Wicked Nights (Angels of the Dark #1)
Page 18“I could say the same to you.”
“I don’t— Argh.” She raised a fist at him. “So maybe I do ask a lot of questions. So what. Anyone in my position would do the same. Besides, I’m a girl and that’s my job. You’re a boy. You’re supposed to pound your chest with your fists and grunt, then do everything in your power to please me.”
“Hardly. The man you just described is more likely to knock you over the head with a club and drag you away by the hair.”
With his every word, amusement had grown in that blue, blue gaze.
The show of her temper, and the subsequent humor, delighted him. But only a little, he assured himself, and only because he could not guess what she would do or say next. “How are you feeling?” he asked, studying her once more. She still had bruises under her eyes, her lips were chapped from being chewed and her limbs shook. “You are unwell again?”
“I’m still suffering from withdrawal, that’s all.”
Zacharel recalled the long list of medications she had been prescribed. Such withdrawals would be substantial. He could give her the remaining drop of water from the River of Life, but— His jaw clenched. Considering such an option before, while she’d been bedbound, he could justify. He hadn’t known whether she would live or die and that’s exactly what the water was for. Life and death. It was not for relieving a few aches and pains.
“I’ll be fine,” she added, probably to fill the sudden silence. “Now. Will you please take me back? Without asking me any more questions.”
“I might be beyond frustrating—” in fact, he was pretty sure the name Zacharel meant bastard in several languages “—but you are safer with me than with anyone else.”
“Safer with the guy who threatened to kill me?”
Ah. Now he understood. After a good night’s sleep, her head finally clear, she had recalled what he’d said to her—I could kill you now—and wanted to escape him. “I did not threaten you.” Truth. He had merely stated a fact. He could kill her at any moment.
“But you said—”
“I know what I said. But I tell you now, again, that you are safer with me than with anyone else.” Even if he hurt her, even if he did decide to slay her, she was still safer with him. Everyone else would do far worse.
For once taking him at his word, she drew in a deep breath and nodded. “All right, I’ll stay. For now.”
He felt an odd urge to say thank-you but managed to bite the words back. “You are simply too good to me.”
She crossed her arms over her middle. “Is that sarcasm? I think I detect sarcasm.”
“Are you sure I even know what that word means?”
“Yes?” He stretched out one, then the other, examining their lengths. Snow still trickled from each, but the glistening crystals were smaller than usual.
“They’re more gold than white. Yesterday the opposite was true.”
She was right. The amount of gold had increased yet again. That could only mean…he was evolving into one of the Elite, whether his Deity had spoken to him about it or not.
But…but…that could only mean his Deity was pleased with him and that Zacharel had been chosen to replace Ivar. There was no other explanation that made sense.
But why?
Because Zacharel had saved a human, despite the risk to himself? Because he had finally taken charge of his army, was finally earning the respect of his men? If so, that would mean his Deity had never wanted him to fail, that the promotion was to be his prize.
“Well?” Annabelle prompted. “And don’t think I was complaining. Your wings are very pretty.”
Pretty? The word should not have offended him, but it did. They were magnificent, thank you.
He owed her no explanation about this, and had to stop offering details so freely. When they parted, and they would, she could be captured, could give the information to his enemy. But still he did it. Still he told her. His training would ensure she was never captured. Surely.
“A p-promotion. H-how cool,” she said through suddenly chattering teeth. Mist swirled in front of her face. “Not to change the subject, but, uh, is it cold in here to you?”
Reminded of when he’d first found her, of how frozen she’d been, Zacharel decided he was no longer accepting or grateful for the chill he carried with him. Annabelle suffered, and that he did not like. He would have to ask his Deity for leniency in this matter. And perhaps he would receive it, now that he knew there was a way back into his leader’s good graces.
“A coat,” he said now, and Annabelle’s eyes gleamed with anticipation.
“I should have thought of that.”
“I’m sure you would have.” He held out his hand and a white faux-fur coat appeared.
“Thanks,” she said. “You know, you are one huge contradiction. You’re mean one moment, then nice the next. Threatening one moment, then protective the next.”
“You mean for me to take offense, like before at the institution?”
“Not this time.”
“Well, I’m not. It’s too hard to get a read on you.”
“I am not a book,” he said.
She nodded. “Exactly.”
“But—”
“Just stick with the meanness and the threatening,” she interjected. “I don’t want to like you.”
A more confusing conversation he’d never had. “Why?”
“I plead the fifth.”
He no longer liked this evasive strategy of hers. “You cannot refuse to respond to all of my queries.”
“Uh, not true. I totally can.”
As she’d just proven. “Then we must work out some sort of reward for when you do answer.” Though that smacked of bribery—because it was—and implied that he cared—which he did. There could be no more denying that, he supposed. Not that the admission would change anything.
One of her brows arched in a parody of an expression he’d given her more than once. “And a spanking for when I don’t?”
“Do not be silly. I would never spank you for such a minor offense, Annabelle.” He liked her name on his lips. Liked the sound of it, the feel of it. “For something major…maybe. But I would never do anything that would cause lasting damage. You are not one of my soldiers. More than that, you are human. You could not withstand much.”
“You might be surprised by my fortitude.”
He meant to respond, he truly did, but he was suddenly snagged by a desire to trace his fingertips over her cheeks, her lips, to know if she would burn him, if her pulse would hammer out of control as he suspected his own would do. He wanted to know if she would inch closer to him or turn away.
You are not a slave to such mortal desires. He would not touch her, and he would not consider her response. But while he could fight the physical—and win—he found he could not fight the mental. His curiosity about her was too great and he found himself saying, “Your mother was Japanese, yet your name is not.”
Annabelle accepted the change of subject with a relieved squaring of her shoulders. “She spent most of her life in the States. And I was named after my father’s mother, Anna Bella.” She drew the lapels of the coat tighter and gave in to her own curiosity. “I’ve been wondering. Are you like the angels in the Bible? I, uh, had the cloud provide me with one last night. I read a few passages, and…well…”
“You see differences between me and the angels you read about,” he finished for her.
He couldn’t help pointing out, “I could refuse to answer, as you have done to me.”
“But that would be the equivalent of a spanking,” she pointed out, “and you, who never lie, won’t do that to me.”
A very smart girl, his Annabelle. Wait. His Annabelle? “What you read is true. In human terms, my Deity is a king. He rules only a certain portion of the heavens and serves under the Most High, who rules every inch of the heavens, even what the Greeks and Titans claim to own—but that is another story. And we are not like the Most High’s angels because we were not created for the same purposes.”
She tossed up her hands. “Then why are you called angels?”
“We are winged, and we fight evil. It’s a label, and it stuck.”
“Argh! But if you both fight evil, how are you different?”
He had so rarely interacted with humans, and he had never had to explain this kind of thing. “All humans are living beings, yes, and share many similarities, but not all have the same purpose. Some build. Some entertain. Some teach.”
No sooner had he finished speaking than the walls of the cloud darkened, thickened, lightning strikes sparking from within, small at first, but growing in length and intensity. Confused, he searched for other differences, found none.
Annabelle reached out, intending to stroke her fingertips over the lightning. He grabbed her wrist and stilled her.
“Cloud?” he said. “What’s the problem?”
Demons… A whisper inside his head. Attacking…
Impossible. Right? But…what if it wasn’t? Zacharel summoned his sword of fire. Demons rarely ventured into the heavens, much less to an angel’s residence, but it could be done.
All the color drained from Annabelle’s face. “What’s wrong? What’s happening?”
“We’re under attack.” Either the demons had no idea who owned this cloud, or their desire to obtain Annabelle was too great, their ability to track her far better than he had anticipated.