The Kiss of Death (Demons' Muse Book 1)

Home > Fantasy > The Kiss of Death (Demons' Muse Book 1) > Page 24
The Kiss of Death (Demons' Muse Book 1) Page 24

by Auryn Hadley


  "I wasn't exactly being nice."

  "Even before that. Like that night at Mac's." I took a deep breath. "I don't like angels, and it seems I never have. When did I start warping the veils?"

  He turned to watch me. "The veil has been slowly bending for just over twenty-four years. The peak started four years ago. It's still changing."

  "Pulling toward me?"

  He nodded. "The veil is a bubble, like a membrane around the dimension. It should be a perfect circle but, all your life, it's been distorted to something more like an oval, and not just on Earth. Whatever you're doing crosses the planes of existence."

  "Oh shit."

  He nodded. "Exactly. I assume Nick showed you the map?" When I nodded, he continued. "So the spike that points at you? Yeah. It started the night of the robbery. It was little back then, but we can't stop the inertia. It's growing, Sia."

  We'd reached the Language building and Luke grabbed the door. As I stepped through I asked, "So why have the angels only taken an interest in it now?"

  He steered me to the stairs. "We don't really look at the shape of the veils that often. Four years ago, one did, but we chased him off and made sure it would be a while before he could tell anyone else. Back then, they assumed the change was because of something we were doing, and it worked for a while because you liked to move around."

  "And now I'm not." We were almost to our classroom.

  He looked at the open door and shook his head, holding me back. "Sienna, I'm pretty sure they're worried about a lot more than just the peaks. They're up to something, and not all of it has to do with you. Mike's got angels watching Nick."

  "But Nick's not here," I whispered.

  Luke nodded. "I know, so don't worry about our problems today. You're just a student, like everyone else. You have no idea that the three guys trying to seduce you are anything but normal."

  I nodded, and he turned me to the door. Even though we walked into class together, four different girls still looked up at Luke with smiles. He pretended to ignore it, but I could tell he'd noticed. Finding a pair of computers at the back of the room, we made ourselves comfortable, saying nothing. Just as the professor was moving to the front of the class, Gabe walked in, smiling sheepishly for being late.

  I tried not to stare, but couldn't help it. His hair was swept back to reveal those freakish green eyes, and his shirt was just a bit too tight. From the late entrance to the outfit he was wearing, everything was designed to make people look. Like every other woman in the class, I did – but unlike them, I wanted nothing to do with him. When he flashed a sneer at me, my heart stalled out in my chest. I should've taken the chair beside the wall – not the one by the aisle.

  Gabe made his way toward us, but the only empty computer was on the other side of the room. Trying not to stare, I watched the other students instead, hoping to mimic their reactions. A girl in the row ahead of me wasn't even trying to hide her interest. A pair of women in the front had their heads together, their giggles hard to miss. A very nicely dressed guy next to the windows was smiling a little too much, his eyes shifting toward Luke instead of Gabe. No wonder they thought we were livestock, I thought, trying to force my attention back to the professor. We didn't try to hide that we worried more about sex than anything else.

  While Gabe found his seat, the professor paced back and forth across the front of the class. Her heels clicked softly on the rubber tile floor while she explained how our midterm projects would be graded. That got everyone's attention. For the next two weeks, it was all we'd be working on, and it counted for a quarter of our grade. The irony was that she wanted us to produce a work of fiction. I'd tell her mine was, but I planned to write a very vivid story based on nothing but fact. It wasn't my fault no one else would believe it.

  Chapter 23

  Five minutes before class ended, we were instructed to print two copies of our rough drafts and give one to the professor. The second was to be self-edited before the start of our next class. When we were done, we could leave. My fingers furiously finished the last paragraph, worrying more about completing the assignment than forming coherent thoughts, then hit print twice.

  To my left, the machine hummed and whirred, announcing its intention to vomit up my work. I made my way over just as the angel pushed his chair back, turning to the same printer. Of course, since he was closer, he reached it before me, lifting the page from the tray to scan the first few lines.

  I smiled politely and waited a pace away from him, knowing the story in his hands said a little too much. Thankfully it was only based on reality, not a play by play of what I knew. It was still enough to incriminate me.

  "Nice." He smiled and shoved his hand toward me. "Gabe, by the way."

  "Sienna." I couldn't figure out a polite way to refuse, so clasped his hand quickly.

  His fingers closed on mine. "Any way I could convince you to join me for lunch?" He smiled charmingly, but it didn't reach those cold green eyes.

  I tried to pull my hand free as I shook my head. "Sorry, I already made plans."

  The smile faded, but he still didn't let go of my hand. Just as I started to panic, I heard the printer whir again and steps approached from behind me. Gabe looked over my shoulder and stared.

  "Excuse me," Luke said, reaching over our clasped hands, forcing Gabe to release me.

  "What made you decide to transfer to school here, Luke?" Gabe asked, his voice dripping with malice.

  Luke smiled at him sweetly. "Friend of mine is testing a theory. How've ya been?"

  I looked between them, hoping I was acting normally but afraid it was too late. "You two know each other?"

  "Gabe's my cousin," Luke said. "Distant relative."

  "Oh."

  He went on before Gabe could speak. "Yeah, haven't seen him for ages. We need to catch up."

  "Gotcha." I smiled up at Gabe innocently. "I need to turn this in."

  Walking to the front of the class, I could feel the tension between them. I hoped Gabe hadn't gotten far enough on that page to realize what I knew and, for the first time, I wondered why I was chancing it. Maybe I should just quit my classes. Maybe I could convince Nick to teach me all the aethersmithing stuff so I could protect myself. I mean, I wanted a degree, but was it really worth the cost of my life? I'd promised I wouldn't touch them, but that freak had figured out how to put me between a rock and a hard place a little too easily. If I didn't take his hand, he'd make a scene. If I did, I was risking my life.

  It seemed there were no longer any good answers, and I was smart enough to know when I'd been outplayed.

  I'd just turned in my paper on her desk when the professor stood and announced, "Ok, time's up. Turn in what you have."

  Around the room, the printers spooled up and students began moving around. Some grabbed their things and left, others milled, hoping to make their work print faster. Gabe and Luke still spoke softly at the back of the class, braced as if ready to throw down. I retrieved my backpack and was heading over to Luke when someone bumped me in their rush to get their printout. I stumbled one single step.

  Luke and Gabe raised their heads in unison. Vigilance covered Luke's face but Gabe's was angry – and I was too close! The angel's eyes lit up, and he struck, reaching out for my arm like a snake. As soon as our skin touched, he pulled, and I felt the wave. Desperate, I threw my free hand out to Luke like a lifeline. He grabbed it just as the veil washed over me and the colors changed. The room shifted to shades of blacks and greys. The students became neon colored ghosts, ignorant of our presence.

  "Let go," Gabe demanded, yanking me toward him.

  "Don't let him drop you!" Luke screamed at me.

  I tried to hang onto Luke, but the pull was too hard, the angel too strong. I felt my hand slipping free, so snapped my head around to look at my new enemy. Instinctively, I clung to him, my fingers wrapped in a white robe that had appeared with our entrance into the corridor.

  Crushing my arm in his, Gabe wrenched me back, and I fe
lt the world drop away from my feet. A pain at the back of my head hung like a weight attached to my hair. I didn't scream, but this trip seemed to last forever. Winds buffeted us as the world sped around in a blur, but my eyes stayed locked on the angel holding me.

  His skin had turned perfectly smooth and metallic. The green of his eyes had changed to an eerily sick flame and brassy hair billowed around his head in the winds. He reminded me of some kind of comic supervillain, and the massive wings at his back did nothing to ruin the image. Neither did him swiping at the weight on my hair until I couldn't feel it anymore.

  And then we stopped.

  Saffron skies and fuchsia grasses told me we weren't on Earth anymore. The air was crisp and warm, but I could breathe it. With my feet firmly on the ground, I pulled, slipping my arm from the angel's grasp. This time, he let me go with a laugh.

  "You don't seem overly shocked, girl."

  "Don't fucking touch me again," I warned him.

  He took a step closer. "Or what?" His face was cruel and terrifying. Quickly, I staggered backward, not wanting his hands anywhere near me, but he seemed amused. "Oh, don't be scared. I just brought you to Heaven."

  "Oh, shit," I breathed, daring to look around. "Oh, no. No. This can't be real."

  Angelis, as Nick called it, was the home of the angels, hence their name. I also remembered Nick saying the veils here were locked to demons. I took another step back, my mind spinning. That meant I was alone here, unable to cross the veils on my own, with no way for anyone to rescue me.

  "What do you want?" I asked Gabe.

  "I want to know what your little friends are doing. Oh, we've seen you with all three of them, and after reading your story, it's clear we've been going about this the wrong way."

  "And if I don't?"

  He jerked his hand to the right, one finger extended. "Then you're useless."

  I looked. A clump of blue trees sheltered something that looked like a pile of firewood, except it wasn't. The breath caught in my lungs and my heart faltered when my brain finally understood what it was I was seeing. Bodies. Stacks upon stacks of bodies, discarded like refuse. Not all of them were human.

  "Those are people!"

  "No, that's fuel, you stupid girl. First, they give us power, then they feed the plants. Start talking – or I'll let the trees eat you."

  I stopped retreating and lifted my chin. "Try it, you narcissistic fuck."

  He snarled and reached for me, but I was reaching back. This Muse wouldn't go down easily. Before his hands could touch me, I slapped my fingers around his wrist and pulled. I pulled with every fiber in my body, hoping I could drain every last tendril of smoke from between his cells. Swirls of brassy fog writhed around my fingers, and the angel shoved, desperate to break free, but I wasn't done. I pulled with everything I had.

  Aether flowed into me and twined around my hands, spiraling up my arms. Like warm and weightless powder, the essence of the angel was tangible but had no mass. The feeling wasn't like anything else I'd experienced before. I had no idea what I was doing, but I refused to stop pulling.

  "You shouldn't be able to do that," he gasped.

  Gabe staggered, weakening before my eyes. I wanted to run, but I didn't dare let go. Not when I was winning. They couldn't die, but Nick said there were still demons devoid of aether, stuck in a coma. I only hoped angels would react the same way, so I kept pulling as hard as I could.

  "Sienna!" The voice came from above, sounding both panicked and overjoyed. I looked up and saw the most brilliantly gold man with unrealistically white wings, plummeting quickly. "Run!" he yelled. It sounded like Luke.

  I shoved at the angel, and he collapsed to the ground, unable to get up. His aether clung to my hands, but I ran. A part of my mind knew how precious the smoke was so I tried to gather it while fear pumped my feet faster. Somehow, I managed to do both, the aether moving with me, seeping into my skin. I caught nearly all of it when a mass hit me from behind, hard, knocking the breath from my lungs. My feet went flying. Literally. The ground was moving away, but I was too shocked to do more than watch.

  "I got you," Luke breathed in my ear, his gold arms tight around my torso. "Please don't puke."

  He turned in mid-air, pointing me toward the sky, and we fell, the world around me blurring as we crossed the veils. I closed my eyes and relaxed, knowing he was taking me back home. Nothing else mattered. He must have been the weight on my hair. That's how he'd found me. Luke had wings, and he'd promised to protect me. He'd saved me, and we were flying. Everything would be ok now.

  "Thank you, Luke. Oh, thank you."

  He chuckled and held me a bit tighter. "I guess this means you like at least one angel, huh?"

  "Forever and ever," I promised him.

  The snap of his wings signaled our arrival. We were still more than twenty feet in the air, far enough that I didn't want him to drop me, but not high enough for the fall to be fatal. The flapping of his wings felt like a raft on rough water, the two of us bobbing in the corridor while he oriented himself. With a strong push, we tilted. My back was pressed against his chest, the ground sprawling ever closer before it blurred quickly, clearing after only a breath to show the lawn of their home.

  "Go straight inside," Luke said. The wind from his wings swirled my hair around his face as we descended. "Don't knock, don't stop, just get inside."

  "Got it."

  As soon as our feet touched the ground, he tugged me into reality and I obeyed. The first step back on Earth was a staggering one while my mind tried to compensate, then I jogged up the stairs and pushed open the door. When I turned to close it, I realized I was alone. Luke was gone.

  "Nick?" I called out, pushing the door until it clicked, aware I felt funny.

  Footsteps from the second floor made me hopeful, but it was Sam, not Nick who peered over the banister. "What are you doing here?" he asked.

  "I just got yanked to Angelis. Luke followed and brought me back."

  "Oh, shit." Sam ran down the stairs, taking them two at a time as he hurried to my side. "You ok, Sienna?"

  "I..." I held up my hands, a trace of brassy mist still clinging to my fingers. "I told Gabe to let go."

  "Keep those to yourself," he said before scooping me into his arms. "We need to get you lying down. How much did you take?"

  "I don't know. How do you measure it?"

  He carried me upstairs, and for some reason, I didn't really care. My eyes were locked on the last trace of aether, trying to draw it inside myself. I didn't know why, but it seemed like the right thing to do.

  "Was he standing when you let go?" Sam asked.

  "He kinda fell down. I think still crawling, but barely."

  Sam nodded. "That's a lot, kid. You took more than half of him."

  "So what do I do now?" I waggled my fingers and Sam leaned his head away.

  He turned his back to a door, pushing it open, and carried me to a large bed covered in a luxurious red comforter. "Nothing. A nap would be great. You're not supposed to try that for your first time."

  "Try what?" I asked as he laid me in the middle of the bed. "Oh, that's soft."

  Smiling, he shifted a pillow to be more comfortable under my head then sat beside me. "You're not supposed to absorb that much aether, sweetheart. It's pure life, and a little intoxicating."

  "So I'm drunk on life?" I couldn't quite get the last bit inside.

  "You're about to be." He looked up at the sound of the front door slamming. "Just close your eyes, ok?"

  Feet tromped up the stairs, sounding rushed.

  "Can I give this to a demon?" I asked.

  Sam nodded, gently brushing a strand of hair behind my ear. "Sure. If that's what you want to do with it."

  "Ok." My head felt a lot lighter than it should. "I don't want to lose the last little bit then. Maybe we can wake one up."

  The feet paused. "Oh, dove," Nick said softly. "Luke found me. Are you ok?"

  "She tried to drain Gabe," Sam warned him. "And she
's feeling it."

  I grinned. "Sam said we can give this to a demon."

  Large, warm hands closed on mine and I watched the last traces of brass mist sink into the pores of his skin. "You couldn't even absorb it all, but it clung to you?" Nick asked in awe.

  "From Angelis," Sam added. "Luke flew her back."

  "And she still had aether clinging to her?"

  Sam nodded slowly. "And was standing, Nick."

  "Fuck."

  Sam rested a hand on Nick's shoulder. "She's filled to the brim. You're going to need to pull some of that off her."

  Nick's fingers tensed on mine. "Uh," he stammered.

  "Or I can," Sam taunted. "She's human. You know what will happen if you don't. Promise, it won't be any kind of inconvenience for me."

  "What?" I asked, barely able to keep my eyes focused.

  Sam chuckled and patted my shoulder, then stood. With one last look, he left, pulling the door closed behind him. Nick's fingers traced the back of my hand, but he said nothing for a moment. When he finally spoke, it was almost clinical.

  "The body is like a balloon when it comes to aether. If you take in too much, too fast, you can rupture. If that happens, it's a bitch to find the leak and fix it, and while we look, your life seeps away." He swallowed and nodded. "Since you're human, it could kill you."

  "Can I just give you some?"

  I saw the smile before he turned away. "Yeah." He cleared his throat. "You should know that donating aether can get intense, little dove."

  I giggled. "Which is why Sam didn't want to."

  "Oh, he wants to," Nick mumbled under his breath.

  "But he doesn't want to mess with his buddy's girl, huh?"

  "Something like that," Nick agreed, tugging at his shirt.

  He pulled it over his head, and I smiled. "I will never get used to that," I breathed.

  "They're just warding symbols," Nick said.

  "I meant the muscles."

  He paused, glancing down. "Um, flying takes good core strength."

  Unable to tear my eyes away, I bit my lip. "Can I touch?"

  He laughed and leaned closer, bracing one arm above my far shoulder, the other grabbing my wrist. "It's required." Gently, he rested my palm on the intricate circle branded across his left pectoral.

 

‹ Prev