"Kitty?"
Sorrow bared her teeth to expose tiny fangs about half the normal size. "He calls them little kitten teeth."
Venom, Honor thought, glimpsing the rage in Sorrow's changing eyes, either had no idea what he was playing with . . . or he had a very good idea. "We'll start with basic moves," she said, making a mental note to ask Dmitri to confirm if she was right about the fact that Venom was pushing the girl on purpose to gauge her level of control.
Sorrow leaned closer, lowered her voice. "Does he have to watch?"
"If you tell him to leave, he'll take even more pleasure in staying." As it was, Venom was answering a call on his cell phone, his body in a languid position she had no doubt could change in the blink of an eye. One of these days, Honor would spar with the vampire--after first taking Dmitri on in a session.
Her thighs clenched at the idea of tangling with her sexy, dangerous lover in that arena, their bodies sweaty and straining. "Just ignore him," she said, wrenching her mind back to the present.
Sorrow took a deep breath. "Okay," she said on the exhale. "Show me."
It was twenty minutes into a relatively undemanding session that the young woman swayed and collapsed.
Venom was beside her with such speed that Honor's breath caught in her throat. Jerking the semiconscious woman into a half-sitting position, he shoved back the left cuff of his shirt, having removed his jacket earlier, and said, "Feed," in a voice that was a whip.
Sorrow tried to shove him away but she was frighteningly weak, to Honor's worried gaze. "Fuck you." Her voice slurred on the curse.
"Stand in line, kitty." He shoved his wrist to her mouth. "Feed or I will pin you down and pour my blood down your throat. After which I will take you to the Tower so you can be placed under twenty-four-hour supervision as a spoiled brat should be."
Sorrow bit down on his wrist. Hard, judging from the vicious glint in eyes ringed by glowing green--though Venom showed no reaction. Realizing the young woman had allowed her power reserves to run low to the point of endangering herself, Honor said nothing until Sorrow shoved at Venom's arm again. This time he allowed her to break the blood kiss.
Wiping the back of her hand over her mouth, Sorrow said, "I suppose you're going to tattle."
Venom used a handkerchief to clean off the neat puncture marks on his wrist before redoing his cuff. "You want this to be our secret?" It was a steel-edged question, his eyes hidden behind mirrored sunglasses an instant later. "Too bad you've got nothing that would interest me when it comes to bartering."
Honor would've ignored the taunt, having caught on to Venom's games. But Sorrow gave a sharp scream and jumped on the vampire. Laughing, he plucked her off and rose to his feet with a fluidity that was as reptilian as his eyes. "Careful," he said, brushing off his shirt as the young woman pushed herself upright, "or you might hurt my feelings."
Sorrow went very, very quiet. Then she moved.
Sucking in a breath, Honor ran to grab her gun out of her practice bag, but she didn't know which one of them to aim for once she had it in hand--or even if she'd hit the intended target. It was like watching two feral cats in the most deadly of dances. They moved so fast the eye couldn't quite track them, their strikes and counterstrikes flowing from one to the other with a grace that was breathtaking.
But while Sorrow fought with instinct born of primal rage, Venom was a cold, quiet predator who was playing with his prey.
Honor's eyes narrowed but she didn't lift the gun.
Games or not, the vampire wasn't hurting Sorrow. Not only that, he was allowing her to express the terrible fury inside her, an anger that had its roots in something far more sadistic than Venom's barbs. The young woman kicked, tried to claw and punch, even went airborne a couple of times, but she made no impact on the vampire, who simply wasn't there, his reaction time not human in any way, shape, or form.
It was beautiful. In a terrifying sort of way. "Can you move that fast?" she asked the man who'd come to stand beside her with a dark grace as old as Venom's power was young.
Dmitri slid his hands into the pockets of his stone-gray suit pants, his white shirt open at the collar to expose skin she wanted to lick and suck and bite. "Venom has a particular way of moving," he murmured in a voice that was pure sex, though he kept his attention on the fight. "Comes from the same place as his eyes."
It was difficult to breathe with him so close, and in a mood that wrapped her in warm honey and champagne and promises of sin dipped in chocolate. "Stop spreading sex pheromones around."
A faint smile that promised all sorts of debauched, decadent deeds. "I think we should spar, Honor. Winner gets to do whatever he or she likes to the loser."
Uh-huh. "You're an almost-immortal," she said, able to see that Sorrow was slowing down, "and you're Raphael's second in command."
"I'll keep to human speed." The kiss of exotic spice against her skin. "Give you your choice of blades while I have only my hands."
Knowing she was a sucker, but unable to get the image of dancing with Dmitri out of her head, she nodded. "You're on." That was when she saw Sorrow stagger.
Venom pulled back at the same instant, and suddenly they were no longer two feral creatures in motion, but a shockingly sexy vampire, with his hair messed up, his sunglasses gone, and his shirt ripped, and a petite Asian woman covered in sweat, her chest heaving as she braced her palms on her knees.
Striding closer, Honor showed Sorrow no mercy. "He kicked your ass."
Sorrow's head jerked up, long, silken strands of hair having escaped her ponytail to stick to her face. "I--"
"Be quiet." She flicked a hand at Venom. "Go away."
Whether he would've obeyed had Dmitri not been present was a moot question, because he inclined his head and left without a word.
"If you were an Academy student," Honor said, realizing this young woman needed a type of guidance no man could provide--not without slamming into Sorrow's jagged pride, "you'd be on your ass now because your instructor would've put you there."
Honor knew about pride, about clutching at the tattered shreds of it when you had nothing else left. But she also knew about survival. "Then you would've run or crawled twenty laps of the practice field before dragging yourself into bed, only to run twenty more when you woke."
"He--"
"Was taunting you, mocking you." She raised an eyebrow. "And you lost control. That loss of control will get you killed one day." Sorrow was dangerous, but without discipline, that strength could turn into a lethal liability. "Before we do any more sparring, we're going to work on your discipline."
Sorrow clenched her jaw, but managed to contain her temper this time.
Good girl. "Have you ever meditated?" The skill of dissociating her mind from the horrors inflicted on her body was one of the reasons Honor had come out of the assault sane.
Sorrow gave a stiff nod. "My grandmother taught me. I haven't tried it since . . ."
"I think you should." Honor put her hand on the young woman's shoulder. "I want you to go inside, have a long, hot bath, do whatever else it is that relaxes you, makes you happy."
Those brown eyes being overtaken by vivid green were bleak, all defiance leached away until she was suddenly heart-breakingly young. "Nothing does anymore."
"Do your best." Nightmares couldn't be vanquished overnight, and Sorrow's had altered her on a fundamental level. "Then sit down and attempt to meditate. Next time I'm here, we'll talk things over--because, Sorrow? You can't keep it all bottled up inside. I know." The notebook she'd never intended to use had become so important, a cathartic release that drew away the poison. "We'll find something that'll help you cope."
Sorrow swallowed. "Do you think I can?"
"Yes." Sorrow needed someone to have faith in her. "Oh, yes, sweetheart."
"Elena wanted to come see me," the other woman blurted out without warning. "I know she saved me . . . but she has wings." A shiver that shook her entire frame. "I couldn't."
"I'm sure
she understands." Squeezing her shoulder, Honor had another thought. "How much time are you spending alone?"
"I'm never alone."
"Sorrow."
"It's not too bad. My family . . ." Her lip wobbled and she bit it hard enough to leave red crescents in the delicate flesh. "They don't know about Uram--the story is that I was attacked by a human crazy and infected with a dangerous virus. I thought they'd reject me when the changes started to show, but they've been wonderful. Mom would be here every day if I'd let her."
"Then let her," Honor said, touching her hand to the girl's cheek. "Family builds a foundation, one that'll help you stand, fight." Honor had never had that foundation, so she understood its value on a level Sorrow couldn't comprehend.
Nodding, the young woman reached out with an impulsive hug. Honor returned the embrace, happy she was at the point where such sudden actions didn't cause her to flash back to the pit where Amos had trapped her. As she stroked her hand over the girl's back, her eyes met Dmitri's and something unsaid but understood passed between them--Sorrow was no longer simply his to watch over, but theirs.
It was as Dmitri and Honor were driving away from Sorrow's that he got the call.
"Dmitri." The rough male voice brought an ancient memory to life.
"Please." A lifted hand, the boy's back bloody from a vicious whipping.
"It's all right," Dmitri said, unable to feel pity, his heart stone, but aware this boy was another victim, no threat. "We won't hurt you."
"Is she dead?"
"Yes, the bitch is dead."
"Kallistos." He pulled over.
A rusty, painful-sounding laugh. "Very good."
Dead air for several seconds.
Dmitri waited, knowing Kallistos would get impatient--according to the people Jason had in Neha's court, this vampire, with his face and body that had mesmerized men and women alike over the centuries, had never quite mastered his temper.
"I hold the reins today, Dmitri." Kallistos's voice would never be smooth, his throat having been damaged at a critical juncture during his Making, but now it lost the veneer of sophistication. "You'll do as I say or this rather pretty angel will die a slow and painful death."
"Tell me what you want."
"I'm sending you directions. Drive. If I see any hint of wings, I'll gut him."
Directions came into Dmitri's in-box as the call ended. "This is only part of the route," he said, after giving Honor a precis of the conversation.
"He doesn't want to chance an angel flying ahead of you."
Dmitri considered his options, made a call to Illium. "Alert Raphael as soon as he's back in the city." The archangel was on his way back from a meeting. "You're too distinctive, Jason's gone, and I don't trust anyone else not to muck this up."
Illium cursed. "I'll fly out, meet Raphael partway."
Hanging up, Dmitri turned to Honor. "Are you armed?"
"Always."
Punching up the speed, he raced out of New Jersey and toward Philadelphia. More instructions came in as he drove, and it was seven hours later, the sky beginning to darken with the first faint streaks of the time between sunset and true night, that he found himself back in Manhattan. Mouth grim, he picked up the call as it came in.
"Have fun on your little drive?" Kallistos laughed, and it was the sound of metal grating.
Dmitri maintained his silence, guessing Kallistos would believe him to be in the grip of a rage that would disallow rational thinking. It didn't. Dmitri's hatred for Isis didn't blind him--not now, not after he'd bathed in her blood.
"I left you a present." Kallistos was almost giggling. "In one of the New York properties you own." The other vampire hung up.
Telling Honor what Kallistos had said, he did an illegal U-turn and headed out toward Englewood Cliffs. Sire, he said, able to speak to Raphael since the archangel was directly overhead. If you and Illium will take these three--he relayed the addresses--I'll take care of the fourth. He sent through the final address as well.
"We're taking the closest property," he said to Honor. "Raphael and Illium will reach the other locations much faster." Kallistos, he thought, was long gone.
"What are the chances this might be the spot?"
He considered the high fences, the lane in the back that could be used to sneak onto the property. "It's relatively private, and decaying enough to suit Kallistos's sense of theater, from what we've seen so far." Increasing his speed, he blew past startled motorists.
If it had been an older angel at risk, Dmitri wouldn't have felt the overriding alarm he did now, but the one who'd been taken was young, his immortality not yet set in stone. Of course, most mortals or vampires would still be unable to cause him a fatal injury, but Kallistos was older than Dmitri; he had both the strength and the knowledge to murder an angel so vulnerable.
34
"We're here." Dark hair whipped off Dmitri's forehead as he took them down a somewhat derelict street, before turning in through a pair of open gates that led to a decaying apartment complex.
"I'm guessing the value is in the land?"
"Millions." Bringing the car to a halt behind the protective barrier of a pile of rubble, Dmitri got out and opened the trunk to retrieve a stunning blade too big to be covertly carried. No, this weapon was about power and intimidation.
It was, if she wasn't mistaken, a scimitar. However, she didn't get much of a good look at it before he was striding back, the weapon held to his side, his eyes flat with lethal intent. "Stay at my back, Honor. Kallistos is most likely gone, but we can't assume that."
"I'll cover you," she said, not arguing with the order because she knew about confronting your own monsters, and Kallistos was Dmitri's.
"No, stay literally at my back. A gunshot won't do me any significant damage, but could kill you."
The idea of Dmitri bleeding for her made Honor's hand clench brutally on the butt of her gun, but again, she kept her silence, knowing time was of the essence. "Let's go."
He was a sleek shadow in front of her, one who ensured she was never exposed to anyone who might be watching them from the building. Honor didn't breathe until they'd traversed the open section to reach the door. He went in first, while she kept her eyes forward as she backed in behind him, gun pointed outward.
The only thing that met them inside was silence . . . and a broken angel. The boy--and yes, he was a boy still, his deathly pale face holding the fading softness of childhood--had been dumped on his front in the dusty lobby, his pale brown wings streaked with blood and dirt as they lay limp and crumpled on either side of him.
Wrong, there was something wrong with those wings.
Broken.
It was, she realized, feeling sick to her stomach, the only way to transport an unconscious angel if you didn't want to use a huge truck and draw unwelcome attention.
"Honor."
"I've got you covered."
Crouching down, Dmitri touched his fingers to the angel's cheek.
"He's warm." Putting down the scimitar, he used utmost care to turn the body, making sure not to further damage the boy's wings. "No heartbeat." But that didn't mean all hope was lost. Raphael, how close are you? he asked, having felt the archangel's mind touch his as he turned in through the gates.
Minutes away. Show me.
Dmitri opened his mind enough that Raphael was able to see through his eyes, assess the damage. Give him your breath, Dmitri. He will not survive otherwise.
Trusting Honor to maintain the guard, Dmitri began to breathe for the young angel, feeling that chest, heavy with the muscle necessary for flight, rise and fall under his touch. It wasn't more than five minutes later that Raphael walked into the building. The archangel didn't hesitate in kneeling on the dirty floor, his wings trailing in the accumulated dust and debris, to take the boy into his arms--replacing Dmitri's lips with his own.
An archangel's breath held incredible power.
As Dmitri watched, a faint blue glow suffused the place where Raphael's
lips met the young angel's.
Rising, he picked up the scimitar and turned to glance at Honor, a hard-eyed hunter with a gun in her hands she wouldn't hesitate to use to protect the vulnerable--yet one who had the heart to feel pity for what her abuser had suffered as a child. Dmitri had no such softness inside him, but he accepted that it was an integral part of Honor, this complex woman with ancient knowledge in those eyes of midnight green.
Nodding at her to hold her position, he began to check the area to see if he could glean anything that might speak to Kallistos's whereabouts. Nothing but scuff marks in the dust from where the other vampire had dragged the young angel's body inside. Kallistos had left the same way he'd entered, making no effort to hide his prints. Will he live? he asked, seeing Raphael break the life-giving kiss.
Eyes of unearthly blue locked with his. Yes. And he'll be whole once more. But he will need care of a kind the mortal world cannot provide.
Dmitri nodded. I'll organize transport to the Refuge.
No, Dmitri. I must take him myself. The archangel rose, the angel's limp body in his arms. We'll leave three days hence, after he has had a chance to regain a little strength.
Elena?
She is my heart. She comes with me.
Dmitri had expected nothing else. I will watch over your city, Sire.
It was as Raphael was leaving that Honor stepped forward. "Wait."
Walking around to the archangel's other side as if she hadn't just halted the most powerful being in the country, she lifted up the young angel's hand. It was fisted. "He's hiding something in his palm."
Raphael glanced at Dmitri. "Force it open."
Dmitri managed not to break any bones, but he did have to bruise the boy to peel apart his fingers. To reveal the crushed but still recognizable remains of two sugar maple leaves. "Nothing to differentiate them from any other similar leaves," he said, picking up the remains of the greenery.
Cupping the angel's hand, Honor leaned closer. "He's written something on his palm."
"Eris," Raphael said, his vision acute. "The word is 'Eris.' "
Dmitri frowned. "Neha's consort? No one has seen him for centuries." Even as he spoke, his eyes fell once more on the leaves from the sugar maple tree. "Neha," he said, an old piece of knowledge jarred loose in his mind, "has no properties in this territory, but Eris had a liking for it before he went into seclusion." Whether that seclusion had been by choice was debatable, for Dmitri had heard rumors that Neha's consort had betrayed her with another woman, been punished for it for the past three hundred years.