Black Howl

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Black Howl Page 6

by Christina Henry


  Gabriel, Samiel and Nathaniel were blasting as many of the demons as they could, and it was keeping the horde back—for the moment. But for every demon that was nightfired into oblivion, it seemed there were three more.

  I blasted a few of them myself from underneath Nathaniel’s shoulder and then went around to Gabriel.

  His face was white with strain and his teeth gritted from the effort of trying to hold back the tide.

  “Let’s close off the tunnel,” I shouted.

  He didn’t look away from his task, but his left eyebrow quirked upward. I knew he was thinking of Wade. So was I.

  “We have to get the cubs away,” I said, and threw some nightfire at the approaching horde. “You, Samiel and Nathaniel keep at it while I take down the wall.”

  He nodded grimly and passed my message down the line. I had been practicing my spellcasting over the last month or so, since it seemed that every time I turned around I had a new enemy. The presence of Lucifer’s mark had also awakened some interesting new abilities, although those powers didn’t yet come easily to my call.

  I took careful aim at a portion of the rock ceiling that was about four feet beyond the leading edge of the demon mass; then I reached inside, to the place where the source of my magic flickered, and pushed it through my heartstone.

  There was a surge in my blood, a painful electricity running through my veins. My body went stiff and I threw my hands out in front of me.

  Blue lightning shot from the tips of my fingers and crashed into the target I had aimed at. The effect was immediate. Huge chunks of rock rained down in front of the demons. Cracks spread from the point of impact and more debris fell. The demons hissed angrily and backed away from the falling stones. Several of them were crushed, and my companions continued to blast nightfire at any demons foolish enough or lucky enough to make it past the falling rocks.

  The air quickly filled with dust but the fallen rocks only partially blocked the tunnel. I didn’t want the demons to come surging over a pile of rock, so I sent another lightning blast at a visible fault line.

  The effort of pushing the spell through a second time brought me to my knees. This happens to me a lot. The angelic part of me controls powers that were normally wielded by immortals. The human part of me fatigues in the face of those powers. I could probably be one of the strongest creatures in Lucifer’s realm were it not for that tiny beating stain of mortality.

  The second lightning blast did the trick. Bigger chunks of rock fell as the whole tunnel became unstable. Gabriel grabbed me under the shoulders and dragged me backward as giant boulders crashed into the mouth of the tunnel. The sight and sound of the demons were completely obscured by the crash of falling rock.

  I pushed to my feet, shaking Gabriel away. The four of us stood watching the tunnel disappear. I hoped I’d done the right thing and that I hadn’t just buried Wade under a gigantic pile of rubble.

  Huge clouds of dust billowed out of the hole where the exit used to be. I approached the rock pile, which still bore the sparkling remnants of electricity from my lightning bolts. Tiny blue arcs shot all over the surface, and far on the other side of the profusion of rock I heard the howls of demons. And I could hear the shifting of stone. I had blocked the tunnel, but it was a temporary measure. The demons would come for us as soon as they cleared the way.

  5

  “LET’S GET OUT OF HERE BEFORE THAT PILE COMES tumbling down,” I said.

  I flew toward the upper cavern entrance, the other three following closely behind me. Beezle was huffing up there with the last couple machines. I caught up to him and took the objects out of his claws. He immediately flew up to my shoulder and landed with a grunt.

  “You’d better have a realllly good reason for this,” he repeated. “And you owe me doughnuts, big-time.”

  “Yeah, yeah,” I said, landing in the cave.

  There was no sign of Jude or the cubs, but I could hear the echoes of the kids screaming from farther down the tunnel. The pile of cameras lay haphazardly stacked close to the place where the ramp tipped down.

  I pulled off my overcoat and made a makeshift bag in which to carry the cameras. My entourage came through the entrance and crowded around me in curiosity.

  “Madeline, why are you wasting your time with these devices?” Nathaniel asked.

  There was a funny note in his voice, an emotion that I couldn’t place that made me glance up at him. I didn’t see anything unusual. He was scowling at me, but that was pretty much his default expression when he wasn’t trying to make amends with me.

  “Whatever is in these cameras—or whatever they are—is behind those weird ghosts that keep popping up all over the city,” I said, stuffing the last of the devices in my coat and tying the sleeves together into a handle. I double-knotted it to make sure that it would stay and stood up. “Let’s go.”

  “What ghosts?” Nathaniel asked.

  “I’ll explain later,” I said.

  “Yes, you had better,” Gabriel said, peering back the way we came from. “Some of the rocks are starting to shift.”

  “The horde is coming through,” I said.

  As I ran down the long passageway toward Jude and the cubs, I retracted my wings so that I could maneuver more easily in the narrow space. I glanced behind me to make sure the others followed. They did, but all three were hunched and grimacing. Unlike Agents, angels can’t make their wings disappear at will.

  We caught up to Jude very quickly. He was red-faced and sweaty and quite obviously at the end of his rope. The cubs still screamed, endlessly. Some of them were getting hoarse.

  “If we’re lucky, they’ll lose their voices,” Beezle muttered.

  “Hush,” I said, though I privately agreed. Nothing seemed to stop the children from wailing. They were hurting themselves, and, even worse right now, they were broadcasting our location to any monster who cared to find us.

  Jude gave me a look that spoke his frustration eloquently. The cubs would not move forward unless herded. If left to their own devices, they would either stand still and scream or else walk into the wall over and over again like malfunctioning wind-ups.

  “There are five of you and twenty kids,” Beezle said. “What now, genius?”

  “We’ll carry the littlest ones,” I said. “We can herd the older cubs.”

  From far behind us I heard the ominous crashing of rock.

  “Hurry, hurry,” I said, scooping up the two smallest cubs.

  It wasn’t easy juggling the kids and my makeshift bag, especially with Beezle firmly planted on my shoulder. I nudged two kids who looked like first-graders with my knees.

  “Walk forward,” I said.

  Miraculously, they obeyed. They still screamed, but they marched through the tunnel like little automatons. I looked at Beezle, who shrugged.

  “Stop screaming,” I said loudly.

  The cubs stopped abruptly, as if a switch had been thrown. The silence was eerie.

  They all looked at me expectantly, except for the ones I had already told to walk forward. They had disappeared into the shadows ahead.

  “Jude, go after those other two. You lead the column,” I said.

  I looked at the cubs, then pointed at five of them in turn. “Walk forward.”

  They obeyed, proceeding after their companions.

  “Gabriel, you stay with them,” I said.

  I ordered the other cubs forward in small groups with an angel walking behind like a grade-school chaperone. I handed one of the toddlers to Samiel, who nodded gravely at the little boy in his arms.

  I shifted the little girl I held to my other arm so that I could carry the bag of cameras with my right hand. It’s not comfortable to grip anything for any length of time when you have only three fingers.

  Lucifer’s sword banged uncomfortably on my back as I took up the rear position behind Samiel. The cub stared off into the distance over my shoulder. The bag of cameras smacked into my thigh and swung out again, over and over. Beezle�
�s weight on my shoulder felt like an anvil, especially when he started to snore.

  “Gods above and below,” I muttered.

  A zillion demons were after us, we were crammed into a tiny space with limited options for defense, we were trying to protect a bunch of helpless children, and my gargoyle goes to sleep right on schedule. No amount of peril would jeopardize Beezle’s naptime.

  “On the upside, I might have lost a pound or two, what with all the stress and the walking and the not eating for hours.” I needed to find an upside before I cracked up completely.

  We had just reached the portal entry when we heard the distant whoop of the triumphant demon horde. I pushed to the front of the column to open the portal, only to discover that the cubs in front were still trying to walk forward into the wall.

  “Stop walking,” I ordered, and they immediately stopped. I frowned at Jude.

  “I tried doing what you did, but they wouldn’t listen to me,” he growled.

  That was a complication I didn’t want to think about, and in any event there was no time. The demons were coming, and their claws sounded like the approach of thunder.

  I held my tattooed hand up to the symbol in the wall, and once more the portal opened. Jude went through first, and then I ordered the cubs through in their chaperoned groups.

  Nathaniel approached me before his group was about to enter. He reached for the makeshift bag of cameras. “Let me take this for you. You will need your hands for defense if the demons appear before we are all through.”

  I handed him the cub instead. “She’s heavier, and it’s more important that we get all of the kids through.”

  He nodded, took the cub and disappeared into the portal with the others.

  The last feathers of Samiel’s wings had just slipped into the portal as the demons emerged over the slope down the tunnel. I leapt into the portal behind the others, one hand holding Beezle to my shoulder—he still wasn’t awake—and one hand gripping the knot in my coat. I took a deep breath and tried not to think about the pain that always accompanied portal travel.

  A few moments later I crashed on my face into the clearing. The cameras clattered to the ground as the knot came loose. Beezle awoke with a grunt and flew off my shoulder. The portal spun behind me.

  Gabriel grasped me by the shoulders and hauled me to my feet.

  “You must seal the portal,” he said urgently.

  “Seal it?” I said blankly.

  “You must close it permanently,” he said. “The demons were directly behind us. They will pour forth from that portal if you do not seal it now.”

  “But…” I began, but I didn’t need to voice what I was thinking. Wade.

  I looked at the cubs, standing in the clearing like broken dolls.

  Jude shook his head at me. “No.”

  “You must close the portal,” Gabriel insisted. “We cannot defend the children if the demons come through.”

  I knew what Wade would want me to do. I turned toward the portal, my right hand outstretched. Lucifer’s mark needed no guidance from me.

  “No!” Jude shouted.

  From the corner of my eye I saw Jude leap toward me. Samiel intercepted him and there was the sound of a scuffle.

  Light burst from the palm of my hand, the blazing red light of the heart of the sun. The portal shrank rapidly. I thought for a moment that there might have been the gleam of tooth and fang emerging from the swirling mist, a glint of malicious eyes, but a moment later the portal was closed and the image was gone.

  The demon mark in the rock was scorched and blackened. The portal was closed forever. I dropped my hand and turned back to the others.

  Samiel was sitting on top of Jude, who was facedown in dead leaves. The angel used his legs to pin Jude’s arms to his sides, and the wolf’s right cheek pressed into the dirt.

  Jude was red-faced with fury. It was a testament to Samiel’s exceptional strength that he was able to hold Jude down. Wolves are some of the most physically powerful supernatural creatures around.

  Samiel glanced up at me, questioning.

  “Let him up,” I said.

  He looked doubtful.

  “It’s okay.”

  Samiel reluctantly released Jude, who leapt to his feet and stalked toward me. His nose had lengthened into a muzzle. His front canines protruded over his mouth. The fingernails of his hands sharpened into claws.

  “Bitch!” he shouted, and his voice was the growl of the wolf.

  Gabriel tried to step in front of me, but I stopped him with a hand on his shoulder. I would not hide from Jude in his grief. It could be laid directly at my feet.

  Samiel moved toward Jude, looking like he intended to tackle the wolf again. I shook my head and stood my ground.

  Jude walked right up to me, chest thrust out, breath coming in harsh pants. His right hand was upraised as though he intended to slash my throat open.

  He pushed his muzzle into my face. I lifted my chin and held his gaze. I said nothing.

  “I should kill you,” he breathed. “I should kill you now and rid the world of one more of your kind.”

  “Killing me won’t change anything,” I said with a calm that I did not feel. I wasn’t sure I could blast Jude fast enough to stop him from ripping me to pieces if he decided the inclination moved him.

  “You sealed the portal,” he growled. “I always knew the spawn of Lucifer would betray the wolves.”

  I couldn’t hide from this. It was my fault. We had lost our only clue to Wade’s whereabouts, and I knew that. I also knew that Jude’s heart was breaking. An alpha is everything to his pack, and as his right-hand man, Jude would have been closer than a brother to Wade. But I didn’t have to stand there and be insulted for the hundredth time.

  “Let me repeat again—I am not the spawn of Lucifer,” I said, my temper rising to the surface.

  “Lucifer’s power runs through you. Lucifer’s sword chose you. Lucifer’s mark is upon you. Whether by one generation or a thousand, you are his spawn. I see his craft in your face. I see the same black heart.”

  “His power may run through me,” I said softly, “but his heart is not mine. I am sorry about Wade. I am sorry. If you look as closely as you claim to, you will see that.”

  His ice-blue eyes flickered over my face, confused. His wolf receded, leaving the face of the man. For a moment he hesitated; then he turned his head to the side and spat. I was thankful he didn’t decide to spit on me.

  “I see only the deception of your kind.”

  He turned away from me, crossed the clearing and fell to his knees. He raised his face to the sky and howled.

  The cubs, who had been standing so still I’d almost forgotten about them, began to howl in unison. Their eyes were still blank and uncomprehending, but their little voices rose in the same grief as Jude’s.

  Samiel, Gabriel, Nathaniel, Beezle and I stood and waited, outside of the circle of their sadness. Inside my heart, I howled with them.

  Once we started moving again we were faced with a different problem. The cubs would follow a direct order, but only if I told them to. They wouldn’t listen to anyone else.

  “You could make them do anything,” Beezle said. “They would all do the Macarena in sync if you asked them to.”

  “Oh, yeah, because a troop of dancing brainwashed kids would be so helpful right now,” I said as we tramped through the woods. Jude was leading us back to the site of the original attack.

  “Just trying to lighten the mood,” Beezle said. “Everyone is so grim.”

  “Well, gosh, Beezle, why would we be grim? We’ve had a swell adventure here in the woods.”

  “You don’t know Wade is dead,” Beezle said.

  “He might as well be. I don’t know where that portal went, and now I never will. And we had no other clues to go on.”

  “Sure you do. The charcarion demons.”

  I stopped and stared at Beezle, who was perched on my shoulder and looking incredibly smug.

&nb
sp; “The charcarion demons,” I repeated. “And they are significant…why?”

  “How many cinnamon rolls will you give me if I tell you?”

  “No one in our house needs cinnamon rolls. Especially you.”

  “I’m not the one on a diet. I think I deserve some compensation for information that is obviously important to you.”

  “Just spill it, Beezle, or I’ll replace all your Cheetos with whole-grain crackers.”

  He puffed himself up indignantly. “You wouldn’t dare.”

  “Try me.”

  “Okay, okay. Charcarion demons are found in only two courts of the fallen.”

  “And those are…”

  “Abezethibod…”

  “Bless you,” I said.

  “And Focalor.”

  “Focalor,” I said, somehow not surprised by this information. “What’s he up to now? I thought he was being punished by Lucifer.”

  Beezle shrugged. “I dunno. That’s for you to figure out.”

  “He definitely has an ax to grind with me,” I said slowly.

  “Yeah, since you publicly humiliated him when you snuffed out his rebellion in front of Amarantha’s court.”

  “Why do you say it like that? Was I supposed to let him tear Lucifer’s kingdom apart and endanger millions of innocent people?”

  “No, but he definitely wants your head on a stick.”

  “He’s going to have to get in line,” I said, thinking of all the scary creatures who wanted to squash me. I shook my head. That was not a productive line of thought.

  “And he’s always had a grievance with Lucifer—or at least for the last three or four millennia or so.”

  “Why is that?” I asked.

  “Haven’t you ever wondered why Focalor looks like a demon even though he’s fallen?”

  “Well, yeah,” I admitted. “I have wondered.”

  “That was his punishment for defying Lucifer the last time.”

  “What were they arguing about?”

  “Focalor wanted to go home,” Beezle said, pointing a claw skyward. “He was gathering a contingent of fallen to ask for forgiveness.”

  “Why didn’t Lucifer just let them go?”

 

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