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Pretty Dark Sacrifice

Page 7

by Heather L. Reid


  Lilith pressed her mouth to his ear, her warm breath tickling his skin. “Come now, Kaemon,” she whispered. “You used to be so fierce, full of fire and heat. Hard to believe this sniveling weak thing houses the soul of the warrior Elite who joined with Eve to destroy half my demon horde and helped her lock the rest away in that wretched box. Watching you kill was like

  watching an artist at work, such power and glory, even if you fought for the wrong side. I can free you, Kaemon, put everything to rights. I’ll even let you go back to your precious Quinn. Of course, you won’t be able to live in the human realm, but there are plenty of other places the two of you can live happily ever after. I hear Eden is uninhabited.” She laughed at some inside joke Aaron didn’t understand. “All you have to do is help me find the box. You must know.”

  Licking her full red lips, she pulled him closer. Desire welled up inside Aaron. He felt ashamed and humiliated, but he couldn’t help himself.

  “No, you aren’t Kaemon anymore, are you? I would never have been able to manipulate him the way I can manipulate you.” He shivered as her hands wandered across his shoulders and down his back. She ran a nail down his cheek, drawing blood. Parting her mouth ever so slightly, she moved closer until he felt the curves of her taut body against him. When she licked the blood from his cheek, he couldn’t help but moan.

  “Is this what you want?” All he could do, under the power of her seduction, was nod. She struck like a snake, clasping the back of his neck as she kissed him. She tasted like bitter chocolate and chili, sweet infused with something hot and dangerous. Hunger burned within him, and he pushed against her, fumbling at the clasp that held her robe, wanting to fill himself with nothing but her.

  When she pushed him to the ground and threw her head back in a haughty laugh, his heart splintered. “Don’t be greedy.” She tucked a strand of hair behind her ear and winked.

  His head cleared as she stepped back from him, and he wiped his mouth with the back of his hand, spitting to rid himself of the taste of her.

  “What would your precious Quinn think of you now? I thought you loved her, but your body betrays your heart. Something you and Kaemon have in common.” Lilith squatted in front of him, grabbing his cheeks in a vise grip. “Quinn has no idea who you really are, does she? Maybe it’s better that way. Should I let her continue to believe you’re nothing but a teenage boy, or should I reveal how you betrayed her for your selfish desires?”

  “Do what you want with me, but leave her out of this.” Aaron jerked away, and she laughed again, deep and grating.

  “Oh, I’ll do what I want, with you and with her. Mark my words, little boy. I’m only just starting to make you both pay.”

  “I’ll give you anything as long as you leave her alone. What do you want?”

  “Oh, so many things, but let’s start with your obedience.” Lilith stood with arms out, palms up. “I tried to do this the easy way, to pull the answer gently from your mind, but your connection to her is still too strong. Perhaps I can use that to my advantage. In controlling you, maybe I can manipulate her, too.”

  Aaron spit in her face, and she grinned.

  “How human of you.” Her full red lips moved as she whispered a chant. The room crackled with power, and Aaron’s heart crackled with fear.

  Something scuttled behind him, and he jerked to the side, the metal of his chains scraping against the rock as he tried to put as much distance between himself and the creature slithering over the lip of the floor as possible. Four pincers, long as pencils, attached to a lizard head, clattered and snapped beneath multifaceted eyes intent on finding him. A million centipede legs writhed beneath its red, segmented, armored trunk, clacking against the stone as it crawled toward him. Aaron scrambled back and to the left, dragging the heavy chain across the rock, hoping to knock the thing back into the inky pit that surrounded the tiny island that had become his prison, but before the metal could touch it, the beast turned to smoke and re-solidified on the other side. Aaron shook and jangled his tether in a desperate attempt to scare it, but it scurried closer, four great pincers clacking and clicking undeterred by his effort.

  Lilith’s chanting intensified, and Aaron was hauled upward as an unseen force pulled all of the slack tight, stringing him up between the two posts, his arms outstretched so he couldn’t move.

  The creature raised the front half of its body as it approached his foot, thousands of silver legs wriggling and writhing in anticipation. He kicked and squirmed as it attached itself to his calf, its spiny legs pricking his skin as it wound its way up his thigh, across his torso, and settled around his neck like a living necklace. Inserting its tail into its mouth, it ate itself up segment by segment until Aaron could feel the edge of the armor plating digging into his Adam’s apple. He whimpered as the living collar tightened around his neck and screamed as a million needle barbs penetrated his skin.

  “Kavash,” Lilith spoke the command, and the creature around his neck tensed then released its venom into his body. The venom worked quickly, relaxing every nerve, every muscle, every resistance.

  “Sleep now, my angel. Sleep and remember.” Aaron sagged against the manacles as Lilith slithered into his mind, sharing every thought and every desire.

  “Don’t fight it. There will be much pain if you resist. Relax. That’s it. Show me what I need to know.”

  There was no place to hide. The venom pumped into his system by the control collar suppressed his fight. Resistance was impossible. She controlled him body, mind, and spirit.

  Chapter Thirteen

  Marcus looked down at Quinn and offered her a hand. The cuffs of his navy suit were caked with mud, and his eyes were glazed, confused. Her dagger lay half-buried in dirt. She quickly kicked some leaves over its glowing blade and prayed no one would notice.

  “You okay?” Marcus asked.

  Quinn nodded, unsure what to say.

  “Well, I’m glad somebody is.” Marcus rubbed the back of his neck. “My head feels like it’s been hit with a month’s worth of hangovers all at once.”

  “Yeah, every part of my body aches.” Reese stared at Quinn.

  “Mine, too.” Jenna smoothed back a strand of chestnut hair and frowned. “What the hell happened? A freak earthquake or something?”

  Shame and contrition churned like tainted food in Quinn’s stomach. Secrets and lies were all she knew anymore, and she was tired of keeping them. Quinn opened her mouth, then closed it, then opened it again.

  You don’t want to bring them into this. Azrael’s voice, one part lightning, two parts thunder, filled her head.

  I need them. Why couldn’t she make Azrael understand? She owed all of them her life, owed them the truth. They’re my friends.

  Go ahead then. Tell them what you can do. See if they believe you. And even if they do, what then? He folded his arms over his chest, black wings spread wide. They have nothing to offer but fashion advice and snarky comments.

  Don’t talk about my friends that way. What do you know of friendship? You aren’t even human, she ridiculed.

  That hurt. Azrael placed a hand over his heart, an oddly human mannerism, and Quinn guessed he was mocking her.

  Did it? she taunted.

  No. I’m not human, remember? Nor, from what I’ve seen, would I want to be.

  Quinn didn’t care what Azrael said, she was tired of feeling so alone, so isolated. I’m sick of supernatural beings telling me who I can and can’t trust. You can’t stop me. I’ll talk to whoever I want.

  Of course, you will. You are nothing but trouble and stubbornness. The glow beneath Azrael’s skin flared along with his temper.

  If I’m so much trouble, then leave me. Concentrating on her intent, she pushed against Azrael’s intrusion, but the fight had left her drained. Get out of my life, and get out of my head!

  Do you think I like being bonded to you? That I like hearing your whiny thoughts every second? Azrael gripped the pommels of his swords,
his jaw tight, wings flaring behind him. Learn to control your emotions and your powers, and I won’t be able to hear the meaningless drivel that floats through your head.

  The tension was so thick she was almost afraid to breath. Quinn thought about the knife buried at her feet. One nick and the Qeres poison would rid her of him.

  You can try, Azrael growled

  Leave me. She gathered what was left of her tattered strength and gave Azrael one final push. And don’t come back until I call you. That’s a command.

  Azrael bowed low, wings spread wide. She felt rage rolling off him in hot waves. As you wish. But don’t say I didn’t warn you. Then he took to the skies, the beat of his wings kicking up a dust cloud in their wake.

  “Quinn, you felt it too, right?” Marcus asked, bringing her attention back to her friends.

  Jenna’s eyes bored into her, expecting, demanding answers. She trusted Reese and Marcus, but Jenna? They all stayed silent as if sensing Quinn wanted to spill.

  Quinn stared at her hands, suddenly unsure again. What if Azrael was right? What if they didn’t believe her? Always torn between the seen and the unseen, she wanted her two worlds to merge. She couldn’t go on like this anymore. Admitting everything that had happened the last few months would be so freeing. If only she could find the right words.

  “What do you remember?” Quinn asked, letting them lead the conversation in hopes that it would open a natural segue.

  “You said Aaron was here, and then you fell to the ground convulsing in some sort of fit.” Jenna folded her arms across her chest. “You scared us. It wasn’t funny, Quinn.”

  Small chunks. Aaron first, demons later. “It wasn’t a joke. I saw him standing right there.” She pointed to the spot beside Marcus. “And then he disappeared.” It wasn’t everything, but at least it was a start. Quinn bit at her bottom lip, waiting for their reaction.

  “You really think you saw him?” Jenna asked, a mixture of hope and sarcasm in her voice.

  “He’s in trouble. I can feel it,” Quinn insisted.

  Reese shook her head. “Do you know how crazy that sounds?”

  “Yes. I do.” Quinn’s fists balled at her sides. She still didn’t understand how she could see him or why, only that she had.

  “One third of all drowning victims suffer neurological damage. More like he’s a hallucination brought on by your water-logged brain.” Jenna tapped a finger on her forehead.

  Reese shot daggers at Jenna.

  “What?” Jenna shrugged. “You know you were all thinking it. I’m the only one brave enough to say it. I mean, you saw her! She was convulsing and writhing on the ground for God’s sake. If that’s not brain damage, I don’t know what is.”

  “And how do you explain the missing time?” Reese asked. “I don’t remember how I got mud on my dress or leaves in my hair. One minute I was standing next to the headstone, and the next my face was in the dirt. We couldn’t all have had a seizure, could we?”

  “I’m telling you, it wasn’t a seizure.” Quinn thought about pulling the dagger from its hidden spot, showing it to them, explaining everything, but something held her tongue. If she couldn’t convince them about Aaron, they would never believe demons lurked in shadows and angels flitted through the heavens.

  “Shared delusion, like the girls in Salem. I read all about it while doing research on the witch trials.” Jenna cocked her head, confident in her assessment.

  “Now who sounds crazy?” Quinn wound a short strand of blond hair around her finger. “If you’re not going to help me, you can leave.”

  “I am helping you. Convince me this isn’t some seizure episode, or some brief mass hysteria brought on by grief, Quinn. I want to believe, but I don’t,” Jenna challenged.

  Could Jenna be right? If seeing Aaron were part of some injury from drowning, it would explain why Azrael didn’t sense him. Could all of this, even Azrael, be the result of brain damage? She hated to admit it, but Jenna might have a point.

  “What if Quinn’s right?” It was the first thing Marcus had said in minutes. “What if Aaron’s communicating with Quinn?” His eyes twinkled, and he looked over Reese’s shoulder straight at Quinn. “A ghost or maybe a psychic link?”

  Hope surged inside Quinn, and she grasped onto Marcus with all her might. A ghost? Maybe, but according to Azrael, ghosts couldn’t exist in this realm. The essence of a human soul resonated on a different note after it disconnected from the body. That soul then traveled to the realm most suited to its true tone. Like music sorted by genre. What people think of as ghosts were really demons disguised to trick and manipulate humans. But if the image of Aaron was a demon, Azrael would have dispatched it with a wave of his sword. What did that leave? A psychic link made sense. If she connected with Azrael, why not Aaron? Maybe angels weren’t the only ones she could communicate with after all.

  “Seriously? Psychic links? You’re grasping at straws.” Reese shook her head.

  “I know what I saw. Aaron was here.” There must be something she could say to convince the rest of them. “Don’t you remember seeing that story a few years ago about a boy who had fallen into a well?” She chewed her thumbnail. “His mother kept seeing him in the kitchen, in the yard, covered in mud. They found him alive, and he’d been communicating through some sort of dream state. Like an out-of-body experience or something. What if Aaron’s trying to contact me?”

  “You’ve watched one too many episodes of ‘Mysteries Unexplained’ or whatever,” Reese huffed and threw her hands in the air. “I can’t even believe we’re having this conversation. You are seriously pissing me off. We’ve come to say goodbye to our friend.” Her chest heaved, and Marcus pulled her into a hug, patting her on the back.

  “Stranger things have happened,” Marcus said. “We should at least have an open mind.”

  “Not you too.” Reese pushed Marcus away. “I don’t want to hear anymore. We should all move on. He is dead. D E A D.”

  Marcus reached for her, but she slapped his hand.

  “If you’re going to be angry at someone, be angry at me,” Quinn said.

  “Oh, I am.” The hinges of the rusted gate nearly came loose as Reese gave it a shove. Shoulders hunched, she stalked back to the car, slamming the passenger door behind her.

  Jenna shoved her hands into the pockets of her navy pea coat and stared at the ground. “I’m sorry, Quinn. I miss him; you have no idea how much. I believe that you believe you saw him today. Your face tells the truth of that. I’m convinced something happened, but I’m not convinced he’s alive. I’m sorry. If there was any chance—”

  “There is a chance,” Quinn insisted.

  “If there was any chance at all, I wouldn’t hesitate. Look, I know you and I haven’t exactly started out on the best terms, but I’d like to try to be friends. I mean it. We should all lean on each other now. Aaron would want it that way. So if you need anything, call me.” She gave Quinn one last pat, hugged Marcus, and left.

  Quinn turned to Marcus. If anyone wanted Aaron back more than she did, it was him. “I know it sounds crazy, but I know what I saw, I just can’t explain it.”

  Marcus grabbed her shoulders and pulled her to his chest. His overly muscled arms squeezed her close, and she could feel his heart beating strong and steady. No wonder Reese loved him so much.

  “You might not have convinced them, but you’ve convinced me. I believe you.” Marcus looked over his shoulder at Reese frowning at him from the car. “I never paid much attention to it before, but what you said got me thinking. Aaron used to know things he shouldn’t, and he seemed to sense what I was thinking or feeling, even when I didn’t know myself.”

  “Like what kinds of things?” The hairs on the back of Quinn’s neck stood on end. She wanted to grab on to Marcus’ theory and cuddle it to her chest like a security blanket.

  “Like asking how my grandmother’s chemo was going when I hadn’t told anyone about her illness. Or the time he
congratulated me on beating my personal best in the 100-meter fly. I was alone in the pool for training that afternoon. Nobody knew my new time. I didn’t pay much attention to it then, it was just part of who Aaron was. But looking back, there are lots of similar little moments that make me wonder.” Marcus rubbed the black stubble on his chin.

  Quinn’s mind reeled with the possibility. She’d experienced the same thing. That night they spent beneath the stars, the thought that he’d been sent there just for her had been almost too strong to ignore.

  “And then there’s the unexplained attraction to you.” Marcus raised his hands in a please-don’t-shoot-the-messenger way. “Not that you aren’t a fine female specimen. What’s not to like?” His eyes raked up and down her body, a grin playing across his lips. “I’m not talking about your physical assets. I mean the way he fell for you the moment he saw you. He’s always had a little bit of a hero complex, but with you it was relentless, like he couldn’t let you go, like he knew something bad would happen to you.” Marcus shook his head. “Now I’m the one who sounds crazy.”

  “No, it’s not crazy. I’ve felt it too, the way he just knew what I was thinking sometimes.” Was that why the demons had threatened her? Could he have been hiding something from her like she’d been hiding from him? Maybe it wasn’t her power contacting him at all, but his own. The picture started to snap into place, and she became more determined than ever to get answers.

  “If only we had proof.” Marcus snapped his fingers. “His journal. Why didn’t I think of it before? He was always writing in this black leather notebook, song lyrics and stuff. Maybe there’s a clue in there, something that might help us. We have to try.”

  “Marcus, you’re a genius.”

 

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