Chapter Nine
“Get down!” I shouted.
Murphy hit the dirt and so did I. The thing coming out of the trees stumbled over us and slammed into the ground.
Not a wolf or a bear or a cat but a man. That didn’t mean he wasn’t a beast—or that he hadn’t been one last night.
Why did I think our attacker not quite human? Must have been the growling that continued to emanate from his mouth.
He also moved a helluva lot faster than the average Haitian. By the time Murphy and I regained our feet, and neither of us was slow about it, the guy was already coming back for a second pass.
In his dark face his eyes shone eerily light—gray, green, or a faded blue; it was hard to tell when I was riveted by the way they rolled and twitched, as if he was hopped on something, or perhaps just insane.
Murphy shoved me behind him. If I hadn’t been focused on the strange, snarling Haitian, I might have been impressed with his chivalry.
Considering Murphy had no weapon, having left the machete and his guns by the pond when he decided to kiss me, I was irritated. At least I had a knife.
Lowering my hand to my waist, I cursed. The sheath was empty.
Before I could wonder how or why or where, the man launched himself at Murphy and the two tumbled to the ground. The attacker was big, bulky, but Murphy held his own. Lucky he’d been to bar fight school, because the other guy did not play fair—if there was “fair” in a fistfight.
The two men grappled for dominance, locked in a struggle of will and strength. Then the Haitian began snapping his teeth directly in front of Murphy’s nose, as if he was trying to bite it off.
“What in hell is the matter with you?” Murphy exclaimed.
I had a pretty good idea. Certain zombies of legend had a craving for live human flesh.
I scrambled toward the pond.
Instead of grabbing one of Murphy’s guns, which wouldn’t be loaded with silver or salt or anything that could work on what that man might be, I tore through my backpack until I found a zombie- revealing powder I’d made myself.
Not that it had ever worked before.
“But those were werewolves,” I muttered, yanking open the bag and pouring some into my hand.
“Cassandra!” Murphy shouted. “You mind?”
I ran, lifting my palm, positioning my lips at my wrist, so I could blow the powder into the attacker’s face.
Just as I did, Murphy threw the man off with an impressive heave and got a snoot-full of zombie- revealing powder for his heroics.
Dust coated his skin. He blinked and particles tumbled from his eyelashes. He coughed.
“Oops?” I said sheepishly.
“Duck!” he shouted.
I did, and a fist whooshed through the air above my head. Murphy shoved me aside and leaped to his feet, tackling the man and driving him into the ground once more.
“The gun!” Murphy yelled.
I took one step in that direction and paused as the Haitian flipped Murphy onto his back and started snapping at his nose again. I yanked my silver crucifix over my head and j ammed the end into the Haitian’s neck.
He howled and I thought, Uh-oh. Werewolf .
Except he didn’t explode. He backhanded me, and I flew several feet to land on my ass with a teeth- j arring thud.
“Quit screwing around and get the gun!” Murphy repeated.
I shook my head, wincing as pain shot through my cheek. I was going to have a shiner, but it wouldn’t be the first time.
I crawled to Murphy’s pack, yanked out his pistol. I wasn’t sure it would work, but I didn’t have much choice. Then something sparkly at the water’s edge caught my eye.
My knif e.
I grabbed it, and headed back the way I’d come.
The Haitian was centimeters away from chewing off Murphy’s nose. I wasn’t going to reach them in time.
Without thought, I drew back my arm and threw the knife. The weapon thunked into the attacker’s back, right between the shoulder blades. Once again—no flames, no smoke, no werewolf. Oh well.
The guy made a horrible sound—I couldn’t blame him—and began to claw for the knife. He yanked it out, and I realized my mistake. Now he had the knife and Murphy.
“Cassandra!” Murphy roared as the man rose above him, the blade flashing red with both blood and the setting sun.
The report of the gun was obscenely loud in the stillness of the partially shrouded glade.
The attacker j erked once. The knife fell; so did he. Right on top of Murphy.