Free Read Novels Online Home

Generation One by Pittacus Lore (33)

NIGEL BARNABY

HOFN, ICELAND

NIGEL REMEMBERED THE SENSATION OF TELEPORTING well. He was the bloody pioneer champion of teleportation, for God’s sake. He’d been the first Human Garde to use a Loralite stone back during the invasion. That dizzying feeling of getting flung halfway across the world toward adventure—he’d missed it.

This was what he always wanted. To make a difference. To take action. To do.

Like he’d told Kopano at the gas station, it wasn’t always glamorous. Nigel still had flashbacks to the massacre at Patience Creek. He still got a bitter taste in his mouth when he thought about the bodies.

But the reality of the fight—against Mogadorians, against Harvesters, against snotty-looking Garde from frozen wasteland countries—it didn’t scare Nigel off or make him second-guess his Legacies. The ugliness only made him want to fight more and fight harder. He’d spent so many years as a nobody, ignored by his parents, relentlessly picked on at Pepperpont—and now finally, finally he was going to take his rightful place in the world.

That’s why, when they arrived in Iceland, Nigel was grinning.

The change was jarring. First, it was cold here, and Nigel’s T-shirt was soaked through with sweat from the battle with the Harvesters. His breath misted in front of him and steam curled up from his narrow shoulders. It was also early morning. Even though the skies were clouded over and gray, the brightness stung his eyes. All the same, Nigel grinned.

Maybe it was Nigel’s half-mad smile that caused the large man in body armor to hesitate bringing down his sledgehammer. Nigel liked to think so. But it was probably the four teenagers who manifested right in front of him that momentarily stunned the intimidating chap.

That was their welcoming committee. A badass-looking dude poised to bring his hammer down on the stone they’d teleported in on. He hesitated only a moment, then continued his downwards swing, not appearing to care that Nigel’s head was now in the way.

Kopano caught the hammer in the palm of his hand with a metallic clang. Then, his fist heavy and hard, Kopano punched the guy square in the cheek. He slumped to the ground, unconscious, his jaw broken.

“He didn’t look friendly,” Kopano said.

Nigel patted him on the back. “He most certainly did not.”

They stood in a small wooden enclosure. The gate was open, footprints in the frost leading from the house to the now-unconscious brute. The house was quaint and cute, a log cabin, with a rock garden outside. It looked entirely too peaceful.

Ran put her forearm under Rabiya’s chin and slammed her up against the wall. “Where is this? Where did you bring us?”

Rabiya gagged, her eyes bugging out. Nigel touched Ran’s shoulder and she let up on the pressure.

“I told you! Iceland!” Rabiya said hoarsely. “This is Einar’s house. He took your friend.” Her gaze drifted to the man Kopano had knocked out and her eyes widened.

Nigel kicked the unconscious man. “Who’s this, then? You recognize him?”

“Blackstone,” Rabiya said. “Mercenaries. If they’re here, this place is burned. Your friend is gone or already dead. We should leave or they will kill us, too.”

Nigel looked down at the unconscious mercenary. “This wanker won’t even be able to eat solid foods in a dream, much less kill anyone.”

“There will be more.”

Ran half turned to look at Nigel and Kopano. “How should we—?”

The second Ran turned her attention away, Rabiya made a dive for the Loralite stone.

If she hadn’t been so badly injured by the Harvesters, she might have made it. Her body moved too slowly, though, and Ran brought her elbow down on the back of Rabiya’s neck. The girl slumped to the ground, her fingertips inches away from the Loralite stone.

“Damn,” Kopano said.

“Coulda let her go,” Nigel said with a shrug. “Poor thing’s been through the ringer.”

“The Academy does not know enough about these people,” Ran said. She dragged Rabiya’s body to the back of the enclosure and set her gently against the wall. “I am sure they will have questions.”

“That shit she said about Taylor—,” Nigel started to say.

“We must check,” Kopano replied.

As soon as he stepped out of the enclosure, Kopano was greeted by a burst of machine-gun fire. He grunted as the bullets struck him in the center of the chest. They didn’t penetrate, but his Legacy was slow to kick in. He would have bruises. Bad ones.

A second mercenary crouched behind a pile of rocks. When he saw that his bullets hadn’t harmed Kopano, he dropped his rifle and took a different weapon from his belt. An energy weapon. Mogadorian.

“Where is Taylor?” Kopano roared.

He charged across the backyard before the mercenary could get a shot off. Kopano picked the man up in both hands, headbutted him and kept running with the man held out in front of him. He smashed through the house’s back door using the mercenary’s body as a battering ram.

“Not a lot of teamwork in his approach, but it’s efficient,” Nigel commented.

Ran’s lips quirked in her almost-smile. “Let’s go,” she said.

The two of them emerged from the cover of the enclosure with a little more caution than Kopano had shown. They weren’t bulletproof. From inside the house, they could hear the sounds of objects breaking and Kopano repeatedly shouting Taylor’s name.

“This what you were expecting?” Nigel asked, looking over the cabin.

“Absolutely not,” Ran replied.

“Me neither.” Nigel nodded up at the wall above the back door. “See that?”

“Camera,” Ran said.

Nigel wiggled his fingers. “Wonder who’s watching.”

It was a lucky thing. If Nigel hadn’t called her attention to the camera, Ran might not have looked up and seen the glint of reflected light in an open upstairs window.

A scope. A sniper rifle.

“Watch out!” Ran yelled and shoved Nigel hard to the side.

Ffft! Ffft! Ffft!

The shots came like puffs of air, fired through a high-powered rifle’s silenced muzzle. Chunks of dirt and ice struck Nigel’s legs, one of the bullets hitting where he’d just been standing. He and Ran scrambled in opposite directions. Nigel got close to the house and around the corner, while Ran dove behind a pile of discus-shaped stones.

“Ran! You good?”

“Yes,” she replied, but Nigel heard a hitch of pain in her voice.

Ffft! Another shot exploded a rock near Ran’s head.

“I’m pinned down,” Ran yelled.

“On it!” Nigel replied.

From inside the house, Nigel heard the crash of a table being overturned. He peeked through a nearby window. Kopano was locked up against a large man with a thick beard and a scarred face, smashing through a fancy kitchen. Kopano punched the mercenary in the ribs, but his body armor absorbed the blow.

The man swung a combat knife for Kopano’s throat and connected. The slice merely made a grinding sound, though, not breaking Kopano’s impenetrable skin.

“Hah!” Kopano shouted, swinging again.

The knife attack was only a feint, though. With his free hand, the mercenary pulled a manacle from his belt. As he ducked Kopano’s punch, the mercenary snapped the shackle around his wrist. Immediately, the bracelet emitted a humming vibration and Kopano was jerked downwards, his arm stuck to the side of the stainless steel fridge.

Kopano roared, trying to pull his arm free, failing, then trying to lift the fridge entirely and finding it too heavy. Quickly, the man drew a pistol from the holster attached to his thigh.

“Let’s see if your eyes are bulletproof,” he growled.

“Boo.”

Nigel threw his voice so it sounded as if he were right behind the mercenary. He spun around, found no one there. Nigel took the opportunity to yank the gun out of his hand. The man got off one shot that harmlessly thudded into a couch.

Kopano took the opening to seize him by the scruff of his neck using the arm that wasn’t pinned to the fridge. He slammed the guy’s head down against the countertop, then hefted him using his telekinesis, rammed his back against the ceiling and finally let him fall to the floor.

While that was happening, Nigel clambered in through the window. He glanced out the back door—Ran was still huddled behind some rocks. As he watched, she used her telekinesis to fling a glowing stone at the second level of the cabin, aiming blindly for the sniper.

A small explosion soon followed. The air was still for a moment. Ran started to peek her head out—ffft!—and yelped when another bullet nearly took her head off. The shot grazed her cheek, opening a deep cut there.

“Sniper upstairs!” Nigel yelled to Kopano as he ran for the stairs.

“I’m stuck!”

“One bloody thing at a time, mate!”

Nigel bounded up the steps, taking them two at a time. His telekinesis tingled on his fingertips—ready to disarm the sniper as soon as he came into view. He raced down the hall, counting doorways to match the windows outside.

He burst into the room where the sniper should be. The window was empty.

“Where—”

Behind him. The sniper spun Nigel around and clocked him in the bridge of the nose with the butt of his rifle.

Nigel fell on his back with a cry, blood streaming down his face. The sniper spun his gun back around, smiled and took aim—

Nigel screamed. The sound was piercing and high-pitched enough that the glass on the rifle’s scope shattered. The mercenary flinched and grabbed at his ears.

That was all the space Nigel needed. He yanked the rifle away from the mercenary with his telekinesis, grabbed it out of the air and pulled the trigger.

He shot the sniper right in the chest. The bullet cracked into his body armor and sent him flying backwards into the hall, where he slumped against the wall. Nigel got up, still holding the rifle, and stood over the man as he gasped for breath.

“Shouldn’t go shooting at everyone who teleports into your backyard, mate,” Nigel said as he chambered another round. “Maybe we were just coming by for a cup of sugar, eh? Guess you’ll never know.”

Nigel might have killed the mercenary—the guy had shot Ran and certainly would’ve done the same to Nigel if given the chance. But movement in the corner of his eye distracted him.

A little girl stood at the end of the hallway. Frightened and pale, she watched Nigel with wide eyes. Around her neck was a strange choker that she kept nervously tugging at.

Instead of shooting the mercenary, Nigel sighed and brought the rifle around and down like he was swinging a golf club. A swift blow to the temple knocked the sniper unconscious. Nigel then used his telekinesis to bend the muzzle of his gun into an unusable pretzel, a trick he’d picked up from Nine.

Finally, he turned to the girl. “Are you some kind of tiny assassin?”

“No . . . ,” the girl replied with a shake of her head.

“Didn’t think so.”

“Are you here to rescue me?”

Nigel looked around. “Sure, love.”

The girl approached him cautiously, still tugging at that weird collar. Nigel noted more cameras mounted along the hallway and in the rooms. What kind of weird shit went on in this Nordic cabin?

“How many of these guys were here?” he asked, nudging the unconscious mercenary with his foot.

“Four,” the girl said.

Nigel made a quick count. “Right, then. Got them all.” He crouched down to better look the girl in her face. “What’s your name?”

“Freyja.”

“Freyja, is there another girl hiding hereabouts? My age, American, pretty if that’s your thing.”

“Taylor,” Freyja said, then shook her head. “She was here, but he took—”

A scream from downstairs distracted Nigel from the rest of Freyja’s sentence. That didn’t sound like Ran or Kopano.

It sounded like Taylor.

Regardless, screaming was a bad sign. “Stay here,” he snapped at Freyja, then bolted back downstairs.

The first thing Nigel saw when he came down the steps was Kopano, still pinned by the wrist to the side of the fridge by that magnetized manacle. An uneasy feeling came over Nigel. There was fear in Kopano’s eyes—not an emotion he’d seen on the big man before.

“Nigel Barnaby,” said a smooth, accented voice.

The guy from the highway—Einar, Rabiya had called him—stood in the back door. He wore gray slacks and a white dress shirt, the latter spattered with fresh blood. He smiled at Nigel in a way that made his skin crawl.

“You have no idea how happy I am to see you.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Flora Ferrari, Alexa Riley, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Jenika Snow, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Alexis Angel, Amelia Jade, Sarah J. Stone,

Random Novels

Beholden by Corinne Michaels

Something to Howl About by Warren, Christine

a saving grace (Free at last Book 3) by Annie Stone

Magic, New Mexico: Made for Her (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Lea Kirk

The Virgin and the Beast: a Dark Erotic Beauty and the Beast Tale by Stasia Black

Tyrant by T.M. Frazier

Warrior Forever (Warriors in Heat) by Amber Bardan

Say You'll Stay by Kathryn Shay

Taming the Giant: A Kindred tales novel by Evangeline Anderson

A Soldier's Pledge: An Eagle Security & Protection Agency Novel (Beyond Valor Book 5) by Lynne St. James

A Total Sweetheart: Arranged Marriage Romance by Rocklyn Ryder

Rip by Rachel van Dyken

The Secret of Spellshadow Manor 5: The Test by Bella Forrest

Fire on the Ice by Tamsen Parker

Her Last Goodbye (Morgan Dane Book 2) by Melinda Leigh

Catch and Release: A Fishing for Trouble Novel by Laura Drewry

Imperfect Love: Liar (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Stephanie St. Klaire

The Fifth Moon’s Dragon: Book Four of the Fifth Moon’s Tales by Monica La Porta

About Truth (Just About Series, #2) by Lexy Timms

Never Say I Love You by Pennza, Amy