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Angel of Darkness

Angel of Darkness (The Fallen #1)(34)
Author: Cynthia Eden

“Are you going to kill me?” She asked him the same way another woman might have asked if he were going to kiss her. Quiet, husky.

He caught her arms and pulled her closer.

“Are you?” She whispered.

He crushed his mouth to hers, and he kissed her hard and deep and he didn’t care that Az’s scent lingered in the air. Let the angel watch. Let him see where Keenan’s true loyalties were.

She wouldn’t die by his hands.

And any angel who came close would find out that his fury was ten times hotter than hell’s.

He hadn’t fallen to lose her.

He’d fallen to fight for her.

Ten days.

No.

He knew it was time to make a deal with the devil.

The voices were louder. The whispers in Elijah’s mind were seductive calls now, tempting him.

Stop them from seeing.

Elijah knew the humans could see right through his mask. They saw the monster inside, and they were mocking him.

He pushed through the crowd at the bar, snarling.

They can see.

His head throbbed, his heart raced, and still that voice in his mind taunted.

He needed the drugs. Needed them to quiet the voice so that he could breathe again—and hunt like he wanted. Hunt and kill without the eyes on him.

See.

He shoved open the door and the hot night air hit him in the face. He sucked in a breath, another, and stumbled away. His body shook and every step was pain.

That voice … so loud now … They see.

He doubled over as the pain sliced right through him.

“Hey, wait … are you okay?”

A woman’s voice. High. Worried.

Footsteps raced toward him. He opened his eyes and saw small feet. White sandals. Tanned legs.

“You sick?” The owner of those legs asked. “Want me to call someone for you?”

He glanced up, slowly, and looked straight into her dark eyes.

She can see you. The voice taunted.

Those eyes of hers widened, and he smiled. Then he lunged for her.

The bitch ran, screaming, as she jumped away from him. But he had his knife out and he was gonna make sure that she didn’t see him again. That she didn’t see anything.

Then the voice would stop.

Can’t see now.

He grabbed her hair and shoved her down.

“Hey, demon …”

Elijah’s gaze whipped up in time to see a board come swinging at his face. He tried to stumble back, but the wood slammed right into his head.

Then he didn’t see anything at all.

CHAPTER EIGHT

Keenan and Nicole made it to New Orleans a few hours after dawn. Nicole hadn’t slept during the drive. She’d been too scared to let down her guard for sleep.

After all, it wasn’t every day that an angel said you were marked for death.

And she’d heard him. His dark, deep voice had filled her ears as he’d asked Keenan to kill her.

Her eyes squeezed shut. If Keenan killed her, he’d rise. Okay, she figured that meant he’d get a free ride back up to the clouds.

But what happened to her? After what she’d done over the last few months, there’d be no comfy cloud ride waiting on her.

I don’t want to die.

“I can’t go back to the Quarter,” she told him as she felt her nails bite into her palms. “I can’t go back to my place.” The cops might be watching.

“You don’t have a place there anymore.”

That had her eyes opening.

The vehicle slowed. “Someone else lives in your apartment. He took it over about a month ago.”

Right. Of course. She cleared her throat. “Then where are we going?” He’d been adamant that they travel back to New Orleans, but New Orleans was not the place she wanted to see again. Too much pain waited in the city.

“I’ve got a place just outside of town.”

Keenan had a place? How did he even have money?

He glanced toward her and his lips kicked up a bit. He must have read the thoughts on her face. “You keep forgetting, sweet … I know just about every secret the humans and the Other have. I know where all the bodies are buried.”

Yes, she bet he did.

“And I had some Other who owed me. The house was payment.”

“Payment for what, exactly?”

“You don’t want to know.”

Probably not.

Her heart squeezed as they drove past the city she’d loved so much. They rode in a different car now, a nondescript Ford. They’d switched vehicles just outside of Texas, the better to keep the vampire-killing cops off their backs.

Soon the streets thinned. Oak trees and moss swept past her.

Then …

“Here we are,” Keenan said quietly as he pulled to a stop.

She gazed out the window and saw an old antebellum. The place had been fixed up, but it wasn’t one of the too-fancy, too-rich houses she’d seen before. This house was half-hidden by the trees, yet standing strong against the swamp.

Waiting.

“Will we be safe here?” Nicole asked as she climbed out of the car.

He didn’t answer.

She guessed that was a no. The sun beat down on her as she walked toward the house, and she felt its pull on her strength.

Keenan opened the doors and the smell of the house hit her. Not the closed-in, old smell that some places could get when they were left alone too long. Instead, the scent was light, soft, welcoming.

The furniture was sparse, but after six months of cheap motels, who was she to complain? The place looked like the Ritz to her.

“You should sleep.” Keenan’s deep voice rumbled from behind her. He locked the door. “Go get some rest. Get your strength back.”

Her hand curved around the banister. Her palm was sweating. “What did the angel mean about trading one soul for another?” She hadn’t asked her questions during the car ride. Hell, for most of that ride, she’d just been numb with fear. Ten days left to live.

She’d been on a countdown before, and she’d never wanted to be on one again.

Ten days.

A deep furrow appeared between Keenan’s brows. “You heard that part?”

“I heard every part.” Including the part where he asked you to kill me.

He shook his head. “You shouldn’t have. Most folks can’t ever see or hear angels, all they can do is just catch their scents every now and then.”

Flowers.

Goose bumps rose on her arms. Six months ago, she’d caught that sweet scent a few times in her classroom and in her home. The scent—she realized now it had been Keenan. Watching.

But they’d get to that soon enough. First … “You didn’t answer me, Keenan.” She’d noticed he was very good at avoiding answers to her questions.

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