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Nocturnal Magic (Demons of Fire and Night Book 2)

Page 6

by C. N. Crawford


  “I don’t understand.”

  “Nyxobas was imprisoned here one hundred thousand years ago. The oneiroi were here first.”

  “Wait, so the oneiroi are—” Ursula struggled to process the implications. “They’re extraterrestrials?”

  He cocked his head. “They’re not native to the Earth, so I suppose they are.”

  The bats’ wings beat the air rhythmically, pulsing like a heartbeat. Outside, Asta shone in the darkness, tinging the gray clouds with purple. There really was something odd about the clouds—the way they twisted and writhed, curling high into the air and then diving down in spinning vortexes. Almost like a living thing.

  As they approached, a low humming reverberated through the carriage. Her seat began to vibrate, and she tried to ignore the sensation. Especially since it wasn’t exactly a terrible sensation, but it’s not like she wanted to mention that to Bael. Her cheeks warmed, and she could feel her chest flushing.

  She was concentrating on blocking out the faint wave of pleasure pulsing through her body, when something thunked against the window. A vicious green smudge streaked the glass.

  “Watch that you don’t fly too close to the moths,” Bael called out to the driver.

  “Yes, milord.”

  Bael gazed at Ursula. “We could blow out windows if we flew through one of the murmurations.”

  “A what now?”

  “The astral moths.” He pointed at the clouds outside. “They’re attracted to Asta’s light.”

  Thunk. A gray wing the size of a dinner plate stuck to the window a moment before peeling off. Ursula pressed her face to the glass, watching the carriage descend. Clouds of moths swirled above them. It took her a moment to realize the low, vibrating hum came from the beating of a million insect wings. Outside, the moths flew in unison, like a flock of birds.

  That’s why the clouds moved so strangely.

  They were alive.

  “Why do they group and cluster like that?” asked Ursula.

  “The murmuration? For protection.” He pointed out the window at a gray form gliding toward one of the clouds. “Look.”

  As the bat approached, the moths dove in unison—a tight spiral of fluttering wings. The bat twisted and jerked. In a gut churning instant, it crushed a moth’s body between its jaws. The circle of life, right here on the moon.

  When Ursula turned back to Bael, her heart stopped.

  The demon lord pointed a dagger directly at her heart.

  Chapter 10

  She froze, only her eyes moving to scan the carriage for a weapon. Who was she kidding? Of course he hadn’t left weapons lying around. “I thought you were my protector.”

  His eyes narrowed. “You scare easily. The blade is for your protection.” He turned the dagger, offering her the hilt. “Take it.”

  “Oh, I thought—” Ursula cut herself off. There was no need to belabor his point. The fact was, she did scare easily. She constantly searched her surroundings for escape routes or weapons. She had no idea what had happened to F.U., but whatever it had been probably wasn’t pleasant. Perhaps that burning room from her dreams had something to do with it.

  Taking the blade, she rolled her wrist, inspecting the steel. Perfectly weighted. When she held it to the light, she glimpsed strange angular patterns etched into the metal.

  “Be careful with it. The dagger was forged from a meteorite, and it’s more powerful than you’d think.” He reached into his cloak, pulling out a set of leather straps. “Stick out your leg.”

  “Why?”

  His eyes met hers. “So I can attach the sheath.”

  “Oh.” She didn’t need his help getting a sheath on her thigh, but something stopped her from protesting. She rested her foot on his seat by his thigh, feeling the heat radiating from him. She pulled up the hem of her dress.

  Bael’s gaze trailed up her leg, his eyes darkening from pale gray to a deep black. His jaw tightened, his dark magic swirling from his body. He handed her the sheath. “Perhaps you should do it.”

  She couldn’t suppress a faint smile, and she let her leg rest against Bael’s as she strapped the leather around her thigh.

  Bael kept his gaze fixed firmly out the window. “If you keep the blade strapped to your thigh, you’ll have to be seriously comprised before someone finds it.”

  Ursula slid the blade into the scabbard. “Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that.”

  “If it does, I think you’ll find it’s considerably more lethal than a corkscrew.”

  In the darkness of his hood, Ursula couldn’t tell if he was joking or not.

  Outside, Asta’s glow burned brighter, washing the cabin with violet light. They seemed to be on a collision course with the spire, and just when she was sure they would crash into it, the carriage veered to the right. It jerked to a stop so abruptly that Ursula lurched from her seat, tumbling into Bael’s lap.

  Instantly, his powerful hands were around her waist, steadying her. She breathed in. Sandalwood and sea air.

  “We’re here,” he said quietly, his breath warming her throat.

  “Right. Sorry.” She stood, smoothing out her hair.

  Bael leaned over, opening the door. Ursula stepped onto a balcony by the side of the spire, pulling her cloak closer around her. Here, the wind felt ten degrees colder, seeming to cut through even the heavy woolen shawl.

  As Bael stepped from the carriage, she surveyed her surroundings, trying not to peer over the side of the balcony. Violet light washed over her, like she was standing in front of an enormous gemstone. On the other side of the balcony, an arched doorway interrupted the smooth crystal. From what she could tell by looking up, they’d landed about midway up the spire. Great walls of purple crystal rose up before her, shimmering in the starlight. Scattered balconies jutted into the air.

  When she looked closely, she could see that scars marred the crystal’s surface. In other places, great chips had flaked off. When she strained her eyes, she could a jagged scar that bisected the crystal, as if it had been severed and reattached. What the hell had happened here?

  They stepped out and the carriage pulled away from the balcony with the great beating of bat wings. Bael crossed to the opening in the wall. Before following him in, she pulled the hood more tightly over her head.

  In the door’s opening, he turned to her. “Remember, if you want to live, you must do everything I say. Even if it doesn’t make sense to you. Do you understand?”

  Do I have a choice? “I’ve got it.”

  “Good. Now, your first command is to be silent. Absolutely no talking. Keep your hood over your head. Use the dagger only if your life is at risk.”

  He turned, striding into a dark hall. She hurried after him, keeping her face downcast. Could he tell where they were going? Surely shadow demons had amazing night vision.

  A moment later, his strong hand grabbed hers, drawing her next to him. They’d stopped walking.

  A voice boomed from somewhere in front of her. “Was that your carriage, Bael?” The tone changed, growing soft and mocking. “I can’t imagine getting dragged around in one of those things. You must miss your wings.” A chorus of laughter echoed around them, but there was no mirth in it.

  Quiet fury tinged Bael’s voice. “Yes, Hothgar. It is I.”

  The familiar urge to identify an escape route began to take hold, tightening her muscles. The Forgotten Ones may have snuffed out her fire, but apparently they’d left her instincts intact.

  Too bad she couldn’t see anything. As her eyes adjusted to the darkness, she could make out only the faint sheen of gray marble below her, but she kept her head tucked down, hiding her face.

  “Then let us convene this council. Do we have a quorum?” said Hothgar.

  Another voice answered. “All twelve lords are here, sir.”

  A cracking noise like metal against stone made Ursula flinch, the sound echoing through the space. It was only after the third crack that she realized someone was banging a gavel.
<
br />   Hothgar’s voice boomed again. “The quorum is convened. Bael, have you brought the cur?”

  “I have,” he replied. She heard his footsteps circling behind her, and he ripped the hood from her head. In the next second, he had forced her to her knees.

  Her stomach clenched. He did tell me to be submissive, but this is a bit much. Still, she forced herself to keep her eyes on the floor.

  “Good, I see that she is obedient,” said Hothgar.

  Fury simmered. I hate these people. She let her gaze rise, taking in a granite, semicircular table twenty feet in front of her. Behind it sat eleven demons. And not merely mortal demons, like she was. No—these were high demons, ancient and powerful. The dim light of luminescent mushrooms cast their bestial faces in violet light.

  At the center of the table sat the man with the gavel—Hothgar, she presumed. He wore a shirt of thin chainmail. His hoary beard and white eyebrows marked him as older than the rest. From his left, Abrax glared at her, his gray eyes glacially cold.

  On Hothgar’s right sat a literal giant. Snowy skin, horned temples, flared nostrils. Demon-Bull, she’d call him.

  She scanned the other lords, trying not to show her alarm at the array of muscled demons before her. Through eyes the color of obsidian, ice, and starlight, they stared at her with a mixture of disgust and hatred.

  Mostly hatred.

  Terrifying as they were, they paled in comparison to what perched behind them. An ancient throne, shrouded in shadow magic, so thick it almost looked tangible. An enormous form sat there, cloaked in darkness.

  There’s Nyxobas, the god of my nightmares.

  For just a moment, his magic thinned, and she caught a glimpse of his head lolling to one side. Is he asleep? No. Not quite. His eyes were open—not their usual pale gray, but black as obsidian.

  Hothgar leaned over the table. “Why are you in the Realm of Shadows, hellhound?”

  Her chest tightened. Hadn’t Bael told her not to speak? Was she supposed to answer Hothgar’s question or not? She didn’t feel like she’d been properly prepared for this encounter. A soft nudge of her shins from Bael cleared it up for her.

  Kneeling, she said, “Nyxobas struck a deal with Emerazel. I’m to spend six months of every year here.”

  “If that’s a lie,” growled Hothgar, “I will tear your guts out myself and use them to decorate my mansion.”

  Ursula’s mouth went dry.

  “She speaks the truth,” said Bael. “I was there.”

  “Why should I trust your word, mortal?” asked Hothgar.

  “You don’t have to trust it.” His voice boomed. “Abrax can tell you.”

  Dread filled Ursula’s gut. Bael had just put her life in the hands of Abrax—the one demon who most wanted her dead after she’d ruined his plans of world domination.

  Abrax spoke so softly, it was almost inaudible. “I can confirm Bael’s story.”

  “So it is true?” asked Hothgar. “Your father summoned her?”

  “Yes,” said Abrax.

  “Why would the god invite one of Emerazel’s curs to his Realm?”

  Abrax’s eyes bored into her. “I don’t know.”

  Hothgar studied her carefully with a look that suggested he was still thinking about decorating his house with her entrails. “Let me see her more closely.”

  Before Ursula could stand on her own, Bael picked her up by the collar of her cloak and threw her on the granite table. Her head smacked the stone so hard, she saw stars. It took every inch of her mental strength to lay still.

  Be submissive, Bael had said. At this point, with the concussion he’d just given her, she didn’t have many other options. Her head throbbed. Hothgar leaned over her, stroking the side of her face with a cold finger. “She’s a pretty one. Maybe Nyxobas wanted her for himself.”

  “Gross.” Dizzy from the blow to the head, the word was out of Ursula’s mouth before she could stop herself.

  Bael squeezed her wrist.

  Hothgar glared at Bael. “But what I want to know is why he put her in your care. You lost your wings. Your house is in ruins.” He emphasized the next set of words: “You are unfit to hold a manor of the night.”

  What the hell? Why don’t they just ask Nyxobas, who was sitting about ten feet away? He seemed to be in some sort of catatonic state. Asleep or in a mystical trance.

  “Nyxobas chooses his lords,” said Bael.

  “And yet he hasn’t given you a new set of wings.” Hothgar leaned back in his chair. “We have decided to give your manor to Abrax.”

  Bael’s eyes darkened, and a cold, dark aura whipped from his body like hurricane winds. “No. Only Nyxobas himself may appoint a lord to a manor.”

  “The choice was unanimous,” said Hothgar.

  “It’s not your province—” Black tendrils of magic snapped around Bael’s throat, cutting him short. Ursula’s eyes flicked to Demon-Bull, who chanted in Angelic. He was choking Bael with magic.

  “We are tired of listening to a mortal,” Hothgar snarled. “Your time as lord has come to an end. Prepare to enter the void.”

  Around Bael’s neck, the filaments began to constrict. His eyes were dark as voids, and his fingers strained at the threads twisting about his neck.

  Panic stole Ursula’s breath, but she lay flat on the stone, trying to go unnoticed. Whatever she was going to do, she didn’t want to telegraph her actions.

  Her pulse racing, she glanced at Nyxobas, still wrapped in shadows, unmoving. Why isn’t he doing anything?

  Bael hadn’t explicitly told her what constituted “an emergency,” but she was pretty sure this was it. While the demons watched Bael suffocate, she slowly drew the dagger from the sheath on her thigh. Just as she managed to extract it, she felt Hothgar’s fingers grab the corners of her cloak. In a single motion he picked her up and heaved her across the room. She slammed into a crystal wall with a bone-jarring smack. Her dagger clattered on the floor.

  Bollocks.

  “The hound had a blade,” Hothgar roared.

  Demon-Bull flicked his wrist, and black tendrils raced across the room. She ducked, diving for the dagger. Just as she gripped its hilt, dark magic slammed into her chest. She flew back against the wall, grunting from the pain.

  Pinned to the wall, shadow magic coiled around her chest. Demon-Bull was crushing her lungs, her blood roaring in her ears. Air. Please. How long would it take for her ribs to shatter and pierce her heart? Please. I can’t die here.

  Ten seconds, maybe twenty.

  “You have disrespected our hospitality,” Hothgar roared. “You tried to assassinate the Sword of Nyxobas.”

  She opened her mouth to speak, but the pain ripped her mind apart. She doubled over as the magical bonds began to crack her ribs. Across from her, Bael hung limply, suffocating. He dropped to the ground, his large body twitching.

  Air.

  Her vision darkened, and for just a moment, she caught a glimpse of a woman with vibrant nectarine hair, wielding a sword with expert skill—her face like Ursula’s, but her eyes a deep shade of brown...

  A voice in the hollows of her mind whispered, Kill the king. A clear voice, ringing like a bell, reverberating off her skull. A voice so familiar, it was like a part of her soul. Kill the king. Kill the king.

  With the last of her strength, she lifted the blade.

  Hothgar laughed. “We are immortal—you cannot hurt us with that.”

  It’s not meant for you, fuckwit.

  It’s for the king.

  With the last of her strength, she hurled the dagger at Nyxobas’s slumped body.

  Chapter 11

  The blade sank into Nyxobas’s chest. The lords froze, staring at the god of night. Time seemed to slow, and the temperature in the room plummeted.

  The filaments around Ursula’s chest loosened, and she gasped. Air.

  She sensed the terrifying presence of the void, flickering in the edge of her consciousness. Watching her.

  “Who has done this?” Ny
xobas’s voice boomed through the silence. His eyes had shifted from black to a glacial gray—the icy gaze of her most terrifying nightmares.

  Black blood bubbled around the hilt of the dagger in his chest.

  Hothgar slowly turned, pointing at Ursula.

  “The hound?” Nyxobas roared.

  At the sound of his voice, a vast emptiness filled her mind. She stood at the edge of the precipice. Black and bottomless, it drew her closer. She only had to step off the edge, to give herself into eternal descent.

  No sound, no light, no sensation. Just Ursula and the unending darkness.

  Distantly, she felt the pain of her broken ribs. I can leave this wrecked body behind, this withering carcass.

  Is this what the Forgotten Ones had meant when they told her the darkness would save her? She could join Nyxobas now. Supplicate herself to him—become one of his brethren. He would give her power she couldn’t begin to imagine. She just needed to accept the void, to give up this decaying flesh.

  To give up the broken ribs and burning walls, the rapacious hunger that could eat her alive...

  Give up the tall grasses, beams of light through yew trees, the salty taste of sea air on her lips...

  No, she thought. I want to live.

  Before her, the darkness thinned. Her heart thrumming, she stared as Nyxobas slowly drew the blade from his chest. He crushed it between his fingers. “Why have you roused me?”

  “They were murdering Bael.” Her voice was rough and strained. Agony still pierced her chest where the cords bound her.

  From the floor, Bael moaned, no longer enshrouded by dark magic.

  Still alive.

  Nyxobas turned his gaze on Hothgar. “You chose to murder one of my lords?” Ice tinged his voice.

  Hothgar straightened. “He has lost his wings. Since we last spoke with you, he has proven himself unable to protect Albelda Manor. The palace has been destroyed, half his men slaughtered. As a mortal, he has been unable to fulfill his duties as lord. Abrax, your son, can hold the manor until another lord is appointed.”

  Nyxobas’s glacial eyes bored into him. “Is this true?”

 

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