Lu felt choked with hatred. All her life, she’d heard what vile bioterrorists Aberrants were, what dangerous traitors, what evil. And the truth was that the supposed proof of their evil was manufactured by the very people crying the loudest for their heads?
“So the Flash must have been them, too,” Lu said, anger quickening her blood. “The destruction of the rainforest in Brazil, the unexplained lights in the sky, the earthquake, the fire . . . that had to be them, too! That was all part of Thorne’s plan for world domination, wasn’t it?”
Morgan’s expression changed to one that looked suspiciously close to pity. She pursed her lips as if carefully choosing her words, then with a one-shouldered shrug that seemed to imply what the hell, she’ll find out sooner or later, said quietly, “No, pet, that wasn’t them. That was all you.”
Lu froze in openmouthed horror. “Me?”
“That’s not entirely accurate,” purred a voice from the shadows behind her. Lu whirled around, searching the darkness, her senses stinging and surging with a weird recognition.
From behind the curve of a giant boulder several paces away, a woman appeared. Dressed in head-to-toe pristine white, she was blonde, pale, and utterly feral. She eased onto the path with a catlike silence, her movements deliberate, her large, luminous eyes shining eerily bright.
Lu exhaled a breath that felt like fire.
Looking at this stranger was like looking in a mirror. The long, wavy hair, the slightly pointed chin, the forehead tipped with a widow’s peak, the tiny mole above the arch of the left brow.
The idea she’d been cloned sidled up and lingered beside her, unspeakably uncanny.
The woman smiled, but it didn’t touch her eyes. She said, “You had a little help, didn’t you, sis?”
There was an awkward pause. Then Morgan, sounding irritated, said, “Hope, this is Honor. Your twin sister.”
Honor. The Girl in her dreams. The Girl who was always so angry. Whom she’d managed, almost completely, to block. Her twin. Lu couldn’t think of a single coherent response. She said numbly, “My name isn’t Hope.”
A voice inside her head replied, Actually, flamethrower, it is.
Honor’s cold smile grew wider.
NINE
Before Lu had a chance to process anything beyond her own shock, Honor’s gaze honed in on the collar around her neck.
“Honor,” warned Morgan, just as the metal around Lu’s throat began to freeze.
It happened so fast. As cold became frost became ice, the collar crackled . . . and shrunk. Lu felt a stabbing pain against her carotid artery, and instinct kicked in.
She lifted her arms and flexed open her palms, aiming at Honor.
When the ball of fire cleared, with a roar and the acrid smell of burning fabric, Morgan was crouched on the ground with her arms flung over her head, coughing, the sleeves of her tunic singed and smoking. Honor was standing with her hands on her hips, glaring at Lu with those predatory eyes, completely unscathed.
“Overreact much?” she snapped.
The collar popped off with a muted tink! and fell in one solid, frozen chunk to the ground at Lu’s feet, where it promptly shattered to pieces.
Lu stumbled back, hands clutching her throat. “Did you just try to strangle me?” she shouted, livid.
Honor’s response was a roll of her eyes and an exaggerated sigh. “And they say I’m melodramatic.”
“What the hell is going on here?”
The growled question came from Magnus, who’d appeared as if from nowhere. He helped Morgan to her feet. Lu noticed he didn’t take her hands, but grasped her under the arms, stepping away as soon as she was standing.
Honor lifted her chin, examining Lu with a disapproving curl of her lip that managed to make her appear even more menacing. “Someone apparently has some trust problems.”
“Honor took Hope by surprise, that’s all,” said Morgan before Lu could spit a retort.
Honor said coldly, “I had to get that thing off of her—”
“By shrinking it?” Lu hissed.
“Metal contracts when it freezes—”
“You might have taken that into consideration, seeing as how it was around my throat—”
“I wouldn’t have hurt you!”
“Easy to say now!”
“Stop!” Magnus thundered, stepping between them.
Lu and Honor fell silent. Vibrating anger, Magnus looked back and forth between them, his dark eyes flashing fire. He was quiet a moment, controlling himself, then he said in a low voice, “Honor. She doesn’t know you. She doesn’t know your Gifts. She doesn’t know any of us.” His burning gaze cut to Lu. A muscle in his jaw began to flex, over and over.
Expressionless, Honor sent Magnus a long, searching look. The temperature of the air dropped sharply, sending a creeping frost that bloomed white down the mossed stone walls. She looked back at Lu.
With the icy weightlessness and silence of falling snow, Honor’s voice whispered inside Lu’s head, the words meant for her alone.
I wouldn’t have hurt you, flamethrower. Obviously you can’t say the same for me.
Damn. This close, keeping Honor out of her head was proving to be nearly impossible.
They stared at one another, bristling, until Honor turned and vanished back into the shadows. The darkness engulfed her as if she’d been swallowed.
After a tense moment, Morgan said to Magnus, “She won’t like it.”
Magnus ran a hand through his hair, exhaling hard. “I’m not taking sides.”
“Really? Because that’s exactly what it looked like you were doing. At least she’ll think it was.”
“I’m just trying to keep the peace,” said Magnus between gritted teeth.
“Ha!” Morgan inspected her singed tunic sleeves. “That’s like trying to stop a volcano from erupting and a tornado from chewing up a trailer park. Where the girls are concerned, I think it’s a much safer bet to just find shelter and wait out the storm.”
“I’m so sorry,” Lu said, ashamed and unsettled by the whole encounter. “It’s just . . . the shock. Of everything. Are you all right?”
Morgan, ever aplomb as Lu was quickly finding out, waved off her concern. “Right as rain. I hated this jacket anyway. And you being a bit out of sorts is certainly understandable, pet, under the circumstances. Don’t worry about it.”
“Are you all right?” Magnus, quiet but still intense, directed this to Lu. Their eyes met, and she had to look away because she felt naked under his gaze. She knelt and picked up a broken piece of the collar. It was coldest thing she’d ever held in her hands.
“So Honor can freeze things?” Lu flipped the frosted metal from one palm to another because to keep it in one spot too long would have caused an ice burn. Hairline cracks covered the metal in webs; the silver had blackened in spots.
Morgan chuckled softly, then sobered. Lu looked up to find Morgan staring at her with that little furrow between her brows. “Just out of curiosity, pet . . . how much have you been able to explore your Gifts?”
Lu looked from Morgan to Magnus. His eyes were dark, unreadable. She stood.
“I haven’t. I couldn’t. My entire life I’ve been trying to pretend I don’t have any. I was just trying to be unnoticed. Trying to fit in. To be normal . . . like humans.”
With a small shake of his head, Magnus murmured, “Pearls before swine.”
Heat crept across Lu’s cheeks.
Do not give what is holy to dogs, and do not throw your pearls before swine, or they will trample them under their feet, and turn and tear you to pieces.