slipped out the door. “Thank you—for everything.”
When she was gone, I went through the motions of
washing my face and brushing my teeth. I paid meticulous
attention to each routine. Everything felt different to me now.
I was acutely aware of the warm water running in rivulets
over my body, the feel of the clean cotton towels against my
skin. Every movement felt new, as if I were experiencing it
for the first time. It occurred to me that I might be in Hel , but
I was stil alive. I was stil a living, breathing, talking person.
Not for much longer.
I stepped out of the bathroom to find Jake half sitting, half
slumped on the sofa, staring into space with his chin
pressed into his hand. The black tailcoat lay discarded on
the floor along with the white bow tie. He had his
shirtsleeves rol ed up to the elbows as if in preparation for
strenuous work. The room smel ed strongly of cigarettes.
Jake had poured himself a large tumbler of scotch, and it
seemed to have steadied his nerves. He held the bottle up
to see if I wanted to join him, but I shook my head. I didn’t
want my thoughts muddled by alcohol. I moved around him,
straightened the cushions on the sofa, tipped out the
contents of the ashtray, and rearranged the items on my
dressing table. Eventual y, I ran out of things to distract me
and there was nothing left to do but climb into the vast bed,
huddle into a corner, and wait for morning. It was clear
neither of us would be getting any sleep. Jake didn’t try and
talk to me; he was like a statue, locked in his own world. I
hugged my knees and waited patiently for the terror I
expected to final y break over me like a tidal wave. But it
refused to come. I had no idea what time it was. There was
a digital clock by the phone, but I tried not to look at it. I
couldn’t help sneaking a look once and saw that it was
three forty-five A.M. The minutes seemed to stretch for an
eternity because when I looked again only a few minutes
had passed. Jake and I remained lost in our own private
thoughts.
I hoped my last thoughts before I lost consciousness
would be of Xavier. I tried to imagine a fairy-tale ending for
him with an adoring wife and five children. Phantom would
live with them and the house would be ful of music and
laughter. On Sundays he would coach the local Little
League team. Xavier would think of me from time to time,
usual y in moments of solitude. But he would think of me
only as a distant memory, as the high school sweetheart
who’d left a mark on his heart but was never destined to be
part of his future.
“You’re thinking about him, aren’t you?” Jake’s voice cut
through my reverie like a blade. “I don’t blame you. He
would never have done anything so stupid—he at least
protected you. You must despise me now more than you
ever did.”
“I don’t want to spend my last hours being angry, Jake,” I
said. “What’s done is done—there’s no point blaming you
now.”
“I promise I wil fix this, Bethany,” he said fiercely. “I won’t
let them harm you.” His refusal to accept the reality in front
of us was becoming irritating.
“Look, I know you’re used to cal ing the shots and al ,” I
said. “But even you can’t change this.”
“We could run,” Jake muttered, talking rapidly as his
mind desperately searched for solutions. “But al the exits
here are guarded. Even if we managed to outsmart the
guards we wouldn’t get far. Maybe I could bribe one of them
to let us into the Wasteland …”
I wasn’t real y listening. I didn’t want to hear his far-
fetched ideas and I wished he would just be quiet for a
while.
“We stil have time before dawn,” Jake continued, talking
to himself now. “I’l come up with something.”
23
Blood Sports
WHEN the Hades’ dawn broke, I wasn’t prepared for it and
neither was Jake. Voices outside in the hal blasted through
the silence and jolted us both out of our trance-like states. I
was surprised to find I hadn’t closed my eyes al night. I was
stil sitting stiffly under the covers, with my knees drawn up
to my chin. Jake sprang up from his position on the couch,
glaring at the door with a venomous expression.
“They’re here,” he announced in a voice ful of doom.
When the door opened it revealed an entourage that
included Diego, Asia, and several other demons I only
vaguely recognized. No less than four hulking bodyguards
accompanied them.
“Sure you’ve got enough backup there?” Jake growled,
his dark eyes flashing with fury.
“Big Daddy anticipated you might put up a fight,” Diego
gave him a lopsided grin and flicked his head in my
direction. “Take her.”
The tank-like guards stormed into the room and soon I
felt their vast hands close around my forearms, hauling me
easily out of bed like a rag dol . I was stil barefoot and in
my nightgown. I stumbled when they tied my wrists roughly
together with rope and used it to pul me unceremoniously
across the room.
“Don’t manhandle her!” Jake took a step toward me and
the other demons sprang, immediately closing in on him. It
was appal ing to see his brothers and sisters turn on him so
quickly. In the chaos, he disappeared from view and al I
could hear was a chorus of vicious snarling and spitting.
The fear was beginning to wel up in me now and I couldn’t
stop myself from shaking.
“Beth!” I could hear Jake cal ing to me, his voice fil ed
with desperation. “Beth, I won’t let them go through with it!”
But I didn’t believe him and I could tel he didn’t either. Al
conviction was gone from his voice.
The guards pushed me roughly down the passage and
headed for the lobby. The others fol owed, casual y chatting
among themselves. When I caught her eye, Asia winked at
me. In the lobby, Tucker appeared out of nowhere, his face
a mask of distress. I could tel from the haunted look in his
eyes that he’d heard the news. I tried not to look at him as
we passed. I didn’t want to make him feel any worse.
“Beth!” he yel ed as the procession passed him. He
lunged forward, trying to fight his way through the throng of
demons to reach me. Nash snapped his fingers, and with a
sickening crunch, Tuck’s legs buckled beneath him. He
cried out and I heard the sharp crack of bones breaking as
he crumpled to the ground. I craned my neck to look back at
him as I was shoved through the revolving glass doors.
“It’s okay, Tuck,” I cal ed. “I’l be okay!” I glared furiously at
Nash, who was striding casual y alongside me. “Fix him,” I
said in a thin voice. “Your vendetta against me has nothing
to do with him.”
“You’re real y not in a position to be making demands,”
Nash replied pleasantly.
A fleet of black Escalades was waiting for us in the tunnel
outside the hotel. I was bundled brusquely into the front one,
sitting between Asia and Diego. Up close, they reeked of
cigarette smoke, hard liquor, and pungent perfume. I slid
down in my seat and tried to regulate my breathing, tel ing
myself I wasn’t truly going to die. Something would happen;
someone would come to my rescue. They had to.
“Take us to the Ninth Circle,” Diego told the driver. “And
take the back route.”
“At least you get to check out from Big Daddy’s pad,”
Asia told me. “How’s that for VIP treatment?”
I bit my lip and didn’t respond. I focused on the gliding of
the car as it sped through the pockmarked underground
tunnels of Hades. The fear had crept from my bel y into my
chest now and was snaking its icy fingers up my throat,
cutting off my air supply. I swal owed hard, determined not
to give them the satisfaction of seeing me lose control.
To get to the Ninth Circle we had to travel deeper
underground and when the cars stopped I saw that we were
in a vast and ancient amphitheater at the very core of the
earth, its center strewn with red sand. The stands were
packed as if the entire populace of Hades had been invited
to witness this momentous event. Lucifer and the seven
other Originals occupied the sheltered seats in the highest
tier, where they watched the proceedings with zeal, as if
they were expecting a show. Human servants refil ed their
goblets and offered platters of food. On a raised platform in
the center of the arena rose a tal wooden stake. Its base
had been driven into the ground. A pile of dry sticks and
straw had been arranged in a pyramid around it. The
flammable material reached halfway up the stake, around
where I calculated my waist would be.
The executioner was not a hooded medieval figure as I’d
expected but a man in a business suit, his clothes so
understated he might have passed for a bank clerk. It was
only his sunken gray cheeks and colorless lips that made
him look like death personified. When his scabby hands
reached for me my skin crawled at his cold touch. Although
he was withered looking I was no match for his wiry
strength. He untied my wrists and pinned my arms behind
me so that I was pressed against the stake. I remained
motionless as he used even thicker ropes to bind my arms,
waist, and feet to the stake. He pul ed the ropes so tight
they chafed and cut into my skin. The sticks and straw bit at
my bare feet and ankles, but I couldn’t move an inch. The
crowd watched the proceedings with a sense of mounting
excitement. I tried to keep my eyes turned upward and to
dissociate myself with what was happening to my body. But
I couldn’t keep my thoughts from taking a gruesome turn.
How long would it take for a victim to burn—minutes or
hours? Did the body burn in sections from the feet up?
Would I pass out from the pain before my skin began to
melt? Would physical burning or asphyxiation be the actual
cause of death?
When he was satisfied that I was securely tied, the
executioner stood back to survey his work. Someone in the
crowd passed him a rusty can of gasoline and he began to
douse the straw with it. The caustic smel wafted up and
burned my nostrils. My heart was beating so fast, I thought it
would explode through my rib cage. The metal ic taste of
fear fil ed my mouth, but I didn’t cry out, scream, or beg for
mercy. My mind and body were churning relentlessly, but I
didn’t let the terror show on my face.
“This,” the executioner croaked in my ear, “is what
happens to those who serve the wrong master. Heaven’s
gone bankrupt, haven’t you heard?” He jumped off the
platform.
Lucifer rose to his feet and the crowd fel instantly silent.
He looked around for a moment, his eyes seeming to
absorb everything, down to the last minute detail. He didn’t
speak, just slowly raised his hand as a signal for the
execution to begin.
It was the simplest, most casual gesture, but it resulted in
the crowd letting out an uproarious cheer. His power over
them was absolute. It was frightening to watch how they
both feared and adored him. When he motioned for silence
the result was instantaneous and every sound was
extinguished as if someone had flicked a switch. A deep
hush fel over the crowd as the executioner struck a long
match, held it aloft for a moment, and then dropped it with a
theatrical sweep of his arm onto the gasoline-doused
construction. The flames roared up with lightning speed.