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The Dark Calling

Page 32

by Cole, Kresley


  “Evie, whatever you’re goan to do, do it fast!”

  Lark had reached the hall. “Empress, release Paul, and I’ll spare you and Deveaux. Otherwise, my wolves will clean your bones—like you did to my lion.”

  “You think I killed Finn. You’d never spare me.”

  She screamed, “You don’t get to say his name! Gabriel, kick down the door.” The Archangel was here as well!

  The battered door rocked off its hinges, crashing to the floor. I gaped at Gabriel and Lark in the hall.

  His wings flexed ominously, his eyes crazed. She was just as wild-eyed, with her mane tangled, looking more like an animal than ever before. Her wolves crouched beside her, saliva dripping from their bared fangs.

  Jack readied his sword, gliding it back and forth.

  I scrambled behind Paul, raising my claws to his face, all the while keeping the pressure on the noose. “No closer!”

  Lark laughed. “Your glyphs are dark, which means you’re out of juice. Besides, he can’t be killed, dumbass. You can strangle or poison him all you want, but he won’t die.” She said to Gabriel, “The Empress is my kill.”

  His eerie green gaze landed on Jack, and his wings flexed again, those talons so sharp.

  Realization: We’re done for.

  Gabriel struck, one wing zooming out from the hallway. Before Jack could swing his sword, his body had been launched across the room.

  “Ah, God, Jack!”

  He unsteadily rose, had somehow managed to keep hold of his weapon.

  “Don’t touch him again, Gabriel!” Or what?

  “ARCHANGEL,” Aric yelled from a distance. He must be at the edge of the sphere. “Face me! I have no armor. No swords. Come seize my icon.”

  Would Gabriel take the bait? “Death has no protection,” he told Lark. “We will not get another opportunity like this. My wing’s reach is long. I can kill him without crossing the boundary.”

  Then Aric was more vulnerable than he’d ever been. Need Paul to die before Gabriel reaches the edge!

  Lark nodded. “Go. I can handle one mortal playing dress-up and a powerless Empress.” Cyclops slinked inside, Scarface and Maneater behind him. They circled me and Jack.

  Gabriel charged away, and Lark focused her chilling red gaze on me. “I’m going to make this hurt.” The wolves pounced.

  I tossed vines their way, muzzling their snouts. Each ounce of power I used for defense weakened my attack on Paul.

  Jack swung at Scarface, landing a sword blow against his flank. The muzzled wolf leapt for him, knocking him onto his back.

  “Putain!”

  “Jack!”

  Scarface broke free of his vines and snapped at Jack’s raised arm, fangs on metal. Clang clang. The sword flashed out again, striking the wolf’s other side. Blood poured, but its eyes were demented.

  When I threw another vine to protect Jack, Paul stole a few wheezing breaths. His struggles grew stronger.

  Maneater pawed her green muzzle off, then charged me. I scrambled back, blocking her way with more vines. All the while, I could feel Paul inching his way out of the noose.

  We were losing ground, about to lose our lives! Anytime, red witch. Here’s another monster for you.

  Jack had the same thought. Between breaths, he grated, “Let her loose, Evie!”

  Out of the corner of my eye, I spied Paul fumbling with something in the desk drawer. What was he—

  A pistol.

  He used my moment of shock to yank back from me. I tightened the noose, but he still managed to raise the weapon, aiming it right at my stomach.

  The gun fired.

  Blinding pain made me scream. Aric’s anguished roar carried from the distance.

  I gaped down at my body. The bullet had gone in and out of my arm. Paul attempted to steady his shaking hand. Too late; a vine leapt from my skin, knocking the weapon to the floor.

  Paul had only given me a flesh wound, but he could have shot my vulnerable belly. The red witch shrieked for vengeance, rising up inside me, a terrible fever. Drawing on my wrath felt good. Surrendering to rage was like living in Paul’s sphere: simpler.

  Power surged. With every one of his exhalations, I tightened the noose’s grip. The scent of roses steeped the air. The heat of battle was an inferno.

  The light behind his head dimmed as he fell to his knees. He clawed at his throat, his eyes pleading.

  Ah, heavenly. “Come, Paul. Touch.” When one eyeball popped out, I laughed with delight. Just like old times. “But you’ll pay a price.” I flicked my wrist.

  The noose contracted. SNAP.

  Paul’s limp body collapsed to the floor, and his tongue lolled from his slack mouth. At last!

  I laughed again as a shivery feeling tingled on my hand. Then another. Icons.

  Yanking off my glove, I stared down at the new marks: a noose for the Hanged Man and Finn’s ouroboros. Want more.

  I slowly turned to Lark. I could take her down, just as my grandmother had wanted. Then Gabriel. Four icons in one day!

  Why stop there? Death had no armor . . . .

  Expression baffled, Lark clambered back against a wall, her wolves staggering toward her. “What the hell?” Her red eyes sparked with realization. Her lips curled back, revealing her fangs. “Paul did it? He killed Finn! He made me burn . . . ah, God, I burned Finn.”

  The wolves leapt upon the Hanged Man’s corpse, snatching at flesh, tearing him apart.

  Crunch, crunch. Blood painted the walls, crimson spatter arcing over antiques and book spines. It pooled on the floor around Paul’s remains as the beasts fought over pieces.

  The violence excited the red witch. As I sized up Lark, her eyes were laser-focused on the gore.

  Jack lumbered toward me. “Hey, hey. Come back to me.” He pinched my chin and turned my face. “Lark’s been through enough. Come on, you can do this.”

  I thrashed my head away. Nooo. Now awakened, the witch had no desire to yield. Evie a sliver of me! I can protect the baby better than anyone. We’re stronger like this.

  “Come back to me, peekôn. The fight’s over.”

  But it wasn’t. The monsters would just keep coming. And I couldn’t keep doing this without drowning in the well. “It’s better this way, Jack.” My voice even sounded different, breathy and evil.

  I’d never felt so in line with the red witch, so unified. Maybe my split personality was melding. Maybe it should.

  “I’m right here, bébé. You have to come back to me.”

  With each second that I clashed against the witch for control, Lark seemed to be emerging from her own inner battle. Eyes lost, she gave a heartbreaking sob.

  That sound was like an alarm going off inside me, warning me of danger.

  I was the danger.

  Damn it, Lark was my friend! I never wanted to hurt her. I peered up at Jack, holding his gaze, taking deep breaths.

  The witch finally began to recede.

  “Ma bonne fille, that’s it. You’ve got this.”

  In time, I met eyes with Lark. “Are you with us again?” Her tableau appeared—right side up.

  She nodded. “Yeah. I’m back now.”

  I glanced out the window. The sphere had dissipated. The pall was gone, but had I gotten to the Hanged Man in time to stop Gabriel? “Can you see if Death is safe?”

  Looking for him through her creatures, she said, “The boss is closing in fast.”

  Relief overwhelmed me.

  “I’m so sorry, Evie,” she said, tears welling. “For everything.”

  “You couldn’t help it. It’s not your fault.”

  “Great trick, by the way.” Her voice broke as she said, “F-Finn would’ve loved it.” She lurched away.

  I hurried after her. “Lark, wait.”

  Glancing over her shoulder, she held up her claw-tipped fingers to stop me. “Need to go lick my wounds. Alone.” Her gaze flitted past me to the blood. Was she staring at it hungrily? Red of tooth and claw. Maybe I wasn’t the only on
e wrestling with the heat of battle. “Just give me a t.o.” She turned once more. Her wolves followed her, severed limbs dangling from their jaws.

  Jack grabbed my shoulder, enfolding me in his arms as much as the armor would allow. “Let her go. Finn’s death is probably hitting her for real for the first time.”

  I couldn’t even comprehend how she must be feeling. Oh, wait—yes, I could.

  Jack pulled off the helmet, setting it on Aric’s desk. “You okay? Can’t believe that bastard shot you.”

  “Yeah.” I checked the wound. Regeneration was kicking in slowly. “It’s nothing. Already healing.”

  “If Domīnija had been here, he could’ve prevented that.”

  “It was close quarters. Are you okay?” Without that armor, he might have died.

  “I’m good.” Jack drew back and started to remove the onyx pieces, piling them next to the helmet. Breastplate. Left armguard. “But I want this off me.” He reached down to unbuckle the last leg guard.

  I frowned at the discarded armor. “That suit probably saved your life. Gabriel’s strike could’ve broken your back. At the very least, Scarface would have taken your arm.”

  “Wearing this made me understand some things.” He straightened. “This suit isn’t just Death’s protection against the world; it’s the world’s protection against him—a cage. Domīnija told me I’d walk a mile in his shoes. I have. And inside this armor is the loneliest place I’ve ever been, the most separated from everything I’ve ever felt.”

  I thought back to all the times I’d asked Aric to wear it. “He must hate it.” But he’d still worn it to allay my fears.

  “Ouais.” For the first time, Jack’s attention strayed from me. Details of the study caught his eye, the books and scrolls, the scepters and crowns on display. His curiosity was clearly redlining. “So this is the Reaper’s lair. Mind-blowing, non? One thing to hear about it; another to see it inside. I was slack-jawed the whole way in. Almost forgot to act like an asshole to you.”

  And now, by rights, the castle of lost time was his. Yet as much as I tried to picture living here with Jack, I couldn’t see it.

  He must’ve picked up on my shift in mood. “You never intended to send Death packing, did you?”

  “I didn’t make any decisions about him or you, but it felt wrong to oust him from his home.”

  “For true.” Another glance around the room. A rueful exhalation. “Nice place to visit . . .”

  Despite everything, Jack made me want to smile. “When Aric brought up his idea, I just kept my mouth shut and went along with it.”

  At the same time, we both said, “Kick the can down the road.”

  I gave a weak laugh. “Yeah.”

  He took my hand in his. “But now we’re at the end of the road. Castle or no, ousting or no, how’re you feeling?” He took a step closer. “Just so we’re clear about how I’m feeling . . .” He leaned down to press his lips to mine. The tender kiss told me more than words ever could.

  I love you. I desire you. I need you. He drew back to gaze down into my eyes, leaving me breathless.

  “Jack . . .”

  “Pardon me,” Aric said from the doorway, his expression stricken, his lungs heaving. With his hair disheveled and still wearing Jack’s careworn clothes, he looked as far from the perfect nobleman as I’d ever seen him. “I heard a gun go off.” His brows were drawn, his eyes searching. “And your scream.”

  I said, “Only got a nick on my arm.”

  Grave nod. “Very good. I am relieved to hear it.” He swallowed hard and his gaze dipped to where Jack clasped my hand. “I will gather some supplies and be on my way.”

  I hadn’t even noticed we were holding hands.

  Jack frowned. “What about your armor and swords?”

  His eyes flickered over what was left of Paul. “You will need them more than I will. To protect her.” With a last glance, he left us.

  Jack whistled low. “He would truly give up everything for you. Everything.” He muttered, “Fucking stand-up Death.”

  I said, “That armor belongs with him.”

  “I sure as hell doan want it.”

  Gabriel rushed into the room, his gaze frantic. “Empress, I’m so sorry! Your babe? The avalanche! You lost so much blood.”

  “I’m still pregnant.” I needed to reach Aric. I would hear his anguished roar for the rest of my days. What must he have thought? I absently said, “You saved me, Gabe. You saved us.”

  Gabriel put his head in his talon-tipped hands, then slid down the wall, losing a couple of black feathers. “My God, my God. I would have stabbed you.”

  Jack released me, hastening to the Angel’s side. “Easy, podna. Just breathe.”

  “And I nearly killed you, Jack. I was a hair’s breadth from slitting your throat.”

  “But you didn’t.”

  He grabbed Jack’s arm. “Where is Patrick?”

  “With the Chariot. They were okay as of a few days ago. But we got separated. I think they might be in the DC area.”

  “I threatened him.” Gabriel curled his wings around his body, seeming to hug himself. “Would have killed my best friend. How will I find him?”

  Jack turned to me. “I got this, Evie. Damn it, go stall Domīnija.”

  I nodded, then hurried after Death.

  52

  By the time I caught up with him, Aric had already changed his clothes and was using his supernatural speed to unload all the supplies Jack had transported from the cave. Staples, fuel, and a ton of baby things.

  Baby things. Because Jack was committed.

  Aric had opened one of the garage doors, was stacking boxes against the wall. I asked him, “Are you in a hurry?”

  Curt nod.

  “Why?”

  “Even my willpower has its limits.” He carried another box inside.

  “Thinking about reneging?”

  His shoulders stiffened, and he slowed. “Before, you would never have asked that, would have known I am a man of my word. If nothing else . . .”

  “Oh, I think you’ll give up ownership of the castle. I was just hoping you were having second thoughts about leaving me and our kid behind.” There. I’d said our kid.

  He set aside the box and turned to face me. “It’s become clear that you and Jack belong together. I saw the emotion between you two when you stared into his eyes.”

  “And what about my relationship with you?”

  He crossed to me. “That’s what I’m trying to tell you. I’ve realized I was wrong about us. I belong with no one. It was always my fate.” A ruler, forever alone.

  “Forever alone, Aric? Too late.” I pointed at my stomach. “Too late.”

  He pulled off a glove and cupped my cheek. His lids went heavy from the contact. “Es tevi mīlu.” I love you. “But my soul is too tainted to be with another.”

  “I disagree.” I didn’t know what I was here to fight for. I just knew I wasn’t ready to lose Aric.

  Still had no idea where that left me and Jack.

  Aric dug into his coat pocket and handed me the red ribbon. “Give this to him.”

  I stared down at it in shock. Jack must’ve told him its significance. Seeing it sent my unruly emotions into overdrive, but I needed to be rational about this. I pocketed it, clearing my throat to say, “You can’t leave, Aric.”

  “He’s not.” Jack strode into the courtyard. “I’m the one heading out.”

  Gabriel followed him, looking calmer.

  Aric drew his head back. “You too think I’ll renege on the bargain I made with you?”

  “Not at all. Which is why I can’t do this.”

  “I don’t understand.”

  “I made a promise to Evie: if I felt sure you were back to normal and wouldn’t give into that rage again, I’d bow out. When I harbored doubts about you, I had no problems imagining myself robbing you blind, taking everything of yours. But now . . .” He waved to indicate me and Aric. When had I gotten so close to him? �
�Damn you, man, you’re back to normal.”

  “Am I to have no say?” My eyes filled with tears.

  “Non, peekôn. For once, non. I told Kentarch that in the end, I’d do whatever is best for you. The fact is: Death can protect you better than I can. The man is ready to surrender his wife and kid to his rival just to keep them safe; you think I’m not ready to make the exact same sacrifice? I’ve got to put you and Tee in the best situation I can. No matter how bad it hurts.”

  My emotions were all over the place with this pregnancy and from the trauma I’d been through. If they did leave the decision to me, maybe it would put me over the edge. Because this was a choice I would never be able to make—perfect for me couldn’t be bested. “You’re leaving because you get to control the outcome. You need to control your fate.”

  “Doan matter why I’m goan. Just that I am,” he said, echoing what he’d told me our first night in Jubilee.

  I gave Aric a helpless look. Fix this, like you usually do. But how could he? I wanted them both.

  Squaring his shoulders, he told Jack, “I struck a bargain with you. I will honor it.”

  “Me and Gabe have been talking. He’s coming with me to find Joules and Kentarch. Then the four of us’ll all head south to put together another settlement. That might steer Richter away from this place.”

  “You’ll act as bait?” Aric said. “I can just as easily undertake that mission, leaving you here with her. Only two Arcana would remain then.”

  “Hell, Reaper, how far are you goan to get down the road with Joules?”

  “I’ll manage.”

  Jack shook his head. “You know this makes the most sense. We agreed that Evie and Tee come first.”

  Now they were fighting over who got to leave. Confusion swamped me. I’d tried to imagine a life here with Jack. Now I was back to raising a son here with Aric?

  “Your boy needs to be with his father.” Jack turned to me. “If my father had wanted anything to do with me and another man drove him away, I would’ve ended up hating that man. I woan be the wedge that separates Domīnija from a son he’s desperate to raise.”

  “I . . . I . . . .” Oh, God, I had no argument against that.

  To Aric, he said, “You’ve waited two millennia to meet him, and now you’re goan to bug out a few months before he gets here?” Clever Jack. “Look, we agreed you need a bolt hole for Evie and Tee. If you outfit me with sunlamps, fuel, and food, I can make that happen. Give me a job, Reaper. Put me to work.” Holding Aric’s gaze, he said, “I woan be moved from my decision. I swear on my mother’s soul that this is what’s happening.”

 

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