The demon boy continued to the very back of the cabin to a small bedroom. Within, her brother lay trussed up. He turned pale when he saw her. A gag prevented him from speaking, but the fear and grief in his eyes needed no words. Jason blamed himself for her capture.
“It’s all right, Jason. You’re going to leave with the pooka. He’ll get you to safety.” She knelt on the floor next to him. He was shaking his head back and forth. Lillian brushed hair off his face. “It’ll be over soon. Don’t worry for me. This is my fault, and I’ll make it right. I’ll follow when I can.” She turned back to the creature pretending to be a child. “Release my brother.”
In case he decided to change his side of the bargain, she drew the demon blade across her wrist while summoning the magic of the Spirit Realm. And like the time Gregory had done it, cold filled the room, causing her breath to fog in the air.
The demon hissed and leapt back. “You promised no tricks.”
She laughed. “A demon complaining about deceit—how ironic. Don’t worry. It’s just a precaution. Stick to your side of the bargain and all will go well. If you don’t …” She let her sentence die, but reached outside to where the pooka waited and whispered her plan into his mind.
“Once you and my brother are far enough away, I’ll see if I can kill everything in a two-kilometer radius.”
“Your brother and the pooka are free to go.” The demon boy bowed to her, then straightened and took a step back toward the door. He made no move to bolt, so she turned her attention back to Jason. There was rebellion in his eyes.
“Please tie my brother to the pooka’s back. I doubt he’ll go willingly.”
“As you wish.” The boy gestured and two demons wearing adult bodies picked up Jason and carried him out to the pooka.
The black horse was nervous, but still waited where she’d left him. He could have fled. He had the power, yet he stayed.
“Thank you.”
When the pooka approached the cabin’s porch, she leaned over the railing and laid her hand on his shoulder, sharing some of her power with him, strengthening him for the return journey.
“Run fast, swifter than death. I’ll give you as much time as I can. Please try to save my brother.”
“You never planned to return to the Magic Realm.”
“No. I plan to return to the Spirit Realm—and somehow I don’t think that is where you want to go.”
“Traitorous dryad.” He snorted and pawed at the ground, his yellow eyes gleaming with rage.
“Your loyalty will be rewarded. Tell Gregory it was my wish that you make the journey with him when he returns to the Magic Realm.”
“And if the gargoyle doesn’t listen?”
“He’ll honor my last request.”
“You’re certain?”
“Yes. Please tell him not to grieve. I’ll meet him again soon.”
The pooka bobbed his head.
She stayed in the cabin’s doorway, watching as the demons bundled her brother onto the pooka’s back. A yellow eye rolled back toward her. She nodded her head and the pooka bolted into motion.
She tracked the pooka long after he was out of sight. He wasn’t followed, but she continued to stare at the trees where he and her brother had vanished for long moments. Each minute she stalled the evil ones bettered the chance her brother had of escaping.
Fear was absent, and a strange thing was unfolding within her. Each time she’d called on magic, a small portion of her memories returned. Fragmented and chaotic, they were no help yet. But if the evil ones took too long to do whatever they planned, better possibilities might present themselves.
“Bring her,” the demon boy ordered.
Two male dire wolves, white eyes foggy and unseeing, approached her with their heads down, tails held limply behind them. She wondered once again what the demon child had done to them to make them serve. Her magic flared, and a memory surfaced: her gargoyle father looking out over a battlement, listless, head hanging. She’d been a small child, four or five, at most, and seeing her father like that had saddened her. He’d been “disciplined” after he’d tried to escape with her. She remembered her mother had been upset with the Wardens for resorting to soul-binding magic. Trap a soul so that it could not gain strength from the Spirit Realm or a living body, and it would weaken. A weakened soul would in turn weaken a mind, making the person more biddable. Her mother had called it one of the darkest forms of magic.
And the same spell had been cast upon the two dire wolves approaching her. She moved away from the porch, allowing the big wolves to herd her toward the east side of the cabin. They continued to guide her until she was blocked on one side by the small creek. Death magic rose from the water’s surface like fog, seeking and smothering life as it came in contact with it. She strengthened her shields another notch even though the magic hadn’t been able to do more than brush along the curve of her shield before being repelled.
The demon child said nothing as it trailed along behind Lillian. She maintained a brisk pace, wanting to stay ahead of the demon. It sidled up next to her, perhaps sensing her unease. Then it tried to take her hand like a child would. She inched closer to the stream.
The scent of death wafted upon the breeze. But underlying that stench, there was a sweeter smell. Honeysuckle. And something else similar to sandalwood. Memories stirred.
A sense of peace, like returning home after a long life.
Impossible.
She took a deeper breath. Yes, she was certain. The Lord of the Underworld was near.
But how could that be? He was imprisoned in his own temple. Both of the Twins were. The duality curse. One sibling couldn’t walk free while the other was trapped. The Lady of Battles was still imprisoned. Lillian knew it in her heart—and yet she sensed the Lord of the Underworld near.
The death magic flowing from the water was deadly, but now it lacked the stench of evil. Strange. She tried to piece together the memories that told her why the magic in the water was dangerous but not evil and they slipped away.
They entered the forest once again. Nothing living remained. All was dead. She mourned the trees and the wildflowers. Even the moss was dead.
“It didn’t like our tinkering and lashed out,” the demon said. “It killed a good half of us before we could get out of its range.”
“What didn’t like your tinkering?” Whatever “it” was, if it had killed half of these little monsters, she wanted to help it kill the other half.
“When we sacrifice you, it will be more biddable,” the demon called over its shoulder as it skipped ahead. It giggled and vanished around a bend in the path.
She swallowed against the bile rising in her throat. Touching the demon was the only way to know for sure if it had possessed a child or merely shapeshifted to look like one. She didn’t want to get close enough to find out. Better not to know.
The footing became treacherous as the path narrowed. Boulders and rocks showed through the eroded soil like the bones of the earth. With her eyes on the rocky ground, she didn’t see she’d emerged into a new meadow until she finished climbing up the leaf-littered slope.
She blinked several times and still she didn’t understand what she saw. Trees lay broken and splintered like a hurricane had exploded out from the middle of the meadow. Branches and trunks were tossed haphazardly to form a dam of wooden shrapnel along the outer edge of the newly and violently cleared meadow. At the center someone had erected a monolith. She didn’t know what else to call it. It looked like a sword, a massive twenty-foot sword. A giant’s weapon. By the way the point was embedded in the rocky soil, it looked like something had stabbed it down into the earth with a great deal of rage.
Its blade shimmered, eerie in the dim light. And if she was to approach it and run a finger along its blade, it looked sharp enough to cut off her hand. She shivered. The death magic was stronger here at the source.
No, she’d been wrong. This great weapon didn’t belong to a giant. It belonged to a god.
Memories from past lives unfolded, triggered by the sight of one of the Lord of the Underworld’s four swords. In the memory, she and Gregory had returned victorious from a battle, and were bringing a dangerous artifact back to the Lord of the Underworld for safe keeping. They’d bowed at his hooves and he had towered over them, his horse’s body topped with a four-armed humanoid torso and a jackal-like head. In another life, she’d not thought him strange—but now, all she could think was that he looked to be the love child of Anubis and a centaur. He had horns and a flowing mane like a gargoyle, and she remembered Gregory had once said all gargoyles called the god of death their master. If this creature wasn’t fearsome enough on his own, having to walk between his four massive swords before kneeling at his feet would have cowed most anything.
However, that time she and the gargoyle had nothing to fear from the Lord of the Underworld. He’d greeted them like friends, and she supposed they were. Being the god of death was a lonely duty, and like the gargoyles, he’d spent his existence alone.
“It rests, dormant as far as we can tell,” the demon said in its child’s voice.
Memories faded and she returned to the present. She still faced the massive sword.
The sword complicated her plan a bit.
“It may have used up its defenses, but we’re not risking ourselves on a guess,” the demon said. “But the sword will recognize you as the Goddess’s avatar. It won’t consider you a threat. And then we’ll use your blood to forge its new allegiance.”
She didn’t need to be told what their next step would be. They’d command the sword to tear a hole in the Veil between the Realms, and more demons would flood into this land. The Clan and the Coven would be the first casualties in the war.
Chapter 22
Lillian let them herd her toward a dead tree, one of only three still standing within sixty feet of the sword. The demons were careful to go no closer to the weapon. Come on Lil, you can do this. Act the helpless victim. Pretend you don’t have the knowledge to protect yourself. How hard can that be? No acting required.
With jerky motions, they tied her to the tree’s blackened trunk, using a bit of nylon rope to secure her. The occasional anxious glance over their shoulders said they didn’t trust the sword’s serenity. She didn’t either.
An insubstantial current of magic swirled past her ankles on its way toward the sword. The great weapon siphoned power from the land, reclaiming some of the magic it had spent in the first attack. She didn’t think the demons sensed what it was doing, or she doubted they’d still be so close. Lowering her shields, she opened herself to the magic coiled within her soul. A small trickle welled up and flowed across her skin. She directed it into the ground. None of the demons looked in her direction. They were busy erecting a circle of stones for their spell casting. Or rebuilding one, perhaps? Yes. That looked likely. She’d come to them sooner than they had planned.
Maybe she’d have time to give the sword enough power to return to its master. She dared not let her captors use her blood to remake the sword. Nor could she risk the sword falling into the hands of the Lady of Battles. There was no telling what damage the dark goddess could do with one of her brother’s weapons.
Lillian opened the part of her soul connected to the Spirit Realm. A cold rush of power filled her. She guided it into the ground, one slow, measured bit at a time. With her head bowed, she looked up through her lashes in the sword’s direction. The massive blade continued to feed.
Fifteen minutes passed, and the demons still hadn’t noticed her silent rebellion.
This wasn’t so hard. All she needed to do was give the sword enough power to return home before the demons came to slay her. However, there was one weakness in her plan.
If her own demon soul awoke before she was ready, it might enslave her and the sword, and then return to the Lady of Battles with a great prize.
She glanced at the stone ring. Unfortunately, demons possessed strength and agility greater than a human, and the ring of stones circling the central altar was nearly complete. Lillian didn’t think her enemies would lavish much time on other preparations once the last stone was in place.
Frosty power filled her body to the point of pain but still she held it in check. Long minutes crept by as she gritted her teeth against the burning pressure. When she could hold no more, she released a great flow of magic into the ground. With the crisp smell of winter, cold air rushed away from her in an enlarging circle, caressing the grass and kicking up a fine scattering of dust as it raced away.
A dire wolf eased out of the trees to the west of her position. He raised his head and sniffed in her direction. Uh-oh, perhaps the demons were nose-dead, but the wolves weren’t. Before she choked off the flow of magic, the dire wolf barked, a high-pitched sound of warning.
At the alarm, Riven rushed from the trees as if the dead forest spat them out. Forty, fifty. Far too many. Instinctively, she pressed her back into the dead tree.
“Stop her,” the demon boy yelled. He was on the opposite side of the meadow, sprinting toward her.
“Oh, what the hell.” She unleashed another wave of magic. The sword drank her power, swallowing it faster than she’d thought possible. Go, she willed it. Go home. Please.
Not enough power, it whispered into her mind.
She dropped her mental shields to speed up the transfer of power, and Gregory was suddenly in her mind, his grief and rage buffeting her. She blinked, and then realized he’d been there the whole time, but she’d been so focused on the situation that she’d blocked him from her consciousness. Now there was only one way to protect him. She showed him what was unfolding while she shoved all her recent memories at him. The number of enemies, their plans to force the sword to serve them and tear a hole in the Veil between the Realms, and all tactical information about the meadow. Then with that done, she sent one last message. “Gregory, you mean everything to me, and I’m sorry to cause you pain.”
Lillian turned her thoughts from him to the task at hand as she forced her connection to the Spirit Realm wide open. Power flowed through her, more than she had ever used. She screamed as a wild current tore through her thoughts. Her vision blurred, and then cleared in time to see a demon standing in front of her, his arm raised, the silver glint of a blade in his hand. Pain exploded in her shoulder and a second scream tore free of her chest.
*
The world below streaked past in a blur as Gregory winged closer to Lillian. He was almost there when her thoughts came to him, flowing across his own. His wings faltered. Shocked, he grasped at her thoughts as he leveled out his flight. Her thoughts flooded his mind with the knowledge she’d gathered. The demons. The sword. Their plan to invade this Realm through the torn Veil. He smelled evil, carried on the breeze, and overlaying that odor, the distinct scent of the Lord of the Underworld.
Gregory was almost there. Hope filled his numb wings and burning lungs, and with renewed strength he sped toward his other half.
Another image of the enemies flashed through his mind. A demon with a dagger poised to strike.
Despair engulfed him. He’d hunt the demons down, find the deepest abyss in the Magic Realm, and imprison them with their own dark magic until all they would know was unending torment. And it wouldn’t be one quarter of the pain he’d feel for failing Lillian.
Lillian’s fear washed across his mind, her agony resonating within his soul. He roared one short, sharp howl, echoing her pain.
*
Lillian awoke, a hot, wet agony slicing along her stomach. Had they stabbed her with a branding iron? She gritted her teeth and looked down. She was naked, her abdomen a red ruin. Blood soaked her bare legs. A second, smaller ember of fire gnawed at her shoulder where a demon blade was buried—probably the same dagger they’d all but gutted her with.
A whimper escaped. Her breath came quick and shallow. She’d been prepared for death, but not this pain. A swift death. She’d been too naive.
She didn’t remember the demons movin
g her, but a slab of stone propped at an angle now supported her back. She hung from her tied hands, her shoulder joints so taut something would dislocate if she moved even a little.
Blood covered the stone, running down its surface in rivulets. Jagged little flashes of light sparked at the edge of her vision. She wasn’t going to pass out, not yet. When she closed her eyes, she could sense Gregory near. His thoughts were no longer crisp, but muffled by whatever the demon blade was doing. Or perhaps it was from losing so much blood. But whatever the cause, she was weakening fast.
Just not fast enough.
Gregory would arrive in time to watch her die and then he’d get himself killed. He’d died for her so many times in the past; he deserved to live this time. While she couldn’t will herself to die faster, perhaps she could find another way to defeat them. Lillian had hoped the demons would trigger whatever trap the Lady of Battles had laid on her soul when they stabbed her, but Gregory must have done something to keep her demon soul from waking. Now, the stupid magic couldn’t even kill her properly.
Focusing proved difficult, but she gathered her thoughts and began picking at the tight knot of coiled memories and magic at her core. There must be something there she could use. She just had to get to it.
Blood continued its slow descent. It circled around her ankle and dripped off her bare toes, and still Lillian dug deeper into her memories. Then she found what she sought, a tether linking her demon soul to the Lady of Battles. Lillian followed the path, reaching, stretching, seeking until another powerful and fearsome being acknowledged her with a caress like lightning across her skin.
“My child,” the other said as a malevolent power snaked through Lillian.
A mild surge of relief escaped Lillian in a giddy laugh. The demons turned puzzled eyes in her direction, but she didn’t care if she’d given herself away. There was nothing the demons could do to stop her. Power poured from her and flooded out across the meadow. Fog rose from the earth, shifting and flowing into thick ropes that wove themselves into a billowing tapestry. The mist solidified and became a silver-edged window, similar to the time Lillian had spoken to the Warden Gryton, but this one was much larger.
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