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The Noru: Blue Rose (The Noru Series, Book 1) Page 18


  I was about to intervene when I heard a human baby cry. I knew I needed to see to the baby’s safety first. I quietly entered through the window and carried the baby out. When I went back in, Pryor was on fire on the floor. The demons tried to stop me from saving her.

  I killed one of them; the other escaped. I then carried Pryor away. It was only when she was safe and sound in the warehouse that I started to think clearly.

  Bex and East had gone to watch over Randy. Meanwhile Key had come out of her makeshift hospital room and told us Pryor was better and should wake soon. That’s when the tension in the air began to lift. I knew for sure because that’s when I was attacked by Swoop. Well, attacked is the wrong word, but she did leap onto my back and wrap her legs and hands around me.

  “How dare you stay away so long? Look how hot and amazing I’ve gotten during your absence,” she demanded.

  I playfully threw her off of me knowing she’s impossibly agile and would land on her feet. Sure enough, Swoop did a few back flips and landed right in front of me. She stood there poised and ready to be marveled over.

  The truth is Swoop had turned into a hot chick. Before she was pretty but now she was an absolute babe. That’s what most guys would see, but not me. Swoop was like my little sister. I could never think of her in those terms.

  “Actually, you’re a little on the scrawny side. In fact you’re kind of ugly,” I replied with a smile.

  “I never liked you,” she informed me as she beamed and embraced me tightly.

  Key told me she was glad that I was safe as she wrapped her arms around me. I’ve always admired her skills. Watching her kill is truly like watching an artist at work. I never got as close to Key as I did to her sister. I think it was because I knew Bex had feelings for Pry and it didn’t feel right that I never mentioned it to her. And even if I did, I’m not sure she’d believe me. And anyway what would be the point?

  A few hours later the twins told me that Pryor was awake and wanted to see me. I thought of all the things I wanted to say to her. Unlike most girls, Pryor was never into the pretty flowers and scenic places. She loved anything odd and out of place.

  She said odd things on earth were examples of Omnis’s humor. And that discovering something odd was like catching Omnis in an unguarded moment of laugher. So she made a list of strange and unusual things she’d like to see. She called it her “Ha-Ha” list.

  I wanted to tell her that she was never far from my mind and that I kept up the list in my travels. I added things that I thought she’d get a kick out of seeing. There’s the blob fish. Humans consider them ugly because they’re a misshaped blob. Yet I knew Pryor would find them intriguing if not adorable. Then there’s the tree I found with a car embedded in the trunk. And a river so salty that when the humans go into it, they come out twice the size they went in.

  I wanted her to know that I visited every place she ever told me she traveled to with her mom so that I could see what she saw. And most of all I needed her to know that I wanted her. I always wanted her.

  Yet when I entered the room and saw her standing there with the new clothes the twins went out and got her, all I could think was how close I came to losing her. The more I thought about it, the more it upset me. And in true “Silver” fashion, I blew it. I lost my temper and yelled at her.

  “Hey, what are you doing?” Pryor asks, pulling me out of my flashback.

  Focus, Aaden. She’s mourning her brother and she needs you to stay focused on the here and now.

  “Oh, I was just gonna take care of the fire, it’s dying,” I reply as I send a small Powerball into the fireplace. The dying embers are now bright flames.

  “You seem pretty far away. What were you thinking about?” she asks.

  “Nothing. How are you feeling?”

  “Like I want to sleep forever,” she shares.

  “My dad was like that after my mom died. It took a while for him to snap out of it.”

  “How long?” she asks.

  “Too long.”

  I go over and apply more of Diana’s mixture to her wings. Then I make her drink more of Key’s mixture. She tells me it tastes awful but it does help.

  “Has it been raining all this time?” she asks.

  “Yeah, but it’ll stop,” I promise her.

  “I wish I could talk to my parents—tell them how sorry I am that I didn’t protect Sam.”

  “Pry, they already know. And blaming yourself won’t help.

  “If you’re feeling up to it we can maybe take a walk? The rain has slowed down,” I tell her, hoping to improve her mood.

  She doesn’t reply. Her eyes are already closed. She’s gone again.

  ********

  The next day, I head back to the Seller shop to get more supplies for us. When I get back,

  I knock on the door of the cabin before entering.

  “Hey, can I come in?” I ask.

  “Just a sec,” she says.

  I’m glad she’s awake but what she says will take a few seconds takes like ten minutes. I still don’t know what girls do that makes them take so long to get ready, but I have come to accept that as a fact of life. Pryor calls out and tells me to enter. I open the door and find her standing there in a tee shirt and nothing else.

  She is easily the most amazing thing Omnis has ever created. But honestly I felt that way when she had her clothes on...

  “Oh, I’m sorry. I didn’t know you were—I’ll come back,” I tell her as I quickly head for the door.

  “No, don’t go. When I said come in, I meant it,” she says with a soft smile.

  “Um...where are your pants?” I ask.

  “Well, these few days all I’ve been doing is going from ‘sorrow’ and ‘rage’ to ‘more sorrow’ and ‘more rage.’ I want to feel something new. So I thought we could...you know,” she says shyly.

  “Oh.” Is all I can think to say.

  “So...you want to?” she asks.

  “I’m gonna go so you can put your clothes back on.”

  “What? Why?” she pushes, sounding hurt and insulted.

  “We can’t do this.”

  “Why not?”

  “Because you’re in mourning for someone you love, someone we both loved.”

  “I know what I’m mourning. You don’t need to remind me. Why can’t we just do this? I mean really who cares?”

  “Pryor, we can’t.”

  “Why? And don’t blame it on grief.”

  “Okay, you want another reason? How about this: you’re not ready.”

  “You’re not in my head or my body. How do you know I’m not ready to...you know,” she says.

  “For one thing, people who are ready to have sex don’t call it ‘you know.’”

  “So you’re turning me down because my vocabulary is too childish for you?” she replies.

  “I’m saying—”

  “Okay, fine. Let’s try it again. Aaden, would you like to fuck?” she replies crudely.

  I march up to her and lean in; I can tell by her wide eyes, she’s thrown by how near I am to her. She thinks it’s about to happen. We are about to have sex. Instead I reach past her shoulder, grab her jeans, and hand them to her.

  “Put your pants on,” I order firmly.

  She rolls her eyes and I look away as she steps back into her jeans.

  “You’re such an asshole,” she snaps.

  “Why, because I don’t want to take advantage of you?”

  “Because I need you right now and you aren’t there for me,” she barks.

  “I am the only one who’s here for you. There’s no one else around.”

  “Too bad there isn’t. Then maybe I could get some,” she says.

  “Well, I’m sorry okay, but even if you weren’t in mourning I would never fuck you.”

  “WHY?”

  “BECAUSE YOU’RE NOT THE KIND OF GIRL I’D FUCK; YOU’RE THE KIND OF GIRL I’D...”

  I don’t finish my thought because it’s pointless. She doesn’
t need to know how many times I’ve thought about being with her. She doesn’t need to know that she’s my first and last thought every single day. And she certainly doesn’t need to know what even the thought of holding her hand does to me.

  “The kind of girl you’d what?” she asks.

  I can’t make eye contact with her. She moves in closer and tries to get me to look her in the face.

  “Aaden, help me out here. I thought you and I...we used to be close. And now it’s different. What happened?”

  “Things that I couldn’t control. Now isn’t the time to get into all that. Just please trust me when I say that us having sex isn’t going make your pain go away,” I reply.

  “How do you know?”

  “I just do. Sex takes all the bad stuff away but only for an hour or maybe even two. Then it all comes back; the black hole that was threatening to swallow you gets even bigger,” I admit.

  “It’s just as well. I’d probably be really bad at it,” she confesses as she plops down on the bed.

  “Why would you think that?”

  “Because I’m not like Key or Swoop. They know stuff. I’d get it all confused and put things places they don’t belong,” she says, only half joking.

  I smile despite myself and sit down beside her.

  “That’s crap. Whoever gets to be your first is damn lucky.”

  “I wouldn’t even know where to start with him. I’d be clumsy and uncertain,” she adds, mostly to herself.

  “He would be the same,” I reply.

  “Why?”

  “Because he’d know what to do with other girls but you’re not like other girls. The wonder and sparkle in your eyes would pull him in so deep he’d never be able to look away. When he leaned in to brush a stray hair from your face, he’d inhale your scent. And the fragrance would give him a peace he’d never been able to find, even in the light. And if he ever got the chance to lay with you...he’d fumble and his hands would shake like an idiot because he just couldn’t believe that kind of grace would be granted to him.”

  I didn’t even realize I had run my hand through her hair while I was talking. I had no idea that I had placed my hand on the nape of her neck. Her eyes had lured me in and distracted me from the fact that we were inches away from kissing and getting closer.

  I then did the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my entire life; I pulled away from Pryor.

  “Gonna check for ...demons. Make sure the area is safe,” I lie.

  I run out without waiting for a reply. I head to the small shed a few yards from the cabin. Once inside, I lock the door and gasp as the pain in my chest pulsates and then spreads throughout my body. The agony is so severe I’m brought to my knees, panting. The pain lasts for only a few minutes, but it’s enough to make me wish I were dead.

  I crawl over to the tool table and grab a piece from a mirror I had broken awhile back. I aim it at my chest so I can get a good look at the damage: The black mark carved into my stomach had been extended nearly two inches because of my encounter with Pryor a few moments ago. Had I kissed her, the carving would have extended even further. Had we made love like I wanted to, it would have brought me that much closer to The Center. And this time, they would surely kill me...

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN: THE LAST HUMAN

  She’s the first thing I see when I open my eyes. Something is different about her this morning. There’s a smile on her face. I look at her with suspicion and she points towards the window.

  “It stopped raining. I think my mom’s doing better. Also, I talked to the team. They’re waiting to hear about the last human. After that, we can come home.”

  “How bad is the last human hurt?” I ask.

  “He’s in intensive care. But I think he’ll make it. Please, Omnis, let him make it,” she begs.

  “I’m sure he will,” I reply as I turn my attention towards the sky.

  “I can’t stay in this cabin and worry all day. I was thinking maybe we could test our wings,” she says.

  “Are you sure you’re up for it?” I wonder.

  “What’s the matter? Scared if we race I’ll beat you like I did when we were kids?”

  “I’m sorry, the mixtures must be playing with your memory. I was always a faster flyer than you,” I remind her.

  “Yes, but I was better at defensive flying. Anyone can fly in a straight line,” she teases.

  “You really want to challenge me?” I ask.

  “Yes, and just so you know, I won’t go easy on you simply because you’re a boy.”

  “Wow, really? That’s how you want to play it?” I ask.

  “The very first Seller shop we see, we go in and loser buys,” I tell her.

  She doesn’t even give me a chance to get out of bed before she takes to the sky. I rush into the air and call her a cheater for taking off before me. She laughs and says we’re going to Italy and back.

  Once in the air, I can tell her mother really was feeling better. Not only had the rain stopped, the sun was actually bursting through the clouds. Also the winds are calm and no longer raging. This in no way meant that her family was over the loss of Sam. It just meant that Death was able to rein in her emotions.

  What’s even better is that Pryor’s flying has improved greatly. Her wings have healed up well. Her flying is smooth and controlled. But don’t think for a second I’m going to let her win. She’d kill me if she thought I wasn’t giving it my all in the race and allowed her to be victorious. In fact, her competitive edge is one of the things I love about her.

  She cuts through the air with impressive speed. We have always been pretty close in terms of our speed, but she’s really far ahead now. Damn her. I pick up the pace and she turns and finds me on her heels. She decides that no matter what happens she is not losing this race. I decide the same thing.

  She heads for the United Kingdom and zips through Stonehenge like it was a ride at an amusement park. She then flies to France, where she grabs hold of the Eiffel tower and swings around several times, mocking me.

  I’m closing in on her as she goes to Italy. Once there, she starts to straighten out the Leaning Tower of Pisa. But she sees I’m gaining on her and she quickly heads back to Ireland. Whoever gets back to the cabin first gets eternal bragging rights.

  Finally, we’re neck and neck. She picks up her speed, but it doesn’t stop me from getting ahead of her. She tries even harder and now it’s a dead heat to see who will make it to the cabin first. Just as we are about to land, she dips down to the valley below. I follow her and she signals to the humans down below.

  There’s a family stranded in a jeep on the side of the mountain on a narrow makeshift road. The wheels of the car keep turning, but the truck won’t move. The man and his wife exchange worried glances. They have two girls about Sam’s age in the truck and this isn’t the ideal place to get stuck.

  Things get worse when an animal howls somewhere in the distance. That causes the girls to start crying. Their mom tries to get them to calm down but it’s not working. We land a few yards away behind a large rock formation and approach them.

  I speak to the father and Pryor goes over to the mom. It would have taken only seconds to lift the car with my bare hands, but that would bring about questions from the humans. Instead I pretended that getting the car out of the muddy ditch is hard. She starts to make fun of the intense look on my face to keep the girls from crying.

  Soon both the father and I were making silly faces while we work so that the kids don’t get scared. It works all too well. The girls jump out of the car and right into the mud because it looked like their dad and I were having so much fun.

  We got the car out of the ditch, but by then we were all soaked in mud. I can’t say who started it for sure but we somehow got caught in a mud fight. It was boys versus girls. The boys never stood a chance.

  The family was very kind and wouldn’t let us go until we agreed to have dinner with them. So we all get into the truck and head into town. Once there, we clean up an
d join them at the dinner table.

  There are moments when I think it would be easier to be human. For example, this family doesn’t have a lot but judging by their interaction with the little girls, they’re happy. No one is pushing them to be good or bad. They just expect that they are humans and they have the capacity to be both good and bad at times. In the end I’m not really sure which of us got the worst deal from Omnis; angels or humans.

  When dinner is over we thank them and head outside to the cobblestone streets. The night air carries with it a cool breeze that makes the leaves sway. There are only a few humans around: couples. They stroll hand in hand, enjoying the change in the weather.

  “I think Natasha had a crush on you,” Pryor says.

  “Is that the one with the two braids or the ponytail?” I ask.

  “Braids,” she replies.

  “She had a nice laugh. I mean it’s been a while since I heard anyone actually giggle,” I admit.

  “So you’re gonna give her your Rah?” Pryor teases.

  A Rah is a red liquid encased in a shatterproof crystal that represents an angel’s heart.

  Giving someone your Rah is the equivalent to marriage. The two angels would place their Rah side by side. The Rahs would then be bound together, then placed somewhere on earth.

  If later one angel wanted to end the relationship, they would ask for their Rah back.

  Here’s the messed up part. If one angel isn’t ready to move on from the relationship and doesn’t want to let go, the Rahs will not separate.

  Okay, so what, right? Well, you can’t kiss anyone else while your Rah is bound to another. If you do you are sent flying through the air. I mean you literally cannot kiss anyone else. Your body repels anyone else’s kiss except for that of the angel to whom your Rah is bound.

  There are some mixtures that can help you get around that by tricking your body into thinking the angel you’re with is the angel you married. But the truth is it’s a pain in the ass to find. So just make damn sure you give your Rah to the right angel.

  “Does that stuff ever really work out?” I ask her.

  “Giving your Rah to someone? Yeah, of course.”