Rafe’s voice hardened. “Tell me what you saw.”
“It was more what she saw.”
“She? Demons aren’t male or female.”
“It felt feminine. She was flying. It felt like astral projection, but I know I was right here, all of me, mind and body and soul. But I was also with her, flying, looking for a vessel. A willing participant in whatever insanity she has planned. But—” she frowned. “She found someone. I saw her.”
“You saw the demon?”
“The person she was looking at. Brunette. Petite. Very pretty. I can see her as clearly as I can see you.”
“Do you know where she is?”
Moira concentrated but her head ached and she just didn’t know. She paced the small room, unable to sit still. “I hate this! If God wanted to help us in this battle, he’d give us clearer instructions.”
“We just need to figure them out,” Rafe said.
“I’d rather have a rule book, thank you very much.”
Anthony stopped in the doorway. With bags under his bloodshot eyes, he looked like he hadn’t slept the night before. “Rico’s plane just landed. He’s on his way for the meeting. Twenty minutes.” He glanced at Rafe. “I need to talk to you.”
She raised an eyebrow at Anthony. “Secrets already?”
He didn’t answer her, didn’t even look at her.
She pushed by him. “Whatever. I’m going for a run.”
“Twenty minutes,” he repeated as she walked by.
Rafe had grown beyond annoyed at how Anthony treated Moira. When he heard the front door slam shut, he said, “Hasn’t she proven herself to you? She nearly died at the warehouse to save everyone inside. If it wasn’t for her, you would have died at Good Shepherd.”
He didn’t mention that she’d also saved Rafe’s own life, not once but twice. Anthony was still skeptical about how—or if—Moira had killed the Cerberbus-type demon. Even Rafe wasn’t certain about what happened in Fiona’s library, or how Moira had been bitten by the demon and survived with only a small scar, yet he’d witnessed the entire thing. He knew what he’d seen. He knew what Moira had suffered. And he’d seen the demon, been attacked by it and still had the scars.
Anthony was struggling with a response, and Rafe pushed. “You stood by me. You believed in my innocence, that I had nothing to do with the murders at the mission. Why can’t you give Moira the benefit of the doubt?”
“That’s different.”
“Why?”
“Rafe—I don’t want to go into it.”
“It’s because Moira was a witch? Because she made mistakes?”
“She’s still a witch! You know it, I know it. I don’t want to hear how she’s not using magic, she has witch blood and there’s nothing that can change that. What do you want from me, Rafe? I’m trying to accept her because of her value to our mission, but you weren’t there when Peter died. You didn’t see what happened. You didn’t bury his broken body. She was responsible, and it still hurts. Peter was my brother.”
“You think I don’t understand the pain? I was just as responsible for the murders at the mission, yet you aren’t blaming me.”
“You weren’t—”
“I was. In the same way Moira was.”
“It was completely different. You weren’t using magic, you didn’t open the door for a demon to breach the sanctuary.”
“I was blind. I was ignorant. I didn’t see the clues.”
“They were powerful witches. We don’t know what spells they cast. And even though you didn’t know about the spells, you were suspect enough to send them away.”
“But I didn’t know Jeremiah Hatch was one of them,” Rafe said quietly.
“Rafe—it’s not the same thing and you know it.”
“No I don’t.”
Anthony rubbed his eyes. “I can’t argue this now. Father Issa is bringing the Bishop to the meeting.”
Rafe frowned.
“I know what you’re thinking.”
“No, you don’t.”
“I met Bishop Carlin when I first arrived in Santa Louisa. You’re thinking that because he was friendly with Corrine Davies he is one of them, but he could have been under a spell or simply overworked and didn’t see the signs. He’s not part of St. Michael’s Order, he doesn’t know what to look for. It’s important that we keep him close. Friend or enemy, he’s our connection to the hierarchy here in the United States. We need his tacit agreement. Any opposition from Carlin creates problems for us.”
Rafe understood that intuitively, but he’d been the one to confront Carlin last fall when he fired Corinne Davies. Carlin had been livid—and that was an understatement. If Carlin was under a spell, that made him weak; if he had been involved on a more personal level with Davies, that made him part of Fiona O’Donnell’s coven, and that made him culpable in mass murder, not to mention crimes against his vows and God.
“Moira would be able to tell,” Rafe said.
Anthony hesitated.
“Dammit, Anthony! You didn’t hesitate to use her before, when her life was on the line, you think she’s going to deceive us?” Anthony still didn’t say anything. “I can tell if she’s lying,” Rafe added. It ached that Anthony was putting him in an adversarial position with Moira, even if she didn’t know. He didn’t want to have to scrutinize her. He didn’t want to think of her as a potential enemy.
Anthony said, “Don’t tell her.”
Rafe understood his meaning. “You’re still testing her. When will it stop?”
“Knowing what we want may cloud her judgment.”
Rafe disagreed, but said. “Whatever you want. I’m going for a walk.”
“Rico—”
“Is coming. I know.” Saint Rico. With Father Philip gone, he was essentially their leader here in America. None of the others in the Order would leave the sanctuary in Italy to lead them. And there were so many battles in so many parts of the world, they could count on no one but one another.
It didn’t give them a lot of hope to find, trap, and send back to hell the Seven Deadly Sins.
Original Sin is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
A Ballantine Books Mass Market Original
Copyright © 2010 by Allison Brennan
Excerpt from Carnal Sin copyright © 2010 by Allison Brennan
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
BALLANTINE and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.
This book contains an excerpt from the forthcoming book Carnal Sin by Allison Brennan. This excerpt has been set for this edition only and may not reflect the final content of the forthcoming edition.
eISBN: 978-0-345-51916-0
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