“But you said you can stop them,” Aunt Carolyn said hopefully. Her face was ghostly pale.
Malini nodded. “We’re going to try.
Mary Michaels pushed Dane an arm’s length away. “Malini said you were one of them. What can you do?”
Dane cleared his throat. “Nothing on my own.”
“I don’t understand,” she said. “You can’t go out fighting those things without some way to protect yourself.”
“I have a gift,” Dane said. “It’s just hard to explain.”
The adults stared at him blankly.
“I can borrow other Soulkeepers’ powers.”
He reached out for Jacob’s hand. Reluctantly, Jacob channeled his weapon back into the vase, then accepted Dane’s palm. A shock ran through both of their bodies, then Dane pulled the water from the vase again, this time forming a Katana in his hand.
John barely caught Mrs. Michaels before she hit the floor. Sarah Gupta fanned her face with a Teleflora pamphlet from the counter. Next to her, Jim Gupta stared at his daughter as if he hadn’t noticed Mary pass out at his side.
“Okay, enough,” Jacob said. “Give it back.”
Dane made a face, but returned the water and reached for Jacob’s hand.
Lillian cleared her throat. “I’m sure this all seems overwhelming,” she said. “But we needed you to know the truth.”
Pale face unreadable, John Laudner shuffled Mary into her son’s arms. “So these demons are coming, and there are more than you can stop on your own. How do we help?”
“I’m glad you asked that question,” Malini said. At the back of the room, she plugged the sink and turned on the water. “Jacob, your flask.”
Jacob passed her his most prized possession, but she had to pry it from his fingers.
“I won’t use it all, Jacob.” She poured four drops into the filling sink and returned the flask. “Holy water is toxic to Watchers. Everyday weapons won’t kill them, but soak them in holy water and they’re deadly.” She grabbed a floral knife from the basket John kept them in and tossed it into the water.
“How long does it need to soak?” Carolyn asked.
“The effect is immediate,” Malini said. “But we don’t know how long it lasts. We resoak after every kill.” She handed the blessed knife to Carolyn.
John pushed through the other adults to a locked cabinet near the back of the room. Pulling a set of keys from his pocket, he unlocked the metal door and dug through the contents. He pulled out a rifle.
Sarah Gupta gasped; Malini’s mother never liked guns.
“If those things are half as terrifying as they look on television, we are going to need a hell of a lot more than a three inch blade.” John dunked the rifle and then a box of ammunition.
Mary Michaels shook her head. Apologizing profusely, she regained her balance, then saw the dripping gun in John’s hand and had to steady herself on Dane’s arm again.
“Mary, why don’t you come stay with us for awhile. Bring the kids,” John said. Mary nodded appreciatively.
“What about us, Malini? We have no weapons,” her father said.
“We’ll bring you some from Eden.”
“Eden?” Sarah Gupta glanced around the room as if begging the other adults to make sense of this madness for her.
Malini triggered the trapdoor in the floor.
John dropped the rifle. Everyone scattered, except for Lillian who snagged the gun before it hit the floor. She had it safely pointed at the ceiling before anyone could say a word.
“Weapons are my gift,” she said, smiling.
Slowly, the adults again turned their attention toward Malini and the trap door. “There’s something else we need to tell you.”
The Third Curse
L
ucifer paced his high-rise penthouse like an animal in a glass cage. They’d taken her. They’d taken his prize. The stench of Soulkeeper still burned in his nostrils.
“I saw her. It was the redheaded twin again,” Cord said. “The one called Bonnie.”
“Again she gets the best of you,” Lucifer snapped.
Cord physically recoiled. Fortunately, at that moment, Auriel burst through the door, red heels click-clacking on the tile foyer.
“Did I miss it? Have you issued the curse?” she asked breathlessly.
“No, dear. It wouldn’t be half as fun without you.”
“Good. It’s a pain in the ass only traveling at night.”
“Yes, the Great Oppressor’s last gift is certainly problematic. But since he chose to bring us into the light, let’s not disappoint him by hiding under a bushel.”
“My Lord?” Auriel asked.
“Elysium was successful. We have addicts pounding on our doors for more of the drug. Do you know why it worked, Cord?”
Cord cringed to have Lucifer’s attention back on him. He thought quickly and tried to give an intelligent answer. “Because people didn’t want to be sick anymore. The humans say the virus causes constant pain. They think they will die without the medicine.”
“Exactly my wretched friend. They fear death. We must make them fear
us
.”
“Us?” Auriel questioned.
He slammed his fist into the back of the sofa. “We must bring them death and destruction, and when they loathe us and cringe in our presence, then we will save them.”
“Save the humans?” Cord asked.
“Why yes. We must save them to win them. Harrington Enterprises is going into the Watcher eradication business.”
“You want to kill our own,” Auriel said, appalled.
“Of course not,” Lucifer chided. “Don’t be an idiot, Auriel. It will all be for show. Amulets, security systems, repellents. We will invent dozens of products and command our Watchers to respond to them. Harrington will make a mint and Milton Blake’s face will be on every box.”
“Your face.” Cord grinned. “Brilliant. They will love you and turn their hearts to you.”
“Exactly.” Lucifer approached Cord, fire blazing in his pupils. “Do you hate the Soulkeeper that stole your illusion?”
“Beyond hate, my Lord. I wish to pull out her teeth one by one before I remove each of her organs by hand,” Cord said through his teeth.
“Good. I choose you as my vessel for the third curse.”
“My pleasure.”
Lucifer strode to the kitchen and procured a pair of scissors from the knife block. “Come here,” he said.
Cord obeyed, approaching the counter quickly, although with the shivering limbs of a dead man walking.
Lucifer pointed at the granite. “Rest your head here.”
Cord swallowed hard, then lowered his cheek to the cold countertop. Lucifer positioned his hand over Cord’s profile, scissors finding the tip of his pinky finger. With a firm grasp, he clipped that piece of flesh, the black stump falling into Cord’s ear canal. While his finger healed itself, Lucifer watched his dismembered digit transform into a black worm that worked its way into Cord’s skull.
“
Ahhhhhh
!” Cord screeched, banging his head on the counter until his black blood splattered the kitchen. “Get it out! GET IT OUT!”
“It only takes a moment,” Auriel said without empathy.
Soon, Cord’s thrashing slowed, then stopped. Carefully, he pulled himself to a standing position. “What did you do to me?”
“I simply enhanced your explosive personality, my friend.”
Cord smoothed back his black hair and straightened his suit.
“Remember, when you terrorize the humans, you must look like a Watcher.” Lucifer lowered his chin. “Milton Blake cannot be associated with the monsters.
“I understand, My Lord.”
“Now, my gift to you.”
Cord cocked his head to the side inquisitively. Lucifer did not give gifts.
“Auriel, can you inform Cord of your latest news.”
She nodded. “It seems one of our teachers at Paris High School saw redheaded twins visiting a local flower shop the night Abigail was stolen from us. The two went in but never came out. Seems Paris is a hotbed of Soulkeeper activity.”
“Redheaded twins. The one they call Bonnie?”
She laughed. “Oh yes. But be careful. If the shop is the entrance to Eden, your attack must be unexpected and efficient. The Healer is still living there. Remember what she did to you.”
“I remember.”
Lucifer nodded. “Leave Malini for me. The others you are welcome to kill.”
Cord growled and headed for the door. “My pleasure.”
* * * * *
“D
o you have the weapons packed?” Malini asked Lillian.
“Ethan and I have been packing all day. We have a duffle bag for each Soulkeeper. Everybody carries their own.” Lillian yanked the elastic from her hair and reformed her ponytail, tighter, smoother. The Horseman showed no emotion over the task. Her eyes weren’t wet with tears, and she didn’t look around the dojo mournfully. But Malini knew she felt it, the aching loss. All of them did.
Ethan zipped the last bag and caught Malini’s eye. “Are you sure this is necessary? I mean, this place has been here literally since the beginning. Adam and Eve and that whole section of the Bible no one reads that lists their descendants.” He slipped his hands into his back pockets. “Seems like a pretty safe place.”
“Sorry, Ethan. I know it seems impossible, but Abigail learned Lucifer’s third curse would target Eden.”
“Maybe it’s a trick. Maybe Lucifer planted that knowledge to get us all to leave the only place we’d be safe.”
“It wasn’t Lucifer who told her,” Malini said. “Listen, we don’t have time for this. You have to trust me.”
He sighed. “You’re the boss. Gonna go finish packing.” Ethan shouldered past her and headed for the west wing.
“Was it just me or did you sense a little attitude coming off him?”
Lillian grabbed the closest two bags and started lining them up along the hall. “You can’t blame him, Malini. This idea seems half-baked. First you and Abigail tell us that the safest place on Earth isn’t safe anymore. Then, you fully admit that you have no idea where we will go next. I’m surprised Grace hasn’t thrown a full-out hissy fit.”
Malini frowned. “It might still be coming. Then again, she’s wanted to go back to Nebraska for months. Maybe she hopes this will be her opportunity.”
“Look, I know you’re the Healer and I trust in that, okay. But even you must realize how crazy this seems.”
“I am the Healer,” Malini said firmly. “And this isn’t easy for me. But it’s the right thing to do. We leave in fifteen.”
Lillian nodded and reached for another two bags.
“Listen, I don’t mean to be rude. This is hard for me too. I …” Malini paused. A knot had formed in the pit of her stomach, and a chill started in her fingertips and coursed to her heart.
A ghost formed in the center of the room. At first she thought it was Jesse, but as the body solidified, she recognized the pink-streaked dark hair and piercings of an old and powerful friend.
“Mara!” Malini said. The immortal, Time, was pale and sweating.
“I can’t … stop … it … Malini. Run. RUN!” Mara dissolved.
BOOM!
The ground beneath the dojo shook, an earthquake that knocked her into the wall. Malini stared at the air where Mara had been, stunned. Thankfully, Lillian’s gift kicked into gear.
“Take these,” she said, throwing two insanely heavy duffle bags over her shoulder and pulling Malini toward the foyer. “Jesse!” she yelled. “Archibald!”
Both poofed into existence as another tremor almost knocked Malini on her backside.
“Ghost, bring the rest of the bags. We have to go, now,” Lillian said. “Archie, full alert. Tell everyone we must evacuate now.” She half-dragged Malini by the elbow toward the door.
“Wait!” Malini dug her heels in, but Lillian would have none of the stopping. She hooked an arm around her waist and dragged her on. “Lilly, we need to find Jacob!”
“Jacob can take care of himself, Malini. You need to go now.”
“I’m not leaving without him.”
In a feat of strength that would have been impossible if she wasn’t a Soulkeeper, Lillian hurled Malini and her two bags toward the door. “I will find him, Malini, only if you get to that boat. We need our Healer.”
Ghost arrived then, looking like an ant under a huge pile of bags. “I got this,” he said to Lillian. He kicked the door open for Malini, just as the place shook so hard the jewels encrusting the walls rained around them.
“Come on!” Ghost ushered her down the hill to the boat. He helped her stow the bags up front and guided her into the seat farthest from the dock. “It’s better this way, Malini. The others can load faster.”
The worry in his voice wasn’t lost on her. She was worried, too.
The twins arrived first, Samantha launching herself into Ghost’s arms before she even dropped her bags. Gideon, Grace, Cheveyo, and Abigail came down next, the first two helping Abigail into the boat. Malini thought she looked stronger, but nowhere near ready for this.
The earth shook again, causing Grace, who was still on the dock, to stumble backward.
Crack!
A piece of the shoulder of one of the cherubim rumbled off and splashed into the water.
“You shouldn’t have waited for us,” Lillian yelled. Jacob, Dane, and Ethan leapt, bags and all, into the boat. Lillian untied the vessel from the dock. “Lee! Come on!”
Looking surprisingly lithe, Lee’s feet slapped the dock. With everything he had, he jumped in, simultaneously pushing the boat off.
Malini breathed a sigh of relief that everyone was on board, but the feeling didn’t last.
BOOM!
The world shook. The cherubim came apart around them. Huge chunks of gold sailed toward their over-packed ship. Malini covered her head with her arms.
“I’ve got it,” Ethan said.
Malini chanced a glance. Ethan deflected one after another from the boat, pieces splashing into the water around them. By the time they reached the river, his nose was bleeding.
“Almost there,” he said. Malini thought it might have been for his own benefit.
Jacob took that as a hint. “Let’s not prolong the experience.” He held his hand over the water and the boat jerked forward, the water propelling them into the cave. The boat slid to a stop on a heap of white sand as usual. Only the expected serenity of the cave was replaced by madness. The walls were coming apart around them.
“Crap, I got nothing left!” Ethan cried from the center of a storm of rubble.