Sinners & Sorcerers: Four Urban Fantasy Thrillers (70 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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“Why should
I
have to sleep on the floor?”

“Then take me back to the dungeon,” she said.

Beelzebub sighed the deepest sigh Bat El had ever seen. He began taking off his armor. “Fine. But I get the blanket, then.”

He lit a candle, and soon Bat El lay on the large oak bed. Beelzebub lay on the floor by her, covered in the blanket, his breathing deep and rhythmic. Bat El lay still, watching the candle. It had been so long since she lay in a real bed, and it felt heavenly, but she could not sleep.

“Beelzebub?” she whispered. “Are you awake?”

He did not respond, and the blanket rose and fell as he slept. Bat El shut her eyes and tried to count sheep, but the sheep became demons in her mind. An owl hooted outside, and Bat El started. She rolled onto her side and hugged herself. She was cold.
Why did I let Beelzebub keep the blanket?

She stepped out of bed to close the shutters, and saw bats flying outside like tiny shades. She shivered, closed the shutters, and returned to bed, but could not sleep. Instead she found herself watching Beelzebub’s blanket rise and fall, rise and fall, like the waves outside the window.

Stupid, stupid, stupid,
Bat El told herself as she crept out of the bed to lie beside Beelzebub on the floor. He seemed not to wake as she wriggled under the blanket to lie against him, her head on his chest, her limbs wrapped around him. She lay against him, warm, hating herself. She could kill him in his sleep, she knew. She could grab his sword from the wall and drive it through him.
I could end this war right now.

Yet she only cuddled against him, eyes moist. She hated herself. She was weak. She was a betrayer of Heaven.

She was in love with Beelzebub.

+ + +

 

“It’s time to invade Hell,” Laila told Michael.

The two walked over the ruins of Jerusalem, bricks and dust and pebbles under their boots. Volkfair walked by Laila’s side, black and silent. Around them, angel troops moved about the wreckage, raising tents, digging trenches, clearing rubble. Since Zarel had destroyed the church, leveling half the neighborhood with it, Heaven had been fortifying these streets. Not much was left—only ruins and bodies—but it was enough. With Zarel fled, her demons dead, Heaven’s forces were spreading across the city, conquering street after street. Soon Jerusalem would be theirs.

But for how long?
Laila wondered. It was only a matter of time, she knew, until Zarel returned with the might and wrath of Hell.

Michael shook his head, his lance tapping against the ruins as he walked, as if it were a staff. “That’s why I lead this army, not you. Your mind is full of stupid ideas.”

Volkfair growled, and Laila patted him, soothing the wolf. “How long do you really think you can hold onto Jerusalem, Michael?” She stepped over a fallen column. “Zarel is already mustering an army to drive you out. For twenty-seven years, you and your brother have been slugging it out, and neither one of you is close to winning this world. If you want to win Earth, I must take over Hell, then retreat its armies. That was the deal, remember? You help me usurp Beelzebub, I retreat into Hell and give you Earth.” She bared her fangs and her halo ignited. “It’s time to take the battle to Beelzebub’s home front. To hit him where he hurts. I must carve out a chunk of Hell and start claiming territory there, not just here on Earth.”

Two sparrows alighted on Michael, then fled when they saw Laila. The archangel watched them fly away. “You visited Hell once, as I recall. The hellfire boiled your angel blood, nearly killing you. The place is toxic to anyone from Heaven, even to half-angels like you. We might as well invade a sea of acid.”

Laila smiled. “Hellfire can be extinguished. Holy water can put it out. I plan to extinguish all hellfire when I take over.”

“There aren’t enough buckets in the world to carry enough holy water into Hell,” Michael said.

“I don’t need buckets. I’m going to dump an entire lake on them.”

Michael sighed. “Laila, have you been hitting the bottle lately?”

“Well, yes, but that’s beside the point. Look, Michael. Hell is nine circles, right? Limbo, the first circle, is just ten miles under the surface of the world. It’s only about thirty miles long, another thirty wide. I’ve been there, Michael. It’s a small circle, really just a portal into what lies below, but it can be enough. If I take over Limbo, I’ll have a foothold in Hell, and then we can really get the ball rolling.”

Michael stopped walking and sat on a fallen column. He rubbed his neck. “Where in your crazy plan does this lake of yours come in?”

She drew Haloflame, which hung over her back, and gave it a few whistling swings. “The Sea of Galilee. Jesus walked upon the water there, they say. The whole bloody lake is holy water. We carve a tunnel from the lakebed down into Limbo, and drain a cubic mile of holy water onto the bastards. That should put out the hellfire long enough to invade and take the place. It won’t harm the rest of Hell, but if we can take Limbo, well....” She grinned. “Beelzebub would be pissed.”

“Laila,” Michael said, “this is reality. Your idea is fantasy. To drain a lake of holy water onto Limbo would mean digging a sloping tunnel that’s over twenty miles long and at least a hundred yards wide. Even if you had a thousand construction workers, it would take years.”

She sheathed her blade. “Oh, I think we can dig this tunnel in a day or two.”

“Not with a million shovels. If you had God himself digging, you wouldn’t get it done in two days.”

She smiled crookedly. “I don’t need God. I just need an old friend who owes me a favor.” She spread her wings. “Muster a few divisions, Michael, as many as you can spare. I’m going to need them. I invade Hell in two days.”

With that she took off, flying north, the smile never leaving her lips.

 

14
 

Zarel flew over her army, surveying the troops. She had gathered them in the desert upon a rocky field, rows and rows of demons, glinting red under the cruel sun. Zarel herself burned as a second sun, surveying the shades, these troops of claws, fangs, horns, drooling grins. Five divisions she had gathered among the dunes, fifty thousand shades, a force greater than the world had seen in years. Five archdemons commanded the divisions, beasts the size of whales, their eyes and mouths dripping lava.

Zarel licked her lips, grinning as she circled over the army.
I’m coming to kill you, Laila,
she thought. Twice she had almost killed the young half-breed. Nothing would stop her this time. With fifty thousand troops, she could overtake Jerusalem and kill Laila, maybe even kill Michael.
Then this world will be ours. Then Beelzebub will have no more use for Bat El, and I can kill that girl too.

Flames rose from Zarel’s mouth when she thought of the angel, Gabriel’s daughter. She clenched her teeth and shut her eyes, fiery tears just stinging at them.
Why does Beelzebub hurt me so? Why can’t he love me the way I love him?

“I love you, Beelzebub,” Zarel whispered as she flew. “I love you so much. Why can’t I have your love for my own? Why must I share you?”

She remembered their wedding in Hell. They had wed in the Ninth Circle, the deepest and hottest pit of Hell, in a tower of polished jet. All the fallen angels who still lived had been there. Moloch, the ruler of Limbo, had given them goblets of lava to drink, sealing the bond between them. It had been a strange day, Zarel remembered. Lucifer’s grave had still been fresh, and Laila had just escaped into exile, the armies of Heaven and Hell hot in pursuit, scouring the world for the girl. Battles raged above ground, and the guests exchanged uneasy looks throughout the ceremony.

“He still loves the half-breed,” Mammon, the fallen angel of greed, whispered to Moloch that morning. Zarel overheard, but pretended not to, facing a wall to hide her tears.
Beelzebub loves me,
she told herself.
And if he does not, he will learn to.

She walked through the Ninth Circle that day, lost in her thoughts, gazing upon the rivers of lava and the columns of hellfire. Bred in the Ninth Circle was she, where all the greatest archdemons were forged—daughter of Angor, a great demon, a rising power in Hell.

When she had been a child, fallen angels whispered around her that some day, she might grow to become a bride to Lucifer. “Some day,” they would tell Angor, “your daughter will be queen.” All her childhood, Zarel believed them, believed she’d grow up to marry Lucifer, and hated the thought. Lucifer frightened her. His eyes were always wroth, his grin always cruel. One day, the King of Hell had visited their home to speak with Angor. Zarel cowered in the corner that day, but emerged when her father commanded her to come forth, to serve wine to Lucifer, to curtsy before him.

Zarel served Lucifer the wine, but did not curtsy, more because fear paralyzed her than any show of defiance. Angor wanted to beat her, but Lucifer only laughed and caressed her flaming hair. “Sweet, demonic child,” he said and kissed her scaly cheek.

That night, Zarel dreamed that she was married to Lucifer, forced to serve him wine, to endure his caresses and kisses. That nightmare haunted her for years. She had always thought that Beelzebub, Lucifer’s lieutenant, was far more handsome. The fallen angel—brother to Michael—often visited their home to speak with Angor, and always brought her presents: glowing firegems, blades of rippled steel, or animal skulls filigreed in gold. He had always been her favorite among the fallen angels.

“I’ve always loved you,” she whispered, watching the fifty thousand demons below in the desert. “I’ve loved you all my life.”

How she had rejoiced when Beelzebub killed Lucifer and proposed to her! Blinded with joy she had been. Let the fallen angels whisper that he still loved Laila. Let them whisper that she was only a consolation prize. Beelzebub would learn to love her like he loved Laila, Zarel told herself over and over.

He had made love to her the night after they married, in flame and passion and screams that made his fortress tremble. The next morning, he was gone to Earth to fight his war, to fight against his brother Michael. They rarely spent nights together since.

“Do you love me?” she asked him countless times, and he said he did, and she believed him, could see the love in his eyes. When they made love, he loved her, she knew. He confessed his love over and over in bed, when she ignited the flames within him. So why did he cheat on her? Why did he seek pleasures so often with other women?

“That is just his way,” Moloch once said to her when she came to him for consolation, tears on her cheeks. “You can’t change him, Zarel. He is thousands of years old and set in his ways.”

“I thought I could change him,” she said to Moloch in his fortress in Limbo, the First Circle of Hell. “I thought he would be only mine.”

Moloch, dressed as always in his black cape and scale armor, had poured her more wine. “Back when we were in Heaven, Beelzebub wouldn’t let anyone tame him, not his older brother, not God. He and Lucifer were the wild ones among us. Do you know, even in his angel days, Beelzebub couldn’t curb his appetite. He’d sneak down to Earth with Lucifer, sometimes with Michael and Gabriel too, and go chasing human girls. God, he loved the human women. I lost count early of how many he knew.” Moloch shook his head, his long black hair swaying. “He does love you, Zarel, but he is Beelzebub, and Beelzebub he will remain. My advice to you is to bear it and not try to change him. Be grateful that he loves you, that he made you his queen, and stand by him. There is nothing else you can do.”

But there
was
something she could do, Zarel knew. She could hunt down her husband’s paramours and kill them. One day, not long after they married, Zarel learned of a human girl, only sixteen years old, who Beelzebub had found on Earth and impregnated. The girl was one of the few humans left in those years, a survivor who lived in a hovel somewhere in Europe. Zarel had heard demons who served with Beelzebub speak of the girl, and she left Hell, found the girl, and clawed out her throat.

I’ll do the same to you, Laila,
Zarel swore as the demon army hissed and howled below. And she knew that Beelzebub was sleeping with Bat El too. She could see it in her husband’s eyes.
I’ll kill both sisters. Soon enough, there will be no humans or angels left in this world. Then Beelzebub will finally be just mine.

+ + +

 

Laila flew over the Holy Land, out of Jerusalem, heading north over the wooded Carmel Mountains. Thin clouds covered the sky, veiling the sun, and the air was cold up here. Laila’s cloak did little for warmth in the sky, and she found herself wanting a hot campfire, a fresh kill, and Volkfair by her side.

Why did I ever get involved in this war?
As she flew, Laila reached over her back and caressed Haloflame’s hilt. Because she was so powerful, many assumed that she loved to fight, that she was a bloodthirsty warrior, a terror.
Nobody knows that all I really want is some peace, a nice fire, maybe a good book if I can find one.

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