Her Soul to Take: Chapter 30
Her Soul to Take (Souls Trilogy)
I couldnât leave her. Iâd resigned myself to it.
By day, I searched for the grimoire and the witch whoâd stolen it. But I returned at night, watching Raeâs cabin in the dark, to make sure the beasts didnât get too close. They were hungry. So damn hungry, they were crawling out of the ground like maggots the colder and wetter it got. The radio began to crackle with reports of missing hikers, and I knew the beasts were feeding but it wouldnât keep them occupied for long.
Things were getting worse.
The Gollums had woken up. The whole forest smelled like their rot. Mushrooms were sprouting up like mad. If the Godâs human servants werenât giving It what It wanted, then It would send the Gollums to do it instead: pale white beings that stalked the forest in silence, their intelligence far beyond that of the Eld.
I could only hope they didnât find her.
Iâd park my truck at the road and stand back in the darkness of the trees. Iâd watch her shadow move past the lit windows, Iâd listen to her hum as she cooked dinner and the way her socked feet shuffled across the wooden floor when she danced.
I knew better than to fall for a human. Humans were meant to be toys, not treasures. But it ached. Fuck, it ached.
Not even monsters could convince her to accept eternity. Perhaps I was simply too inhuman to understand the terror of forever, the dread that gripped mankind when faced with making decisions for the afterlife.
Demons swore bonds to each other at a mere glance sometimes, yet she couldnât justâ¦
She couldnât. There was no use in dwelling on it. She couldnât, and I would have been wise to stay away from her.
But I couldnât.
Just a fucking fantastic predicament all around.
The skulls Iâd placed to scare the Eld had rotted away, so I left the only other thing I knew of that could deter them: one of the vile little trinkets the Libiri so loved. Sticks, bones, string â and a fish eye, symbolizing the eye of the Deep One, would usually get the Eld spooked.
It spooked Raelynn too, but at least it made her vacate the house for a few days. With her hidden away at an apartment in town, sheâd be harder to find. Safer, at least for a little while. Which meant I could hunt for the witch in earnest.
Everly was proving hard to find. She wasnât with the Hadleighs anymore, having somehow managed to escape Kentâs careful watch over her. Every whiff Iâd get of her would blow away as quickly as the wind, and Iâd never been very good at the slow, steady art of tracking. Iâd never had the patience, and now that I needed it, I simply didnât have the skill.
But I knew someone who did.
It was near one in the morning when I met Zane by the bay. The rain had slowed to a misty drizzle, like static through the fog slowly rolling in off the water. The world was soft and pale, and the cherry on Zaneâs joint flared in the dark.
âIâm surprised youâre still here.â Zane let the smoke curl from his lips as he spoke. âI thought youâd bail out the moment you got the grimoire.â
âIâd planned to. Problem is, I donât have the damn thing. It was stolen from her, from Raelynn.â Zane glanced over at me, wide-eyed. He knew how important that wretched book was, how all my freedom hinged on destroying my name from its pages. âBut I know whoâs got it, and Iâm hoping you can help me find her. Something is hiding her scent.â I frowned. I didnât like to admit I wasnât the best hunter, but Zane already knew it. It wasnât shame that made me avoid placing all the blame on myself.
Something was hiding the witchâs scent, making her harder to track, throwing it in all directions so Iâd never know if it was east or west.
Zane shrugged, passing me the joint. âIâll do what I can. Who has it? You got a name?â
âEverly Hadleigh. The young witch.â
âAaahh.â Zane gave a slow groan. âThe damn witch? No shit?â
âNo shit.â I took a drag, wishing once again that the weed they had on Earth was anywhere close to the herb in Hell. Their stock had gotten better in recent years, but it was still nothing in comparison. And damn, I needed the high.
I was getting frustrated. And when I was frustrated, I got reckless.
I couldnât afford to be reckless now. Not with the grimoire, and not with Rae.
Zane was shaking his head. âLeave it alone, Leon. Forget the grimoire, go back to Hell.â I could hardly believe what I was hearing. Zane, telling me to give up? âThe witch wonât summon you, trust me.â
I frowned. âAnd why wouldnât she? Why should I risk it?â
âShe wonât,â he insisted, taking back the joint. âSheâs already got an Archdemon.â
I nearly choked on the last of my exhale. Goosebumps prickled all the way down my arms and left my fingers cold. âHow the hell do you know that?â
âBecause he almost killed my girl,â Zane said grimly. âThatâs how.â
I paused. âAn Archdemon almost killed yourâ¦have you made a deal with a human?â
âYeah.â Zane grinned proudly, but the expression soured. âAnd this woman has got one damn big bone to pick.â He gave me a quick look up and down. âIâll do my best not to let her see you.â
âWhy is that?â
âBecause sheâll remember you.â He tapped a finger against the side of his head. âShe can really hold a grudge.â Seeing the question on my face, he leaned over and said softly, âJuniper Kynes. Canât say the whole situation of nearly being a sacrifice left her feeling very forgiving.â
âAh, shit.â
âSheâs out for the blood of anyone whoâs wronged her. Itâs been a fun ride but fuck.â He flicked away the joint, and it disappeared into the waters of the bay. âShe might get me killed.â
âJuniper,â I murmured. There were few things Iâd done for Kent that I could attach any kind of moralistic regret to. But the night Juniper had fled through the woods, high on acid and covered with sacrificial runes, counted among things I wished I hadnât been involved in. âOf all the humans for you to take a fascination with, it had to be her. She gave you her soul?â
âShe offered it,â he said. âI was already hunting her, but the deal was her idea.â
I wasnât about to admit how jealous I was. âSo now sheâs your girl, eh? What happened to not falling for humans?â
âNever said I fell for her.â Zane frowned, shifting his stance. He was such an obvious liar. âBut of course sheâs mine. I claimed her.â
I chuckled, although I was a fucking hypocrite to taunt him for it while I was still pining over an absolutely hopeless situation.
âSo, Everly,â I said. âYou know where she is? And this Archdemon of hers, how strong is he?â
Zane sighed heavily. âIn a fight to the death, the two of us together, against himâ¦â He shrugged. âWeâd hold out for a few minutes. Maybe.â
âFuck.â
âIâm telling you not to go after her, Leon.â
âNoted. Where is she?â
âGoddamn stubborn bastard,â Zane scowled, hands shoved in his pockets. âThereâs an old coven house, northwest of here. Iâll text you the coordinates, as close as I can estimate them. Juni and I went there looking for ââ
âJuni?â I snorted. âFucking hell.â
âOh, shut up.â He shoved me, and reached into his jacket for another joint. âI think we both know youâre goddamn bleeding romantic, Leon, so donât taunt me for it.â He put the joint to his lips and lit up, the sour smell wafting around us. âAnyway. We were looking for the elder witch, Heidi. Didnât find her.â
âI couldâve told you she died years ago.â Zane tweaked an eyebrow at me, and I shook my head. âSuicide. I didnât do it, though Kent likely would have set me on her sooner or later.â
âAh, wellâ¦we got another nasty surprise instead. I thought he was going to rip us to shreds before Everly gentled him like a lamb. We were lucky the witch was willing to talk with us. If she hadnât been, wellâ¦â He shuddered. âI wouldnât be standing here right now. That Archdemon would have killed us both.â
âYou get a name?â
âCallum.â Zane flicked his ash to the wind. âNever heard of him. Heâs ancient. Heâs been out of Hell a long time, if I had to guess.â
âPerhaps the coven summoned him a long time ago, and made a deal with him.â
âMaybe. Hell, Iâd stick around for a witchâs soul.â He glanced over at me pointedly. âHave to make the trouble worth it.â
âYeah? All that trouble with Juniper worth it?â
He exhaled sharply. âSheâs a little monster. Vicious as hell, body like a fucking succubus. Itâs worth it.â
The night grew colder as we stood there, passing the joint in silence. It always felt the same with Zane: always steady, the one constant through my few centuries of life. We could part for decades like it was nothing, then spend decades more in each otherâs company.
A howl pierced the night, and Zane and I glanced toward the trees at the far side of the shore. Dark, long-legged shapes scuttled through the shadows, like massive spiders on the prowl.
Zane spat in the sand. âFucking Eld. Been centuries since Iâve seen so many in one place.â
âTheyâve been hunting Raelynn,â I said grimly. âStalking her house. Theyâre forming packs. I nearly lost my arm to them.â I rolled my shoulder, where the tenderness still lingered deep, near the bone. It would heal eventually.
âTheyâve been coming for Juniper too, but she holds her own well enough. They dug up her brother from the yard though.â
âMarcus?â
He nodded. âShe buried him in the yard up at her cabin and the beasts dug him up.â
I shook my head. âShe went down into the mine and got his body out?â
âYeah. I went with her. Wouldnât recommend it. Awful place.â
I had to laugh. Iâd been feeling sorry for myself, but at least Raelynn wasnât dragging me right onto the Godâs doorstep. âSheâs mad.â
âCompletely. Sheâs going after the Hadleighs next.â He grinned at me. âDonât think Iâll be able to convince her to save the old bastard for you to kill.â
âDead is dead.â I shrugged. âTell her to hurry up. Itâs hard enough keeping Raelynn alive. Damn womanâs sense of self-preservation is broken.â
âIf sheâs spending time with you? Clearly.â
âAsshole.â I shoved my knuckles against his shoulder as I turned to go, and he caught my wrist, holding it captive.
âHey. Donât get yourself killed,â he said softly.
I scoffed. âIâll be fine.â
âYouâll be reckless.â
âHasnât killed me yet ââ
His fingers moved from my wrist to my throat, squeezed, yanked me forward so we were face to face. âDonât. Get. Yourself. Killed.â Each word punctuated by a squeeze. The bar in his tongue flashed silver as he spoke, the mark Iâd put there ages ago. âGot it, kid?â
I scowled. âI fucking hate that.â
âI know.â He let me go with a shove, and took another long drag from the joint. âCall me if you need me.â
âAnd youâd better do the same.â
I stalked away up the beach toward the road, where the truck was parked beneath a flickering streetlamp. Just before I reached it, I turned and yelled, âHey! Iâll be fucking pissed if you die!â
He laughed. âWell, Iâm not trying to piss you off, Leon. Iâve seen what happens to the poor bastards who do.â
I love you too, asshole.