Read Legacy & Spellbound Online
Authors: Nancy Holder
Soon, a hole big enough to crawl through materialized at waist height; Eli bent down and climbed through, his fist still tight around the scrying stone. He had not forgotten that his purpose was rescuing Nicole, and he knew that he might have to wait for the proper moment to battle the Golem. Where there was one Golem there could easily be another. And another.
As soon as he got through the hole, he trailed the massive stone construct. He was still on alert for guards, and still baffled that none advanced on him.
Then all hell broke loose, and he realized he'd been right: It was a trap.
As the Golem whirled around and began swinging
its ax at him, what had looked to be crumbling pieces of the stone had now detached from the walls and flung themselves at him. They were misshapen creatures made up of gelatinous bodies and long, taloned arms. They slashed at him as they catapulted themselves toward him.
Skilled warlock that he was, he immediately protected himself with a spherical barrier, aiming fireballs at the projectiles and deflecting the swinging ax of the Golem. He was aware of a blur of larger shapes racing around the sphere; and when he had a moment to look at them, he almost lost his rhythm: Three more Golems had joined the first. One had an ax, one a mace, and one a net of chain mail, such as Roman gladiators had once used. All of them were battering at the sphere; and he realized his only chance to survive would be to keep the sphere intact. That was made more difficult by the fireballs he was lobbing at the enemy.
More of the wall-creatures pushed off from the walls and slammed against the sphere, flattening and collapsing into heaps of gelatinous goo as they slid down the sides of the sphere to the floor. There were perhaps a dozen of them now. The four Golems continued to hack and batter the sphere, and its integrity began to give way. It wobbled and began to crack.
Then the Golem with the mace raised the weapon high over its head. The spiked ball of metal crashed down with a bone-jarring impact, and the force of the blow sheered off the topmost section of the sphere. Eli was now trapped inside like an animal in a burrow.
An animal â¦
he thought, as he dropped to his knees.
An animal.
Keeping his calm, he closed his eyes and focused his magical strength, seeing each feather clearly, each shining talon, the beady eyes and greedy beak:
Fantasme,
he called.
I summon you across the faceless void⦠.
Now the Golem with the broadsword arced his blade into the side of the sphere. Cracks like lightning flashes jagged all over the surface, obscuring Eli's vision.
Fantasme â¦
Three of the strange gelatinous creatures scrabbled to the top of the sphere, rose on their haunches, and dive-bombed inside. One of them landed on Eli's head and immediately began digging into his scalp with his long, sharp fingers. Eli roared with pain and grabbed the creature with both his hands; its body squirted between his fingers, and he flung it away from himself, disgusted.
The second one took up where the first one had left off, and Eli smashed that one too. The third had
landed inside the sphere at his feet and was trying to crawl up his pant leg; with a grunt, he pushed it off with the sole of his high-top and stomped on it.
Two of the Golems rammed the sphere with their shoulders, trying to roll it onto its side. Eli was tossed to his knees; he spread his arms to prevent himself from slipping forward along the curved surface like a hamster in a wheel.
Fantasme!
he commanded.
“There he is!” someone shouted in English, and Eli was aware that human troops had just entered the tunnel.
As if they need reinforcements,
he thought. He took the opportunity of the rolling sphere's condition to lob fireballs out of what had once been the top, and now was an open side. He caught the first two human soldiers, who were wearing what looked to be black leather jackets and trousers. The men burst into flame and fell shrieking to the ground.
Damn you, Fantasme, come!
None of the men bothered to help the two who were burning to death. One was blocked by the Golems; it was almost humorous to watch him struggle to bully them out of his way. They paid him absolutely no mind, only kept on taking chunks out of the sphere.
And that is not funny.
The Golem with the mace reached inside, grabbing Eli around the neck. It began to squeeze. The rough dirt of the creature's flesh sanded Eli's neck. Eli grabbed his hands around the thing's thick wrists and fought for air. In another moment or two, the Golem would crush his windpipe ⦠and he would be dead.
Bird,
he thought, his brain a roar of words he could no longer bring to mind.
My servant â¦
An explosion rocked the tunnel. The Golem with its hands around Eli's neck was thrown backward. Eli was yanked out of the sphere and onto its chest. The impact loosened its grip, and Eli savagely lobbed a fire-ball directly into its face.
It made no noise, simply went limp, letting go of its weapon. Eli was surprisedâhe'd had no idea fire could harm Golems; the fireball had been a reflexive attempt to protect himselfâand then he saw a small piece of paper curling into ash inside the Golem's mouth. Of course. As creations of ancient Jewish magic, one activated a Golem by writing a magic spell on a piece of paper and placing it inside its mouth. His fireball had destroyed the spell.
Seizing the moment to gather his wits, he caused a great wall of flame to ignite, sealing off the majority of the guards and the monsters as they raced into the
tunnel. Left with a small band to fight, he poured on the aggression and started taking them out one by one by one, as fast as he could.
There was another explosion. Eli mentally took note of it but otherwise spared no attention. The battle at hand took all his focus ⦠but he knew that if he lived through it, he would have to deal with whatever was coming next.
There was a third explosion, and the ceiling of the tunnel began to shake apart into huge chunks of stone, crashing down on the gelatinous creatures and the Golem with the broadsword, which had just been about to lunge forward toward Eli. Eli immediately shielded himself with a spell, yet the barrage was so incredible that he rolled into a ball and covered his head with his hands. Then, realizing how vulnerable to attack he was allowing himself to be, he rolled onto his side and staggered to his feet as the floor beneath him cracked apart. One huge jagged mass of it collided with another, forcing both pieces upward like a mountain.
His wall of flame held; yet, incredibly, something so massive rose up behind it that Eli saw its silhouette through the rippling tongues of flame. Then it strode through the fiery curtain, sending the third Golem flying with a punch of its gigantic fist.
It was a hideous creature, leathery and black, approximately ten feet high. As it shambled toward Eli, it had to duck to avoid hitting the top of the tunnel. Its face was an elongated rectangle ending in a strange triangular configuration of flesh and feathers. Its eyes were huge, and there were no irises, only pupils at least half a foot across. Instead of arms, large, fleshy appendages were covered with quills. Its feet were clawed, resembling those of a hawk.
The thing opened its mouth and made a high-pitched, eerie wail. With a start, Eli realized who and what it was: It was the spirit of the falcon, Fantasme, materialized in some bizarre manifestation he had never seen before. “You heard me,” he blurted.
The bird-creature reached forward with its arm-parts, scooped up Eli against its chest, and whirled around, lunging forward and opening an enormous mouth at the end of its snout. Its jaws cracked open and expanded; another set of jaws extended forward and ripped open the throat of a gelatinous creature that was sailing through the air in an attempt to land on its back.
Bits of goo flew everywhere. Then Fantasme turned back around and began to lope through the tunnel.
The two remaining Golems took off after it. Craning his neck to see, Eli watched them draw near,
then recede as Fantasme picked up speed. The tunnel was filling with smoke and a horrible burnt odor. The acrid, oily smoke poured into Eli's throat before he had a chance to protect himself. He began to cough, his eyes watered. Fantasme gazed down at him and squawked in its incomprehensible speech. Then it jerked toward him and, before Eli could respond, it had engulfed his head inside its beak. It inhaled, exhaled; Eli understood. Fantasme was giving him fresher air to breathe.
The act probably saved Eli's life, and he kept his head inside Fantasme's beak as the bird-creature raced faster, and faster still, hunched protectively around Eli like a quarterback around a football.
He didn't know how long Fantasme ranâit seemed like hoursâbut the hot, moist breath of the bird grew stale and smoky, as it undoubtedly drew in the poisonous air around itself, filtering as best it could before offering it to Eli. Weakening and feeling ill, he could feel his grip around Fantasme loosening, but the creature held him tightly, and Eli felt a rush of gratitude as they loped along. Throughout the centuries, Fantasme had been a good and faithful servant of his family, in whatever incarnation the bird presented itself.
Of course, that faithfulness had been dearly purchased â¦
with the blood of many, many virgins⦠.
But now, he was growing fainter. The air was too polluted; he was suffocating inside Fantasme's mouth. His fingers went limp, and his arm dangled at his side, jangling like a spring as the bird carried him through the dungeon of the castle on Avalon.
I'm not going to die,
he thought angrily.
I'm a Deveraux. We don't do that.
Then everything faded, and his soul screamed in terror, for fear that the Horned God would devour it, and gray and spiritless oblivion would be its final reward.
When he woke up, Nicole was bent over him with her mouth over his. He smelled a delicious fragrance of cloves and roses and inhaled greedily. Witch breath. Magic breath. She was apparently unaware that he had regained consciousness, and he made his lungs rise with the air that she was breathing into his mouth. She was giving him mouth-to-mouth, and he loved it.
She was so intent on what she was doing that when he gently touched his tongue to hers, she continued to work on him.
Then her dark, deep-set eyes gazed directly into his own, and she broke contact.
With a grunt, she sat up and narrowed her eyes, on guard. He made a show of coughing and rolling onto
his side, spasming and clenching and unclenching his fists.
She pounded on his back. He grinned to himself and made himself cough a few more times.
“Eli, wake up. Get me the hell out of here,” she demanded harshly. “The water's rising.”
The water?
Dropping his act, he sat up, realizing that it wasn't so much of an act after allâhe was incredibly weak, and the caveâ
the cave?â
was spinning around him like a crazed merry-go-round.
“That thing broke me out and brought us both to this cave,” she said, pointing to a place behind. He turned. Sure enough, Fantasme loomed protectively over him, its beady eyes reflecting back nothing but the darkness. There was a source of light somewhere in the cave, and Eli glanced around in search of it. A small globe bobbled beside Nicole.
She must have created it,
he thought, and reminded himself sternly that she was a Cahors witch and, as such, still his enemy. The old days of high school and her having the hots for him belonged to two inhabitants of a past, foreign country.
“If this is a plan to deliver me to your father or James, I'll kill you,” she said. As if to prove that she had
the moxie to do it, she pulled a dagger on him and held it to his throat.
Fantasme lunged toward her, but Eli held up a restraining hand and said, “Back.”
He recognized the dagger from rituals he had performed with James. It was one of his athames. Wicked-sharp, it had sliced through the breast of a goat with one easy strokeâbut he doubted Nicole knew that.
“I'm not here to give you to James or my father,” he said. “I'm here to rescue you. Period.”
“Why?” she demanded.
He thought about telling her that he loved her, but she would never believe that. Or that he wanted her, which she would probably find offensive. So he told her the truth. “You're powerful, and you're valuable. I need some bargaining chips. You're good in my back pocket.” He chuckled at his nonsensical but vaguely sexual turn of phrase.
“Don't you touch me,” she said savagely, showing her teeth like a feral cat. That turned him on. “Don't you so much as get near me.”
“No worries.” He held up his hands. “Down, Sheba.” Then he smiled and said, “But if I need mouth-to-mouth again, I'll be sure to let you know.”
“I saved your life,” she hissed. “But not out of any
compassion for you, Eli. I need you to get me out of here. But if you try anything, I'll kill you.”
Fantasme took another step forward. Again, Eli motioned to it to stay put.
“Fair enough, babe,” he tossed off. “Same here. Let's agree to a truce until we're out of this mess.”
“And then ⦠?”
“Then we'll see where we're at. As we used to say back when we were kids.”
She scowled at him. “I never talked like that. Neither did you. Your father did, maybe. He was always trying so hard to be âcool.'” She tossed her hair, and it was hard for him not to grab her and kiss her. He loved sassy, bitchy chicks.
“My dad is cool,” he retorted.
“You know what, Eli? I really don't care,”
she said. She was dressed in a shapeless rustling gown of satin and black lace, which was quite fetching on her. It was richly embroidered with Cahors silver at the low-cut bodice and long sleeves, which half-covered the backs of her hands. Though she had been a prisoner slated for death, she was also the bride of a Mooreâuntil such time as she was the dead bride of a Moore. Her dark, curly hair had grown since they'd been together, and it was twisted at the sides and hung long down her back. She was incredibly beautiful.