Mystics 3-Book Collection

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Mystics 3-Book Collection Page 3

by Kim Richardson


  Black steam rose from the demon’s scorched body, smothering the theatre with a rotten flesh stench.

  “Your laws, not mine!” it growled. “I care nothing for your treaty, Agent. Contracts conceived by humans mean nothing to us. I will rip the flesh off your bones!”

  With a flap of its singed wings the demon shot up in the air and came down at the man with destructive force.

  “Now why did it have to say that?” said the same man with a smug expression. “Agent Lee, some assistance.”

  Just as the creature was about to rip out the man’s throat with its talons, both men raised their weapons and fired at the same time. Two balls of liquid fire engulfed the winged demon. It hit the wall and slumped to the ground, howling in pain and anger. Within seconds the fire consumed it like a piece of paper. The demon disappeared and ashes fell to the ground like blackened snow. The Duyen demon was no more.

  Zoey was mesmerized. The man called Agent Lee slipped his gun back into a fold in his long black trench coat. With his shades, he looked ready to walk the runway for the new clothing line of FBI outfits. He was younger than the other man and appeared to be Asian. Although he was a few inches shorter than the other man, Zoey saw that he compensated with an over-the-top spiked black hairdo.

  “You know, Barnes, we should put a tighter leash on the Duyens,” said Agent Lee. “That’s three this week. You’d think they’d get the idea and stay in the Nexus. Oh great, now my coat’s all dirty. I just had it dry cleaned!” He started to pat down the dust on his trench coat and looked utterly appalled at his appearance.

  Zoey wasn’t sure whether to laugh or stay quiet. Who were these people? But she was glad about one thing—they had given her answers to one of her questions—the Nexus was a place where the monsters came from.

  “I’m just glad we fried it before it killed anyone else,” said the man called Barnes. “Hey, anyone in the mood for fried chicken…?”

  “What about her?” said the teenage boy.

  Zoey began to blush.

  He was tall for his age and athletic, like a hockey player. He wore a plain white t-shirt under a khaki jacket and jeans. His thick brown hair framed his perfectly chiseled face. His olive complexion and high cheekbones implied that his ancestors could have been native Indian. His dark almond-shaped eyes bore into hers, and she quickly looked away. There was something unsettling about his eyes.

  “I’m on it.” Barnes pulled out a cell phone from his jacket. “I’m calling in the Erasers—”

  “No, wait!” urged the teen. He stood facing Zoey with a puzzled expression on his face. “She was talking to it just before we got here. I’m positive that she could see it.”

  Zoey’s heart was in her throat. The rotten smell still lingered, and every breath was like sucking in toxic waste. The room began to spin, and she strained to keep still. She couldn’t faint now, in front of these people, and worse—she didn’t want anything called Erasers near her either.

  “She did, did she? Well, that’s gotta be a first,” said Barnes as he dropped his phone in his jacket pocket.

  The three strangers watched Zoey intensely without speaking for a moment. A cold sweat dripped down her back. It was the first time in her life she had met other people who shared her ability. They could see monsters, too, just like her. She had waited and prayed for this moment all her life, but it wasn’t happening quite as she had imagined. They didn’t seem very happy about it. In fact, they seemed a little unnerved that she could see monsters, too. Was this a mistake? What were they going to do with her? Should she run?

  Finally, Barnes moved towards her until he was looming over her like a teacher about to reprimand her. “You there, kid, what was it that you saw? Did you see anything unusual?”

  Zoey fidgeted on the spot. “Apart from seeing you people burn a giant bat to smithereens—I guess nothing that unusual. Of course I could see it. It was standing right in front of me. It was about to kill me, and then you three showed up.”

  The boy gave the other two a told-you-so look. But their shared expressions were grim, not at all the joyous reception she had imaged. Zoey had been waiting all her life to meet people like her. She wasn’t alone. But their third-degree was making her nervous. Maybe they were going to vaporize her like they did the demon.

  “Well, slap me silly and call me Susan! We’ve got ourselves a Drifter. I’m Agent Barnes,” he said and then pointed to the others, “this is Agent Lee, and our young fellow here is Tristan. We’ve been tracking your so-called giant bat for two days. It killed three people.”

  Agent Barnes hazel eyes measured her, and close up Zoey could see a scar on his chin that was surrounded by days old stubble.

  “So, what’s your name, kid?”

  “Zoey St. John.”

  “Well, Zoey St. John, do you think we could speak to your parents?” asked Agent Barnes.

  Zoey swallowed hard. “My parents are dead. I live…lived with a foster mother.”

  “What do you mean by lived?” asked Agent Lee, and he slid his hand inside his jacket. “Did you do something to her?”

  Since it looked like they were about to shoot her, Zoey decided to tell them the truth. “She turned into a monster. I think it used her body as a host—I killed her with a bag of salt.”

  Tristan snorted but was immediately silenced by a dangerous look from Agent Lee.

  Agent Barnes measured her. “Must have been a Skin demon, they’re really hard to detect—and when you do, it’s usually too late. Tell me, how did you know to use salt on it?”

  Zoey took a moment then spoke. “I’d read that the occult use salt to kill demons. I’ve been using salt for years, and so far it’s worked for me, except for tonight.”

  “Not all demons are the same, you need fire to kill a Duyen demon,” said Agent Barnes as he sized her up.

  “Well, you’re a very strange girl, Zoey. How is it that you’ve managed to avoid being put into an asylum or killed by illegal mystics?”

  “I’ve learned to keep my mouth shut,” she answered shortly, confused by his last words. “I did what I had to, to survive.”

  “Hmmm.” Agent Barnes shared a sidelong glance with Agent Lee, and then he lowered his eyes. He was eyeing Zoey as if she were some criminal.

  “Well, we can’t leave you here now, can we? It’s not safe for you. You’ll have to come with us back to the hive. Management will need to do some digging, but ultimately they’ll decide what’s to be done with you.”

  He reached out and steered Zoey towards the edge of the platform.

  Zoey wiggled out of his grip. “Just a second! What’s management? What do you mean by what’s to be done with me? I’m not some dog to be put in a cage. It sounds a lot like the foster system to me. Why should I come with you anyway? I don’t even know you—you could be serial killers for all I know. I don’t need anyone. I’ve been alone all my life, and I can take care of myself.”

  She folded her arms against her chest with a defiant look on her face. It was too late to tell them that she had nowhere else to go—she didn’t want them to think she needed them. “I’m not going anywhere.”

  Agent Lee grabbed her from behind. “You have no choice. You’re going to get killed unless you come with us.”

  “Let me go!” Zoey kicked his kneecap with a satisfying crunch. He howled and let her go, staggering backward.

  “Wait!” Tristan came in between Agent Lee, who had a murderous look in his eye, and Zoey. He turned towards her with his hands up in surrender.

  “Listen, I know this must sound crazy to you, but you have to trust us. We’re the only ones that can help you.”

  “I don’t need any help,” grumbled Zoey.

  “Really? That’s not what it looked like ten minutes ago.”

  Tristan gave her a cheeky grin. “You’d be dead if it weren’t for us. Truth is, there are a lot more and deadlier illegal mystics out there. They’ll do anything to stay here in this world, and I mean anything. They don’t wa
nt to be caught and sent back. Once they recognize that you can see them—adios—you’re dead.”

  “I’m not an agent.”

  “To them you are.” Zoey looked confused.

  “—because you’re one of us,” answered Tristan. “You’re one of the Sevenths.”

  Zoey’s mouth felt like it was full of cotton balls. “I’m a what?”

  “A Seventh, a human born with the seventh sense.”

  “There’s a seventh sense? Seriously?”

  “Yes,” answered Tristan. “Sight, hearing, taste, touch, smell—are the five. The sixth sense is your gut feeling, your intuition. But the seventh sense is the ability to see and feel the supernatural.”

  Zoey wasn’t sure how to react to this new piece of information. But somehow she knew it was the truth. She had the seventh sense. She’d always had it.

  “Did you get cold goose bumps right before you saw the Duyen demon?” asked Tristan.

  “Yes.”

  “That’s part of your Seventh sense,” said Tristan, and she noticed that he was doing his best not to meet her eyes. “It’ll all become clearer, but first you have to come with us. Trust me, you’ll be a lot safer with us—I promise we won’t hurt you.”

  Zoey studied Tristan’s face, she could always tell when someone was lying, and he wasn’t. She let out a long sigh and said, “Okay, I believe you. All I own is in my backpack, so you could say that I’m already packed for the trip. Where are you taking me?”

  It was Agent Barnes who answered. “To the hive.”

  Chapter 3

  Hive # 416

  After a brief conversation on his cell phone, Agent Barnes ordered everyone out of the theatre. He told Zoey to sit tight while they waited for their ride. The rain had stopped, and bright stars winked from a dark blue sky. Agent Lee leaned on the theatre’s front wall, eyeing her suspiciously from a distance. He stood with his right hand on his hip like a cowboy ready to draw. He hadn’t forgiven her for the blow to his kneecap. Since she had made up her mind to join them to go to whatever this hive was, she sat on the edge of the sidewalk and tied her wild red mane into a ponytail and waited.

  Tristan came and sat next to her. “So, how long have you been a foster kid?”

  At first she was taken aback by the question. Her skin tingled at his nearness almost as though there were another monster nearby. But the sensation soon vanished, as though it had never happened.

  After a moment, she answered. “Since I was four, so about ten years.”

  “Do you remember your real parents?”

  Zoey stared at her shoes, a heavy weight on her heart. “Not really. I get images sometimes. I know my mother had red hair like mine, but that’s it, I don’t remember my father at all.”

  “Do you know what happened to them?” asked Tristan, his voice soft and full of compassion.

  Zoey shook her head. “No. All they could tell me back at the orphanage was that I was dropped off without a name at one of the facilities. I don’t know who they were, or if they’re alive or dead. Without a real name, it’s not like I can look for them either.”

  Tristan threw a pebble into the street. “So who gave you the name Zoey St. John?”

  “The orphanage did.”

  She felt a sting in her chest as she always did when she spoke of the orphanage—it always made her uncomfortable, like she was a second-class citizen. Seeing her name written down had made it seem more real to her, even though she knew it wasn’t her given name. One day she would discover her real name, she promised herself.

  “I was named after the St. John’s orphanage in Toronto,” she continued, “that’s how they name the nameless kids. They chose names for kids alphabetically, and when I was dropped off they were up to the letter Z. They gave us easy names to remember I guess. I’m just glad they didn’t call me Jane Doe.”

  “I think Zoey St. John is a cool name.”

  Zoey felt the heat rise on her face.

  She thought it was best to change the subject before she began to sweat and before her face turned the same color as her hair. “So, how long have you been an agent?”

  Tristan scratched the back of his neck, his face reddening as well. “I’m not an agent. I’m just an operative.”

  Zoey noticed the dimples on his cheeks when he smiled. It was a very handsome face, and she felt herself drawn to it. “What’s an operative?” she asked, still staring.

  “Well I guess you could say it’s what we call agents in training,” he answered.

  He avoided Zoey’s stare. “You need to be accepted in the operative program first—it’s a very selective program amongst our people. Not everyone has what it takes to become an agent.”

  He was very interested in his sneakers.

  Somehow, Zoey felt more at ease seeing his own discomfort, and she took comfort it in. “So how long until you become an agent, then?”

  “Three to four years,” he told her brightly. “You have to be at least fourteen years old to be considered for the program. I started six months ago with a few others. It’s always been a dream of mine, to become an agent.”

  Something was nagging her. “Why did Agent Barnes call me a Drifter? What is that exactly?” She had a feeling it wasn’t a good thing.

  “A Drifter is a Seventh who’s been on their own for a very long time and lost to the agency,” answered Tristan. “Like you, they have no idea that there are others like them in the world. Usually, if the agency hasn’t found them when they’re really young, they start to believe they’re crazy. They eventually go insane.”

  Zoey looked away. “Sounds great.” A shiver rolled down her back. She couldn’t help but wonder if that might have happened to her.

  “So…how many more operatives are there? Are there some at this hive place where we’re going? Is that where you train, at the hive place?”

  “Yes, there are a few of us.”

  Zoey couldn’t help but be fascinated.

  “So if you don’t become an agent, what else is there?” She imaged herself as an agent battling monsters like a ninja.

  Tristan laughed softly. “You ask a lot of questions.”

  Zoey did her best to hide her excitement in her voice.

  “I’ve been waiting all my life to ask them. I feel like my head’s going to explode if I don’t ask them—you have no idea.”

  Tristan watched a car roll by and disappear around the corner. “Well, it depends on the Seventh. Some try to live normal lives, away from the agency, but even they get basic combat training to protect themselves from dangerous illegals. It’s really up to each Seventh to decide what he or she wants to do. There’re loads of opportunities for them. They could teach, own a business, do research, or even work in management.”

  “Am I going to be an operative, too?” she asked. She knew that her eagerness showed on her face. Just the thought sounded too good to be true. How could she be anyone important? Her stomach twisted.

  Tristan didn’t answer right away. “I’m not sure exactly. Management will decide, I guess. Sorry, but I really don’t know.”

  Before Zoey could ask more questions, Agent Lee moved towards them, holding up his cell phone.

  “Just got a call from the agency,” he said, and then he lowered his voice. “You won’t believe this—an interloper’s been stolen at the Boston hive. Sounds like the thieves put up a pretty big fight, too—lots of casualties, very violent, eight agents were killed. They’re sending reinforcements.”

  Agent Barnes’ face darkened, and he stood silent for a moment. “There’s only one reason why someone or something would want such a dangerous device. The interloper was securely bound. Nobody should have been able to get it. How did they get past security?”

  “I don’t know,” answered Agent Lee, perplexed. “I’ve been asked to investigate.”

  “The interloper’s location was a heavily guarded secret,” Agent Barnes said. “It was well hidden and protected. Whoever is behind this had inside knowledge. I�
��m sure of it.”

  Agent Lee looked grim but said nothing.

  Zoey wondered what an interloper was. It had to be something of great importance. She longed to know what it was. The situation sounded really serious. People had lost their lives because of it. She was itching to know more about this device.

  As she opened her mouth to ask Tristan, a black SUV with tinted windows pulled up to the curb. Agent Barnes walked up to the vehicle and opened the back door.

  “In you go, Little Red,” he said and gestured to Zoey. He still looked angry. “It’s getting late, and we have a long drive out of the city.”

  Agent Lee snapped his fingers at Tristan. “We should go. I hate these kinds of things—now everyone’s a suspect. Keep your eyes open for anything unusual, even if you think it’s minor.”

  Tristan got up. “See you later, Zoey,” he said and started to walk away.

  Zoey jumped to her feet. “What? You’re not coming?”

  The idea of being alone in a car with Agent Barnes wasn’t exactly a pleasant one. She preferred the company of someone her own age. The anxiety was choking her, she hated not knowing where they were going or what these Sevenths were going to do with her.

  Tristan turned around, and Zoey could see he was holding a round metal compact the size of his palm. On the top was a ring dial with a series of engraved numbers around the edges like the face a clock. And in its center was a needle that pointed to locations on a map. She could see it had mirrored surfaces on the inside.

  A compass, thought Zoey. A very fancy compass.

  “Can’t,” answered Tristan as he continued to manipulate the device.

  “I have to go with Agent Lee to Boston—it’s part of my training as an operative—to work with an agent out on the field. I got lucky today.”

  He smiled at her. “But don’t worry, Agent Barnes is a big teddy bear—he doesn’t bite, not always.”

  Agent Barnes cleared his throat awkwardly. “Hey, I do bite when I have to.”

  Agent Lee pulled out a similar mirrored compass from the folds of his trench coat. He flipped it open, stared at himself through it, and after adjusting his hair he folded the two sides together just as Tristan had done.

 

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