Beyond the Veil (18 page)

Read Beyond the Veil Online

Authors: Pippa Dacosta

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Urban, #Paranormal & Urban

BOOK: Beyond the Veil
8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I contemplated returning to the guest bedroom. Half-dressed and intruding on his personal time, I felt a little awkward and out of place.

Erm

are you okay?


Sure.

Clearly, he wasn

t. I

d been expecting some sort of witty comeback making light of our situation. A

sure

wouldn

t cut it. Now I was concerned. It wasn

t like I knew him well, but up until then, he

d pretty much made it all look like a breeze. As though this sort of crap was his day job. His unrelenting confidence had shored-up my complete lack of it. I sat on the edge of the couch across the coffee table from him, tugging the edge of the shirt over my thighs.


I was wondering something
…”
I hesitated as his gaze followed my efforts to cover my legs. He quickly flicked his attention back to my face, then elsewhere, anywhere but my eyes.

You

re the same as me, right? I mean. We

re different elements, but you

re powerful too?

He nodded and settled back in the couch, draping an arm across the back.


So why do you need me? You started this to get to Akil

Set it all up to get close to him before you even knew who I was. You must have had a plan. An end game?


The end game was to catch Akil out. We know he

s overstepping the boundaries here, breaking the laws. We just need to catch him in the act. Hiring me, among other things, was part of that. But you

re right

We didn

t know about you

although I

d heard of a half-blood that Akil

kept

.

I winced a little at the word

kept

and saw Stefan flinch in return.

It became clear, early on, that I

d need your help.


Why? What can I do to him that you can

t?


You

re his weakness.

I didn

t understand. Akil was a Prince of Hell. They don

t have weaknesses, at least none that I was aware of.

What does that even mean?


He

s obsessed with you, Muse. I don

t know why

no offense, you

re easy on the eye, but he

s a pure-blood demon, a Prince, and you

re what they class as

filth.

I frowned at the last word. It was true, and yet knowing it, hearing it, always summoned horrid memories.

His smile chanced a return, but it didn

t linger.

Anything to do with you, and he

s distracted. Even hiring an assassin, he

s sloppy. He can

t see straight when it comes to you. Maybe it

s because he

s full-demon. He can

t fathom why he

s drawn to you. Either way, you

re the key to stopping him.

I sighed and let my stare wander about the room.

I think it

s a power thing. After what you helped me do today, I

m pretty sure it

s not me he wants

or wanted. It

s my demon. Now

Now I just think he wants me gone. I walked away from him, and nobody does that, especially not a half-blood. My brush-off would have slighted his honor.

Stefan smiled softly.

No doubt. His ego too.


What about you?

I leaned forward to turn the picture frame toward me. The photo was the same one I

d seen earlier: the handsome fifty-something man with the catch-of-the-day at his feet.

What

s your story?

Stefan averted his gaze once more, dipping his chin before blinking slowly.


I

m sorry.

I said. The quiet became a little too awkward.

It

s none of my business.

If it was anything like my past then I could understand why he didn

t want to tell me.

We survived though, right?

Barely, in my case, but barely was enough.


Against the odds.

Something in those three words, perhaps the weary tone or their implied meaning, whatever it was, it made me feel such a depth of compassion for him that a stubborn lump formed in my throat. On impulse, I shifted off the couch and moved to the cushion beside him. Perched awkwardly on the edge, I clasped my hands in my lap with a nervous smile ticking across my lips.

I had no idea there were people like you out there. I just thought it was demon or be damned. Then, Akil taught me how to summon my demon with intent, not just by accident. He woke her in me, and together we killed my owner. It was the best day of my life. My owner, Damien

he was a sick son-of-a-bitch. Vile in many ways. Akil taught me

that it didn

t have to be like that.


You were lucky,

Stefan said softly. I caught an undertone of sadness and knew he understood.

I was lucky. If Damien hadn

t paraded me in front of Akil, I might not have survived much longer. Had Akil not taken it upon himself to free me

Had Akil been worse than Damien

Had I not been strong enough to maintain my sanity through all of the pain and degradation


My point is.

I cleared my throat.

We

re the products of our past. Without those experiences, as horrid as they were, I wouldn

t be the person I am today.

Stefan moved so quickly I barely saw him move at all. He was suddenly very close. His hand hovered beside my cheek as though he

d lost his nerve at the last second. I froze. For a few moments, I didn

t breathe, didn

t move. Then he eased a little nearer, his lips so close all it would take was a little give on my part, and we

d kiss. As his hand lightly touched my cheek, a sliver of power snapped between us. Its dart-like flicker forced a hiss through my teeth. He laid his hand against my cheek, and the chill of his element slid over me, a shivery tremor following in its wake as a traitorous muffled groan slipped from my lips. I could have kissed him, should have

He was there, so close, but I knew if I did, it wouldn

t stop there. My heart fluttered nervously. The urge to close that tiny distance between us was so intense that I had to grip the couch to stop myself. He took a breath just as his lips brushed mine, so lightly, like the gentle flutter of snowflakes.

I sprang back, hand clasped over my mouth, the other pulling the shirt down to cover my thighs.

I er
…”
I waved a hand in the air, gesturing wildly.

I should um

you know, get back

get some sleep. Not that I

Erm

Yeah.

Stop waffling before you say something you

ll regret,
I thought. The tease of desire had ignited inside of me at his touch. My element bloomed quickly, spilling heat though me. My heat and his cold, fire and ice, it was wrong on so many levels. And I wanted it.

He grinned wickedly, his demeanor as cool as ice. Damn him.

I clamped my mouth closed, afraid I might tell him what I really wanted, although he probably read it all on my face. His eyes in the dark held all manner of tempting promises. The gape of his collar betrayed a hint of his sculpted body. I could so easily have sat back down and undone those shirt buttons, one little button at a time. Hot lips on his cool mouth, tasting, exploring. I

d lay him back. Slip my hands beneath his shirt and let my heated touch ease across the rippled plain of his sculpted chest, across the scorpion tattoo, lower

Hot, flustered, and within a few heartbeats of giving in to temptation, I turned quickly and headed for the stairs.

A howl fractured the serenity of the night. The hollow sound of the beast sliced through the heat of desire and dashed my wanton thoughts. Stefan was on his feet. He plucked the katana from the bag of weapons and tugged off the scabbard. He flicked the light off in the kitchen and then returned, snatching a gun from the bag before joining me at the foot of the stairs.

It can

t know we

re here. Not yet,

he whispered.

But this isn

t the city, and we

re the only things out here.

In other words, we

re screwed.

Another howl echoed outside, closer this time. The chill of fear swept over me. I tried to summon my element, but the preventative marks on the wall snuffed it out before it could breach my flesh. Stefan shook his head, sensing the stirring of my power, then handed me the gun. I noticed it was the gun I thought he

d lost when I felt its familiar weight in my hand.


You have seven rounds in the magazine,

he said.

Use them.


What if we go outside? Use our elements.


Only if it finds us.

He planted a hand on my shoulder and forced me to sit, my back against the wall.

There

s a chance it may not

Call enough of your power to see it.

I flexed my elemental muscles, calling just enough to spill a veil of power in front of my eyes. The last time we

d dealt with the hounds, we

d only escaped by hiding. This time, hiding was all we had. I cupped the gun in my left hand, right hand around the grip, finger off the trigger but ready against the trigger guard.

Stefan did a double-take, then grinned.

Flick the safety off.


You enjoy this crap way too much,

I grumbled, doing as he

d advised.


Slide the chamber back.

I skewed a scowl in his direction, catching that glint of humor in his eyes.

I have fired this gun before
—”
The kitchen windows exploded inward.

Glass blasted through the kitchen doorway, showering the spot on the couch where we

d been seated moments before.


Go!

Stefan shoved me up the stairs as the thunderous crash of splintered glass and wood filled the air. I stumbled on the steps, clambering up on all fours as the heaving bulk of hairless hound slammed its way through the kitchen doorway, taking out half the wall with it. I got a glimpse of its blood-red eyes as it swung its head around before I finally found my feet and dashed up the remaining steps and down the hallway.

Stefan flung open a bedroom door.

The window. Go. Get outside.

I was inside the room before I realized he wasn

t following.

What are you doing?


Go. I

ll keep it here. Run. Don

t stop. Just run.

He was gone.

I headed for the window and yanked open the lower section enough so I could duck outside. The wind blasted into the room, whipping around my bare legs as I stood frozen. I couldn

t leave him. Gun in hand, I turned and darted back out into the hall. The massive hound had clawed its way up the staircase, knocking the banister out in its furious attempt to get to Stefan. I saw the beast snap its jaws together, lunging at Stefan as he swung the sword across its snout. Its whimpers sliced through my skull. Teeth gritted, I raised the gun, steadied it in my left hand, and aimed down the barrel. As the hound lunged at Stefan again, I fired. The gun jumped in my hand. The casing ejected. The hound jerked and swung its crimson glare on me. I fired again. The bullet sliced down the right side of its hideous face. Again, and this time, the bullet hit the Hellhound right between the eyes, blasting through its skull. The beast jerked back and collapsed, slipping from the landing to land with a dull thud on the living room floor.

Stefan lunged at me, grabbed my left hand, and tugged me forward, back down what remained of the stairs. The hound

s breathing snuffled from its wet jaws. It wasn

t dead. They don

t die.


Quickly.

Stefan pulled me toward the door. He yanked it open. And froze.

I plowed into the back of him, about to ask why he

d stopped when I saw the mountainous bulk of Hellhound blocking his path. The beast hunched forward, fat paws splayed on the path. Pools of glistening drool gathered below its rippling lips. I reeled back. The hound behind us snarled and shook its head, snapping its jaws together as it regained its senses. Instinct tugged on my demon, but she couldn

t break through whatever magic those marks on the walls performed. Backing into Stefan, I slipped my left hand into his. The Hellhound beneath the stairs stamped its feet, steadying itself. It ducked down, legs ready to spring.

Other books

Moon and Star: Book One by Mike Bergonzi
GalacticFlame by Mel Teshco
Repair Me by Melissa Phillips
The Bastard by Inez Kelley
Anywhen by James Blish
Frankie by Shivaun Plozza
Disconnection by Erin Samiloglu