Runebinder. Alex R. Kahler

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had to believe they were related, despite the contrast in their appearance. They were both tall and lithe and angular. But the girl was paler than ivory, with long willowy fingers and silvered hair that reached her waist; paired with the white coat and faded jeans and sweater she wore, she looked like a specter. Even her blue eyes were nearly gray. But the boy—her brother—was darker than night, with choppy black hair and a burgundy scarf wrapped around his face, leaving only his blue eyes bare. So blue...it must have been their use of Air. Tenn tried not to stare. He’d seen plenty of people subtly changed from the element they used, himself included, but he’d never seen transformations so distinct. Neither seemed to carry weapons, which meant their magic was impossibly powerful.

      The pair strode toward the hotel exit. Then Air opened in their throats, and they flew off into the night.

      “You don’t need to change our formation,” Derrick said when they were out of sight. “I already have scouts in position.”

      “We don’t need scouts,” Jarrett said. “We know the army is coming. And they know where we are. We need our ranks close. Otherwise, our fighters will be swallowed up one by one.”

      Derrick said nothing.

      “And you,” Jarrett said, turning his attention to Tenn. “What are you?”

      It wasn’t so strange a question. Not anymore.

      “Earth and Water. Sir.”

      “That one’s a fuckup,” Derrick interjected. “Nearly cost us the whole mission this afternoon, which is probably why you’re here. Went against orders.”

      Jarrett eyed Tenn up and down, a hint of...something...in his pale eyes. “He doesn’t seem the insubordinate type. What happened?”

      “He—”

      “I was asking him,” Jarrett said quietly. Why was his voice so familiar? “What happened today, soldier?”

      “I used magic. Against orders.”

      Jarrett’s eyebrows furrowed.

      “And why did you do that?”

      “I didn’t,” Tenn said. “It...it used me.”

      “He’s clearly crazy,” Derrick said, “or just trying to save his own a—”

      The Sphere of Air opened in Jarrett’s throat, harsh and pale blue, and a second later Derrick slammed against the wall. Jarrett didn’t even gesture or take his eyes off Tenn.

      “What’s your name?” Jarrett asked.

      “Tenn.”

      Jarrett’s eyes narrowed.

      “And you say your Sphere...what? Acted against your will? Used itself?”

      A lump lodged in Tenn’s throat, but he forced himself to speak.

      “We were surrounded. Only two of us left. I was prepared to die. I swear. But Water just...took over. Before I could stop it...” Tenn took a deep breath. Saying it again felt like insanity. “It killed every single Howl surrounding us. In a heartbeat. Before I could try to stop it.”

      Jarrett didn’t say anything. Not for a long time. And whether Derrick was silent out of newfound respect or some sort of invisible gag, Tenn couldn’t say. Tenn didn’t care. He couldn’t take his gaze off Jarrett. Not because he was scared—though he was, definitely—but because there was something about the way Jarrett looked at him that sent electricity through his veins. Like Jarrett knew his secrets.

      It should have made him feel like he was being appraised. Instead, he felt, in that moment, like the center of Jarrett’s universe.

      He couldn’t say he didn’t enjoy it.

      “Is this the first time it’s happened, Tenn?” Jarrett asked. Just hearing Jarrett say his name sent another course of energy through his veins. It was nothing like what he’d felt around Tomás, but the intensity was just as sharp.

      “Yes. Sir.”

      “Call me Jarrett,” he replied. He lowered his voice. “When this is over...we’ll talk again. At length.” He looked Tenn up and down. “I want you to stay out of the fight. The reports say you don’t have many healers out here, so we’ll need all the Earth mages we can get. And if your Spheres are acting up, I think it’s best you stay out of battle.”

      Jarrett patted him on the shoulder and left. Derrick slumped down from the wall, rubbing his throat. He didn’t approach Tenn, but the glare he shot over was enough.

      “You killed her, didn’t you?” he rasped. “You killed her, and now you’ve damned all of us.”

      He spat on the ground.

      “You’re no better than a fucking Howl.”

      He walked out, and all light went with him.

      There, in the darkness, Tenn began to wonder if it would have been better if he’d died.

      * * *

      It was sometime past midnight. The troop was assembled and the orders had been given. Tenn was back on the roof of the hotel, most of the troop stationed to the city or field beyond. Katherine’s body had been...removed. He didn’t ask where, or by whom. No one told him. No one told him anything.

      Especially not the two Hunters he’d been stationed with.

      Devon and Dreya stood farther back. They’d been there when he arrived, and when he tried to introduce himself, they stared at him like he was speaking a different language. He shrunk under Dreya’s hawk-like glare and didn’t try speaking to them again.

      The rain pounded down harder now, but he barely felt it. It was a perk of being attuned to Water, though it didn’t necessarily make up for the emotional backlash. You took what you could get. Like Tenn, the cold and the rain didn’t seem to bother the newcomers. He looked back to them. They stood on opposite sides of the roof, both open to Air as they scanned the sky.

      Neither of the twins spoke as they stood there, waiting. Minutes churned to hours. The night deepened. His nerves sharpened to daggers with every drop of rain. He wasn’t just waiting. He was waiting to die.

      No. He was waiting for something else to go horribly wrong.

      He stiffened when Dreya walked up next to him. She stood by his shoulder, staring out at the abandoned town. She was almost a head shorter than him, though she seemed much taller.

      “You say that Water used you,” she said. Her voice was soft, barely carrying over the rain, but it was perfectly enunciated.

      He nodded.

      “That should not be possible,” she continued.

      “I know.”

      She didn’t say anything for a while, so he took that as his opportunity.

      “Why are you here?”

      “Because

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