From his seat, I saw a smile of satisfaction cross Lucifer’s
face while Jake thrashed desperately against the demons
restraining him. Asia was biting her lip, but only to keep her
excitement in check.
The flames rose around me like a hundred hungry
mouths, quickly devouring the sticks and straw at the base
of the stake. I squeezed my eyes tight shut, waiting for the
suffocating heat, the inevitable agony to start. I sent a quick
prayer to My Father, not in the hope of being spared but
seeking forgiveness for al my failings. Then I waited for the
flames to do their work.
I felt nothing. Had the torture begun but I was in too much
shock to notice? Several more moments passed without
any change. I looked around to see coils of flame leaping in
every direction … only they weren’t touching me. The
flames rose and seemed to part around me so that two
columns of fire burned on either side of my body. But I was
not burning. Not even a strand of my hair was singed. Al I
felt was a warm prickling sensation as the fire snaked
around me. My flesh should have been melting from my
bones, but the fire refused to harm me. If it chanced to
touch my skin it seemed to bounce off and veer in a new
direction. It was as though I were wearing invisible armor.
For one fleeting moment, I thought I heard a choir of angels
singing. The sound was gone in an instant, but it was long
enough for me to know I hadn’t been abandoned.
It took a while for the spectators to realize what was
happening. Once they did the cheers changed to howls of
disappointment. Some shook their fists to indicate how
cheated they felt. In the VIP stand Jake had stopped
struggling and stared at me in open wonder. Lucifer looked
momentarily confounded and then rose slowly to his feet,
eyes flashing. Speculative whispers broke out al around
the amphitheater.
I couldn’t believe what was happening. Could this be the
work of Heaven protecting me? Had someone enchanted
the flames or was it my own powers keeping me safe? I
had no idea, but I murmured hasty thanks to whatever
higher power had chosen to spare my life. One look at
Lucifer’s face told me how humiliated he felt before al
those assembled. He’d intended my death to demonstrate
his power and I had unwittingly shown him up. The flames
seemed to be subsiding around me now.
“Cut her loose,” he commanded in a voice like steel.
The executioner obeyed, climbing the platform and
wielding an axe to hack through the ropes, which were too
hot to touch. Once free, I stepped out of the fire completely
unmarked. As soon as I did, the flames rose up to devour
the wooden frame, which was quickly charred to cinders.
“What the hel is going on?” Asia leapt forward, looking
wilder than ever. She whipped around to face Jake. “She
should be fried to a crisp! What did you do?”
“Nothing …” I thought I heard Jake’s voice tremble. “I … I
don’t know what happened.”
“Liar!” Asia screamed.
“Silence.” Lucifer held up a ringed finger. “Arakiel had no
hand in this. It seems the angel has been holding out on us.
Her powers are greater than we know.”
“What now?” someone asked.
Lucifer’s listless blue gaze met mine and this time I didn’t
flinch away.
“Arakiel,” he said tonelessly. “Kindly escort Miss Church
to the chambers until we decide what to do with her.”
As it turned out the “chambers” were Hel ’s version of a
prison cel block and they made Hotel Ambrosia look like
paradise. The bodyguards hustled me out of the arena into
a car and before I knew it I was being thrust into a space in
the wal barely large enough to contain me. It was made of
rough, cracked stone and rusted iron bars secured the
entrance. When I sat down, my elbows scraped against the
wal s and my legs began to cramp after five minutes. There
was total darkness in the chambers, but strange noises like
the shuffling of feet and the clanging of metal pipes filtered
through, along with mute cries of despair. The smel of
damp was overwhelming.
Once the bodyguards left I heard Jake’s voice through
the bars. Although I could barely see him I could hear the
mixture of relief and confusion in his voice.
“How did you do it?” he asked in a hushed tone. I heard
his rings clink as he wrapped a hand around the bars. “Tel
me the truth.”
“I don’t think it was me.”
“Wel , don’t admit that to anyone, got it?” Jake said
sharply. “It’s the only bargaining chip we’ve got left.”
“What are you going to do?”
“I don’t know yet, but I’l speak to my father—try and
persuade him to let you go. Maybe things wil be different
now he’s seen how special you are.”
I didn’t respond—I was too drained from the day’s
ordeal. “Leave it to me,” Jake said.
A few moments later I heard his retreating footsteps and I
was left alone in the darkness.
24
Tennessee Blues
WITH Jake gone, there was only one way to take my mind
off my physical discomfort. I shoved al troubling thoughts
out of my head and focused on projection. I squeezed my
eyes shut, wil ing my thoughts to shift away from this
nightmarish place. The transition happened easily, like
flipping a channel in my head. There was a rush of wind and
then I had the feeling of my body dropping away like a
stone as I rose in my spectral form. Before the darkness
cleared, a voice reached me, distant at first but growing
clearer. I could feel the familiar chug of an engine beneath
me and smel leather mixed with sandalwood. I would have
known that smel anywhere. It belonged to a certain 1956
Chevy Bel Air convertible. I felt the knot of tension in my
chest instantly unravel and I breathed a deep sigh of relief. I
was in Xavier’s car.
As my astral form took shape, I realized I was hovering in
the backseat of the Chevy between Xavier and Mol y. They
seemed to be angled as far away from each other as was
physical y possible, both gazing sul enly out the windows at
the passing landscape. Any rift mending that had occurred
in the last few hours had evidently been only temporary. Ivy
and Gabriel were sitting tight-lipped up front, clearly
relieved to be at some distance from whatever dispute was
in progress. As I watched the highway speeding by, I
realized that we were in unfamiliar territory. My family must
have already left Venus Cove far behind them. They sure
weren’t wasting any time.
“We’re almost there,” Gabriel said sounding like a parent
hoping to placate restless children. His voice, deep and
resonant, reminded me of a low chord strummed on a
guitar. Hearing his voice triggered a sharp pang of
nostalgia for the way life used to be before Jake showed up
and shattered everything. “We’re about to cross the
Tennessee state line.”
“I don’t see why we couldn’t have gone by plane like al
normal people,” Mol y grumbled.
“We weren’t going to fly to cross one state,” Ivy replied
calmly, though I could sense that her patience was wearing
thin. Mol y shifted and her elbow went right through my rib
cage. The sensation was uncomfortable like a bar of heat
spearing through my side. I guessed it was the life force of
her human body col iding with my spectral form. I
automatical y wriggled away from her.
“Ugh, I knew I shouldn’t have eaten al those Junior Mints
on the way over here,” Mol y complained rubbing her
stomach. I noticed she was wearing pink sweatpants and a
matching cropped hoodie. Her auburn curls were pul ed up
into a high ponytail on top of her head and a hot pink duffel
bag had been shoved under the seat in front of her. I
couldn’t suppress a smile, knowing that Mol y would claim
she’d dressed sensibly for the occasion. Nobody
responded to her comment. I supposed there wasn’t much
to say about Junior Mints when your mind was preoccupied
with demonic kidnappings and apocalyptic signs. The
Chevy coasted along the highway and Xavier laid his
forehead against the window. He looked edgy, like he
needed to be doing something more than lounging in the
back of a car.
I peered through the window and watched the Georgia
countryside fly by. I was struck by how scenic it was. The
earth seemed to have a life of its own and lush forestland
spread out before us like a cloak. Vivid red maples grew
thick and fast, forming shady canopies where their
branches interlocked. I caught sight of butterfly weed and
delicate purple prairie clover among the velvet greenery. As
we traveled I watched as the earth became carpeted with
sycamore twigs. The sky above us looked vast and open,
only a handful of clouds scudded lazily across it, like lilies
drifting across a clear blue pool. Things seemed simpler
out on the open road and I felt close to the natural world. I
was reminded of my old home in the Kingdom. Something
about this place made me feel more connected to it than I
had in a long time. I let out a heavy sigh and Xavier, who’d
been resting against the window, sat up straight and glared
at Mol y.
“What?” she demanded when she noticed him staring at
her.
“Please don’t do that,” Xavier said.
“Do what?”
“Breathe in my ear like that.”
Mol y looked insulted. “What kind of freak do you think I
am? Why would I want to blow in your ear?”
“I said
breathe
.”
“Oh, I see, so I’m not al owed to breathe now?”
“That’s not what I meant.”
“You do realize, I’l suffocate if I’m not al owed to breathe.”
Xavier leaned forward. “Seriously, guys, let me drive,” he
implored. “Someone else can sit back here and be
tortured.”
“I’m not even talking!” Mol y protested angrily.
“You’re talking now,” Xavier groaned.
“We’d be there already if we’d gone by plane.”
“The pilot would have crashed after five minutes of
listening to you talk.”
“It’d stil be safer than driving around in this old bomb.”
“Hey!” Xavier could not have looked more offended had
someone insulted his manhood. He always got worked up
when people took shots at his car. “It’s vintage.”
“It’s a vintage pile of crap. I don’t know why we couldn’t
take the Jeep.”
I’d been wondering that myself. I got the feeling that
taking the Chevy had been Xavier’s idea. Maybe it made
him feel more connected to me. We’d shared plenty of
memories in that car, and maybe he’d wanted to take those
with him when he left his old town and his old life completely
behind. But Xavier wasn’t about to share that information
with Mol y. Instead he said, “You wouldn’t know a classic
car if you fel over one.”
“Jerk,” she muttered.
“Airhead.”
Ivy whipped around and glared at them both. “Were you
two born in a barn? Knock it off.”
Mol y looked sheepish while Xavier sighed loudly and
sank down in his seat once again. A few minutes of blissful
silence fol owed until Gabriel pul ed into a gas station.
Xavier couldn’t get out of the car fast enough and vanished
inside, almost before my brother cut the engine. I
considered fol owing him, but I knew he was only going to
fil in the time sulkily inspecting packs of gum and dated
magazines until it was time to pile back into the car. Mol y
threw him a dirty look as she trotted off to find the
restrooms.
I fol owed as my siblings made their way over to a man in