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Skyborn(30)

By:Leia Stone


"You're sure? You're sure that your sorcerer friend is one hundred percent certain I am half … ?" I couldn't finish.

Eva's reply shocked me. "Oh, honey, my friend isn't a sorcerer. He's a druid, and yes he's one hundred percent sure."

What did she just say? "You're friends with a druid?" Maybe it was wrong  of me to trust Eva. She could be working for the other side. How stupid  and naïve I was to give a sorcerer my blood!

"He's not like the others. He's the last of his kind. He takes magic  from the earth, not from dragons, and he wants to meet you, honey. I can  come over in the morning and we can tell the pack together. Then I can  take you to meet my friend."

Oh. Hell. No. I was not meeting any more druids, even if they claimed not to be the dragon killing kind. "Sure," I lied.

Eva paused. "It's going to be okay, Sloane. I'll make the pack see that you're nothing like those monsters."

But I was. I was like them because my freaking blood said so. "Okay  …  thanks, Eva."

She was silent for a moment before saying goodbye and hanging up.

I sat there in a numb silence for a minute. My mother was a druid  …   either that or she wasn't my biological mother, and I couldn't take the  latter. I knew nothing about druids, but my mother did have a special  affinity for gardening and that sort of thing. Maybe that was her druid  heritage. Some kind of earth power. Still  …  I couldn't see my mother  associating with those people from today. I couldn't see her killing  Logan-or any other being. She was gentle and kind-fierce when she needed  to be, but kind at heart. Had she given me hints along the way? She'd  always said my father was one of a kind and died protecting us. I  figured he was a cop or something by the way she spoke about him. Maybe  he was this Marcus person. She'd shown me a picture once-tall, with  light brown hair, and a chiseled jaw. And  …  he had fierce green eyes,  like me, like Logan. What Eva said had to be true. Either way, the most  important part was that I was a druid with freaky purple magic and I  needed to get the hell out of here.

I crossed the room and started shoving things into my duffle bag. I  couldn't stay here anymore. Not now, not after this. There were a room  full of angry druid-hating hunters downstairs, and I'd seen the way Dom  had looked at those men today. When the pack found out I was half druid  and not half sorcerer, they would never look at me the same, and I  couldn't bear it. Dom would be the first one to put a bullet between my  eyes.                       
       
           



       

I had a hundred grand in the bank. I could start over, lay low. I'd been  with Logan and the pack for a few days now and my dragon hadn't  shifted-I was getting more in control of it. I was going to be fine.

I heard footsteps coming up the stairs and I slowly crossed the room on  my tiptoes to turn out the light. Shadows danced under the door and I  heard a soft knock. "Sloane? You awake?" It was Logan. It was 9:09pm and  I was twenty-one years old-who would believe I was asleep? But I didn't  answer, and after a moment the footsteps retreated back downstairs. The  thought of leaving the pack  …  It made me sick. They had become my  friends, especially Nadine and Danny and  …  Logan. Logan was literally  the only other person in this world that I could relate to. But still, I  couldn't stay. What if my purple magic started lashing out and hurt  Logan? What if I started turning bad and tried to kill him or something  awful?

I peeked out the window and saw Keegan was walking Roxy and Ruben  outside. Okay, I needed to be smart about this. Keegan would see my car  and that would be good. The night shift started with Gear at 11pm. That  meant if I left now and Gear noticed my car gone at 11, it gave me about  a ninety-minute head-start if they came looking for me. I had a nearly  full tank of gas and enough crap in my car to live out of it for a week.  I wouldn't use my bank account until I could transfer the money into a  different one that Eva couldn't trace. I was going to be fine. They were  better off without me.

I pulled a sheet of paper from my sketchpad and scribbled a quick note so they didn't think I was kidnapped or anything crazy.



I don't belong here. Don't come after me.

I'm sorry.

Sloane



I took one last look at the note, then shouldered my pillow case pack  that was stuffed with my laptop, sketchpad, and clothes, and gave  Mittens a good rub down.

"Sorry, kid. I would take you with me if I could," I whispered, although  I'm not sure that was true. Something told me I would be sleeping a lot  better without her constantly trying to eat my hair or make a bed on my  face. But dammit she was cute.

I stood slowly and moved to the window of my unicorn bedroom. The window  faced the front of the house and my room was just over the porch. That  porch roof was going to be my savior tonight. But my thoughts were  frantic, on the verge of a nervous breakdown. I couldn't stop thinking  about the way that mountain lion shifter had leapt for me and my purple  magic just  …  spit out of me like wild fire, knocking him unconscious. I  was dangerous, but most importantly, I was a part of everything that  this pack hated. I felt dirty.

I gingerly stepped forward and ever so softly flipped the latch open to  unlock the window. I went through a rebellious stage when my mom's  cancer was first diagnosed. I would sneak out every night and meet Jen  at the park. We would sit under the play structure and stare up at the  sky and talk about how messed up and unfair the world was. It kept me  sane, and it also made me a master of sneaking out. Dragon hearing or  not, I was a ninja and would not be caught.

I hoped.

It took me about five minutes to open the window and pop off the screen.  This house was old and the screen was rusted in the corners. I had to  completely distort the frame to pull it into the room. I stood before an  open window, the fresh breeze blowing cold air into my face. Here we  go. I slipped off my shoes-too noisy-and tied them around my pack which  consisted of a pillowcase fashioned with shoelaces. Sock-footed would be  the best way to go. After using all of my ninja moves to get out the  window, I was about to close it again so that that the house didn't get  too cold, when I heard Keegan's voice.

Shit! He hadn't gone inside yet after walking Ruben and Roxy out.

"They're all diseased," Keegan said in an agreeable tone.

Dom must have been outside too, because it was his voice that answered.  "I'm telling you, we should start hunting them. Take them out one by one  and weaken Ardan's power."

Bile rose in my throat as I realized who he was talking about. Druids. Me.

Keegan blew out a puff of air. "Look, nothing I would love more than to  have a world with less druids in it, but we aren't hunters. We're  protectors, and now more than ever we have something special to protect.  Two skyborn."

Dom growled. "But if we could-"

"But nothing," Keegan said harshly. "Hunting druids could bring them  right to our doorstep and get Logan and Sloane killed. Drop it."

Dom huffed. "Fine. You owe me a beer."

Keegan must have been smiling, I could hear it in his voice. "Let's get inside."                       
       
           



       

The front door opened and then closed again; I released the breath I had  been holding. Wow. The druid hate with the pack was legit. Dammit, Mom,  why couldn't you have been a sorcerer?

After closing the window, I padded quietly to the roof and peeked slowly  over, relieved to find no one on the porch and the curtains pulled  shut.

The next maneuver was going to hurt like hell. I needed to hang off the  roof as much as I could and jump the rest of the way onto the crushed  rocks while wearing only socks. I was betting on my regenerative healing  thing still working, because my feet were going to bruise and be cut to  shit. I gradually lowered myself down, increasingly aware of how  inadequate my upper arm strength was. And as I was hanging from the  roof's edge with only about four feet left to the ground, I looked up at  Logan's room.

I had to admit that leaving him felt wrong. My dragon was restless  inside of me, probably because she knew Logan was safe. But when he  found out what I actually was  …  I couldn't bear to see the look on his  face.

I took one last deep breath and let go. I fell for longer than I  thought, then my feet hit the hard-crushed gravel below and I had to  bite down the whimper that wanted to leave my throat as pain shot up the  pads of my feet and into my shins. Mother fricker, crap on fire! I bit  my knuckle to release some of the tension that was making its way out of  me, and just stood there for a minute letting the adrenaline pulse  through me.