Black Howl

Home > Other > Black Howl > Page 2
Black Howl Page 2

by Christina Henry


  The ghost had lowered his hands, but when I asked if I could bring him somewhere, he got that panicky, trapped-animal look again. “No, can’t stop—got to go—don’t make me stay!”

  I didn’t know if he’d been damaged in life or in death, and I didn’t usually intervene in the afterlives of ghosts—once the soul has made their choice to haunt instead of go to the Door, an Agent is pretty much out of it. But this ghost was acting so weird, I couldn’t believe that the Agent who had been sent to do his pickup had left him like this. I thought I’d better get him off the streets.

  I called an Agent response team and gave them my location.

  “Agent Madeline Black, north side, near the bus stop at the corner of Clark and Wellington. Yeah, I’ve got an unruly ghost here.”

  I gave the dispatcher some info on the ghost’s behavior and he told me to wait until the response team arrived. I tucked my phone in my pocket and settled in to babysit.

  They didn’t keep me waiting long. A few minutes after I’d called, three burly guys who looked like Navy SEALs came flying in. They all wore black shirts and black cargo pants and had the unsmiling look of military men on duty.

  “Agent Black? We’ll take it from here.”

  I stepped back to let them do their thing. The leader of the squad approached the ghost with his hands in the air, indicating that he meant no harm. The ghost had gone back to walking into the wall over and over again.

  I felt a tap on my shoulder and turned around. J.B. stood there, glaring.

  “What’s up with your ghost, Black?”

  J.B. had a thing for me, and if I didn’t have a whole lot of unsettled lust for Gabriel, I might have had a thing for J.B., too, because he was pretty much as hot as it gets. Six foot plus, body of a runner, green eyes, black hair that sticks up in every direction because he spends a lot of time tugging at it.

  Unfortunately, he acts like a stick-in-the-mud most of the time. Also, he was presently pissed at me because his mother had put a spell on him to make him act lovey-dovey toward me—part of her master plan of getting a child from Lucifer’s bloodline into her own bloodline. I didn’t know why this was my fault, but once the spell was broken, he’d decided to take out his mother issues on me.

  “It’s not my ghost, Bennett,” I said, trying to control my anger. “I found it acting like this.”

  “This is the fourteenth one this week,” he said, his eyes troubled. “I want to know what the hell is going on.”

  The ghost screamed, and I turned back to see that one of the response team guys had wrapped his arms around the ghost’s to restrain him. Another member of the team pulled out a small black device that looked a lot like a remote and pointed it at the ghost’s eyes. A laser sight appeared on the bridge of the soul’s nose.

  The ghost struggled in the Agent’s grip, his cries louder and more frantic. “Can’t stop—KEEP GOING—SORRY RED—I AM THE SCREAM—I AM THE SCREAM—I AM THE SCREAM!”

  The other Agent pressed a button on the remote. It didn’t seem like anything had happened, but the ghost abruptly went limp in the Agent’s arms. One of the other guys stepped forward with a binding rope.

  “How could fourteen ghosts end up like this in one week? Who was supposed to do their pickups?” I wondered aloud.

  J.B. was silent behind me. I turned to face him and saw that his jaw was clenched.

  “What?” I said.

  He looked like he was struggling with some decision; then finally he said, “They weren’t scheduled.”

  “Fourteen unscheduled deaths in one week? And they all ended up like this?” I looked at him with dawning comprehension. “You think it has something to do with the fallen.”

  “Doesn’t it usually?” he said. “Every time something weird and freaky has happened around here in the last few months it’s come back to Lucifer. And the weird and the freaky have happened more frequently since you acknowledged your bloodline and came into your powers.”

  “And so you think I might have something to do with it?” I said. “You know, you accused me of murder once and you looked pretty stupid after when you found out that I hadn’t been lying about Ramuell.”

  “I’m not accusing you of anything. I’m just saying that you are Lucifer’s child.”

  “I’m not Lucifer’s child,” I said. I could feel my magic pulsing underneath my skin—never a good sign. Even though I had made great leaps and bounds in controlling my powers, I still was at the mercy of my emotions.

  “Really?” he said, with a pointed glance at my right hand.

  My right palm was covered with what looked like a henna tattoo of an uncoiling snake. Unfortunately, the tattooing had not been voluntary. I’d been branded by Lucifer’s sword, and I wasn’t happy about it.

  I shook my head at J.B. “I’m Azazel’s child, and my heritage has nothing to do with this in any case. I don’t know what’s causing this.”

  “Maybe I should just have you followed,” J.B. said thoughtfully. “You’ll probably stumble onto the solution accidentally. That seems to happen a lot.”

  “I resent the implication that I’m Three-Stooging my way through life. I am the only person who’s ever survived the Maze,” I snapped. “And may I remind you that you should look to your own backyard before you start making wild accusations.”

  “You think my mother has something to do with this?” J.B. snorted. “She’d never be able to keep a secret this big from the rest of the faerie court.”

  “She managed to keep the fact that she wanted a child of Lucifer’s bloodline secret,” I reminded him.

  “What motivation would she have for murdering mortals and leaving them like this?” J.B. said.

  “What motivation did she have for trying to have me raped and killed?” I said, and as soon as I said it I was sorry. It hung in the air between us like a living thing.

  As if by speaking it aloud, my memories—the ones that I tried so hard to suppress over the last month—came rushing back.

  The Maze—a swarm of demons, a giant spider, my demon half brother trying to destroy me utterly.

  Nathaniel’s face possessed by rage, Nathaniel’s hands holding me down.

  Gabriel turning away from me in disgust.

  “It wasn’t real,” I muttered to myself. My face was covered in sweat, and a blast of cold January air made me shiver.

  “Maddy…” J.B. said, and he lifted his hand toward me.

  “No,” I said, and backed away, trying to get myself under control, trying to forget again. “I’m not doing this with you. You can’t be my friend when you feel like it and shout at me the rest of the time. Whatever your mother did, I had nothing to do with it, and I suffered far worse at her hand than you did. You were embarrassed by a love spell. She tried to break me, my heart, my mind, my body.”

  “But she couldn’t,” J.B. said, and his eyes were hard to read.

  “She couldn’t,” I agreed. “And I won’t let you or anyone else do it, either.”

  Then I turned and flew away, and he didn’t try to follow me.

  I came in the back door so I saw the mess in the kitchen first. Apparently Beezle and Samiel had made waffles, because the counter was covered in batter and the sink was full of dirty dishes. The score from a movie swelled in the living room and drifted down the hall to where I stood with my coat in one hand and my gloves in the other.

  “Seriously?” I said, and then my voice got louder. I tossed my stuff on a chair and strode down the hall. “Seriously? Beezle, you are way too old for this shit.”

  I stopped when I got to the living room. Samiel and Beezle were sitting on the couch. Both of them had tears running down their faces.

  “Gods above and below. What happened?” I said, rushing to Beezle and picking him up. “Did somebody die?”

  He pointed wordlessly at the screen. I glanced at it, then back at Beezle.

  “E.T.?” I said.

  Beezle sniffled, nodding. Samiel blew his nose with a tissue.

 
“You do know it’s make-believe, right?”

  Beezle glared up at me. “If you don’t cry during E.T., you are a robot. No human could get through this movie without shedding a few tears.”

  “Far be it from me to point out that neither of you are actually human,” I said. “When you’ve wiped your face you can clean up the mess in the kitchen. I’d like to have breakfast in a batter-free zone.”

  Samiel looked at me and signed, He made me do it.

  I signed back, You don’t have to listen to him.

  He threatened to put Grape-Nuts in my bedsheets if I didn’t make waffles.

  Just make sure he actually does the dishes instead of supervising, I replied. Grape-Nuts in your bed is a pretty diabolical punishment. Those little grainy things would probably get everywhere. How would you ever get them out completely?

  “We saved some waffles for you. They’re in the fridge,” Beezle said.

  I looked down at my nonexistent abs and sighed. “I can’t have waffles.”

  Beezle smirked. “Because of your diet.”

  “I am going to lose thirty pounds,” I said. “Stop trying to sabotage me by bringing doughnuts into the house.”

  “No one is making you eat them.”

  “No, but you are making me buy them,” I said. “You could be supportive, you know.”

  Beezle made a little “pfft” noise.

  “And what would you do if I stopped going to the pastry shop for you?” I said.

  “You would deny an old gargoyle a few simple pleasures before I turn to stone?” he said, putting on his best I-am-so-adorable-you-can’t-resist-me face.

  “You act like you’re going to turn tomorrow,” I said.

  “Who knows?” Beezle shrugged. “It could happen very suddenly.”

  “So could a heart attack from saturated fat overload,” I said, and went to the kitchen to make oatmeal. My virtuous breakfast didn’t taste nearly as good as Samiel’s waffles looked.

  After the movie was over they came in the kitchen and Beezle started washing dishes with a lot of long-suffering sighing. I told them about what had happened with the ghost I’d found, and how J.B. thought it had something to do with the fallen.

  “It probably does,” Gabriel said from the door.

  I turned slowly, my heart beating faster, the way it always did when I heard his voice. He leaned in the doorjamb, hands in the pocket of his ever-present overcoat. His face was implacable as always.

  “I didn’t hear you come up,” I said.

  “You gave me permission to come and go as I pleased. I have come for Samiel’s morning lesson,” he said.

  Gabriel was teaching Samiel to channel his powers in a more productive way. Samiel had been raised by a monstrous nephilim and a psychotic angel who’d drilled vengeance into him from the moment of his first breath, and thus mostly knew how to use his powers for destruction. I was very interested in keeping Samiel alive and under the radar of the Grigori, so Gabriel had undertaken the task of making Samiel a more productive member of supernatural society.

  “Have your orders changed, mistress?”

  “Don’t start with the ‘mistress’ crap,” I said angrily. “I’ve already gotten enough passive-aggressive BS from my other not-a-boyfriend this morning.”

  Gabriel nodded stiffly. “As you wish.”

  “And my name’s not Buttercup, either.”

  I sighed. I didn’t know how much longer the two of us could go on this way. It seemed Gabriel resented me more because I refused to act like his owner. Since I’d already thrown down with J.B., I wasn’t in the mood for another confrontation with Gabriel, especially with Beezle and Samiel watching us like we were the best reality TV ever.

  “Why do you think the ghosts have something to do with the fallen? Their own accords state that they aren’t supposed to harm mortals.”

  “And you have witnessed for yourself just how well some of Lord Lucifer’s minions follow those accords,” Gabriel replied.

  “Not very well at all,” I said, thinking of Focalor and his bid for power.

  My darling great-grandfather had told me that Focalor would be punished for his actions at Amarantha’s court. I hadn’t heard what that punishment was, but I was certain it had been swift and severe. Lucifer had to make sure that his other courts understood that treason would not be tolerated.

  Samiel rapped his knuckles on the counter so we would all look at him. But to murder mortals and leave their souls in such a state—that law is one that even the most rogue of Lucifer’s court would not break. Lucifer is not interested in the death of mortals.

  “No,” Beezle agreed. “He wants to collect them.”

  “Because every creature on his side increases his base of power,” I said. “All he’s really interested in is lording his strength over the other supernatural communities.”

  “Which is why he is so interested in you, Madeline,” Gabriel said. “You have strength and power that you have not yet begun to imagine, and Lord Lucifer knows this. It is also why you have become such an interesting target for the other courts.”

  “Yeah, moving on,” I said. I didn’t like to think too closely about my value to Lucifer and my consequent dead-or-alive value to his enemies. That way lay indigestion and sleepless nights. “Look, the last two times there were deaths outside of the natural order it was because of Lucifer’s sons, so I can see why you and J.B. would think it would have something to do with him again. But really—how many more sons could he have floating around?”

  Beezle arched his brow at me pointedly. “Lucifer has been alive for millennia.”

  And therefore would have had millennia to reap and sow, as it were, I thought. Was I really going to have to go through this again—stumbling onto more secrets in Lucifer’s kingdom, hunting down another of his children? How many innocents would die before I figured things out?

  We all stood silently, each of us brooding on our thoughts. The doorbell rang. Beezle fluttered up and away from the sink, clearly thrilled to have a reason to leave the dishes.

  “I’d better see who it is,” he said, speeding toward the window.

  “You have to finish the washing when you come back!” I shouted after him.

  “With any luck, it will be something horrible and you’ll be distracted for the next several hours,” Beezle snapped back over his shoulder.

  I looked at Gabriel, who gave me a sad little half smile. Beezle was probably right. My doorbell rang only when bad things were about to happen. Maybe I should tear the stupid thing off.

  Beezle zipped back in through the kitchen window, pulling it shut behind him. “It’s cold out there. It’s Jude at the door.”

  I frowned. Jude was a werewolf that I had met about a month ago. I was friendly with Wade, Jude’s alpha, but Jude himself didn’t think very much of me. He hated anyone related to Lucifer.

  I trooped downstairs to see what Jude wanted. My household entourage followed me, Gabriel and Samiel crowding on the stairs and Beezle plunking himself on my shoulder.

  “Hasn’t anyone in this house ever heard of privacy?” I muttered.

  “No,” Beezle said. “Your business is my business, and you’re only going to tell the other two anyway.”

  And if Jude was there to claw me to death, Gabriel and Samiel could probably intervene before too much bodily damage occurred.

  I swung the door open and saw Jude through the exterior door standing outside on the porch with his back to us. This was standard for supernatural creatures—they couldn’t cross the threshold of my house without my permission. I pushed open the exterior door and tried not to think about the fact that Gabriel was standing right behind me, the warmth of his body radiating into my skin and making my clothes feel uncomfortably tight.

  Jude turned when he heard the door open, and I gasped. His face and hands were covered in blood and his eyes were wild.

  “You have to come. Wade’s missing.”

  2

  “I KNEW THERE WOULD BE
SOME TRAGEDY FOR YOU TO attend to,” Beezle said.

  “Shush,” I said, my stomach knotted. I liked Wade. He was straightforward and compassionate, two traits that were sadly lacking in most supernatural creatures that I met. “What happened, Jude?”

  “Perhaps he should come inside,” Gabriel said. “Lest we draw the attention of your neighbors.”

  Jude ran his hands through his shock of red hair. “I don’t have time for tea and biscuits. Wade’s missing and he told me to get her. So come now.”

  “I’m not going anywhere until I know what’s going on,” I said, “and Wade wouldn’t want you running off without a plan. So come inside.”

  Jude looked mutinous, like he might bolt off the porch just to spite me.

  “Please,” I said, summoning up all my patience. Jude didn’t like me, and I didn’t think too much of him generally, but I respected Wade. I could be patient for Wade if not for his second-in-command.

  Jude looked down at his hands, seeming to realize for the first time that they were covered in gore. “They attacked us in the night. They took so many.”

  There was a universe of pain in his voice. Something inside me softened toward him. Whatever he might think of me, he obviously cared about his pack.

  “Come inside,” I said again, and I took him by the arm. It was a mark of how lost he was that he even let me touch him in the first place.

  He shook his head as he crossed the threshold, and then he looked down at my hand on his arm. “I’m okay.”

  I correctly took that to mean that he wanted my hand off him, and I complied. We all climbed the stairs again—Samiel in the lead, followed by Gabriel, Jude, and me, lugging Beezle on my shoulder.

  “Do you want to wash your face and hands?” I asked when we got upstairs. I really hoped he would. It was kind of hard to look at his face in its current condition.

  “Yeah,” he said, and then he unerringly went down the hall to the bathroom and shut the door, like he’d been there before.

 

‹ Prev