Byzamoth squeezed. Weakly, Wraith stabbed the pointed end of the top into Byzamoth’s eye. The fallen angel reared back. Finally free, Wraith punched a dagger into the fallen angel’s gut. It sank deep, and Byzamoth hit the deck.
“Mother,” Wraith rasped, “is going to have to wait.” With a snarl, he slashed Byzamoth’s throat. The fallen angel’s neck opened up all the way to his spine. Blood flowed in a river, but the holy site seemed to be ready. Steam billowed up as the blood burned to ash. Quickly, Wraith slit his own wrist, let the blood drain into the wound.
Instantly, Byzamoth went up in smoke.
That was it? Wraith had thought an angel’s death would somehow be more dramatic.
Outside, demons shrieked as they, too, began to flame. Wraith looked down at himself, made sure he wasn’t on fire. So far, so good. Except for the fist-sized hole in his gut.
He seized the amulet from the floor where it had fallen when Byzamoth poofed, and staggered out of the Dome of the Rock. In the distance, Eidolon moved from human to human, healing where he could. Nearby, Tayla barked out orders to the less severely injured Guardians. Luc was rendering aid and looking a little worse for wear himself, but he appeared to have all his body parts. Near the Harrowgate, Reaver was spreadeagled on the ground, chains holding him down.
Wraith gathered Kynan’s body in his arms and limped down steps that were tacky with burned demon remains and human blood. Eidolon looked up from healing a guy wearing what looked like a Spanish military uniform, his expression falling when he saw Kynan.
“Is he…”
“Yeah.”
Still, E’s dermoire lit up as he lay his hand on Kynan. “Ah, f**k.” His arm fell away.
“Yeah.” Wraith cocked his head toward Reaver as Eidolon channeled a healing wave into him. “Someone needs to help the angel. I’m going to Serena.” He looked down at Kynan’s limp body. “And Gem.”
Lore had to take a leak. He had no idea how long he’d been sitting in the hall of what he’d figured out was an Aegis house, but he really could use an opportunity to stretch his legs and hit the bathroom. Why the f**k his brothers had brought him here instead of leaving him at the hospital was beyond his comprehension
Being chained up there was just as good as being chained up here, and likely less hazardous to his health, given how the Guardians eyed him like they wanted to drag him outside and use him for target practice.
The door across from him opened, and Shade came out of the room.
“So.” Shade crossed the hall and stopped in front of Lore. “What’s your deal? We haven’t had a chance to chat.”
“Too bad, too, because you seem like such a nice guy,” Lore drawled.
Shade thunked him in the forehead with his palm. “Says the guy who tried to kill his own brothers.”
“Yeah, about that.” Lore glanced down at his arm, and then glanced at the matching set of markings that marched their way up Shade’s forearm. “I know you and your brothers are a breed of incubi. So I’m guessing I am, too?”
“What did you think you were?”
“Dude, I didn’t even know I was a demon until I was in my twenties.”
Shade gave him a you’re-a-dumbass look. “The fact that you were born with a dermoire wasn’t a clue?”
“Dermoire? That’s what it’s called?” At Shade’s nod, Lore shook his head. “I wasn’t born with it. It appeared when I was twenty.” He remembered the hell he’d gone through immediately prior to the appearance of the markings, the insane desire to have constant sex when, for twenty years, he’d not even gotten an erection.
“It appeared when you were twenty?” Shade frowned. “What species was your mother?”
“Human.”
“Well, there’s one piece of the puzzle. You’re a cambion. Half-breed. Which is why we can’t sense you.” He looked down the hall where two Aegis slayers weren’t even attempting to be covert as they watched them. Shade flipped them off and turned back to Lore. “So your human mother named you Lore?”
“Loren,” he mumbled.
Shade eyed him with sympathy. Because, yeah, Shade was such a great name. “When were you born?”
“Eighteen-eighty.”
“Then you were one of our father’s firsts. Idiot either didn’t know any better than to impregnate a human, or he was already off his rocker.”
“You know, I’m not feeling the love here.” Lore shifted, wincing at the tingles shooting up his leg, which had fallen asleep.
“Our father got off on f**king things he shouldn’t.”
Lore had no idea what that was supposed to mean, but Shade’s tone didn’t invite questions, and really, Lore had more to worry about than his deadbeat dad’s choice of bedmates. Besides, Lore didn’t have a lot of room to judge.
“Where is he?”
“Dead.” He gestured to Lore’s dermoire. “What’s your gift?”
“Gift?” Lore laughed. “Is that what you call it? Can you kill everything you touch, too?”
Shade cocked an eyebrow. “I can kill with my gift, but I have to make an effort to use it that way. Its primary purpose is to force ovulation in females.”
Since Shade was an incubus, that made sense. “Can all Seminus demons do that?”
“Wraith can get inside female heads and make them receptive to sex. Eidolon can ensure an egg is fertilized. You said you kill everything you touch?”
“Yeah. Except it didn’t affect Eidolon.”
“Could be the brother thing… or it could be because E had activated his own gift, and maybe they countered each other.”
It had to be the sibling thing. Lore had never hurt his sister with his touch, either. “So why is my gift all f**ked up?”
“Probably has something to do with the cambion thing. We’re not meant to breed with humans. Stuff tends to go wrong with the offspring. Obviously.”
“Is there anything else I should know about? You know, that might go wrong?”
Shade appeared to consider that. “Oh, hey, you’re probably sterile. You know how when a donkey and a horse or a water sprite and a fire sprite—”
“I got the picture,” Lore snapped. For some reason, the sterile thing annoyed the shit out of him, but he had no idea why, since he couldn’t f**king have sex without killing his partner. Having kids was a moot point.
Shade said something under his breath about him being high-strung. “So why did you think killing me and Eidolon would be a good idea?”
“Some dude named Roag paid me.”
“And you didn’t know who he was?” Shade threw back his head and laughed, but the sound wasn’t one of amusement. “That sick sonofabitch.”
“Can I get in on the joke?”
“He was our brother.”
“Brother? As in, that sick f**k, too?”
“Yep. No doubt he knew who you were all along. I’ll bet he had it arranged so that when you got the money for killing us, you’d learn the truth.”
Fun guy, his insane brother. Of course, the one in front of him didn’t strike him as a load of laughs, either. “I’m glad he’s dead.”
“Well, he’s not exactly dead. But he’s suffering a fate worse than death. Trust me.”
A commotion in the front room brought Shade to his feet. The pounding of heavy footsteps and hushed curses heralded the arrival of something… not good.
Wraith stalked into the hall, his arms cradling a body. The human male, Kynan. Oh, cool.
Gem’s scream pierced the silence, and his feeling of satisfaction shattered.
“No… no… no!” She’d been in the room with the sick woman, and now she stood in the doorway, disbelief and horror etched on her face. She backed away, hand over her mouth, shaking her head, and as Lore watched, she stumbled and fell to the floor.
Wraith moved slowly down the hall toward the bedroom, his eyes closed, but his aim never wavering. Shade uttered a soft curse and moved aside as Wraith took the body to Gem and laid it before her.
“No, Wraith… no!” She grabbed his hand, pleading with him to make Kynan not be dead.
Shade and Wraith both bowed their heads until Gem collapsed on top of Kynan, her sobs wracking her body.
Wraith seemed to weigh a thousand pounds as he went to Serena.
No one in the room seemed to know what to do, but Gem’s cries lanced Lore’s heart. He should use this opportunity to comfort her, to take advantage of her loss. Had he been the one to kill Kynan, that’s what he would have done.
But seeing her suffer wasn’t pleasant.
“Shade.” The guy didn’t move. “Shade!”
“What?” He was still standing, head bowed.
“Release me.”
“Fuck off.”
“Shade.” Lore swallowed, knowing this was crazy and that it might not work because he didn’t know how Kynan had died, but he had to try. “I might be able to help.” He kept his voice low, not wanting to give any false hope.
Shade turned, slowly, eyes bloodshot and narrowed. “If this is a trick, know that I have no problem killing a sibling.”
Lore gave a single nod, and Shade crouched, released the chains holding him.
With Shade on his heels, he moved to Gem and Kynan. She was draped over him, her face buried in his throat.
Drawing a deep breath, Lore crouched at Kynan’s feet. He grasped the human’s still-warm ankle. He concentrated, let his “gift” work its way down his shoulder to his fingers, until his markings glowed. A wave of energy spread up the human’s leg, into his torso, his chest, his extremities.
The heart sparked. But the body was drained of blood, and it took several precious minutes for his marrow to start churning, creating new blood to fill his veins.
Gem turned to Lore, her eyes nearly swollen shut, but possessive anger shone through her misery. “Get away from him!”