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- Yuri
Chapter 231
It was terrifying how easy it was to use my magic now.
A single thought woven with intention, entwined with a thread of energy, and reality itself bent beneath my hands.
Holly and I left the garage, walking through the kitchen and into the living room where everyone had gathered.
Breyona was talking animatedly to Mason and Clara, while the two Vampire’s standing close by watched with
interest. Dad and Asher had come back inside and were now sitting on the sofa still deep in conversation. 1
Asher’s head snapped up, his eyes locked on my face as Holly, and I entered the room. There was no dark light of
suspicion in his eyes, only exhaustion and endless love. He opened his muscular arms and I stepped into them, my
breath catching as I waited for what might happen next.
What my mate didn’t know was that the girl he held in his arms wasn’t real.
Through one of the many living room windows, Holly and I watched the illusion I crafted unfold. Everything, from
the stitching on our clothes to the part of Holly’s hair, was a product of my magic. I’d taken the extra precautions to
make the illusion tangible on the off chance someone was to reach out and touch one of us. Nothing would blow our
cover like a hand passing through our arm or torso, proving we were made of nothing more than mist and magic.
It took seconds to conjure up two clones of us, to slip through the front door without a single person in the house
noticing. Without Rowena’s cursed amulet around my neck, it was all too easy.
“It’s a little unsettling, isn’t it? Seeing yourself from a distance.” Holly murmured in a low voice, even though it
wasn’t needed.
Another droplet of magic and any sound we made was undetectable. The Shadows themselves cloaked us outside,
obscuring our forms from the window we stood in front of.
I couldn’t bring myself to answer her.
Guilt ran rampant in my chest the longer
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtI looked at Asher. He and Breyona were talking to me- to the illusion. Their lips moved, but I didn’t dare tune into
what they were saying.
Forcing myself to turn away, to go against my family and friends, was the hardest thing I’d ever done. It made
every breath I took sting in my lungs, but I couldn’t-wouldn’t lose anyone else. If this power I had was so incredible,
then there was no reason I couldn’t do this on my own. 1
“Let’s go. We’re wasting time and I need to make a pit stop.” I ushered Holly away from the window, compelling the
Shadows to follow.
We jogged around to the front of the house, going down the driveway to where Tristan had parked the sedan. A tiny
push of magic and the engine rumbled to life. With betrayal roaring in my head, an acrid backdrop to the song the
dark magic whispered in my veins, Holly and I peeled out of the driveway and into the night.
Neither of us spoke, but I gathered she was nervous by the way she tapped out a hasty rhythm on the armrest,
eyes scanning the passing forest.
Peeling down the back roads brought up a time when I’d been afraid of driving. I wasn’t sure when that fear had
subsided, but at this very moment, I felt absolutely nothing. Blame it on the icy kiss of dark magic, or the fact that
I’d been maxed out with my brother’s death, but it was a break I had longed for.
“How long do we have to do this?” Holly asked, her voice soft as it peeled past the layers of darkness.
The backroad we coasted down widened as we drew closer to town. Businesses began to pop up, their windows
darkened, and open signs flipped to closed. Most of the parking lots were empty, except for the one I was looking
for.
“Without me there to control them, the illusions will slowly unravel. I’d say we have an hour tops.”
There was no way for me to actually know this, yet I did. The answer came in the form of a kick to the gut, an eerie
feeling that smacked me upside the head and demanded I listen.
I made it to my first and only pit stop within ten minutes, swinging into a bay before putting the car in park.
“Lola, why are we here?” Holly craned her head to stare out the window, a strange note of suspicion plaguing her
voice. Her brows were furrowed when she finally turned my way.
Again, I didn’t respond. She knew why we were here and what my plan was. I wasn’t going to waste the time
answering.
“Be back in five.” I turned away, closing the driver side door.
With a single thought the air around me folded, weaving itself over my body and erasing my form from view. To
Holly, it would look like I had vanished in thin air, but I was still very much present.
An iridescent film of magic only I could see floated in front of my face, encasing my body in a cocoon of energy.
Without looking back, I strolled into the Hospital through the ambulance’s bay doors, one step closer to bringing my
brother home.
Nurses flitted by left and right, a sea of colorful scrubs that blurred as they passed. There weren’t any more than a
dozen, and while they moved with purpose they lacked that sense of urgency present when someone was teetering
on the cusp of death.
It seemed it was a normal night for them. For me, it was anything but.
Not a single one of them looked my way. Mots of them chatted as they walked, slinging medical phrases I didn’t
know the meaning to. More than once I had to move out of the way to avoid running into one, but I doubt they
would’ve noticed if I had.
Even the nurses sitting behind the main desk failed to notice me pass. As for the badge I snagged, one of them
would be missing that, but they’d most likely chalk it up to a case of forgetfulness.
Five minutes would pass, and they’d find it in the exact spot I’d swiped it from.
The morgue itself was cold, but not nearly as cold as my hands. By the time I made it to where Sean was being
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmkept, that iciness had injected itself into my veins and traveled to the rest of my body, encasing me in frosty stone.
When I pulled his body out of the cooler, my first urge was to drink him in. To stare at the face I’d grown up besides,
to think about how much it had changed during his progression from boy to man.
I didn’t give myself so much as a second, because this-this wasn’t the end.
Getting into the Hospital was the easy part. Escaping, now that was a bit harder. With another speck of magic, any
sound I made was silenced. Making sure I didn’t run any nurses down with the giant metal cart I pushed, that was
the hard part. 1
I did wind up clipping a few with the corner, but the most they did was hiss in pain and turn to see nothing but
empty hallway, before going back to their jobs.
“Fuck, Lola. Don’t tell me that’s what I think it is.” Holly squeaked as I approached the car, slapping a hand over her
mouth. She fumbled to get her seatbelt off, though I wasn’t sure why.
I was too wrapped up in sliding Sean’s body onto the backseat to notice that Holly had cursed for what was most
likely the first time in her life. Once I got him situated, I slammed the door shut and climbed into the driver’s seat.
Holly was turned in my direction, her eyes wide with some vagrant emotion I didn’t care to process.
Once again, we drove in silence. This time around, it was thick with tension. Nearly a dozen times Holly would open
her mouth only to snap it shut, never once saying anything.
What was there to say, after all? She knew my plan and had even offered her blood to help. There was no backing
out now. Not for me, not for her. Hell, not for any of us.
All I needed was a patch of land directly under the full moon. I didn’t drive far before finding the perfect spot. A cut
out alongside the main road wouldn’t even garner attention for most. It was unimportant, an easy detail to
overlook. For me, it was everything I needed and more.
“Help me with his body.” I told Holly, barely waiting to put the car in park before jumping out.
She twiddled with her fingers, once again opening, and closing her mouth. I guess she could tell I meant business
because with one look at the expression on my face, she snapped out of her stupor.