The Belial Library (The Belial Series) (39 page)

BOOK: The Belial Library (The Belial Series)
13.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She ran down the trail, vaulting up the rock to Danny’s hiding place.  She reached him just as he was climbing out, his face terrified.  Grabbing his arm, she pulled him towards the ropes they’d climbed earlier.

She quickly attached him to the rope.  “I’ll take him,” Jake said.

She nodded, quickly switching the rope over to Jake, thankful he’d had offered.  Danny was shaking so hard, she wasn’t sure he’d be able to rappel down quickly enough to get him out of range. 

Jake pulled Danny onto his back. 

Laney gestured down the cliff. “We pitched a second rope a hundred feet down.”

Danny stared at her over Jake’s shoulder.  “What about you?”

“I’ll be right behind you.”  She watched Jake expertly lower them down the rope.

Although Jake moved them down incredibly fast, she couldn’t help urging him to move faster. 

Finally, he reached the second anchor, dislodging himself and Danny.  Laney quickly attached herself to the first rope, all but flying down.  A rumble from above caused her to stop.  Her eyes darted up.  The rumble was followed by a series of quick explosions.  She saw a helicopter fly off and she said a quick prayer that all her friends were safely on it.

She glanced down.  Jake and Danny had made it to the ground.  Jake was pushing Danny towards the trail, ordering him to run.  But Jake was staying put.  Waiting for her. 

Laney reached the second anchor.  Small rocks began to tumble over the cliff above.  Crashes of glass and steel rang out through the canyon.  The walls echoed the sounds back at her.  Her hands were shaking so hard, she was having trouble attaching herself to the rope. 

Finally, she snapped the carabiner in place.  All but throwing herself down the rock, she still had time to look up.  The rock wall above her was beginning to break apart, large rocks tumbling down its face.  They were coming straight for her.

CHAPTER 99

 

Laney tried to move faster. The rope burned through her hands.

“Laney!  Let go!”  Jake yelled from below her.

She darted a glance at him twenty-five feet below.  He stood there, unmoving, his gaze fixed on her.  Rocks smashed to the ground around him.  But he waited.  For her. 

She let go.

Gravity dragged her to earth.  A scream escaped her lips.  She slammed into Jake’s chest, his arms pulling her to him.  He rolled her towards the base of the cliff, into a crevice just large enough to hold the two of them.  Rocks crashed to the ground behind Jake’s back.  Laney was crushed to his chest. She watched as the light quickly disappeared.  The sound of the rocks piling up came through with thunderous crashes.

It seemed forever, but finally, everything went silent.

Laney’s head was ringing and her back was jammed into the rock face.  Her body was pushed as close to Jake as she could get.  She wanted to look up into his face, but she couldn’t move enough to do even that.  “Jake?  Are you all right?”

His arms gave her a brief squeeze.  “I’m okay.  You?”

She gave a short laugh, followed by a few tears.  “Oh sure.  You know, this is just another Tuesday for me.”

He rested his chin on top of her head.  “That would be funny, if it weren’t so close to the truth.”

“I can’t believe you stayed.  You should have run.”

Jake let out a sigh.  “Don’t you get it yet, Laney?  You’re it for me.  Wherever, you go, I go.  And if that means under a waterfall of rocks, then so be it.”

Tears slipped their way down her cheeks and she leaned against him.  “I love you, Jake.”

She could hear the smile.  “About damn time you realized it. I love you, too.” He paused.  “You know, if not for the life-threatening danger and the claustrophobia setting in, this would be a really romantic moment.”

She let out a shaky laugh.  “I think you and I need to take our romance where we can find it.”

“Laney!  Jake!”  The yell came from outside the pile.

“We’re here,” Jake yelled back.

“Have you out in a bit,” Henry yelled back.  The sound of rocks being pulled away from the pile could be heard.

Jake squeezed her tight.  “Ready for reality?”

She snuggled in closer.  “Actually, I’m kind of good where I am.”

CHAPTER 100

 

It had taken Henry and the rest of them an hour to extract Laney and Jake from beneath the rockslide.  By then, the police and feds had shown up wanting to know what the hell was going on.

The local police had been about to drag them down to the police station, when some feds showed up, badged the local cops and sent them on their way.  Laney wasn’t sure what that had been all about but, honestly, she couldn’t work up the energy to care right now.  She’d worry about the feds tomorrow. 

After a hot shower and change of clothes, Laney still felt like road kill.  She pulled three plates out of the cabinet in the suite’s kitchen.  She gave a little grunt of pain as she placed them on the counter. 

“You all right?” Jake pulled three beers from the fridge.

“Except for the bruises on my back, my front, down my legs and arms, I feel great.”

Jake laughed, pulling her gently into his arms.  “How about I run you a nice hot bath to work out some of those bruises?”

She wrapped her arms around his waist.  “That sounds perfect.  And it would be even more perfect if I had some company in that bath.”  She leaned up to kiss him.

He grimaced as he leaned down.

She laughed.  “Your neck?”

“Yeah.”

She leaned into his chest.  “Man, we’re a mess.”

He kissed her forehead before letting her go.  “That we are.”

Jake handed her a bottle of beer, beads of condensation ringing it.

Laney took a long, cool, drink.   Sighing, she leaned back against the cabinets.  “Oh, that’s good.”

Jake tipped his bottle towards her.  “To quiet times.”

She clinked her bottle to his.  “To quiet times.” 

The door to one of the bedrooms opened and Henry stepped out.  He’d showered and changed, looking like his old self in jeans and an oxford shirt. 

Jake opened the third bottle, holding it out to him.  Henry crossed the room and joined them.  Taking the bottle, he sat down on one of the island’s stools.

“How’s Danny?”  Laney asked.

“Asleep.”

“He worked non-stop since you were taken,” Jake said.

“I hate that he went through that,” Henry said. 

“It all worked out in the end,” Laney said.  “And I think maybe it helped him grow a little.  He stood up to me when I tried to make him stay behind.”

“He did?”

Laney smiled.  “I couldn’t believe it, either.  It was kind of nice to see.”

Henry nodded, taking a drink, his eyes distracted. 

Laney glanced over at Jake.  They’d discussed how they were going to ask Henry about what had happened.  They didn’t want to push him, but if they were going to help him, they were going to have to get him to open up to them.  They would just have to find a way to ease into it.

“Were you able to read the books?” Jake asked.

Laney glared at him.  So much for easing in.

Henry’s head jerked up.  “How’d you know that’s what they wanted?”

They’d decided on the way back from the canyon that they wouldn’t keep Victoria’s visit a secret.  They didn’t know if Victoria was planning on telling him.  But they both agreed their loyalty was to Henry.  They were going to tell him everything.  Now that the moment had arrived, however, Laney couldn’t think of a good way to start.

She took a deep breath, opting for Jake’s directness.  “Your mother told us.”

Henry looked like he’d been slapped.  “My mother?  What are you talking about?”

“She came to see us after you were taken.  She said she was worried, and she seemed to be.”

Henry nodded, rolling his bottle in his hand.  “I’m just, I’m surprised.  No, shocked, actually.  What did she tell you?”

“That the world thought she died twenty years ago.  That she had to stay dead.”

“I love my mother,” Henry said simply.  “I always have.  But I don’t understand why she does the things that she does.”  He looked at Jake.  “I’m sorry I lied to you.  But when she disappeared, I felt in many ways like she had died.”

Silence descended before Henry spoke again.  “What does that have to do with my being taken?”

“She told us about your father.  She explained where your abilities come from.”

Henry looked up, a trace of fear on his face.  “And?”

“You’re a nephilim,” Jake said.

Henry was quiet for moment.  “What do you guys think about that?”

Jake shrugged.  “Well, after Montana we were pretty sure something was up.  We just didn’t know what.”

Henry let out a breath.  “There’s more.  Sebastian and Hugo, they said …”  He shook his head.  “I don’t know, maybe they were lying.  They said my father…”  His voice trailed off, leaving the sentence unfinished.

“…was Enoch.” Laney said gently.

Henry looked up, shock on his face.  “Enoch?”

Now it was Laney’s turn to feel like she’d been hit.  “You didn’t know?  Oh God, Henry.  I’m so sorry.  I thought—”

Henry took Laney’s hand.  “It’s okay, Laney.  No one told me.  But I had some time to think with everything going on and he was one of the possibilities.  Did my mother tell you that?”

“Yes,” Jake said. 

Henry sighed.  “Since I was a kid, I’ve known I was different.  The night my dad died, he warned my Mom not to let anyone know who I am.”

Laney squeezed his hand.  “He wanted to keep you safe.  Apparently being a child of Enoch comes with some special abilities.”

“But Enoch?”  Henry said.  “My Dad was just my Dad.  And Enoch?  He lived thousands of years ago.  How’s any of this possible?”

Laney debated how much to tell him.  Henry probably wasn’t up for a whole history lesson.  “Apparently Enoch has lived many times. One of those times was as James Chandler.”

Henry stilled, his eyes moving between Laney and Jake.  “Enoch was a scribe.”

Laney nodded.  “And your father.”

Henry’s face went blank.

Jake grasped his shoulder.  “Henry, you okay?”

Henry looked over at him, giving himself a shake.  “Yeah, actually, I’m,”  he paused.  “I think I’m good.  I mean, if the choices are between being a Fallen or the offspring of a Fallen or the offspring of an actual angel, I’d say I made out pretty well.”

Laney smiled.  “Did you have any clue?”

“Since I was around twelve I knew about my abilities.  But about my Dad?”  He shook his head.  “No, not really.  The only thing that was different about him was how incredibly talented he was at languages.  I guess now I know why.”

Laney watched him, waiting for a stronger reaction.  He seemed to be taking this all too well.  But then again, he’d had a lifetime of knowing he was different.  Maybe answers were what he needed, even if the answers were surreal.

Henry downed his beer and put it on the island.  He stood.  “Would you two mind keeping an eye on Danny?  I think I’m going to take a little walk, maybe a drive.”

Laney nodded.  “Of course.”

“You want some company?” Jake asked.

Henry shook his head.  “No.  I think . . . I think I need to just think some things through on my own.”

Laney walked around the island and hugged Henry tight.  “You know where we are if you need us. 

Henry wrapped his arms around her.  “I know.”

Laney and Jake watched Henry walk out of the suite.  Jake slipped his arms around Laney’s waist. 

She leaned back into him.  “Do you think he’ll be okay?”

“Actually, I think he’ll be better than okay.  Now he knows who he is.  And he has people around him who know and care about him.  I think he just needs a little time to sort through all of it, not to mention what happened over the last few days.”

Laney nodded.  “And when he’s ready, we’ll be here to help.”

CHAPTER 101

 

Henry walked down the hall, his head aching but not with pain.  With knowledge.  How come she’d never told him?  How come she didn’t warn him? 

He punched the button for the elevator.  It arrived almost immediately.  He stepped in, ignoring the obviously inebriated young couple next to him.  At the casino floor, the couple stumbled out the doors, heading for the slot machines straight ahead. 

Henry turned towards the back of the hotel.  He walked out one of the back exits, away from the Strip.  Darkness had fallen and Henry stepped into it.  He liked the dark, liked feeling hidden.  Since he’d started to grow at age twelve, he’d always felt conspicuous.  At night, though, he could blend into the shadows.  Go unnoticed.

Up ahead, a couple moved towards their car, holding hands. The man unlocked the door for the woman, a light kiss on her lips before she took her seat.  Jen’s face slipped into Henry’s mind.  He thought of finding her, telling her what he’d found out.

Other books

The Untethered Soul by Jefferson A. Singer
Antebellum BK 1 by Jeffry S.Hepple
A Catered Wedding by Isis Crawford
Bound to Her by Sascha Illyvich
October Men by Anthony Price
Bleed On Me by McKenzie, Shane