Dusk of Death: an Armen Leza, Demon Hunter novel (Armageddon Trilogy Book 1)
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A Just Ink Press novel
eBooks are not transferable. They cannot be sold, shared or given away as it is an infringement on the copyright of this work.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or were used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Just Ink Press, LLC
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Tempe, AZ 85281
Dusk of Death: an Armen Leza, Demon Hunter novel
Book I of the Armageddon Trilogy
Copyright © 2016 by N.L. Gervasio
Edited by Sharon Gerlach and C.J. Obray
Cover design and interior images by Jinxie G
ISBN-10: 0-9916214-6-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-9916214-6-0
All rights are reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form, without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
First electronic publication: August 2016
For information, address:
Just Ink Press, LLC
justinkpress@gmail.com
www.justinkpress.com
1: Evil Things
2: Ancient Tongues
3: Home
4: Afterburn
5: Death Dreams
6: Amore
7: Admit No Thing
8: The Grigori
9: Good Knight
10: A Time to Grieve
11: Apocrypha
12: The Trap
13: O Minion
14: Knight of Death
15: Dismal Days
16: On Faith
17: Call of the Ban-shidh
18: The Book
19: Proposal
20: Hidden Truths
21: War and Lust
22: A Corpse is a Corpse
23: Warrior
24: Ashtoreth
25: The Beast
26: Crucible
27: The Fall
28: Infamous Rebellion
29: Agares
30: Vial Magic
31: Angel’s Breath
32: End of Days
33: New Beginnings
About the Author
A Note
Footnote
Dedication/Acknowledgements
Preview
Other Books
Demons, detectives, and a forensic scientist who has fallen from Hell.
Hell wants her back.
Let the demon hunt begin.
All hope is not lost.
—Origen
Armen Leza should be dead.
A hazy cloud of nothingness fogged her mind from when she had become flesh a few years ago. One moment she’d been a demon; the next, human skin graced her ancient bones. All that had been in between was missing.
When she’d fallen from Heaven, cast out by her Father, her memories hadn’t faltered.
Not.
One.
Moment.
She had fallen into the Darkness while screaming for her murdered child.
The Darkness changes people, makes them go cold inside. She had forgotten about her child. She’d forgotten about the pain. One day, someone pulled her from the dark and gave her purpose. The pain flickered to life again, but it had focus.
Being a demon had taken some getting used to. Growing accustomed to her human shell was slow-going at best, but she’d get there. That wasn’t to say she liked it very much. Something about being human didn’t feel . . . right. Of course, neither had the demon form.
She sat in her usual spot on the sofa staring at one of the centuries-old paintings, ruminating on events she could never change, clawing after the past and holding onto the memories that stirred the fire within her, until the phone’s ring scattered her thoughts like dust particles escaping a ray of light.
Several moments later, dusk settled as the last few beams of daylight snaked their way through the edges of worn shades. Terry Armstrong had hung up on her—again. In truth, Terry was never much for goodbyes; he didn’t give the send-off to someone until they were dead, so he never said the farewell to the living. Of course, she never heard the word itself uttered from him. Armen assumed he thought saying that one little word invited bad luck, and she found the quirk rather entertaining, even if his calls usually weren’t.
She set down the phone and shuddered, the chill running up her spine and into the nerve center of her brain having nothing to do with the night air. As she was the medical examiner who specialized in the occult, work calls usually meant bad news, even if they were rare, but something in Terry’s voice this time made the hair on her arms stand on end. She thought she had picked a quiet profession to live out her human existence. She’d much rather return to her ruminating thoughts. The emotions at play within her human form bounced around, back and forth between her millennia of experiences and her current situation with a certain detective. The emotions were distracting, to say the least, since they were quite different from angelic or demonic, or warrior emotion, or the lack thereof.
Right. She’d been a warrior once. A beautiful flaxen-haired badass warrior, not unlike the Valkyrie.
The memory blinked away and she made her way to her bedroom, changing into a pair of old faded jeans, tank, and a hoodie, and reached for a pair of shoes—some no-name brand of black and white sneakers she’d bought dirt-cheap at one of the big retail stores. Armen knew the family behind the stores quite well. They had been on her list in the days of old, before her flesh. The List of the Damned.
Armen had seen Hell; fire and brimstone were nothing compared to the Darkness—a plane that sat on the edge of Hell.
Hell was comparable to a metropolitan city much like New York but surrounded by a river of fire. It was the outskirts a person wanted to steer clear of, the other planes of existence just outside the ring of fire. That was where the real monsters lay in wait. And Armen would know, for she’d been sent there in the beginning, before she became demon and was allowed to ride the flames.
Far worse than the Bottomless Pit of Abaddon, or Sheol, the Land of the Dead, was Gehenna—a place all feared. The Darkness there would consume you.
She pulled on her socks and shoes with a shudder of remembrance, fetched her car keys from the table, and jogged down the stairs to her Jeep. The sky bore several shades of purple that turned midnight black as she sped off into the darkening twilight toward Terry’s new case, hoping she’d reach her destination before the captain arrived.
Armen climbed out of her Jeep, disgruntled and shivering. “Is he here yet?”
“Good evening, sunshine,” the man greeting her said with a lop-sided grin. A homicide detective with the Phoenix Police Department, Terry Armstrong had been a pain in her ass since the day they’d met. Unfortunately, she enjoyed it entirely too much.
“Why’s it so freakin’ cold?”
“It’s wintertime, Armen.”
“It’s a desert!”
“Where are you from again?” The comical grin spread across his face, suiting the twinkle of jest in his eye well. He was tall with a close-shaven head. Tattoos covered his muscular arms and, Armen suspected, other places as well. She thought he was insane for wearing only a T-shirt under his Kevlar vest.
“Hell,” she said harshly. Cal
ling it by any other name would only confuse him.
Terry laughed. “With that snippy attitude of yours, it wouldn’t surprise me.” He stepped closer, his six-foot-three frame towering over her. “Where’s your coat?”
“I left it at home. I didn’t think it’d be this damn cold. I mean, shit, a hoodie should be enough in a desert wasteland.”
He withheld his laughter, though a small snort escaped him. “Wait here. I’ll get one for you.” He came back to her and held out a coat dangling from his fingers. After she slipped it on, he handed her a cup. “I thought you might like this, too.”
The scent of the brew reached her nostrils before her hand took the cup. “Thanks, Terry.”
“Anything for my favorite medical examiner.”
She narrowed her eyes. “What are you buttering me up for?”
“Nothing. I can’t say you’re my favorite medical examiner?”
She cocked her head to the side and sent him her best ‘you can’t be serious’ look. “Why in the world would I be your favorite medical examiner? Better yet, why would you even have a favorite one?”
He laughed again. “My, you’re touchy tonight. Didn’t sleep well today?”
Shaking her head, she replied, “The days are too short,” then sipped her coffee. She crinkled her nose as the burnt caffeinated beverage slid over her tongue.
He nodded. “Then you must love summer.”
Again, she shifted her head from left to right, her long blonde ponytail swishing as though it were a pendulum. “The nights are too short.”
His boisterous laugh echoed in the surrounding area. “A no-win situation for you, then?”
“Pretty much,” she replied. “I’m screwed either way.”
“Come on,” he said. “If you want to see this before he gets here, we’d better hurry.” He took her by the elbow and started to lead the way.
She jerked her arm from his grasp. “I am not a child who needs to be coaxed into the mouth of Hell, Terry.”
He gave her a blank stare, his eyes completely devoid of emotion, before continuing forward. “Your choice of words always amazes me, you know,” he said as they neared the building. “I mean, who says something like that, really?”
“I guess I’m alone in my vernacular.”
Terry chuckled. “Is that your word of the day?”
She grinned. “No, actually the word of the day was wisenheimer, and amazingly, it had your picture next to it.”
“Ah yes, well, I am quite photogenic,” he replied with a toothy grin.
Armen fought the urge to roll her eyes. “So, tell me what I’m about to see.”
He shook his head. “Nah, I’d much rather see the look on your face when you see it without prior description.”
“Damn, it must be bad.” Especially if he wasn’t telling her; he really got a kick out of watching her face twist into different expressions. According to him, the more grotesque the description, the higher her brows went.
“No, unique would be a more appropriate word.” He stepped through the door.
That did not make her feel any better about the prospect.
She followed him but stopped short in the doorway, wrinkling her nose as she caught a familiar odor. The squalid scent slithered uninvited into her nostrils, and she had to force herself to move forward, despite the inclination to purge her last meal.
Terry paused, a quizzical expression morphing his features momentarily. “You okay?”
“Fine.” She took another sip of the singed coffee, mostly to have the brew’s aroma dominate the other odor.
“He’s in here.” Terry headed for a bulky, steel sliding door standing partially open on the west wall of the warehouse. He pulled on the large handle. The door creaked and screeched as he heaved it open.
The scent of copper filled her nose and coated her tongue in a thick slime, and she gagged on the rancid air before barely stopping herself from turning tail and running away.
“Jesus Christ,” she whispered when the scene paraded before her. She winced; using the divine name could bring trouble, given the scent she’d picked up moments ago. The real world of cops and robbers and twisted murderers wasn’t ready for supernatural of the religious variety yet. Not that they ever would be, unless they were fans of a certain television show.
“Told you it was unique,” Terry said. “Some damn weird occult shit, though, eh?”
Right, that’s what we’ll call it. She shifted her eyes from the scene to Terry’s face. “That’s an understatement.”
The man hung on the freestanding wall, pinned by nails piercing his stretched skin. He still lived, if one could call it that. As Armen stepped toward the door’s track, the victim shrieked; startled, she spilled hot coffee over her hand, cringing as the liquid scalded her skin.
This skin . . . .
He stopped suddenly, and Armen studied the wall.
Ancient symbols, drawn in blood, surrounded his crucifixion pose. Razor wire encircled the entire scene so no one could go near. The man’s head dropped forward, but he wasn’t dead—yet.
“He keeps doing that,” Terry said. “But he’s not talking. We’ve tried. Makes noises, though. Maybe they cut out his tongue?”
“Perhaps.” It wouldn’t surprise her one bit; the symbols told her what kind of evil was at play. “Why did you call me? He’s not a corpse.”
He cast a glance down at her. “The occult shit. You have a knack for it. I figured you would know what all this meant.”
She turned her attention back to the hanging man and sighed. “The symbols, they’re demon script.”
“See what I mean?”
“Terry, this is a very bad situation.”
“Oh, you don’t have to tell me that. We need to figure out how to get him down.”
“He’s not meant to come down. If you attempt it, he’ll most likely die, and horribly, as well as anyone who attempts to remove him.”
“What could possibly be more horrible than what he’s already been through?” He abruptly raised a hand as she opened her mouth. “Wait, don’t answer that.”
Armen shook her head. “I take it no one’s searched the area?”
“Nope. Didn’t know what would happen,” Terry replied. “Barnes started to head straight for him, but I stopped him. I remembered that one, you know, a few months back, where you told me about the trigger that set it off and killed that woman?”
She remembered it vividly. The first officer on the scene had made the mistake of trying to rescue the woman and ended up in the psych ward after losing his right arm and watching the woman and her unborn child die. Half of the fetus had landed at the officer’s feet.
A veteran officer like Terry wouldn’t have been so easily broken, but then again, there was something different about him. She just couldn’t put her finger on it.
“Yeah, well, I figured this one might be the same. I was hoping to find a way for the vic to not die this time.” His right brow hitched upward. “Any ideas?”
She thought about it, clicking her tongue a few times. “Not unless I can walk in there and look around.”
“You just told me—”
“I know, but I’m not stepping near that.” She pointed at the razor wire.
He chewed on his inner cheek. “If Captain finds out, he’ll kill me.”
“If I don’t, the victim will hang on that wall until he’s dead, and then you can set off the trigger into a corpse.”
Terry sighed heavily. “I trust you. Go . . . but don’t set the damn thing off!”
She grinned and set down the coffee. “What, do you think I’m an amateur at this?” She carefully stepped forward, eying the entire room for any type of trigger based on motion.
“And be careful,” he added.
Armen nodded in silence. The concern in his voice was too much for her to deal with. Terry liked her, she knew that, but she wanted nothing to do with anything remotely resembling a relationship outside of work. She just didn’t h
ave the time, or the interest, in such pursuits. The last one destroyed everything she’d known. She wasn’t about to make that mistake again.
Finding nothing that would set the trap off if she stepped inside, she took a step over the door’s track. When nothing happened, she exhaled and circled around to the right, where she noticed a small gap—an inch or so—between the wall and the floor. She crouched and put her head to the floor to see underneath. The wall appeared to be floating. This had dark magic written all over it and there was nothing she could do to reverse the multiple spells she sensed. It was too much and would take too long—
“See anything yet?” Terry said loudly.
She nearly jumped out of her skin and placed her finger to her lips to shush him. He said no more as she stood and walked around the back of the wall, carefully avoiding the razor wire.
A skittering sound behind her traveled rapidly toward the small elevator shaft to her right. She pivoted in time to see a distinct trail of red smoke winding around and into the shaft.
“What was that?” Terry shouted, nervousness layering his voice.
Armen peeked around the wall and glared at him, pointing at him and then cupping her hand around her ear.
He nodded and waggled his hands in a gesture that virtually screamed how nervous she was making him.
Armen smiled at him. She hadn’t thought anything could make Detective Terry Armstrong nervous, but she had detected it in his voice before she’d stepped away from him. She turned her attention back to the scene, trying to determine how the contraption would work if triggered and just where in the hell the trigger was.
From the corner of her eye, she saw a stocky man walk up to Terry.
“Armstrong.”
“Johnson,” Terry replied and crossed his arms over his broad chest.
“What’s she doing?”
“Trying to figure out what the trigger is.”
“Ah, letting your woman do your work for you, huh?”
Terry twitched at Johnson’s comment. Armen slipped behind the wall again. She was no man’s woman.
“Well, she’s probably the only one who can figure it out, Johnson,” Terry’s voice bounced off the empty walls. “Unless, of course, you have some clue as to how to get this man out alive?”