Authors: Samantha Young
Focusing on Azazil’s ponytail of
long, white silk hair, she replied, “I needed to see you.”
“Let me guess—you miss being the
Seal?”
“No.”
He shrugged and lay down the small,
jewel-handled dagger in his hands. “You’re tired of these visits from Asmodeus and would like me to have a word with him?”
Feeling impatient, Ari shook her
head. “No. I mean, yes, I’m tired of his visits and I would really appreciate him staying away from me, but that’s not why I’m here. I’m here … I’m here about the favor you owe me.”
That got his attention. “Oh. That
pesky thing.” He turned to face her full on. “Well? What is it you want, child?
Out with it.”
Ari drew in a shuddering breath.
“You can turn back time, right? You can change a person’s path in life.”
Every muscle in the Sultan’s body
tensed, his eyes alert as he took one intimidating step toward her. “Why are you here?”
Needing to make a statement, Ari
took a step toward him rather than cower back from him, and she saw the surprise flicker in his dark gaze. “I want you to change my past. Change it so that Sala never left me at Derek Johnson’s in Sandford Ridge when I was a baby.”
Azazil cocked his head to the side
in thought. “What path would you prefer?”
“Don’t rewrite me a new one. I want
to continue on in my life as it is, with all the people in it. However, I want the threads with Pazuzu, the Ghulah, and the Labartu to change. Like they never knew about me, never met me or the people I care about. I want Derek’s, Charlie’s, and Fallon’s lives to be different, and this is the only way I know how.”
“Do you know what you ask of me? It
is much, Ari. It is very much. You are asking me to create a new reality for these people without affecting your own. You want me to create a new reality without causing too massive a domino effect.” His eyes narrowed. “You do realize that if I did this, only mortals would be affected by it. Derek, Mikey, Charlie, and Fallon. And Fallon, being a half-blood, will remember this reality as well as the new one I create. That’s asking a great deal of her. It’s asking a great deal of me. It will exhaust me, Ari. It will drain me. I’ll have to make sure that every new path, road, and thread that this change creates does not have an effect on the bigger picture. There’s always a chance I don’t foresee everything, and something monumental might occur. Something irreversible. Is that the kind of responsibility you’re ready for?”
She nodded, her heart pounding so
hard she thought a rib might break.
He shook his head at her. “Why am
I not surprised that the favor you ask be so colossal? You are White’s daughter. Of course it is colossal. There is a great deal of danger in what you ask.”
“It’s the favor I’m asking. You
said you’d grant me a favor that was within your power to grant me. You just said you could do it. So … will you?”
As Ari waited for his answer, she
once again tried to ignore the blood splatter at the edge of her vision and the groans from the dying man strung up at the edge of the small room. Packed dirt was hard beneath her feet, the bare rock walls devoid of emeralds and glistening with dank moisture. Low light from candles scattered throughout gave it a gothic, sinister atmosphere. Damp earth, sweat, and the coppery scent of blood tingled Ari’s nose.
Her own blood rushed in her ears as
she stared up at Azazil, awaiting his answer.
His black eyes narrowed on her, his
thoughts impossible to discern. With a huge sigh, he looked away, his contemplation falling upon the man he had been torturing before Ari arrived.
The Sultan wore no jewelry and his usual ostentatious style was muted—he wore only dark leather trousers and leather bands around his wrists. His muscled, naked torso was covered in blood and little bits of torn flesh. Ari dropped her gaze, feeling her stomach turn.
“I’ve laid out the consequences,
Ari.” Azazil looked back at her now and that fist of anxiety twisted in her chest. “Are you sure you understand what I’m saying?”
She nodded. “I understand. Are you
saying you’ll grant me the favor you owe me?”
His lip curled at the corner, his
eyes glittering. “I should either kill you or applaud you for using the oath of a favor against me. This is no ordinary favor. It will affect us all … and I am unusually blind to the consequences. I see vague images that I cannot make sense of.” His features hardened. “All I can feel is that if I grant you this favor, something of great immensity will come to pass. Something that will affect my realm and the mortal one, not just me and you.”
His prophecy made her stop. It was
one thing to suggest the possible consequences and another to prophesize an actual gigantic change. “In what way?”
“I told you I cannot know for
sure.”
“So it could be good or bad?”
“Is anything ever just good or
bad?”
The man at her side groaned again,
and Ari winced. “I don’t suppose you’d let this guy go too as part of the favor?”
Azazil scowled. “I grant you this
favor and I might not be able to do much of anything for a while.”
That in itself was reason enough to
do it. Ari nodded. “Do it.”
The Sultan crossed his arms over
his chest. “I don’t know whether to risk the consequences of breaking my oath to you or go along with this insanity.”
“I thought you liked insanity. It’s
entertaining, right?”
That produced a slow, wicked grin
from her grandfather. “This is true.” He dropped his arms and strode toward her, the majesty of his power threatening to blow her off her feet. “You win, Ari. I’ll grant you your favor.” He smirked. “Let the realms have mercy on us all.”
Suddenly, nausea took hold of Ari
as her vision went in and out, the room shaking in a jarred blur back and forth. But as her vision refocused and the nausea retreated, Ari realized it wasn’t her eyesight. With a shiver she glanced around her new surroundings.
Azazil had shifted them both to a
huge bedchamber she assumed was the Sultan’s.
“Privacy,” he murmured, and that
was the last thing he said before he braced himself against the elaborately carved fourth post of the mammoth bed.
Uncertain what was happening, Ari
opened her mouth to speak but stopped when Azazil closed his eyes.
She blinked, trying to make sense
of what she was seeing.
His body flickered in and out as
his fingernails dug into the wooden post. “Arggh!” he groaned between clenched teeth.
Shadows pooled into the room,
filled with the hiss of electricity. Ari’s breathing grew shallow and she took a tentative step toward the Sultan only to feel an immense, painful pressure push in on her temples.
The pain blinded her and Ari cried
out, falling to her knees. Her arms folded over her head as she tucked it into her body, praying for the pain to stop. She let out another scream, trying to relieve the pressure … but it seemed to go on forever, until her body began to sway toward the black …
Yes … the black where there was no
pain.
And then it stopped.
The whole room stilled beneath her
and Ari let her arms fall, tears streaming down her cheeks as she lifted her heavy head and gazed up at Azazil. What she saw shocked the very breath out of her.
“Your Highness?” she whispered
hoarsely, still feeling the throbbing waves of remembered pressure at her temples.
Azazil glanced over at her as he
slumped toward the floor. “Done,” he whispered.
He was so pale. And not just pale. Hollows sunk beneath his eyes, shadows stretched across his torso, a torso once powerful and muscular, now lean and frail.
“What have I done?” Ari murmured,
more tears falling.
The Sultan tried to wave a hand at
her, but his wrist flopped with the effort.
It suddenly occurred to her there
was a wave of magic pooling behind her and Ari twisted around to look at the double doors to Azazil’s chambers.
“Asmodeus …,” Azazil whispered.
“Been trying … to get …in. Too weak … to take … down enchantme …”
Afraid of Asmodeus’s reaction but
even more afraid for the Sultan, Ari waved an exhausted hand at the door, feeling the energy that blocked the lieutenant out. It was a binding spell, not a very strong one if you were in the room with it, but outside … it might take Asmodeus too long to take it down. Ari felt the ember burst across her palm and she held it up and outward toward Azazil’s spell. With a little focus, she felt it fragment and two seconds later, the double doors blasted off their hinges.
Literally.
They collapsed to the ground,
stirring up a layer of dust that had accumulated while Azazil granted Ari her favor. How long had it taken him?
“We’ve been trying to get in for
hours,” Asmodeus unknowingly answered her question, his intent eyes on her.
“What’s wrong? What’s happening?” His eyes flew from her to Azazil and then widened. He cursed loudly and strode toward his master. “Your Highness?” He knelt down beside him, his hands hovering over him as he felt his aura for magic use. “Azazil,” he whispered, his voice filled with genuine concern. “My friend, what have you done?”
He jerked his head over his shoulder and glared at Ari. “What have you done?” he raged quietly.
“Leave her,” Azazil managed quietly.
He took Asmodeus’s hands for help onto the bed. “I will be returned to myself again soon enough. A few days at the most. My debt … my debt to her … is paid.”
Asmodeus’s eyes narrowed. “Whose
destiny did you change for her?”
Azazil wheezed and coughed into his
shoulder. “The intention … the intention I presume … was … was to protect the Ginnaye and the Hunters … but also … to change the boy’s … destiny. Charlie.”
The look Asmodeus gave Ari as she
watched on in exhausted concern would have flayed a lesser being. “Get out,” he demanded, his voice filled with disgust. “Get out!”
“I’m sorry,” she whispered before
turning on her heel.
Glass stood in the doorway, his
expression unreadable.
At last he held out a hand. “Let’s
get you home.”
That Old Tune I Love
The hours in Mount Qaf amounted to a few days in the mortal realm, so when the Glass King escorted Ari back to the house she shared with Jai and Trey, it was to a welcoming committee.
As soon as she appeared in the
living room with the tall king, strong hands pulled her into Jai’s embrace. She clutched him in relief, inhaling his familiar spicy scent as she pressed her ear to his chest. His heart pounded against it in a vital show of life that soothed her harried nerves.
“Ari, what did you do?” he asked, worried. “It’s been crazy …” He pulled back, holding her tightly by the shoulders as he gazed down into her tired eyes. “Fallon is back.”
Tears of joy pricked Ari’s eyes and she exhaled in relief. “It worked.”
“Ari?”
At the sound of Michael’s voice, Ari turned in Jai’s arms and faced the Guild Hunter and his brother, Gerard, and Gerard’s wife, Megan, along with Trey who apparently couldn’t take the distance between them anymore. He strode toward Ari, his obvious concern clear in his startling gray eyes, and just like Jai, he hauled her into a tight hug.
“Thank God,” he murmured into her hair.
She hugged him back, smiling softly, and feeling very loved. When they stepped back, he nodded at Glass politely in front of the others, but his eyes shone with gratitude and tenderness that Glass surprisingly, openly, returned. “You brought her back in one piece. Thank you.”
Glass smirked at him. “Of course.
Was there ever any doubt?”
Trey’s lips twitched. “Well … yeah.
Dude, you took her to Azazil’s palace.”
“I told you not to call me that.”
“You tell me to do a lot of things.
It’s hard to keep track.”
Shaking his head and clearly trying not to encourage the young Ginnaye by laughing, Glass waved at the people behind Trey. “I think Ari may have some things to discuss …”
“Right.” Trey stepped away from
Ari, who found herself trapped in Michael’s gaze.
“Ari …” He took a step toward her, seeming unsure what to do. “The whole Guild felt the change and then she was there … Fallon was there.”
“How is she?” Ari asked hurriedly.
“I mean, Azazil said it might be difficult for her. Is she okay?”
Michael shook his head, still
looking shell-shocked. “She’s exhausted. She had a difficult time sorting out the two realities. We all have. But the humans … the humans who knew she passed … they don’t seem to remember that.”
“No,” Ari replied, “they won’t.
This change. It only fully affects humans.”
“Ari, what did you ask Azazil to do exactly?” Jai’s deep voice inquired softly from behind her.
She turned to him now. “I wanted to protect everyone. I wanted to fix what happened to my dad, to Mikey and Charlie. To Fallon. The only way I knew how was to ask Azazil to make it so that Sala never left me with Dad. I didn’t want to lose what I had now. You, the Guild … so my own memories of the past haven’t changed, and neither has the memories of the Jinn who are in my life. Except for Pazuzu. I asked Azazil to specifically change that.” Her eyes slid back to Michael. “I know you were just doing your job, but I couldn’t let Charlie die. Everything that happened to him, including what happened to Fallon, it was all because of my place in his life.”