Read Armageddon (Angelbound) Online
Authors: Christina Bauer
Lincoln’s eyes fill with pain, terror and ultimately, anger. “The moment we’re done here, I’m pulling both my parents in for a serious talk. We’re getting answers, Myla. I swear it.”
Marcus steps across the room to lean against the wall. He makes a great show of casually hitching his right ankle across his left, although both legs are obviously shaking. “Why would I back out? You spent two days casting all those extra spells on me. With that much magic in place, you’ll pull me out of Hell easily enough.” He hitches his thumb at the Teschio. “And our teachers promised my freedom from Wastelands in exchange for helping with this little demonstration. You’ll be free too, Hildy, if this works.” His expression turns tender. “I want us to be together, far away from here. Whatever it takes to make that happen, I’m good with it.”
“But I’m not,” says the young Hildy. “I take over your mind before he gets anywhere near you. You won’t experience Hell; it will be like you’re asleep.” Her bottom lip trembles with emotion. “Let me do that for you.”
“No way,” Marcus laughs, but the pitch is too high to be believable. “Just because you’re a prodigy, you think you have to cover everyone else’s ass.” His voice lowers and his eyes fill with love. “Let me do this for you. You’ve had enough pain.”
Hildy looks away. “If you say so.”
Marcus offers her a shaky smile. “You have my Looking Glass still, don’t you?”
Hildy pulls up the sleeve on her right arm, showing another purple looking glass there, this one holding Marcus’s image.
He shakes his head in amazement. “How do you have two going at once? Few casters can manage one.”
Hildy smiles. “Let’s say I’m motivated.” Marcus closes his eyes, and Hildy’s turn completely white.
“You know the rules,” snaps the Teschio. “You’re not allowed to telepathically communicate without permission.”
“Thank you, Hildy.” Marcus opens his eyes. “Same here.”
Hildy’s pupils return to their mismatched hues. “Good.”
“Enough idle chatter,” snaps the Teschio. “Where is our esteemed client?”
Hildy checks the Looking Glass on her opposite wrist. “Arriving right…Now.”
“Hello everyone!” Connor strides through the entryway.
“Welcome, Your Highness.” The Teschio gestures with his bony arm to the interior of the room. “Let me introduce you to Hildegard.”
Connor claps his hands together. “Well met! It’s taken me years to find you, Hildegard. And if you don’t mind my saying so, it took even longer to bribe this old bag of bones into letting you work for me.” He nudges the Teschio in the ribs. “That was quite a lot of gold and convincing, eh?”
The Teschio’s voice takes on a menacing edge. “We still haven’t seen a shiny coin.”
“Can you blame me? I’ve heard a lot of pretty talk about what this one can do, but haven’t seen a thing.”
“Tests are risky,” says the Teschio. “We don’t do them on a whim.”
“Which is why you waited until we struck our deal,” says Connor. “I understand that. And now, you have to understand that I’m withholding payment until I see a demonstration of her powers.” He turns to Hildy and smiles. “Are you ready?”
Hildy nods quickly. “Yes, I suppose so.”
The Teschio bows. “We will begin by showing you how a Master Monopsyche works. Marcus will step into another room, and then Hildegard will draw him back here. Teleport, if you will.”
“Oh, I’ve seen that before,” huffs Connor. “Plenty of monopsyches do that.”
“Only four, Your Highness,” says the Teschio. “It’s quite a rare skill.”
“Well, perhaps there’s a new twist you can show me.” Connor stares for a long minute at Marcus. “If he walks out into the hall, can she teleport him back to anywhere? Now,
that
I’d like to see.”
“No, it doesn’t work that way,” explains the Teschio. “Hildy can only call back her mark to wherever she stands. The spell works because of their mental bond, like magnets attracting. There are other houses of magic that specialize in teleportation, but as you already know, they can’t meet your strict requirements.”
“Quite right,” says Connor. “Well, get on with it. Show me someone getting pulled out of Hell. I’m ready to pay a pretty penny for this girl and I want to be sure she can deliver.”
“Of course,” says the Teschio. He snaps his fingers and the chains disappear from around the Cruor’s neck and hands. Immediately, the demon wraps all four lanky white arms around Marcus.
“To the torture pits!” screams the demon.
“No!” cries Hildy. “That’s too fast. I have to form the links first.”
Marcus shivers under the demon’s grip. “Do it, Hildy!”
Hildy’s eyes turn all white while Marcus’s close tightly. The demon continues to grasp his prey with all four arms as the pair sink through the floor into Hell. Hildy pulls up her sleeve, showing the Looking Glass of Marcus. “Someone tell me when he’s in Hell.”
Connor steps up and peers at her wrist. “Not quite yet,” his mouth curls with disgust. “Ah, he’s in the torture pits now.” Connor steps away, his hand pressing over his mouth. “Bring him back.”
Hildy raises her arms above her head into a ‘v’ shape, her palms glowing with purple light. She raises her all white gaze toward the ceiling, her lips silently moving with incantations.
In one swift movement, Hildy lowers her hands, claps them together at chest-level, and then positions her arms into a reverse V-shape by her hips. Nothing happens.
“I didn’t have time to make the bond properly,” cries Hildy. “I can’t pull him back.”
Hildy tries again and again to retrieve Marcus. Nothing works. Finally, after an hour of fruitless attempts, a ghostly version of Marcus appears before her, his body made of shifting purple mist. Bit by bit, his form becomes more solid until he’s standing before us in the flesh.
He’s barely alive.
Marcus’s white coat is covered in blood, he wobbles as he tries to stand upright. Hildy grasps him in her arms as he collapses onto the floor.
“Where are your healers?” Connor’s face is frantic. “Help this boy!”
“He is of no consequence,” says the Teschio. “That one is only a Novice, after all. He should have accepted Hildy’s offer. At least, he wouldn’t have suffered.”
Hildy rounds on the Teschio, her eyes bright with rage and tears. “I hate you. How would you do this? You knew I didn’t have time to properly prepare the bond.”
The Teschio shrugs. “You shouldn’t have chatted without permission, then.”
Her mouth twists into a snarl. “You’re the one who deserves the torture pits!”
“And you’re a proven Grand Master Monopsyche. I’ll ready the spells to mark your forearm, then your new owner can take you away.” The Teschio steps out of the room, leaving Hildy and Connor behind.
Hildy cups Marcus’s face in her hands. “Stay with me, my love. We can heal you.”
Blood dribbles from the side of Marcus’s mouth. “Don’t call a healer, please. I saw the torture pits.” He shivers. “I’d rather die than remember that.”
I stare at the haunted look on Marcus’s face, my mouth filling with bile. One hour of seeing the torture pits and this grown man would prefer death. What would happen if Armageddon ever dragged my three-year old son there? Everyone says Armageddon’s cruelty makes the torture pits look tame.
Connor fumbles in his pockets. “I’ve spent years on demon patrol, my girl. Let me take a look at his wounds. Perhaps I can help.”
Hildy holds Marcus’s head against her chest. “He’s already gone.” Her voice breaks with grief. “There’s nothing to be done.”
Connor gently rests his hand on Hildy’s shoulder. “You need to leave this place. I can take you away.”
“I don’t want to be a monopsyche anymore. I want to die, too.”
“Now, don’t say that, my girl. Come with me to Antrum and meet my grandson. He’s the one I want you to guard, you know.”
“I don’t want to guard him. I don’t want to be protect anyone.”
“Now, how do know you that if you won’t meet the little chap?” Connor scratches his cheek, his eyes lost in thought. “And I’ll tell you what. If you just meet the boy, I’ll give you your freedom. Your choice. Meet him, then stay or walk away.”
Minutes pass as Hildy scans Marcus’s lifeless face. At length, she inhales a long breath. “He’d want me to leave.” She dries her eyes with her fingertips, leaving streaks of blood across her cheeks. “You have yourself a deal.”
Bit by bit, the image of the stone room disappears. With it goes much of my innocence about what’s really been taking place inside my own family.
Lincoln and I return to our audience chamber at the precise places where we started our journey into Hildy’s memories. Although my body hasn’t moved an inch, my mind is upside down. The true definition of a Grand Master monopsyche has short-circuited my brain.
Hildy sits on a leather chair in our audience chamber, her elbows resting on her knees. “Sorry to leave you alone in that scene.”
I take a seat on the couch across from her, careful to keep my voice gentle. “Don’t worry about it. If I were you, I wouldn’t want to relive that experience, either.”
“It was the only way I could think of to show you the truth,” says Hildy. “Now, you know what I do. Like you saw in my memory, I need to cast a few days worth of spells, but once that magical link is in place, I can move my mark from anywhere, including Hell.”
“Right, got it.” My chest tightens with fresh bands of worry. Some small part of me had hoped the threat against Maxon wouldn’t be real. But after seeing Hildy’s memories? There’s no question that my boy is at risk.
Hildy kicks at the Persian carpet with her boot. “Look, you don’t know me, but I’ve gotten to hang out with Maxon. Octavia snuck me in to meet him and he’s a good kid. I don’t have family of my own, so I care about what happens to him.” She straightens her shoulders. “All I’m saying is that if you want me to cast the spells and forge the bond with your boy, then I’m in.”
Lincoln and I answer at the same time. “Do it.”
“Glad to hear that.” Hildy smiles with relief. “Do I still work for Connor and Octavia, though?” The look on her face says that Hildy has no desire to work for the liar faction of our family.
“No, you’ll be on our payroll going forward,” explains Lincoln. “Myla and I are meeting shortly with the King and Queen Emeritus, and we’ll straighten everything out. My apologies that you’ve gotten in the middle of our—” He exhales, trying to find the words. “Strange family dynamic.”
A sad smile rounds Hildy’s mouth. “Hey, at least you have a family dynamic. And like I said, Maxon’s a good kid.”
“Thank you for caring about our boy.” Lincoln sets his hand on her shoulder. “That means a lot to the Queen and me.”
“You’re welcome.” Hildy blushes and steps away. “I better get started on those spells for Maxon. I’ll see you at the Anointing tonight?”
“You’ll see us before that,” I say. “We’ll stop by Maxon’s play date with my father in the afternoon.”
“Okay, until then.” Without any further chit-chat, Hildy marches out the door and down the outer maze of hallways, her boots thudding like a drumroll in her wake.
A long pause follows after Hildy’s gone. Lincoln and I melt into a wordless embrace. While the feeling of his long arms around me is comforting, the threat against Maxon still presses in around us, heavy as concrete. The realizations of today whirl through my mind, leading to one inescapable conclusion.
Maxon’s at risk and Connor’s known for years.
The creep has been sneaking around Striga, hiring a monopsyche against a threat he never shared with Lincoln and me. And Cissy said that Connor’s somehow involved, too. What in blazes does that mean? How deep does this betrayal go?
After what I’ve learned today, my guess is that it goes pretty fucking deep.
My inner wrath monster returns with a vengeance, heating my blood with rage. “Don’t take this the wrong way, Lincoln, but I’m going to kill your father.”
Leaning back, Lincoln stares at me so hard, I’m surprised that laser beams don’t shoot out of his eyes. “Not if I get to him first.”
Oh, crud. Lincoln and Connor have been at each other’s throats for ages, but I’ve never felt that anything too terrible would happen between them. Although Connor works himself up into some insane rages, Lincoln’s always able to keep his cool. But seeing that look in my husband’s eyes?
Terrible may be just around the corner.
I glare down at Connor, my hands balling into angry fists.
I so want hurt this man, it isn’t funny.
Once Hildy left, Lincoln and I had the guards drag the King and Queen Emeritus in here for an interrogation. It hasn’t exactly been a love fest.
“I’ll ask you once again, Father.” Lincoln’s voice drips with menace. “What the hell is going on?”
“Going on?” Connor asks with a chuckle. “Who says something’s going on?” He wraps his arm around Octavia’s shoulder, pulling her in for a closer snuggle on the couch. You’d think the two of them were lovebirds about to watch their favorite TV show, not ex-rulers ready to get their asses handed to them.
“Drop the act, Father.”
“We already know Hildy is a Grand Master monopsyche,” I say. “She can move souls from Hell.”
Octavia rounds on her husband. “See? I told you they’d figure it out.”
Connor laughs again, his barrel-chest heaving with the movement. “You’re a pair of smart kids, I’ll give you that.”
Over the years, Connor’s ‘jolly old king’ act has gotten really annoying, but never more so than now. We need the truth and fast. At this point, I’d rather he plunge into one of his classic rages rather than smile.
Octavia straightens the neckline of her black Rixa gown. “I told him you’d figure it out. Please don’t hold it against Hildy.”
“We’re not here to discuss Hildy, Mother.” Lincoln takes a half-step closer to his father and glowers down at him. “What do you know about Maxon? Why are you finding him a bodyguard that can pulls their mark out of Hell?”
“I can’t tell you, son.” Connor raises his gaze to meet ours. Bit by bit, his smile fades. “All I can say is this. I’ve been waiting for years to find someone like Hildy. She’s exceptional. A prodigy. She’s exactly what we need. We’ll all be safe now.”