Read Rebel Angel: A Sainted Sinners Novel Online
Authors: Vivian Wood
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Women's Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Romantic Comedy, #Vampires, #Werewolves & Shifters, #Contemporary Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #Fantasy, #Humor, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Crime, #New Adult & College, #Angels, #Demons & Devils, #Witches & Wizards
Still, the red eyes and perfectly sculpted fangs didn’t lie.
“Thanks,” she said, taking a couple steps back. She might be hot-tempered at times, but she’d never take on a Vampyre if she could help it.
He slunk forward, keeping pace with her, and she felt her stomach turn over.
“You are sister to our girl Mercy, are you not?” he asked.
She couldn’t stop looking at him. His cheekbones were so sharp they could have been creased paper, his lips full and lush around his fangs. He was incredibly beautiful, in a way that made her want to run far, far away.
“Yes,” she said, taking another step back.
He stepped forward at the same time, as if he knew her every move before she made it.
“I won’t hurt you,” he said, canting his head and smiling. “Unless you ask nicely, that is.”
“I’m just leaving,” she blurted out. She couldn’t bring herself to turn her back on the Vampyre, though, so she didn’t actually move an inch.
“I see that,” he said, his tongue darting out to caress one of his fangs for a moment. “I am Jacinth. Mercy says that you are a bounty hunter. She says you’re very good, and that you’ll take on nearly any commission.”
Vesper stilled for a moment. She’d never imagined Mercy talking about her, but the idea made her feel a little ill.
Jacinth pressed on. “She says you’re saving up to buy her freedom.”
Vesper looked him square in the eye, trying not to show her growing anger. “I am.”
“I have an offer for you.”
“I don’t want anything from you,” Vesper said, dropping her hand to the hilt of one of her short swords.
“Don’t be ridiculous,” the Vampyre said, his lips twitching with amusement. “I could drain you before you’d even get that thing out of its sheath.”
“I’m leaving,” she said, backing away from him, scuttling sideways toward the closest alleyway.
“I’m offering you a chance to free your sister.”
She froze.
“Free… like completely free?”
“Yes. That’s over one hundred thousand dollars, if you think of her trade as a commission.”
“She owes you a hundred thousand dollars?” Vesper growled. “
How??
”
“That is simply her worth,” Jacinth said. “The rest is… fluid. Now ask me what the assignment would be.”
Vesper drew a breath. “What would the assignment be?”
“One hit. A tough one, but a single task.”
“A hit? I don’t… I don’t do that. I just capture and turn them over to the highest bidder.”
“You wouldn’t be able to keep this one captive. Besides, we want him dead. Shoot on sight, head removed, the whole thing.”
“Again, I don’t do that. You’re talking to the wrong girl.”
Jacinth looked her up and down, then heaved a sigh.
“Very well. It’s only your sister’s freedom, after all. Probably her life… if you could get her clean, she’d probably live into old age…” He waved a hand, as if dismissing the thought.
“Who’s the target?”
“You’d find that out last, after our agreement. Assume he’s big, powerful, and dangerous.”
“What if I could bring him in alive?” she asked.
The Vampyre shook his head, growing impatient. “You won’t.”
“But what if I did?”
After a moment’s thought, Jacinth bobbed his head. “It would be acceptable.”
“You’d let Mercy walk away? No, fuck that. For the cost of what you’re asking, I would require you to black list her. Every Vampyre brothel and shooting gallery, anywhere she could score. She’d be total
persona non grata
.”
A grin split the Vampyre’s face once more. “Now you’re bargaining. I like your spirit, little human.”
Vesper tried not to glare at him, and failed.
“All right. You’ve got a deal, bounty hunter. Bring Kirael Lesange to me, and you will have your sister. Forever.”
“Kirael…” Vesper said, trying to figure out why the name sounded familiar. “Wait. You don’t mean…”
“Yes. He’s Fallen.”
“You’re insane,” she said, her eyes going wide. “You want to me to capture one of the most powerful Fallen angels? Isn’t he, like, third in line to Lucifer’s throne?”
“Seventh,” Jacinth said tartly.
“You must be joking. I’m human. He’s like…” she waved her arms, lacking the basic words to describe how futile it would be.
“He’s weakened right now, as it happens. Lucifer has revoked some of his powers. And he should be on Earth for the foreseeable future.”
“Why would you even want him? You can’t kill Fallen…” she said.
“Not me, no. Don’t worry about my reasons. Worry about your sister.”
Vesper bit her lip. On one hand, Jacinth’s offer was basically a suicide mission. On the other hand…
“I’d have Mercy, free and clear. No tricks. Right?”
“I’d add in a sizable amount of cash, to sweeten the deal.” When she hesitated, he lifted a brow. “Take the deal, Vesper. It’s the only one you’re going to get.”
Vesper blinked for a second. Blowing out a breath, she slowly nodded.
“Okay. I’ll take the contract. You’ll have to forgive me, though, if I refuse to shake on it.”
Jacinth flashed his fangs and winked at her, which made her break into an honest sweat.
“Don’t flirt with me, Vesper. I’m starting to like it,” he said. “I’ll have a contract messengered over to you.”
Then he turned and swept back into the house, vanishing as quickly as he’d appeared.
Vesper was left rooted to the spot, armed with nothing but her new target’s name and a blossoming note of hope for her sister’s future.
“
K
irael
.”
He turned to find Mere Marie standing behind him, having appeared out of nowhere. The Voodoo priestess wore pale purple robes, folds and layers of fabric upon fabric. Her hair was wrapped in a towering fabric bundle, her arms covered in shining bangles, her eyes done up in smoky kohl.
Kirael thought she looked like she’d just jumped straight out of the encyclopedia, her photo pinned next to the entry for “palm reader” or maybe “Vodun”.
“You should knock,” he said. “And stop sneaking up on me.”
Letting the curtain drop, he stepped away from the window.
“I like the getup,” she said, gesturing to his jeans and t-shirt.
Kirael plucked at the hem of his t-shirt with a frown. After their first few weeks in the human realm, Mere Marie had insisted that Kirael, Lucan, and Ezra all abandon their button-ups and Brioni suits in favor of a more casual dress code.
Since all three Fallen had defected from Lucifer’s army at the same time, all three former angels were going through similar growing pains. Though Kirael and the other Fallen spent a great deal of time on Earth, executing various plans to further the agenda of Hell, none of them had ever been required to blend in with humans for longer than a few days at a time.
“I’m becoming accustomed to it,” Kirael said with a shrug, turning to the window again. He pulled back the curtain and glanced down into Jackson Square, watching tourists dashing to and fro in the rain.
“I come bearing a message,” Mere Marie said.
Kirael rounded on her. “Why didn’t you say so?”
“I am, right now,” she said, giving him a warning glance. Mere Marie didn’t tolerate snappy remarks from anyone, not even powerful Fallen.
“Well?” he asked, impatient. “Who is it from? St. Peter?”
Mere Marie snorted. “Please. You’re all but forgotten up there, my friend. Actually, an argument could be made at the moment whether you’re less popular in Heaven or in Hell.”
Kirael blew out a breath, trying not to get angry. It wasn’t as if she was telling him anything he didn’t already know.
“So who sent the message, then?” he asked.
“Le Medcin.”
Kirael narrowed his gaze.
“And what does he say?”
“Heaven wants something from you. A favor, of sorts,” she said, then shrugged. “They can’t ask directly, of course. The Rules, and all.”
The Rules, meaning the handshake agreement between Heaven and Hell, saying that neither would directly interfere with the free will of humankind. There were a hundred other little amendments to the rules, minor points haggled over the millennia, but that was the gist of it.
“I’m not affiliated with either party anymore,” Kirael said. “Shouldn’t I be fair game now?”
“It’s not really my decision to make,” Mere Marie said flatly. “Do you want the message or not?”
She offered him a single piece of cream-colored paper, folded in half. Kirael gave her a look as he stepped forward and took it from her, then unfolded it.
Bring me the Book of Names
, was all it said. Kirael gave a startled laugh; the task was all but impossible.
The Book of Names was as close to a sacred text as the rebels in Hell would allow. It contained a handful of highly secret prophecies, as well as the names of all the Righteous and Fallen. Lucifer stole it during the chaos of the Great Fall, and he’d kept it under lock and key in Hell ever since.
“Have you read this?” he asked, glancing up at Mere Marie.
She shook her head slowly. “I don’t interfere in Le Medcin’s doings. I only carry out his wishes.”
“What he asks for… it is not possible,” Kirael said, shaking his head slowly.
“He wanted me to impress upon you the importance of the task,” Mere Marie said, cocking her head. “He said to use the word
forgiveness
.”
Kirael’s heart skipped a beat. “Forgiveness? From… from
Him
?”
Mere Marie’s lips twisted. “I am merely the messenger, I can promise nothing.”
“Forgiveness,” Kirael said again, mostly to himself.
“I don’t know what your task is, but… Le Medcin seemed very apprehensive about it. If I were you, I would move on this as soon as possible.”
Kirael nodded, barely listening. Already he was making plans in his head, puzzling out how to conquer the task at hand.
He was going to have to do the one thing he genuinely ought to avoid right now. Go to the last place he should be seen, risk being caught by his former comrades, try to steal a book that was kept under the vigilant protection of a dozen or more Fallen at all times…
He was going to have to break into Hell.
T
here were
thousands of entrances to Hell scattered throughout the human realm, but there was only one in New Orleans. The portal had existed since just after the Great Fall, so there was no accounting for the current-day structures built around it.
Still, Kirael found the fact that it was in a hallway in the back of abandoned Arby’s restaurant on Canal St. was more than a little funny. One would assume that the straightest route to Hell would be in a secret temple in the Gray Market or something, but no.
Kirael was able to walk right into the place, the back door swinging in the wind. There wasn’t a soul to be seen, not even a rat sniffing around for long-lost curly fries. The portal oozed a dark sort of magic, subtle but enough to make you feel the need to clear your throat, and inspire a continuous prickle of fear at the nape of your neck.
It was a bit like walking through endless spiderwebs; you could feel it, but not see it.
For Kirael, the feeling was familiar enough to almost be strangely comforting. After all, Hell had been his home for millennia. A body could grow to like anything, given enough exposure.
The entrance itself was easy enough to find — a five foot by five foot hole of dense, pure blackness. Kirael walked right up to it, then fished a little silk pouch out of his back pocket. It was a gris-gris charm, procured from Mere Marie once he told her that he needed to sneak back into Hell.
“I am assuming you’re telling me this because you need my help,” was her sour reply. She hesitated a beat, then held up a finger and vanished before his eyes.
She returned with a handful of items: a few herbs, a vial of viscous black liquid, a little leather pouch she called a
gerregery
, and a tarnished bronze cross.
“This will only work once,” she told him, explaining how he should mix the ingredients together and then pierce the portal entrance with the cross. “Appreciate this favor, because all of these ingredients are rarer than you can possibly know. If you do it just like I told you, you’ll fool the portal into thinking you’re someone else. Someone who’s still welcome to come and go without raising any eyebrows.”
“Dare I ask who?”
Her lips twitched. “Better not.”
Kneeling down before the portal, he quickly mixed the ingredients as she’d explained, then used the
gerregery
and the cross to open the portal for his use. The amulet and the cross heated to the touch, then winked out of existence, one and then the other.
Must be working
, he thought.
The air began to fill with thick, sooty smoke, but Kirael was able to move into the portal as promised.
Kirael stepped forward and through, feeling the spell spread over his skin as he moved into a dark, rocky tunnel. A few steps in, he saw another bright flash, and glanced back.
Nothing. The space behind him was empty, and he couldn’t detect any presence there.
That didn’t stop him from feeling eyes on his back as he headed further into the tunnel. Down, down… he walked on and on until he finally saw a faint light at the end and smelled the sulfur.
When he stepped out, he was in an area of Hell called The Dunes — a cold, seemingly endless desert wasteland. This was one of the very first stops for newly arrived souls, a place where their humanity was completely stripped away.
In the distance, he saw the hazy glint that was supposed to indicate an oasis. Many souls would be dumped here together, still inhabiting the projections of their human bodies. Then they would inevitably strike out for the oasis, usually as a group.
Only, there was no oasis, only a distant mirage that moved further and further away. The sinners would quickly turn on each other, each one coming face to face with the very flaws that had landed them in Hell in the first place: greed, pride, envy…
Being in the desert hellscape brought out the crazed animal in every soul, made them do heinous, unspeakable things to themselves and the other souls around them.
In The Dunes, it didn’t matter why someone ended up here. By the time they ‘died’, which really just meant they graduated to a different part of Hell and some fresh new kind of torment, they could no longer see themselves as good or righteous.
Kirael’s first instinct was to unfurl his wings and fly up and out; what looked like the night sky here was actually just a small glimpse of the Atrium, the part of Hell where Lucifer and his Fallen spent the bulk of their down time.
With soaring, starry skies and clouds floating overhead, the Atrium was enchanted to resemble Heaven. But of course, only Heaven was actually Heaven, so the Atrium was always disappointingly cold, chillingly damp, and smelling of sulfur — a far cry from Heaven itself.
After a moment’s thought, he realized that he couldn’t exactly just fly into the Fallen’s outer sanctum. He’d been missing for months now, and even if Lucifer hadn’t declared open season on Kirael, his presence would attract attention.
He turned and followed the dark stone walkway that circled the entirety of The Dunes instead, heading right. Hell was made of a thousand different levels and hidey-holes, all connected by a loose network of tunnels.
Fallen generally flew from one to another, but there were a great number of lesser demons that lived in each level, serving Lucifer in various capacities. Some did not fly, so over time they’d dug tunnels, carving their way through Hell’s black bedrock to get from one level to another.
Kirael barely knew the passages in and out of The Dunes, but he knew he generally needed to go upward. He passed the first few tunnels, which didn’t seem especially promising, before turning into one whose path took an immediate incline. All the tunnels were interconnected, little arteries spreading vast and wide around the beating heart of the Atrium.
Kirael only made it a few hundred yards into the tunnel before he heard voices. He doubled back, ducking into a smaller tunnel, and waited. Powerful as he was, he wasn’t particularly adept at hiding his presence. After all, in his high-level post, he’d never really needed to learn.
Then, his very presence commanded attention and fear. Now, he needed the very opposite. He could fight nearly any demon and most of the Fallen one-on-one or in small groups, but if one of them sounded the alarm…
Kirael didn’t want to die under a swarm of Hell’s most vicious demons and vindictive Fallen angels. Not today, anyway, when the word
forgiveness
was still ringing in his ears.
He threw a low-level shield up, not enough to put off a strong energy signature, and held his breath. Two low-level Karast demons trundled past, arguing in low, creaky voices as they went past. Their lumpy gray bodies didn’t slow, didn’t notice him at all.
As soon as they were past him, he slipped out and went on his way. A few long strides down the tunnel though, he heard one of the Karast demons give a loud shriek. He whirled, expecting to see one of them coming at him, though he was still throwing a shield.
But no. Down the tunnel, he saw one of the Karast come barreling toward him, making an alarming sound. Kirael spotted a golden blade jutting from the side of its neck, and blue-black blood gushing from the wound.
Muttering a curse, Kirael held out his right hand and summoned his own sword into existence. The cool, heavy steel was a comforting weight in his hand as he raised it and lunged forward, thrusting the blade into the Karast’s belly.
The demon crashed to a gurgling halt, then gave a final shriek as it went up in a puff of brimstone and dust. He didn’t speak the demon’s language, but he was fairly certain that its last words had been a warning. Which meant that he couldn’t leave the other one alive, lest it run off and start talking.
Snatching up the blade when it clattered to the floor, he vanished it to his storage bolt-hole as he focused on the second demon. One small part of his brain was still working through the concept of where the golden blade might have come from. Unfortunately, the realization that there was likely a third party came a little late.
He found the other Karast grappling with, of all things, a human woman. Not one from The Dunes, either. Kirael could recognize a hellbound soul from a mile away, they got this look about them when soul was starting to part from body.
This woman… well, her soul was firmly attached to her body. Physically, all Kirael could take in was that she had a long, dark rope braid, pale skin, and leather head to foot. She held a second blade, something between a knife and a short sword. Seconds after he spotted her, she dispatched the second Karast, severing its head.
It the dusty puff of smoke it left behind, Kirael and the woman stared at each other.
Damn, he did not need this right now, whatever
this
was. She started toward him, determination stamped on her face.
“Stop!” he called, lowering his sword.
She didn’t.
“You’ll raise the alarms,” he warned, but she didn’t slow. “I don’t know who you are, but I’m sure you’re not supposed to be here.”
Then she raised her hand, holding a glass orb filled with yellow mist.
“Shit,” he muttered. She was going to try to orb him, trap him and transport him… well, undoubtedly somewhere he didn’t want to go.
Vanishing his sword, he moved his left foot up and leaned slightly forward, ready to take whatever she was going to dish out. As soon as she was close enough, he threw out a warning: “Do
not
throw that orb. You’ll die where you stand, and I won’t be able to help.”
He saw half a moment’s hesitation on her face, then she shook her head. She rushed at him, and he realized that she planned to smash the orb into his flesh. She must only have one shot if she was so unwilling to chance missing him with a bad throw.
“Fuck,” he whispered, both his hands snapping out to block the downward arcs of the orb and the dagger, respectively.
He caught her wrist, preventing her from crashing the orb into his shoulder, but fumbled the other hand. She plunged her dagger directly into the back of his shoulder. He managed to twist away from her at the last moment, but she still landed it all too close to his heart. It slid straight through him, back to front, an inch from snagging his collarbone.
“Fuck!” he said, releasing her wrist and jerking away from her so that she couldn’t yank the blade free. “Are you fucking crazy?”
She snarled, and he sensed her frenzy; she truly wanted or needed to capture him, that much was certain. He heard a distant sound; no doubt someone coming to investigate the noise and the twin surges of power from Kirael and the woman dispatching the Karast demons.
“For fuck’s sake,” he said. “They’re coming now, are you happy?”
She glanced back, then refocused on Kirael, raising her arm to hurl the orb. Kirael waited until it was out of her hand, then threw up a shield at the last second. The orb bounced off and hit the jagged stone wall, shattering and releasing its mist harmlessly.
The woman surprised him by jumping right through his shield the second he dropped it, trying to get her hands around his neck. He was at least six inches and a hundred pounds heavier than her, which meant her move was sheer, desperate insanity. Even with the dagger through his chest, even though he couldn’t move his left arm well, there was no way she could take him.
Kirael released a low growl, grabbing her arm and whirling her around. Careful not to cut her with the very blade she’d thrust into his chest. He pulled her close and got the crook of his arm around her neck. She struggled, scratching and sputtering like a cat dipped in water, but ultimately Kirael was too strong.
He pressed and held her carotid, waiting until she sagged against him and then a few seconds more. She slumped forward, and he was forced to let her fall to the floor with a dull thud.
Blowing out a breath, he reached back and pulled the dagger from his shoulder, hissing between clenched teeth.
“You are going to regret that,” he said to the unconscious woman. “Don’t know why you’d want to do that, but…”
Before he could even finish his thought, he heard the stamp of heavy boots. Meaning that there were probably some big bad demons coming his way, possibly even a few Fallen.
In less than a minute, they were going converge on his location.
Kirael had a split second to decide what to do with the woman. He got the toe of his boot under her body and rolled her over.
He stilled; now that she was motionless, her beauty was a punch straight to the gut. Long dark hair, ivory skin, high cheekbones and pouty pink lips. She was tall and lean, but with curves enough in the right places. A few moments ago, she’d showcased a stunning emerald gaze, too.
Something about her pulled at him, whether it was her physical beauty, the desperation of her actions, or simply the fact that no human deserved to be stranded here in Hell.
He looked down at her, already knowing that he couldn’t leave her here. A human sneaking into Hell would meet a truly grisly end, after a great deal of torture.
He wasn’t a good man, that was lost long ago. But he would never, ever leave an unconscious woman alone in Hell, no matter her agenda.
He vanished her second knife, then leaned down and scooped her up, throwing her over his shoulder. Closing his eyes for the briefest moment, he re-oriented himself and then headed for the closest side tunnel, taking right turns where he could find them. Slowly but surely, he emerged into The Dunes once more, on the far side of the tunnel that brought him from the New Orleans hellmouth.
The sky far above him began to darken, the stars winking out one after another. The Fallen were descending now, their black wings blocking out the night sky. Kirael gave up all attempts at secrecy, clamping his arm around the woman’s waist as he ran flat-out for the correct tunnel.
He made it in just as Fallen were landing behind him, vanishing their wings and calling forth flaming swords as they rushed after him. Kirael raced for the exit, going up and up, growing shaky with the shock from his wound, with the effort of carrying his burden.
“KIRAEL!!” came from behind him. The voice unmistakably belonged to Belial, Kirael’s longtime arch-enemy.