Creche (Book II of Paranormal Fallen Angels/Vampires Series) (7 page)

Read Creche (Book II of Paranormal Fallen Angels/Vampires Series) Online

Authors: Karin Cox

Tags: #epic fantasy romance, #paranormal fallen angels, #urban romance, #gothic dark fantasy, #vampire romance, #mythological creatures

BOOK: Creche (Book II of Paranormal Fallen Angels/Vampires Series)
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I
knew they would not let me leave. My bodyguards would be upon me soon enough, but like a hare to a fox I was determined to exhaust them in the chase. With a shudder of my wings, I leaped onto the boulders that had formed the passage into Silvenhall Crèche. Finally, I had found Cruxim like myself, yet still I did not belong. My wing beats battered my body back against the cliff as I rose into the air and wheeled away from Silvenhall and from its disappointments.

I had flown for not half an hour before they intercepted me, ten of them. They bore down on me swiftly with Skylar behind them, begging for leniency. Daneo was the first. A team of darker-haired angels followed, their capes fluttering around them so they looked like a murder of crows descending on a skylark. I fluttered on the wing and spun, soaring away, but I had no hope of escaping them. My wings had not healed enough, and I was weak, having drunk only a little of the rich Haemil.

“You dare to leave against my orders?” Daneo’s enormous white wings clawed at me and sent me spiraling downward. Another Cruxim followed, battering me with feathers and fists.

“I believed I was a guest,” I answered haughtily. “I did not find the hospitality to my liking.”

“A guest,” another spat.

“Yes. Skylar invited me.”

“She should not have.”

“No, she shouldn’t. That is why I left.”

“Now you know of Silvenhall.”
Skylar’s voice in my brain was calm. “
They will not let you leave until they are sure you will not reveal its location. I brought you to Silvenhall by many different paths, that it might confuse you and placate them. But you were right: I should not have brought you here.”

“Then I am to be made prisoner again?”
My heart wilted at the thought.

“Yes—until I can convince them you will be their salvation and not their ruin. We will meet with the Council tomorrow.”

“I am no one’s salvation.”
I wheeled again. “
You saw what happened to Danette, to Joslyn and Sabine. I was their damnation.”

“And you may yet be ours,” Daneo snarled.

I growled back, “Perhaps you might avoid that by treating me more courteously.”

It was an affront to him, and I expected retribution. Daneo rushed at me again. A well-muscled Cruxim helped him, spinning me around in mid-air and dragging my exhausted body between them.

I let my wings still—what would they do if I refused to fly?—but between them, they hefted my body up and hauled me back with them.

“Let me remain unfettered. I will not leave again until you reveal the Sphinx’s riddle,” I promised. “You have my word.”

The wind carried off the thin sound of Daneo’s laughter. “Your word. Just like your mother’s. No. You will come, and you will wear your bonds, and you will remain until we have decided what to do with you.”

“Don’t fear,”
I heard Skylar’s thoughts again.
“They cannot kill you.”

“It is not death I fear,”
I answered her. My throat was too hoarse with anger to speak the words, Sabine’s words, that echoed in my brain:
It is eternity in a cage.

“Shhhh.”
I felt a singular pain shoot through Skylar’s mind, no words or thoughts attached, or none I could discern—she hid everything so well. I took it as guilt. Was she sorry she had not helped me save Sabine, at least?

“Bring me Kisana,” Daneo instructed another Cruxim as we descended among the rocky towers that concealed the Crèche. “She set him free. She must be punished.”

“My sister did nothing.”

“Exactly. She did nothing to stop you.”

“Do not lay your hands upon her,” I growled, struggling in his grasp.

He looked shocked at that, but I saw the anger in his eyes.

“Why punish her for my presence here? If you do not want me here, let me leave.”

“I do not want you alive,” he spat, releasing me. “If you were not Kisana’s kin, maybe you would not be. The cage this time, for both of them.” He nodded to the other Cruxim and strode off to find my sister.

“Or if he were not the Cruor.” Skylar’s words followed him.

“I
am sorry,” Skylar said gently once her Crèche mates had dragged me into the stone hall and thrown me into a gilt cage for good measure. A second cage sat more than a wingspan away, awaiting my sister, I presumed.

“I should not have brought you here, nor let them bind you. Now that you have displeased them so, who knows if they will even let me teach you Cruxim lore?” She put her hand through the bars to squeeze my forearm, but I pulled away and turned my back on her.

“I want no part of this place, no part of your lore. I have survived hundreds of years without the company of another Cruxim. I will survive thousands more. Even if they determined I could remain, I would not.” I leaned against the bars. “If I do nothing else, I must find Beltran and send him to Hell for what he has done.”

“They will all go there eventually, Amedeo.”

I spun again to grasp the bars and shook them. “Why? Why should you care? All I see here are Cruxim with no passion, no purpose. You drink each other’s blood and sit in Council. Meanwhile the undead hordes are animating corpses. Daily the Black Death is serving them ever more corpses while you all sit here playing at politics and prophecies. Does this lore say for what purpose Cruxim are made, for it is surely not this? Tell me the riddle and let me leave, for I will not stay here and content myself with trivialities, not while Sabine still lives. Not while Vampires still exist.”

“Very good, Cruxim. Very good.” A laugh trilled around me. It bounced off the marble flagstones of the council chamber and rang meanly in my head like Beltran’s.

A woman, wearing a suit of supple, dark kid leather that fit her body like a skin, glided toward us, pushing my sister before her.

Kisana’s hazel eyes were even sadder now and swollen with tears.

“Do not touch her!” I rattled the bars of my cage.

The woman ignored me, directing Kisana toward the other cage. My sister made no move to resist, just stepped inside and slumped in the corner.

“Sister,” I called to her. “I am sorry.”

Her head was braced on her arms, knees drawn up, but she nodded between sobs.

“What did she do,” I raged at Skylar, “to deserve him? Must we both be punished for our mother’s actions? Who will punish Daneo for his?”

The woman raised an eyebrow as she turned the key to lock Kisana in her cage.

“Was that a threat?” she said, crossing the space between the cages. She circled my cage, as if appraising me. “You have a temper, Amedeo, and quite a body. I am sure you would find no shortage of suitors in Milandor.”

“Don’t,” Skylar said. “Your quarrel is not with him, Jania.”

“No. And I have no hope of convincing you to join Milandor, do I, Skylar?” Her words lacked malice, but her enormous blue eyes were sad. “I gave up on such hopes ... years ago. But many others do not. Thanks to Milandor, not all Cruxim will be slaves to the
Cruximus
,” she continued. “Not all of us will suffer.”

“There will come a day when such suffering will end.”
I heard Skylar’s thoughts.

Jania’s laugh echoed around the chamber again. “For you, Skylar Emmanuel, yes. Unfortunately, it will be the same day you hold your newborn daughter in your arms.”

“Then I will know pure love,” Skylar retorted.

Jania looked at her wearily. “For an hour, no more. I would have offered you my love for eternity.”

“Jania, your heart belongs to Lilyana now, for eternity,” Skylar said gently, approaching the Cruxim to place a hand on her shoulder. “Do not speak of such sorrows. You will always have my heart, friend.”

“No.” I felt the slicing blame of Jania’s stare. “You will trust a stranger sooner than your oldest friend, even if he will lead you to your doom.”

“So be it,” Skylar said.

“The Council will meet this evening to determine his fate. Have pity on your sister,” Jania addressed me. “Do not think to attempt escape.”  Her boots squeaked as she strode off.

Skylar put her hand over mine where it wrapped around the bars. “I apologize for Jania. She does not easily trust newcomers.”

I scoffed. “I have caught you in a lie, Skylar: a kind lie but a lie nevertheless. It is not newcomers she distrusts. It is me. Any fool can see that. Just like the rest of them.” I slumped to the ground to sit. “What is she to you?”

“A childhood mentor, and the Proxim of Milandor.” She lowered herself down next to me on the other side of the bars. “She hoped, at one time, that I might join them. But their way is not for me.”

“Their way?”

“They are barren.” Kisana put her head up, and I wondered that she too had no children.

With Daneo as her mate, surely a son would be welcome,
I thought, but I did not give voice to the words. “By choice or by nature?” I asked

Skylar shrugged and answered. “They love other Cruxim of the same sex. They will not suffer the pain of losing their mate when a child of the same sex is born. ”

So my mother had been honest about that, at least. “Then they have more sense than you,” I said, not unkindly, but thinking of Joslyn and the hole her absence had punched in my heart as surely as if the silver cross had ruptured my skin.

Hurt crumpled Skylar’s brow. She did not answer, just inspected the nails of her left hand.

They were short, I noticed, for a woman’s, as if she kept them that way so she might play an instrument.

“Jania loves you. Even I can tell that.”

“It is not the way of Silvenhall,” Kisana interrupted.

“To be celibate? Our mother was of Silvenhall, and she took a vow of celibacy.”

“A vow she broke,” Skylar responded.

I reached my hand out through the bars toward her. “Tell me about her, if you know of her. I have told Kisana all I know.”

“Jania?”

“No. My mother. She left me young when Kisana was born. How do you know so much about her, here in Silvenhall?”

Skylar’s eyes fixed on my lips, and then she flushed, almost shyly. “You resemble her in many ways.” She nodded across at Kisana. “As does your sister. Calira was proud, very beautiful, and clever. Before Samea took her place, she was the head Sibyl, and an excellent one. Some say the best, although they daren’t whisper it now. When she broke her vow ... The
Cruximus
says it should not be that a Sibyl is ever lost to childbirth.”

I did not press her more. “You talk much of this
Cruximus
, yet you refuse to let me hear its riddles. Why do you keep it from me? Apart from my sister, there is nothing here for me but secrets and riddles, and even those are denied me. I have come here for even less than I expected.” My words came out harsher than I intended.

“For that too, I apologize...” Skylar’s voice faded out again. “The
Cruximus
is sacred. There are lores ... conventions ... that must be followed. You will remain an outsider until you make a blood-troth, and only then will you be allowed to know the secrets of the
Cruximus
. Before you can make a troth, the Council must see fit to grant you asylum here in Silvenhall.” She paused. “That is if they will.” She sighed. “Amedeo, you must be prepared. Even if you see the riddle, the oracles, there is no telling whether you will understand them. They are very precious to us, guarded over deep in the caverns of Cascadia, in the Chapistry of the Sibylim, but you have heard the voice of the Maker, you know how enigmatic He can be. Sometimes even the Sibylim cannot decipher an oracle’s meaning.”

“Yet still you believe it,” I quizzed her. “Still you have faith in the
Cruximus
.” Was it innocence or naiveté that made her so? I wondered.

“Yes. When the Maker is silent, the
Cruximus
is the only thing that tells us what we are and where we are headed. ”

I snorted. “I don’t need a book to tell me what I am. I know what I am!” I ran a fist along the golden bars, making a desperate music. “I am a machine designed to kill Vampires, made to gorge myself on their gore until the world is free of their pestilence. I am creature of darkness and of hate. I am the Maker’s sword to wield, his stone to batter against the skull of immortality. I am a monster caught in a cage.” I shook the bars again.

“Stop it!” My sister stood, her knuckles white around the silver-plated bars. “Stop it.” She put her hands to her ears.

I sighed, shame flooding me. “I am sorry if you do not wish to hear it, Kisana,” I said, my voice lowered. “But I am no more than that, and nor are you, Skylar, or you, Sister.”

My voice was barely a whisper. “As for where I am headed?” I turned, my wings extended so that they nearly filled the cage, feathers poking through the bars. “It will be away from here.”

“You are more. You will see.” Skylar turned her face away from me and from Kisana’s sobs. “You are the blood that cannot be spilled.”

CHAPTER EIGHT

S
kylar returned at dawn, flanked by a phalanx of Cruxim soldiers. They moved in rhythm, wings stiffly out behind them and beating in unison with each step. I climbed to my feet slowly, sore from a night spent on the flagstones, but it was a small discomfort compared to the torture I had suffered in the tower at Sezanne or in the tents and covered carts of Gandler’s Circus of Curiosities, and at least I had my sister for company, what little good that had done me. She had withdrawn into herself. Was she angry, or had I scared her with my words? I could not tell. Female Cruxim were a puzzle to me, their emotions a calm lake barely rippled by the shadow of a bird that flew overhead. Were they so blind to the truth that my words felt like stones rupturing the surface, or were there depths they would not let me dive to?

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