Samael

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Samael Page 6

by Heather Killough-Walden


  But now even more, she could tell her lost angel husband was not actually up there. She felt his absence like a very real empty space upon the stage.

  Sophie rolled back her shoulders and took a deep breath. She needed to focus. Find Samael and convince him to leave. Or find Az and figure out why she couldn’t communicate with him. The last thing she needed to do was freak out.

  She pushed her way through the crowd, using her telekinesis to help gently nudge taller or heavier people aside up ahead of her so she wouldn’t get squished in the writhing throng.

  She’d just passed a woman with green spiky hair and a tall, skinny man in purple leather and massive earrings when she stopped in her tracks. There was an odd, uncomfortable sensation around her. It was like licking a battery or touching a TENS unit pad when it was on too high. The air felt a little thick, and she suddenly felt slightly dizzy. She looked down, not knowing why she was doing so, and found herself gazing at dozens of trampled black dandelions.

  Black dandelions. Her pulse quickened at the sight of the familiar and impossible small black flowers. They spread from beneath where she was standing to several feet away, at the edge of a chain link fence. She was at the outer rim of the crowd. The darkness of a desert night stretched beyond the fence, deep and ominous.

  “The easiest way to kill is to separate the smaller and weaker from the crowd.”

  Sophie recognized the voice, but vaguely. Her heart began pounding, and she could hear it in her head. Slowly, and with a palatable sense of dread heavy on her tongue, she turned around to face the man who’d spoken to her.

  But before she could so much as meet his blue gaze with her own, his hand was around her throat, cutting the air from her lungs and the voice from her lips. His strength was immense, and his speed unreasonable. He slammed her against the chain link fence behind them so hard that metal cut through her clothes and into her back. Her vision blurred as pain wracked through her.

  The clouds above them began growing instantly darker, and lightning crashed into the ground less than a mile away.

  Chapter Eleven

  As soon as Azrael vanished, Angel was running. She put one foot in front of the other, waving her hand to illuminate the tunnel before her. The sound of her footfalls echoed against the tight walls of her confined space. She counted the steps, counted her breaths, and the moment she felt she’d gone far enough, she stopped and cast a transport spell.

  She reappeared in a hotel room in Boston, one she’d purchased out a few weeks before with the contingency that she would come and go over the coming days. She took a moment to look around, taking in the smell of cleaners and laundry detergent. There was also the scent of air fresheners no doubt meant to disguise the cigarette smoke that was coming from the adjoining bathroom. She listened to the sound of kids running down the hall in flip flops, probably headed to the pool, and the distant ding of an elevator as it reached her floor. The curtains were partly drawn, the sink sparkled, and the bed was made.

  Her original plan had been to transport from one place to another in a quick hop-frog sort of fashion until she was at her home, a place she’d created long ago and shielded long in advance, knowing this time would one day come. But she was feeling drained and hungry, and this hotel had room service.

  An hour wouldn’t hurt.

  She made her way to the bed, changed her appearance to what it had been when she’d first made the reservation weeks ago, and flipped on the television. Then she grabbed the phone and ordered a soup and salad dish and a Dr. Pepper.

  *****

  “Sam… what are you doing?”

  Sam ignored the voice in the doorway. Just this once, it was rather unwelcome. Not only was she interrupting him while he was on the phone, he didn’t feel like explaining himself to Lilith, and he most definitely didn’t want to see the hints of disappointment he knew he’d find on her face.

  Instead, he continued with his preparations. His phone was at his ear, and the man on the other end of the line was taking orders.

  He asked Sam a question.

  Sam replied, keeping his voice even and steady – nonchalant. “Five-thirty. Yes. That’s right, Adam. Have the stations ready. All of them.” He paused, waiting as the man asked another question. “What is it concerning?” He smiled. “You’ll just have to wait and see.” He hung up.

  That would get them going. If he knew anything about humans and their love of dirty laundry, every news station he controlled would be waiting in the lobby of a building that sat on the corner of the busiest intersection in Kansas City, Missouri during the busiest time of the day on the busiest day of the week. The coverage would be immediate.

  He hung up, and turned around, expecting Lilith to be gone.

  But instead of leaving, she stood less than a foot away, startling him a little. Not that he showed it outwardly. He was quite good at keeping an outward calm.

  He was wrong about her wearing a look of disappointment. This one was different. If he didn’t know better, he’d say she was angry. Furious, even. There was a strange vibration coming from her, one he’d never felt before. For a split second, she didn’t feel like herself, but like something much bigger and more dangerous than she was, stuffed into a tiny, discreet, if beautiful body.

  “I thought our discussion was over,” he stated casually, re-pocketing his phone and apparently turning his attention to documents on his desk. In reality, he was very tuned into the woman on the other side of the desk. She was unnerving him.

  “Did it ever, even once,” she began slowly, “occur to you and your conceited, fat head and your sadistically selfish tendencies that Angel might have a very good reason for running from you?”

  He didn’t reply. But he felt his chest tighten. He felt his skin heat up in a responsive, knee-jerk flush. He kept his eyes down and continued to pretend to ignore her. His palms were beginning to sweat.

  He’d left the concert in a transport flash, having decided once and for all that with Angel’s mode of operating, she would only use it as a temporary cover before transporting away herself. Again. He’d realized that this would go on forever if he didn’t change the game once and for all. So that was what he’d decided to do. He formulated a plan, and now he was putting that plan into action.

  Apparently, Lilith knew what that plan was, and she wasn’t happy about it.

  She moved forward, placed her slim hands on the desk, and leaned in.

  “I bet it has,” she said, her tone changing, becoming an acidic purr that got right under his flushing skin and stayed there. “I bet it occurred to you, Samael, and you can’t stand it. In fact, I’m betting you’re afraid that her reason for avoiding you is that she actually hates you.” She paused, leaning in a bit more. “Angel is a genuinely good person. She has empathy. She cares. She tries to do good things and make this world a better place. Why, in a million years, would she want to be saddled with a seasoned son of a bitch like Samuel Lambent, the multi-billionaire media tycoon who’s proven himself to be a genuine apathetic bastard?”

  Her words rolled over him like a tidal wave of red, smooth and powerful and smothering. They seared across him like the truth. Nothing burned hotter than the truth.

  Any other man in the world would probably have lost it at that point. Sam had lived here long enough to know that human men weren’t overly good at word battle. They were apes, really, cave men at their cores, prone to bursts of violent vengeance when a woman’s intellect got the better of them. It was their only remaining defense. When you can’t fight with your mind, you use your fists. As long as the loser was capable of bruising his opponent on the outside as deeply as he was bruised on the inside, he wouldn’t consider it losing.

  Of course, Lilith was more than capable of taking care of herself. She’d been down here just as long as Sam had, after all. Longer, in fact. She was a woman who’d come through millennia of inquisitions, plagues, and the general male population in one piece. It said something about her defense mechanisms.
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  So it was probably fortunate for them both that Sam was not at all like most men. Rather than lose his temper, he simply straightened, smiled a small, sure smile, and said, “You’re right, Lilith. Angel is good. Which is why I’m fairly certain this is going to work.”

  Lilith straightened herself and gave Sam a withering look. It hurt him more than he wanted to admit. “I can’t believe you’re going this far, Sam.” She shook her head, and then frowned, asking in all seriousness, “Is there nothing you won’t do to get your hands on – ”

  “No.” Sam took a seat in the massive leather chair behind his desk and steepled his fingers to peer over them at her with stark determination. “Now, I hope you don’t mind seeing yourself out.”

  With icicles in her eyes, Lilith did just that, turning slowly away to walk back to the office door. But there, as she so often did, she stopped and turned back to regard him. There was something else in her gaze now, something that deepened the unsettled feeling she’d given him so far.

  It was disappointment, stark and pure. “All this time… and you’ve learned nothing,” she said softly, regretfully, then shook her head just once and left, closing his door behind her.

  Chapter Twelve

  When you can’t breathe, nothing else matters.

  It was a saying of some sort, but her brain was quickly becoming so addled, she couldn’t remember from where. The American Lung Association? The Asthma Association?

  Something like that…

  It was true, wherever it came from. But there was something else, and it mattered too, a little. Sometimes, when you couldn’t breathe, the reason was because you were in the process of being murdered and your killer hand his hand wrapped around your throat and had crushed your windpipe.

  Crushed it. She would never have imagined, not in a million years, what that felt like. It was indescribable, really. There were no words for that pain.

  Everything was blacking out. The thunder, which was as indescribably loud as the pain was indescribably bad, was becoming softer. It was turning indistinct and unimportant, and she had that bizarre numb feeling that lightning couldn’t hurt her anymore, so it didn’t matter how loud or close it all was.

  Az.

  She tried to call out, one last time. But the white stars in her vision had even gone away. Night was falling, the clouds were coming in, and the Cosmos was winking out one white dot after another. When she hit the ground, she heard it more than felt it. A distant banging kind of thing, hollow as her elbows and knees collided. She expected it to be the last thing she felt or heard.

  But with excruciating slowness, the pain in her throat grew worse. She tried to scream in pain, and heard herself make a terrible, low sound, like a banshee’s moan. There was movement around her – boots in the mud, and more lightning. There were screams and shouts that sounded far off.

  She knew she needed to heal herself, but her arms and legs wouldn’t respond. It was like they weren’t even there. There was nothing for her to do but lay sprawled in the dirt and hurt.

  *****

  There was nothing – not a thing in the universe – but the knowledge that Sophie was in pain. He’d felt it in Angel’s tunneled-out path beneath the ground. He honed in on it with singular vision and intent, driven into a blur that became mist in the crowd and sped through every shadow of night.

  Until he was rematerializing, and everything bad in the world was there before his eyes: his mate, being killed. A man with his hand around her throat, his Sophie against the fence, bleeding.

  Dying.

  What happened next would never properly be pieced together in his mind. It was pure chaos, pure, visceral destruction. It was everything he had thought he’d left behind. In that moment, that desperate, horrible moment, he was the Angel of Death.

  And when that moment had passed, he was kneeling and lifting his archess into his arms and sending a mental call to his brothers with everything he had.

  He threatened the Earth not to absorb her blood, not to take her life force, not to rob him of the only thing he gave a fucking shit about on its surface. If it did, he would destroy it. He would systematically rip it apart, being by being, city by city, outer layer, mantle, core. Until nothing was left but chunks of empty rock floating aimlessly through space.

  Up on the stage, the concert stopped. The image of Azrael suddenly disappeared. Confusion rippled through the crowd like waves on a disturbed pond. The cheering faltered. Where was he? The band members glanced at one another. Vampires began to communicate in a web of telepathy that crisscrossed through the audience.

  But Az was oblivious to the disruption and the signals that went up afterward. His entire existence consisted of one thing. Distantly, he realized how fragile happiness was. “Sophie.”

  “Az, put her down.”

  It was Juliette. She and Gabriel were suddenly there. In his peripheral awareness, he noticed Max there as well. And others. They had heard him. More impossible moments passed, and somehow, he’d managed to lower Sophie once more to the undeserving ground. He’d managed to force himself to step back.

  There was light; he saw it beneath spread fingers – an archess, laying her healing hands upon her sister. There was more moving, and there were things happening around him. Some of it seemed distantly important, maybe even desperate.

  Also distantly, he realized he was in agony.

  And then there was a sound, like a gentle scratching at his mental door. It was so soft, so quiet, he was uncertain whether he’d heard it right. He told the universe to shut the fuck up. So he could try to hear it again.

  Everything around him was cast into absolute silence, as if a blast had gone off and there was that ringing afterward and nothing else. Except even the ringing was absent. Silence obeyed him. Like the darkness did.

  Az…

  He hit the ground, on his knees faster than any man had ever knelt, and his hand lifted her head. I’m here. I’m here! Open your eyes for me, Sunshine.

  Like the morning star rising at last on a long, soul-crushing night, Sophie’s eyelids parted, and gold peeked out. The world and everything it consisted of came crashing back into existence. Sound was allowed to resume once more. Movement recommenced.

  There was entropy, to be sure. But it was over there.

  Right here, there was one single thing that made sense. Sophie was alive. And she was his. And the universe could go on existing for now.

  Chapter Thirteen

  Max could scarcely believe what he was seeing when he came upon the scene near the back fence surrounding the outer circle of the Valley of Shadow concert venue. The images would be forever burned upon his mind, and the cold, terrible dread and nausea that had claimed his gut would never be forgotten either.

  But at least now he knew. Now he knew just how far one of his boys would go to protect the woman he loved.

  The dead man had once been the “right hand” of Samael. Jason. That had been his name. At least, Max was fairly certain it had been him. What there was left of him was rather hard to mentally piece together. But one of the eyes was still there in the head that had been removed from its body, and it was a vivid blue. The body itself had been pushed through the chain link fence, like meat through a grinder.

  The illusion on stage had vanished, the crowd was in disarray, and Azrael’s loyal, trained vampires had instinctively mobilized to overpower mortal minds, calm the situation, and erase memories of anything that might have been witnessed.

  But the damage had been done, and the archangels were a band of confused men and women that he knew he had to somehow guide, somehow protect, and somehow give answers to. The questions would surely be coming soon enough.

  Michael and Rhiannon were even there. They’d either heard Sophie’s call or felt the unrest with their brethren and come running back from New York.

  “Why didn’t he hear her sooner?” Juliette breathed, shock making her face paper white.

  Max shook his head. “Interference maybe. Or Gr
egori.”

  “I did warn you.”

  Everyone – Max, Gabriel, Juliette, Uriel, Eleanore, Azrael, Michael and Rhiannon – either turned around or looked up. None of them had been aware of the man’s approach. They should have been. The ground was covering itself in black dandelions. They were sprouting up around the blood, through the mud, and into full bloom like fast-forwarded time-lapse photography. There was a vibration to the air that made Max’s teeth feel like they were buzzing and his gut feel like it was churning. He had an instant headache.

  But the man in white stood amongst them, calm and still, a tower of pale evil wrapped in serenity that was a lie.

  He looked at Azrael, who knelt in the mud with Sophie laying against his legs. “Now you know. Samael will stop at nothing to win his archess, even going so far as to dismantle the archangels by sending his minions after your mates.”

  Max had no idea what he was talking about as far as the “warning” was concerned, and he planned to speak with Azrael about that as soon as possible. But as far as Sam sending people after the archesses went? It didn’t look good. It was Jason who’d been responsible for this attack, after all, and the former incubi wasn’t known for his discretions. It was possible Gregori was right. Was Sam trying to get them out of the way? Was he afraid they would try to stop him?

  If so, why?

  “If the Culmination wasn’t enough to make up your mind,” Gregori said as he turned away from them to leave, “perhaps this event finally will.”

  The people in the crowd had been subjugated by the vampires amongst them. They stood still now, and quiet, in the most eerie exhibition of suppression Max had ever seen. Thousands upon thousands of revelers who had been absolutely wild moments before now stood swaying slightly, their eyes glazed over, their stares unfocused and aimed vaguely at the concert stage in the distance.

 

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