Angels' Blood (17 page)

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Authors: Nalini Singh

BOOK: Angels' Blood
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Relief washed through her. “Yeah, yeah. So?”
“So the big, bad, and able-to-mind-control angel thinks you’re his. As in ‘I don’t share my woman.’ ”
Elena swallowed. “You’re messing with me.”
A bark of laughter. “Hell, no. This is way too interesting as it is.”
“Oh, Jesus.” She bent over and stared at the carpet, trying to think. Yes, she’d kissed him. And yes, he’d been sending out some strong vibes—vibes she’d responded to despite herself—but all that was de rigueur for the powerful angels and vampires. Sex was just a game. It meant nothing. “Maybe he was saying that to put me on edge.” That would make more sense.
“Oh, no, babe. This was for real.” His voice became serious. “The man wants you—but I’m not sure if he wants to fuck you or kill you.”
Rising from her bent-over position, Elena stared out at the window in front of her. Her stomach nose-dived. “Ah, Ransom? I have to go.”
Silence. Then: “He found you.”
Her eyes on the wide spread of white gold as Raphael hovered effortlessly outside, she closed the phone and put it very carefully on the small table next to the sofa. “I’m not letting you in,” she whispered, though there was no way he could hear her.
I can get in anytime I please.
She froze at the crystal clarity of his tone. “I told you—no fucking with my head!”
Why?
The chill of that single word got through to her as nothing else could have. Sara had been right—there was something different about Raphael tonight. And it was very, very bad for her. “What’s wrong with you?”
Nothing. I am Quiet.
“What the hell does that mean?” She inched her hand toward the gun at her back, never moving her eyes off his face as he watched her through the glass. “And why are your eyes so . . . cold?” That word again.
He stretched out his wings even farther, fully displaying the gold and white pattern on the underside. So beautiful it threatened to distract. “Clever,” she said, focusing deliberately on his face. “Trying to manipulate me without using your mind.”
You were right when you said I need you fully functional. Too much mind control and I could bend your mental pathways permanently.
“Bullshit,” she muttered, having almost reached her gun. “You can hold me for a while but the second you stop exercising active control, I’m free.”
Are you sure?
Oddly enough, though he was scaring the bejesus out of her right then, she didn’t feel as vulnerable to the threat of compulsion as she usually did. When he was being his normal arrogant, lethal-as-hell self, there was a pulse of sexual attraction between them that scrambled her usual defenses.
But this man—this cold, cold man with death in his eyes . . . Her hand closed on the butt of the gun.
18
“You know what,” she said, fighting to keep her expression
calm, “the only thing I’m sure about right this second is that you’re acting out of it.”
Is that why you have a gun?
Her hand froze on the weapon, the beads of sweat on her spine turning to ice. “What gun?”
His hair whipped off his face as if caught in a driving wind, but he kept his position without any apparent effort. His face was so pure in its beauty that her heart kicked a beat. It was as if he’d been carved by the most masterful of artisans, the lines of his face clean and quintessentially male. Without a doubt, he was the most beautiful man she had ever seen.
Or perhaps, I am simply that to you.
She flinched, snapping out of the fascination. And this time, she knew he hadn’t been messing with her mind—that thought had been her own stupidity at work. “Simply what?” she asked, just to keep him talking.
Beautiful.
She snorted. “Believe me, angel boy, you turn female heads wherever you go.”
Most women see cruelty in me, too much for beauty.
Caught short by that apparently honest assessment, she found herself staring at him with new eyes. Yes, there was cruelty in him. He wasn’t pretty, wasn’t handsome, wasn’t anything so tame. He was dangerous and strong, the epitome of what appealed to her hunter senses. All her life, she’d been too strong, too fast, too unfeminine for human men. They liked her, but after a while, most claimed she made them feel emasculated.
She’d never let on how much that hurt, but it did, it hurt a hell of a lot. Maybe she wasn’t a tiny doll like Beth, but she was very definitely female. And she appreciated the male of the species, most especially this male. “You’re capable of cruelty,” she agreed quietly, “perhaps even horror, but you haven’t crossed over into evil.”
Haven’t I?
Her palm lay sweaty on the gun. “No.”
You sound very certain. And yet you accused me of rape this morning.
Her temper spiked. Ignoring the warning cry of her own common sense, she pulled out and held the gun openly at her side. “This morning, you tried to take by force something I might’ve given you freely had you waited.”
A long pause filled only with the sound of her adrenaline-spiked breaths. She wondered what he heard out there, in the velvet darkness of the night, with the streets so far below.
Such honesty.
“I said ‘might.’ And buddy, your chances went down the drain the instant you pulled that stunt. I won’t be manipulated into sex.” Not even by a sex-god of an archangel.
He seemed to be thinking that over. His eyes met hers through the glass. He shrugged.
Sex is fairly pointless anyway.
That made her blink. It didn’t fit at all with the darkly sensual man who’d devoured her like his favorite candy that very morning. “Are you alright?” she asked, wondering if he was on some sort of angelic drug.
His response was to blow out the plate-glass window between them. It happened so fast, she barely had time to throw up her arm to shield her eyes. One second the window was there, the next, it was lying in several neat pieces on her carpet. Not a sliver had touched her. When she dropped her arm, she found herself looking out at a huge square of darkness, the wind sliding into her apartment on smooth, silky wings.
Raphael was nowhere to be seen.
Scared, but not for herself, she looked down at the gun in her hand. With trembling fingers, she clicked on the safety again. She’d fired in instinctive self-defense, aiming not for Raphael’s face, but for his wings as Vivek had advised. An angel without wings . . .
“Oh, God.” Stepping carefully over the large shards of glass—eight perfect triangular pieces—she made her way to the edge and glanced down.
A whisper of wind from
behind
her. “Definitely no problems with vertigo.”
She might’ve fallen had he not had his hands securely on her hips. “You bastard! You scared me to death!” Twisting, she tried to get away.
He held her still, wrapping both arms around her waist. “Behave, Elena.”
The oddness of his tone clanged a serious alarm bell in her head. She couldn’t help but think of her earlier thoughts—there were a lot of things worse than death. “Are you planning to drop me?”
“You just told yourself that I won’t kill you, that I’m more likely to torture you.”
Something snapped. “Get. Out. Of. My. Head!” Squeezing her eyes shut, she shoved outward with every ounce of will-power she possessed. It was a stupid, human reaction, but she
was
human in every way that mattered.
Behind her, Raphael sucked in a breath. Startled, she intensified her attempts to block him, even as the spiraling emptiness of a deadly fall spread out in front of her. Elena didn’t look away—she’d rather face death than have her mind invaded, for what was that if not another form of crawling? But she damn well wasn’t going to go without a fight. She switched the way she held the gun. This time, she
would
purposefully aim for his wings.
“Well, well,” Raphael said against her ear. “It seems the hunter-born have another skill.”
Her head was starting to ache. But she kept up the pressure, hoping her brain would learn to do this automatically after a while. Of course, that wasn’t going to be an issue if she didn’t get away from Raphael. It was becoming clearer by the second that whatever was wrong with him it was very, very dangerous for her. “Why are you here, doing this? Is it because I cut Dmitri?”
“He was under orders not to touch you.”
Tired of leaning away, she relaxed into him, her head against his chest. He took her weight with ease. “What did you do to him?”
“His jaw will have healed completely by now.”
The night darkness was so close, the lights from the other buildings so bright, it felt as if she was standing on the edge of the world. But it wasn’t the emptiness in front of her that was the real threat. “Does violence excite you?”
“No.”
“Hurting me,” she pushed, “making me bleed, that gets Dmitri off. Same for you?”
“No.”
“Then why the fuck are you holding me here?”
“Because I can.”
And she knew that in this mood, he really might break her.
So she shot him. No warning, no second chances. She simply aimed blindly behind her and shot. The second his arms loosened, she sent herself sideways. She could’ve as easily fallen, but she trusted her reflexes and they didn’t let her down.
She landed on the huge shards of plate glass. They held, but she cut the side of her face and the palms of both hands as she clutched at the glass to keep from sliding off and out into the pitch-black of the night. The instant she had any leverage, she used one of her more acrobatic moves to flip over the glass and to a crouching position on the carpet.
Shoving the hair out of her eyes, she looked toward Raphael. He lay crumpled on the glass, propped up against the table where she’d put her phone what felt like hours ago. He was staring down at his wing, and when she followed his gaze, what she saw made her sick.
The gun had done what Vivek had promised. It had almost destroyed the bottom half of one wing. What Vivek hadn’t told her was that when an angel’s wings got hurt, he bled. And he bled dark red. It dripped onto the glass, sliding across the clean surface to sink into her carpet. Shaking, she got up. “It’ll heal,” she whispered, trying to convince herself. If she’d crippled him—“You’re immortal. It’ll heal.”
He looked up, a dazed incomprehension in those incredible, unreal blue eyes. “Why did you shoot me?”
“You were torturing me with fear—probably would’ve ended up throwing me off the ledge a few times and catching me again, just to hear me scream.”
“What?” He frowned, shook his head as if trying to clear it, then looked at the open space where her window used to be. “Yes, you’re right.”
That wasn’t the answer she’d expected. “You were there—why do you sound like you can’t believe it?”
His eyes met hers again. “In the Quiet, I’m . . . changed.”
“What’s the Quiet?”
He didn’t answer.
“Do you go there a lot?”
His lips tightened. “No.”
“So, are you normal now?” Even as she asked, she was running into the kitchen for towels. When she came out, it was to find him in the same position. “Why won’t it stop bleeding?” Her voice rose as panic took hold.
He watched her try to stem the flow without success. “I don’t know.”
She glanced at the gun she’d left on the other side of the room. Maybe it was stupid to remain here, but she knew this Raphael as she hadn’t the other. Whatever the Quiet was, it had turned him into the worst kind of a monster. But was she any better? That gun, the damage it had done . . . Grabbing her phone, she called the Cellars, her fingers slick with Raphael’s blood. In front of her, his blue eyes seemed to dim, his head dropping back. “Come on,” she said, cupping his cheek with fingers stained red. “Stay awake, Archangel. Don’t go into shock.”
“I’m an angel,” he murmured, his voice slurred. “Shock is for mortals.”
Someone picked up the phone. “Vivek?”
“Elena, you’re alive!”
“Damn it, Vivek, what the hell was in those bullets?”
“I told you.”
“Has it been tested?”
“Yeah. It’s been used in the field a few times—gives you maybe twenty minutes to half an hour at most. Angels begin to heal the instant after the bullet hits.”
She glanced down at Raphael’s shattered wing. “It’s not healing. It’s getting worse by the minute.”
“That’s impossible.”
She hung up since he clearly knew nothing. “Come on, Raphael! What do I do?”
“Call Dmitri.” His color was fading to gray, a pale death mask that struck terror into her heart.
Guilt and fear for him choking a knot in her throat, she dialed Archangel Tower and was immediately put through to Dmitri. “Get to my apartment,” she ordered.
“That’s not—”
“I’ve done something to Raphael. He’s bleeding and it’s not clotting.”
A blink of silence. “He’s immortal.”
“His blood is red, same as mine.”
“I’ll kill you in tiny, tiny bites if you’ve harmed him.” He hung up.
“Dmitri’s on his way,” she told Raphael, as the cell phone slid out of her bloody hand. “I don’t think he thinks very highly of me.”
“He is loyal.” His hair fell over his forehead, making him look absurdly boyish.
Another spurt of blood hit her leg, hot and rich. “Why the hell aren’t you healing?”
A moment of brightness in those glassy blue eyes. “You’ve made me a little mortal.”
Those were his last words before lapsing into unconsciousness—probably nothing but the shock speaking, she realized. She was still by his side when Dmitri and several other vampires arrived. They simply broke down the door instead of bothering to knock.
“Hold the hunter.” Dmitri ignored her as his lackeys dragged her away from Raphael.
She would’ve struggled but she knew it was pointless. There were too many of them and she had no chip-embedded weapons on her. Bearing unique serial numbers and with each and every use tracked by the VPA and Guild both, the devices were issued only for hunts, or when a hunter’s life was in demonstrable danger from a vampiric threat. The official line was that it was to stop hunters from becoming dangerously overconfident, but they all knew it was because the powerful vamps didn’t like the idea of being vulnerable to any old hunter with a grudge. Right now, she didn’t care. “Help him!”

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