Bitter Night (14 page)

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Authors: Diana Pharaoh Francis

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy, #Fiction, #General, #Magic, #American Science Fiction And Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Fiction - Fantasy, #Science fiction and fantasy, #Supernatural, #Fantasy - Contemporary, #Contemporary, #Occult fiction, #Good and evil, #Witches, #Soldiers

BOOK: Bitter Night
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“And you, Alexander. Do you have something more ...eloquent?” Selange prompted.

He turned and bowed and was surprised to hear Max’s muttered, “thought it was damned eloquent, myself.”

Selange did not hear, though she scowled, seeing Max’s lips move. Alexander spoke quickly. “I live only to serve you, my witch. It is my pride and honor to stand here as your champion.”

She smiled at him. “I know you will not fail me,” she purred.

But the warm promise in her eyes left him cold. He kept his expression bland.

“Let us begin,” Selange said to Giselle.

Selange wasted no time. Her scarlet-tipped fingers flicked. A crimson line opened at Max’s breastbone, her skin unzippering as the wound traveled down below her belt. Blood ran from the wound, trickling down her legs to drip onto the floor. Only her tightly laced vest kept her intestines from spilling out of her body. But she made no sound, only wrapping her arms around herself and pushing the wound together to help her body heal.

Then Alexander was struck with such pain that his mind scattered before it like ash. He fell to the floor, writhing and moaning, unable to stop himself.

There was something crawling around inside him.

He screamed, the horror of the realization making him vomit. He felt the creatures wiggling and squirming and ...chewing.

Agony rippled through him. He bucked against the floor. Pain burned in his back and abdomen and he felt digging and tearing as the things sought a way out. They pushed and nuzzled, gnawed and clawed. He screamed again, his head cracking against the floor. He looked down at himself. His stomach lumped and then his skin split. A bloody, whiskered snout protruded through. A blood-slicked head followed.

It was a sewer rat.

Another squabbled with the first. They fought and pushed through, stretching and tearing open the rent in Alexander’s skin. Then another hole opened and another. His stomach and chest felt full of them. They hooked their claws in his flesh and scrabbled for freedom in a frenzy of panic. He felt one crawling up to gnaw and dig at his throat. Another burrowed through his back, sending spasms down his legs.

The agony was awful. But the horror of it was more than he could bear. He screamed and thrashed, rolling and snatching at the rats and yanking them from his flesh. He threw them and they returned, crawling over him, biting him. He dug his fingers into the wounds, trying to drag out more of the creatures. All rationality fled. He began to strike himself, trying to kill the rats within.

He vomited convulsively, choking on bile and screams.

A rat squirmed up his throat into his mouth. It was too much.

His body bowed backward with only his head and heels on the floor. Every muscle knotted and strained, and the rat crawled out of the rictus of his mouth. Then blessed darkness swept a protective hand over him and he knew nothing else.

7

ALEXANDER DID NOT KNOW HOW LONG HE HAD been unconscious, but it could not have been long. Adrenaline still raced through his body, and his heart pounded rapid-fire. He still lay inside the circle.

The rats were gone.

Relief as profound as anything he had ever felt filled him. Tears burned in his eyes. He blinked them away, clamping his mouth shut. The memory of the rodents wriggling and clawing through him sent his mind spinning with horror. Blood ran from his nose and mouth, and more leaked from the wounds in his chest and back, and his ears rang oddly.

Over his head and from a distance that seemed very far away, Alexander heard Selange speak.

“You have won the challenge.” The cold rage in her voice could have shattered diamonds. “Open the circle.”

He had lost. That meant something’something terrible. But his mind was too scattered to allow him to understand. Instead it flittered away, twisting up with the chants of the witches. A flare of light blinded him and he squeezed his eyes together. He heard the quiet sound of Selange’s feet as she approached. He struggled to sit up, but pain pulsed down his body like dull-hitting sledgehammers. His muscles felt wasted. He collapsed. Selange set her hand on the crown of his head. Her perfume washed over him, cloying and smothering. He blinked, clearing the blurriness of his vision. Her jaw was shaking.

“You failed,” she snarled, her red lips twisting. “I always knew you’d break when I needed you most. Good riddance.”

It was not until that moment that he understood what she was doing. Her hand tightened on his scalp as if she clutched a handful of loose yarn. Her nails dug furrows in his forehead. She twisted and yanked as she stood erect. For a split second it seemed as if nothing had happened. Then Alexander felt it. It was like she had pulled a thread to unbind his soul, and it continued to unravel his entire being. He felt himself coming apart, his mind splintering, his skin flaking away. Then fire erupted, scorching him from within. He convulsed, his body bucking and flopping. A cascade of violent seizures racked him. He bit his tongue and lips and cheeks. His head and hands beat wildly against the blond wood floor as he screamed.

It went on for minutes or perhaps hours. Finally his body settled, his fingers and legs twitching. He gasped, tasting blood.

Above him Selange waited. She watched him with angry triumph’he had failed her and she had taken her revenge. Clutched in her hand was a tentacled thing. It looked like a jellyfish made of neon blue witchlight. Its quivering tentacles hung unevenly, some worming along the ground beside his head as if searching for him. Alexander went still as death. He could not tear his eyes from it. It was a spell’the one that bound him to Selange. Or had.

Horror crashed into him. He could not breathe. It was like watching the display of his own severed leg or arm. Except this wound would not heal. He opened his mouth’to beg, to scream’he did not know. Nothing came out. He tried to breathe, struggling against the sudden ice filling his chest. No! No! Selange was his life! He was nothing without her!

She walked away, her heels clicking sharply. She did not look back.

He closed his eyes, slumping, his mouth opening in a silent howl. Loss was too small a word for what he felt. A hungry, black maw of unspeakable grief sucked at him. He wanted to let go and disappear inside. Only the mind-blinding aches of his body kept him anchored to reality.

Hands gripped him under the shoulders and lifted him.

“C’mon. We have to get out of here before we can’t anymore.”

Max’s voice was hoarse. She got him on his feet and pulled his arm over her shoulders, while bracing him around the waist. He sagged, his head lolling forward. He felt blood still seeping from the open holes in his side. His healing spells were sluggish, made more so by Selange removing her binding.

Alexander heard himself moan softly and clamped his mouth shut, trying to pull away from Max. Her arm did not loosen. He staggered and swore softly and let her pull him along. Her breathing was labored and he could smell a stench of burnt hair and flesh. He tried to raise his head, but it was too heavy. Murky darkness filled his head, and the remembered horror of the rats crawling through him made him vomit again.

“Easy,” someone else said in a tight voice. It took him a moment to sort out who it was. Giselle. Max’s witch’his witch now, too, though that would not last long. Shadowblades did not change covens. They could not be trusted. She would pry out of him everything he had to tell about Selange and then she would kill him.

Again that vast black emptiness opened up and he felt himself starting to slide in. But no. He would not take the easy way out. He had failed. There was a price to pay. He made a furious sound, trying to pull himself back from the precipice.

He lost track of everything but his battle, coming back to himself outside on the amethyst path. He was slumped heavily against Max. She had both arms around him. His cheek was pressed against her collarbone. He could feel her ribs bellowing noisily as she panted.

“Get out of here. Go to Akemi,” Max ordered, her voice thin and weary. It sounded like she spoke through clenched teeth.

“Like hell,” was Giselle’s angry response.

“If you don’t, you’ll get us all killed,” Max ground out. “My compulsion spells are eating me alive and I’m already half-dead. As soon as she can get to the veil to pass her Shadowblades through, Selange will send them after him. She can’t afford to let you have him. If you’re safe, I might be able to get him out alive. But the longer you stand here being a target for any witch who wants a piece of you, the worse my compulsions get. In a minute I’m going to pass out.”

“Then leave him. Keeping him alive isn’t worth risking you.”

Alexander nearly collapsed at Max’s adamant “No.” He thought he must be hallucinating.

“I command it.”

“Fuck you. He’s yours now. I paid dearly for him and I’ll not waste my pain.” She paused, her teeth grinding. Her body jerked and shook with a palsy. “I’m his Prime and I don’t leave any of mine behind,” she wheezed.

The silence that followed crackled with nuclear fury. Alexander’s astonishment was complete when he heard Giselle’s quiet “Very well. I’ll go. But if you get yourself killed’”

“Then you’re screwed and I win.” Max’s voice twisted and frayed. Her fingers dug hard into Alexander’s flesh as a cascade of shudders ran through her. “Better go or I won’t be able to walk out of here.”

He heard the slap of feet as Giselle dashed away. Max’s chest rose and fell as she drew a deep breath. The tremors eased from her body and her grip firmed.

“C’mon.”

Alexander’s mind whirled. His Prime. She’d defied her witch for him. Waste of skin. It made no sense. But it drove him to draw on the last reserves of his strength’he would not let her die for him. He straightened his spine and forced his legs to move. He still leaned heavily on her, but he no longer slumped like a bag of dirty laundry.

Feeling the change, she pushed him into a staggering jog. When she reached the edge of the perimeter path, she crossed into the undergrowth. Bushes scraped at Alexander’s bare chest and arms, and the rocky ground tore at his feet. Twigs and branches snapped and crackled loudly. No one following could miss their trail.

Max held him up as they scrabbled down the short drop to where the path returned from its circuit around the hill. On smooth ground again, she increased their speed to a slow lope. Alexander kicked his feet, but remained clumsy and awkward, doing more to hinder than help. She paid no attention, neither chastising nor encouraging him.

They had gone about three-quarters of the way back to the parking area when she stopped. “This is where we get off.”

Alexander was panting and could not speak. His body was still trying to deal with his wounds, and his mind quaked beneath the memory of the rats crawling inside him.

She dragged him off through the trees and brush along the swell of the butte. The ground was steep and uneven. She stumbled and grabbed a branch to keep herself from falling. Her breathing sounded loud and harsh. She did not pause to rest, and Alexander fought with all the strength he had left to keep up.

They came to a sheer-sided ravine that entirely blocked their path. The pines growing up from the bottom filled the cleft in an impenetrable thicket, and a dense screen of scrub bushes shrouded the sides. Max stopped, dropping him awkwardly down on a boulder.

“Wait here.”

He raised his head, getting his first good look at her since the challenge had begun. For a moment all he could do was stare. The leather of her pants up to the middle of her thighs was burned away except where ragged bits clung to the seeping black char of her flesh. A thick hatch of bloody stripes showed through the laced-up gaps of her vest, down her arms, and across her face. He could see white bone through the shredded tops of her feet.

A strange relief slid through him like rusty razors. A part of him had wondered if Selange had taken advantage of the challenge to be rid of him. But seeing the damage to Max, he knew Selange had pulled no punches. Max had simply won.

“I’ll be back,” she said. “Wait here.”

“Where’” He broke off, coughing.

“Just rest.”

He struggled to get to his feet. “I’ll come with you.”

She pushed him back down hard. “I have one rule. Don’t get anybody’even your own idiot self’killed. And that means doing what I say when I say. Stay put.”

With that, she turned, pushing into the bushes. A moment later he heard the scrabble of rocks and a sliding sound as she went over the edge of the ravine and down into the trees. After a moment of silence, Alexander heard the crunch of twigs and leaves. Silence fell again, broken only by the rustling of the wind and the faint sounds of departing witches.

He sat on the boulder, waiting as ordered. He did not have much choice. He could do nothing else. Besides, she was his Prime. For now, anyhow. He looked down at himself. The rat wounds had closed, but a pressure was growing inside. He was bleeding internally. His stomach felt swollen and hot, and his organs felt as if someone were squeezing them. He could not get a deep breath. Cramps radiated around his abdomen and dug burning fingers up into his chest.

He coughed and spat blood.

What was going to happen now? Would Giselle accept him into her covenstead or would she tear him apart to learn what secrets he knew about Selange? He wondered what Max would have to say about that. She had called him a waste of skin, and then she had claimed him, defying her witch and protecting him with her life. Would Max do all that just to let Giselle kill him? As little as he knew her, he did not think so. Not that she could stop the witch. All the same, it made no sense. He would not have done the same.

Why did that disgust him so?

He strained to hear her or any sounds of pursuit. Max was right. Selange had left the rest of her Shadowblades waiting just outside the veil near the end of Burlingame Drive. It would not take her long to get there once she retrieved her Hummer from the parking lot. She would bring a kill squad in to finish him, and without Giselle to free them from the veil, he and Max would be trapped.

But Max had a plan. He had to trust her.

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