side. The cobra reared over them. It was like a moving tower of muscle and scale. It hissed at us. The sound was loud, echoing.
The men lay on the ground at its . . . feet? tail? One of them twitched. Was he alive? My hands squeezed the guardrail until my fingers ached. I was so scared I could taste bile at the back of my throat. My skin was cold with it. You ever have those dreams where snakes are everywhere, so thick on the ground you canât walk unless you step on them? Itâs almost claustrophobic. The dream always ends with me standing in the middle of the trees with snakes dripping down on me, and all I can do is scream.
Jean-Claude held out one slender hand towards me. The lace covered everything but the tips of his fingers. Everyone else was staring at the snake. Jean-Claude was staring at me.
One of the wounded men moved. A soft moan escaped his lips and seemed to echo in the huge tent. Was it illusion or had the sound really echoed? It didnât matter. He was alive, and we had to keep him that way.
We? What was this âweâ stuff? I stared into Jean-Claudeâs deep blue eyes. His face was utterly blank, wiped clean of any emotion I understood. He couldnât trick me with his eyes. His own marks had seen to that, but mind tricksâif he worked at itâwere still possible. He was working at it.
It wasnât words, but a compulsion. I wanted to go to him. To run to him. To feel the smooth, solid grip of his hand. The softness of lace against my skin. I leaned against the railing, dizzy. I gripped it to keep from falling. What the hell were these mind games now? We had other problems, didnât we? Or didnât he care about the snake? Maybe it had all been a trick. Maybe he had told the cobra to run amuck. But why?
Every hair on my body raised, as if some invisible finger had just brushed it. I shivered and couldnât stop.
I was staring down at a pair of very nice black boots, high and soft. I looked up and met Jean-Claudeâs eyes. He had left his place around the cobra to come to me. It beat the hell out of me going to him.
âJoin with me, Anita, and we have enough power to stop the creature.â
I shook my head. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
He brushed his fingertips down my arm. Even through the leather jacket I could feel his touch like a line of ice, or was it fire?
âHow can you be hot and cold at the same time?â I asked.
He smiled, a bare movement of lips. â Ma petite , stop fighting me, and we can tame the creature. We can save the men.â
He had me there. A moment of personal weakness against the lives of two people. What a choice.
âOnce I let you inside my head that far, itâll be easier for you to come in next time. My soul is not up for grabs for anybodyâs life.â
He sighed. âVery well, it is your choice.â He started to turn away from me. I grabbed his arm, and it was warm and firm and very, very real.
He turned to me, eyes large and drowning deep, like the bottom of the ocean, and just as deadly. His own power kept me from falling in; alone I would have been lost.
I swallowed hard enough for it to hurt, and pulled my hand away from him. I had the urge to wipe my hand against my pants, as if I had touched something bad. Maybe I had.
âWill silver bullets hurt it?â
He seemed to think about that for a second. âI do not know.â
I took a deep breath. âIf you stop trying to hijack my mind, Iâll help you.â
âYouâll face it with a gun, rather than with me?â His voice sounded amused.
âYou got it.â
He stepped away from me and motioned me towards the ring.
I vaulted the rail and landed beside him. I ignored him as much as I was able and started walking towards the creature. I pulled the Browning out. It was nice and solid in my hand. A comforting weight.
âThe ancient Egyptians worshipped it as a god,
John Warren, Libby Warren
F. Paul Wilson, Alan M. Clark