20 Shades of Shifters: A Paranormal Romance Collection
Page 109
She relaxed, slightly, leaning over and patting my ankle. “They’re really not supposed to, but… sometimes we can make exceptions.”
A shadow passed through the light near the edge of the entrance to my bedroom, momentarily blocking out even the faint light from the outside and casting the form’s face into darkness. For a brief moment I thought, irrationally, that it was one of the Wraiths… that the shadow creatures had somehow breached the inner walls of the Garden, and that we were all in terrible danger.
But in my heart I knew it wasn’t so.
Ishan stepped out of the shadow and into the light, wearing a huge, genuine smile, his left arm bandaged and bound up in a sling. He stepped over to my bed and I wrapped my arms around his shoulders, drawing him down against me, pressing my lips to his.
“I thought you’d died,” I said, my voice trembling, wavering as emotion welled up within me.
“That’s my line,” he said, kneeling down beside my bed, his hands reaching for mine, hooking them together and intertwining our fingers. I wiggled my fingers against his and we shared a relieved giggle.
“Okay, okay,” said Asena, groaning as she climbed up to her feet. “Let’s get the hell out of here and give these two some room.”
I smiled my gratitude to her, releasing Ishan for a moment as Asena leaned down for a careful hug, her red hair spilling all over my face. “Don’t get up to anything silly, okay?” she said.
“My whole body hurts,” I reminded her, “despite the drugs. If I wasn’t so deliriously happy to see you, all of you, I’m pretty sure I’d just go straight back to sleep.”
She smiled warmly at me and then slipped away. Katelyn took her turn with a hug, too, and at the cave mouth I could see Vriko and Susi. Vriko gave me a thumbs up right before Asena boisterously shooed him away and back down the corridor.
They were gone, then, leaving the two of us alone.
Ishan touched my hand and I wrapped my fingers around his, squeezing him back as hard as I could. Despite the pain in my body, despite knowing that the shadows would, soon enough, fall over us once again, my heart felt as though it would burst with joy. He was alive.
I wanted to stay in this moment forever. I don’t know how long he sat there, just holding my hand, tracing his thumb over the back of my hand, but I enjoyed every second of it.
Questions swirled around in my head, dancing like shadows from a candle. How had the Wraiths returned? What would happen now that Jacques was dead? How had the human skull come to be in the Rewa killing grounds, and whose was it?
Questions, though, were less important than Ishan’s presence. My doubts and fears melted away when he was with me. I raised his hand to my lips, kissing the backs of his fingers, taking in his scent.
Our future was uncertain, but the present felt as certain as anything I’d ever felt in my life. Ishan and I were an unmoving rock, a solid mass that wasn’t going anywhere. We were together, and whatever the future would bring, the present was where we wanted to stay.
It wasn’t eternity, and this perfect moment couldn’t last, but it was enough.
For now.
The End of Tigress, Book I.
Tigress Book II begins with Tigress: Rapture under Moonlight, which is available now!
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Grace by Alica Knight and David Adams
Grace
A Paranormal Romance Novel
Go to Heaven for the climate,
Hell for the company.
— Mark Twain
Copyright Alica Knight and David Adams
A shape-shifting succubus, Grace, is expelled from Hell and given a simple task to prove she's worthy of a return to the pit. However, when circumstances conspire against her, the most powerful ally she can find plays for the other side…
A paranormal romance novel written by a team-up between David Adams and Alica Knight.
Straight Out of Hell
Car Park
Jersey City Denny’s
My head hurt. It was raining. I felt like I was going to throw up.
I was lying on asphalt on my side. The left side of my face burned; gravel rash, probably. I pulled myself up into a sitting position, resisting the urge to empty my stomach contents onto the ground. I was in a car park. A huge glowing sign nearby said DENNY’S. There were cars parked nearly between white lines. The sky was cloudy but through it could catch glimpses of blue sky.
This wasn’t Hell. It was the mortal realm.
How had I gotten here?
Cautiously, I eased my way up to my feet. I was standing inside a massive scorch mark; a pentagram of melted, scorched asphalt. The standard mark of a helliport: a burning on the ground causing one hell of a scene.
Eyes started to find their way toward me. Drawn by either the sizzling pavement or the smell…or, as I discovered with a glance, my nudity.
Lucifer’s Teeth. At least my skin was dark and brown and fleshy, not red. Gingerly, I reached up and touched my temple. My horns were hidden. I couldn’t feel my wings. I was shapeshifted into a human body. I wasn’t appearing as a demon. That was something at least.
“Hey lady,” said some guy nearby, his arms full of brown paper shopping bags, huddling under a black umbrella. “Are you okay?”
Was I? Apart from having absolutely no memory of how I got here, and feeling like my stomach was in a washing machine and my body inside a totally different washing machine, I felt mostly okay. “I’m fine,” I said.
“You’re not wearing any clothes.” They looked up at the cloudy sky overhead then back to me. “And I think you just got struck by lightning.”
A lightning strike which had left a scorch mark in the shape of the five pointed star of the beast. I’d obviously plane shifted…but how? Why? Why couldn’t I remember?
No time to argue with mortals. I took off, running across the car park, the rough asphalt stinging my human feet. I almost considered shifting to my natural form and flying away, but…no. A masquerade violation would bring down the big guy. I couldn’t risk it. I’d seen what happened to demons who were sent to the pits as guests, not hosts. It wasn’t pretty. The cold wind nipped at me, blowing water into my eyes.
“Hey lady!” the guy called after me, his voice retreating as I tore through the ranks of cars. “Come back! You’re not well!”
I sprinted out of the car park as the rain intensified. Fortunately the downpour gave me some kind of cover; I couldn’t let the humans get a good look at me and they had cameras and things these days. Good thing heavy rain usually messed them up. I kept my head down, ducking and weaving between cars, until I found myself in an alleyway between two low, squat buildings.
Succubi were much tougher and stronger than humans, but after sprinting for so long I was out of breath. I ducked behind a dumpster, leaning up against the metal and filling my lungs.
My stomach settled down. My skin started to dry out. I started to plan my next move. Where?
The dumpster shook slightly, vibrating as though something inside was trying to escape. The lid lifted, a tiny hand holding it open by an inch. A small creature crawled out, no more than two inches high, his hands filthy white claws like a drowned man’s, his skin pink, fading to dark red on his wings. His tail was a scorpion’s tail, wickedly barbed, and a pair of thin horns crowned his head.
An imp.
Imps were wretched creatures, messengers and servants of Hell, but they knew things. They could be commanded by full demons. I just needed to assert dominance. “Creature,” I said, “I com—”
“Well well well,” he said over
the top of me, his voice high pitched yet masculine, full of sarcasm and thinly veiled contempt. “Look who it is. The pit’s biggest fuckup. The biggest loser of the millennium. Possibly ever.” He took flight, hovering in front of my face. “How’s it hanging, Grace?”
“You know my name?”
He sneered. “Everyone does.”
“What is this?” I asked, staring him down. “Some kind of new layer of Hell?”
“Worse,” he said, “New Jersey. But hey, it’s gentrifying nicely, thank-you-very-much and these days is quite liveable.” He made a tiny ok symbol. “Buy, buy, buy.”
“That’s great,” I said, resisting the urge to throttle the contemptuous little beast. “What am I doing here?”
He stared at me, eyeing me off with a curious, almost sympathetic air. “Oooh, baby. You don’t remember…do you?”
“No,” I said, searching my mind. “The last thing I remember, I was…I got a summons. From my boss, I think.” I remembered reading the note and feeling so good. I had crawled out of my pit and shifted into this form, the same one I was in now, and then I had…
Forgotten almost everything. What was left was fuzzy. There had been a flash of energy. A white light. “I don’t know.” I shook my head. “Tell me what happened,” I said. A commanding tone was important with imps.
The little thing laughed at me. Laughed right in my face. “Well, if you don’t remember what you did…” He blew out a low whistle. “That’s too bad. I can’t tell you shit. Orders from the top.” He stuck out his tiny hand. “I’m Asmodeus. Third layer, fourth order, Bannerman of Hell.”
“I am Grace, Fifth layer, first order, succubus.”
“I know who you are,” he said, cheerfully but voice edged in ominous promise. “Everyone knows who you are.”
Now that made no sense. Nobody knew who I was. I was a very minor demon, only a few centuries old. “What do you mean?”
“Can’t say.”
“But—”
“Can’t. Say.”
Fine. Imps and their rules. Torturing the little bastard wouldn’t give me anything…they didn’t feel pain. “Okay,” I spat. “Then leave me alone. I need to think of a way out of this…” I grimaced, closing my eyes. It didn’t help. “And try to think of a way out of this.”
No matter how much I rifled through my memories I couldn’t find anything. Just the white flash. Then nothing.
“I’m here to help you,” said Asmodeus, fluttering over and prying open my left eye. It watered uncomfortably. I swatted him away. “C’mon. There’s a safe house nearby. We can talk there…and get you some clothes.”
Safe house? “Okay,” I said, glaring at the tiny creature, entirely unsure this was in my best interest. “Lead on.”
Asmodeus
Alleyway outside
Heavenly Apartments
New Jersey
Asmodeus led me through alley to other alley, winding between dilapidated buildings. The rain eased up, becoming a light drizzle, and that worried me a little. With the rain gone people would come out. I still didn’t have any clothes.
“So,” I asked, firmly. “How did I get here? I don’t remember helliporting, and using that ability on others isn’t possible for anyone below the first layer. Gotta be a big deal to do it.”
“Maybe you were real drunk,” said Asmodeus, somewhat evasively.
“I wasn’t drinking,” I said. He should have known this stuff. “And it wouldn’t matter anyway. Succubi are immune to poisons. Alcohol counts as a poison.”
“Yeah.” Asmodeus blew out a whistle, fluttering over to a fire escape, the door grimy and blackened by pollution. “This is the place.”
Looked like some kind of cheap hellhole, but I gently pulled open the door and slipped into the stairwell. The door to this level was chained up—fire safety apparently wasn’t a big deal in this place—so I began to climb.
“So,” said Asmodeus, perching on my shoulder. “You woke up in a Denny’s car park, huh? Wow. Your life is a Cards Against Humanity Card.”
My memory was almost blank. Only fragments of stuff from the pit. I definitely didn’t remember anything about how I got here. Maybe it was a substance problem…even though that made absolutely no sense since my blood couldn’t be poisoned.
Could demons have inner demons? Huh. Sounded like something Jayden Smith would tweet.
I glared at Asmodeus out of the corner of my eye, turning at the landing and continuing to walk up. “You still haven’t told me why you’re really here,” I said. My legs ached from all the running but I ignored their complaints. “And I don’t believe for a moment that it’s because you wanna help me. Nobody in the pit does anything for anyone else.”
Asmodeus didn’t answer for a moment, casually tapping his ankle against my shoulder. “Can’t say,” he said, finally.
Useless little beast.
I passed the third floor. Asmodeus grabbed my ear. “Stop here.”
“Ow!”
He let go. “Sorry, old habit.”
Old habit? “You regularly grab people by their ears?”
“Yup,” he said, without elaborating. “Room 313.”
313. That was so…boring. “Why not 666?” I asked.
He stared at me like I was stupid. “Because for one of Hell’s hideouts, that would be way too obvious. Try to use your brain a little bit, huh?”
Fair enough. I ducked out of the stairwell and into a musty, smelly corridor. The carpet was a stained red, as though this building were once an expensive set of apartments left to decay.
“I thought you said this place was gentrifying,” I said, passing by various doors. Each one was cheap, painted chipboard. 301, 302, 303…
“It’s a process,” said Asmodeus, sounding very pleased with himself. “We’re doing good work. Lots of imps working this city. Hard working, salt of the pit kind of folks we are.”
I was sure they were. Industrious little things, subtle but stupid.
We came up to Room 313. The plaque hung slightly askew and from within I could smell the faint, comforting aroma of brimstone; far too subtle for any human to detect.
“A’right, here we go,” said Asmodeus, fluttering off my shoulder and hovering near the lock. He reached into the keyhole, fumbling with the tumblers with his fingers, and then the door popped ajar with a click.
I pushed open the door. Beyond was a room much bigger, and more lavish than its surroundings would suggest; the red carpet here was clean and gilt with gold, the windows were floor-to-ceiling and covered by thick white curtains, and even the walls were covered in thick, plush tapestries depicting Hell’s various victories.
“Nice,” I said, stepping past the threshold. The room seemed to go on and on and on, as though it were far, far bigger than the contents of the cramped apartment block.
“Yeah, well, senior demons sometimes camp out here, when they’re off to play havoc with the stock market in NYC, or go to Occupy Wall Street protests or whatever. The head honchos ride in style, you know. And they play both sides.”
Of course they did, everyone knew that. That was how our side was doing so well; we had our fingers in the extremes of all political movements. Republicans and Democrats. White and black. When it came to stirring up racial tensions and goading people into sin, we didn’t take sides. We did whatever we could to make life just that little bit worse for as many mortals as possible.
But none of this answered the important question: what I was doing here. I turned and put my hands on my hips, glaring at Asmodeus. “Okay. Talk, little guy. Now.” I swept my hand around. “Why all…this? What am I doing here?”
“Can’t say,” said Asmodeus.
I simply glared, narrowing my eyes at him and putting my hands on my hips.
Asmodeus sighed, running his little hands through his stringy hair. “Okay,” he said, “here’s what I can tell you.” He took a deep breath. “You’re banished.”
He might as well have told me that I had two heads, or t
hat I was being reassigned to work a Heaven’s bouncer. “That’s not possible,” I said, waving a hand. “I’m a fucking full demon. I’m a blooded resident of the pit. There hasn’t been a single soul raised from Hell since the founding, let alone an actual factual dark one.”
I waited for him to laugh, to tell me it was all a stupid imp joke, something obviously that couldn’t happen because it had never happened and was totally impossible.
He didn’t laugh.
“Seriously?”
“Seriously.” Asmodeus tapped his foot almost nervously. “You’re gone-ski. I mean…demons can plane shift at will. Try it. Helliport to your lair. I’ll wait.”
Okay, fine. I’d show that little twit. I turned my focus inward, summoning the dark energy required to tear a hole in the mortal realm and slip between the planar boundaries into the pits. My fingers felt warmth, the familiar fire of Hell, and a pleasant tingle ran up my spine. I felt my body start to slip away…
And then a massive shock coursed through me, a powerful flash of lightning that I felt rather than saw. My whole body lit up in pain; the comforting heat of Hell had become a roaring wall of fire, impenetrable and inhospitable.
With a shriek of pain, I found myself back in room 313, a smouldering pentagram below my feet and a bemused-seeming Asmodeus looking on.
“Told ya,” he said, words dripping with smugness.
Lucifer’s Teeth. This…this was really bad.
I tried again. Focusing my anger, I used it to draw upon my inner power. I pushed hard; whatever barrier was forcing me back, I would overcome it. I would—