Run to You Part Five: Fifth Touch

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Run to You Part Five: Fifth Touch Page 9

by Clara Kensie


  * * *

  “You okay?” he asks. He sees Jillian is upset, but she’d held it together in there, so he decides not to mention the book. For now.

  “Yeah, I’m okay. Just disappointed.”

  “For a moment I thought she might be legit,” he says. “When she said we lost our family? Wow. I got chills.”

  Jillian nods. “Me too. But look at us. We look like orphans.”

  “You’re right, though,” he says. “We need to stop running. We’ll look for someone to help us. Maybe someone will give us a place to stay.” He pulls a set of keys from his pocket and tosses them to her. “Your turn to drive.”

  They climb into the RV. The front door of the house opens, and Lady Elke comes out. She waves at them to stop.

  Jillian sighs impatiently and rolls the window down.

  “Your sister feels eyes everywhere,” Lady Elke says. “They’re black. They’re from her nightmares. She feels them watching her.”

  Of course this one-eyed woman would be obsessed with eyes. “Right now, in art class?” he says, sarcasm dripping like poison from his voice. “That’s why she’s drawing them?”

  “Yes! Exactly,” Lady Elke says. “She can’t escape them.”

  He loses his patience with the crazy woman, and silently commands the RV to drive away. It jerks to a start and pulls out.

  She runs after them, shouting something about two girls named Lily and Brooke, but her words get lost as the RV rumbles away, kicking up a cloud of dirty snow.

  * * *

  “Tessa, she’s ready,” Tristan said from behind me.

  I called in the fog, blinked, and looked up at him. “She was so accurate that Jillian and Logan thought she was a fake.”

  Tristan snorted at the irony. “Any other clues?”

  “They’re driving an RV,” I said. “That moving square that Melanie saw my book inside? That was probably a cabinet inside the RV. And they’re looking for a place to stay now instead of driving around aimlessly.”

  “That’s good,” Tristan said.

  “Maybe. We saw them a lot while they were on the road. It might be harder for us to find them once they settle somewhere.”

  “But if Lady Elke can tell us where they are right now,” he said, “we should be able to catch up to them before that happens. Let’s get back in there and get that reading.”

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  I sat back on the couch, making sure to sit between Tristan and Melanie again. Lady Elke’s lip curled up at the sight of me. Tristan gave the sheet music and ballet shoe to Lady Elke again.

  Without releasing the cigarette from between her fingers, Lady Elke grabbed the items. She held them to her chest and twisted her lips, then looked up to the ceiling in deep concentration. “These people ain’t dead,” she said.

  “We know,” Tristan replied. Still, I felt relieved to hear it.

  “It’s them kids who was here this morning,” she said.

  “Yes,” Tristan said, offering no more information. “Where are they?”

  “He’s driving. She’s playing with her charm bracelet.”

  I tapped my foot anxiously. Logan was driving. Jillian was fiddling with her charm bracelet. But knowing what they were doing didn’t answer our question. “Where?” That’s all that mattered: where.

  Lady Elke closed her eyes. “He doesn’t like this new car. It’s too small. The RV had more space.”

  They got rid of the RV, Tristan flashed to me. “What are they driving now?” he asked Lady Elke.

  She licked her lips. “It’s shiny.”

  “Lady Elke, I need you to tell us where they are,” I said, trying to be patient. “The name of a town.”

  “I don’t see where. I only see what.”

  “Well then,” Tristan said, “what do you see around them? Street signs? Buildings?”

  “It glitters and glimmers.”

  “What, the sun?” he said. “Are they driving through a desert? Through somewhere sunny?”

  “Sparkles and glows.”

  I brought my shaking hands up to my mouth. “Tristan...”

  He exhaled with frustration, then tried a new question. “Which direction are they driving in? North, south, east, or west? Where is the sun?”

  “Everything is sparkling,” Lady Elke breathed. “It’s so bright.”

  “No, where is the sun, in relation to their car? East or west?”

  “Silver.” Lady Elke’s single-eyed gaze wandered around the room. “All those faces. All those people.”

  “My nightmare,” I said, nerve endings tingling with dread. “Tristan, she’s seeing my nightmare.”

  “The eyes.” Lady Elke shook her head, as if she was trying to shake my nightmare from her head.

  Tristan went rigid. Tessa, get out of here. Take Melanie with you, and get out of here now.

  Tristan told me to get out of here; he was having a warning premonition, but I couldn’t leave. I couldn’t move.

  “Melanie,” he whispered. “Get out of here. Run.”

  “Where should I go?” she whimpered. “What do I do?”

  “Outside! Go. Now.”

  Melanie squealed and darted from the house. But Lady Elke didn’t spare her a glance. Her one eye glared at me, weighed me down. I was frozen in her gaze. The Nightmare Eyes too, burned into me, trapping me, holding me prisoner.

  Tristan stood, pulling me up with him, and backed toward the door. “You stay away from her.”

  “You need to pay, Tessa,” she rumbled, her voice heavy with rage. “You need to bleed. You need to spill your tainted blood.” She giggled with hysteria as her eye rolled in its socket.

  She knew my name was Tessa. She knew my blood was tainted. And was—was her eye black? Tristan do you see her eye it’s black it’s Nightmare black...

  “How did she do that? Tessa, run!” he yelled. He grabbed me around the middle with one arm and ran outside, dragging me with him. Once Lady Elke couldn’t see me anymore, I was able to move again. Able to breathe.

  Melanie was waiting just off the porch, scrunched down behind a post. “Is it over?” she quivered.

  “Ye—” Tristan’s eyes widened as another premonition struck him. “No!”

  We needed to run, we needed to hide, but there was nowhere to go. I spied something across the yard—a weathered, crumbling shed. “There! Go!”

  I grabbed Melanie’s hand, dragging her as I ran with Tristan to the shed. He forced the door open, and I glanced behind me. Lady Elke came lurching out of her house, barefoot in her cutoff shorts and stained tank top, clutching something long and silver and shiny in her hand. A knife.

  Of course it was a knife. Not quite the same as the one in my nightmares, but the blade was just as long. Just as silver. Just as sharp.

  The blade reflected a ray from the setting sun.

  Lady Elke stopped in her tracks, gulping in air. Looking for me. She wiped a glob of drool from her mouth with the back of the hand holding the knife.

  She spied me in the doorway of the shed and howled with rage. Tristan dove with Melanie and me inside, then slammed the door shut behind us.

  The wooden shed was old and corroding; sunlight streamed in through the dirty windows and several holes that had rotted through the walls. One ray landed on me like a spotlight. Wind blew through the holes with a constant echoey whistle.

  “Tristan,” Melanie cried. “What should I do?”

  “Get back there and hide,” he whispered, and pointed to the back of the shed.

  Shaking, whimpering, she squeezed herself into a dark space next to a rusty snowblower. Grunting, I pushed a lawn mower in front of her to hide her better. Tristan held the door shut with one hand as he strained to reach the yard and garden tools that
hung on the walls. Shovels, hammers, screwdrivers. Rakes, hoes, garden shears. Saws, circular blades, a chain saw blade, hedge clippers. The setting sun reflected on the tools’ smooth blades, making them glimmer and glitter, sparkle and glow, illuminating the walls with silver.

  Lady Elke flew at the shed, crashing into it with such intensity the walls shook. “Tessa!” she screamed. “Killers’ Spawn!”

  This was it. This was Deirdre’s dream.

  A little house with silver walls.

  And soon, the silver will change to red. Red with blood.

  “Spawn! Killers’ Spawn!” Lady Elke pounded on the shed. “You need to spill your filthy-dirty-tainted-foul blood! You need to bleed. You need to bleeeeeeeed.”

  I was going to bleed to death in this little house with silver walls, and since I’d led Tristan and Melanie here, they were going to die too.

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  “Killers’ Spawn,” Lady Elke howled outside the shed. “You need to bleed! You need to bleeeeeeeeed!”

  The door jerked as she threw herself at it. The entire structure rattled and swayed, creaking and screeching, screaming for me because I could not.

  The shed wouldn’t hold for long.

  Keeping the door pulled closed with one hand, Tristan reached again for the tools hanging on the wall. His fingertips knocked a pair of garden shears to the floor. He dragged it over with his foot, then grabbed it. He clutched in his fist over his shoulder, ready to fight.

  “Tessa,” he snapped. “Get back there with Melanie.”

  “No.” I wasn’t going to hide and let Tristan fight for me. I was not Melanie. Shaking, I took the hedge clippers from a hook and held it over my shoulder like a dagger.

  “Tessa!” Tristan yelled. “Go hide!”

  I planted my feet, drew a breath for courage, and tightened my grip on the hedge clippers.

  Panting and wheezing, Lady Elke rattled the shed, pounding on it. It creaked and shook, causing the sunrays to dance merrily, making the walls so silver-bright I was blinded. Terror sang in my ears, time moved in tiny increments.

  And then Lady Elke stopped screaming. Stopped pounding. The shed stopped rattling.

  In the silence I whispered, “Where did she—”

  Tristan’s eyes flew open wide. “Tessa she’s coming in you need to hide NOW!”

  From outside an agonized shriek howled over running footsteps, and the door burst open, sending Tristan crashing to the floor. The shed flooded with light. Melanie screamed.

  Lady Elke’s single eye swirled maniacally in its socket, until it landed on me. The silver walls gleamed blindingly bright, forcing my vision to narrow, narrow, narrow, focusing it on that black Nightmare Eye. Dark as a starless night and black as a cavern of coal, it held me frozen.

  Distantly I heard Tristan shouting, but I remained frozen, unable to move, unable to look away from the vengeful, gleeful, triumphant Nightmare Eye.

  “Tainted Tessa, tarnished Tessa,” Lady Elke cackled. With both hands, she raised the knife over her head.

  Then she collapsed with a thud.

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  “Gotta admit, I might not have stopped her if it was just you two trapped in this shed,” John Kellan said to Tristan and me. Victorious, he stood with one booted foot on Lady Elke’s crumpled form as he slid his tranq gun back into its holster. “But I wasn’t about to let this woman kill my niece.”

  “U-Uncle Johnny?” Melanie whimpered from her hiding spot in the back of the shed.

  Brushing past me, Kellan tromped over Tristan to push the lawn mower away and help her up. “I tracked you all the way here through your phone, sweetheart,” he cooed.

  “Melanie,” Tristan croaked from the floor. “Mel, I’m sorry.”

  Cheeks soaked with tears, she wouldn’t look at either of us as Kellan guided her gently from the shed.

  Two guards in black APR jackets stood outside. Kellan cocked his head at Lady Elke. “Get that woman and transport her to the Underground.”

  They pushed me aside as they lifted her, one by her shoulders, the other by her knees, and carried her out. Her head fell back, and her one eye stared out into nothing.

  Her mossy green eye.

  That woman had tried to kill me today. I’d grown up thinking that Dennis Connelly wanted to kill me, but he was only trying to rescue me. When Kellan abducted me from Twelve Lakes, I’d believed he was going to kill me, but that was just a ruse to get my parents to surrender. Even my mother, who’d once flown me against the wall in a fit of sleepless rage and who’d sliced open my stomach in a fit of panicked terror, had never wanted to kill me.

  But Lady Elke, she’d wanted to kill me. It wasn’t a lie. It wasn’t an act. Lady Elke had looked into my mind and saw my shame and grief and guilt, and it was so strong, so deep, that she’d fed upon it. It made her eye turn Nightmare black. It made her want to spill my tainted, tarnished, Killers’ Spawn blood.

  I dropped the hedge clippers, then slumped to my knees as my muscles lost their strength and all energy drained from me.

  Lady Elke’s knife had dropped when she collapsed, and from his place on the floor, Tristan angrily shoved it away with the heel of his shoe. With a huge exhale, he sank back to the floor. He scraped his hands in his hair, then stayed like that, his arms hiding his face from my view.

  “Tristan,” I whispered. “Are you okay?”

  It took him a long time to answer. “You almost got us all killed, Tessa.”

  “I know. I’m sorry.”

  “This was what my mother dreamed about,” he said. “Brinda drew it too.”

  “I know.”

  “This shed is the little house. The tools are the walls of silver.”

  “Yes.”

  He sat up, leaning on his elbows. “You knew this would happen if you left Lilybrook, and you did it anyway. You didn’t tell anyone you got a lead. You sneaked out of town. You flew out to some godforsaken place in the middle of nowhere, and then not only did you almost get yourself killed, you almost got Melanie and me killed too.”

  I crawled over to him, crawled through the tools and junk and dirt. “Tristan, I’m sorry.” I put my hand on his arm, but he flinched.

  Slowly, he stood, the setting sun making his shadow fall over me. “All I’ve ever wanted to do is keep you safe,” he said, “but I can’t. It makes me feel like a failure, Tessa. I’m always going to fail you.”

  Then he walked out.

  * * * * *

  We hope you enjoyed PART FIVE of

  Clara Kensie’s thrilling and romantic serial

  RUN TO YOU!

  Read on for a sneak peek at

  RUN TO YOU PART SIX: SIXTH SENSE....

  About the Author

  Clara Kensie grew up reading every book she could find and using her diary to write stories about a girl with psychic powers who solved mysteries. She purposely did not hide her diary, hoping someone would read it and assume she was writing about herself. Since then, she’s swapped her diary for a computer and admits her characters are fictional, but otherwise she hasn’t changed one bit.

  The complexities of family, friendship and love have always intrigued Clara. Wanting to study human nature, in college she triple-majored in psychology, sociology and social services, then threw in a criminal justice minor for good measure. She interned at a group home for troubled teen girls. She visited prisons. Today Clara lives outside Chicago with her husband, their two kids and their trouble-making cat, appropriately named The King of Chaos. She writes twisty mysteries and chilling thrillers for young adults—but it’s the romance that will take your breath away. When she’s not torturing her characters, she’s on Twitter and Tumblr, reading YA lit or looking for her keys. Visit her website at clarakensie.com.

&nbs
p; A family on the run from a deadly past, and a first love that will transcend secrets, lies and danger…

  Looking for more Clara Kensie? Be sure to catch all 6 parts in her fast-paced, romantic-suspense serial, Run to You. Available now in ebook format.

  Run to You Part 1: First Sight

  Run to You Part 2: Second Glance

  Run to You Part 3: Third Charm

  Run to You Part 4: Fourth Shadow

  Run to You Part 5: Fifth Touch

  Run to You Part 6: Sixth Sense

  Order your copies today!

  Be sure to also catch these other great Harlequin TEEN titles, available now:

  White Hot Kiss by Jennifer L. Armentrout

  Bitter Sweet Love by Jennifer L. Armentrout (novella)

  Heartbeat by Elizabeth Scott

  Stir Me Up by Sabrina Elkins

  Another Little Piece of My Heart by Tracey Martin

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  “Captivating, mysterious, fun, and deep…for readers of John Green or any realistic YA authors, I would highly recommend this new wonderful novel.”

  —Fresh Fiction

  Five Strangers. Countless adventures. One epic way to get lost. Don’t miss one of the most anticipated debuts of 2014, Let’s Get Lost (August 2014), by Adi Alsaid.

  Available in ebook.

  Order your copy today!

  Four teens across the country have only one thing in common: a girl named Leila.

  She crashes into their lives in her absurdly red car at the moment they need someone the most.

  Hudson, Bree, Elliot and Sonia find a friend in Leila. And when Leila leaves them, their lives are forever changed. But it is during Leila’s own 4,268-mile journey that she discovers the most important truth—sometimes, what you need most is right where you started. And maybe the only way to find what you’re looking for is to get lost along the way.

 

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