by ID Johnson
Ruin’s Legacy
Reaper’s Hollow Book 3
ID Johnson
Copyright © 2018 by ID Johnson
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Created with Vellum
For Judy for all of your inspiration. I wish I could be a total boss like you.
Contents
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
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Epilogue
A Note from the Author
Also by ID Johnson
Chapter 1
“Mitto ego te ad vidisse igneos puteos horrendam daemonium de inferno!” Ru Roberts repeated the phrase over and over again under her breath as she paced back and forth across the floor of her bedroom in Angel Grove, the ancient wooden floorboards squeaking in protest at each step. She’d been practicing that phrase, along with the other two Rider Michaels had taught her on the long flight from London to La Guardia Airport the night before. She alternated between them, making sure she had all of them down before they left for their mission later that evening. She knew this particular incantation meant a captured Reaper would be sent to Hell but not destroyed. There was another incantation for that, which went, “Infernus et perdere faciam te in nomine Domini,” and she was told this is the one they usually used, unless of course they had a particular reason why they would want to question the Reaper. Cutter Michaels, another Keeper, and Rider’s cousin, who had done most of Ru’s training, had made it pretty clear he preferred this second incantation.
However, if she was going to close the portal to Hell, the one they all believed was located very close by, out in the woods near Angel Grove and the town of Reaper’s Hollow, then she would need to know the incantation for that as well. In this case, it wasn’t so much the words that were important, it was the sentiment behind them and the power she could wield. No one was certain if any of the Keepers would be strong enough to close it, but for some reason, not only did everyone seem to think that Ruin was capable of locating the portal, but that she was the only one who could seal it for all time. It was a lot of pressure, particularly since she’d only known she was a Keeper for a few months while the rest of her team had known their whole lives that they were half-angels who had powers that allowed them to control either light, air, or earth. She’d heard there were occasionally Keepers who could manipulate water, but she had yet to meet one with that particular power.
“In nomine domini, ut claudere infernum est effi- cimur, omnium aeternum,” Ru whispered, continuing to pace. She had to write all of the words down initially, but now she was able to recite them from memory, and she was pretty sure she was saying the words right, though she’d needed correcting at first. Luckily, the flight had taken forever, so she’d had plenty of time to practice.
She hadn’t been able to sleep at all on the plane and hadn’t tried to since she’d gotten back to New York state, either. There was just something about being back here that made it hard to even consider taking a nap, though Cutter had suggested it. He was the unofficial leader of their group. Tall and stunningly handsome, with the same light blond hair as the rest of them, and piercing blue eyes, when she’d first met him a few months ago, she’d thought he looked like an angel—or a Greek god—but she’d never imagined the tales he’d tell her, ones of Archangels and demons, Grim Reapers and the Keepers who fought endlessly to keep them from collecting unmarked souls, people whose names were not yet written in the Book of the Dead. Ru had thought he was crazy at first, despite the fact that he’d demonstrated his skills as a Keeper of the Light more than once to her. But, once she’d tangled with Thanatos, the most powerful Reaper operating out of the area, she’d realized everything Cutter had told her was true, and she’d left her life as a fourth grade teacher behind.
The most compelling argument Cutter made to cause her to decide to pursue this path involved finding her birth mother. Cutter had produced enough evidence to convince her that she was capable of finding her mom, someone she only remembered in her dreams. He’d even taken her back to where the rest of the Keepers had grown up, a small town fittingly named Los Angeles, in Wyoming--not California--and introduced her to her mom’s mother, a sweet woman named Nana Sue who shared the same affinity for cats that Ru had. She was taking care of Ru’s precious kitty, Piper, even now.
Meeting her mother, whose name had been Seraphina when Ru was born, though now she preferred to be called Maggie, had been Ru’s reason for traveling to Holy Island, a place off the coast of Great Britain that was both quaint and difficult to access. They’d found her due to a humming sound only Ru and Lyric, who was a Keeper of the Wind, could hear. And even though Ru had envisioned bringing her mother back to the States with her, Maggie refused to go, saying she was willing to stay at Holy Island as long as necessary in order to pay penance for the love of her life, Larkin, a Reaper, who happened to be Ru’s father.
Getting on the plane to come back without her mother had been difficult, but Ru had called her as soon as they landed at La Guardia. Maggie assured her no Reapers had shown up, and Ru was relieved to hear it since she was pretty sure Thanatos, otherwise known as Nat, would’ve loved to find out where she was. For some reason, he seemed almost as interested in finding the lost Keeper as Ru was.
Now, they were back in Reaper’s Hollow, and Ru’s first true test of her skills would come tonight, if, and only if, she was able to find the portal. Her mother had said she believed in her daughter’s ability to find it, even though Maggie didn’t know the location as the Keepers had believed. Without that information, it would be up to Ru to follow her senses and feel it out.
And in all likelihood, they wouldn’t be alone. Their last night in London, Ru had dreamt that Nat warned her not to try to close the portal or else he’d have to hurt her. She wasn’t sure if it was a real dream or if he’d actually been there. She was certain another Keeper was present in her dream, but when she’d asked her friends, they’d all said it wasn’t them. Whoever it was, they hadn’t gotten close enough to Ru for her to recognize them before she attempted to leap realms and ended up back in her own hotel room, staring at the ceiling and wondering what had just happened to her.
Allowing her mind to wander was distracting her from her practice, and Ru tried to focus on the incantations. She was repeating the last one for about the hundredth time when she heard hurried footsteps outside of her door. A knock followed by the door opening had her frozen mid-sentence. “Ru, sorry to interrupt,” Rider said, “but we have a problem.”
She was starting to get used to that. “What is it? Nat up to no good?”
“No, it’s not him, but we need you to come downstairs right now. Cutter has some info he wants to fill us in on. It’s not good.”
Ru’s forehead crinkled. She wondered what kind of “not good” information wouldn’t concern Nat. “Okay,” she replied, picking up her phone off of the nightstand and shoving it in her back pocket as she followed him out into the hallway and down the stairs. Chills went up her spine as she considered all of the possibilities, but she tried to keep herself calm until she knew whether or not there was really something to panic about. Rider could be jum
ping to conclusions.
Angel Grove was well over two hundred years old. The house had been constructed just before the Revolutionary War when Keepers realized there was a portal in the area and that they needed to be nearby so as to control the flow of Reapers from one world to the next. They had thought for many years that the portal lay dormant, yet about the time that Sky, Lyric’s sister and their lifeline to the realm where an entirely different group of Keepers operated sort of behind the scenes, instructing teams of Keepers on Earth, found out that there was a possibility Ru was in New York, activity around Reaper’s Hollow began to increase. That was one of the reasons Cutter had determined it was worth it to look at Reaper’s Hollow more closely, which had led him to Ruin Roberts, fourth grade teacher at Thomas Elementary School, Keeper of the Light, lost to the Keepers as a small child when her mother fell in love with a Reaper and was nearly destroyed by the Archangel Raphael. It all sounded like something out of a myth or a fairytale, and yet that was her life.
Cutter was sitting on the sofa in the parlor exactly where he’d been sitting the night he revealed to her that she wasn’t who she thought she was, and in fact, her name wasn’t even what she believed it to be. He’d shown her a birth certificate with her real name, Rune Seraphina Raphaels Ronobes, on it; she’d freaked out and demanded to be taken home by someone else immediately. That someone else, Lyric Gabriels, sat in a chair beside him, running a hand through her short pink hair, looking nervous. On the other end of the sofa, sitting in a matching chair, Ivy Uriels chewed on her bottom lip while running her hands down her long, blonde braid.
“Wow, everyone looks so… anxious,” Ru said, laughing as she entered the room in an attempt to lighten the mood. “What’s up?” She took a seat next to Cutter, though not right next to him. Things had been a little off again since she’d practically held up a neon sign that read, “Kiss me!” the other night in her hotel room, which he’d either misread or run from. Giving him some space seemed like a good idea.
Rider sat down in a chair across from the couch and nodded at Cutter, who inhaled deeply before he said, “We have an issue, and I’m not sure what we can do to fix it.”
“Okay…” Ru said, drawing both vowels out a bit longer than necessary. “What is it?
“It’s your mom,” Cutter explained. “There’s a chance she might be in danger.”
Ru felt her stomach tighten and a bout of nausea swept over her. “What?” she asked. She’d just found her mom. The thought that something bad might happen to her now that they had finally reconnected made the panic well up inside of her. “What kind of danger? Rider said that this didn’t involve Nat.”
“It doesn’t,” Cutter assured her, though his voice didn’t sound any less stressed. “This is a different threat, and while I’m almost certain she won’t actually be harmed, she’s not going to like what’s about to happen.”
Ru looked from Cutter’s face to the others, one by one, trying to read them. Everyone seemed to know something she didn’t. She returned her eyes to her mentor, the Keeper who’d taught her just about everything she knew about who she really was. “Well, if it’s not Nat, what is it? Another Reaper? A demon? The devil himself?” Thinking back to the story her mother had told her about how an Archangel had come down from Heaven and banished her father to Hell, she said, “Oh, my God, is it Raphael?”
“No,” Cutter said, reaching out and placing his hand on her knee. “It’s…”
“It’s my sister.”
Ru turned her head to look straight into Lyric’s blue eyes. Confusion hit her like an ocean wave at high tide. “What? Your sister?”
“Sky.” Ru nodded, still confused, but at least she knew exactly who they were talking about now, although she’d never met Sky. She knew she was pretty powerful, though. “She’s headed that way.”
“But…” Ru began, shifting her eyes back to Cutter, “I thought you said you didn’t tell her where we were going.”
“I didn’t. I promise,” he said, and by the look on his face, she could tell he was being honest. She returned her gaze to Lyric.
“Hey, I was just as shocked as you are.” Once again, she saw nothing but honesty. She looked at Rider and Ivy and knew it hadn’t been anyone in this room.
“Then who…?”
“I have no idea how she found out,” Cutter answered before the question was even fully out of her mouth. “We will figure it out, but for now, we need to get over there and warn your mom. There’s a chance we might be able to stop Sky from whatever she is trying to do, but we can’t do it from here.”
“I’ve tried to contact my big sis, but she’s ignoring me,” Lyric said, her words laced with sarcasm even as her voice trembled in exasperation. “She didn’t take her whole team, but no one else whose back at her base knows what her intentions are.”
“And what do we think it is?” Ru asked, afraid of the answer.
“Hopefully, she just wants to bring her home,” Cutter said with a shrug.
“I sure the hell hope that’s all,” Rider muttered. It wasn’t like him to be so quiet, so Ru knew he was genuinely concerned.
“Okay, well, then, let’s head to the airport,” Ru exclaimed standing up and spinning around, like she didn’t even know where to begin.
“Hold on there, Ru,” Cutter said, reaching out for her arm and pulling her back to the sofa so that she was sitting right next to him. “We don’t have time for that.”
“Huh?” she asked, looking into his eyes for clarity.
“Sky left hours ago. We just found out about it. She is physically already in London.” Ivy’s voice sounded meek, almost a whisper, and Ru turned to face her. “There’s a good chance she’s already driving to Holy Island.”
“There are obstacles that might slow her down. Tides, the causeway, all of those things…. But there’s no reason to mess with them when you don’t have to,” Lyric continued. “Especially when it’s faster to do it the other way.”
“The other way?” Ru questioned, shifting her eyes from face to face again. She was glad for Cutter’s hand on her arm. His touch helped to center her, despite the surge of adrenaline beginning to take over her body.
“Manifestation,” Rider reminded her.
She’d only seen it once, when Rider had shown up in her bedroom in Los Angeles after she’d had a run-in with Nat. She’d never even tried herself. “You think Sky will go to my mom in person so that she can physically take her out—but we can get there first if we manifest and warn her—and what else?”
“Ward Sky off, hopefully,” Lyric explained. “Maybe if I get there before they take your mom, I can talk some sense into my sister. Although, she’s never been that sensible.” The last part was a mumble, barely audible, and it didn’t make Ru feel better.
“So… we need to get over there as soon as we can,” Cutter said, his tone even and soothing. “That way, your mom will have a fighting chance.”
“But I have no idea how to do that,” Ru reminded them.
“I know,” Cutter nodded. “And hopefully, I can show you. But if you can’t do it, Ru, we won’t have any choice but to go without you.”
“Go without me?” she repeated. “No, I need to be there. My mom needs me.”
“Okay, then,” Cutter agreed. “Then you and I are going to head to the dark room while these other three go ahead and make the jump. You guys, find Maggie, and keep an eye on her. Try not to approach her until I get there at least. I’ll see if I can bring Ru with me, but if Sky shows up, do what you have to.” He was looking at Lyric then, and she nodded. He glanced at Rider, whose ire was clearly up, and Ivy had a resolute expression on her face as well.
With a deep breath, Ru stood up again, praying that she would be able to do this in time to help her mom. The idea of leaving her body behind and manifesting in another location on Earth and manifesting seemed so unbelievable to her, she had no idea how she could ever pull it off, but she had to try, for her mother. Cutter took her hand and hurried
her toward the stairs. She followed, trying to concentrate on her breathing.
Rider had constructed the dark room in an effort to help Ru learn how to leave her body in a dream state to visit other realms and hunt down Reapers. She’d been able to do that eventually, through Cutter’s patient tutoring. But what she was about to do was completely different, and she had no idea if she could figure it out in time.
The moment Cutter closed the door, the room went pitch black, even though it was dusk outside. Rider had done a nice job of sealing out any places where even the thinnest stream of light could find its way through. Cutter used his own power to illuminate his fingertips so that they could see enough to make it across the room and drop to the floor in the same positions where he’d taught her how to leave her body to jump to another realm. She took a seat on the floor, and he sat next to her so that her knee was overlapping most of his folded legs. They both knew that, for some reason, making physical contact with him seemed to help her, so he didn’t resist when she scooted even closer.
“Okay, Ru. This is almost exactly the same as leaping into different realms. You’re still going to leave your body the same way, only, instead of jumping into the ether the way that you have before, you’re going directly to the location where you want to manifest.”
“Right,” Ru said, though absolutely nothing sounded right about what he’d just said. “And how, exactly, do I do that?”
Cutter gave her a reassuring smile which temporarily slowed her racing heart. “Just think about where your mom is, and concentrate on leaving the same way that you have in the past. Do you know where she might be this time of evening there?”