Forged of Shadows: A Novel of the Marked Souls (12 page)

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Authors: Jessa Slade

Tags: #Paranormal, #Fiction, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Romantic suspense fiction, #Supernatural, #Historical, #Demonology, #Good and evil

BOOK: Forged of Shadows: A Novel of the Marked Souls
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He glanced back at her. From the glint of violet in his eye, she knew he was responding to her simmering violence.
“Let’s go, then,” she prodded. Anything to get away from the scene of the crime.
He took a long drink of the water. She couldn’t help but trace the line of his throat with her eyes. With the rain behind him, her overwrought senses tricked her with the feel of cool water in her own mouth. She swallowed hard to clear the sensation. She wasn’t interested in living in his skin, no matter how good he had felt moving against her.
She’d seen how being wrapped in another person only led to both souls smothering. She could only imagine how much worse it was when the demon-pocked souls in question had all the structural integrity of a
Star Trek
spaceship at the forty-eight-minute commercial break.
In two separate bubbles of silence, they descended to the street.
To Jilly’s relief, the herb shop was closed, and Lau- lau was nowhere in sight.
Liam stalked across the street toward a dark town car. Jilly hung back as the window went down, but Liam seemed unsurprised.
The man inside studied them. “Lost the audio.”
“Technical glitch,” Liam said.
“ESF readings caught the spike. So she made the transition.”
Jilly angled closer. “ ‘She’ is a badass demon-exterminating mama now, heading for another shopping spree in your weapons room, who hates being talked about like she’s not here.”
The man lifted one eyebrow. “But doesn’t mind referring to herself in the third person.”
After a moment, she grinned. “Presumptuousness is okay when I’m doing it. I’m Jilly.”
His dark brown eyes glinted with amusement. “Archer. Sera’s mate.”
It was her turn to lift an eyebrow. “Mate.”
“She’s still working on a scientific term that doesn’t make me want to smash something.”
“I’ve heard compromise is the heart of any good relationship.” She tried to sound encouraging.
He just shrugged. “She is my heart.”
The flat finality of his voice—leaving no room for argument—set her back a step. To proclaim himself with such irrevocable simplicity . . . For a heartbeat, she thought she could hate Sera, and not just for her size-four ass.
Liam growled under his breath and opened the car door. “Come on.”
She slid in and was relieved when he closed the door gently and went around to the front passenger seat. The town car was big, but not big enough. She wanted her space.
Liam hadn’t said anything to her about mating.
She caught Archer’s glance in the rearview mirror and focused her attention out the window. But she eavesdropped shamelessly as Liam made a half dozen calls organizing what sounded like a covert tactical sweep of the city’s least loved neighborhoods.
“I’m not coming back before everyone heads out tonight,” he was saying. “Send Jonah to check the data recorders at the haint clusters. The mass at Pickers Park had an odd moment this afternoon and I want to catch if they’re tweaking on something we’ve missed.” He paused, listening. “Just odd. If I knew why it was odd, I wouldn’t have to send Jonah, now, would I?”
She snorted to herself. There was more to that story, but if he didn’t want to explain the kiss, she’d never tell.
He closed the phone with a snap. “Drop us off at the Coil.”
Archer’s gaze snapped between them. “Little late to go the drinking route.”
Archer knew, of course, Jilly realized. He’d gone through the same experience with Sera.
Fury pulsed off Liam in palpable waves. “It’s never too late for a drink or a fight, and the Coil is always good for both.”
His unfocused anger seemed to spill into Jilly’s space, begging to be picked up and stoked high. She’d worked with enough wayward teens to recognize that pointless spiral, where no one could reach outside the shattered expectations and hurt. She wouldn’t get trapped with him.
But she wondered how a man as strong and dedicated as the league’s leader could subtly remind her of a lost and frightened child.
Then she steeled herself against the yearning to soothe his ire. Her mother had catered to a string of men like that; not a heritage Jilly was interested in perpetuating, especially with the eternity angle. He wasn’t one of her unofficial wards; if anything, she was one of his. When Liam glanced over the seat back at her, she studied her nails as if the slightly ragged blue paint held the secrets of the universe.
He straightened in his seat with a muttered curse.
As she’d surmised, the Mortal Coil was a bar, but she hadn’t thought it would be so trendy. Liam seemed more a pint-at-a-pub man than a vodka-martini-by-the-dance-floor boy.
The neighborhood around them was in flux, torn halfway between art gallery and pawnshop—one loft balcony was strung in delicate paper lanterns, while the one below had been tagged with an illegible scrawl of gang sign. The place seemed poised to pull itself out of the muck. Or collapse again and die.
Despite the sketchy surroundings and early hour, a line of shivering hipsters snaked halfway down the block. Archer stopped the car at the front of the line.
Liam stepped out and opened the door for her. She got out, felt the weight of stares on her less-than-red-carpet-ready self. Liam nodded to the bouncer, who returned the nod, and they slipped inside.
She glanced back as the neon and heat of the club enveloped them. “Does he know what you are? He can’t have guessed you’re anyone, not with the crappy cars you drive.”
“The league’s investments have seen better days,” Liam admitted. “But his boss still likes to see me.”
She persisted. “Does the boss know what you are?”
Liam hesitated. “She knows more than she lets on. About many things. Which is why I want to talk to her.”
Though the stuffy darkness of the club was utterly different from the open chill of the park, Jilly was uncomfortably reminded of the soulless cluster by the way this crowd also stood in random array, absorbed in their drinks and the blue-green glow of their cell phones. She sheltered behind Liam’s height and let the flare of his duster clear a path to the bar.
He wedged a hip between two patrons and made a place for her under his arm. She gritted her teeth at the casually possessive gesture and slipped in, since she wanted to hear the conversation.
Her gaze skipped over the two bullet-headed bar-tenders and went directly to the curvaceous woman whose red beehive was just a few shades off her red baby-doll tee, so that she seemed to vibrate at that end of the spectrum. Her eyes behind the cat’s-eye glasses, however, were almost eerily devoid of color.
“She’s blind,” Liam murmured. “Don’t let that fool you.” He raised his voice. “Bella.”
The woman took a few steps down the bar, overshot them, then edged back again. “Liam, darling. How good to see you.” Her smile was sharp, bordering on cruel. “And who is this charming little thing with you tonight?”
Jilly shifted, wishing there was room to move out from under Liam’s arm. She hated feeling petite. Almost as much as she hated feeling laughed at. “Hello, Bella.” She resisted the urge to add “Lugosi.” No self-respecting vampire would keep that hairdo. Maybe the woman couldn’t see, but she was as blind as a vampire was vegan.
Liam dropped his hand to her shoulder as if he sensed the snark-attack coming on. “This is Jilly. I was hoping you’d have a minute to talk.”
“Have you brought her for my blessing?” On the word “blessing,” Bella’s smile widened. “Or will you be busting up my bar like you do with your boys?”
“Just talk,” Liam said.
Bella lifted her face as if to scan the room. “It’s quiet for now. Let’s go in back.”
Considering the techno beat coming from the dance floor, it wasn’t quiet at all even in the cramped storeroom. A spindly chair next to an overflowing ashtray was the only seat beside the cases of liquor bottles, and Bella settled herself there with a sigh.
She kicked off her Mary Janes. “Sorry for the stink, darlings, but my feet are killing me.” She smiled at Liam, more coy this time. “Or are you here to tell me something even worse is coming?”
“I try to keep you in the loop. You’ve been good about the men blowing off steam here.”
She reached unerringly for a pack of cigarettes and a lighter on the shelf behind her. “You always pay the damages, and your boys—even at
their
worst—tend to keep those even-worse things at bay.” She tapped up a cigarette. “So what is it this time?”
“I’m hoping you can tell me. When I warned you to keep the solvo out of here, you’d already noticed there were . . .” He hesitated. “Untoward effects.”
Her expression was shuttered. “You don’t stay in this business long if you can’t tell the difference between a drunk and a real danger. I knew solvo was no good-time club drug.”
“You’ve been keeping track of the addicts. Jonah saw you at one of the clusters. Why?”
She pursed her lips, rouged yet another shade of red. “They interested me.” When he waited, she shrugged. “I find them very peaceful. Like watching fish.”
Jilly jerked once.
Bella angled toward her, the upswept corner of her glasses catching the light from the bare bulb hanging overhead. “You think that’s sick?”
“You could
do
something instead of just feeding off them.” Jilly bit off the rest of the words.
Bella turned back to Liam. “She is very new on your crew, isn’t she? What do your boys think of your fresh meat?”
“It’s not like that. Besides, the shine wears off quickly.” He rubbed the mark at his temple as if, Jilly thought, he could feel her dagger glare. “I want to know if you’ve seen anything odd in the clusters lately.”
Neither he nor Bella seemed to think his choice of “seen” was inappropriate. Jilly realized he was willing to make use of any resource, however weird—or
more
weird, she supposed—to pursue his mission.
Bella tilted back in the chair. “I haven’t been out lately.”
“Fish get boring,” Jilly growled.
“After a while, you get the sense they might be a little more like waiting piranha. Then they do not seem so peaceful.”
Liam perked up. “Piranha? Did you see—?”
“Nothing,” Bella said. “Just an impression. But I can tell you there’s more solvo on the street now than ever. James tosses out at least one pusher a night, and if I eighty-sixed everyone at the bar who shows signs of having indulged . . .” She shook her head. “But you’ve never told me why it’s so bad.”
“I didn’t have to tell you,” he reminded her. She made a moue of displeasure, but he went on. “Just keep an eye out, okay, and get word to me if you get the heebiejeebies.”
Bella’s smile returned, more calculating than ever. She flicked the lighter. “I’ve got your number, darling.”
On their way back past the bar, she poured three different drinks, her hands picking deftly among the bottles. “On the house this time,” she said as she tipped back her own glass and returned to her work, the cigarette behind her ear.
Liam and Jilly took their drinks and continued to an empty spot along the railing overlooking the dance floor.
Jilly looked into her glass and snorted. “Absinthe. How chic.”
“Speaking of which, now that you’re immortal, don’t you think you’re too old for blue hair?”
“Even if you’re immortal, don’t you think you’re still too young to be such a drag?”
He took a draft from the pint of dark beer Bella had drawn him. “I’d look terrible with blue hair.” The tip of his tongue caught the faint shimmer of foam on his upper lip.
She froze at the pang of lust that arrowed through her. Damn, how could she blame that errant sexual escapade on saving her life if she wanted a repeat performance now with no excuse? She downed her evilly green glowing drink in one swallow. The herbal astringent puckered her throat and she made a face.
Liam was watching her. “How are you feeling?”
“Better.” When he raised an eyebrow, she realized that might’ve been a little insulting. She let it stand. “Why’s Bella so odd?”
He gave her another look. “She who is possessed probably shouldn’t throw stones.”
“I’m not stoning her.” Although the thought held a certain appeal. “Is she human?”
“As far as I can tell. I’ve been wondering if she’d serve as our new Bookkeeper.” At her questioning sound, he explained, “The league has always had an outsider, not talya, who acts as historian and researcher and sometimes our last connection to the worldly realm. We’ve been without a Bookkeeper for some time now.”
At his suddenly forbidding tone, Jilly asked, “Did the last one die?”
“Unfortunately, no.” He didn’t elaborate. “Bella guesses that we are something more than we seem. And she has hinted at connections that could be useful to the league, underground resources that keep us out of the everyday eye.” He returned his attention to Jilly. “I hoped having you along would make her more comfortable about joining the crew, knowing there are other women.” He scowled. “When I make Sera come here, she makes me dance.”
Jilly smiled, picturing his lean self in a white leisure suit, busting a Travolta. Then her amusement faltered. “I bet you’d have fine luck with Bella if you came by yourself and offered her a place in your . . . league.”
“No need to insinuate,” he said. “Bad enough having female talyan, which at least has precedent if I’m willing to go back a few thousand years. A female Bookkeeper goes against our entire history.”
“Your history is not your future. I tell—told the kids that all the time.”
“I am not one of your naive runaways.”
“No.” Jilly pushed her glass away.
Liam stared into his beer, as if he might find answers there instead. “Still, you’re right that what has worked before isn’t working now. I’ll do whatever I must to lead the league into these new dangers.”
Into danger, she noted. Not out of. But she supposed that part hadn’t changed. “Even if that means accepting the inevitable woman or two. How open- minded of you.”

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