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Sanctimalus Serial: Parts One-Three

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by Skye, Aurelia




  Sanctimalus Serial

  Parts One-Three

  Aurelia Skye

  Amourisa Press

  Amourisa Press and Kit Tunstall, writing as Aurelia Skye, reserve all rights to TEMPTED BY DEMONS. This work may not be shared or reproduced in any fashion without permission of the publisher and/or author. Any resemblance to any person, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  © Kit Tunstall, 2020

  Cover Images: Depositphotos.com, Daz3D

  Cover design by Amourisa Designs

  Editing by A.W. and T.M.

  Created with Vellum

  Contents

  Blurb

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Epilogue

  About Aurelia

  Blurb

  Abby wakes in a forest with no idea how she got there and no memory. Three tempting men rescue her, but she soon learns they’re demons…and she’s an angel, albeit with a damaged essence and burned-off wings. Angels and demons alike are hunting her, but she has no idea why. Unless she and the men bond in an intimate way that will heal her essence, she might never remember.

  Dante, the youngest of the demons, is ready to claim her as his mate. Brax, the de facto leader, has some hesitations, not wanting to get drawn back into the demon war to reclaim Caelum from the angels. Mal is the most reluctant, having lost a human wife to angels long ago. He knows they can’t be trusted, and he never wants to love like that again. Yet, when he looks at Abby, he’s tempted to let himself fall. Abby is captivated by each of them, but she fears the danger stalking her will spill over to them. Can she allow herself to be tempted by demons?

  This is a reverse harem romance between an innocent angel and three hot demons, so Abby will never have to choose. There is no cheating, but there is cursing, violence, and other adult content.

  Be aware this is a serial, so cliffhangers abound, but updates occur regularly.

  Chapter One

  Her heart was racing, thumping in her ears, and she was running. She ran with everything she had, and then she was falling. It was like a sudden plummet, with bright light all around, and it caused a flare of agony the likes of which she had never experienced before. She fell for what felt like forever until there was an abrupt stop as she crashed into the ground. Her eyes fluttered for a moment before closing, and she lost all awareness.

  * * *

  She woke sometime later with her head aching, pain filling her body, and an all-consuming sense of loss she couldn’t explain. All she knew was something was gone, though she couldn’t identify what. With a groan, she slowly sat up as she felt the crunch of leaves underneath her body. She looked above her, and the sky was dark. She had no real memory of what had occurred before other than a sense of falling, but she remembered light. It had been bright, crisp, and so sharp it had almost burned her eyes.

  She blinked now, trying to adjust to the abrupt change. There were stars in the sky, and the moon was full and bright, so it allowed her some illumination as she looked down at herself.

  Still feeling woozy, she stood up as slowly as possible. The first time she tried, she collapsed back to her knees, so she took her time and breathed through it, finally gaining her feet several seconds later. She was surprised to feel steadier than she had expected, but she still leaned against a nearby tree for a moment. She spent a minute looking around, trying to determine where she was, or how she’d come to be in this place. Unfortunately, it was all a blur, and she shook her head. She had cause to regret doing so, because it caused another flash of pain behind her eyes that radiated through her skull.

  She took a step forward, feeling the crunch of leaves under her feet, and realized she wore no shoes. A look down revealed she wore a white dress that was stained and dirty. She could see the tips of her toes in the moonlight, and they looked out of place among the leaves surrounding her. She spent far too long staring at her feet as she tried to place all the pieces together to determine what was happening to her.

  After a long time with no success, she issued a sigh and pushed away from the tree completely. She was able to walk now, but she still felt weak. She could hear something that sounded like music in the distance, though not music she was familiar with, and she moved that way.

  Perhaps there would be someone who could help her or explain what was going on. Spurred by the hope, she increased her pace, though she winced more than once as her bare feet encountered sharp or rough objects on the ground. She couldn’t remember much of anything, but she was positive she didn’t routinely walk barefoot through forests.

  The music was growing louder, so she continued in that direction until she emerged from the forest. There was a gray strip on the road in front of her, and she instinctively knew the name for it. Asphalt. How did she know that but not know where she was or how she’d come to be there? It was bewildering, and she pressed on toward the source of the music.

  As she crossed the asphalt, she was aware of lights bearing down on her, and a shrill sound punctuated the air. The vehicle was zooming at her, and it swerved at the last moment, the driver leaning out the window to scream something incoherent at her.

  She hastily finished crossing the road and slid down the steep incline on the other side, scraping the back of her hand in the process. As she waved it to dispel the sting, she was able to see a building and identify it as the source of the music now that she was off the road. Her feet were ragged and bloodied, and she wanted to stop, but she needed help. She forced herself to limp on, frowning as she turned the corner of the building and saw its parking lot full of motorcycles. She knew the term for that too, and she could picture someone riding one. She knew what they were and what they did, so how could she not know anything else?

  She was starting to quietly panic as she realized her memory was a gaping hole, and she didn’t know so much as her own name. She stumbled in through the front door, ignoring the catcalls of the few men who stood outside in front of it, sparing a glance for the layout of the area for a moment.

  She heard more catcalls and shrill whistles, combined with obscene words that she tried to block out as she stumbled forward and collapsed against the bar. The bartender approached, looking concerned. She was a woman with long dark hair, likely in her late-thirties, and she had a hardened look about her that suggested she’d seen everything, but her expression revealed clear shock at the sight before her. “What happened to you, honey?”

  She shook her head. “I… I don’t know.”

  The bartender frowned, nodding to a stool. “Take a seat.”

  She did as commanded, climbing onto the stool and sitting there as she stared at the bartender for a long moment, until the woman grew visibly uncomfortable and turned away. She returned with a glass of water and set it before her a second later. “You should rest and then get on out of here. This isn’t a place for you.”

  Her eyes widened, and she watched it happen in the mirror behind the bartender. Realizing she was staring at herself, she took a quick mental appraisal of the pale figure seated at the bar. She had wavy blonde hair that was so white it was almost silver, delicate features, and big silver-gray eyes. She looked like she had been through something traumatic, and she was certain she had, though she couldn’t recall what.

  She nodded her thanks to the bartender and started sipping the water, only then realizi
ng just how raw and swollen her throat felt. There was an ache in her chest as well, as though her very heart was missing. In a superstitious move to convince herself she was imagining things, she placed her palm against her chest and felt the reassuring, steady thump of her heartrate underneath. She breathed a sigh of relief.

  “What’s a pretty little thing like you doing here?” asked a big man as he squeezed onto the stool beside her. He was large in every way—not just fat, but tall, wide, and hairy. She instinctively shuddered in fear as she tried to draw away, pointedly avoiding looking at him.

  He trailed his beefy fingers down her arm. “Don’t be like that, sweetie. What’s your name?”

  She opened her mouth to answer, but she didn’t know. She stared at him in consternation for a moment, forgetting her initial fear as this new fear overtook her. “I don’t know,” she said softly, her voice sounding raspy. She wondered if she was naturally husky, or if it was a side effect of whatever had brought her to the forest.

  He looked skeptical for a moment. “That’s fine. We don’t need names. Why don’t you come with me now?”

  Instinct told her that was a bad idea, and she reared back as she violently shook her head. “No.”

  He frowned as he leaned closer. “I’m trying to offer you some help here, Blondie. Be a good girl and let me.”

  She stumbled away from him, sliding off the stool and almost falling on her butt in the process. Somehow, she managed to retain her balance and keep from falling, though she backed away from him. “Stay away from me.” There was something off about the man. She could tell it just by looking at him, though she didn’t know how she knew that. All she was certain was his intentions for her weren’t good.

  He was scowling as he slipped off the stool, keeping pace with her. “I ain’t gonna ask you again. Come here.”

  She let out a startled little shriek of surprise as her reversing caused her to collide with a solid body. Her fear increased tenfold as she was surrounded. She turned to look back at her newest threat, finding herself standing against a tall black man with short hair, strong features, and a muscled chest and arms she could feel even standing with some inches between them.

  She gasped slightly, but her fear immediately lowered. She didn’t know how she knew, but she was certain she was safe with this man. A glance at the one beside him gave her a similar response, and she managed a tentative smile for the man who looked younger than his companion. He had black hair, brown eyes, and tanned skin that stretched perfectly over a tautly muscular form. He gave her a lazy smile and a wink in return, and her fear eased down another notch.

  “Step aside,” said the man behind her.

  “I don’t want no trouble, Brax. She’s not yours though. I saw her first.”

  She shuddered at the large man’s words, more convinced than ever that he was a bad man.

  “She’s not a toy to claim. Step away.” Brax made it sound like the only logical choice before the other man.

  “Maybe I don’t wanna. If she is what I think she is—”

  “Then she’s too good for the likes of you or any of us,” said a third voice as he stepped up to join them. He took his spot on the right side of the man she stood against, and she looked at him in an evaluating fashion. He had rough, craggy features, shaggy blond hair, and sharp green eyes that radiated a visible threat to the man trying to get her to go with him.

  When his gaze temporarily locked with hers, she still felt a hint of threat relayed to her as well. She shuddered, though she wasn’t exactly afraid of him. She just realized how reluctant he was to stand there, and she figured it must be for his friends’ sake and certainly not hers.

  “No one asked your opinion, Malephar,” said the unpleasant man as he glared at the one who’d spoken to him last. “I’ll be taking that prize.”

  “Over your dead body,” said the younger of the three, his brown eyes flashing in warning. He spoke with a faint hint of an accent she struggled to place as somewhere from the deep South. Perhaps Texas, or maybe Louisiana? She frowned that she knew those words and could immediately call to mind what they were. She could see a bird’s eye view of both locations, as though she had stared down at them on a topographical map. It was all confusing, and she shook her head lightly, trying to clear her thoughts.

  “I suggest you walk away,” said the one she now knew was called Brax.

  “Do you know who I am, boy?” asked the large man.

  “Yeah, we do,” said the youngest. He sounded cocky and unafraid when he said, “You are Uzrael. You might be older than all of us combined, but you’re no match for the three of us. I think you know that too, don’t you?”

  “Don’t take that tone with me, Dantalion.” Uzrael’s eyes narrowed, and he seemed on the verge of continuing the aggressions when there was a snicking sound to the right that drew all their attention.

  The bartender stood with a shotgun pointed at the small group. “Break it up,” she said in a threatening voice.

  “That shit won’t work on me,” said Uzrael.

  The bartender smiled, but there was no warmth or humor in it. “This isn’t my first rodeo with your kind, man. These aren’t regular bullets, so I suggest you skulk off to whatever dimension you came from. You’re no longer welcome at Beth’s Roadhouse.”

  The man looked surprisingly frightened, and she had a hard time reconciling that, because the bartender didn’t look any more intimidating than the three men who stood behind her despite her weapon. In fact, she looked less frightening, though when she looked at her, she could see a faint orange glow about the woman that seemed to emanate from her chest. Perhaps that was what the other man found so frightening.

  After a long second, he shrugged and turned away. “She’s not worth it.” With those words, he sauntered out of the bar.

  “The bastard owes me forty dollars,” muttered the bartender as she lowered the gun before nodding to the four of them.

  “Would you like me to retrieve him to pay it?” asked the one who’d been called Malephar.

  The bartender shook her head. “I’m just glad he’s gone. I suggest you all depart as well. Your little friend there is garnering a lot of interest, and while I’m well stocked with ammo, perhaps not well enough stocked if this becomes a free-for-all brawl.”

  “Point taken,” said Malephar as he turned to the other two. “Let’s get out of here.”

  “We can’t just leave her here alone,” said the youngest of the three with an air of challenge, as though he expected the words to be countered.

  “She’s certainly not our problem,” said the blond.

  “When we stepped in, we sort of made her our problem,” said the black man.

  Brax gave her a gentle smile as he said that, and it made her knees go weak. She started to fall, and his hands on her hips kept her from sliding to the ground.

  “Do you want to come with us?” asked the youngest one. “We won’t hurt you, and we can help you get out of here.”

  She didn’t know much about anything, so she decided to trust her instincts. They told her going with these three would be best, so she nodded slowly. “Thank you.”

  “No problem, darlin’,” said the one with the Southern drawl. “My name is Dante.”

  “I thought it was Dantalion?” she asked, confused.

  He grimaced. “Ugh. I left that horrible name behind long ago. It’s just Dante.” He stared at her with an air of anticipation after a prolonged moment of silence. She licked her lips, knowing the expected thing was for her to share her name now, but she couldn’t recall it.

  “This is Malephar, though he prefers Mal,” said Dante as he continued introductions by glancing at the blond man after the awkward pause. “And this guy right here,” He pounded on the black man’s chest, “Is Abraxas, though Brax is his usual moniker.”

  “It’s nice to meet you.” She was certain that was the expected thing to say, though she didn’t know how she knew.

  “What’s your name, sugar
?” asked Brax.

  She opened and closed her mouth for a moment and then shrugged her shoulders. “I don’t know. I don’t really remember much of anything.”

  “May I?” As he asked, Brax lifted a dark finger to carefully pull aside the shoulder of her white dress. Her arms were bared from the cut of it, so he didn’t have to pull far to reveal a small symbol on her shoulder. “Your name is Abdia.”

  She frowned, wondering how he knew that, but the name resonated with her. “I…I think people usually call me Abby.” Abdia was familiar, but Abby felt like her.

  “Do you want to come with us?” That gruff question came from Malephar.

  After a brief hesitation, she nodded. “Yes, thank you.”

  As soon as she gave permission, the three of them formed a semi-circle around her, and she wasn’t certain if she should feel protected or trapped, though she certainly felt safe. They hustled her out of the roadhouse and soon to a set of bikes. They were the serious, macho kind with loud engines and various pieces of decor that caught her eye.

  She was a little daunted by the painful-looking metal studs that dotted the exhaust pipe and trims of the seat on the nearest bike that Dante directed her to take a seat on. That just happened to be behind him, and Dante opened the compartment on his bike to remove a second helmet that he passed to her. “Do you know how to wear it?”

  She shrugged her shoulder, which must’ve translated to a no in his mind, because he quickly placed it on her head and sized the straps for her until it was snug.

  “How does that feel?”

 

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