Read Ruled by Steel (The Ascension Series #3) Online
Authors: S.M. Reine
Lincoln was still yelling. She took the paper into the bathroom with her. “Listen, Lincoln,” Elise said. “I’m about to exorcise you. I can do it painfully, or I can do it quickly with this rune.” She shook the paper at him without letting him see what she had drawn. “I have questions. Answer nicely. Why have you been leaving bodies for me to find?”
He seemed too stunned to answer. Then recognition dawned, and he began to laugh.
“Oh,” he said. And then, “
Oh,
that is too sweet. That’s cute. Really cute. You went overboard on the freckles, though.”
Elise glanced in the cracked mirror. She had exactly the same kind of freckles she had when she was alive. James had emulated them perfectly.
Her eyes narrowed at Lincoln. Were it not so painful to do so, she would have been tempted to beat the shit out of him. “How did you even know I was here?”
“Belphegor warned me,” he said. Now that he recognized her, all the fury had drained away to teasing flirtatiousness, which was far more grating. He tilted his head against his shoulder and almost batted his eyelashes at her. “Did you think that he escaped all on his lonesome?”
“You left a body for me before he escaped.”
“That doesn’t mean he couldn’t communicate with me. The House of Abraxas has a lot of features you don’t know about yet, lover girl,” Lincoln said.
“Such as the fact that Belphegor is hiding in the mines underneath the mountain?”
Lincoln’s smile vanished. He floundered for words.
Elise sat on the edge of the marble countertop and kept drawing. She felt like she could find the symbol if only she kept sketching, kept searching. It was
there
. She didn’t need to remember it; she needed to discover it. As the pencil moved, she said, “What were you doing on the bridge? Had you been to Earth?”
“Just visiting my old stomping grounds in Northgate. I’ve been so homesick. It’s nothing for you to worry about.” Some of his bravado returned. He bared his teeth in a grin. “Unless you’re worried about your precious puppies.”
Her heart skipped a beat. “What did you do to the pack?”
“I was hoping to decorate my new quarters in the Palace with animal skin,” Lincoln said. “And I look
so
good in fur.”
Elise was about ready to rip the nightmare out of him with her teeth if she had to. She drew with new fervor, and there it was—darkly outlined, the shape of the exorcism rune. She knew it was right. It resonated with her.
She could do it now. She could free him.
Elise took a moment to drink in Lincoln’s changed features. With his rugged jaw and cheekbones that looked like they had been crafted with a talented surgeon’s knife, he would have been attractive under any circumstances.
They had practically lived together in Northgate for a week, investigating murders and sharing cherry pie, and Elise hadn’t noticed the signs of demonic possession in him. She had thought she was better than that. She had thought that she could protect her allies.
She had been wrong.
Now she was going to rectify that oversight.
Elise stepped out of the room to activate the rune. James might have been selfish in most things, but he was right to try to hide his techniques from others. What was dangerous in his hands could be outright catastrophic in others’. It was bad enough that Lincoln knew that Elise could cast magic—he didn’t need to see how she did it.
Setting the parchment on the desk, she leaned over it and began to trace the symbol darker than before.
She began to speak to herself, letting ethereal syllables spill from her lips. She reached out to James, and even through the closed walls of their bond, she felt herself drawing on his strength, his knowledge, his angel blood. The word came to her easily.
Her skin ached, as if she were trying to stand in full sunlight. Her heart raced. Sweat pricked her flesh and her vision blurred.
Exorcise
, she tried to say, but what came out was unlike any word she had ever spoken before. It wasn’t even like the other ethereal word. It was more lyrical, almost like singing.
She could taste apples.
The symbol on the page glowed.
Crash.
Elise dropped the pencil and turned. Lincoln stood in the bathroom doorway radiating anger. Nothing became angry quite like a demon, and his fury seemed to darken the air around him, making the walls shiver. The shackles were still on his wrists. Broken chains dangled from them.
Possessed people tended to be strong because the inhabiting demon could push them beyond their normal tolerance of pain. It wasn’t supernatural, not really.
Either way, he was free.
Lincoln rushed at her.
His body slammed into hers. His skin was scorching-hot, like being struck by pavement burning under the noonday sun. The small of her back hit the corner of the desk. Pain erupted through her spine.
“When I first saw you, I wanted to feed from you,” Lincoln breathed into her neck, “but I think I’ll just settle for making you hurt the way you hurt me.”
She stomped on his instep. He doubled over but didn’t fall. He shoved Elise into the opposite wall.
When he ran at her, she ducked. Elbowed him in the gut. Dodged out of the way.
Once there were a few feet of space between them, Elise ripped off one glove, crumpled the paper in her fist, and let the exorcism rune slide over her skin. It burned brighter than starlight and her arm shook at the new magic. She could feel the light of it sapping her strength, almost as much as creating it in the first place had—she needed to use it, and fast.
And then Lincoln was rushing her, on top of her, and Elise was flat on the floor.
They rolled. Elise punched at him, but every strike she landed on him was a strike against her, too. Lincoln didn’t have that problem—he whipped her across the face with the chains at his wrist, and her vision darkened. Elise tasted metal.
She closed her twitching hand around his throat.
He had a hand around her throat, too, and the edge of the manacle felt like it might be slicing into her skin.
“Let Lincoln go,” she croaked—and then she released the exorcism rune.
He cried out and reared back, lifting the weight from her neck. He clutched at his face. He screamed.
After a moment, she realized that strange choking sound wasn’t pain. It was laughter. “Was that supposed to hurt?” Lincoln asked, eyes burning bright through all the blood.
The spell hadn’t worked.
Elise lifted her fist, now empty of a glowing rune, and wondered what she had done wrong. She knew she had drawn the symbol correctly. The word had felt right, too. “You were supposed to be exorcised.”
“You can’t exorcise me to Hell,” Lincoln rasped. “I’m already here.”
Shit
.
She swung a kick at his temple. He tried to grab her ankle, but she was twisting, aiming the next kick for his side. She drove her heel into the floating ribs at his waist.
Lincoln toppled back, and Elise staggered to her feet as the room spun around her.
“Lincoln, if you can hear me in there…” She clenched her fists at her side, frustrated and sick. “This isn’t done.”
She erupted into shadow, shot down the stairs, and left him behind.
Elise spirited Jerica
out of the Palace, and the wards shrieked in a high-pitched whine that would be audible across the city. It was a warning that something was leaving that shouldn’t be. But the spells that were intended to keep incorporeal demons from breaking in weren’t as effective at containment; the magic slammed shut behind Elise, but she was already gone.
It wasn’t until she landed in the walls of the House of Abraxas that she realized her hands were covered in Lincoln’s blood.
Elise spread her fingers to look at them. It was harder with her magicked hand; the fingers wanted to clench into a twitching fist, contorted by James’s runes and totally out of control. The opposite hand still had a glove on it. But both of them were slick and red. It was more than she should have gotten from punching him in an oozing eye. She must have really hurt him in the fight.
She had phased across the city and kept his blood the same way that she had kept the clothes on her body. And he was one of the generals that Aquiel had used to bind the Palace links to himself.
Jerica was on her knees beside Elise, looking shocked by the change of scenery. She must not have seen Elise coming.
“I need a vial,” Elise said, clenching her hands on the blood. It was already growing tacky and dry. “A glass, a plastic bag, any kind of vessel.
Now
.”
Jerica was smart enough by now not to question the order. She scrambled to her feet and darted into the House.
Elise turned to glare at the outline of the Palace against the sky. From the side of the mountain, she could see across the whole city, and the bridge in progress glimmered in a flash of sunlight from Earth. Lincoln was still there. Dammit, she had failed to save him
again
.
But at least she had his blood. The trip hadn’t been a total failure.
After a minute, Jerica returned with an empty herb jar from the kitchens. Elise scraped its rim over her bloody hands and wrists until she had a tiny pool at the bottom. Not much, but it was enough to shatter his soul link to the Palace wards.
It would have to be.
Elise retreated to
Abraxas’s room. Ace met her at the door with a wagging tail. His mood seemed to be improving the longer they were in Hell, like it suited him fine to be among such violence. She still didn’t trust him not to bite her if she tried to pet him, but when he rolled onto his side, Elise rubbed his stomach briefly with her foot. His tail thumped against the ceramic floors.
She locked Devadas’s hand in the desk with the whiskey then grabbed the X vial. She held one in each hand, Lincoln’s blood and her own, considering what they meant.
“It’s always about the blood,” she muttered, setting them on Abraxas’s shelf above Seth’s body.
There was also a small mirror on the end of the shelf. She caught her reflection in it. She was pale-skinned and black-haired again, back to what had become normal. James had been right. Phasing had broken the glamor. A moment of disappointment guttered through her, but she pushed it aside.
These two vials were a good start, but she needed more. She needed Aquiel and Belphegor’s blood, too.
And then she could make the Palace hers.
Elise folded the shroud back, revealing Seth’s face. She leaned on the slab next to him and stared down at his frozen features.
Lincoln had been in Northgate again. The implication that he might have done something to the pack made her blood burn with hate, and a powerful sense of protectiveness surged through her. The thought of nightmares sweeping down the quiet street of the sanctuary—the thought of Rylie, tiny and shivering in the shower, afraid of what she had become and what kind of violence dwelled in her wolfish heart—made Elise want to break through the fissure and guard the pack against the hellish onslaught.
The idea of Lincoln going after Rylie and the pack made Elise furious.
“Shut
up
, Eve,” she muttered.
But it wasn’t Eve, was it? Eve didn’t hate. She might feel protective toward the pack, but she’d feel protective toward Lincoln, too, and all of the demons serving him. Eve had been a font of boundless love. All she wanted was her children, and the children of Adam and Lilith, to live in harmony.
Elise didn’t feel loving. She felt
furious
.
She pressed her hand to Seth’s chest. It was as warm as the stone of the mountain, as if the fires of the pits burned within his belly and radiated to fill him with heat.
“I’m going to go get Belphegor, and then I’m going to take the Palace,” she told his rigid features. “I won’t let them hurt your family.”
Promise made, Elise pulled the shroud over him and left Abraxas’s office.
Thirteen
Elise stood at
the mouth of the mine and stared into its depths. The tunnel was taller than the main building of the House and almost as wide as the entire west wing, and she felt tiny in front of it. The wind rushed past her to whistle through the stalactites as though the cave was trying to inhale, and the echoes within the tunnels sounded like a beast groaning in restless sleep.
Tracks had been run down the center of the tunnel, and metal carts waited at the nearest end. Elise reached into one cart and pulled out a handful of shattered rock. It had naturally broken with edges sharp as an arrow, and ripples from the pressure that had formed it were permanently imprinted on the flat edge. It looked like the same material that Elise’s falchion had been made of, but uncut.
There was no value to that rock. It was simply what Mount Anathema was made of. Sharp, yes, but without any aesthetic appeal, and too brittle for most uses.
That was all that Abraxas seemed to have mined from the tunnels—that glassy black rock and the red dust that coated everything in Dis.
Elise dropped the rocks and wiped her palm off on her pants. She had another of Jerica’s glass jars tucked in her shirt, a bottle of water, a gun, and James’s magic. Elise could be no readier to face Belphegor than she was at that moment.
“Ready to go?” she asked Ace. He was sniffing the ground near her feet, tail lashing from side to side.
Elise unclipped his chain and Ace took off into the mines. She followed.
The air immediately began to grow hotter as they walked down the broad tunnel, following the mine tracks down a steep slope. The ground was relatively smooth near the surface, but the tooling of the dark tunnel grew rougher as it became steeper.
Within a few hundred feet, all light from the surface faded. Elise found a lantern abandoned by the tracks and lit it, lifting the lamp high to let Ace see.
It was quiet in the tunnels—the kind of quiet that only came from having miles of mountain above and below, with nothing to prevent collapse but a few metal beams supporting the ceiling. She could almost feel the weight of rock above her. It wouldn’t kill her to have the tunnel’s roof fail, but she also wasn’t sure that she would be able to get out if it did. The idea of being trapped under a mountain in perfect darkness and perfect silence, compressed like the fragments of rock in the mine cart, was as close to dying as Elise could imagine.