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Emma L Adams

Celestial Ashes: Celestial Marked Series Book 3 (Paperback)

Celestial Ashes: Celestial Marked Series Book 3 (Paperback)

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Book 3 of 5: Celestial Marked

The netherworld is far from done with Devi Lawson...

Now the celestials are set on eradicating anyone who carries the demonic virus, Devi finds herself a fugitive. Joining with the demons is the easy way out, but that would mean giving up her home to the denizens of the infernal realms. With everyone in the netherworld queuing to stake a claim on her, she's not all that keen on handing Earth over to them, too.

But now her demon mark is taking on a life of its own, she might not have a choice in the matter. The shadow of war descends, and Devi must find a way to protect the people she loves, without losing her humanity in the process…

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I crept through the corridor, my gravity-defying, super-stealth shoes cushioning my steps. Despite the daylight hour, darkness permeated the landing of the so-called ‘safe house’. Aside from the boots, I wore dark colours, and my dark brown hair was tied back out of the way. Long sleeves hid my wrists, and the twin marks on them which marked me as belonging to both heaven and hell. Or neither. I can’t believe I’m actually saving vampires from the celestials.

Vampires were determined to be the bane of my existence lately. Normal vamps slept in coffins but wandered around at night. That meant anyone who hadn’t taken the cure would be passed out right now—an easy way to make the distinction between regular vampires and the ones who’d knowingly or unknowingly drank an infusion of demon venom.

After the celestials’ elite soldiers had massacred three groups of innocent vampires on their own territory, I’d snapped. It was one thing to take down the vamps intentionally spreading the demonic venom by biting people, and quite another to kill innocents. The celestial guild of Haven City, once the arbiters of justice chosen by the angelic Divinities themselves, had restyled themselves thanks to their new leader, Inspector Deacon. His Grade Four celestial soldiers were once given the job of executioner in absolutely dire situations only, but now the merest hint of the presence of demon venom would lead them to shoot first, ask questions later.

I reached the door, made of reinforced steel to keep the prisoners caged in, since vampires were much stronger than humans. Then I pressed the demon mark on my right hand—which I’d charged up with Nikolas’s lightning power earlier—into the lock. A jolt of demonic energy rippled up the door, and as I’d suspected, it wasn’t demigod-proof. I could only borrow so much power at a time, and it turned out I had a limit. But zapping a door open was a pretty neat trick.

Inside the room, the shapes of bodies draped on the floor came into view in the dim light. The smell of blood was faint, so presumably they were all alive. Relatively speaking.

“Rise and shine, sleepyheads,” I whispered.

Vamps slept like the dead. Or undead. I grabbed one of them and shook him. He mumbled something unintelligible and started snoring again. I gave him another shake. 

“Wake up!” I snapped.

“Bugger off,” he grumbled. Like a lot of vamps I met, he was probably in his late teens. I figured the large proportion of vampires in that demographic was due to the alarming number of students who thought it amusing to wander drunkenly into vampire territory in the middle of the night, and then woke up with immortality to go with their hangovers.

I jabbed my fingernail into his cheek. He yelped, abruptly cut off when I covered his mouth with my hand. “Quiet. I’m doing you a favour. Help me wake up the others.”

“Wait till morning,” he mumbled.

“It is morning. That’s why I’m here. Unless you want to still be here when I burn this house down and kill the morons who captured you.”

He groaned. I rolled my eyes. “Sorry I interrupted your kidnapping,” I said.

“Who are you?” asked a female vampire in a slurred voice.

“I’m Devi,” I said. “And I’ve come to rescue you.”

“I’m Kelly,” she said, blinking. “Wait—aren’t you a celestial?”

“I was,” I said. “But trust me, if they showed up before I did, they wouldn’t stop to ask whether any of you had been bitten or not before bringing the lights out. Come with me.”

“Where?” asked Kelly.

I flashed them a smile. “What do you think? Somewhere safe.”

“How do we know you’re not one of them?” demanded the first vampire I’d woken.

I shone the light underneath my face. Seeing my eyes were dark brown—no hint of vampire bloodlust, nor the pupil-like darkness of someone who’d taken in the demon’s venom—his expression relaxed.

“I knocked out the guards, but they’ll wake soon,” I whispered. “Wake the others. Let’s move.”

Normally, I’d have taken out the guards in a more permanent manner, but the annoying thing about leaving corpses around vampires is that they tend to get a little distracted by the presence of fresh blood. Besides, I needed to leave as little trace of my presence as possible. Aside from the missing vamps, obviously.

They shuffled after me. From their red-tinted eyes, they’d been starved and were on the verge of a blood craze—which meant if one of them flew into a frenzy, they could cause a bloodbath I’d prefer to avoid. I hadn’t expected any less, given the conditions they’d been kept in. The whole building had not only been locked, it’d also been warded against demons using the celestials’ own technology. Damian Greenwood, former celestial and traitor, had apparently passed on his knowledge before he’d challenged me and got himself killed. He’d also been the one to give the demons the idea to spread the virus through fake bloodstones. After switching out the energy sources the vamps used as a substitute for drinking blood with demon eggs containing a demonic parasite, they’d changed the landscape of all things preternatural in this city forever.

When we reached the door leading outside, I checked the nearby guard was still unconscious then pulled a mass of fabric from my bag. “We’re going outside. Cover your faces, but try to look where you’re going. We don’t have much time.”

Vampires burned in sunlight, often turning to ash in seconds. Most bright lights were painful for them, but it was the light of the day that signalled their demise. Yet another way to tell the difference between the fake vamps and the real ones—the vamps who’d taken the demon-tainted ‘cure’ could walk in the day just fine. Which meant there was a high chance of running into one of them before we reached safety, but I’d take the vamps over the celestials at the moment.

The vampires looked at the hooded coats with confused expressions.

“Put the coats on,” I told them. “Honestly. It’s that or catch on fire.”

There was a flurry of movement. I waited, listening out for signs that someone had discovered the empty room, but none came.

“How’d they get so many of you?” I asked the female vampire.

“They brought us in a few at a time,” Kelly mumbled. “They feed us the cure, then pit us against one another to see what happens. Some volunteered… they wanted out.”

I suppressed a shudder. The vampires who chose to take the so-called cure had signed their own death warrants. The celestials saw no distinction between villains and victims, and unless the difference was obvious—like the vamps locked in the cage—I couldn’t afford to, either. I’d got a tip off that the celestials intended to target this place in less than two hours. So I had that long to sneak the innocent vamps out of here and if anyone went bad, kill them.

“You’re all definitely not infected, right? No bites, and no blood?”

“None. I haven’t seen any blood for days,” she said. 

“Don’t worry. They’ll get what’s coming to them. Everyone set? C’mon.”

I beckoned them to follow me, easing the door open into the daylight.

Javos—my warlock boss—disapproved of my new hobby, but I disapproved of the city turning into a battlefield. If the celestials crossed a line and murdered someone close to Madame White, the vampires’ leader, I’d get to find out the hard way if the warlocks would stand with the vamps against the guild—or if the whole city would be torn apart in warfare without the netherworld needing to lift a finger. My agreement with the local warlocks only covered my employment, plus training to use my newly acquired demonic powers. When you added in vampire rescue missions, my schedule was pretty full. But it was my contribution towards preventing the end of the world as we knew it.

“Okay,” I whispered. “Go over there. See the big security guard? It’s one of my allies in disguise.”

Rachel was a chameleon demon who could take on the form of anyone—a useful ability for someone whose natural demon form had three sets of serrated teeth and a taste for flesh. She’d taken on the shape of a burly male human, standing next to the minibus I’d hired for easy transportation. It even had window drapes.

One of the vampires whimpered, cringing away from the light. 

“Keep the coat on,” I told him. “I’ll take care of the rest.”

Once I’d checked they were on their way to the minibus, I turned back to the dark corridor. The guard hadn’t been alone. And when he woke up—

A hand grabbed my throat and spun me around, slamming me into the wall.

“Stealing my vampires, are you?” whispered a voice.

You are a vampire, I thought dizzily. No human was that strong. When they took the demon venom, vamps lost their sensitivity to daylight. I wished they lost their super-speed and strength along with it, but instead, they kept their advantages and lost the drawbacks. Considering a lot of them ended up losing their minds and murdering anyone nearby, some might have considered it a fair trade-off. And there’d be vamps out there who’d taken the cure by accident.

The vamp who’d grabbed me, however, definitely wasn’t an innocent bystander. His pale skin glowed, but judging by the way he didn’t shrink away from the sunlight, he’d been through the full transformation and was now a day-walking vampire.

“They’re not your property,” I said. “Clearly, you aren’t their sire, otherwise they’d be like you.”

“You say that like it’s a bad thing.” His eyes shone, luminescent black—a side effect of the parasite living in his head. I doubted he’d be as cocky if he knew precisely what the cure had done to him. But they didn’t. They hadn’t even asked.

“Give them over,” he purred.

“Let me think about that one.” The demonic power I’d taken from the arch-demon Themedes still resided in my hand. I used it sparingly, but now was as good a time as any. A flame leaped into my hand. The vampire hissed and sprang back—too late. I raised my right hand and threw the flame at him, igniting him in demonic fire.

He yelled, the skin melting off his bones. My demon mark tingled, pleased that I was using its power, and it took everything I had to tone it down. As much as I wanted to burn this place to cinders, it’d be a dead giveaway that I was no longer the same as the other celestials.

Instead, I used my left hand. White light, the flames of divine fire, leaped to life in my other palm. The light burned out evil and sin, and all vampires fell into that category. Demonic vamps, several times over.

I turned to face the two vamps who’d come out behind him. They had the same dark eyes, the same confident manner—though they looked warily at my right hand.

“What kind of celestial are you?” they asked.

“Oh, you know the celestials? Even better.” I strode casually towards them, kicking the ashes of their fallen companion aside. “I don’t suppose you’d like to tell me who put you up to this? What’s the point in this whole operation?”

He stepped back, fear flashing across his face. “They just told us to bite as many people as possible. The ones who don’t react badly to the venom—”

“They get to live, right?” I asked. “And on whose orders are you acting?”

“Why should I tell you? You’ll only kill me anyway.”

I smiled sweetly. “It’s death at my hands, or death via the Grade Four celestial soldiers. And I’m the easy option. At least I’ll make it quick. Tell me who your boss is.”

“Ryman…”

One of the sires. Vamps in this city tended to answer to the one who’d given them their blood, who’d turned them. I should have known a sire was behind it. The venom had spread so fast, the demons must have sent it in via someone whose designated role in vampire society involved biting people. A lot of people. The last week had been a crash course in all things vampire.

“And you thought it was funny to watch them fight to the death as sport,” I said. “I should have let the celestials burn you. Too bad… you get me instead.”

Celestial light blazed from my left hand, and the vampires screamed. Even the demonic virus didn’t prevent them from burning alive, as the divine fire scorched out their souls.

I ran to the bus. The curtains were closed, giving no clues that we were about to smuggle a bunch of vampires across the city. Thanks to Nikolas’s mind-altering abilities, nobody stopped to ask questions. While he drove, I joined Rachel in the front row of seats. The vampires huddled in behind, giving me wary looks. They’d probably seen the light’s glare imprinted on the outside of the curtains. Doubtless some of them would have heard the rumours I was no normal celestial soldier.

I pulled my sleeves down. My demon mark itched constantly these days. A side effect of absorbing so much contradictory magic, maybe.

Or maybe because I was actively working against the person who’d marked me.

The Divinity—fallen, turned into an arch-demon—hadn’t only marked me, but had gifted the vampires’ original leader with the same mark as me. Sure, he was dead, but it was a glaring reminder that the magic I used was on loan from a dangerous, impossibly powerful being which might easily turn against me. The divine forces doing battle for dominance cared nothing for our lives. They’d mow us down in their battle—a fight I barely knew anything about. Souls were currency, and mine was marked by the demons.

The world believed I was a fugitive, on the side of the netherworld. And maybe I was. Maybe we were all puppets in this war. But I had no intention whatsoever of being anyone’s pawn.

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