Fourteen
ZURAEL worried it was a trap. Twice police cars
had pulled alongside the bus. Once a guardsman’s jeep had slowed at
an intersection and waved the bus onward when it would have yielded
the right of way.
Aisling’s fear washed over him each time the
authorities were present, fear so deeply ingrained in her she
couldn’t prevent her rapid breathing or the tiny tremors that shook
her. And yet she didn’t turn back from the task.
He took her hand as they walked, felt the tension
in her slide away. Her courage amazed him. Her trust destroyed him.
He couldn’t allow anything to happen to her.
They passed the houses huddled together in
worn-down poverty and gritty survival, the vine-controlled
wastelands, the burned out, rusted shells of other structures,
until eventually they came to the place where ragged orphan
children fished on the banks. The Mission followed—a last vestige
of civilization before The Barrens.
Zurael thought he caught a glimpse of Davida in
an upstairs window. His suspicion that it was a trap set for
Aisling grew.
Hidden eyes followed them. He felt the
gazes—curious, apathetic, hostile, suspicious. Predatory.
His hand fell away from Aisling’s. He studied
their surroundings, looking for danger. Prepared to kill anyone or
anything that dared attack.
Having explored The Barrens on wings, Zurael
chafed at the pace they were forced into because of the necessity
of having to look for the fish symbol. He hated that Aisling was so
vulnerable, so very human in a place filled with danger.
She slowed at the first blackened shell beyond
The Mission. It stood at an intersection, though nothing remained
on three of the corners and the road had long ago cracked and
become pocked with holes.
A school of crudely drawn fish was ankle-high on
the strongest of the walls still standing. Each swam in the same
direction, face pointing forward, through the intersection.
“We’re going to find them,” Aisling said,
excitement and anticipation making the blue of her eyes rival the
sky.
Without conscious thought, Zurael leaned forward.
He was a short breath away before he realized the danger, how close
he was to touching his lips to her.
He stood abruptly and turned away. But not before
his heart wrenched at the sight of Aisling’s uncertainty.
They continued on in silence, their progress
slow. The continued sensation of being watched, considered prey,
kept him at her side instead of scouting ahead.
They stopped long enough to eat lunch. Then
later, dinner.
The daylight grew into evening light, but neither
suggested they turn back toward Oakland. It became harder to locate
the symbols of early faith.
Several times they hid as jeeps driven by
guardsmen patrolled. A helicopter in the distance, its arrival too
sudden and unexpected, caught them out in the open, though it
didn’t veer toward them.
Crickets and cicadas came to life. The rumble of
car engines purred in the dusk all around them, alternating between
growing louder and fading.
Zurael considered shifting to the demon’s form
and flying with Aisling to safety but thought of the game he’d
witnessed the guardsmen playing each time he’d been in The Barrens.
The risk was too great. He couldn’t protect her from bullets, or a
fatal fall, if he became formless.
“We need to find shelter,” he said, studying what
remained from the time when one city merged into another and
another until little was left besides concrete and steel and
teeming masses of humans penned in a place that would ultimately
make their slaughter easy.
Nature was in the process of reclaiming much of
the area they were in. The vines once developed by scientists to
leach industrial poison from the soil now covered the horror left
by man’s temporary rule of Earth.
Aisling pointed at what might have once been a
secure storage shed. “How about there?”
Zurael studied it for a moment. He compared it to
the larger structures around them, most with gaping holes, to the
cars buried beneath shrouds of thick stems and shiny leaves. He
nodded. The walls of the storage building were concrete, the roof
solid metal. They’d be trapped, but the narrow doorway allowed for
a defensible space.
The wind brought the sound of hounds baying. Next
to him Aisling shivered and rubbed her arms. He ushered her into
the building and indicated a corner for her to settle into just as
the sound of a helicopter reached him.
It was a risk, but this time he deemed it
necessary. He crossed to her and knelt in front of her, noting how
fragile she was, sitting on the floor with her knees to her chest
and her arms wrapped around her legs. The desire to protect her
filled him with the primitive, explosive heat of molten rock.
“I won’t be far,” he said, unable to stop himself
from stroking her cheek, from brushing his thumb over her lips and
losing himself in angelite eyes.
Pride spiked through him when she pulled a long
kitchen knife from the burlap sack holding what remained of their
food. She laid it on the ground next to her. “I’ll be okay.”
Zurael shed his physical form and moved away from
her, motes of dust and dirt, lightly tossed leaves and insect
carcasses the only things marking his exit.
The drone of engines assailed him, vibrated
through him. Wild-life scattered and darted into hiding places
ahead of the rumble announcing the approach of man.
A small swarm of the finger-length fey who
feasted on blood raced after a fleeing deer, hoping for a meal
before deep nightfall forced them to their nest.
Their wings glittered with the colors of sunset.
Their upper bodies and faces were vaguely human though their minds
were those of a savage hive insect.
Zurael moved away from Aisling’s shelter
cautiously, gauging the distance to ensure he could get back to her
if danger threatened. The baying of the hounds grew closer, coming
from the same direction as the sound of the helicopter’s rotors. He
couldn’t see the helicopter until he reached the end of his
self-defined tether to Aisling. Then uneasiness filled him at the
spotlight illuminating the ground beneath it.
He’d witnessed the guardsmen carousing in The
Barrens, casually slaughtering anything that crossed their path,
but tonight was different. They were hunting something specific,
and coming toward where Aisling hid.
He shifted his attention to the closest
buildings. Reevaluated them. The storage shed was a defensible
position against wild animals, humans and supernatural beings, but
it wasn’t safe against armed men.
Zurael returned to Aisling. “Let’s find another
place.”
She rose to her feet without argument. At the
doorway he lifted her in his arms.
With a thought, the wings unfurled, unhindered by
the Djinn-created fabric of his shirt and jacket. In two steps he
was airborne, her weight negligible, her soft, joyous laugh sending
heat cascading into his heart as he flew the short distance
necessary to reach a hole in the third floor of a building that
looked relatively stable.
“That was wonderful!” she said, eyes sparkling,
voice breathless and cheeks flushed, for an instant unafraid of
anything.
He wished he could keep her that way. But all too
soon the bloodhounds arrived, baying, noses to the ground. They
went directly to the place Aisling had been, then circled in
confusion at the lost track as guardsmen arrived in jeeps.
Fury filled Zurael. The witches would pay for
their part in sending Aisling into a trap. “Stay here,” he said
before once again becoming a swirl of air.
In the desert a single Djinn could become a
sandstorm deadly enough to bury large caravans of men and machines
in a matter of moments. He had less to work with in The Barrens,
but Zurael was determined to disrupt the hunt for Aisling.
Leaves and sticks, rocks and small scraps of
metal—all gathered in the violent energy of his unformed mass. Men
cursed and dogs yelped when he bore down on them, blinding them
temporarily, making them bleed when debris struck them. Some ducked
into the shelter he and Aisling had abandoned, while others raced
toward the building where she was now hidden.
Rage gave the winds more force, but the vines
reclaiming the land covered the loose material that would make him
deadlier. As the first of the guardsmen neared the building Aisling
was in, Zurael shot upward, using all the gathered energy to reach
the helicopter.
It rocked, tilted, might have escaped his
assault, but the open door where a man with a machine gun sat
allowed the gathered debris to distract the pilot in a critical
instant. The humans screamed as the helicopter spun out of control
before striking the ground.
Zurael returned to Aisling. Beneath them, men
rushed to the downed helicopter. Radios squealed. Panicked, angry
voices reported the crash and were told additional guardsmen were
being dispatched. Already there were too many of them, spread too
far apart and too heavily armed, too nervous, for Zurael to attack
with Aisling close by—and even if he could buy her time to escape,
there were other predators to worry about.
Machine-gun fire exploded, vented in fury or fear
at some movement in the shadows. Next to him, Zurael could feel
Aisling shiver, could hear the shortness of her breath as she
remained completely motionless, not giving in to the primitive
instinct to run.
Guardsmen pulled the bodies of the pilot and his
passenger from the twisted metal. “There’s nothing we can do for
them,” an authoritative voice said. “Newman, get the heat sensor
out. Alvarez, get the dogs. Refresh their memories with the scent
article. Let’s finish this. These men died because of magic.
Anything that moves and isn’t one of us, shoot to kill.”
Two men peeled away from the crash site. One
headed toward a jeep, the other to where the bloodhounds milled
around the concrete-block storage building.
Zurael turned to Aisling. What he intended was
dangerous, but there was no other way.
He gathered her in his arms and lifted her. “Put
your legs around my waist,” he whispered.
Returning to Aisling’s home wasn’t an option. Not
tonight and not with her.
In his mind’s eye he saw The Barrens as he’d seen
it as an owl, considered the abandoned buildings where he’d perched
and watched the activity beneath him. He chose one to shelter in,
but fixed the roof of another in his mind to transport to—a place
he hoped to launch from before the first of the angels arrived,
summoned by the sound of him breaching the metaphysical
plane.
With a thought, the batlike wings appeared again;
only this time he allowed the full demon form to manifest. His
fingernails elongated into sharp talons; a deadly barbed tail
completed the look. Zurael smiled at the irony of appearing in the
image once forced onto The Prince by the alien god—of possibly
using it to defeat an angel.
A burst of machine-gun fire, and the seemingly
instantaneous impact of bullets against the building, served as a
trigger for their departure. He curled an arm around Aisling in a
protective gesture, then willed himself to the rooftop fixed in his
thoughts.
As he’d feared, no sooner did his feet touch the
flat surface of the roof than the night sky opened in a blaze of
light. White wings stretched in what the humans saw as a glorious
display.
Zurael set Aisling aside then moved to stand
between her and the angel, but not before he heard her gasp of awe
and saw it in her eyes. A deadly blade formed in the angel’s hand.
It glowed like the sun, but despite what the humans believed, it
wasn’t a weapon of fiery glory. It was a creation forged in the
coldest, deepest realms of space, because only such a thing could
prevail against the fire of the Djinn.
Satisfaction moved through Zurael when the angel
made small slicing motions with the blade, indicating his intention
to fight. An older angel, one from a higher order, would use his
voice as a weapon. But by his actions, the angel in front of Zurael
had revealed his status, his inexperience when it came to the
Djinn.
Zurael moved forward and to the side, wanting to
draw the angel away from Aisling before the fight began.
The angel’s eyes flicked briefly to Aisling. He
spat the word “Abomination,” then lunged toward Zurael, blade in
front of him as though he were fencing.
Zurael easily eluded the thrust. A laugh escaped.
He slashed, sending severed wing feathers fluttering to the
rooftop.
The angel swung then, eyes glowing, the arc of
his swing carrying the blade to where several steps and a lunge
were all it would take to reach Aisling.
Zurael launched himself upward and the angel
followed, knowing he had the advantage with the extension of the
sword.
Pride might keep the angel from summoning others
to assist with the kill. But it was no guarantee others wouldn’t
soon arrive, alerted by the sound of Zurael’s passing through the
barrier, drawn by the trail his energy signature left when he
transported between Earthly locations.
He dropped to a far corner of the roof, and
waited until the angel was nearly on him to turn into a swirling
mass of particles. The ice chill of the blade barely missed him
before Zurael reclaimed the demon’s shape. Struck and drew blood
this time.
A scream erupted from the angel, the enraged
sound of a bird of prey instead of a man. He lunged forward,
swinging the sword with savage ferocity as his blood left a trail
across the roof.
Zurael retreated, driven backward by the near
mindlessness of the assault. Out of the corner of his eye he saw
Aisling trying to stay far away from the fighting. But her movement
drew the angel’s attention. The sudden gleam in the angel’s eyes
was the only warning he gave before halting his wild swings and
launching himself toward her.
Too late Zurael realized it was a trap. With the
swiftness of a falcon the angel turned, slashed, opened a deep
wound across Zurael’s chest.
Cold seeped into Zurael, so pervasive it froze
the breath in his chest and filled his mind with the sound of his
own scream of agony. Only his training saved him from a death blow.
Instinctively he twisted away, used the barbed tip and whiplike
strike of the demon tail as a weapon.
The angel screamed. The blinding glow of the
blade disappeared as his concentration faltered and his sword arm
slickened with blood.
Zurael tried to move in for the kill. But the
cold was spreading, making his reactions slow as it seeped deeper
into his being in an effort to reach and extinguish the Djinn fire
at his core.
Aisling.
The heat she generated in him, the protectiveness
he felt for her helped him fight the angel’s icy poison.
His flesh mended, chased out a chill that should
have required a visit to the House of the Cardinal in order to heal
so quickly. But just as he was mending, so too was the angel.
Zurael lunged forward, talons drawing blood,
turning white feathers crimson.
The angel jumped back, knocking Aisling to the
ground. Deadly swords appeared and elongated in both of his hands.
“Abomination!” he said, slashing downward at Aisling.
“No!” It was wrenched from Zurael, torn from the
depths of his soul in the same instant Aisling’s stark face and
terrified eyes were seared into his mind.
He flung himself forward and was greeted by a
blinding flash, a boom so loud it shook the building and rolled
across The Barrens like a shock wave from the human’s destructive
bombs.
For a second he was frozen in place, held in a
doorway of ice and infinite darkness. And then he returned to find
Aisling rubbing her hands over his chest, calling the Djinn fire at
his core with her worried touch and angelite blue eyes.
“Are you okay?” she said, her voice quivering,
not hiding her fear for him.
He grabbed her wrist, suddenly aware of the
sun-shaped charm trapped between her palm and his flesh. The memory
that had eluded him earlier returned with clarity.
In his mind he located the book kept with so many
others in the House of the Serpent library. Turned its pages and
saw the powerful token. “You touched the angel.”
Aisling shivered. “I sent him home, wherever that
is.”
Zurael read her face, saw her thoughts as clearly
as if they were his own. She was a child of the ghostlands, but she
was still human. She still had a human’s instinctive, genetically
programmed reaction to the alien god’s warriors—to cower and
worship, to prostrate herself in their glorious beauty and accept
their judgment.
Fierce emotion gripped him, mixed with pulsing
pride. She’d been found in the presence of what she thought was a
demon and named an abomination, yet she’d had the strength of will,
the presence of mind, to use the charm the witch had given her and
cast the angel from the human world. She was as worthy as any
Djinn.
Clouds covered the moon, offering some
protection. He peeled his bloody shirt off. And because it wasn’t
of the human world, he was able to will it to ash so it wouldn’t be
used to track him.
Zurael scooped Aisling up in his arms. In three
steps they were airborne, flying rapidly to a place where he hoped
they’d be safe from both guardsmen and angels.
His emotions churned. A lifetime of belief and
teaching was lost to their chaos, in the lava-hot flow of desire
coursing through his bloodstream.
Zurael was barely aware of landing on the
fifth-story ledge of what might once have been an apartment
balcony. He had no conscious thought of entering the darkened space
other than a predator’s quick, instinctive searching for the
presence of others.
He was feverish, burning from the inside out. He
became more so when Aisling whimpered, so attuned to him that she
kicked off her shoes so he could strip her from the waist down
before pressing her back to a smooth wall.
Her arms went around his neck, her legs around
his waist, trapping the hard length of his cloth-covered erection
against her fevered, wet folds. “Aisling,” he whispered, glad the
clouds no longer obliterated the moonlight so he could see the
exquisite beauty of her face.
She was delicate and desirable. Had enslaved him
from the first moment she whispered his name on the spirit
winds—only now he acknowledged it willingly.
“Aisling,” he whispered again, touching his lips
to hers, parting them with his tongue and taking her breath, her
spirit, her moan of pleasure—and returning the same.
He’d worried over it, feared it. But as he felt
their souls touch, dancing and merging like twin flames, euphoria
filled him.
Despair to match the height of his joy would
follow if he was separated from her for any length of time. But he
couldn’t care in that moment when they were one being.
In heated darkness their tongues rubbed and
twined, teased and tormented. It was beyond anything he’d ever
experienced. It became something he’d forever crave.
Each of her whimpers lodged itself in his heart,
filled him with a satisfaction like no other. He smoothed his hands
over her back, felt a renewed surge of primal satisfaction that she
accepted him regardless of what form he took.
With a thought, the wings and demon-tail
disappeared. His hands left her long enough to free his erection
from his pants so he could grasp her hips and lift her until his
cock head was positioned at her opening.
They both shuddered with ecstasy when he slid
into her hot core. He groaned when she freed his hair, tangled her
fingers in it and held him tightly to her as her tongue twisted and
mated with his.
Sensation bombarded him. Savage emotion ruled
him. An uncontrollable hunger swept through him with the
devastating force of molten lava.
Aisling belonged to him. No one—not angel or
human, supernatural being or Djinn—would deny his claim or take her
from him. No one—not even The Prince would keep them apart.
He freed her hair and reveled in the silky feel
of it. He gave her his breath when her lungs screamed for
air.
His cock mimicked the thrust of his tongue,
plunged deep and hard, with dominating force. And she responded
with moans of pleasure. She welcomed his aggression by softening
against him, becoming more submissive; she acknowledged by her
actions that she belonged to him completely and without
question.
Her tight channel clenched and unclenched on his
cock, sent waves of raw, nearly painful pleasure up his spine and
into his heart. His! She was his. The
sureness of it was reinforced each time his penis surged in and out
of her.
He wanted to linger, to savor the intimacy of
their first kiss, the sharing of breath marking the first true
joining of their souls. But the night was still young, too full of
predators to be guarded against. And the hunger raged too fiercely.
It commanded the jerk of his hips, the tightness of his testicles,
the undeniable need to imprint himself so thoroughly on her that
every cell would hold his name, answer to his call.
He changed the angle of their bodies, felt her
quiver each time he struck her clit. Primal satisfaction filled him
when she fought to get closer, to take him deeper, to feel the hot
splash of his seed.
Each thrust was a claiming, a declaration of
intent. They would be together.
Aisling’s cry of release spilled into him where
their lips touched. And like Djinn fire, her ecstasy burned through
him, triggered his own, so wave after wave of semen jetted through
his cock.
Long minutes later he pulled from her sheath and
reluctantly stood her on her feet. Heartbreakingly beautiful eyes
met his as she touched her kiss-swollen lips and asked,
“Why?”
He knew she was asking why he’d repeatedly
refused the intimacy of kissing until now, but he had no answer for
her, nothing he could reveal until after they’d found whoever was
creating Ghost, until after he’d dealt with Javier and returned to
the Kingdom of the Djinn with the tablet, until after he’d fought
for and won a future with her.
“Let’s find a more defensible room,” he said,
touching her lips lightly with his before taking her hand and
leading her deeper into the building, to a windowless area with
only a solitary door to guard.
Aisling dressed then settled into a corner, knees
hugged to her chest. For a while she was content to puzzle on the
question of Zurael, the change that had taken place between them.
So many other times he’d turned away from her when she’d thought to
touch her mouth to his.
She wet her lips, relived the fire of his kiss,
those moments when the only breath he’d allowed her was his own, as
if her very life belonged to him. Her nipples and clit pulsed with
renewed need, ached for his mouth and hands.
He stiffened in the doorway. His nostrils flared
as if he could scent her arousal. Tiny nipples grew tight and the
serpent he wore on his forearms rippled.
Their eyes met and held.
Feminine satisfaction curled in her belly and
breasts. The fast, rough coupling had left him craving more. It was
there in his taut muscles, the tightness of his features, the cock
once again pressed huge and hard against the front of his
pants.
She wanted to stand and go to him, to lose
herself in the pleasure, the safety and peace she found in his
arms. She wanted to keep the angel’s judgment—the word abomination—from her mind and avoid the truth of her
own demon origins, the worry about her soul that she’d never
struggled with until Zurael and then the angel appeared.
But a cougar’s nearby cry urged caution. The
sounds of rustling, of movement in other parts of the building,
kept her in place. The drone of a helicopter in another part of The
Barrens reminded her of the danger if they had to give up this
hiding place.
She pulled her attention away from Zurael. The
sun-shaped amulet pressed against her palm. She’d thought at first
it was meant to protect her against Zurael, then later, when it
became obvious the guardsmen were hunting her, she’d wondered if
Tamara’s family had sent her into a trap. Now she didn’t believe
either was true.
Aisling flexed her wrist, exposed the golden
charm. “Would this work on you?”
“No. It’s meant for the heavenly host.”
She trembled at the fury and hatred in his voice.
But she didn’t back away from her train of thought. “Levanna knew I
might need this. The Wainwright matriarch wouldn’t have given me
such a powerful charm if she didn’t want me to find the Fellowship
of the Sign and return with Anya. I think she guessed what you are
and knew I’d be safe in The Barrens from anything but an
angel.”
Zurael nodded. “I thought it was a trap also. Now
I think otherwise. The guardsmen wouldn’t need the hounds, not if
they knew the trail we were following.”
An icy chill swept into Aisling’s chest. It
settled around her heart like a frigid fist as she remembered the
guardsmen calling for a scent article.
Fear for Aziel froze the breath in her throat. In
her mind’s eye she saw the guardsmen storming into her house so
they could get something of hers to present to the bloodhounds,
their heavy boots and guns deadly to the ferret trapped inside with
them.
She shivered and once again hugged her knees to
her chest. She told herself Aziel was clever. He’d find a hiding
place.
For long moments the worry and fear crowded in.
They only lessened when she accepted that she couldn’t change what
had happened, acknowledged that it wouldn’t have been better to
bring Aziel into The Barrens.
If he was a lesser demon, as she suspected, then
he would have become a target for the angel’s attack. And unlike
Zurael, he wouldn’t have been able to defend himself. Aziel was
trapped in whatever body he wore.
Aisling turned to the question of the guardsmen
and who might have sent them. She and Zurael had witnessed
Cassandra going into the building housing the police station and
guardsmen shortly after they’d left the library after searching the
Internet for information about Ghost and the Fellowship of the
Sign.
Twice police cars had pulled alongside the bus,
and once she’d seen a guardsman’s jeep. If they’d been after her,
watching her, determined to prevent her from entering The Barrens,
then wouldn’t they have stopped her sooner? And if they were
selling protection, or involved in distributing Ghost—then wouldn’t
they know where to find the Fellowship’s compound?
Aisling’s eyebrows drew together. She felt like
one of the farm dogs chasing shadows and rustling leaves—until she
thought about Father Ursu and Bishop Routledge. The magnetic strip
on the back of the transit bus pass would reveal she’d gone to the
stop closest to The Barrens for a second time, traveled again with
a second person, only this time hadn’t returned home.
She’d slept at the church. Her scent would be on
the towel she’d used after her shower, on the sheets and pillow.
Annalise Wainwright’s vision had confirmed Father Ursu and Bishop
Routledge’s desire to find the Ghost source.
“The Church might have sent the guardsmen, hoping
we’d lead them to whoever is responsible for Ghost,” Aisling said,
tensing with her next thought. What if the guardsmen had been
ordered to bring her back alive? What if it was the helicopter’s
crash that changed the nature of their hunt?
A knot formed in her stomach with the added
deaths laid at her feet, the ever darkening stain on her soul. She
closed her eyes and pressed her forehead against her knees.
Almost instantly Zurael was there, his fingers
tracing the vertebrae of her spine, already knowing her so well he
could guess at her thoughts. His breath was hot against her ear,
his lips soft. “The hunted always have a right to defend
themselves.”
A soft whimper escaped when his tongue caressed
her earlobe. A second followed when it circled the shell of her ear
then slipped inside.
His hand pushed between her chest and knees,
possessively stroked her breasts, her nipples, forced her to open
from her defensive posture. “You need to sleep,” he whispered, palm
gliding downward. “We lost ground coming here to escape the
guardsmen and reduce the risk of encountering another angel. We’ll
have to make it up on foot tomorrow.”
Her cunt lips grew flushed and slick, parted with
the same ease as her thighs when Zurael’s hand slipped beneath the
waistband of her work pants and her panties. On a moan, she tilted
her head backward, welcomed the way he covered her mouth with his
and demanded entry with the dominant thrust of his tongue.
The fingers tracing her spine went to her hair,
speared through it, making it impossible to escape even if she’d
wanted to. His palm burned where it cupped her mound possessively.
His fingers slid inside her, and she lifted her hips so he could
thrust deeper.
Zurael’s groan fed her desire, her confidence.
She wasn’t alone when it came to the shattering intensity of the
hunger that flared to life when they touched.
His grip on her hair tightened. His tongue
probed, thrust in the same rhythm as his fingers forged in and out
of her channel and his palm glided over her hardened clit.
When she would have sought breath, he allowed her
to take only his. When she would have let ecstasy consume her, he
forced her to wait.
He was relentless, unyielding. He demanded
everything from her.
And she yielded.
He became her world. The only reality until sweet
oblivion claimed her at his command.