Darkest Before Dawn (8 page)

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Authors: Pippa Dacosta

Tags: #Romance, #Paranormal, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal & Urban, #Literature & Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy

BOOK: Darkest Before Dawn
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Chapter Twelve

C
old water thrown
in your face must be one of the most unpleasant ways to wake up. The splash shocked me like a jolt of electricity. I sat bolt upright. My demon immediately tried to burst from my skin but instead butted up against it. Where the hell was I?

Jenna planted a hand on her hip and glared down at me.

My cheek stung. Had she hit me too?

“Good. I thought you were never going to wake up.” She glanced about us, prompting me to do the same.

We were in the lounge at Blackstone. “Dawn?” I shoved off the couch and managed two steps before my vision flooded with black. I fell back into the couch and blinked my vision clear. My head throbbed, and my stomach rolled.

“If Dawn’s the little girl, she’s gone. The demon took her.”

Rubbing my temples, I groaned. “When?”

“Hours ago. You’ve been out cold most of the night.”

Val took her back to the netherworld. I promised to protect her, and failed. I sunk my hands into my hair and spat out a curse. “I have to go after her.”

Jenna rolled her eyes. “Yeah, well, better you than me. That’s one demon I don’t want to see again unless he’s stone cold dead.” A dash of color touched her cheeks, and considering she had a healthy bronze glow to her skin, it took a lot for her to blush. She licked her lips and skewed a glance at me. We shared a flicker of recognition. She’d felt his power too. “What is he?” she asked, a hint of reverence lifting her voice.

“I have no idea. I thought he was like me. All hellfire. But he’s not...” He had heat. He blazed white with an abundance of it, but he also messed with my head on a level I didn’t even want to acknowledge. He wielded a different kind of heat. A body of heat. The heat of wanton desire. I recalled, in gut-churning precision, the touch of his nakedness, and it felt wrong, so very wrong, but my body didn’t think so. Holy hell, I’d lusted after my own brother. Saliva pooled in my mouth. My empty stomach flipped at the thought of what might have happened. I growled, disgusted and appalled with myself. “Did he do... anything to me?”

Jenna’s brown eyes met mine with a peculiar fierceness. Her brow tightened, and her lips pressed closed. “No. He fled with the girl.”

“Val is a full-blood demon. He’s Asmodeus’ son,” I said softly, remembering Stefan’s words. “Asmodeus is the Prince of Lust.” Of course Val would screw with my head. It was in his DNA. It wouldn’t have been so bad if I didn’t actually
want
to experience his touch all over again. How could my own body betray my mind? I’d lusted after my brother, and by the look on Jenna’s face, so had she. “Are you okay?”

She’d glazed over, focused on a spot somewhere beyond the lounge windows. “Yeah...” Running a hand back through her hair, she shook herself, and met my gaze. “Thanks to you. If you hadn’t jumped him when you did, I’d have let him do anything to me right there on the car.” She grimaced and turned away. Jenna was a fighter. I’d seen her take down demons twice her size with roundhouse kicks and short, sharp jabs. She was an imposing figure and a damn good Enforcer. Val’d had her salivating at his feet in seconds.

“You’re lucky to be alive.” So was I. It was only the ominous, if distant, presence of my father that prevented Val from killing me. If a demon as powerful as Val was concerned with adhering to the wishes of our father, just how bad was Daddy-dearest?

Jenna drew in a deep breath and nodded. “So what now, Muse?” She plucked her gun from inside her coat and checked the chamber. “I need to report this to the Institute.” Ejecting the magazine, she gave it a once-over and rammed it home again.

I winced. There was no way I could stop her from talking, short of tying her up.

She took my delay to reply as her cue to explain. “I followed you up here. Your brother caught me watching you at the mall.” She licked her lips again and wiped a hand across her mouth. “The Institute knows I’m here. If I don’t check in, they’ll send a team.”

Akil would already be pissed that Enforcers had crawled over every inch of his Boston apartment. If I brought them to Blackstone, he’d probably send the Hellhounds after me.

“Okay. Alright. I just need... some time.” Val followed Jenna here from Boston. I was sure of it. He couldn’t have found Dawn or me hidden inside Blackstone’s walls, so he’d tracked Jenna after she’d tried to tail me. Maybe I should have listened to Ryder. Had I handed Dawn over to the Institute, at least she’d be on this side of the veil. She’d have a chance. In the netherworld, where Val had surely taken her, they’d tear her apart and remake her into something damaged beyond repair.

“You wanna tell me what’s going on?” Jenna asked stiffly. “Why you ran from us in Boston? Who the girl is? What you’re hiding?”

I didn’t have much choice now. I’d lost Dawn. I had to get her back. Could I go to the netherworld and face my brother alone? I wasn’t a coward, but I did have some sense of self-preservation. And even if I got her back, what then? Val would come after me. I didn’t relish the idea of another family reunion. I needed help. “Stick around, and you’ll get your answers. I have to summon a Prince of Hell. Wanna help?”

Jenna looked at me as though she wasn’t sure if she’d heard me right. “Don’t do things by halves, do you Muse?”

“Not anymore.” I grinned.

Chapter Thirteen

I
glued
a candle to a salad plate, using its own molten wax to stick it fast, and placed it on the floor in the center of the lounge. We’d pushed the furniture up against the walls, giving me plenty of space to work.

Jenna handed me a kitchen knife. “You’ve done this before?” She swallowed with an audible click, wiped her hands on her leggings, and stepped back.

“Summoned a demon? Yeah, a few times. I’ve never summoned a prince though.”

“You think he’ll tell you about Dawn?”

Crouched beside the candle, I dragged the sharp edge of the knife across my palm, wincing as it stung. Blood pooled inside my clenched hand and dripped onto the plate. “Maybe. I don’t know. We’ll see. Stay back. I don’t know how he’ll react to you. Don’t say or do anything unless I tell you to.”

She backed up against the wall. “What if it goes wrong?”

Her voice quivered. She was afraid, and so she should be. The princes were formidable, myth-like nightmares. Few this side of the veil had ever seen one. Fearing the Seven Princes of Hell was healthy. She didn’t know I’d given up being afraid of Akil, that he needed me to pump him full of power and I needed him to free me of the demon consuming my soul. We had a mutually beneficial relationship. “I can control him.”

“Yeah, but what if...”

“If it goes wrong, blow out the candle. With the focal point gone, there’s nothing to anchor him here.”

“And he can’t go full-demon on us, right?” Seeing her haunted wide-eyed look, I began to doubt having her here was a good idea. “We tried to summon a high ranking demon once at the Institute. It was a bloodbath. If he’s, y’know, all demon, he might try to– ” Her hand hovered over her sidearm.

“Not with the symbols in these walls. He’ll just be Akil. Relax, Jenna, you’re making me nervous.”

I turned my attention to the candle and watched the flame writhe on its wick. “Mammon, One of The Seven, a First, Prince of Greed, Guardian of the Dark, Son of Chaos,
Master of Lies
,” —my own addition–he’d earned it— “I, Muse, invite you to share with me this place and time. You will not harm me. By our element, I summon you.”

The air trembled. An electric thrum of energy danced around us, invisible, but distinct enough to vibrate against my skin. I straightened slowly and glanced behind me. I’d been caught out before. It was daylight outside, but inside, the shadows lengthened, crawled up the walls, and consumed the light, plunging us into shades of gray. This was new.

Jenna caught my eye. I gave her a reassuring nod. She stood still, breathing slowly, waiting.

The electric charge strumming the air tightened across my skin. The fine hairs on my arms and down my neck prickled. He was coming. I swallowed. I wasn’t afraid. He’d be pissed I’d summoned him, especially in front of a witness. Well, he’d have to swallow his pride. I’d had enough of fishing for answers to questions I didn’t understand. It was time for him to tell me the truth.

Reality peeled apart in front of me, opening a jagged tear between this world and the netherworld. A blast of superheated energy rolled over me. I staggered back and shielded my face. When it passed, Mammon knelt on one knee in the center of the room. Horned head bowed, he held his leathery multi-jointed wings extended, their tips brushing the walls. Dust rained from his obsidian body. His corded muscles shimmered with a slick layer of energy. Darkness throbbed around him, remnants of the netherworld air clinging to its prince.

Shit. I hadn’t expected him to appear as a demon. Say what you will about demons, but they know how to make an entrance. This was his house. Perhaps he’d rigged it so only he could summon his power inside the walls.

Mammon lifted his head. His eyes swirled like pools of lava. Red embers fizzled across his cheeks and skittered across his square jaw before settling beneath his skin. He pulsed with fire, veins throbbing red. Sweltering heat poured off him and over me. Perspiration beaded at my hairline. I wondered how Jenna was holding up but dared not look away. Looking away would be a sign of submission.

“Blackstone...” His coarse voice resonated, grumbling around the room and through my thoughts. “You brought her here...” Those fire-filled eyes narrowed on me. I didn’t have a hope of reading his expression. His face resembled a human man’s but hardened and exaggerated, as though carved from black granite.

“Mammon.” I inclined my head. It wouldn’t hurt to offer some respect.

His head jerked. He sniffed the air and swung his head to the side. Jenna stood perfectly still, hands flattened against the wall. Mammon’s rumbling laughter filled the room. She cringed, but stood firm. Jenna wasn’t the type to run. If she did run, Mammon would likely lunge for her. He dragged his gaze back to me and finally straightened. His chest glistened with blood. Streams of it ran down his thighs and pooled at his feet.

He grunted, acknowledging what I’d seen, and then shook himself all over, beating his wings. Hot ash blasted my face. I hissed and buried my face beneath the crook of my arm. Only when the heat passed could I look up. He’d hunkered down. His immense body trembled. His flesh tore open, rippling and contorting. Chaos energy licked over me, tugging on my demon. Mammon’s presence faded, and Akil fell forward, naked and bleeding, landing on his hands and knees.

I dashed to his side and dropped to my knees. “What happened?” He rolled his eyes up to me. I cupped his cheek in my hand. He leaned against my touch, seeking comfort. “Akil... please... Tell me what’s happening.” He shivered, teeth clenched. Jesus, who had done this to him? I pulled him close and cradled his head against my chest.

“Did you do the right thing by the girl?” he growled.

I brushed tendrils of his blood-soaked hair away from his face. “I lost her. Val has her.” He closed his eyes and shuddered. I pulled him against me. “Dammit, Akil. Tell me what’s happening.” I couldn’t even summon my own power to help heal him. The marks in the walls prevented it. I tried anyway, but my demon pushed against my skin, unable to break free.

“Find her.”

“I will. What does Val want with her?” I closed my arms around him and listened to his ragged breathing. The metallic odor of blood and the burned rubber smell of the netherworld burned my nose and throat.

“She is too powerful.” Pain wracked him. He jolted in my arms, teeth locked. “You must get her away from your brother. He will deliver her to Levi.”

“I will...” I stroked my hand down his arm and felt him wince. “Who’s doing this to you?” He tensed, his muscles turning to stone in my arms. His voice was failing, fading in and out. I clasped my hands on his cheeks and searched his half-closed eyes. “Akil, stay awake. Who’s hurting you?”

“Levi...” His eyes closed.

“Akil...” He fell limp in my arms, but he breathed. He wasn’t dead. Not yet. If his vessel died, Akil as I knew him would be gone. Mammon would craft himself another avatar, but he wouldn’t be Akil. I’d lose him. I needed him to get Damien out of me. I needed him, dammit.

“Muse, the candle...” Jenna approached.

The little candle flame flickered, as though disturbed. It twisted and writhed on its wick and then, with one final splutter, snuffed out. Immediately, Akil’s weight lifted. His body dissolved right there on my lap. He just misted away to nothing. I snatched at my own breath and pressed a hand to my chest where the parasite throbbed around my heart. Akil was dying. Val had Dawn. Levi was torturing Akil, likely for information on Dawn’s whereabouts. I couldn’t save them both alone. I needed help. I needed the smartest, most badass demon hunter this side of the veil.

Jenna looked to me for our next move. “We need back-up.” I climbed to my feet and strode from the room. I collected Ryder’s cell and car keys and left the house with Jenna in tow.

We drove in silence toward the Salem mall to collect Jenna’s car. Fury burned through my veins, flaring hotter as my thoughts darkened. I would protect Dawn. I’d promised her that much. And Akil... How dare Levi torture him? He had no right. Akil was infallible. A smug bastard he might be, but he didn’t deserve that. What if Levi killed Mammon’s vessel, killed Akil?

“Akil means a lot to you.” Jenna leaned an arm against the passenger door and watched the leafy tree line blur past.

I glared ahead and tried to imagine what she thought she’d seen: a Prince of Hell dying in my arms and no doubt the terror in my voice. “No. I need him. There’s a difference,” I replied flatly. She’d witnessed Akil’s true form and looked him right in the eyes. More than that, she’d held his stare. That took balls. She obviously had a pair. I liked her all the more.

She turned her head and watched me. “What on this earth do you need a Prince of Hell for, Muse?”

Good question. The answer was mine to keep.

“What the hell are you?”

I had some witty retort on my tongue about a half-baked mistake, but it twisted in my mouth and died on my tongue. She’d seen me go demon. I’d deterred Val’s magnificent wings, albeit briefly. I’d bowed to a Prince of Hell and gathered him into my arms. She’d probably read the reports from the Garden event, where I’d funneled pure energy into Akil. As far as she was concerned, I had a Prince of Hell on a leash. She didn’t know I had another demon shrink-wrapped around my heart or that I could wipe out a city if I put my mind to it.

I shrugged a shoulder. “I’m just me. Caught in a storm.”

Jenna watched me closely. She was an Enforcer, trained to eliminate the demon threat. So was I, technically, but I was demon first. My allegiance didn’t rest with the Institute, and it never would. I worked for them—for Adam—because I needed answers. Jenna saw through my act and witnessed the demon in me staring right back at her.

She didn’t say another word, and once at the mall, she retrieved her car. We drove back to Boston in convoy. Her car loomed in my mirrors the whole time.

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