The Armies of Heaven

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by Jane Kindred


  “She’s forgiven you,” I said, and he wept in my arms.

  I have since presided over many changes in Heaven and have watched my joyful aetherspirit daughter grow more beautiful by the day, with no sign that she remembers the dark shadows of her early childhood. She is beloved by her fathers, by her tutors, and by her uncle—though the latter is sometimes struck by bouts of melancholy that confine him to his bed for days, which in her joyful nature, she cannot understand. But she loves him dearly in return, and works her natural healing magic—reading and singing to him in his darkness until he is happy again.

  She is beloved by the houses of Heaven, noble and humble alike, the darling of the demons—their “Raqia Princess,” though they know her father is only honorary Fallen—and the adored of the angels. One day she will be the queen of Heaven, and what else lies ahead of her, I can only guess. I know only that the tangled threads, crossed, severed, and started anew, have made a lovely tapestry, and how the rest unravels, only the syla, who spin the cords of queens, may know.

  But this is only my story, and you needn’t believe it. Perhaps there never were four honey-haired sisters in Heaven who resembled the poor Russian grand duchesses so cruelly cut down before their time. Perhaps no beautiful, golden-haired boy, heir to the throne of Heaven, was whisked off to the Unseen World by the Queen of the Fairies to escape the Realm of the Dead to which he belonged.

  Perhaps there was never a lovely Romani girl named Love—nor a solemn Orthodox monk from an island monastery in the Arctic Sea who loved her—who became governess to a celestial princess with Seraph blood in her veins. Perhaps there are no Virtues in Heaven’s wintry north whose beauty makes one weep, nor bitter, fiery Seraphim forever confined to a river of flame.

  Perhaps a rugged, red-haired demon-who-was-not-a-demon never loved a fierce-hearted thief and master of the celestial game of wingcasting—though this much, if nothing else, I would choose to believe.

  Perhaps no dancing unseen spirits guard the midsummer flowering of a magical fern in the forests of the Russian taiga while young people make merry with wreaths of wildflowers in their hair, leaping over bonfires and swimming naked under the moon. Perhaps there is no Midnight Court beneath Tsarskoe Selo where men are judged for their cruelty to women.

  But perhaps it’s best to live one’s life as if all of it were possible.

  Epilogue

  The Demon Count hooked his hands behind his head and leaned back on the rear legs of his chair at the wingcasting table, an unlit cigar poised in his mouth as he turned his head. The Grand Duke of the House of Arcadia stuck out his tongue, heated to a glowing red point, and lit the cigar for him.

  The count grinned around the cigar. “Good boy.”

  “Poshol na khui.”

  “Really now, Vasya.” He shook his head as he looked over his cards. “You’ve utterly exhausted me. Swear at me all you like. You’ll get nothing more out of me tonight. Perhaps a visit to the queen is in order.”

  Vasily straightened his spectacles, cursed him, and went to the bar. Belphagor smiled, taking the cigar from his mouth as he moved the angels of a perfect Full Choir about as if trying to decide what his best options might be with the hand he held.

  His new opponent slipping into the wingcasting queue to take the defeated player’s place was an angel so green it seemed almost cruel to take his money. The youth had obviously taken a glamour to appear demonic—visually quite effective, but the mannerisms screamed Host.

  “Is it true the Count of Raqia owns The Brimstone?” asked the angel, demonstrating that his mind wasn’t properly on the game.

  Belphagor gave him a noncommittal grunt.

  “They say he’s an incorrigible cheat.”

  “So they do,” Belphagor agreed around his cigar. “Wouldn’t trust him with my purse or my person.”

  The angel cast the die and Belphagor muttered “dragon.” His opponent looked downcast as he saw the dragon on the face of the die when it bounced back from the marble corner. Belphagor glanced up at the angel looking glumly at his hand, trying to decide what to discard without making the slightest effort to hide his disappointment. Something in the angel’s expressive eyes, though they were colored amber, caught his attention as the youth put down his card with reluctance.

  Belphagor lifted his pierced eyebrow. “Does Lively know you’ve been in her cupboards?”

  The angel blanched.

  “Nice touch with the topaz oil. Your mother was always fond of ruby herself. Though I daresay she won’t be pleased when I haul you into her chambers by the scruff.”

  Ola glared and dropped her cards on the table. “You are an incorrigible cheat, Beli,” she said with a pout.

  “And you’re simply incorrigible, my little angel.” He set down his hand as he stood, and Ola gasped at the Full Choir as she peered across the table.

  “Don’t tell Papa,” she wheedled as he yanked her from her chair, but he was too quick for her, and had already swung her around by the collar toward the bar.

  “Maybe there’s something you’d like to tell Papa yourself.” He tapped Vasily’s shoulder.

  Ola sank down into her coat as Vasily turned and picked up his spectacles from the bar.

  “I’m sorry, Papa,” she said in a small voice, and even with the glamour and the topaz oil, she managed to give him the look that always melted him.

  “Go wait for us by the door,” said Belphagor, and Ola slunk away with her head down. He laughed at Vasily’s smitten look. “You’re going to have to pretend to be angry with her.”

  “You’re a bad influence,” Vasily grumbled while the porter fetched their coats at a snap of Belphagor’s fingers.

  “I am?” Belphagor laughed as they followed Ola out into the night. Colorful lanterns threw delicate patterns on the snow as they walked along Boulevard Raqia toward the Virtuous Memorial Bridge.

  “What, you’re going to blame it on me, Prince of Tricks?”

  Belphagor tucked Vasily’s arm in his. “No, my dear malchik. I think there is only one explanation for our wayward girl’s behavior.” He smiled, his eyes beaming with pride as he watched their sulking daughter, disguised as a boy and swinging her boot in frustration at the hardened embankment. “She gets it from the queen of Heaven.”

  Acknowledgments

  As this trilogy comes to an end, my deepest gratitude goes out to the readers who found their way to The House of Arkhangel’sk. I’d also like to thank the many book bloggers who’ve hosted me along the way, and the reviewers who took a chance and opened the books; I will always treasure my copy of Russian Life Magazine with its lovely review of The Fallen Queen.

  A special thanks is due my friend Martin Rawlings-Fein, who went above and beyond to spread the word, as well as to everyone who took the time to rate or review the books online—you will never know how important that is to an author; it means the world.

  And finally, I’m thankful for the beautiful people of the city of St. Petersburg, who opened their doors to me and stole my heart. My hope is that one day they’ll have the opportunity to see my love for their great city in the pages of these books.

  In the meantime, Anazakia and the boys will have a chance to reach an international audience in France and Japan in the coming months. Who knows where they may go from there?

  Hierarchy of the Spheres

  The First Sphere

  The Heavens (“Heaven”)

  First Heaven: The Empyrean

  Capital: Gehenna

  once populated by the the Host of the First Choir, now abandoned

  Second Heaven: Aravoth

  Capital: Aravoth City

  populated by the Order of Virtues

  Third Heaven: Shehaqim (“The Firmament”)

  Capital: Elysium

  populated by the Host of the Fourth Choir

  Fourth Heaven: Ma’on

  Capital: Asphodel

  populated by the Order of Powers and Fourth Choir military recruits

  Fifth
Heaven: Zevul

  Capital: Araphel

  populated by the Order of Dominions and Fourth Choir scholars

  Raqia

  (formerly the Sixth Heaven, now annexed as a district of Elysium)

  Capital: None (formerly Arcadia)

  currently populated by the Fallen

  Seventh Heaven: Vilon

  Capital: Arcadia (formerly Aden)

  populated by the Host of the Fourth Choir

  The Host (angels)

  First Choir: Spirits of Air

  Orders: Tafsarim (“the Aeons”), Elim (“the Ardors”),

  Erelim (“the Splendors”)

  mysterious beings none living have seen

  Second Choir: Spirits of Fire

  Orders: Seraphim, Cherubim, Ophanim

  elemental beings of fire who are able to manifest wings in

  Heaven—bodyguards, brute squads, and palace guards of the

  reigning principalities

  Third Choir: Spirits of Earth

  Orders: Dominions, Virtues, Powers

  philosophers and administrators; scientists & investigators;

  military officers

  Fourth Choir: Spirits of Water

  Orders: Principalities, Archangels, Angels

  nobility, merchants, and commoners

  Supernal House of Arkhangel’sk: Heaven’s imperial family, it takes its name from an earthly city named for the monastery of the Archangel Mikhail, founding principality of the House

  Malakim: Messengers to the world of Man from the

  Order of Archangels

  Elohim: An elite sect and ruling body of princes (sars) of the

  Order of Virtues (Aravoth is the only princedom ruled by a governing body rather than a principality)

  Hashmallim: Elite warriors of the Supernal Army from

  the Order of Powers

  The Fallen (demons)

  Common demons: angels of mixed blood—

  the serfs, demimondes, and outlaws of Heaven

  The Second Sphere

  The World of Man

  Terrestrial Fallen: demons who permanently reside

  in the world of Man

  Grigori: Watchers from the Order of Powers sent to

  observe the world of Man; the first Fallen

  Nephilim: hybrid offspring of Grigori and Man

  The race of Man: humans

  Night Travelers: a secret society of gypsies who act as liaisons

  between the world of Man, the celestial militsiya, and terrestrial Fallen

  The Third Sphere

  Nezrimyi Mir (The Unseen World)

  the realm of the Unseen, located in the Russian

  forest in the world of Man

  The Unseen

  Syla: bereginyi: spring syla; mavki: summer syla;

  samodivi: autumn syla; snegurochki: winter syla

  female nature spirits

  Leshi: male nature spirits

  Rusalki: female water spirits

  The Fourth Sphere

  Irkalla and the Realm of the Dead (“Hell”)

  Nehemoth: servants and gatekeepers of Irkalla

  The dead: formerly living souls of the First and Second Spheres, now permanent residents of the Realm of the Dead

  Turn the page for a look at the stunning first novel

  in the House of Arkhangel’sk series

  The Fallen Queen

  by

  Jane Kindred

  Now available from Entangled Select

  Pervoe:

  A Discordant Note in the Music of the Spheres

  from the memoirs of the Grand Duchess Anazakia Helisonovna of the House of Arkhangel’sk

  As any demon will tell you over a bottle of vodka or a game of preferans, Heaven is not the paradise you have been told. Depending upon the demon who holds your ear, he may also tell you Heaven’s last ruler was a tyrant who cared nothing for the lives of the common angel. Never believe it. He was the kindest soul ever born to the supernal House of Arkhangel’sk; Heaven would be blessed to have him now. But put no faith in me, for I am his daughter. I was born within Elysium’s pearly gates and have been cast out.

  I do not like to think my impetuosity brought down the throne of Heaven, but on the darkest days, it is what I believe. When Elysium fell to a quiet coup, I was at a wingcasting table in Raqia instead of by my family’s side.

  It is a favorite game in Raqia’s dens of iniquity. A fast-moving combination of cards and dice, wingcasting requires single-minded concentration and a certain narcissistic audacity. Challengers who hope to unseat the reigning prince of the game progress from one table to the next until they are opposite the champion.

  I only reached this coveted spot on one occasion.

  Raqia’s reigning prince that night was a dark-haired demon with eyes as sharp as the waxed points of his hair. He played his hand as cool as you please and barely seemed to notice me, but he put nearly every card I discarded into play with his own and soon had me hemorrhaging both cards and crystal.

  Smoke burned my eyes while the demon nursed his cigar in a deliberate distraction. When he took it between his fingers, I could not help following with my eyes. Beneath the tattered lace of his cuffs, black crosses and diamonds, interlaced with characters of an unfamiliar alphabet, braced his fingers between the knuckles like rings made of ink.

  He followed my gaze. “Prison,” he said around his cigar, the first word he’d spoken not directly related to the game.

  He was trying to unnerve me; there were no prisons in Heaven. There was no need for any among the Host.

  Raqia, for the most part policed itself, preferring to game the crystal from wayward angelic youth rather than take it by force and risk the flaming hand of seraphic justice. If he had really been in prison, he was one of the true Fallen who had spent time in the world of Man—though all demons were Fallen, by the Host’s reckoning. Their indiscriminate breeding muddied the cardinal elements by mixing the pure water dominant in the blood of the Fourth Choir with the earth of the Third, the fire of the Second, and the air of the First. Such blending resulted in their sullied complexions and varied hue of hair and eye.

  A glance around the poorly lit den revealed half a dozen natural shades of brown and a dozen more who colored their hair and eyes with deliberately wild hues in defiance of celestial purity.

  Most who fell to the world of Man bore signs of aging not present in the Host; something in the air of the terrestrial plane made Men’s lives short. A fine layer of stubble that could only have been carefully cultivated and trimmed hid any weathering of my opponent’s skin, but studying his face, I saw the telltale signs: little lines around his deep-set ebony eyes that said he’d fallen more than once.

  I tightened the drawstring on the purse of crystal at my wrist, careful to keep the luminous celestine of my supernal ring turned toward my palm and cupped between my fingers while I played my hand.

  The demon raised a dark eyebrow, pierced with a thin bar of metal that accentuated his coarse nature. I had put down a card in my distraction without waiting for him to call the die. I blushed and snatched it up again, furious with myself for making such a stupid blunder. His immodest grin said he thought his ploy had worked, but it took more than a small-time terrestrial thief to unnerve me. No novice to the dens or to demon magic, I never came to Raqia without a protective charm tucked into my bodice.

  In truth, I had been distracted since climbing down the trellis to sneak out in the middle of a tedious banquet. My younger brother Azel was sick in bed, and my cousin Kae was acting strangely toward his wife, my sister Omeliea—and both circumstances were in some measure my fault.

  §

  Though I did not know it yet, the die had been cast against the House of Arkhangel’sk by my unbridled impulse on the day I turned seventeen. On a hunting holiday in the mountains of Aravoth, my father had presented me with a blue roan mare. I was eager to take her out, but the first snowfall had ushered in the season and my sisters were keen t
o head inside the lodge and curl up by the fire.

  I sulked while the groom took my horse to the stable. Not even a gift of a gorgeous red velvet riding cap lined with silver fox could coax me out of my bad humor.

  When my sister Omeliea admonished me for being moody, I tossed the cap back at her and announced I was taking my horse out by myself. Mama would never have tolerated such willful behavior, but she had stayed behind with Azel, and Papa was so softhearted, it pained him to discipline his daughters.

  When I led the mare out of the stable, Cousin Kae was waiting for me.

  “Tell her to stop being such a child!” my sister called, wrapped in a fleece on the steps of the lodge. “It’s freezing out here!”

  Kae caught the reins and drew the mare to him. “Stop being such a child.” He winked, stroking the horse’s muzzle. “You can’t go alone.”

  I pulled the tether from his hands and swung into the saddle. “Then I suppose someone will have to mount up.”

  I trotted the blue roan out to the road and into the wooded heights, on a path muted with preternatural quiet. It seemed nothing but my horse and I existed. Here in the North, we were without the oppressive, constant presence of the Seraphim Guard, which Papa could not abide outside the city. In Heaven’s hinterlands, he said, there was no need for their protection.

  After a minute or two, I heard the light clip of Kae’s horse behind me.

  “Is Ola angry with me?”

  Kae drew up beside me. “Not as angry as she is with me for letting you go.” He shrugged beneath his cloak. “It will pass. Sometimes I think it’s her job as a wife to be angry. She’s very efficient at it.”

  I laughed at his feigned look of persecution. “Such trials you must endure for the crown.”

 

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