Authors: Leah Clifford
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Paranormal, #Love & Romance, #Social Issues, #Death & Dying
“She’s smart. She’ll escape. Survive.” Az didn’t waver. He met Michael’s gaze. “And she’s never been temporary to me.”
Michael rotated his head slowly to the side, studying Az.
“Just like Gabriel’s never been temporary to you,” Az said. The slight flinch from Michael was all he needed. Az stood. “He will never be the same after. You know it as much as I do. Don’t make Gabriel do this.”
Michael’s grip tightened on the bars. “Yesterday, we snared a Sider who knew your precious death breather. Plucked thoughts of her from his head like grapes. We learned much before we gave him his peace.”
“Who was it?” Az asked shakily. Jarrod’s face swam into his thoughts. It could have been anyone.
“He made her beverages and gave her shelter. She and her two Siders hide within his walls. We’ll use her sickness to draw her out. Inexistence creeps nearer to her every moment.”
Zach,
Az realized. His shoulders slumped. The Bound had been at Milton’s.
I’ll destroy them if they lay a finger on her.
“If anyone ends Eden but Gabe—”
“I tell you of what we know,” Michael said, cutting him off. “So that you may take my words to heart. Gabriel stays in the mortal realms for
you
, Azazel. He feels duty bound to keep you from Falling fully.” Michael lowered his voice to a whisper. “Yet your death breather held you balanced while Gabriel was blackmarked, did it not? You don’t need him. I want him returned to glory.” Michael’s eyes danced with his fervor. “What is your love worth?” he said with a sneer. “You seek freedom; you desire your Eden? Then cut loose the ties binding Gabriel to the mortal realms.” He dropped his hands. “If you wish a chance to save her, the price is Gabriel. Is she worth it to you?”
Az ran a hand through his curls. “I . . .”
Rust red swirled in Michael’s irises. He stepped farther back into the hall as if he didn’t want Az to see. “How can you hesitate?” Michael pressed. “Choose to save her, and give me back my Gabriel.”
A tremor passed through Az. It felt like a trick. “What about what Gabe wants?”
Michael went on as if he hadn’t spoken. “She’ll be attacked. Weakened. Once he’s close to her in that state, Gabriel won’t be able to resist the compulsion.”
Az knew his irises must be crimson at the rage inside him.
Let him see,
he thought, but Michael showed no reaction. “Why are you doing this?”
“They’re already luring her, Azazel. Moments until she sheds blood.”
Az’s wings flared. Feathers scraped against the walls as they spread to fill the room. “Open the door, Michael,” he said.
“A promise Upstairs is binding, even if you’re not Bound.”
With a single pump of his wings, Az was across the room. He slammed his fists against the metal. “Open the door!”
“You’re to convince Gabriel to return Home permanently.” Michael went on, urgency in his voice. “Swear it, Azazel, and freedom is yours. Stay silent, and she’ll be ash in moments.”
“Gabriel will leave the mortal realms,” Az said, cautious. Curling his fingers around the bars, Az made his choice. “He’ll come back Upstairs. Permanently. You have my promise or my life.”
Michael dug for a key as he spoke. “The rest of the Bound are slaughtering the Siders at a soiree in the Bronx,” he said. He held up a bloodstained hand. “Gabriel is too late to save them, but you can use the information to send him away. Break his compulsion long enough for you to escape with your death breather.”
“It’s done? They killed the Siders there?” Az asked, his heart in his throat. “Kristen’s dead?”
Michael looked nonplussed as the lock clicked. “Such an effort to tell them apart, and no gain. The genocide is in progress.”
He swung the door open.
“How fast can those wings carry you, Azazel? Faster than fate?” Michael asked.
A thousand curses rushed to his lips, but there wasn’t time. Az rushed past Michael and into the hall.
From just behind him, he heard Michael’s whisper, a single word. “Fly.”
T
he phone call had caught Eden off guard. She’d been expecting Madeline. But it was a Sider on the other end, one who’d sounded ragged and desperate, too scared to come to them. He’d given her somewhere to meet, an alley off a street in the Financial District. A short subway ride away.
Every corner they came around, Jarrod stopped her and Sullivan, insisting on checking ahead. If the Bound spotted them, no amount of running would help this time.
“Clear,” he said, keeping a few yards in front of them. They took a side street, then another before heading down the alley. The Sider had told her it hooked right in an L shape. They wouldn’t be bothered. He would meet them there. Halfway down, a single light shone to guide their way. Rats scurried without fear. The patters of their feet against plastic trash bags set Eden’s skin crawling.
“Let’s hurry,” she said to Jarrod.
Eden glanced back at Sullivan and noticed her clutching her stomach. When she realized Eden was watching, she dropped her hand and gave her head the slightest shake, a silent plea in her eyes.
A good twenty feet in front of them, Jarrod looked back as he went around the corner. Eden waited until he was definitely out of earshot before she spun on Sullivan.
“How long?” Eden demanded. She grabbed Sullivan’s hand and twisted it over, but even in the creases, the palms were free of ashes.
“It’s just a stomachache. So far.” The note of panic in her voice told Eden otherwise. Sullivan’s skin looked clammy, almost green. She hissed through clenched teeth.
“What’s it feel like? Stabbing?” Eden asked. She glanced down the alley to be sure Jarrod hadn’t ventured back. “How long, Sullivan?”
“Yesterday, I promise. That’s it.”
Eden squeezed her shoulder gently. She knew all too well the agony Sullivan was going through. “It’ll pass. Give it a second.”
Hugging her stomach, Sullivan doubled over. “I have to tell him,” she whispered. “I just don’t know how.”
“Don’t panic.” Eden rubbed Sullivan’s palm again. “We’ll tell him after we’re done here. You’ve got at least a few days, though. The pains won’t get much worse unless you’re injured.”
A crunch of footsteps echoed through the alley. Two figures passed under the dim light ahead of them, but neither was Jarrod.
Sullivan straightened. “Where is he?”
“I don’t know,” Eden said. Something was wrong. “Stay calm. We’ve got this.” She spotted a fist-sized chunk of asphalt against the wall. Toeing it, she said Sullivan’s name and drew her attention to it. Eden shuffled forward until the broken asphalt was behind her.
“Eden?” Sullivan’s whisper was cautious.
Eden had been alone in the alley at the apartment nearly every day, brought Siders she didn’t know into it for months without feeling any danger. as she stared at the guys creeping toward her, something inside her shifted.
They’re not Bound,
she thought.
But are they Fallen?
The two guys stopped just in front of Eden and Sullivan. Eden met their steely gazes, and one of them sneered, skin crinkling around predatory eyes. The reaction wasn’t what she was used to. Usually the Siders who found her seemed grateful, or afraid, or desperate. On the phone, his voice had broken.
She waited, but neither said a word. She fought the urge to avert her eyes, knowing it would make her look weaker.
One of the guys was tall and reeked of trouble, from his baggy jeans to the tattoos decorating the visible skin of his neck and knuckles. A cliché street thug. The other was younger, and looked naïve enough to seem out of place. Almost timid. And then he opened his mouth. “So you’re the little girl with the good shit? They say you’re picky about who you give it to.”
Eden froze.
“You’re not gonna be picky with me, are you?” he asked.
They weren’t Siders. Or angels. They were junkies, the way Sullivan used to be. Eden curled her hands into fists and shoved them into her pockets, grateful for her gloves. She couldn’t afford to give up any Touch. In her peripheral vision, she saw Sullivan bend down to pick up the asphalt and hide it behind her back.
Eden shrugged her shoulders, trying to keep the attention on her. “You misled me on the phone.”
The tattooed one laughed, but the younger one silenced him with a punch to the shoulder.
“Look, I’m sorry,” she said, trying to keep her voice even and nonchalant. “We’re not selling. It’s not—”
The younger one leaped at her.
“Jarrod!” Sullivan screamed.
Fingers dug into Eden’s cheeks. “Give me the fucking Touch,” he snarled. Droplets of spit dotted her face. “I was told
exactly
where to find you. I don’t have time for your games, bitch!”
“I don’t have any to give.” She tasted blood as his grip ground the inside of her cheek against her teeth.
“Bullshit.” He shoved her against the wall without warning. Her back hit hard, the air rushing out of her. If he’d been a Sider, her exhale would have killed him.
He didn’t even flinch. Against a mortal, the powers that made other Siders fear her were worthless. He heaved her from the bricks and slammed her against them again. This time Eden didn’t hold back her cry. Where was Jarrod?
“I have some!” Sullivan screamed suddenly. The tattooed guy turned to her. Sullivan swung toward his temple with the rock. He ducked and caught the blow in the shoulder. His fingers slid across Sullivan’s bare hand as he knocked the rock away. It clattered across the ground to Eden.
“Give me more,” he said. Sullivan backed away slowly.
Eden shook her head. “Don’t.”
The word barely escaped before a punch whipped her head sideways, dropped her. Her vision blurred as she struggled to her hands and knees.
The tattooed guy grabbed Sullivan by the arm. “Dose me again!” he demanded.
“She lied. She doesn’t have any more,” Eden ground out. A boot met her stomach in a swift kick. She moaned as she curled reflexively into a ball even as the younger guy ruthlessly pried her limbs apart. His weight crushed low on Eden’s hips. Snagging her wrist, he ripped the glove from her hand, splitting her knuckles open as he grated them against the iced ground. Touch passed from her fingertips.
Eden felt him change position on top of her, fumbling lower, digging at her thighs. She wanted to fight, to push him away, but he was too strong. “Where is it? I know you’ve got cash.”
Her stomach clenched hard. She retched, but all that came out was a cloud of ashes.
They’re going to kill me
, she realized.
They’re going to kill me and they don’t even realize it.
“Please,” she begged. “Please, you have to stop.”
To her surprise, the guy on top of her froze.
Eden raised a hand to her face, wiping cheeks smeared with a mix of blood and ash as she turned her head. Feet away, where no one had been a second ago, stood Gabe. Her mind blanked out, short-circuiting between fear and relief. Something was in his hand, a bat or a crowbar. It glinted viciously in the weak light. “Don’t touch her,” he snarled.
“You don’t wanna make this your problem,” the one on top of her threatened.
“Oh, yes I do.” Gabe’s eyes flared red as he disappeared, then he flashed back just in front of them. “Don’t touch her.”
His thug friend bolted past them. Scuttling off her and to his feet, he took off after.
The instant they were gone, Gabe dropped down next to her. The last time she’d seen Gabe, he’d given Jarrod a note.
Don’t leave Eden alone with me,
it’d said. She tried to turn, to claw away from him, but she couldn’t get her limbs to move. Everything felt so heavy. “Jarrod,” she croaked. “Help.”
“You’re okay,” Gabe said. “Eden, it’s me.” The chunk of broken asphalt dug into her hip. “You’re . . .” His voice lowered, a slow swirl starting in his eyes as he took her in. His breaths came faster, cut off as he curled his hands into fists and dropped them at his sides. “Sullivan,” he called over his shoulder, “you all right?”
“Bruises,” she answered. “Is she okay?”
For a split second, Gabe seemed to come back to himself and turned to Sullivan. “Jarrod’s around the corner. He wasn’t moving. Go to him.”
Eden heard her struggling, but kept glued to Gabe, afraid to look away. “Don’t leave me,” she said weakly, but already she heard Sullivan’s footsteps fade.
“Shhh, I won’t leave you,” Gabe murmured to Eden, his fingers gentle on her cheek. “You’re hurt bad.” His stare blanked out, the words barely a whisper. “I couldn’t let them kill you. I don’t want to. . . .”
She curled her hand around a rock. She didn’t know if she had the strength to hit him hard enough to get away.
I can do it,
she thought. His gaze dipped to her side.
He knows.
With the slightest nod, he leaned forward, tilted at an angle that would give her the best shot. She could feel him trembling.
“Don’t, Gabriel!” The voice echoed off the buildings.
It can’t be,
Eden thought, stunned. Gabe didn’t turn toward where she’d seen Jarrod disappear. He looked up. Eden followed his lead. She couldn’t make out anything in the darkness, and then suddenly Az’s wings flared wide enough to fill the alley, breaking his dive. His legs swung wildly as he pumped the wings again. Hitting the ground in a crouch, Az used the momentum to shove Gabe and knock him off her.