Betty shrugged. “Then I guess we don’t have to explain anything else.”
Efram raised a finger. “No, no, no. I said I do business with the gods. But I’m not about to let you ladies use my store if it involves that psychotic bitch.”
“Efram—”
“No, Betty. I love you to death despite the way you terrorize my staff. But there’s no—”
“I have an offer.”
“There’s nothing you can offer me that would make me change my mind. Nothing.”
Betty blew out a breath. They’d all hoped not to have to use this, but it seemed there was simply no choice.
“Odin!” Betty called out. “Odin!”
Odin appeared behind Betty. Eye patch and grin in place, dressed in a perfectly tailored Italian blue suit.
“You bellowed, sweet Betty?”
“Odin, this is Efram. Efram, this is the god Odin.”
“What am I supposed to do here, Betty? Fall to my knees? I’m Jewish. He doesn’t exactly terrify me.”
“I’m not trying to terrify you. I have an offer. You give us your business and, no matter what happens, we rebuild and replace.”
“Betty—”
“And,” she continued on, “you get the next twenty-four hours to hang out with Odin.”
“Wait . . . what?”
“You heard me. Twenty-four hours, around the world, Odin-style.”
“You’re kidding, right?”
Betty glanced back at the god and realized he was now standing with two beautiful, if somewhat used, women.
Betty didn’t even bother to hide her disgust. “Ech.”
“Valkyries?” Leigh asked Jace, slightly confused. The LA Valkyries, chosen by Freyja herself, were all beautiful girls next door. Like a bunch of sorority girls with lethal weapon skills and winged horses. The ladies Odin chose for the Tri-State Valkyries, however . . .
“From Jersey, I think,” Jace whispered back. “So I’m guessing they’re all former strippers.”
“A whole twenty-four hours of uninhibited, out-of-control, Odin-style entertainment, with the god himself,” Betty crooned in that voice Jace was sure she used when trying to get a producer or studio head to do what she wanted because threatening him or her was going to be ineffective.
Efram handed the store keys he held over to Betty.
“Go with God,” he told Betty before disappearing with Odin and his hook . . . er . . . Valkyries.
Betty shook her head. “I told you, ladies. I told you. It doesn’t matter the race, the religious belief, how they were raised . . . nothing. All men are the same.”
“You came out of that coma feisty,” Erin noted.
“And hungry. Think we can get some pizza before our next move?”
“Nope,” Erin replied, suddenly looking at her phone. “Got a text from Kera. It’s all a go.”
“Are you sure about this?” Jace asked Betty, unable to hide her worry now that she knew her plan was moving forward.“I know this is all my idea, Betty, but our next move—”
“Don’t worry, sweetie.” Betty placed her hand on Jace’s shoulder and grinned at her. “I can’t tell you how much I have been looking forward to this.”
Gullveig finished bathing in the blood of a virgin—well, actually, in this case, an unemployed screenwriter who thought his idea of a musical version of Saving Private Ryan was brilliant, but there wasn’t really much of a difference in the big scheme of things—and took a quick shower. She finished dressing and went out into her office and, with a happy sigh, dropped into the chair behind her desk.
She put her hands behind her head and used the tips of her toes to move her office chair back and forth.
Life was good.
“Come in,” Gullveig called out when she heard the knock on her office door.
Her assistant, Jenna, walked in. “I got more calls. They’re having problems on the set.”
“Is he drinking again?”
“Most likely.”
Gullveig rolled her eyes and dropped her head back against the chair. “I should have taken his soul when I had the chance.”
Jenna’s head tipped to the side. She looked like a confused cocker spaniel. “Pardon?”
Before Gullveig could soothe her assistant’s concerns—she really should be more careful what she said around the girl—there was yelling and screaming from the hallway.
Her door flew open and Betty Lieberman stormed in, with security right behind her.
Jenna’s eyes widened, she lowered her head, and quickly backed away. It was as if she thought she could fade into the wallpaper, like some kind of chameleon.
Amazing that even after all that had happened, Lieberman still managed to instill fear in everyone around her. She’d make a hell of a god if she wasn’t a worthless human.
A worthless human but a brilliant agent.
Lieberman stopped in the middle of the office, turned in a circle to look over everything.
“Wow,” she stated, voice thick with mocking, “you like mirrors.”
“Welcome back, Betty. We’ve missed you.”
Lieberman’s head tipped down and she mouthed, Liar.
“Awww, Betty. You hurt me.”
“I don’t think that’s possible, sweetie. But nice try.”
“So what do you want?” Gullveig asked, putting her feet up on her desk and watching the corners of Lieberman’s eyes twitch.
“Jenna, honey.” Lieberman turned those sharp eyes on Jenna, who’d been trying to ease her way out of the room. “You’ve moved up.”
“Hi . . . uh . . . Miss . . . uh . . .”
“Why don’t you give us a minute, sweetie.”
Jenna made some sort of noise with her mouth before dashing from the room.
“That’s impressive,” Gullveig had to admit. “I’m a god, and I don’t get that kind of fear out of her.”
“I’ve been in this industry a long time. Worked my way up from the mail room. And you don’t get to where I’ve gotten by being nice. Or forgiving. Or remotely humane.”
“So . . . what? You’re here to take me out, Crow? You?” Gullveig laughed. She couldn’t help it. The balls on this woman!
“Of course not. Don’t be silly.”
“Then what? Why are you here?”
“You took from me. I’m here to take from you.”
“Take what?” she asked, laughing. “What do you think you can take from me?”
Lieberman laid her hands on Gullveig’s desk, leaned in. “Freyja’s necklace.”
Gullveig’s laughter died in her throat. “What are you talking about?”
“Brísingamen.”
“I know its name, idiot.” Dropping her legs to the floor, Gullveig stood. “And it’s my necklace.”
“Is it?” Lieberman smirked. “Because according to Freyja, it’s hers. And she wants her shit back.”
Gullveig started to go over the desk to get to the insolent Crow, but Lieberman pointed at the open office door behind her. “Now, now. Trust me. The entire staff is out there listening, and they’re enjoying every second of this. But are you sure you’re ready to out yourself as a god?”
Growling, Gullveig went through her bathroom to the small room she’d been using for her sacrifices and to call the Carrion to her. She kept all her jewelry in here but Brísingamen had its own special place on a bronze bust of Aphrodite.
But the bust now stood bare.
Screeching, Gullveig spun around, only to be hit in the face by a Crow. She’d wrapped the necklace around her fist and the power of it and her fist shoved Gullveig back until she slammed into the chest with all her jewels.
The Crow ran and, beyond angry, Gullveig tore after her, the walls peeling as she dashed by, her anger ripping away at the thin layer of this world.
She nearly had her hand on the Crow’s shoulder when the bitch tossed the necklace to another Crow standing on the far side of her desk.
“Erin!”
A redheaded Crow c
aught the necklace and Gullveig shifted her attention to her. The redhead ran, sliding under the desk just as Gullveig was going over it.
“Give it to me!” Gullveig bellowed, ready to burn the entire state down to get her necklace back.
She lifted the heavy desk and tossed it like so much hay, but the redhead was already near the front door of the office.
Gullveig cut her off there, but the redhead spun around while, at the same time, tossing the necklace.
“Betty!”
Lieberman caught the necklace in one hand and held it up. “This what you want, whore?” she asked. “Then come and get it, bitch!”
Done with this, Gullveig used a mystical doorway simply to go from one side of the room to the other, so she could wrap her hands around Lieberman’s throat.
But before she could yank the twat’s soul from her body and swallow it whole, talons dug into her from every side, and Gullveig quickly realized that the other Crows were holding on to her.
But why? What the mighty Helheim were they doing? They had to know they couldn’t kill her. They had to!
“Go, Jace!” a brown Crow yelled and her curly-haired sister began chanting in very ancient Norse. So ancient, Gullveig was shocked the little bitch even knew it. Almost no one knew that tongue because it was the language of the Vanir gods, not the Aesir.
It was a “call to the gold.” A spell so old and misunderstood that the Aesir had banned it from ever being used by their disciples.
What was so misunderstood about it? It was a spell that was often mistakenly used by those looking for wealth or bounty. But it didn’t bring anything to you. It brought you to it.
Something most people thought was a fine idea until they ended up at the bottom of the ocean where a long boat had gone down or in the fiery stomach of a gold-eating dragon or trapped behind the locked doors of a king’s gold vault with no way to get out.
But this . . . girl, she knew the spell. Knew it so well, she was using it to—
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
They were all standing around in the middle of a Beverly Hills jewelry store, with mounds of gold, diamonds, and rubies placed in piles to create a powerful mystical circle.
They were all at the ready. The Maids that had created the circle, and the Protectors, the Crows, the Ravens, and the Killers.
They all silently waited until . . . they were there. In the center of the circle. Betty having the life strangled out of her by an enraged Brianna and Jace, Kera, and Erin holding on to Betty’s god-infused assistant with their talons.
Betty, unable to pull away, held up her hand, Brísingamen clutched in her fingers.
Freyja, who’d given Jace enough of her power to have the strength to use the spell that would bring Gullveig here, leaned over the circle and snatched her torc from Betty.
“No!” Gullveig as Brianna, screamed, throwing Betty aside and trying to go after her Vanir sister.
Freyja leaned back and the powerful circle stopped Brianna cold.
“Give it back to me!” Brianna screeched. “It’s mine!”
“Oh no, sister,” Freyja replied, her voice low. “This is mine. And it was your mistake forgetting that.”
Then Freyja was gone, leaving a livid god trapped within the circle.
Bear sighed at the loss of Freyja, and Ski had to ask, “Did you really think she was going to help us anymore than she already has?”
“We did get her that stupid necklace back.”
“Oh, my friend, gods just don’t work that way.”
Raging, Brianna began to pace, trapped by the mounds of gold and diamonds that she so favored.
The store was brightly lit inside for its jewelry-buying patrons so she could see all of them waiting.
“What?” she asked. “Do you really think you can kill me? Your gods couldn’t kill me! Thor and Odin couldn’t kill me!”
“No,” Inka calmly told her. “We don’t think we can kill you.”
The Maids spread out so that they surrounded the circle that Brianna was trapped in, bowed their heads, their white robes covering their faces, and held up their hands. They began the chant that would open a doorway into another world.
A world where they’d send Brianna and the god stuffed inside her.
She quickly realized that, too, eyes growing wide when she recognized what was happening.
“Get ready,” Ski told his brothers.
Brianna threw back her head and unleashed a primal scream that radiated out, breaking every glass window and object in the room except for the ceiling above them.
Everyone ducked but the Maids, attempting to protect their faces and vital organs from shattered glass.
Bear lifted his head, turning and tilting it one way, then another. “They’re coming!” he warned. “They’re coming!”
The Carrion crashed through the tempered glass skylight and flew in through the open windows. The Mara came through the walls as smoke, but quickly turned to their more humanlike forms. Having already faced the Crows, the Mara went after them first while the Carrion targeted the Protectors.
Ski leaned one way, then the other. A Carrion’s Hel blade slashed past him. It wasn’t just the steel of these blades that worried him, but what the blades were imbued with. Just a touch from that steel would destroy skin and bone on contact.
The Ravens came at the Carrion from behind, moving out of the shadows so quickly, it was like they’d suddenly just appeared behind them.
Rundstöm came up behind the Carrion fighting Ski and caught hold of his leather wings. While he held the wings, he lifted his leg and rammed his foot against the Carrion’s back.
He tore the wings off, ignoring the screams and flying blood as only a Rundstöm could, while Ski grabbed the two Hel blades from the Carrion. He used one blade to cut him across the gut, intestines pouring to the floor, and the other he used to slice the Carrion’s throat, nearly taking his head off.
The Carrion dropped forward, and Rundstöm tossed the wings aside.
“Here,” Ski said, handing him one of the Hel blades.
Rundstöm took the offered sword. “I thought Protectors didn’t fight with weapons.”
“We don’t,” Ski explained seconds before he turned and removed the head of a Carrion who’d landed behind him. When he turned back to Rundstöm, he added, “But that doesn’t mean we can’t.”
The Crows fought off the Mara, the disgusting purveyors of everyone’s nightmares. But Jace and Betty were still focused on Gullveig. They couldn’t risk the possibility that she’d be able to get herself out of the Maids’ protective circle before they opened that door.
So, using their blades, they slashed at Gullveig. Not to kill her. They couldn’t kill her. At least not yet. But they could harm her. Especially since the skin she wore was not hers.
It had once belonged to Brianna, and Betty had made it clear when Jace had told her the plan that if there was one thing that must be accomplished during all this, it was the release of Brianna’s soul from her captor.
Jace had been a little surprised. Betty seemed to have made it her business to torment Brianna when she’d been her assistant, but Betty clarified that with, “I can torture her, but no one else can.”
So here they were, tag teaming a god. Betty slashing at Gullveig with her blades while Jace used her talons to strip Brianna’s skin off in big swaths and chunks.
When all the skin was removed from Gullveig’s chest, Betty stopped long enough to slap her hand between the god’s breasts and chant something in Old Norse.
Screaming, Brianna’s soul exited her prison of god flesh and dissipated into the air.
Then Betty slashed the god’s throat and yanked and spun around Gullveig, reaching up and grabbing her hair. She tore Brianna’s face off the god like a Scooby-Doo villain mask.
That’s when Gullveig raised her hand and, with a flick of her fingers, sent both Betty and Jace flying across the room.
When Jace landed, she lifted her head in time to see
a Hel’s blade fashioned as an axe coming down toward her chest. She rolled to one side, and the blade barely missed her, but the Carrions were fast, as well, and this one had pulled the weapon out of the floor and brought it down again before Jace had time to roll to the other side.
She crossed her blades in front of her face, and her rune-empowered weapons managed to prevent the axe from ramming into her head.
Using all her strength, she fought to keep the Carrion from bringing the blade all the way down, which would cleave her skull in two.
She turned her head to the side and saw that several of the Carrion were now inside the circle with Gullveig. They were going to try to get her out, but she didn’t think they were strong enough to bypass the Maids’ powers.
But then they did something she hadn’t seen coming. Inside the circle, they began to open their own doorway. And she knew immediately where they’d take Gullveig.
“Ski!” she screamed. “Stop them! Stop them now!”
Ski charged across the room toward the circle, which held the god trapped but could be entered by the rest of them. Vig and Bear started to follow, but the Mara grabbed hold of them, wrapping themselves around them, using their powers to make them live their nightmares.
That’s when the first twitch hit Jace.
Then she saw Ski make it into the circle and slash one Carrion with the Hel blade, then take the head of the other. He grabbed another Carrion. The one who’d picked Gullveig up to carry her into the doorway they’d opened.
The three struggled, but when the Carrion attempted to throw Gullveig into that doorway, Ski reached up, grabbed the goddess by the hair, and tossed her across the circle. She slammed into the other side like she was hitting a brick wall.
Screeching in rage, unwilling to believe anyone had treated her that way, Gullveig forgot about her own safety. She forgot about everything, and instead, she unleashed some spell that caused the doorway the Carrion had opened to start sucking them in.
One Carrion flipped backward, disappearing into it, and the one struggling with Ski tried to turn the Protector so that he’d go next.
That’s when the twitch Jace felt unleashed her rage, and everything in the room turned red. No one meant anything to her anymore. No one but Ski.