by Kresley Cole
The other two wolves joined the fray, snatching out throats as bullets sprayed them—and the opposite shore. Bam bam bam. Grit kicked up in a line along the edge of Death’s net. He growled with fury when one bullet caught him. Then another.
Somehow, Death rose up, freed at last, setting off for cover. Though he was pouring blood from his left shoulder and his right side, he didn’t quicken his pace as bullets plugged the ground just inches from his feet.
He reached another boulder not twenty feet from me and dropped behind it, long legs stretched out in front of him. His head fell back against it, and he squeezed his eyes to the sky.
The sight sent me adrift, my mind recalling another time when he’d lain like that, his face raised to the sun. He’d been petting my hair as I rested my head on his lap. . . .
Now he was shot. Trapped. When I felt a pang of what might have been pity, I gave myself an inner shake. This situation was what I’d dreamed of: Death without his armor, multiple Arcana gunning for his head.
My pity was unfounded. With a bellow, Death shot up from his cover and launched one of his swords overhead. The blade flew like a throwing dagger—tip over hilt across the width of the river—to skewer the Teeth’s leader through the throat.
Yet there were scores more, gearing up their larger guns. Another male took up the charge: “Kill her!”
With a black look, Death returned to his cover, gripping his remaining sword.
He and I were both screwed. If I ran, they’d gun me down, assuming Death didn’t get me first. If I remained, the Teeth would capture me and do . . . worse.
Blinding streams of silver began descending on the convoy. The first speared the hood of the largest vehicle; lightning erupted, exploding the truck high up into the air. It plummeted, spinning like a dropped pinwheel, ejecting charred bodies with each rotation.
Bodies falling. Just like Joules’s Tower Card.
More javelins rained down, obliterating the vehicles one by one. Destroyed. Wolves scavenged any screaming survivors.
A dripping, enraged Ogen appeared on the opposite shore. With a hair-raising yowl, he stomped off in Joules’s direction once more.
Joules called out, “Farewell, Empress. We canna kill the Reaper—it’s all on you!” As he, Gabriel, and Tess fled the scene, their calls grew fainter, replaced by Ogen’s yell of frustration. . . .
When Ogen eventually skulked back to Death, shoulders low with defeat, I couldn’t keep myself from grinning. Got away from you, did they? Just as my allies had escaped Death’s reach. Reminded of his lack of icons, my smile widened.
“Ah, creature, it seems you’re now a beacon of hope.” Death levered himself to his feet, unable to stifle a grimace of pain. “Well, you heard the Tower—it’s all on you. Come end this.”
“That’d be really fair, boss. With both hands tied behind my back? Free me and let the cards fall where they may.”
“Speaking of which . . .” He whistled for his horse, and the red-eyed mount trotted to him. From his saddlebag, Death took out that strip of metal harvested from his black armor.
Only now it looked like a barbed cuff.
“My strategy for the game has changed.” As he strode toward me with a menacing expression, he said, “It will be best if you don’t struggle.”
25
Death freaking neutered me.
As we rode, he had his right arm slung around my neck, resting over my collarbones, his hand gripping my shoulder.
And I was powerless to do anything about it.
The metal device he’d been fashioning had a name: a cilice, an armband with spikes that dug into my skin. And when this cilice was made of the same metal as his armor, it neutralized my powers. Death weakening life, or whatever.
As the Reaper had put it earlier today: “Aside from some superficial glowing and your customary rapid healing, you’re just a normal girl now. The only way for you to remove it would be to excise your bicep muscle, as you did your thumb. But you won’t be alone for long enough to perform that procedure.”
That bastard had painstakingly carved every single barb, knowing what it would do to me, knowing he would shove it up my arm and make Ogen squeeze it tight.
I had screamed with pain. In the hours since then, my skin had regenerated around the barbs, but they were still agonizing. No need to tie me up anymore, now that I was helpless.
Today’s count: Powers defused? All. Attempts to kill Death? Several. Successful attempts? None-point-none. The Arcana were gloating:
—Failed attempt on Death!—
—Empress is still his prisoner.—
—Until he slits her throat.—
Despair settled over me, as bitter as the cold. We’d failed. And we’d never get a chance like that again. Even my earlier joy at finding Death’s hand clear of those icons had faded. If my friends lived, then why hadn’t Matthew contacted me?
What if they were still trapped in the mine?
I tried to console myself with the knowledge that I’d gained new players for our alliance, but the worry was sharp. Until I managed to escape, I couldn’t do anything to help them. Unless I got this cuff off me.
I told Death, “I will get freed of this thing.”
“Though you’re probably vicious enough to chew your own arm off—I put nothing past you—your odds of shedding the cilice are long.”
My teeth had started chattering. As usual, he’d denied me my coat, my boots. But he’d insisted on me riding with him, to make up time. We must be closing in on his home. “If you believe in this cuff thing, then why are you keeping me cold? Why not give me back my coat?”
“You thought that was to weaken you?”
“Wasn’t it?”
“No, that was for our enjoyment.”
Asshole!
“You should be grateful for the cilice,” he said. “With it, there’s no need to bind your arms.”
“Then why do this now? Why not put it on me from the very beginning?”
“My armor has served me well—I preferred it unaltered. Plus, I never expected you to live this long.”
“You would put a lot of store in that armor. In your first fight without it, you got plugged—twice—by cannibals. I bet you’re still bleeding under all that metal. Which is a definite mood brightener.”
“I’ll heal from these as I have from all my other wounds.”
I frowned. “Do you regenerate like I do?”
I heard him exhale heavily. “You truly remember nothing about me?” He sounded almost . . . troubled by this.
Matthew had told me he’d given me memories of past games, along with some kind of safety valve to keep me from accessing them all at once. Or else I could go crazy like him. So I hedged: “I thought we weren’t supposed to remember, that only the Fool and the current winner know about the past games.”
“And I thought our struggles would prove unforgettable.”
“Anything I recall is because Matthew showed snippets to me. Besides, why should I tell you how much I remember?”
“Why should I reveal how quickly I heal?”
Touché. “Fine. You first.”
“I heal quickly, but not like you. And I retain my scars to remind me of my victories.”
So he had strength, speed, skill, and enhanced healing? “I remember you stabbing me in a desert,” I admitted. “I remember how badly I wanted to live, but you didn’t care. Not until you realized you could touch my skin. You said you’d see me well.”
“The Fool showed you nothing else?”
“Before you tried to kill him? No.”
“If I’d wanted him dead, he would be so.”
“Sure thing, boss.”
“You think I couldn’t have gotten your mortal to drop the Fool’s unconscious body into the deep? The boy was already frenzied to save the female he . . . sleeps with. All it would’ve taken was a few cuts across your pretty flesh, or maybe a jostle of your broken arm. He would have dropped the Fool to rush headlong to you
. Then I would have gutted him without even setting you down.” In an absent tone, he said, “I regret not gutting him.”
“Jack’s smarter than you give him credit for.”
“I think he’s sly, like an animal, but you have him under your spell. He, at least, believed that what you gave him that night was worth dying for.”
“You’re disgusting.”
“Merely stating fact.”
“What Jack and I share is more than a single night. That was just the icing on the cake.”
Death’s grip on me tightened, as if he were jealous. Which made no sense. I could accept his attraction—since I was the only girl he could touch—but I couldn’t accept his jealousy. Not when I knew how much he hated me.
“Everyone thinks of you as some kind of earth mother,” he said. “They have no idea you’re a femme fatale, more Aphrodite than Demeter.”
Gran had mentioned Demeter as well.
“You used the mortal to keep you safe, until you came into your powers. Now he is obsolete.”
“I didn’t use Jack. And we will be reunited. We’re fated—”
Death’s arm squeezed even harder. “Do not talk to me of fate.”
“I don’t have to talk to you about anything,” I told him, resolved to say nothing else.
Dusk came and went, the rain pouring with abandon. Late into the night, we rode.
I hadn’t been on a horse for this long a span since riding my old nag Allegra. Jack and I had freed her before we’d burned down Haven, before the arrival of the Army of the Southeast. Would they have captured her? Eaten her?
Eventually I started nodding off, catching myself dozing against Death’s armored chest. Each time I would pinch my arms, biting the inside of my cheek to shake my drowsiness. No use. Finally I went out like a light, didn’t know for how long.
I only jerked awake when my ears began popping. Sure enough, I was relaxed back against him. I sat up, scooting forward in the saddle.
As if in reflex, Death’s arm tightened around me, the four-inch long spikes of his glove hovering near my neck.
“Watch the gloves, Reaper.”
“They’re called gauntlets.” When he released me, he accidentally(?) brushed my new cuff, sending pain shooting down my arm.
I hissed in a breath, eyes watering. But knowing how much he enjoyed my suffering, I refused to let him see any more of it.
I tried to get my bearings as we wound along a narrow rocky trail, but the rain and fog were thick. All I could determine was that we were already above the tree line—or what used to be the tree line—and still ascending. Up here, it was barren. I’d wager no plants had grown in this dismal terrain even before the Flash.
The higher we climbed, the more Death seemed to relax, while I grew colder and colder. Just when I decided this was the highest mountain I’d ever been on, the path widened to a gravel drive, fronted with an enormous gate. A stone wall towered over us.
“And now we arrive.”
His lair was atop a mountain? Ogen lumbered ahead to open the gate, and we rode through. The horses’ hooves—and Ogen’s—clacked on a brick courtyard. A jaw-dropping mansion, almost a castle, came into view. Through the fog, I spied several stories and two sprawling wings.
Death lifted me from the saddle and plopped me on the ground, then dismounted. Lark did as well, and Ogen led the horses away.
“Come,” Death commanded, and I had no choice but to follow.
At first I was impressed with this stronghold. Yet as we neared and details came into focus, I thought, No, Finn, this is officially the creepiest place.
If someone had asked me to sketch my idea of the world’s eeriest mansion, I couldn’t have imagined the scene before me. Death’s home was so . . . Death.
Dwarfing Haven House, it was built of gray stone. Courtesy of the Flash, the walls were slashed with charred black. The slate roof had dozens of different pitches and turrets, with one looming above them all.
Chimneys climbed into the night sky. Rusted weather vanes squeaked. An unseen shutter thumped, like a spirit banging on a coffin lid. Fog seemed to be trapped in place, choking the courtyard, clinging to the walls.
As we approached, I detected animal calls growing louder and louder. Even some exotic ones. I jumped when I heard a lion’s roar. Somewhere on this mountain, creatures teemed. With that many to control, Lark might prove unstoppable.
How close was this menagerie? The fog lies.
I glanced up, caught Death studying my reaction. Did he actually care what I thought of his home?
Lark saw my look of horror. “Hotel California, Evie. You can check out, but you can never leave.”
“She’s right,” Death said. “You will never leave this mountaintop alive.”
I waved that away. “I thought your lair was gleaming black, with ruins from all different ages.”
“Ruins?”
“It looked like you, I don’t know, collected them,” I said as we climbed a few steps toward the huge copper-plated front doors.
“Then you saw inside my mind. I wonder why the Fool would give you access to me.”
Aghast, I said, “That’s what it looks like in your head?”
“Explain to me why it should look any different.” He sneered, “Do you really think Death should dream in color?”
“I doubt you have dreams.”
“Would it shock you to know I once did?” he asked in a strange tone—as if he were accusing me.
Before I could ask about this, we passed through the front doors into an opulent foyer, with a chandelier dangling above. He dialed on a wall switch, and the foyer went ablaze, crystals projecting prisms, lighting a grand staircase. If the exterior had been forbidding, the interior was quite the opposite.
I’d grown up in a stately southern mansion. As we walked deeper into this palatial building, I realized Haven would look quaint in comparison.
When the corridor intersected with one leading to another wing, Lark veered off. “See you in the morning, boss. Night, Evie.”
I glared. “I hope you die before you wake, Lark.”
She cast me a fake wince. “Ooh, burn.” She trotted off, leaving me alone with Death.
“Follow me.” The corridor wound seemingly forever. At last he stopped to unlock an oak door. Behind it lay a curving stairwell.
We climbed so many steps that I knew he had to be leading me to that soaring tower. The walls of the stairwell were cold, weeping moisture. I could only imagine what my cell would be like.
“Try to keep up, creature.”
“I have a name.”
“As you always do.”
“And what’s yours?” I asked. “Ogen and Lark have given names—don’t you?”
“Call me Death. That’s all I’ll ever be to you.”
The double meaning didn’t escape me.
At the top of the stairs was a stone landing with a single door. He unlocked and opened it, ushering me inside.
The room was . . . lovely.
The lofty ceiling and exposed beams were painted stark white, stretching to a tented point above. The queen-size bed had a costly crimson spread on it. Rich drapes in the same material bordered panoramic windows. Up this high, the wind gusted, pelting the glass with raindrops, but the lavish room was snug and dry. A plush rug covered the stone floor, and the grand fireplace had logs already set up for a fire.
Again Death studied my reaction. I scuffed over to a cedar wardrobe. Scores of clothes filled the closet? Most looked like they would fit me.
In an adjoining modern bathroom, I found fresh towels and toiletries. Unable to curb my curiosity, I turned on the shower’s hot water spigot. Almost immediately, the water began steaming.
A hot shower? I hadn’t had one since we left Selena’s house. When I experienced a little thrill, I went awash in guilt. My friends might be trapped in an icy mine, but I was looking forward to a shower?
And more, I didn’t trust Death’s motives for providing all this.
“Why these kindnesses?”
“To keep you on edge. You’ll pine for these indulgences all the more when I deprive you of them.”
“You think I can’t escape? I could jump.”
“If you somehow made it past the outer walls of the compound and didn’t get swallowed up on the mountainside, you’d face the world with no abilities, at the mercy of any you stumbled upon. Besides, the glass here is fortified, unbreakable for one with such minuscule strength. Even Judgment would find it difficult to break you out.”
“Are you expecting Gabriel to try?”
“I hope he does.”
My heart was sinking even before he said, “In any case, you will have a guard.” He thinned his lips and gave a piercing whistle. Giant paws padded up the stairs.
You again, Cyclops? I’d noted earlier that he must’ve gotten zinged by one of Joules’s javelins; the wolf’s fur was now permed like a poodle’s.
“Try to escape the grounds, and the beast will make a meal of you.” Death’s eyes glittered, as if he’d be happy for me to try.
Enough. “Why do you have such a burning hatred for me? That night you murdered Calanthe—”
“Murdered? That’s rich. They ambushed us in an open field, with no cover from javelins—or from a winged soldier like Judgment.”
“Anyway,” I continued as if he hadn’t spoken, “when you beheaded Calanthe, you appeared weary, as if it was an unavoidable chore.”
“Perhaps it was.”
“But not with me.”
“No,” he said gravely. “Not with you.”
How had we gone from To my bed, Empress to this? “Will you ever tell me why?”
He turned to leave. “You’ll be dead before the impulse strikes me.” The door locked behind him, the sound panicking me.
No escape. A gilded cage. Like a haunted madhouse.
I’d been locked up for months at CLC. Now my freedom had been taken from me once again. At least at the center, I’d had a roommate and visits from my mom. Here?
A wolf that was looking at my legs like he wanted to gnaw on them.