The Witching Hour (The Grim Reaper Saga (Urban Fantasy Romance)) (3 page)

BOOK: The Witching Hour (The Grim Reaper Saga (Urban Fantasy Romance))
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She nailed him with a glare and then sighed with exasperation when he refused to look at her. Michael wouldn’t be ruffled today. She’d lost. So she turned her attention to other things.  

The mall was appropriately decorated, a large Christmas tree guarded the entrance. Festive lights hung swagged from one light post to the next, and of course, the melee of people shoving against her at a constant, repetitive pace with barely an apology to be gained. She sighed. To say she had a love-hate relationship with the holidays was putting it mildly.

But Michael had been acting secretive all day, alluding to some great gift she’d find under the tree come Yule. In truth, her husband’s enthusiasm for life was contagious. She wouldn’t miss the annual last minute shopping for the world. Though she’d never tell him so.“Michael,” she grumbled, “let’s go home. It’s freezing. My feet hurt, and...” she paused, trying to think of the next excuse to come up with.

He smiled as expected. “Love you, shrew.”

She rolled her eyes, trying desperately not to snort with laughter.

Then as if the weather felt some need to remind her how cold it was--and that she had no freaking business being out in the first place--she was blasted with a sweep of frigid air up her trench coat. Goosebumps broke out along her inner thigh and a chill zipped down her spine.

She shivered. “Stupid weatherman. I should hex his behind. He said temperatures of sixty.”

Michael’s lips twitched. “When you gonna learn that Were don’t know his ass from his head? The man’s worthless. Call a toad a toad and a bad weatherman a bad weatherman. Period.”

She nodded. “Hear hear.”

 

***

 

Eve fingered a delicate gold and emerald butterfly broach. “Baby, do you think Tamryn would like this?”

He glanced up from browsing at a case of black pearl necklaces. “Sure. I guess.”

She laughed. “I guess? The standard male answer for everything, right? Why do I even bother?” She caught the heavily made-up clerk’s eye and nodded.

The blonde glided over in a sea of expensive perfume. Orange blossom undertones so strong Eve wiggled her nose to stop the sudden urge to sneeze. The clerk sent a blatantly lustful smile in Michael’s direction. Eve hid her laughter under a pursed lip and raised brow. “The butterfly,” she prompted and handed the lady a fifty.

Michael grinned and encircled Eve’s waist from behind, laying his head on her shoulder. She rubbed her nose, but the tingling still didn’t stop. She sneezed and he chuckled. A soft lock of his doe-brown hair brushed the side of her neck.  Eve swept his hair aside and sighed.

“You just love it when that happens don’t you?”

“What?” he asked in a rush of innocence. “When you sneeze? Why yes,” he flicked the

tip of her nose, “I think it’s adorable.”

“You know very well what I mean,” she twisted her lips and swatted his finger away. “You’re too gorgeous for your own good.”

Throaty laughter spilled from his lips as he swayed with her in time to the strains of ‘Jingle Bell Rock’ floating through the overcrowded department store.

Eve snuggled deeper into his arms. A little’s girl’s squeal of delight floated to her, the sound full of joy and innocence. The sharp tang of pine mingled with the sweet hint of peppermint and jingle of bells all around made Eve suddenly glad they’d come. This really was the best time of year.

Michael nuzzled the side of her neck with a slow up and down exploration; his moist breath fanned her flesh and tightened her body. Even after five years of marriage he still had the power to make her heart flutter and her knees tremble.

“Michael,” she whispered.

 “Hmm?” He placed a gentle kiss on the nape of her neck.

Goose bumps skimmed along her forearms. “I’m ovulating.”

He went still for a split-second then nipped on her ear lobe. His large hand framed her stomach. “Let’s go make babies then.”

Her lip twitched, and she wiggled her bottom against him. Michael growled low in his throat and pinned her arms to her side, holding her still. “Eve,” he warned.

She turned and draped her arms over his neck. “What?”

He dragged her closer, a mischievous twinkle in his emerald green eyes. “Imp. You’re just lucky I’m wearing a coat long enough...”

“Excuse me.” A strained voice interrupted them.

She turned. The sales clerk held her purchase and change in one hand. Her narrowed eyes and curled lip were too much for Eve to ignore.

She quickly took the bag and without missing a beat leaned forward. Enough to part her button-down shirt at the collar and make her pentagram swing free from between her breasts. “He ain’t on the market, babe.”

The clerk, obviously human, turned deathly white. No human liked to tangle with the dark arts. And though that wasn’t what Eve did by any means, the blonde didn’t know it, and Eve sure as heck wasn’t going to correct her assumption. Judging by the reaction, the threat had done its job.

With a smile and a jaunty wave, she turned on her heels and marched off.

Michael held out his arm. “What in the world did you say to her, Eve?” She didn’t miss the tinge of humor lacing his voice.

She grinned. “What? And give you a bigger head than you’ve already got? I don’t think so.”

He chuckled and grabbed her hand in his, caressing her knuckle with the pad of his thumb. Laughter glittered in his eyes. Then he became serious and turned her face to look directly at him. “I love you.”

The way he said it made her shiver. One of those freaky moments in time that when you look back on them you wonder if there was some sort of sixth sense involved.

Her smile slipped for a millisecond, the memories of what had happened only last night came sharply into focus. What if that hadn’t been an isolated incident but fate? She always tried to be aware of the signs and the environment around her. What if she was being purposefully ignorant? Ignoring the obvious?

Don’t make more out of this. Don’t be stupid. Everything’s fine.

Pushing the neurotic fears to the back of her mind, she gave him a crooked smile. “I know, Mikey. And I thank the Goddess every day for you.”

 

***

 

Cian stood outside the entrance to the mall and waited for his dark witch and the man to walk out. Last night seemed a nightmare he was destined to relive over and over. He couldn’t shut out the image of seeing that bolt of energy headed toward her. The emotions she’d felt had snapped through him, so extreme he remembered them vividly. Her golden eyes had narrowed with panic, fear. A cloying miasma of emotion that had turned his stomach.

It had felt like somebody reached a hand into his chest and squeezed his heart in a painful grip. The terrible itch of a healing laceration had him irritable, pissed. He’d lain awake all night wracked with coughs and shivers, until the flesh had begun to knit itself together. It would heal. But give him hell for his stupidity.

Like any fae his natural healing abilities were legendary. The older the creature, the stronger the power to regenerate. Too much damage could kill, but it was rare for a fae to die from physical blows. They’d have to be ripped apart, pieces scattered to the winds, for death to happen.

He rubbed his back against the rough exterior of the mall, much as a bear would trying to scratch an itch. The need to relieve the irritation was insatiable and maddening, almost worse than the pain had been. 

He closed his eyes and inhaled the biting wind. The cold traveled through his lungs and burned him with frost. Cleared his head, but not his heart.

In all the centuries none had ever been able to sense him.
I shouldn’t have done that. Shouldn’t have followed so close. I should never have walked to that mirror.

But the intoxicating possibility had been more than he could stand. And for one sweet moment it had all been worth it. To have someone notice him. To have someone be aware that he even existed at all.

A small, noisy crowd of humans walked toward him. His eyes snapped open. They were laughing and holding on to several department store bags. They hadn’t noticed him, but he decided to err on the side of caution.
She
had seen him. He didn’t need that happening again. His skills as death depended on silence and stealth.

Using his essence he transformed himself ordinary, hardly worth a second glance. He couldn’t go fully invisible until the harvest time came upon him.

How better to get people not to notice than to look as pathetically average as possible? Through all the years of using this guise he’d never once been remembered. Blending in so well with the norm, that no one could ever give the same description of him twice. Right now, he needed people to look past him, not see the peculiarities that branded him not quite human.

His hair turned a drab brown, short and barely reaching his collar, his eyes became much the same color. The process happened so fast; no one would even have time to react at all. It would seem to them as if he’d been this way the entire time.

Once the group had passed, he relaxed and returned to thoughts of her.

He’d be lying if he said he’d changed himself merely to remain anonymous. There was another truth. His witch had seen him in true form and in some small corner of his mind he didn’t want to shatter her illusion of that man. He didn’t want her to believe that man a killer. For some reason that mattered.  

Regardless, death beckoned. It must happen today. That was the way of things. He was the balance to life. For one to be born, one must die. Last night had been a mistake he wouldn’t make again, couldn’t afford to make again.

He frowned, his stomach twisted with anxiety. It was almost a physical pain to think of her crushed, the life expunged from her body. Could he stand to see her pain, her suffering?

How much longer can I do this?

A dangerous, dangerous question. One that had caused other Reapers stronger than him to decide fading was the only possible solution.

The hollowness of knowing he’d never be anything other than death consumed his thoughts until the time for action came. Several minutes later, an electrical rush of power surged through his body. His witch and the male had finally walked out of the mall. The final phase of death’s transformation was upon him. Knowing that he was now invisible to all, he strolled purposefully toward the car garage.

Today’s scenario would be no better than last night’s. He could see it in his mind, like an image on a television screen. A carload of teenagers barreling through the garage, the interior of the car heavily laced with the thick stench of cannabis. The driver was laughing, blaring an Ozzy tune ‘Crazy Train’, unaware that soon he’d be indicted for two counts of vehicular homicide.

Cian often wondered at times like these why the humans couldn’t feel it. The end of their lifeline, the disturbance in the air, death; for him it was like the blast of trumpets, loud and hard to ignore.

Turning his attention back to the couple, he waited. The man popped open the trunk of a green sedan, laid down his packages and flashed the woman a smile. She stood by the hood of the car, her midnight curls blowing in the stiff wind.

The faint rumble of an approaching engine echoed eerily through the garage. The vibrations traveled through the soles of his boots.
Soon. It’ll all be over
.

For a crazy second he wanted to scream at them.
Move. Get out of the way.
But he held his tongue. He wouldn’t interfere. Not again. His skeletal hand twitched and he yanked off the glove. No more mistakes.

The car made a sharp left around a concrete post in the garage and swerved headlong toward the couple with a loud, echoing cry of rubber.

For Cian the scene was agonizingly slow; each detail sharp and clear, as if it were taking minutes, when in truth it would all be over within seven seconds.

When they finally noticed it was already too late.

Her golden eyes grew wide in her face. Blood rushed from her skin, leaving her a pasty white. Her hands covered her mouth as a scream of raw fear flew from her lips. “Michael!”

The smile on the man’s face died. He turned--unable to run for cover, to hide from his fate. She ran forward, arms outstretched, and tried to pull the man toward her.

Metal exploded against flesh. The sickening crunch of bone and tearing muscle warred with the scream of tires braking. The man was dragged under the car. She was flung aside, her limbs at odd proportions.

Cian’s heart clenched painfully seeing her ravaged body lying so helpless on the ground. She looked like a morbid porcelain doll. Beautiful and broken.

Blood spattered everywhere. All over the windshield--even the neighboring vehicles in the next three slots. The overwhelming, metallic stench was all around.

The car squealed to a halt, slamming against the side of the sedan. The shattering of glass echoed through the garage with an eerie finality. It was done, their bodies slowly dying, their souls waiting only for him to harvest and carry them on to the appropriate afterlife.

The driver, a pimply-faced redhead emerged. “Oh no! No!” he sang the litany over and over as he ran a trembling hand through his hair and glanced up. A family--the next row over--stared back in open-mouthed shock.

“Get back in the car, Derek!” The girl in the passenger seat screamed.

The wind picked up flurries of snow, enclosing them in winter’s peaceful embrace. An ironic scene, at odds with the gruesome sight of death.

The kid jumped back in his car and squealed off with one last
bump-bump
in his wake.

Cian closed the gap between himself and the victims. First the male, he didn’t trust himself going to her just yet. The man’s face had been nearly sheared off. His forehead was cracked open and a constant stream of blood gushed from the wound. The sickeningly sweet metallic waft of so much blood had a small child puking in the corner. Kneeling, Cian extended his skeletal hand, ready to harvest the soul and carry it safely to the afterlife.

The man moaned and opened green eyes glittering with pain. The man could see him now because he no longer belonged to the land of the living. He didn’t question why Cian was kneeling over him; instead he parted ruptured lips and croaked, “Save my wife.”

BOOK: The Witching Hour (The Grim Reaper Saga (Urban Fantasy Romance))
2.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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