"NO!"
Lia snatched the vase off the shelf and threw it. The intruder ducked. The ceramic shattered against the wall. He grinned at her, holding long sharp blades in both hands. She bolted, trying to get to the gun in her nightstand.
The man blocked her path.
Shit.
She jumped backwards into the kitchen, an easy hop in her tiny studio apartment.
Lia yanked open the cutlery drawer and began flinging silverware at him.
"GET OUT!"
But all he did was grin that sick grin and pace toward her.
"Stupid Quikmart silverware," she muttered. She glanced around. There had to be something else.
There! She grabbed a large butcher knife.
"GET AWAY FROM ME!"
He smiled and flicked his hand at her.
Something invisible slammed into her legs, knocking her to the ground. Her glasses flew off her face as her head smashed into the kitchen tiles. Pain stabbed her head, causing her to roll to one side, just as he brought a fist down where her head had been. She couldn't see, but she could sure hear the tiles fragmenting at his blow.
The man howled in triumph as he raised his massive fist, dagger in hand for the final blow.
With all her might, she kicked upwards into his crotch.
The howl turned to a scream. His blades fell to the floor with a clatter, just narrowly missing her.
Did I really kick him that hard?
Suddenly, the man was lifted up and tossed into a wall.
Another man stood above her. He kneeled, reaching for her face.
She squinted.
The room swirled around her.
He has blue eyes.
His hand was warm and comforting against her cheek.
She moaned. "I hope you're with the police."
Darkness washed over.
* * * * *
There were voices.
Lia tried to open her dry eyes.
Her head thudded with pain as she tried to sit up.
"POLICE!"
An Asian woman ina camel colored trench coat burst into her apartment.
Lia blinked, rubbing her head. "I think he's gone."
The woman holstered her weapon and rushed over to her. "Stay still." She reached for her radio. "I'll call a paramedic."
"No. No. I'm fine." Lia knew what a head injury was like. The weird wavy feeling in her head was something else.
The cop introduced herself as Sgt. Wong as she helped Lia up off the floor and onto her loveseat.
"You sure you don't want medical help?"
Despite the fact that the room kept wobbling, Lia began telling the cop about how she was attacked when she had returned home from grocery shopping. She had left the door for just a moment to drop the heavy bags in the kitchen. When she had walked back into the living room, the man had been leaning with his arms crossed in her doorframe.
"He had this sick smile. And then he said, 'So you're the one that Master wants." Lia shivered. She ended her story with the description of the policeman who had saved her. Sgt. Wong frowned.
"Ma'am, I think you might have hit your head a little hard. There was no other officer around. And there is no evidence of forced entry, just the broken vase and scattered silverware. Are you sure your attacker wasn't someone you know?"
"No! I'd never seen him before in my life! Wait, if the other guy wasn't police, then who was he?"
Sgt. Wong shrugged, flipping her notepad closed. "The call came to us from one of your neighbors. He thought there was some kind of domestic thing with all the screaming and noise."
"What?!"
Sgt. Wong finished filling out the report and handed it to Lia. "Can you please sign here to file this complaint?"
The detective's radio barked with a loud buzz. "Sector Vlad, 10-85 in progress! Wong, you done with that call?"
Sgt. Wong jumped up with a curse. She grabbed the sheet in Lia's outstretched hand. "Crap. All the bad guys are out tonight." The cop grabbed her radio. "Central, done with the aided call. Responding to the 10-85 in Sector Vlad now!" She looked at Lia. "Lock the door. And be more careful next time."
Lia rubbed her forehead, still aching. "Thank you."
After Lia had locked the door, she stood there, staring at the dull brass knob.
What the hell had just happened?
She remembered her rescuer's bright blue eyes, burning into her.
How could she imagine someone like him?
She closed her eyes. Crap. Somehow she had to find her glasses.
* * * * *
Late afternoon sunlight filtered in the lone window. Finger-like shadows, cast by long leaves of bamboo stalks sitting on the windowsill, crossed a small ivy patterned rug.
The news blared on the radio.
Just a few feet away, Lia swept the broken vase pieces off the exposed hardwood floor.
Everything could have ended.
Lia threw the shards of the vase into the wastebasket so hard they nearly bounced out.
If it weren't for her mystery rescuer, she could have died.
Her grip on the broom tightened. Why hadn't she been smarter? She didn't need to rely on anyone, let alone a strange man, who didn't even to exist.
There was no way she could have made up the warmth of her rescuer's hand against her cheek, the magnetic way his strange blue eyes drew hers, or the way strands of his dark hair fell over his eyes, highlighting the hard planes of his face.
Even his touch didn't tell her anything about him.
Lia yanked open the tiny closet door and threw the broom in. Something crunched. She slammed the door shut.
What was the point of being able to read people's emotions through touch when she couldn't even control it? The power was so stupid; it only worked with people she didn't know. As she found herself caring for others more and more, the ability to read that individual would fade.
Those closest had the ability to hurt the most. That's why you couldn't trust them.
Which is why Jon had so easily deceived her.
Fear had defined all too many of her years. After she had broken up with Jon, he had stalked her throughout college. With a shiver she remembered the dead roses he had sent to her, the mysterious phone calls at 2 a.m. and the time she had woken up in the middle of the night, to find him standing on her street, staring up at her window.
She had been afraid for so long.
Until
Abuela
reminded her who she was. She was a daughter of Mexican demon hunters and Spanish knights, not to be cowed by some stupid little man.
Lia had found the courage to stop being afraid and had learned her lesson. She would never let anyone get so close that she couldn't read them anymore. It was one of the reasons she lived in New York City and worked with dead languages. Ironic, that one could more easily stay aloof from others in a city of millions.
She tapped a button on her kitchen radio.
"Investigation into last week's burglary of the National Galleries in Washington D.C. has revealed the theft of several one-of-a-kind Aztec codices dating back to the 14
th
century. These thefts are in addition to the disappearance of a number of items ranging from 16
th
century samurai masks to 15
th
century Aztec ritual knives. Many of these artifacts were not on display and were housed in the Gallery's basement storage area."
Even better news
. Lia punched the counter. Those codices could have been invaluable in her attempts at deciphering the yet untranslated Aztec language. Why hadn't she made the trip to D.C. when she had the chance last month?
"Video footage from the night in question has shown that the items seemed to vanish into thin air. Although the burglary has been referred to the P.P.A. for further investigation, film experts are currently examining the tapes to determine if they have been doctored."
Hmm. Maybe the guy was one of those P.P.A. agents.
She snorted. Yea right. Superheroes like Centurion were like celebrities; you saw them everywhere, but that didn't mean an average person like her would ever meet one.
Her cell phone buzzed, alerting her of a voicemail.
Lia sighed, but a thrill shot through her as she listened to the message. The copies of Friar Bartolomeo Da Cenza's notes, had arrived at the University!
* * * * *
A noisy car alarm went off, adding to the cacophony of street sounds. As she headed down the sidewalk, bundled up in her winter gear, her thoughts wandered back to Da Cenza's notes. She paused at a newsstand.
"CENTURION: EARTH'S SEXIEST CHAMPION!" "SILK! IS SHE SOFT AS SHE LOOKS?" Lia ignored the superhero tabloids, scanning the headlines for more news of the National Galleries burglaries.
Nope. No luck.
Yup, she thought. Only a true dork would be more concerned with the notes of a dead 17
th
century Franciscan priest serving in the Yucatan, than the fact she had nearly died the night before.
Lia splashed through a slushy puddle, grateful for her comfy warm winter boots.
An odd feeling sent tingles up the back of her neck. On a hunch, she looked upwards.
Was someone standing on the roof of that building?
As she squinted, the presence disappeared.
She shook off the feeling. Now
that
she probably imagined.
Still, she drew her coat closer.
Cutting through the park, Lia finally made it to the campus. She relaxed as she saw groups of students moving about.
No one would ever make her afraid again. It wasn't Jon. It couldn't be him. Jon was locked away in California, doing time for the murder of three women. He would never get out.