Shadow Kissed 03 - Shadowman
slapped for waking the other kids. And then sheâd still had to stay in bed anyway, the dark ones touching, scraping, pulling. She hadnât even been able to hide in the bathroom until morning like she usually did. That was a bad night.
Shhhhh.
Layla stood stone still. Her heart stopped, too. The dark people were coming.
Whispers filled the airâ should be dead âthe words all on top of each other. Already dead.
Why did they say that?
Dead, dead, dead.
Something brushed her cheek.
She could turn the light on herself, run for the doorway, flip that switch, but the dark people would just come back tomorrow and the tomorrow after that and forever. She shook when she thought about it, scared and mad and tired and all by herself.
Tonight sheâd show them that she could be mean, too. Even meaner than them. Sheâd cut them if they reached for her. Then theyâd leave her alone.
Layla backed to the window and into the squares of soft starlight. The crisscrosses of the windowpanesâ shadow left xâs all over her. The floor was even colder there.
Greedy tipped-up eyes gleamed from the closet. From the corners. From under the bed.
Layla unzipped her backpack and reached inside. Found the handle. Drew out the knife. âStay back!â she said, pointing the blade into the room.
The dark ones smiled and moved forward, their shadow bodies wavering like black water. Closer and closer.
âI said stay back!â Layla jerked her outstretched arm so theyâd see what sheâd brought.
They laughed. Canât hurt us.
She bet she could. She had to.
Layla squeezed her eyes shut, made herself brave and mean, and slashed the knife through the air.
More laughter.
She slashed again and again. âNever come back! Never, never!â
She slashed for them to leave her alone.
She slashed until the laughter broke with a cry of pain.
And then she opened her eyes.
â. . . down the knife, honey,â Mama Joyce was saying. Her face was all red.
The light was on. Blood ran from one of Mamaâs arms. She was kneeling, her good hand out as if she wanted Layla to stay, like a dog.
Layla let the knife clatter to the floor. âIâm sorry . . . Mama.â
Mama grabbed for the covers and pressed them to her arm. âNot your fault, honey.â Tears ran down her face, so it had to hurt bad. âNot your fault.â
Yes, it was. But Layla didnât say that.
âYou saw something scary?â Mama asked.
Layla nodded. Bad things. Tears fell down her face, too.
âAre they gone now?â
Layla nodded again, even though she knew theyâd be back.
Mama nodded herself. Her face had a worried look on it, the red of her cheeks going splotchy. âDo you know how to call nine-one-one?â
And thatâs when Mama Joyce gave her back. She had wanted to save the world, one kid at a time. Just not her.
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Khan watched from Twilight, the dream shadows of the fae creeping by him into Laylaâs childhood bedroom. The colors of the dream were bright and harsh, like the intensity of her dread. She was trapped in an old nightmare, one that had the sense of recurrence. Layla had been here many, many times before.
He lifted a hand and cast Laylaâs mind deeper into sleep, beyond the reach of memory.
Same spirit, same will as Kathleenâs. And now, also, the same ability to see through the veil and into Shadow. Or she had once. And here heâd thought that Shadow was a revelation to her. Deep down, sheâd known. Deep, deep down, sheâd known all along. Of course she had. She and Kathleen had the same soul.
But where Kathleen had seen fairy tales in Shadow, Layla received nightmares. His fault. The ability to see beyond the veil often attracted the attention of the fae, who would divert themselves by driving the mortal mad. If heâd been in Twilight, where his duty lay, heâd have surely found her. Heâd have spared that child her loneliness and pain.
Instead, sheâd overcome and found him.
Chapter 8
âIâll meet you there,â Talia said.
Layla agreed and hung up the phone. Library, first floor, half an hour. With Talia Thorne. Wow. Layla still couldnât believe it.
Her couple hours of crappy sleep were not enough to clear her exhaustion, but the appointment gave her a jacked alertness.
Talia had been the shock of a lifetimeâa kindred spirit. Until now, Layla had believed those were
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