Vampires. Creatures of darkness and fear, and also terrible manners, outdated dress sense and a fairly bland taste in decor. Also, zero concept of housekeeping. I crept across the floor of the vampire’s lair—or rather, house—trying not to breathe in too much dust. Rachel, the first warlock I’d befriended, had added a stealth option to my gravity-defying shoes, but a dust repellent and a light would be more useful at the moment. Since light would wake the vampires, however, I had to rely on my other senses to find my way around the house. I had reasonable confidence he wasn’t in this room, but like any vampire abode during daylight hours, every window and door was sealed to prevent the tiniest speck of sunlight from entering the house. This wasn’t your best idea, Devi.
I carried a handmade magic detector around my neck, set to vibrate when I got close to my source. A regular demon detector would make too much noise. Somewhere here was a collection of bloodstones infused with demonic magic—a highly illegal magical item, newly on the market thanks to a fire-wielding warlock from another realm who’d decided to recruit the local vampires by giving them blood infused with demon magic. When they infected celestial soldiers with that venom, they’d died. Horribly. And even though I’d destroyed one nest, calls like the one the warlocks had this morning came in every other week.
The smell of blood—fresh and old—filled my nostrils as I re-entered the hall. Ugh. Vampire houses weren’t the most hygienic places. My feet found the lower step of a staircase, and I rested my right hand on the banister. I’d checked the entire floor, which meant the source must be upstairs. The solidness of the cuff binding my left wrist—a present from Javos, my sort-of-boss—was a reminder that I couldn’t use my celestial powers on this mission. I’d have to rely on stakes and quick reflexes instead.
A floorboard creaked overhead. I stilled, cursing silently. Someone was awake, and switching a light on to see who it was would alert the house’s other inhabitants. The tiniest creak on the stairs betrayed movement. Shit. He moved fast.
Oh no.
I’d taken one step back when a solid body slammed into me, knocking the breath from my lungs. We crashed into a heap, my elbows scraping the floor. Warm breath tickled my neck, and cold, hard teeth pressed against the skin under my collar.
I might be immune to vampire venom, but that didn’t mean I liked the idea of being turned into a pincushion. I slammed my elbow into his side—at least, that’s where I aimed for. The pitch darkness didn’t abate, but vampires moved by scent as far as their human prey was concerned and even celestials couldn’t match them for speed. Freeing my right hand, I grabbed the charm around my neck and hit the switch. The smell of herbs blasted me in the face, and the vampire’s grip loosened. Miniature drowsiness spell worked like a charm. It helped that during the day, he’d already be half asleep anyway.
Sliding along the carpeted floor, I wriggled free of the vampire’s grip. I might have lost the perks of using the celestials’ lab, but I could improvise handmade spells when I wanted to. Saying farewell to my promise not to use torchlight, I used my phone’s light to show the path up into the dark landing. As silently as possible, I climbed the stairs. Hopefully our fight hadn’t disturbed any more bloodsuckers. Javos had insisted there wouldn’t be more than two, and I’d killed a whole room of them on one memorable occasion. But that was when I had my celestial blade. Without it, I felt naked, undefended. It’s definitely not shadow magic I have. Whatever other magic my demon mark contained remained more dormant than my celestial powers.
I felt my way along the landing. If a vamp was asleep, the door would be locked—I thought. Why that one downstairs had been wandering about, I had no clue. But I needed to search the unlocked rooms first, and only venture into the vampire’s lair as a last resort. True bloodstones were energy sources generally used by vampires who didn’t have an immediate source of human prey to draw energy from. But the ones I searched for contained a more deadly power. Three novice celestials were currently suspended from action due to the venom produced by the demon-infected vampire’s bite, and it would be much worse if more vamps got hold of the demonic bloodstones which someone had apparently hidden in this house.
I tried the first door. Unlocked. Faint light from my torch showed an empty bedroom. I crept in, searched every corner, then backed out. The second room yielded a similar result. Testing all the doors, I found none of them were locked. No more vamps, then. I breathed out, pushing open the last door.
A creaking noise came from downstairs.
I froze, my hand on the doorknob, and turned it the rest of the way. A vampire leered at me from the corner, his mouth stretched open, pointed fangs curling from his lips.
Screw this game, Javos.
I gripped my left wrist and yanked at the cuff the warlock boss had put there. White light shone from the arrowhead tattoo on the underside of my wrist, celestial fire designed to burn out evil, and skimmed over the vampire’s face.
The vampire didn’t turn to ashes. Because he was very, horribly dead.
Blood slicked his neck and covered his chest in jagged stripes. His body had been propped in a sitting position against the wall, but terrible wounds marked his body. Thick red blood soaked into the carpet, its fresh coppery tang permeating the air. Not a vampire killing. A demon savaged him.
I swallowed bile and backed away, not daring to switch off the light in case something else jumped at me. Like, for instance, the thing which had decided a vampire would make a good snack. Vampire bite wounds were small punctures that sealed within a minute. This guy had apparently run into a wild animal attack—or a demon.
Another creaking noise came from below. Oh hell. The other vamp plainly wasn’t the attacker, but maybe he was in league with them. Why else would he be creeping around the house with his buddy lying dead upstairs? Tensing, I pushed the cuff further down my wrist, white light flooding my hand. I slipped out into the upstairs landing and shone the light down the stairs. The vamp lay slumped where I’d left him—younger than I’d thought, a man of maybe twenty with floppy blond hair. Nobody else was around.
I swiftly climbed down the stairs, one eye on him. “Who else is in here? Show yourself.”
My knees buckled under the unexpected weight when someone crashed into me from behind. A muscular arm wrapped around my waist, pinning me flat. I wriggled, waving my celestial hand. “Get off me.”
“I’m disappointed,” said a soft voice in my ear. “I really thought you could complete the mission without resorting to using your celestial power.”
“Ouch.” I pretended to struggle feebly, though relief made my legs go wobbly. “Oi. Nikolas. Let go of me. There’s a dead body upstairs.”
“Javos told you not to stab the vampires.”
“Javos is a prick.” I freed my hand. “And I mean the vampire’s more dead than usual. Someone ate him.”
Nikolas loosened his hold, allowing me to scramble to my feet. “Seriously?”
“Why do you think it smells like something curled up and died in here?” Nikolas had offered to supervise my training, but he was as much of a stickler for the rules as his boss. Hence the ‘no celestial powers’ condition that made subduing demons and vamps a royal nuisance.
Nikolas wasn’t hard on the eyes, for a warlock. While a lot of them came equipped with horns and fangs, he looked human from a distance—albeit a particularly striking human. Tall and broad, he had dark red hair, golden eyes, and tanned, chiselled features that wouldn’t look out of place on DivinityWatch’s Warlock of the Week feature. Not that I’d actually told him. I figured guys like him were perfectly aware of how disturbingly attractive humans found them, and stroking a warlock’s ego was generally a bad move.
He eyed the man on the floor. “He’s not dead.”
“No, I caught him first,” I said. “I’d peg him as the killer, but I’m pretty sure what savaged the other dude isn’t human. Not by a long shot.”
“Show me,” he said.
I led the way upstairs, and pointed through the open door, steeling myself to look at the sight of the brutal murder again. Even werewolf kills weren’t that messy. “Look at that. Definitely not a human killer.”
Nikolas looked through the door with an impassive expression. “I see,” he said, prowling into the room, scanning every corner. I switched on the light properly, now there was no need to keep it off. So much blood soaked into the carpet, it seemed impossible that the other vamp had been in the same house and not flown into a blood frenzy. Damn. We need to get him out.
“The killer was a demon,” he said, “but it wasn’t summoned in this room. Check the others.”
“Is Javos coming to take away the guy downstairs? Because that spell won’t last forever.”
“I’ll let him know.” Nikolas pulled out his phone. “But we need to be certain if the demon was summoned here.”
“If that guy did it, I bet he regrets it now.” I backed out of the room. Switching on the landing light, I kicked in every door, moving loudly and swiftly to gain control over my jangling nerves. There were dozens of demons who could savage someone, so figuring out who’d done the summoning was the priority before we tried to pinpoint what they’d summoned.
Inside one of the bedrooms, I found a pentagram on the floor, smeared with brimstone. Dead. I kicked it just in case, treading on the lines. Several bloodstones lay nearby, but clear-coloured, not dark red or black. They’d been drained. I picked them up anyway and returned to Nikolas.
“I found a small pentagram in there,” I told him. “And these. They’re dead. All the energy’s gone.”
“I see.” He took the bloodstones from me. “I’ll ask Javos to inform the vampires’ local sire about the body so it can be removed. I think we’re done here.”
“And the vampire downstairs?”
“Still unconscious, so we can take him for questioning,” he said. “I’d congratulate you on knocking him out without waking the rest of the house, but considering the only other person inside the house is dead…”
I gave him the finger. “Very funny. Nobody else is here? The vampire downstairs… unless he’s seriously in a blood rage, I doubt he’s the one who ate his friend.”
“No,” said Nikolas. “I suspect not. We’ll question him when he wakes up. This is the third raid this week that’s resulted in a botched summoning.”
“Might not have been botched,” I said. “A lesser demon’s capable of taking a bite out of someone.”
“I’ll report this to the vampires’ leader,” he said. “She won’t be pleased. However, as it’s daytime, we can take this man for questioning ourselves.”
“I’m up for that,” I said. “He knows something. You can’t walk around in a house with a dead body without knowing how it got there.”
“Are you certain there’s nothing else here?”
“Positive.” Warmth filled my chest at the notion that he trusted my word—and it was a hard-won trust, considering we’d once suspected one another of murder. He thought the celestials were the enemy. I distrusted warlocks who showed up at murder scenes and had terrifyingly powerful shadow magic. With my newly discovered demon mark, and the fact that the celestials had treated me like shit, I’d decided to sign up to work with the warlocks to figure out what magic my mark contained.
The demon mark had only manifested a few weeks ago, but it’d been on me ever since I’d killed a demon in its home dimension and sent a prayer to the Divinities to help me get home. I hadn’t expected an answer, much less that the Divinity in question had apparently gone dark in the years after saving me from the car crash which had killed my parents by turning me into a celestial soldier. And in unknowingly making a deal with an arch-demon, I’d ended up wearing its mark.
Unfortunately, I’d seen no signs of the arch-demon in question, so I didn’t know which dimension it was from—or which type of magic I’d been given. Aside from my ability to use demonglass, a rare substance from the netherworld dimensions, to transport myself around in a similar manner to the way Nikolas used shadows to move between this dimension and the shadow realm.
Nikolas and I left the house, carrying the unconscious vampire along with us. A shiver of unease slid down my spine, looking at the dead bloodstones. The energy must have gone somewhere, but the vampire upstairs was dead. The unconscious guy might have taken in the power himself, but the way they’d been left beside that pentagram made me certain they’d been fuelling a portal into a nether dimension. But which?
Nikolas hauled the vamp into the back of the car, and I slid into the front. We’d settled into a partnership fairly easily, which came as a surprise considering my usual issues with authority figures. In the two years since I’d left the celestials, I’d worked alone on independent cases, generally relating to magical misuse. The celestials dealt exclusively with demon attacks and major infractions, while the preternaturally inclined policed their own. But that left humans vulnerable to magical trickery, and not every rogue preternatural got caught. I could do more good with the warlocks than alone, but if I admitted it, I’d been trying to fill the hole left by the death of Rory, my former teammate, partner, and friend. Working with Javos caused me no end of frustration, but it was better than drifting.
“You’re being unusually quiet,” Nikolas said, closing the door as he settled into the driver’s seat. His seatbelt snapped into place and the car engine started with a purring noise. “I thought you’d be pleased the killer wasn’t lurking in the house.”
“Ecstatic,” I said. “My life wouldn’t be the same without narrow brushes with death. I take it you explained to Javos that I had good reason to remove this stupid cuff?” I wiggled my wrist. He’d fastened the damn thing tight, too much for me to take it off myself.
Nikolas took his hands off the wheel and reached for my left wrist. The engine continued to run, but the trembling in my limbs wasn’t down to the car but the sensation of his thumb brushing against my pulse. There was a click, and the clasp loosened.
He paused, his fingers lightly resting against my exposed wrist. Warmth rose to my cheeks. We’d rarely had a moment alone together since I’d started working for the warlocks, and I’d forgotten how good he smelled close up. Power swarmed in his golden eyes, and I longed to cover the inches between us and see if he was as good a kisser as I remembered. He was temptation personified even when he wasn’t using his lure ability. And he hadn’t used it on me since we’d first met, despite my growing suspicions. Somehow, attraction had happened all on its own.
The vampire snored in the back seat, and Nikolas dropped my hand. “Javos will be wondering where we are.”
I got the message. We were partners, and while it wasn’t an issue for warlocks to be involved with humans, celestials with questionable demon marks were a different story. I didn’t think it bothered Nikolas, but I was also fairly sure he’d only kissed me because he’d thought one or both of us was about to die. He’d shown no signs of interest since, anyway. And there were so many things I didn’t know about him. Like who his arch-demon father was, and how he and his brother had come to rule a castle in the shadow realm. You know. The important things.
“Sure,” I said. “Wouldn’t want our vampire waking up first.”
Nikolas moved his hands back to the wheel. “Considering we don’t yet know if he’s high on demon energy or not, I think it’s best to err on the side of caution.”
“Wise idea.” I settled back in my seat to enjoy the ride back to the warlocks’ place.