Sinners & Sorcerers: Four Urban Fantasy Thrillers (77 page)

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Authors: Sm Reine,Robert J. Crane,Daniel Arenson,Scott Nicholson,J. R. Rain

Tags: #Dark Fantasy, #Urban, #Paranormal & Urban, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Horror, #Genre Fiction, #Literature & Fiction

BOOK: Sinners & Sorcerers: Four Urban Fantasy Thrillers
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Moloch checked the blow and punched Laila’s face. She flew back against a column, shattering it, and slumped to the floor, mouth full of blood.

As her head spun, Moloch walked toward her, blade drawn. Laila dared not move, but stared at him through the circles of light that danced before her eyes. Blood drenched her shirt.

“So sad...,” Moloch said,
tsk
ing. “Michael sent you here to your death, didn’t he?”

“I didn’t come for Michael,” she grunted, blood in her mouth. It was hard to speak. She sat slumped against the column, unable to rise, Moloch’s blade held above her. “I came for Hell. It’s mine.”

“Is that so, Laila? Listen to that sound outside, the crackling and hissing. Those are my pits of hellfire, reignited. Soon they will blaze again over Limbo, destroying the last of your army. You won’t live to see it, Laila, but I want you to die knowing it.”

“And you, Moloch,” Laila said, “you can die knowing that, frankly, only sissies wear rubies in their clothes.” She drew a gun from her belt and pointed it at him.

He laughed. “A handgun? You think human weapons can hurt me?”

Hand trembling with weakness, Laila fired. Michael’s holy water squirted onto Moloch’s face, burning him, raising blisters. He screamed.

“Well, a water gun, to be accurate,” Laila said, rising to her feet. With a swipe of her blade, she sliced off Moloch’s screaming, blistering head.

She leaned against a column, clutching her wound, wincing. Angels rushed into the hall, catching her before she fell. They lay her on the ground, bound her wounds, let her drink honeyed milk. She did not rest long.

“Let all know who rules in Limbo today,” she said, struggling to her feet. She took Moloch’s severed head, flew out the window, and stuck the head upon the highest steeple of the palace. She looked over Limbo, a land of flame, water, and blood. The armies blustered around her.

“I am Laila!” she shouted from the tower, so loud she thought all of Limbo could hear. She spread out her wings, and her halo crackled with flame. “I am Lucifer’s daughter and new ruler of Hell. I rule now in Limbo. See the head of Moloch! It is I who rule in his stead. Demons, return to your caves and homes, and leave the fires dead. Obey me, and I will let you live.”

Her voice rang across Limbo, and the demons who saw Moloch’s head shrieked, bowed before Laila, and scrambled about, spreading the news. Soon demons were bowing around her, kissing her feet, bringing her gifts. The last pits of fire were doused, and the last demons loyal to Moloch slain.

“Seal the gateways into the lower levels of Hell,” Laila told the archdemons who came to swear fealty to their new mistress. “None now may pass between Limbo and Hell’s other circles.”

The scaly beasts bowed and flew to do her bidding. Battalions of demons spread around the fortress, chanting for her, rolling into the distance. Laila stood upon the steeple, overlooking Limbo, tears on her cheeks.

I am Laila, of the night. I am Queen of Limbo. This is my new home.

 

18
 

Bat El sat in the dungeon, ankles shackled.

Only a bar of light shone above, peeking beneath the dungeon door atop the stairs. Bat El could see dust flying, but no more. The air was icy down here, and she could feel ants racing along her legs. A bowl of brackish water lay before her, untouched alongside a loaf of dry bread.

Zarel had returned to the fort, so now Bat El sat chained here, entombed, alone with her anguish. “It’s only until Zarel leaves for her next battle,” Beelzebub had promised. “Once she leaves the fort, I’ll let you out.”

Yet how long could she keep this up? For how many more months or years could she live this way, spending her days shackled underground, loving Beelzebub when Zarel was away? Bat El lowered her head, her hair covering her face, tears in her eyes. “I chose this,” she whispered, tasting the saltiness of her tears mixed with ash. “I chose to stay here, I chose captivity.”

She could have let Michael kill Beelzebub. She could have escaped then, returned to Heaven’s camp, yet she had sided with Hell.
No. Not with Hell. I sided with Beelzebub. Because I love him.
Even here, chained underground, the thought of Beelzebub sent shivers of love through her, made her heart leap with light. His eyes, wise yet forever slightly mocking; his smile, knowing; his lips, his hands, the goodness she saw in him, the angelic side she knew still pulsed through him. All these things she had discovered. All these things made her love grow every day.

“He will come for me soon,” she told herself. “He will free me from this dungeon. Someday he’ll leave his wife, he’ll leave Zarel, and he’ll be mine. It’s me he loves. I know it.”

The thoughts of a young girl, she knew, lovesick. Yet still they filled her. The ants raced over her, and Bat El shivered. For Beelzebub she would endure this pain. She would endure the dungeon, the chains, the damage to her soul. She had never kissed a man but him, never loved anyone but him. “I give all this to you, Beelzebub; you have broken my will, you have shattered my righteousness, made me a slave to your love, mindless, powerless. I stood against Michael for you, I betrayed Heaven and my god for you. This is what you’ve done to me. And still I cannot hate you, only wish for your love. You have destroyed me, Beelzebub.”

Her tears hit her legs, and she shivered until the light under the door died, and night fell, like night had fallen over her soul.

+ + +

 

It was Zarel who first told him about Limbo.

He had stepped out of bed for the first time in three days, and had made his way down to the fort’s main hall, still weak and sore, but healing fast. Beelzebub wore his breastplate and blade, and he was beginning to feel more like himself, strong, coolheaded, in control again. He stood by the statue of himself which he had carved, the same statue he completed that day Laila returned from exile into Jerusalem. He was gazing at his artwork when Zarel fluttered into the fort, hair aflame.

“She took Limbo,” was all his wife said. “The bitch took over the first circle of Hell.”

This Beelzebub had not expected. He had known for two days now that Laila had invaded Hell with an army—demons and angels spoke of it across the world—but he had expected Moloch to do his job and defend the place. Beelzebub stood facing his wife, hand on the hilt of his sword, and took a slow, measured breath.

“And Moloch?”

Zarel spat a glob of lava onto the floor. It sizzled. “She stuck his head upon his tower. As far as I know, it still rots there.”

Beelzebub tapped his fingers against his statue.
Well, well, little Lailoosh; you’ve done well for yourself, haven’t you?
“This is not good,” he said. “I’m not liking this, Zarel.”

“Beelzebub, this is all your fault. I could have killed her before, but—”

“Hush, Zarel. Let me think.”

“Less thinking, more killing. Come with me now to Hell, we’ll—”

“Zarel, be quiet!” he roared, and at once regretted it. Demons stared from all corners of the hall, and Beelzebub cursed under his breath. He had sworn to show control, yet everything seemed to aggravate him lately. Beelzebub missed lying in bed by Bat El, missed her kisses. He walked over to a table the shades had set up with wine and food, chose a bottle, and drank. He paced the hall, bottle in hand.

“What is Michael thinking he can accomplish here?” he wondered aloud. “To take Hell? He must know he can’t keep it. He wants Earth, not Hell.”

Zarel shook her head with an exasperated sigh. “Would you quit thinking about Michael? Michael this, Michael that. Don’t you realize that it’s not Michael you’re fighting now? It’s Laila we must kill.” Tongues of flame ran across the Demon Queen’s body, and her eyes crackled. “Michael might want Earth, but it’s Laila who’s after your throne.”

He stared at her. “Laila is a girl. A pup. She can’t take Hell. Eight more circles of Hell lie below Limbo, and there’s not enough water on earth to douse their hellfire. She took Limbo? Let her keep it.”

Zarel barked a laugh. “You’re a madman, Beelzebub. You’re so obsessed with Earth, you’re going to let Hell slip from your grasp. And then what will you do?” Bloody tears filled her eyes, bubbling in the heat of her flaming hair. “She enlisted Angor. She has my father fighting with her. It’s Angor who dug a tunnel to Limbo, who doused the hellfire. Forget about the war on Earth, and look upon the rebellion against you in Hell.”

Beelzebub tossed his bottle against the wall. It shattered, sending wine and shards of glass across the room. “Damn it, Zarel, will you stop being so overdramatic? What is Limbo? A city. That’s all. In size, it’s less than one percent of Hell. A rebellion against me? Like hell. Your dad is nobody. Worthless. I only kept him around because he’s my father-in-law, and I’ll gladly kill the beast next time I see him.” He stepped toward Zarel and grabbed her shoulders, pulling her close to him, and whispered into her ear with clenched teeth. “What will you have me do, Zarel? March into Hell with my armies, leaving Earth unguarded for Michael to take? Will you have me start yet another front? Let Laila remain in Limbo. She’s more a threat to me on Earth than underground. Let her stay there and play her little games of dominion. It’ll keep her out of my hair.”

Zarel glared at him. “You still think you can take Earth. You couldn’t even take Jerusalem.”

Beelzebub shoved her aside. She fell, rolled across the floor, and glared up at him, crackling with flame. “I killed Raphael in Jerusalem,” he said, voice strained. “I killed an archangel, and several seraphim to boot. You want to call that a defeat? Go ahead. I destroyed most of Michael’s garrison and killed my brother, Zarel. I killed my baby brother, doesn’t that make you happy, my sweet wife?” His voice was maniacal, and he struggled to keep his fists from destroying the room. “With Laila underground, with Raphael dead, with Michael’s army beaten and bloody, I will take this world. It won’t be a month, and this place will be ours. And then, Zarel... then the hellfire will burn below Laila, and above her. So why do you worry, my dear?”

She looked up at him from the floor. “Because Michael almost killed you, Beelzebub, and I was scared.”

He turned his back to her. “You don’t need to fear for me.” He stared at the wall, where the portrait of Michael used to hang, showing the archangel alight, lance in hand, slaying the devil. Beelzebub could still see the lines on the wall where the portrait once hung.

Zarel stepped up to him and placed her hand on his shoulder. He could feel the heat from her body. She leaned her head against him, pressing her body against his. “How did this happen, Beelzebub?”

“Laila taking Limbo? Because Moloch was useless.”

Zarel embraced him from behind. “I don’t mean that, Beelzebub. How did this happen between us? How did we grow apart?”

He turned to face her. She looked up at him, her hands on his shoulders. “We are not grown apart, Zarel,” he said.

“We are. You spend all your time with the angel girl, I know it, and with your human whores by the lake. Why can’t you love me, Beelzebub? Have you ever loved me?” For once, her voice was not mad or accusing, but pleading, tragic.

He stood impassively. “Of course I love you.”

Zarel snorted, though it sounded like half a sob. “Gee, your sweet words make me melt, Casanova.”

He sighed. “What do you want me to do, Zarel? Bring you flowers? Take you out for a candlelit dinner and a moonlit stroll? I didn’t know archdemons went for those kinds of things.”

With a snarl, she slammed her fist against his armor, raising sparks. “Damn it, Beelzebub! Show me that you love me every once in a while.” Bloody tears stained her cheeks, and she trembled. “I’ve always loved you, since I was a girl. I was happy when you killed Lucifer, do you know? I was promised to him. For centuries, my dad raised me to be a bride to Lucifer, and when you killed him, I laughed. I laughed because I loved you, not Lucifer. But you only wanted Laila, didn’t you? And now you want Bat El.” Sobs muffled Zarel’s words, and her face twisted in bitterness. “Who was I ever kidding? You were born an angel. You’ve never forgotten your angel side, and that’s all you want—Laila with her mixed blood, her sister with her godlight and unscaled flesh. You never wanted to marry me. You only married me because I’m Angor’s daughter, because I’m strong, because Laila wouldn’t have you.” She slapped his face. “I hate you, Beelzebub.”

He stood, watching her sob, arms crossed against his chest. He waited silently until her sobs died, the flames of her hair fading to dull embers. She lay on the floor, claws digging into the stone.

“Are you done?” he finally asked.

She glared up at him, spent. She nodded.

“Come with me.” He grabbed her arm and pulled her across the hall, down a corridor, and into his bedroom. In this bedroom, he had made love to Bat El countless times, but of course Bat El was gone now. With Zarel returned, Beelzebub had locked the angel in the dungeon, though it tore at his heart. Beelzebub forced his thoughts away from Bat El.
Today, let me think only of my wife.

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