Incendiary (The Premonition Series (Volume 4)) (90 page)

BOOK: Incendiary (The Premonition Series (Volume 4))
12.52Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I feel like I’
m between heaven and hell when I have to lift
my mouth
from hers as I rest her on the
dark wood-grain
surface of the desk.
One hand slide
s
down he
r
side resting on the curve of her hip where her armor stops my descent.
I
growl in frustration, pullin’
energy to me more from instinct then premeditation.
Energy leaks out fr
om my fingertips, spreadin’
in
burnin’
ember
s of
glowin’
orange to turn
the black armor to gray ash as it travels down her sides and over her thighs. The armor ra
pidly disappears from Anya as
a
sh falls and floats
a
way,
leavin’
just
the soft
,
dark leggings behind that she must

ve had on beneath the armor.

A soft gasp comes from Anya as she looks down and sees the
disintegra
tion
of her defensive combat attire
.
Lookin’
up quickly with uncertainty in her eyes, a slow smi
le curls on my lips because I’
ve
managed to startle her
again
. I take control, raisin’
my hand and swiftly sliding the ponytail
holder from her hair, makin’ the black waves spill ‘
round her should
er
s as it flows down her back.
I brush stray strands of it away
from her soft skin.
Beautiful
,
I think before
I kiss the spot where her
hair meets her temple only to discove
r that the scent of her hair compel
s the butterflies
inside
me
to
increase in force.

“Russell,”
Anya
say
s before I can kiss her again, “wait.”
She presses her hand
s
flat against my chest.

It takes me a second to understa
nd what she just said because I’
m wrapped up in the sexy way she said my name: in a
raspy
groan-like whisper.

My lips
tease hers, “
Hmm...

I murmur against them.


Wait,

she repeats
as she tenses in my arms.

My brow furls.

Why
do you
have to
know
that
word,” I growl, lookin’ in her eyes. “‘Wait’
is the worst word in the English language in a situation like this.


You have to wait...this is
confusing—
y
ou’
re not...

she manages to say before
she looks away from my stare.

“I’m not what?”
I ask her gently.

“You’re not...you,”
she says with her eyes searchin’
mine.

“I’
m sorry?”
I murmur
with equal confusion. “
I’
m not me?

She looks so lost
before she glances away again
. “
You just ripped away my armor, like it was nothing
, then you melted it
.

“Is that a problem?” I ask. “
We can get you another—


You ripped it off with your
bare
hands,”
she murmurs.

It’
s
more...

My eyebrows draw together in confusion as I try to make eye
contact with her again. “
More?
What’
s more?”
I ask.


You
are more!”
she accuse
s, meeting my eyes.

My eyes narr
ow as I try to understand her. “I’m more? How am I more?”
I ask.

She bites her lower lip for a m
oment before she says, “Look at you,”
she flicks her hand to indicate my
chest, “you’
ve never been this...
this...big
.”

“Big,” I say, my eyebrows raisin’
in surprise.


And s
trong,”
she adds
.

We ne
ver had this attraction before,” she says, lookin’
at me uncertainly.

“The butterflies?”
I ask and she nods.

Her fingertips trail o
ver my abdomen for a second. It’s makin’
me want to growl again. My muscles tighten with the need to pull her to me.

And this—
this is unreal,”
her tone is accusatory again.

“Unreal?”
I ask, frownin’
.

“It’
s like
someone carved you from stone,”
she says with a frown.
H
er hand lifts and her fingertips skim over the feathers of my wings. I inhale a breath bec
ause her touch is incredible. “
And y
ou have wings—
Seraphim wings.”


Is that
bad?
” I ask, hopin’ she’
ll say

no.


You outrank me
,

she admits.

“I do?”
I ask,
feelin’
a surge of warmth in my belly that I try to hide
from her
.
It makes me feel powerful
and I lik
e that. I have this overwhelmin’
need to protect her and if she has to listen to me then that will help.

“Seraphim, Cherubim, Throne,”
she ticks of
f each rank using her fingers, “in that order,” she admits with a scowl. “
Right now I am Throne-Seraphim, equal to your rank. When you remove our binding, then I will be Throne only.


I though
t that bindings were permanent,” I say with narrowin’
e
yes. The thought of her removin’ my wings from her is makin’ me want to crush somethin’
.


Normally, there are very few reaso
ns for a binding to be revoked,” she says. “
One reason would be if t
here was a fall,”
she say
s. “
If one angel were to fall from grace, a case could
be made to remove the bi
n
ding between them. In our case, you m
ade it a stipulation of
this mission.

“So right now, we’
re equal ra
nk, but if I were to unbind
you, I’
ll outrank you and
you’
ll
have
to listen to me?

I ask for clarification.

“Grr,”
Anya give
s
a sex
y growl with her eyebrows comin’ together again, “
you see!
You are different now that you are part angel
,

she says.

My
Rus
sell would not want me to follow his
orders
.
My
Russell would want m
e to be his equal in all things!

M
y eyebrows come together, too. “
Well
,
that’
s great for
your
Russell.
Your
Russell got you in Paradise where it was safe.
This
Russell
,
me
,
new
Russell
,” I retort, pointin’ at my chest, “
has you here
on Earth where just ‘bout everythin’ ‘
round us is a threat.


Maybe
I
don’
t like
new
Russell,”
Anya says with an incredibly sexy pout.

“Well, darlin’
,
new
Russell is
the only one
here at the moment,”
I say
grimly. “So let me get this straight, we’
re equal right now
because
you have my wings, but
if I take them off you, then I’
ll have authority over you?

“Yes,”
she nods
stiffly. “
You outrank everyone here but Evie.

“You’
d be disobeying an o
rder if you tried to execute your
plan without my permission?”
I ask.


In
theory
?

she counters.

“Yeah, in theory,”
I repeat.

“Yes,”
she says sullenly.

“Then I'm orderin’
you to stay here
while we take care of Brennus,” I say, feelin’
relief like I’
ve never felt before.

Anya’
s scowl grows darker.
“You can’
t
order
me. I still have your wings and yo
u need a Virtue to remove them,” she says, while stabbin’ her finger at me. “
Unless you can locate a
Virtue in the next few hours, I’
m going
back to Ireland.

She wiggles out of my arms and climbs off the desk, straig
htening the little white halter-
top that is hardly coverin’ her because of the way it’
s almost entirely backless. I focus on the tight black leggings that accentuate her shape and I
call myself every kind of idiot as I watch the sexy way she crosses the room and slams the library door closed behind her.

I shuffle ov
er to the cou
ch, fallin

onto it. I grab a pillow and
pull it over my face. A few minutes later I hear the door to the
library open up. I sit up
, hopin’ it’
s Anya,
but instead, I see Red standin’
by the door.

I frown at her and ask, “What?”


We had a meeting,” Red says
in a quiet tone
, lookin’
really sad
.

Anya has just as much to lose in this if Brennus succeeds as the rest of us.
So, w
e’ve decided that she
’s
part of the team, Russ.
If she wants to come, she’s in.”

Fear and anger vie
f
or supremacy within me. Anger wi
n
s
within seconds. “I don’
t get a say in this?” I demand
between my teeth.

“It would just make th
e vote five-to-one,” Red replies,
straightenin’ her shoulders.
"And I’
m an equal rank to you."

“And there’s nothin’ I can
say to change you
r mind?” I ask
, pointin’
accusing
ly
at her
.

Shakin’ her head
, Red murmurs
, “No.”

My e
yes bore into Red’s and I can
tell that she’s strugglin’ not to look away
from me
. Quietly, I say
,
“Anythin’ happens
to her and I’ll never forgive you
.”

Palin’, Red breathes
, “I know.”

CHAPTER 25

Doubt The
Stars

Evie

S
lowly, I si
nk
down on the larg
e bed
while
my eyes touch
upon the destruction in Reed’s
disheveled
room
.
Ancient paint
ing
s and works of art lie
like carcasses
of
dead flesh upon the floor along with
s
hards of glass piled beneath the broken frame
s
of the
once elegant mirrors
.
Reed’s clothing i
s shredded bey
ond recognition, strewn like kite tails under
diamond
shapes of
broken plaster from the pockmarked walls.

Other books

Another part of the wood by Beryl Bainbridge
Love and Hate by Chelsea Ballinger
Sorority Sisters by Claudia Welch
Eastern Dreams by Paul Nurse
Games of Otterburn 1388 by Charles Randolph Bruce
Who Am I Without Him? by Sharon Flake
A Shroud for Jesso by Peter Rabe
Vendetta by Susan Napier
Jack Be Nimble: Gargoyle by English, Ben