Her Angel: Eternal Warriors Complete Series Box Set
Page 52
Marcus dragged a chair across the deck and set it opposite her and Amelia. He sat down in it and leaned forwards, resting his elbows on his bare knees. “Veiron says that you have some powers.”
Erin swallowed. “I do. I don’t know what they are or where they came from. I had thought maybe I was like Amelia, but Veiron says that isn’t possible.”
Marcus shook his head and a lock of his dark hair fell down. He preened it back. “It isn’t possible. There was only one female angel. Veiron would know if it was any different.”
“How?” Erin said and found herself leaning forwards too. How much did Marcus know about Veiron and how much would he be willing to tell her? Taylor had told her things but nothing about his past.
Marcus looked as though he wouldn’t answer.
“Please... tell me how he would know such a thing. Is it because he’s fallen?” She reached out to touch his hand and then thought the better of it. If Amelia touched Veiron, she would probably kill her sister in a fit of jealousy. Amelia might feel just as strongly about Erin touching Marcus.
“When angels die, we are reborn in the same physical form but everything else about us is wiped clean and often our positions alter. Mine does not. Neither does Veiron’s. Whenever he dies, he’s reborn as a guardian angel.” Marcus drew in a deep breath and exhaled it on a sigh.
“You make it sound as though he dies quite often, and that he isn’t an angel when it happens.”
Marcus frowned. “Erin... whenever Veiron is reborn, he is destined to become a Hell’s angel. It is part of the game. He is the Devil’s knight... and I am God’s. It doesn’t matter what he does in his time as an angel, or how dedicated he is to his duty... he will fall.”
That was terrible. Her gaze sought and found Veiron standing on the shore with his back to her, the water lapping over his bare feet. What was he thinking as he stood there alone staring out at the ocean? Did he want her there with him, holding his hand, speaking to him? She wanted to be there with him. She wanted to hear these things from him but she knew that he would never tell her. If she asked him, he would close himself off and push her away.
“When Veiron found me in Hell, he said that Amelia couldn’t come to get me because if she died, he would die too... when I pressed him to explain that to me, he said he meant it literally.” Erin’s heart thumped and she swallowed to clear the dryness in her throat. “Is it true?”
Marcus nodded. “If Amelia were to die, then both myself and Veiron would die too. The game would be reset and because we had been reborn, we would not remember anything that had happened.”
Erin felt sick. Being reborn on death hadn’t sounded too bad but coming back into the world without knowledge or memories of things you had done in your previous life? That sounded horrible and she couldn’t stop her mind from chanting a single question.
If Veiron died, would he forget her?
Images from her nightmare flashed across her eyes. Veiron bloodied and beaten, lying broken under the Devil’s feet, watching his master as he came to end him and trying to fight for his life. Her blood sank to her toes.
Erin shot to her feet. Amelia’s hand circled her wrist and held her firm. She looked down at her sister, the low light from sunset barely illuminating her face, and silently pleaded her to stop trying to intervene in her relationship with Veiron. It wasn’t protecting her. It was just hurting her. She needed to see him. Couldn’t her sister see that? The thought of Veiron dying tore at her soul, cleaving her heart open until she felt as though she was bleeding inside, and only looking into Veiron’s eyes and hearing him tell her that everything was going to be fine would heal her.
“Amelia,” Marcus said and her sister looked across at him. Whatever look he gave her, she would have to thank him for it later, because her sister released her hand.
Erin hurried down the steps to the white sand. She had removed her boots and socks while talking to Amelia and the sand was soft between her toes, still warm from the day. The sun had set and the sky was already turning inky above her, the moon rising higher into it to shine down on the island and light her path. Erin rolled her jeans up and headed towards Veiron where he walked the shore.
He stopped as she approached but remained with his back to her. He must have sensed her because her footfalls were silent and she was barely breathing, her chest too tight and throat too dry.
“Veiron,” she whispered and he slowly turned to face her, his expression as dark as she had ever seen it.
“What is it?” he snarled and she froze mid-step, confused. Was he still angry because of what she had said earlier?
She took another step towards him and wasn’t sure what to say to him or where to start. The muscle in his jaw tensed and the edges of his irises burned crimson.
“Nothing,” she said and felt weaker than she had ever been. She straightened a heartbeat later and looked him in the eye. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” he parroted and she frowned at him, unwilling to take that as his answer. He looked away from her, towards the sea and the dark horizon.
“You left us.”
He shrugged. “I wanted to walk... I needed some space.”
Space from her? She reached out to take his hand but he moved, angling his body so her attempt failed.
“I thought I would enjoy what little time I had here,” he said. “No offence to Marcus and Amelia, but I’m not exactly interested in going over old ground with them.”
Erin had failed to hear what he had said after his first sentence. “You’re leaving?”
Her heart pounded in her ears, loud enough to drown out the sound of the gentle waves breaking against the shore.
“I have to.”
Erin grabbed his hand this time and forced him to face her. If he was going to leave, he could at least do her the courtesy of looking her in the eye and telling her why. It wasn’t as though they were just friends. The time they had shared with each other had to mean something to him. It had to. It hadn’t just been casual sex that had meant nothing to him, or her. It had been something incredible.
“Why? Where are you going?” she said and he looked down at his feet and then finally met her gaze.
“Home.”
Erin dropped his hand, shock rippling through her. “You can’t go back there! What about what I saw?”
Veiron stared into her eyes, cold and emotionless, as distant from her as he had ever been. Erin took deep breaths to calm her rising anger. In. Out. Steady. It wasn’t working. She wanted to scream and rant at him, to beat her fists against his bare chest until he said that he had only been joking to wind her up and that he was staying.
“That’s why I need to go back. I have to see what happens in my future.” Not the answer she had wanted.
Tears threatened to fill her eyes but she sniffed them back, unwilling to look weak even when her heart felt as though it was going to break.
“How?” she said, the barest tremble in her voice. She had known he wanted to leave. She should have been more prepared for it when it came. Would have been, but she had thought she had more time to work on convincing him to stay. The way Veiron looked right now, she felt as though he was going to fly off at a moment’s notice and she would never see him again.
“There is a pool in Hell that can show the future. I need to go there.” The uncertain look in his eyes, the trace of fear she easily spotted in them, made her heart skip a beat.
“Where is this pool?” Her voice trembled fully now. Her eyes widened. He didn’t answer. “God... no, Veiron... don’t tell me that it’s near that fortress I saw.”
He looked away from her. It was all the answer she needed. Erin grabbed his arms and shook him until his dark gaze slid back to her.
“You can’t go there alone!” She gripped him close to his elbows, squeezing so tightly that she felt sure she was hurting him. He didn’t show it if she was. His gaze remained dark and cold, void of feeling. Erin clung to him, afraid that if she loosened her grip, he
would create one of those portals and beam himself straight to Hell and the Devil. “I won’t let you go alone. I’m coming too.”
Veiron laughed and then frowned at her, as though he had thought she was the one joking now. “No. It is too dangerous... and I don’t need your help.”
That one stung. “I won’t let you go alone, Veiron. I have my powers.”
“Powers you do not know how to use,” he growled and Erin flinched. There was no need for him to throw that one in her face. She could figure out how to use them as they travelled. She could help him. “You are back with your sister now and that is all that matters. My mission here is done, Erin. Let me go.”
“No!” Erin didn’t care if he meant let him go forever or just release him. It wasn’t happening either way.
“You must. Stay here with Amelia and Marcus. They’ll take care of you.”
Erin swallowed. “I don’t want them to take care of me.”
He yanked his arms free of her grip. “I can’t be the one to do it.”
Erin bristled and glared at him. “I can take care of myself!”
Veiron just stared at her. She damn well could take care of herself. She could master this power of hers, whatever it was and wherever it had come from, and she would.
“If you go down there, so help me God, Veiron, I am coming with you and you can’t stop me.”
He gave her a look that said he could easily stop her.
Erin squared up to him, ignoring the fact that he stood almost a foot taller than she was, set her jaw and clenched her fists. Her fingers began to tingle and heat and she felt queasy. “I will not let you go alone.”
“What do you care if I go back to Hell where I belong? You have your sister now. Marcus will take care of you both.”
Erin unclenched her hands and sagged, the fire draining from her and leaving her cold. It wasn’t the first time he had mentioned that she had her sister and Marcus, and something told her that he wasn’t mentioning it because it meant his mission was a success. Amelia had kept her away from Veiron and had treated him poorly. She had told Erin countless times that he wasn’t worth her attention and was a bad man. Was part of Veiron’s desire to leave because he felt her sister would never accept him as Erin’s lover?
“Veiron,” Erin whispered and tried to touch his hand but he moved it out of reach. She smiled briefly and then looked up into his eyes, tears filling hers. “I care... you’re the only thing I care about... can’t you see that? The thought of you going down there when you know you might die... that kills me. Please don’t go.”
“I must.”
“Please.” She wasn’t above begging if it came to it, anything to stop him from going off to Hell half-cocked and looking for a fight because of the things her sister had said and the things that she had said too. “Stay.”
“No.” He turned away from her. “Go back to your sister, Erin. Nothing you could say will change my mind.”
“Fine. Be like that.” Erin backed off a step. “Maybe she’s right and I’m wrong about you.”
He hung his head and sighed, his broad shoulders heaving with it. Erin hesitated, torn between touching him one last time, swirling her fingers around his tattoos, and remembering him with a final kiss, and walking away.
She opened her mouth to speak.
“What’s wrong?” Amelia said, appearing out of the darkness. She took one look at Erin and settled her arm around her shoulders.
Erin wanted to shirk her touch and shout at her. This was all her sister’s fault. Things had been going fine, except for the occasional hiccup on her part, between her and Veiron and Amelia had wrecked it. She was sure of it. Amelia had kept her away from Veiron all day and she had thought nothing of it until now. She stared at Veiron’s back, willing him to turn around and see in her eyes that she was sorry and that she wanted to be with him. He had to stay.
“Veiron is leaving,” Erin said.
“I know.” Those two words leaving Amelia’s lips made her frown and she turned it on her sister. “Marcus told me he intends to go to Hell to find out more about what the Devil wants with you and something about his future.”
More about what the Devil wanted with her? Why hadn’t Veiron told her that? If he had, she might not have felt so certain that she would never see him again. Now she felt as though he was going back to Hell for her sake, to bring her answers. If he believed the Devil wanted her because of her power, then perhaps the Devil knew where her power came from. But Veiron would have to speak to the Devil, and the Devil wanted him dead.
It would end as she had seen in her nightmare.
“Did Veiron also tell Marcus what I saw in my vision?” Erin looked from Amelia to the dark-haired man in question. Marcus shook his head. “The Devil kills him... and I’m there... and I unleash the power I have on him. If Veiron goes to Hell, he’ll... he can’t.”
“Veiron can take care of himself,” Amelia said and Erin caught the words she didn’t say hidden in her tone.
Veiron wasn’t worth her concern.
Erin broke free of her sister’s grip and stared at the back of Veiron’s head. “I won’t let you die... and I know you can hear me. I care about you, Veiron. If that means I have to go into Hell again to make sure you survive, then I will do just that. I’ll do whatever it takes to make sure you’re safe and to keep you with me.”
Veiron’s shoulders shifted in a deep sigh and he ran a hand over his hair, settling it at the back of his head, close to his ponytail.
Silence reigned.
Marcus broke it. “If Veiron will be in danger by travelling to Hell and you are concerned about his safety then I will go with him.”
“No!” Amelia snapped and Erin wanted to remind her that she didn’t have the right to get upset about Marcus going to Hell when she had been telling Erin just a few seconds ago to let the man she loved travel to Hell and not worry about him.
Loved.
Not falling then. Fallen.
Marcus sighed as Amelia glared at him. “Einar and Taylor will arrive soon. When they do, Taylor can hide you and Erin. I shall go with Veiron to Hell, and everyone is happy.”
Erin was certainly happier with that as it gave her more time to convince Veiron that she loved him and didn’t care about what everyone else said about him, and it threw Marcus into the equation. She wasn’t going to give up on accompanying Veiron though. Unless Marcus being there and her not being there would mean that her vision wouldn’t come true.
“Veiron?” Erin said, needing to hear him say that he would stay and wait for the others to arrive, and then he would go to Hell with Marcus.
He grunted and kept his back to her.
“At least think about it,” she said and Amelia slipped her arm around her shoulders again.
“Fine,” Veiron grumbled. “I’ll think about it.”
Erin smiled.
Amelia squeezed her shoulders. “Why don’t we hit the bar and Marcus can talk to Veiron? I don’t know about you, but I could use a cocktail or two.”
Or ten. The mood Erin was in right now and the all-inclusive package they were on, she would be hitting the bar as hard as she could and not stopping until Veiron came to tell her that she couldn’t look after herself after all and carried her to bed.
She wanted to stay and convince Veiron herself, but Amelia was right. Veiron wasn’t listening to her but he might listen to Marcus.
She hoped that he did.
Because she had the terrible feeling that if he went to Hell alone, she would never see him again.
CHAPTER 18
“I thought we had agreed you would wait?” Marcus said and Veiron ignored him and stared out at the black moonlit sea.
They had but seeing Erin with her sister had changed his mind. He knew when he wasn’t wanted and Erin’s impassioned speech hadn’t convinced him to stay. As soon as he was able, he was leaving, whether that was when Taylor arrived or before then. He would rather face the Devil alone and cause the future Erin had
seen to happen than hang around watching Amelia poison Erin’s mind and watching Erin drift away from him.
She hated his kind. How long would it be before she hated him too?
Marcus sighed. “You like her... do not deny it. I might be new to love but I am not blind to it. If you like her so much, why are you in such a hurry to leave?”
Veiron closed his eyes, wishing he was a thousand miles away and wasn’t getting interrogated by a man who had apparently had one love and one woman in his current lifetime. What did Marcus know about the difficulties of love? He had been a guardian angel, one of the good men. Amelia had probably thrown herself at his feet on discovering that.
Although, Marcus had tried to kill her.
If Erin was as tough as her sister, there was a chance that she might get over the things that his kind had done to her, just as Amelia had gotten over what Marcus had done.
But that counted on her sister changing her mind about him and stopping her assault on their relationship.
“I know when I’m not wanted,” Veiron said, opened his eyes and glared at Marcus.
It killed him to leave. Is that what Marcus wanted to hear him say? He didn’t want to, not in his heart. He wanted to stay with Erin and protect her from whatever came after her. They had shared so much in their time together and he didn’t want to let her go. The thought of it wrenched at him, sinking claws into his heart and threatening to tear it from his chest. He needed her, had never felt so hungry for someone before, so possessive and protective, and unwilling to allow anyone near her.
Even seeing Marcus close to her had made him want to growl and fight the man.
“I really don’t think you do.” Marcus moved around him and looked up the shore towards the resort complex, his back to the ocean. “I know Amelia isn’t handling this very well and I will speak to her about it.”
Veiron appreciated that but he still wasn’t going to change his mind.