Hearing something like that after all that he’d been through made all the difference in the world. It gave him a reason to go on; a reason to fight if indeed they ever did come for him.
Remy was going to call Linda back, but saw the time and decided he might give her another hour or so to sleep before disturbing her. Mulvehill had left a message not long ago, so he hit the keypad to listen.
His blood froze in his veins; the sound of his friend’s voice was chilling. Remy flexed the muscles in his shoulders, calling forth his wings, and was about to travel to Steven’s Somerville apartment when the last of his friend’s message struck a very specific chord.
“Not sure who the hell you pissed off this time, but if they’re coming for me to get back at you . . .”
The words slowly turned, and burrowed into Remy’s gray matter.
“Ugly son of a bitch in a hooded cloak . . . used some kind of gun that looked like it was made from bones.”
A Bone Master, Remy realized. He was confused for a moment, recalling that Prosper had called off the contract, but then he remembered.
Prosper said that he hadn’t hired them.
The Bone Masters were attempting to fulfill another contract, one that appeared to include his friends as well.
And if they’d gone after Mulvehill . . .
Complete panic almost overtook him, but he realized that he had to remain calm. Calling upon his wings, he wrapped himself within a cloak of feathers, picturing inside his head where he wanted to go.
Where he needed to be.
Remy appeared in the tiny backyard of his Pinckney Street brownstone, already on the move toward the back door. The door was locked, but that was not a worry. He destroyed the lock as he tore the door open and forced his way into the house.
“Linda!” he called out, hoping that he’d find her terrified by the abruptness of his arrival, but safe. He could make up something to explain his worry later; he was good at things like that.
But neither she nor Marlowe were there, and his panic started to grow. He raced around the home, searching for any signs that something might have . . .
Remy forced the thought from his head.
He reached into his pocket for his phone, and was about to call Linda’s cell when he heard sounds from the foyer. He dropped the phone and rushed to the door, opening it in time to see Linda and Marlowe coming into the entryway with a bag of groceries.
“Hey you,” she said with a smile that nearly took his breath away. “Have you checked the mail?”
She was turning toward the mailbox, Marlowe excitedly trying to get to him but restrained by his leash.
“No. I just got in myself,” Remy answered. He was coming toward them when his eyes caught the hint of movement behind her. Something had entered with her, something that moved in such a way that normal eyes did not—could not—focus upon it.
Something that moved silently, and with a deadly purpose.
A shift in the makeup of his eyes made it possible for him to see the hooded Bone Master assassin as he flowed into the foyer, one arm disappearing within the folds of his cloak to emerge holding the yellowed, skeleton weapon that had once lived, but now delivered death.
Marlowe reacted as Remy did, spinning toward the closing door as the Master took aim. Linda was still oblivious, opening the mailbox as death loomed behind her.
She was Remy’s first concern. She needed to be out of harm’s way.
But that would mean . . .
There wasn’t any time for thought. If he was going to be successful, it had to happen. It was the only way.
Remy’s wings exploded from his back as he leapt, carrying him over Linda and Marlowe to land directly in front of the assassin. He grabbed hold of the assassin’s wrist and twisted it violently to one side, causing the weapon to fire into the wall.
“Get into the house!” Remy roared, allowing his voice to take on the characteristics of the divine. Some had described it as sounding like getting a message from God Himself.
He could see the look in her eyes, first of awe, and then of fear. He could imagine the little explosions cascading across the surface of her brain as her perceptions of the world were brought to ruin.
Remy didn’t want to be rough, but couldn’t risk her being hurt. He spun away from the attacker, grabbing her firmly by the shoulders and throwing her backward toward the still-open door to the brownstone. Her mouth was open in a scream, but no sound came out as he watched her fly through the air. The grocery bags tore in the scuffle, the contents spilling over the tile floor of the entryway.
Marlowe’s bark boomed in the small confines, warning Remy that there was an intruder and that he would protect him.
“Go be with Linda,” he managed to get out as he turned back toward the assassin, ready to rend the killer limb from limb for daring to put those he loved at risk.
Divine fire formed in the palm of his hand, and he thrust it toward the Bone Master, who ducked, slipping beneath his arm, and worming his way around Remy. Remy lashed out with his wings, slashing the feathered appendages across the front of the Bone Master as he attempted to aim his weapon.
Phutt! Phutt! Phutt! went the weapon of bone, projectiles of poisoned teeth hurtling their way toward their intended target. But Remy did not slow down, thrusting off with his wings and colliding with the Master’s midsection as the two of them hurtled back toward the open door into his home.
The Bone Master was smashed with incredible force against the wall inside, the sound of broken plaster crumbling to the floor accompanying a grunt of pain.
Lashing out, the assassin smashed the bony weapon across the bridge of Remy’s nose. His eyes filled with tears as he reared back and away.
The Bone Master used the opportunity to dart to the side, flowing into the living room as he again took aim.
Wiping the running fluids from his eyes to clear his vision, Remy attempted to take flight, but the low ceilings in the entryway limited his distance, and he found himself dropping back down as the assassin prepared to fire.
There was a flash of black across the Bone Master’s path, and an ear-piercing cry sounded, the shot going astray.
Remy saw in horror that Marlowe had attacked the assassin, taking hold of the would-be killer’s wrist in his powerful jaws, causing the assassin to lose his hold upon the weapon.
Driven nearly insane by the attack upon his master, Marlowe held on to the demon’s limb, growling and shaking it savagely in all his animalistic fury. The Bone Master continued to cry out, withdrawing a nasty-looking blade from the folds of his cloak with his free hand.
Remy was there, taking the demon’s wrist in a fiery grip.
“I’ve got this, boy,” Remy told the dog, and Marlowe listened, releasing the assassin with a bark and stepping back to make sure that Linda, who cowered in the corner of the room, was all right.
Remy didn’t want her to see this, but it wasn’t a time to be gentle.
The demon fought against his hold even as his pale flesh caught fire, and the serrated dagger dropped from his grasp.
But the Bone Master was not finished, driving his knee up into Remy’s stomach as he wriggled from the Seraphim’s clutches. Remy was surprised at the Master’s strength as the wind wheezed from his lungs.
Dropping to the floor, the demon crawled upon all fours like some hideous insect toward where his bone gun had dropped.
With a hand charred black from divine fire the Bone Master reached for the weapon, only to pull it back with a quick snap as a foot came down upon the gun, crushing it against the hardwood floor.
Remy saw that Linda had left the safety of her hiding place to assist him, her eyes briefly touching his as she ground the weapon beneath the heel of her shoe.
The Bone Master screamed as if in great physical pain. And still screaming, the demon grabbed Linda’s ankle, yanking her foot out from beneath her and sending her to the floor, her head bouncing off the hardwood, stunning her.
The k
iller crawled atop her with a snarl, going for the knife that he’d dropped when his hand was set aflame. The weapon still burned, but that did not stop the assassin, as he retrieved the smoldering blade and prepared to cut the woman’s throat.
Remy pounced, reaching out to haul the Bone Master from atop her.
The assassin was wild, thrashing in his clutches, and Remy grabbed hold of the demon’s pale, gaunt face, forcing the assassin to look into his eyes.
“You’ll never hurt anyone ever again,” Remy stated flatly, dispassionately, willing his hands afire.
The assassin continued to fight him, even as the divine flames began to hungrily consume the flesh of his face, his eyes bubbling and popping from their sockets before the flames spread onto his skull.
The Bone Master screamed for far longer than Remy would have imagined he could.
When he finally fell silent, Remy let the body slip from his grasp. The fire continued to burn, jumping to the assassin’s robes and the flesh beneath. If allowed to spread, there would be nothing left to show that the assassin had even been there.
All except for the physical and mental damage the demon had inflicted in his wake.
Marlowe came to Remy, leaping up on his chest, stretching his neck to eagerly kiss his face. Remy found it suddenly difficult to remain standing, and dropped down to his knees, giving the dog ample opportunity to display his rampant affections.
As Marlowe frantically licked his face, Remy looked to see Linda staring at him from where she sat perfectly motionless upon the floor. He wanted to tell her to remain calm, that he would explain everything to her, but he found that the words would not come.
The look of fear in her eyes freezing them in his throat as he tried to speak.
“I believe,” he started, the words for some reason so difficult to pry from his mouth. “I believe I owe you an explanation.”
Remy heard himself, the words sounding strangely slurred, and wondered what could be the cause when he came to realize that his entire body was growing increasingly cold. He could not feel his limbs, and found himself suddenly toppling over onto the floor.
Marlowe yelped in panic as he fell, and Linda was at his side, leaning over him, tears in her eyes, her face racked with the beginnings of panic.
“You’re bleeding,” he heard her say, though strangely muffled, and he was able to lift his body and tilt his head in such a way to see that yes, he was indeed bleeding; a cold realization came to him.
The assassin’s bullets had found their target, the venom-infused teeth sending a powerful poison coursing through his veins.
Remy attempted to react, to alter his internal chemistry in such a way as to burn the poison away before . . .
Nothing happened, and the cold continued to permeate his every fiber; he was finding it harder and harder to remain there—to remain with Linda and Marlowe.
Marlowe cried pathetically, pacing back and forth in front of them. Linda was holding him now, gripping him tightly in her arms and begging for him to stay with her.
“Remy, what should I do?” she pleaded, hoping that he would help her, but it was so difficult for him to speak.
“I . . . I’m so sorry,” he managed to squeak out. “Didn’t want . . . to lie.”
She was hysterical, and he wanted to hold her, to tell her that he would be fine, but he could no longer move his arms, and now that everything had been revealed, he did not want to begin another lie.
“Remy,” she pleaded, tears raining down upon his face; tears that he could not feel.
He tried to stay with her, but his eyes had grown so heavy, and he could no longer hold them open. Maybe if I close them for just a moment, he told himself.
To rest.
Marlowe was howling now, his cries reverberating through the lobby. Remy thought it was the saddest sound he had ever heard as he felt himself begin to succumb.
His eyes closed, and darkness fell, but there was fire in the midst of shadow; a struggling flame fighting to stay alight in the encroaching gloom.
But the fire grew dim, smaller by the passing moment, until it was but a faintly glowing ember, and it could fight no more, giving in to the dark.
The last thought Remy had before he, too, succumbed:
Is this what it’s like to die?
EPILOGUE
Romania
Simeon stood on the outskirts of the ancient cemetery, watching the burial from a distance, and trying to remember how it felt to die.
With each shovelful of dirt upon the wooden coffin, he imagined himself deep within the ground, lovingly held in the earthen embrace, waiting for the moment when he would at last pass from life.
But the Earth, and Heaven, would not have him.
The forever man’s thoughts drifted back to a time that seemed not so long ago. But what was time for one who would breathe forever?
Castle Hallow had fallen, and the sorcerous might of the Pope named Tyranus had been unleashed as death had taken him. In his fury, Simeon had commanded the demon legions to attack, their number proving too great for the holy man. But as he succumbed, the Pope let flow his vast reserves of supernatural power, laying the castle low.
The fortress of the necromancer crumbled and sank beneath the moor, Simeon’s body weighed down by pieces of heavy wall that took him deeper and deeper beneath the mire.
And that was when he experienced the vision.
In a moment of death—which was all that he was ever given—Simeon saw the way in which his desires could finally come true.
And in the time of death allotted, before he was wrenched back to wretched existence, he saw how it could all be made possible.
The rings. The two rings of Solomon.
With one ring already adorning his finger, Simeon had searched for the other, dying again and again while looking for the corpse of the Pope called Tyranus deep beneath the gripping marshland.
A woman’s cry tore Simeon from his memory.
He watched as a group of men supported an older woman in a veil, and dressed entirely in black, holding her up as they escorted her from the new grave. Eyes drawn to the freshly turned earth, Simeon again remembered how it had been.
Now possessing both of Solomon’s rings, he’d pulled himself up from the mire, a new purpose burning in his chest where a soul used to be.
He’d cried out his victory to the Heavens as he emerged from the mud, desperate for them to hear him, and to know that he would be the one to bring them down.
As usual, Heaven and all who lived within its glory chose to ignore him.
But that slight would come at a cost most severe.
He wondered if the angel that stood upon the ground where the necromancer’s castle had once been would be returning to Heaven.
The angel turned to watch his struggles as he withdrew himself from the grip of the moor. A sword of fire glowed powerfully in his grasp as he observed him.
Simeon was tempted to share his vision with the divine creature, but he decided against it, believing that it was best that the Almighty and all who served Him be unaware as to what was coming sometime in the future.
The angel had asked who he was, and how he came to be alive, but Simeon did not have time for questions, raising his hands and feeling the power of the rings tingling upon his fingers.
“I’m nobody,” he had told the angel. “And nothing worth remembering.”
And the angel had agreed, spreading his wings and taking to the sky.
He’d often wondered in the passing years what had happened to that angel, and if he would ever see him again.
Simeon thought of the angel, now called Remy Chandler, and smiled. There’s something about that one, he thought, turning to walk the path from the cemetery, his demonic minions walking respectfully behind him, as they had since he pulled himself from the mud and ruins of Castle Hallow.
Something to be watched, and if possible, cultivated.
This Remy Chandler could be exactly what was needed to move t
hings along. It was something to consider, but there was another matter that needed attending to.
Another need to be filled.
It wasn’t all that difficult to locate the one he’d been searching for. Simeon and his demonic lackeys stood outside the run-down stone building located just behind the bakery. The aroma of freshly baked bread wafted in the air as the forever man searched for the entrance.
The door whined like a hungry feline as he pushed it open and proceeded inside. His demons attempted to follow, but Simeon did not believe they would be necessary.
“Wait for me here,” he told them, turning to climb the creaking wooden steps up to the top floor of the ancient tenement. The air was thick with the residue of the many Romanian meals that had been cooked there through the centuries the structure had stood. Simeon could just imagine the lives lived here.
The lives, and the deaths.
It hadn’t been all that difficult to locate the one Simeon sought, no matter how hard he tried to hide himself. Purchases of baubles to ward off evil from a local Romani clan, thefts of holy relics from churches close by, reports of a strange man who openly wept when a story about an environmental calamity on a deserted Japanese island was reported on a news broadcast at the village tavern.
All were like a map to one such as the forever man; a map that pointed to the location of one who could be beneficial to his work.
Simeon could feel the presence of something unnatural—preternatural—as he reached the heavy, wooden door at the top of the stairs. It was obvious to him that he had come to the right place.
“Who’s . . . who’s there?” asked a weak voice from inside.
“I’ve come with a proposition,” Simeon said to the closed door, listening for sounds of movement on the other side. “May I come in?”
There came a chilling laugh behind the door. “Oh yes, please do,” said a voice unlike the one he’d first heard. This one sounded strong, confident. “We would truly enjoy hearing what you have to propose to us.”