Her presence was strangely calming. Perhaps it was the
open candor of her face that was so at odds with these
bizarre surroundings.
“May I ask your name?” I said.
“I am Hanna,” she replied directly. I noticed her English
was a little stilted, as if she hadn’t learned it as her mother
tongue.
“And you work at this hotel?”
“Yes, miss, I’ve been assigned to you.” My face must
have reflected my confusion because she added, “I’m your
maid.”
“My maid?” I repeated. “I don’t need a maid.”
The girl misconstrued my irritation as being directed at
her. “I wil work hard,” she reassured me.
“I’m sure you wil ,” I said. “But the reason I don’t need a
maid is that I’m not planning on staying here very long.”
Hanna gave me a strange look and then shook her head
vehemently. “You cannot leave,” she said. “Mr. Thorn never
lets anyone leave.” She clapped a hand over her mouth,
conscious of having said too much.
“It’s okay, Hanna,” I said. “You can say anything to me. I
won’t repeat a word.”
“I’m not meant to speak to you. If the prince were to find
out …”
“You mean Jake?” I snorted. “He’s not a prince!”
“You mustn’t say things like that out loud, miss,” Hanna
whispered. “He is the prince of the Third Circle and treason
is a capital offense.”
I must have looked completely baffled. “There are Nine
Circles in this world, each one ruled by a different prince,”
she explained. “Mr. Thorn presides over this district.”
“Which idiot gave him so much power?” I snapped and
then, seeing the alarm on Hanna’s face, quickly modified
my tone. “I mean … how did that come about?”
“He was one of the Originals.” Hanna shrugged as if
those six little words explained everything.
“I’ve heard about them,” I said. The term rang a bel . I was
sure I’d heard my brother Gabriel use it, and I knew it dated
back to the beginning of time and creation.
“When Big Daddy fel from grace …” Hanna began
casting a furtive look at the door.
“I’m sorry?” I interrupted her. “What did you just say?”
“That’s what we cal him down here.”
“Cal who?”
“Wel , I suppose you would know him as Satan or
Lucifer.”
I felt the pieces of the puzzle begin to fal together in my
mind.
“When Lucifer fel from Heaven there were eight angels
who pledged their al egiance to him … ,” I continued the
story for her.
“Yes.” Hanna nodded eagerly in confirmation.
“Michael cast them out along with their rebel leader and
they became the very first demons. Since then they’ve used
whatever means they can to wreak havoc on the earth in
retaliation for their expulsion.” I paused to let the enormity of
it sink in. I frowned as a paradoxical image came into my
head.
“What is it, miss?” Hanna asked, seeing my expression.
“It’s just hard to imagine that Jake was once an angel,” I
said.
“I wouldn’t say hard; more like
impossible.
” Hanna’s
words were so blunt that I had to smile.
Stil , I couldn’t shake the thought from my head. Jake and
I shared a genealogy. We had a common maker. What
he’d since become was so far removed from what he was
original y created to be. I’d always known it, but I guess I
was so eager to banish him from my mind that I’d never
al owed myself to think it through properly. I couldn’t
reconcile that the Jake I knew, the Jake who had tried to
destroy my town and the people I loved, had once been just
like me. I knew about the Originals. They were the most
faithful servants of Lucifer, the ones who’d been with him
right from the word go. Throughout human history he’d sent
them to occupy positions in the highest echelons of society.
They had crept into communities on earth, enabling them to
continue their corrupting influence on mankind. They had
infiltrated the ranks of politics and law where they were able
to destroy without consequence. Their influence was
poisonous. They indulged man, preyed on his weaknesses,
and used him to their own advantage. An appal ing thought
occurred to me. If Jake worked for a higher power, then
who was real y to blame for what had happened thus far?
“I wonder what Jake wants this time?” I murmured.
“That is easy,” said Hanna in her funny, stilted English.
She seemed happy to be of use, to impart some
information I didn’t possess. “He only wants for you to be
happy. After al , you are to be his bride.”
I laughed at first, thinking she was making some horrible,
tasteless joke. But when I looked at Hanna with her round,
childlike face and big brown eyes, I knew she was only
repeating what she’d heard.
“I think I need to see Jake,” I said, slowly trying to conceal
my mounting panic. “Right away. Can you take me to him?”
“Yes, miss,” she replied promptly. “The prince has asked
to see you anyhow.”
Hanna ushered me down the dimly lit corridors of Hotel
Ambrosia, moving like a ghost across the thick carpet.
Everything was eerily stil , and if there were other
occupants, there was no sign of them. We took the glass
elevator, suspended in midair like a bubble. Once inside
we could see al the way down to the central fountain in the
lobby.
“Where are we going?” I said. “Does Jake have a
special dungeon he likes to conduct business from?”
“No. There’s a boardroom on the ground floor.” I realized
Hanna took everything I said at face value, so sarcasm was
pretty much lost on her.
We stopped in front of a pair of imposing paneled doors.
Hanna’s reluctance to go any farther was obvious.
“It’s safer if you go in alone, miss,” she said pointedly. “I
know he means
you
no harm.”
I didn’t argue with Hanna. I certainly didn’t want to expose
her to the vagaries of Jake’s temper. I didn’t feel frightened
now that I was going to come face-to-face with him again. In
fact, I wanted a confrontation, even if only to tel him what I
thought of him and his heinous plans. He’d done his worst;
there was nothing further he could do to hurt me.
Jake looked edgy when I walked in, as if he’d been kept
waiting too long. There was a fireplace here too, and Jake
was standing with his back to it. He was dressed more
formal y than usual in tailored pants, an open-col ared shirt,
and a deep purple dinner jacket. Light danced across his
bone white skin. He looked just the same as I remembered,
with strands of long dark hair fal ing across eyes that were
glassy and reminded me of a shark’s. When he saw me, he
began pacing around the room, pausing to examine one
detail or another. There was a vase of long-stemmed roses
in the center of the table. Jake plucked one to inhale the
scent and then twirled it idly in his hands. He ignored the
thorns and trickles of blood that ran down his fingers as if
he couldn’t feel any pain at al . I realized he probably
couldn’t and the wounds healed a moment later.
An imposing table fil ed the boardroom, so highly
polished it reflected the ceiling. High-backed swivel chairs
were arranged around it. A giant monitor took up an entire
wal . On it I could see scenes from the clubs. I watched in
fascination the image of bodies shiny with perspiration
dancing so closely together they were almost melded into
one entity. Even though it was only on a screen, the scene
made me feel light-headed. The image shifted suddenly to
rows of statistics and numerical calculations, then back to
the tireless dancers. It seemed to zoom in on individuals
and tabulate information about them.
“What do you think of my club rats?” Jake boasted.
“Damned to drink and dance for eternity! That was my
idea.” He held a tumbler from which he periodical y sipped
an amber liquid. A half-smoked cigarette hovered on the
rim of an ashtray.
Someone coughed and I swung around to see we
weren’t alone. A youth who didn’t look much older than me
sat in the far corner of the boardroom, stroking a sleeping
cat. He was dressed in a checkered shirt and pants so big
they had to be held up with braces. His brown hair was cut
jaggedly across his forehead as if it had been done with a
pair of shears. He sat with his feet pointing inward the way
a child might.
“Beth, meet Tucker. He’s one of my assistants and he’l
be keeping an eye on you. Tucker, stand up and shake
hands,” Jake barked at the boy before smoothly turning
back to me. “My apologies for his boorish manners.”
Jake seemed to treat him as some kind of pet that he
was in the process of training. When Tucker stood up and
came toward me, I saw that he had a discernible limp and
dragged his right leg. He held out a large, cal oused hand
for me to shake. I saw a deep scar ran from his upper lip to
the base of his nose. It pul ed his lip up slightly so that he
looked as if he were permanently sneering. Despite his
size he seemed vulnerable to me. I tried smiling at him, but
he only scowled darkly and averted his gaze.
Tucker’s movement roused the cat, a Siamese and none
too friendly. It arched its back and hissed ferociously at me.
“I don’t think he likes competition,” said Jake in a silky
voice. “Enough with the temper tantrum, Faustus. How are
you settling in, Bethany? I’m sorry your arrival had to be so
dramatic,
but I couldn’t think of any other way.”
“Real y?” I retorted. “I would’ve thought over-the-top is just
the way you like it, being the big drama queen you are.” I
tried to make my words as offensive as I could. I was in no
mood to humor him.
Jake twisted his mouth into an O of mock surprise and
clamped his fingers over it.
“My, my, we’ve learned to be catty. That’s a good thing.
You can’t go through life always being Little Bo Peep.”
Jake reminded me of a chameleon in the way he could
alter his appearance to blend with his surroundings. On
home ground he was entirely different from the way I
remembered him at school. At Bryce Hamilton he had been
self-assured but stil an outsider. He’d his devoted clan of
fol owers, but it was the subculture he represented that was
his strongest attraction. He’d known he didn’t belong and
made no attempt to conceal it. Instead, he seemed to revel
in drawing attention and when he worked his seductive
influence over a student, it gave him a smug satisfaction.
But he’d always been on the alert, prepared for any
eventuality. On his home turf, Jake was entirely relaxed, his
shoulders sloped, his smile lazy. Here, he had al the time in
the world and his authority went unquestioned.
He rol ed his head to the side impatiently and addressed
Tucker. “Are you going to pour my guest some wine or just
stand there al day like the oversize lump of uselessness
you are?”
The boy hurried over to a low table and grabbed a crystal
glass with clumsy hands. He fil ed it with crimson liquid from
a decanter, and set it down gruffly in front of me.
“I don’t want a drink,” I snapped at Jake, pushing the wine
away. “I want to know what you’ve done to me. There are
things I want to remember, but my memories are blocked.
Unblock them!”
“What’s the point in remembering your past life?” Jake
smiled. “Al you need to know is that you were an angel, and
now you’re
my
angel.”
“You honestly don’t think you can keep me here without
some consequences? Some divine retribution?”
“I’m not doing too badly so far,” Jake chuckled. “Besides,
it was high time you got away from that hick town. It was
clearly holding you back.”
“You make me sick!”
“Now, now, let’s not squabble on your very first day.
Please, do sit down.” Jake’s voice became suddenly
inviting as if we were two friends reuniting after a long
separation. “We have so much to talk about.”