Read This Wicked Magic Online

Authors: Michele Hauf

Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Harlequin Nocturne

This Wicked Magic (12 page)

BOOK: This Wicked Magic
2.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Immediately the bead, small as a dragonfly’s eye, had began to travel the streets on the map, at first following a main road and then veering down an alley.

Grim stood patiently over the map, hands clasped to his gut, his muscles tense and jaw tight. It had been six months. Finally he would learn where Certainly Jones was hiding.

Over the decades they had matched each other in magics, always trying to one-up the other. They had never been allies or even friends. Always enemies, but not quite, for they employed a gentleman’s conduct for all duels and magical showdowns. They were always generally aware of the other’s location and doings, and if something struck one as interesting then the challenge was issued.

Dasha tended to put up with his macho grandstanding. He loved her for her quiet acceptance.

He hadn’t realized Jones had a clue what he was up to until the man had returned from Daemonia and Ian had sensed what his nemesis had returned with. Something he’d wanted to lay his hands on for decades.

“You haven’t won yet,” Grim muttered as he tracked the slowly moving bead that veered toward the fifth arrondissement and then scattered in a powder across the map, as if blown away by explosives.

“No!”

The dark witch must have been on to him and blocked his approach with protective magic. To be expected. If Grim were able to easily sneak up on Jones, he’d be disappointed. But he was closer than ever now.

“The fifth.” Only one of the largest quarters in Paris. “I will find you, Jones.”

Chapter 8

T
his cleanup was weird.

Pulling on her gloves, Vika looked over the piles of ash. Normally, she was rarely called in for a vampire cleanup. The vamp was staked; he ashed, leaving behind just bits of clothing and personal items. Usually. This time, one particular pile of ash was only half-formed, sitting before the legs and hips of what had yet to ash.

“A young one,” Libby said, joining her side with dustpan and broom in hand. Clear goggles, that covered her nose as well, wrapped her head because the fine dust tended to fly up one’s nostrils. “That’s too sad.”

The young vampires didn’t ash as easily as those who had perhaps a few decades of vampirism to their arsenal. And the heat generated during an ash didn’t get hot enough to destroy clothing. Hence, the cleanup call.

“You grab the feet,” Vika said. “I’ll get what’s left of the hips. This shouldn’t take long.”

Libby handed her the black body bag, and Vika zipped it open as her sister inspected the shoes on the feet. “These are Louboutins.”

“Don’t think about it,” Vika warned.

“I know. Really bad karma to steal the dead’s belongings. But do you know how much those things cost? And they’re purple. I think they’re my size, too.”

“Libby.”

“All right, all right! Lift.”

They succeeded in getting the legs into the body bag without having to remove the shoes to lessen the weight. Libby tossed the bag into the back of the hearse.

“So he liked the cookies, eh?” Vika asked. She began to sweep the ash, Libby holding the dustpan and dumping it frequently in a hazardous waste disposal bag.

“He took two this time. Said he’d never had anything like them before.”

“Soul bringers don’t usually eat, do they?”

“Not sure. They’re from angel stock so they don’t have to eat, but they can. And he did.”

“That’s remarkable. That Reichardt had a sort of conversation with you. Well, two sentences, but still.”

“I know! Remind me to always have a fresh batch of chocolate chip cookies available.”

“Something tells me I won’t need to remind you. But seriously, Libby, you are dating other guys, right?”

“Oh, no. What if Reichardt finally gets it into his head to ask me out and I’ve got a date with someone else? That would so not be smart.”

Vika pushed a small mountain of ash toward the dustpan. “I suppose not.” He wasn’t going to ask, because the guy could have no concept of what a date even was. “Maybe you should come out with me and Becky next weekend. Friday girls’ night out? Just for kicks.”

“You’ve never invited me along before. Would Becky mind?”

“Not at all. I think I should ask her about those shoes. She runs with the glamorous crowd.”

Vika suddenly couldn’t erase the feeling something more than a routine vampire slaying had gone on here. “I know most vamps are pretty well-off, but, I don’t know. Are they all females? Does this feel odd to you? I’m sensing some latent witchcraft in the air.”

Libby paused from brushing up the ash and closed her eyes, studying the air about her by opening her instincts to the electrical energies in the ether. She nodded. “I do, too. Most spellcraft would have faded by now. Must have been a powerful witch in the vicinity, and recently. That is weird.”

“Witches and vamps are on neutral grounds now,” Vika added. “And a witch would have no reason to take out vampires like this, not even for a source—”

“CJ is a powerful witch.”

She twisted a look to her sister. “What are you implying?”

“Huh?” Libby stopped playing with the tip of her purple glove and released it with a
snap.
“Oh. Well. I’m not implying anything. Sorry.”

Vika nodded and turned to her work.

“But he does practice dark magic,” Libby added.

Why her sister couldn’t get on board with her being interested in the ultimate of bad-boy witches was beyond Vika. He was exactly the sort Libby fell for. It was a good thing Libby wasn’t attracted to CJ. He was hers.

Really? Already claiming the guy, and you’re still not sure if you’re safe around him?

“Oh!” Vika gasped as a few corpse lights suddenly entered her body, one right after the other, as if rushing to the front of the line. They burst inside her and then faded until she felt not a thing.

“How many?” Libby asked.

“Three or four? I can never be sure. Probably all of them. I think there’s at least five dead vamps here, though I’m not sure that ash pile is one or two.”

After she’d taken on a soul, she felt nothing more. No sign from within that she harbored lost souls. The first time she’d realized she was actually collecting souls was when Reichardt had been at the scene of a cleaning. He’d watched as she and Libby had done their work and then pointed out the souls he’d come for were stuck to her. She had no problem agreeing to a regular scrub, while Libby had swooned and hadn’t been the same since.

“That smaller pile there.” She pointed out one moist with dark liquid, which she guessed was blood. “I’m going to make a call and say that was a heart. And why would it not have ashed at the same pace as the rest of the body?”

“Because someone had reached in and pulled it out to drink the blood,” Libby said. Witches had to consume the blood of a beating vampire’s heart once a century to maintain their immortality. “But why five vampires when one will do? Do you think all the hearts got grabbed?”

“I don’t see how it’s possible. Someone would have fought back. Unless there was more than one perpetrator.”

“Or the witch had the other vamps in thrall while he methodically went from heart to heart. We have to report this to the Council,” Libby said. “We’re not detectives.”

“I know. I have no interest in getting involved in whatever
this
is. I have so many other things with which to concern myself at the moment.”

“Like the dark witch with the tattooed hand?”

“Who kissed me again.”

Libby gaped and pressed her gloves to her mouth, but her eyes were all glee.

“He’s invited me to the Council archives this afternoon. We’re going to search the grimoires.”

Libby’s glee dissipated. “Sounds like a real exciting date, sis. And you think
I
need to get out more?”

“It’s a work date. I’m determined to—”

“I know, clean him up. So what happens when all his demons are gone? You two go your separate ways? Because I so cannot see you hooking up with him, even if you two have kissed. He’s completely opposite your type.”

“You keep saying that, but I don’t have a type.” Vika zipped up the hazardous waste bag, and the two of them hefted the ash-filled container into the back of the hearse. “Do I?”

“Tall, blond and Nordic. You like them looking like Thor, not Thor’s evil nemesis.”

“Who is Thor’s evil nemesis?”

“Not sure, but I suspect he’d look like CJ.”

“Who has a look that bears a remarkable resemblance to your type.”

“I know.” Libby tugged off her gloves and took out the spell-sanitizing spray from a rubber container in the back of the hearse. “And yet, I’m not at all attracted to the guy.”

“Which, I have to say, I appreciate. You should see his home. It would amaze you. I told you he needs prismatic light to keep the demons at bay? He must have a hundred chandeliers hung overall.”

“Seriously? Like some kind of Tiffany’s on crack? Yet another weird feature about the dude that totally doesn’t add up to Vika material. You be careful, sister mine. I know your need to help and clean things up is the biggest compeller in this situation. Don’t fall so far you can’t see the light for his darkness.”

“That’s a bit dramatic, Libby.” Sounded like a line from one of the country music songs she was always singing at the top of her lungs.

“Yeah? But who’s the better judge of character between the two of us?”

Vika sighed. The answer was unnecessary; they knew it was Libby. Vika was too caught up in herself at times to notice the foibles of others, while Libby’s extroversion made her a people reader extraordinaire.

Was she taking a wrong step with CJ?

He had threatened her safety twice. Not him, exactly. The lust and menace demons had done that. And he’d been genuinely upset and apologetic. He was misunderstood, that was all. And so what if he didn’t look like her standard dating material? Maybe it was time she tried something new.

A walk on the dark side.

Her skin flushed in anticipation. Memory of his gentle kiss slowly growing bolder until her skin had felt like liquid fire, as if it was the watery candle flame. Yes, she wanted to delve deeper into Certainly Jones’s compelling darkness.

* * *

The archives were appropriately Gothic and stuffy, tucked into the basement of a building the Council had appropriated centuries earlier for storage. CJ had showed Vika around on a tour. Iron walls supported tunnels dug out of the limestone, and doors were operated with high-tech digital codes. Dry stone and mildew mingled with dust and what she sensed was burned wiring from decades gone by. Bats skittered in the rafters, and a chill enveloped her ankles as if walking over a fresh-packed grave.

She liked it.

Now they sat at the library table beneath a massive Swarovski chandelier fashioned with iron fixtures and crystals that gleamed in all colors. One of the first the company ever made, CJ explained. And it was haunted.

Vika kept looking toward the crystals, expecting to see them move or tinkle in the stillness. If the chandelier was indeed haunted, the spirit or ghost attached would surely sense the presence of ultrasensory entities, such as she and CJ.

Certainly cast her a grin from across the table. “We’re safe here.”

“I know.” She propped an elbow on the table, the black lace on her sleeve sweeping a stack of books. “But
how
is it haunted? I don’t know much about ghosts, but I’m ever curious.”

“My knowledge of the spirit world is on level with yours. And I adore your curiosity.”

She tilted her chin up pridefully. She felt his look glow upon her skin in a warm flush.

“I’ve been told a duke who hailed from Revolutionary Paris was tossed up on the chandelier by peasants and landed on the iron stakes. He was left there to bleed out. Supposedly you can hear a dying groan echoing down, but I’ve yet to hear it. Tea?”

“Oh, yes, please.”

He turned on a tea service at the cupboard against the wall, above which a long fluorescent light had been hung. He’d explained his lighting precautions since returning from Daemonia. He’d not divulged to the Council his sudden need for better lighting, but Council members rarely visited the archives, so his secret was for now quiet.

Vika paged through the ancient book of shadows she’d selected from the archives, hoping for words like
demon, exorcism
and
Daemonia
to jump out at her. When CJ had brought her into the special humidity-controlled room where they stored the grimoires, it had taken away her breath. The room was half the size of his loft apartment, and it had been stacked floor to ceiling with books of all shapes, sizes and bindings. No wonder they’d not been ordered and scanned. Where to begin?

“You need an assistant,” she said, standing and reaching for another from the stack they’d carried out as the most likely to contain what they were looking for since their covers depicted demons or had been fashioned from human skin.

“So I’ve been told. You in the market for a job?”

“I already have one I enjoy. And I don’t think I’d get to the grimoires because all this dust, well...”

She sighed at the sight of every surface dulled with dust. The old, rich woodwork screamed for a good oil polish. Should have brought in her cleaning cart from the hearse. She could still go out and get it....

“What if I had the place cleaned up before you arrived?” he suggested from over a shoulder.

“Would never work. I’m far too busy with my business.”

“Jiffy Clean,” he said with a chuckle.

“That’s Libby’s joke. I didn’t notice the sticker for weeks, and I have no idea how to remove it from the hearse without ruining the paint job.”

“Something the Martha Stewart of witches can’t clean?”

She tried to think of a comeback, but the sudden sweep of CJ’s hand across the nape of her neck made her stand up straight. It was followed by the warmth of his breath. The nuzzle of his nose tracing the length of her neck stirred her heartbeats.

“Wh-what are you doing?”

“Your hair spilled away from your neck, and I had to touch it. To learn this little space of skin.” A kiss tendered below her hairline. It branded her softly. “Is that all right?”

BOOK: This Wicked Magic
2.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Leon Uris by Exodus
Darkest Risings by S. K. Yule
Blue Light of Home by Robin Smith
The Truth and Other Lies by Sascha Arango
The Brentford Triangle by Robert Rankin
Traitor by Claire Farrell
An Unexpected Date by Susan Hatler
CURSE THE MOON by Lee Jackson