooper said. “I gather they
want to make sure my brain’s not about to explode from some damage left from the accident. What did you do back there, with Samantha?”

Brent looked away. “I’m not even sure. I guess it was instinct. You’re okay though, right?” Brent tilted his head, making eye contact for the first time since he walked in. There was something unsettling about his expression as he put a hand on Cooper’s arm. “Can you sit up?”

Cooper hadn’t even noticed he was still lying down. He was more out of it than he thought.

He pushed himself into an upright position, only to then have to lean forward as a second wave of vertigo hit. Black spots danced in his vision. Brent kept him from falling forward off the bed by sitting next to him and looping an arm across Cooper’s shoulders.

Cooper drew a couple of deep breaths, until the world stopped rocking beneath him.

“How are Ryan and Delilah?” he asked, wondering how Brent was doing so much better than he was.

“Haven’t seen them,” Brent replied. “The nurses didn’t want me to stand up at first, just kept insisting on feeding me and stuff to get my blood pressure back up. Then that woman—my mom, I mean—came in.”

“What about—” Cooper stopped, distracted, when he realized Brent still had an arm over his shoulders. Had he always been this touchy-feely?

“What about what?” Brent asked.

“Samantha,” he managed to say. “Do you know what
happened to her?” Before Brent could actually respond, though, the cuddling got to be a little much for him, so he just blurted out, “Are you hitting on me?”

“What?” Brent blinked with surprise.

Cooper deliberately lifted Brent’s arm off his shoulders.

“Oh,” Brent said. But instead of moving away, he came closer, and leaned over Cooper as if to kiss him before Cooper shoved him.

“Back off!” Cooper pushed himself to his feet and took a slightly unsteady step away. This could explain why Brent and Delilah hadn’t worked out. “You’ve been really cool the last few days, and I appreciate the help you’ve given me, and I’m happy to have you as a friend. But I don’t swing that way. Got it?”

Brent started laughing. He put his hands on his hips and shook his head.

“Cooper …” He took a breath, obviously struggling not to keep laughing. Eventually he managed to say. “You’re really not very bright all the time, are you? Maybe I should come back when you’re a little more together,” he said.

“Yeah, you do that,” Cooper said. “Come back
later.”
When the world was back to normal, at least.

“I thought you would be cool with this,” Brent said, slinking forward with a half smile and another chuckle. “You’ll laugh when you get over the surprise.”

“Ha-ha,” Cooper said flatly. “Now go away.”

Brent shook his head and turned, but there was something familiar about the movement that made Cooper
frown. When Brent walked back toward the door—with a bit of a huffy flounce in his step—Cooper said, “Wait.”

“Make up your mind,” Brent said with a smile.

“I …” He stared at Brent, examining the way he was standing, half turned with one hand on his hip and his head just slightly tilted with teasing curiosity. He asked quietly, “Samantha?”

He recognized her giggle now, despite its deeper tone and the form it accompanied. “I wondered how long it would take you to figure it out.” She moved closer this time, her posture still flirtatious, and more obviously feminine now that he realized what was going on.

She reached for him again, and he leaped back with a yelp only partially caused by the pain that shot down his hip from the sudden tense movement.

“Oh, come on,” she said. “It’s not like I’m
actually
a guy.”

“No, that would be far more okay,” Cooper retorted hotly. “I’d still say no, but … God, Samantha, what the
hell?
You’re a chick in a dude, who’s hitting on me, which is creepy enough. But that’s not just some random body. It’s taken already.”

“It’s not like I did this intentionally,” she protested. “I wouldn’t know how to undo it if I wanted to.”

Refusing to get distracted, Cooper asked, “Samantha—should I even call you that?
Where is Brent?
I haven’t seen him, the way I used to be able to see you. Is he okay?”

Samantha sighed and flipped her hair, though it really wasn’t long enough for the gesture.

“Don’t know, don’t care,” she said. “I’m sure he’s fine wherever he is. I managed it for months.”

“Samantha—”

“Cooper,” she crooned. She caught his hand, and held on to it tightly. “Do you understand what it’s like, to have a body? To be able to touch you—or anything, really,” she said. “They gave me applesauce when I woke up, and just a simple thing like that was incredible. I didn’t do this on purpose. I don’t know what you and Brent were doing or tried to do, just that I woke up like this. But I won’t regret it. I
can’t
regret it. I’m
alive.”

She kissed his cheek and then gave a gentle push, sending him stumbling toward the hospital bed.

“I’ll keep in touch,” she said, before the air shuddered again. This time Cooper didn’t think it was his head that was spinning.

When he managed to look up again, Samantha was gone.

What next? Cooper hoped Ryan or Delilah would be able to help, but he remembered how easily Samantha had knocked Ryan down at the start of her hysterical attack on Margaret’s body. Would Cooper find Ryan in another room around here, unconscious or worse?

More importantly, would he find Brent at all?

There was one place Cooper could check for Brent, the only place he could imagine his being able to go. If Brent was there, things were going to be … kind of funny, actually.

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