Read Beautiful Salvation Online

Authors: Jennifer Blackstream

Tags: #Angels, #Cupid, #Demon, #Erotic Romance, #Erotica, #Erotic Paranormal Romance, #Fairy Tales, #Fantasy Romance, #Historical Paranormal Romance, #Love Stories, #Love Story, #Mermaids, #Paranormal Romance, #Romance, #Shifters, #Vampires, #Witch, #Witches, #Gods

Beautiful Salvation (22 page)

BOOK: Beautiful Salvation
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“We can’t let that happen.” Etienne growled, giving the belt one last jerk.
 

 

Saamal let his chin fall to his chest for a moment, breathing through the pain. “I don’t have the power to stop her.”

 

“Then we’ll all help.” Etienne stalked over to the table near Aiyana’s bed and snatched up the pitcher of water and a clean towel. “Between the five of us—”

 

“Cipactli does not want power, Etienne,” Saamal ground out. “This is not Sanguenay. This is Mu, and ours is a kingdom forged in flesh and blood. The pact that was ours to honor has been broken. Cipactli is not asking for anything to which she is not entitled.”

 

“Then you’ll just let her eat whomever she wants?” Etienne gaped at him, the pitcher tilting precariously in his grasp. “Women, children?”

 

“No,” Saamal snapped. He tried to sit up, wincing at the violent tremors that tried to shake the flesh from his bones. “She is mollified, at least in part, for now. I must wake Aiyana and her family. The sacrifices must be reinstated.”

 

“You’ve been trying to wake Aiyana—we’ve all been trying to wake Aiyana. What do we know now that will help us wake her when up to this point we’ve failed?”

 

Saamal sucked in deep breaths as he managed to get to a sitting position, the exertion forcing a sweat to break out on his forehead. His skin was cold, clammy—a result of blood loss. He blinked, trying to focus on Adonis’ words. “Up until this point, there has been hope for me to save my kingdom. But now my people hover on the brink of death, the end of my world. There is only one option left to me.”

 

“I don’t like the sound of this,” Etienne muttered.

 

He knelt on the ground beside Saamal’s bed, eyeing the wound where Saamal’s left foot had been. He held the towel under the bloody stump and poured water gently over it. The water pitcher and cloth hung forgotten by his sides, the water spilling onto the floor in a growing puddle. Saamal pressed his lips into a thin line, tension singing in his hands as he gripped the bed, fighting the pain as the werewolf started cleaning the wound. Etienne was being as careful as he could, but the flesh was raw, the nerves exposed. Cipactli had not been gentle.

 

Adonis stepped closer to Saamal. “What are you going to do?”

 

“I’m going to give Aiyana the rest of my power. Perhaps if she had all of it, she could somehow free herself from Chumana’s curse.”

 

Saamal hesitated, an image of Aiyana’s smiling face lighting up his mind. He remembered her father’s words, spoken in the passion of a parent for the welfare of his child. The old man had been willing to sacrifice his kingdom for his daughter. Saamal’s heart ached and he closed his eyes. If only he could see her father now. He wanted to tell the old king he understood.

 

“Saamal, you can’t do that. If you give up the rest of your power, you’ll be mortal. You know as well as I do that this is not the time to make yourself helpless, and even with all of our help, you wouldn’t be safe from the enemies you’ve made.” Etienne scowled and stood, crossing his arms. “A terrible plan. Perhaps you need lessons from the vampire as well.”

 

“The werewolf is right,” Adonis agreed. “You can’t do that. There has to be another way.”

 

“I have to.” Saamal braced himself for the pain as he tried to sit up once again.

 

Adonis snorted. “I suppose I should have been more clear. You’re not going anywhere.”

 

“Yes, I am.” Saamal clenched his teeth. “I appreciate all you’ve done, but this is how it must end.” He shifted his legs to slide them off the bed.

 

Adonis put a hand on his chest. It was a simple gesture, and the demon didn’t press very hard, but a demon was no mortal. His strength was such that his hand may as well have been a stone monolith. Saamal couldn’t budge.

 

Anger rose like a serpent inside him, spitting fire and writhing in helpless fury. “You would hold me here while my people die?”

 

Adonis flinched and averted his eyes, but he didn’t move his hand. “Saamal, we will do everything in our power to protect your people. But I won’t let you make a decision you won’t even live to regret.”

 

“There is no other way!” Desperation joined his anger and Saamal wished he had energy to spare, anything he could afford to waste forcing the demon away from him.

 

“Are there wolves in your kingdom?” Etienne asked suddenly.

 

Saamal flicked his gaze from Adonis to Etienne. “Yes.”

 

Etienne nodded. “I can call wolves here. We will patrol the kingdom, try to keep your people from Cipactli’s pits.”

 

Adonis tensed, shooting Saamal a glare as if warning him not to move. He strode to where Etienne stood at the window. Etienne paused, arching an eyebrow at the demon, but Adonis motioned for him to continue. “Call them. I’m going to give you a little astral boost.”

 

Etienne narrowed his eyes as the demon put his hands on his shoulders, but he turned to the window. Tilting back his head, Etienne let a howl spill from his lips. The long, keening sound poured through the air like liquid moonlight, almost tangible as it echoed out into the chaotic sky. There was an eerie resonance to the howl, a reverberation that cast it out even farther until it seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere. After he’d finally closed his mouth again, Etienne shook his head.

 

“A strange feeling,” he muttered, rolling his shoulders.

 

Adonis obligingly dropped his hands and stepped back. “Perhaps. But every wolf in the kingdom will have heard you, as well as a great deal from the surrounding kingdoms. That howl echoed on the astral plane. Part of a werewolf’s spirit can hear the astral plane. Every werewolf in the five kingdoms will have heard that howl, and if they’re inclined to help, they’ll be here.”

 

“I may be able to help you somewhat as well, Etienne,” Saamal spoke up, viciously ignoring the traitorous spark of hope that threatened his previous resolve for his death curse. Adonis frowned as he sat up, but Saamal ignored him and gestured for the werewolf to come closer. Etienne stepped up to his side and Saamal put a hand on his forehead. “
Ocetotl.

 

Etienne shivered and shook himself like a wolf ridding its fur of water. “What was that?” He blinked, his eyes flaring brighter gold as energy infused the air around him. Shadows rose to the surface of his skin, sprinkled over his neck, shoulders, and back like faint tattoos in the form of jaguar rosettes.

 

“I have given you the gift of speaking with jaguars.” Saamal eased himself back onto the bed as exhaustion penalized him for the energy expenditure. He decided against pointing out the physical manifestation of the ability, not certain Etienne would appreciate the spots. “My cats will listen to you as your wolves do now. Let them help you.”

 

Etienne started to leave through the main doorway, but Saamal called out to him.

 

“There is a secret passageway in the corner. If you take the path to the right, it will lead you out into the garden. The garden is the last lush place in the kingdom, it will be the safest.”

 

As Etienne vanished into the passageway, Adonis turned back to Saamal. “You need to get some of your power back. We can’t have you this weak. You’re the one tied to the land, our ability to help will be limited. Is there anything we can do to reenergize you?”

 

Saamal eased his head back. “Cipactli’s hunger is too great, anything that strengthens the land will go to her. There is nothing that will help me but rest.”

 

“Or Aiyana,” Adonis pointed out. “How did that go?”

 

The mention of his bride-to-be brought warmth to Saamal’s heart, a strange sensation given the unrest surrounding him. He smiled. “She agreed to marry me.”

 

Adonis’ eyes widened. “That’s it then. You can marry her on the astral plane and get your power back.”

 

Saamal shook his head. “Marrying her on the astral plane was my means of convincing Chumana that she has no cause to continue striving to be my wife. For the prophecy to come true, Aiyana must marry me on the physical plane, where we can stand on the earth and offer our blood to the land.”

 

“Is there anything you people do that doesn’t involve blood?” Adonis muttered.

 

Saamal ignored the sour note in his voice, still thinking of Aiyana. “She will be a great queen.”

 


If
we can wake her up,” Adonis insisted stubbornly. “Are you
certain
kiss of Death meant your kiss and not actual death?”

 

Rage surged through Saamal and he lunged off the bed, grabbing Adonis by the arm as he stumbled, his body trying to slump to the floor. The incubus bellowed in pain as Saamal’s claws pierced his flesh, holding him in a falcon’s grip. The stump of his left leg thudded against the floor and Saamal used the blistering agony that rushed through him to bolster his resolve. His body trembled, but he was able to get his right foot under him, helped by his merciless grip on Adonis’ arm.

 

“You will not lay a finger on her,” Saamal seethed, digging his claws in a little farther. “I will never hear you speak of her death again.”

 

Adonis opened eyes gone crimson with his own rage. Smoke curled out of his nostrils and when he spoke, his voice was muffled by the mouthful of jagged teeth. “I would never hurt Aiyana, you colossal fool.” His voice rasped against his vocal cords, an evil, sibilant sound. “Though I would point out that that is very likely something your future queen would do only too willingly if she thought it would save her people. But then, I suppose willing sacrifice is only for those people whose names you don’t know.”

 

Saamal jerked back, his claws sliding free of Adonis’ flesh. The demon didn’t break eye contact, didn’t even flinch as his skin began to close on its own. His wings rose and fell with his steady breaths as his glowing eyes continued to bore into Saamal’s.

 

“I know their names.” Saamal’s voice was low and he didn’t look away from Adonis’ fiery stare.

 

“But you didn’t care for them, didn’t love them,” the demon said evenly. “Their sacrifice was just duty to you, something honorable they did to honor Cipactli. Not the same when it’s someone you love, is it? Makes you wonder about the families of all those willing sacrifices.”

 

Saamal gaped at Adonis, taken aback by the venom in his voice, the steel in his resolve. “Where is the shameless incubus with a grin for every situation and a notable penchant for not taking anything seriously?”

 

Adonis crossed his arms, biceps bulging with the motion, making shadows dance across the red flush of his skin. “That’s all you see, isn’t it? I wasn’t born a prince, I don’t care about politics, I don’t brood over this curse or that. Have you truly not noticed that there is one thing I take
very
seriously?”

 

Sex was the first thing that came to Saamal’s mind, but he wisely kept his mouth shut, cautious about pushing the demon any farther. Adonis shook his head.

 

“Love. Romantic love, familial love, it doesn’t matter. Love is worth anything and everything and just because I’m smiling and enjoying it, doesn’t mean it’s not something I always take very,
very
seriously.”

 

“I love Aiyana.” The words came out on a breath, like a shared confession.

 

Adonis sighed, his wings drooping. He tilted his head, his ebony horns catching the torchlight. When he looked at Saamal again, the anger was gone from his eyes and a knowing resignation had taken its place. “Did you tell her?”

 
Chapter Nine
 
 

Aiyana stared dumbly at the spot where Saamal had been only moments ago. She could still feel the heat of his mouth on her lips, his breath against her face.
“Marry me.”
Her heart beat against her ribcage like a beast trying to escape. She’d agreed. She’d agreed to marry him and she’d been so happy. Then he’d…vanished. Tears burned her eyes, and Saamal’s face, twisted with pain, hovered before her eyes.

 

“Your Majesty, what’s happened?”

 

“Something went wrong.” She raised her eyes to find Okomi standing in front of her, gardening spade in one hand, dirt smudged on his cheek. The sight of the shaman tugged at her spirit, trying to get it to rise, but there was so much he didn’t know, so much she had to explain if she wanted his help. “Okomi, I don’t know where to begin…”

BOOK: Beautiful Salvation
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