CHAPTER TWENTY

Any lingering doubts about the
existence of demon spells and dark magic faded as Emma spoke words
in a language Andre couldn’t identify, then opened her mouth,
releasing a shimmering stream of... flies.
Or something that looked a hell of a lot like
flies.
Tiny black, buzzing dots rushed toward the blood
circle and the men standing inside it, swarming over their bare
skin, covering them until every man looked like a shadow of
himself. Shadows that writhed and screamed, colliding with one
another in a desperate attempt to run from the biting, stinging
specks of black.
But there was nowhere to run. The blood glowed
bright red on the floor, creating some kind of invisible fence.
Each time one of the men drew too close to the markings, he was
repelled back to the center, back into the heart of the
swarm.
And then there were more screams—raw and feral—and
gunfire and beneath it all the buzzing from the horde.
You’re losing your mind. Andre closed his
eyes and shook his head, struggling to clear it. Surely he was
hallucinating. The Hamma in his bloodstream was making him see
things that weren’t happening, making him imagine all this. He
swallowed against the nausea rolling through his midsection,
blinked away the spark-infused sweat rolling into his eyes.
“Holy fucking—Shut it down! Shut it down!” Andre
looked up in time to see Francis lunge for Emma, grabbing her by
the shoulders and shaking her like a doll. Her head snapped back
and forth, her eyes rolling back in her head. “Stop that shit.
Now!”
Andre struggled against the rope binding him to the
chair, rage banishing the effects of the drugs for a moment as he
fought to gain his freedom. He was going to kill Francis for
touching Emma, then kill him again for ripping their family apart,
then kill him again for murdering his father and poisoning him with
Hamma claws, then—
“Fuck this shit.” The man who’d been dragging
Andre’s chair toward the circle bolted for the door, knocking Andre
over in the process.
He hit the ground hard, shoulder bruising, breath
rushing from his chest, making him even more highly aware of his
racing heart. He felt about ten seconds away from a heart attack.
He needed that antivenom, but he wasn’t a fool. Francis didn’t
intend for him to live. Whatever Dr. Finch was bringing up here, it
was probably another breed of poison. His only chance of survival
was to grab Emma and run for the door and hope they could find a
cab willing to take them to the nearest ER.
He could do it. If he could only gain his freedom
while chaos still ruled.
Shoving away the rotten feeling spreading through
his insides, Andre brought his knees to his chest, caught the
bottom of the chair with his heels, and shoved. Simultaneously, he
lifted his arms as high behind him as he could, silently thanking
his trainer for making him stretch after every lifting
session.
One try, then two, and finally the chair flipped
beneath him, the back digging into his spine for several painful
inches before it completed its turn from right side up to upside
down. He was still bound to the middle and unable to use his hands,
but his feet were free. He could run. Or at least walk. He rolled
onto his stomach and scrambled into a standing position, swaying as
his guts cramped hard enough to make him moan. The rush of the
Hamma was coming faster now. The pellets must have burst in his
stomach. He had to hurry; he had to get to Emma before he was too
sick to be of any help to her.
He stumbled across the room, dragging the chair
behind him. Francis now had the woman he loved by the neck, his
thick hands squeezing so tightly that Emma’s face had flooded red
and her veins stood out in sharp definition. He was strangling her
to death. The realization gave Andre the strength to run the last
few steps. He hurled himself at Francis headfirst, ramming into his
cousin’s rib cage hard enough to send a flash of light streaking
behind his eyes.
They fell to the ground, and Emma collapsed beside
them, coughing as she struggled to breathe. Andre slammed his head
into his cousin’s, barely noticing the pain as skull knocked
against skull. He didn’t have the use of his hands; there was no
choice but to use his head.
He was rearing back for another attack when a burst
of electricity exploded inches from his face. He looked down to see
Francis’s eyes bulge wide. His cousin had been hit with a stun gun.
A gun set to full strength if the bowing of his spine as the pulse
surged through his body was any indication. When he fell back to
the floor, he was completely motionless but for the twitching of
his eyelids. Francis wouldn’t be a danger to Emma or anyone else
for several hours. It was time to get out of here, time to—
“A little to your left,” a male voice said, one
Andre recognized but didn’t fear. Who was it? If only his reeling
head would clear. “She’s right by your—”
“I know. I can see her.” A woman’s voice this time,
coming closer. “Check on Andre.”
“Andre, are you okay?” The man was so close now
that it seemed the words had been shouted directly into his
ear.
Andre spun toward the hands busy at his wrists, and
the world spun along with him. His vision wavered, and it took
several seconds for his eyes to focus in on the face of the man
untying him. When he did, his relief was so profound, he could have
cried like a goddamn baby.
It was his cousin Jace, one of the few people he
had no doubt he could still trust.
Jace finished freeing him from the chair and pulled
the gag from his mouth. “Francis gave me an overdose of Hamma.”
Andre forced the words out, though his tongue felt thick and
unwieldy in his mouth. “He said Dr. Finch had some antivenom,
but—”
“Fuck, I stunned him on the way in. Let me go see
if he had the antivenom in his bag and I can shoot you up myself.”
Jace slapped Andre on the shoulder before turning to where his wife
knelt by her sister on his other side. “Sam, I’m going into the
hall. I’ll be back in two. Maybe less. Francis is down at about
sixty-three degrees, and the rest of them are trapped in
the—”
“I can see them, all of them,” Sam said, her
usually brown eyes glowing an eerie blue. Just like the blue light
that came from her sister’s hands when she was feeding her demon
mark. “Just hurry and get something for Andre.”
Andre met Sam’s strange eyes and, for the first
time, those eyes connected with his, holding his gaze for a tense
moment before she turned her attention back to her sister. She
could see him. Despite the fact that she’d been blind since she was
a child, Sam could really see him. If the stories he’d heard
were correct, that probably wasn’t good news. Sam could see only
people who were on the verge of a major transition in their
lives.
One of the most common “transitions” was
death.
“Emma. Sweetie, can you hear me?” Sam brushed the
hair out of Emma’s face, but Emma only twitched in response. Her
eyes were rolled so far back in her head that only the whites
showed. “Emma, talk to me. Emma, what did you do?” Sam raised her
voice, struggling to be heard over the men still moaning in pain
inside the circle. At least the screams had stopped, but the low,
pitiful moans were almost worse. There was more than defeat in
those sounds; there was death. “Honey, you have to—”
“She cast a spell,” Andre said, the room tilting
and the ground waving beneath him when he tried to move closer to
Sam and Emma. He swallowed hard, fighting the nausea that
threatened to turn him inside out.
“Oh god. What were you thinking?” Sam asked, her
fear for her sister obvious in her voice.
“She was ... trying to save my life. They were
going to take me into the circle.” Andre willed his racing heart to
slow. He had to hold on, had to do whatever he could to help Emma.
“She sent those flies ... they came out of her mouth.” He sucked in
a deep breath that only made the sickness spreading through his
body worse.
Sam sighed and cast sad eyes toward the circle.
“Well, they should be coming back soon. Looks like they’re almost
finished.”
It took several seconds for his body to respond to
his brain’s command, but finally his arms and legs cooperated in
helping him turn just enough to see the men who had betrayed him.
Or what was left of them. Inside the circle, only two men still
moaned and writhed. The rest of them were already still and
motionless on the carpet and didn’t look like they’d be getting up
again.
The flies had abandoned the dead, who lay shriveled
and deformed, twisted into shapes human bodies should be incapable
of making. For a moment, Andre was certain it was his own wavering
vision that made the corpses appear so distorted, but when the room
steadied, the horrific view remained the same. Worse, even. Because
now he could see the men’s faces, see the expressions of terror and
agony that spoke of the nightmarish pain they’d endured before they
were allowed to die.
Emma had done that to them. She’d killed nearly
twenty men in a manner any court in the world would deem torturous,
monstrous.
He’d been prepared to kill his cousin seconds ago
and threatened to kill Anthony for shooting Emma, but the truth was
that Andre had never taken a human life. Ever. He’d never even seen
a dead person outside of a funeral home. The rest of the Contis
dealt with the disposal of inconvenient corpses. He was the man who
worked within the law, who bent it and stretched it and
occasionally broke it, but never in a way that would earn him the
death penalty.
But Emma ... she’d committed mass murder.
The reality of that hit home with a vengeance,
making the sight before him even more horrible. It wasn’t just a
murder scene; it was a testimony to the fact that the woman he
loved really was two different people.
“Which arm do you want this in?” Jace had returned
and was kneeling by his side with a prepped syringe and an alcohol
swab.
“Is that ... the real—” Andre broke off as a wave
of bile rose in his throat. Whether it was caused by the Hamma
overdose or the slaughter he couldn’t seem to tear his eyes away
from, however, he couldn’t say.
“It’s not what he had prepped. I mixed it myself.
That’s why it took so long.” Jace helped him peel off his jacket
and roll up the sleeve of his shirt. “I’m ninety percent sure this
is the antivenom.”
“Only ninety. That’s ... comforting.”
“That’s going to have to be good enough.” Jace
swabbed the crook of his arm. The sharp, astringent scent of
alcohol cut through the air, helping clear Andre’s mind enough for
him to force his eyes away from the circle, where the last man had
finally stopped moving. “You need this. The sooner the
better.”
The fear lurking in Jace’s usually shuttered
features told him he must look as horrible as he felt. He and Jace
had always been close, best friends as well as cousins. Seeing Jace
in a coma last spring had torn him up inside. Silently, he prayed
Jace would be spared the experience of seeing him hooked up to a
dozen machines, fighting for his life. Grieving Uncle Francis’s
passing would be hard enough. The elder Francis had been everything
to Jace: an adopted father, a mentor, and a friend. It was going to
kill him to know that he was gone, murdered by his own son.
“You ready?” Jace asked.
Andre nodded, watching with strange detachment as
the needle pierced his skin and the silver liquid flowed into his
vein. Even knowing the pain that would hit in a few seconds as the
venom and antivenom waged war on the battlefield of his internal
organs couldn’t seem to penetrate the fog that had settled around
his mind. He couldn’t think—or feel—much of anything. He knew only
that he was numb and strangely cold and sore all over. He was
probably going into shock.
Scratch that. He was definitely going into
shock.
The buzzing of the flies drew closer, and a black
cloud streamed over his head—close enough for him to see that the
specks of black weren’t flies at all, but tiny drops of black
liquid that sparkled as they drifted by. Still, he couldn’t seem to
summon an appropriate response. He simply turned his head and
watched the droplets merge together, becoming a thin stream of oil
that flowed down to Emma’s mouth and slipped through her parted
lips.
By the time the antivenom began to burn through his
arms and legs, the blackness had disappeared inside of her, tucked
away like a secret. But the dark wasn’t a secret anymore. It was a
very real, very terrifying reality, one he wasn’t sure he knew how
to deal with.
He loved Emma, but ... Could he build a life with a
woman who lived with a monster locked away inside her? He didn’t
know. He only knew that a part of him was almost relieved when his
racing heart finally hit the wall. The stillness in his chest was
oddly peaceful. Calming. Seductive.
Andre was dimly aware of Jace shouting and guiding
him onto his back on the carpet, but soon his eyes slid closed and
the outside world faded away. And then there was only himself,
alone, slowly being burned away by the drugs whispering through his
system.
Emma came back to herself just as Jace began
rescue breathing. On Andre. Andre wasn’t breathing. She hadn’t
saved him. And now the darkness inside her was more formidable than
ever. She could feel it surging through her blood, pressing against
the inside of her skin, shoving at the boundaries of her flesh in
an attempt to make more room for itself.
“No. No, no, no,” Emma moaned. It was happening.
She was becoming a monster, just like her brother.
“Calm down. You’re going to be okay.” Sam tucked
her hair behind her ears, ran soothing hands in circles on her
back.
Sam. Sam and Jace were here. Everything was going
to be okay. Emma glanced back at Jace, who was performing chest
compressions on his cousin. No. Everything wasn’t going to be okay.
Inside her, the darkness squirmed into the base of her brain,
making clear thought almost impossible. She’d murdered an entire
room full of people, and a few feet away, the man she loved was
dying. Nothing was okay.
“Andre,” she said, grabbing Sam’s arm. “It’s an
overdose. They made him swallow Hamma claws. I have to—”
“Jace already gave him the antivenom. Now, give him
space. He knows what he’s doing.” Sam held her in place with a hand
on her arm. “We’re going to figure out a way to undo this.”
“We can’t. Francis killed his father; he—”
“We know.”
“How do you—”
“When I talked to Andre this morning, I could tell
something was wrong. We booked a flight right away and were
deboarding the plane from Seattle when we got a message from the
family Francis was supposed to meet in Vancouver. The crash is all
over the news. Then we got your message and headed straight here.
I’m just sorry we didn’t get here sooner. Before ...” Sam trailed
off, but Emma could guess how her sister would have completed the
sentence.
Before you turned yourself into a monster. For
nothing.
No, it couldn’t be for nothing. Andre had to be
okay. She’d make him be okay.
“I have to go to him.”
“Emma, no, you—”
“Let me go, Sam.” Something in her voice must have
told Sam that she wouldn’t be taking no for an answer. Her sister
released her arm with a sigh, and Emma was off, crawling across the
carpet to Andre, a part of her surprised to find that her knee no
longer hurt. What the darkness had stolen from those men had healed
her, a small drop of goodness in the midst of the awful.
“Andre. Andre, can you hear me?” She crouched near
his head, running a soft hand through his hair, whispering into the
shell of his ear. He was so beautiful, even sweaty and covered in
spark. It was impossible to imagine a world without him, without
his smile and his smart-ass remarks and his touch.
God, his touch. He might never touch her again. She
was a repulsive freak. But that was okay. It would be worth it if
Andre lived. He had to live.
“Andre, please. You have to fight this.” Panic
pulsed inside her chest as Jace moved in to give Andre two strong
breaths, then moved back to his chest for more compressions, with
no noticeable response from his cousin. Andre wasn’t breathing; his
heart wasn’t beating. It was only a matter of time before he was
gone forever.
Tears spilled down Emma’s cheeks while the darkness
churned and frothed inside her. She could feel the demonic presence
pushing at her thoughts, her feelings, her memories, trying to
replace her fear with hatred, her sadness with hunger. Connecting
to the magic of the spell had given her demon link an incredible
surge of power. But it couldn’t consume her completely, not while
there was still a chance for Andre. She loved him too much to let
the darkness take her over. She had to fight back, had to cling to
the human part of her and do everything possible to save his
life.
“I’m going to try to pull some of the drug out of
him and into me,” Emma said, threading her fingers into Andre’s
hair, hooking up to his mind in the same way she had a few hours
before.
“Can you do that? Is it safe?” Sam sat beside her,
watching as the blue light burst from Emma’s hands.
Sam’s blue eyes flicked from Emma to Andre,
supposedly looking for some sign that Emma’s touch was helping or
hurting. It was only then that Emma realized her sister was seeing
her. Her and Andre. It was a bad sign, but one she struggled to
ignore. She had to try to save him, and this was the only thing she
could think of that might help.
Besides, it wasn’t like things could get any
worse.
“I pulled the drug out of two other men. One of
them died, but the other one ... I’m not sure about ...” Emma
trailed off as she focused her attention entirely on the man
beneath her fingertips.
Memories flowed in from his mind—Andre catching her
sneaking out of the strip club, Andre gagged and bound and watching
her crumple to the floor after she was shot—but she pushed past
them. She didn’t want his memories; she didn’t want to feed on him.
She wanted to feed on something else. ...
Emma closed her eyes, ignoring the sweat that had
broken out on her upper lip, struggling to find the toxin floating
through Andre’s body. She pictured the pellets of drugs in her
mind’s eye, imagining what they must have looked like as they
traveled down to Andre’s stomach. For the first few seconds, the
visualization did nothing, but then, slowly, Emma became aware of a
knot in Andre’s energy, a place where the flow of life force had
slowed and cramped around a foreign invader.
That was it. The Hamma. It had to be. It hadn’t all
made it into his bloodstream just yet.
Carefully, holding on to the sensation, Emma
psychically encouraged the knot to open, to give up the poison
locked inside. She coaxed and cajoled, kneading at the place with
her mind until finally the cramped energy released with a spasm.
Emma pounced on the fistful of Hamma, pulling it toward her,
imagining the gold poison seeping into her fingers, flooding her
with the venom.
At first, she felt nothing, not even the usual jolt
of energy she received from a feeding, but then ... her heart began
to speed ... and her stomach cramped, balling into that familiar
pit of nasty. Faster and faster, until her pulse beat behind her
aching eyes and the world spun in great, throbbing circles.
Inside her, the darkness howled, protesting the
invasion of the poison, screaming that silent scream only she could
hear. It rocketed through her mind, fracturing her thoughts,
destroying her focus, biting and scraping and clawing away every
psychic wall she’d ever erected. Soon, she was aware of only the
pain, a pain so horrible there were no words to describe it. And
then, even the pain faded as something within her threw up one last
frantic barrier, protecting her from the sensation of her brain
being shredded to bits.
She was outside of her body, outside of time,
locked away in some secret inner space she hadn’t known existed.
But even from that padded room deep in her own mind, she was dimly
aware of the sound of a man drawing a deep breath and calling out
her name.
Andre. He was going to live.
It was her last thought before she collapsed onto
the cool, hard floor of her inner prison and fell into a sleep
deeper than she’d ever known, so deep she wasn’t sure she’d ever
wake up.