Haunted
Page 110

 Kelley Armstrong

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I knelt beside Jaime.
"Is she okay?" I asked. "What can I do?"
He pulled back and began chest compressions. "We lost her for a second, but I think she's coming back.
Can you take over the—?"
"Lucas?"
Savannah's voice drifted out from the back of the house. Her footsteps clomped across the kitchen floor.
 
"Mom?"
"In here, baby. Come—"
A bone-chilling scream cut me short. I sprang to my feet and raced for the kitchen.
 
 
Chapter 50

THE KITCHEN WAS EMPTY. "She must still be outside," I said as I jogged to the back door. "Go back to Jaime. Make sure she's okay."
"If you need me—" Lucas began.
"I'll call."
I ran out the back door. Though the sun had fallen, the floodlights from the neighbor's yard lit the lawn to near-daylight, and I only needed a single sweep to know Savannah wasn't there. As I turned toward the drive, I glimpsed rheumy eyes glaring through the side fence. Lucas and Paige had erected a privacy fence around their yard, but there was just enough space between the slats for a determined neighbor to peer through.
"You!" I said, wheeling.
The old man wobbled back. I strode to the fence.
"Did you see a—Savannah, my ward—did you see her out here?"
"Watch your tone, girl," he snapped, coming back to the fence. "You—"
"Did you see her?"
"Ran off on you, didn't she? I may be old, but I'm not deaf. I heard them arguing out here, her and your husband. They can whisper all they want, but I know arguing when I hear it."
"Good for you. But Lucas went back inside and then—"
"Then the girl went back inside and someone screamed. I heard that. Don't think I didn't."
I gritted my teeth and wished those slits in the fence were a little wider, just wide enough to get my hand through and grab the old bugger by the throat.
"You saw her go back inside? And then she came out again?"
"Nope. Probably ran out the front door. You kids can't control that girl. And now she's run off, hasn't she? Good riddance, I say."
I flicked a knock-back spell at him. He hit the ground with a yelp.
"Hope you broke a hip," I mumbled as I ran back toward the house.
I threw open the door to the lean-to and crossed the darkened shed, gaze fixed on the still-open back door. Something fell on my back. I went down, slamming face-first into the concrete floor. Knees jabbed into my back and fingers dug into my shoulders.
 
I tried to flip over, but the hands went to my neck and squeezed so hard I barely had time to register pain before everything went dark.
 
I came to on my back. Savannah stared down at me, face twisted in hate and rage. For a second, my gut went ice-cold. She thought I'd killed Jaime, maybe even Paige. Then I looked into her eyes, and knew my daughter wasn't in there.
The Nix leaned down, her hands still locked around my throat.
"How does it feel, witch? I could snap your neck right now. Could have done it the moment I grabbed you. But this is more poetic, don't you think? Kill you the same way you tried to kill me."
I squirmed, but her demonic strength pinned me to the cold floor.
"I suppose I should thank you. Had I known I could leap bodies, I wouldn't have wasted my time in that silly necromancer." She closed her eyes and shivered. "This is a body truly worthy of a demon. So young and so powerful."
I opened my mouth to cast, but could only gasp.
"Now it'll be no trouble pinning the blame on your daughter, when it really is her hands choking the life from her guardian."
Her grip tightened and the world dipped into blackness. I fought to stay conscious, writhing beneath her, trying to get an arm or leg free.
"Why do you struggle?" she said. "You aren't going to die. You already did. You'll just return to where you were. It's the little witch who will suffer for your failure. Her and her husband, killed by their dear—"
The Nix jerked back, her grip loosening. She looked up over my head.
"Wait your turn, sorcerer," she snarled.
I tilted my head back to see Lucas pull a shovel from the wall.
"Get off her," he said.
The Nix's eyes went wide. "Lucas? What are you—?"
"I know you aren't Savannah," he said, voice level. "Now get off her."
As he pulled the shovel back, I wriggled out from under the Nix. She didn't even seem to notice, just smiled and got to her feet. Lucas swung back the shovel.
"Do you really think you can do that?" she asked. "What if you kill her? Hit just the right spot, and down she goes, never to get up again."
Lucas hesitated. I opened my mouth to tell him to do it, to hit her on the shoulder or the torso, just knock her down, but my bruised throat wouldn't let out anything more than a gasp. Lucas dropped the shovel and raised his hands to cast. The Nix charged.
I pushed to my feet, gasping for breath. The Nix grabbed Lucas by the arm and whipped him against the wall. His head struck a beam. She threw his limp body aside and turned on me.
 
I cast the anti-demon spell. Even as the words left my lips, panic shot through me. Did Paige know this spell? What else—
The Nix went rigid. Her limbs convulsed and she toppled back to the floor. I dove for her, but she kicked me away, stumbled to her feet, and staggered through the back door, into the house. Her footfalls stumbled down the stairs. Perfect. There was no escape route from the windowless basement. She'd have to come back this way. That anti-demon spell had almost drained Paige's reserve, and I was still gasping for air. I needed a moment. I looked down at Lucas. He needed me to take a moment.
I knelt beside Lucas and felt his pulse. Still strong. I cast a couple of healing spells in succession. It zapped the rest of Paige's spell-casting power, but I knew it was what she'd want me to do. After another quick check of his pulse and breathing, I leaned back on my heels and struggled to catch my breath.
The Nix was in Savannah. To stop her, I'd need to do what Lucas hadn't been able to do—attack my daughter. I pushed to my feet and ran into the house.
 
I touched down on the last step and paused there, scanning the dark basement. To my left was the freezer and cold cellar. To my right, the laundry room. Behind me would be two more rooms—