Archangel’s Ascension: Chapter 25
Archangel’s Ascension (The Guild Hunter Series)
Lailah looked over to the left. âCato!â
A male voice sounded in the background.
âA moment, Aodhan. Cato is dealing with one of the animals. I will go speak to him then return. I want to make certain of my memory and Cato is often better at the details of that time.â
Aodhan muted his end of the feed after sheâd disappeared from the screen. âThat is the woman I met in the Refuge.â
Arms folded, Illium was leaning back against the wall. âI like this one better than the one Iâve always heard about.â
âSo do I,â Aodhan said.
Lailah appeared on the screen again, and he unmuted his feed.
âYes,â she said, sounding a touch breathless. âI did remember correctly. An angel who used to linger here was obsessed with that diamond the rare times I wore itâexclusively when my father was visiting. She has had many names over the years, but Cato says the last one he recalls is Bijou.â
A name that translated to âjewelâ in French. An affectation? Or how she saw herself?
The name rang no bells in Aodhanâs head, but he didnât run in courtier circles. Jason or one of his people would be more knowledgeable. They made it a point to watch everyone, even those who appeared to be pointless pieces of fluff. Many a spy had hidden in those ranks. âDo you think this Bijou mightâve taken it?â
âI would not accuse anyone, but she was the one with the most avaricious eyes when it came to that particular stone.â
âCan you describe her?â
âShe changes her hair color oftenâand I think these days, she would also change her eye color, but her natural shade is a hazel green that is startling in its paleness. Itâs part of why I remember how she looked at the stone; her stare is disconcerting. In all honesty, Iâd have her the cursed stone if Charisemnon wouldnât immediately have noticed should it have appeared on anyone else.â
âSo if she took it, she knew not to display it.â
âI can see her hoarding it, pleased with her secret. Bijou had that way about her, a sense that she was always watching, ready for any vulnerability that she could either utilizeâor gloat over knowing. Sheâs old but not particularly powerful, so she grasps for power in other ways.â No judgment or anger in Lailahâs tone, the words nothing but a description.
Bijou didnât matter to her. Not as Andi mattered.
âHer hair, it has always been long and straight anytime Iâve seen it,â she added. âShe was proud of that. Her skin is like Catoâsâso pale as to look bloodless.â A faint smile. âThough Cato is at last gaining a hint of color after all his time in the sun.â
âHer wings?â Those were often the most distinctive things about an angel.
But Lailah said, âCream, with no other elements. I believe thatâs why she plays up the cosmetics and clothing so muchâI thought her wings lovely and elegant, but she couldnât bear having what she called âpedestrianâ feathers. She used to color parts of her wings, too, but you know how difficult it is to get color to last on angelic feathers, so she gave up on that.â
Aodhan couldâve ended the call then, but he found himself curious about this woman who appeared to have stepped out of centuries of bondage of a kind unknown to most. âYouâre different, Lailah,â he said without artifice. âYouâre not lost any longer.â
A smile so haunted, it hurt. âOh, Aodhan, I am still very much lostâbut Iâm trying to build myself a road that takes me out of this black maze in which I find myself.â
She wrapped her arms around herself. âPlease donât mention our conversation to Andromeda. Our child has found her wings, and I would that she fly in freedom without looking back. Thereâs nothing good for her here, no joy in what I or Cato represent.â
âI wonât mention it.â Even as he spoke, Aodhan wondered if Andi was as ignorant of her parentsâ current state as Lailah believed. A scholar did not blind her eyes. But this scholar had also been a child in a household tainted by Charisemnon, so perhaps this was the one subject on which she wished to remain ignorant.
Aodhan would not gainsay whatever decision it was that sheâd made.
âWill you tell me what you do now?â he asked. âI am curious only, so if youâd rather it remain private, I will not importune you to speak.â
Her expression softened. âOur home has always been a haven for animals, and now that is our focus. We have let it be known that we will care for wild orphans, for wounded creatures, for any such being that needs us. We did much the same in the war, attempting to protect the wildlife against the scourge of the reborn, for animals played no part in that atrocity and yet it was their drinking water that was fouled by the dead, their land that was infested.â
Passion pumped fire into her cheeks. âYou do not know the depth of our gratitude and respect for Archangel Titus, he who has allowed us to retain oversight of these lands. He has said that we are to think of ourselves as guardians of the wild, tied to his court under that duty.â
Those lovely eyes so like Andiâs, but with such terrible pain in their depths, met Aodhanâs. âI would like to live that title until it erases what I once was, until it is all I am. So would Cato. And so we work here, in our small slice of the earth, watching over the animals.
âWe have few staffânone for the house. Weâve shut up most of it. The staff we do have help with the wounded beasts. A mortal even! He is a physician of animals, a wondrously clever man, and Cato is learning under him, for Cato, too, is proving clever in ways he was never allowed to know.
âHe grew up under Charisemnon, too, you know. We wereâ¦companions in our strange exile.â A love in those words that was a gentle creature with wobbly legs. Because Lailah and Cato had only ever, Aodhan realized, known each other as the ghosts theyâd become to survive Charisemnonâs court.
âI didnât know that,â he said.
Lailahâs smile was sad. âMost donât. The man who sired me never allowed Cato, this beautiful child of a favored courtier, to be anything but a pretty ornament. You should see him now, Aodhanâhe helped birth a rhino calf yesterday!â
âAnd you, Lailah?â he asked, his heart aching for the child hidden within Lailah, the one who was so proud of her companion in painâand survival.
âMy task is protection of the animalsââher face glowed againââand of the lands. Iâve also been showing the mortals near us that they can look to us for help should they have need. They will bring us their wounded animals now, and no matter if itâs a humble goat, we turn no beast away.â
Aodhan found himself hoping that sheâd make it out, that the whispering dark wouldnât pull her back under. And though it was presumptuous, for they barely knew each other, he said, âDonât allow the shadows of the past to steal your future bright, Lailah. Remember, what was taken was done so without your consent.â Sheâd told him so on that strange foggy morning in the Refuge; never could she have understood so well otherwise. âYou bear no blame.â
Eyes shimmering, Lailah inclined her head. âI will fight, Aodhan. Perhaps one day, I will feel worthy enough to reach out to the child I failed over and over again. That is the bright goal that drives both Cato and me.â
When Aodhan turned to Illium after ending the call, the other man said, âJasonâs out of touch for a few hours so I sent the description of Bijou to both Dmitri and the sire. Neither recognized her.â
âLetâs ask Jessamy before we track down one of Jasonâs people.â The spymasterâs agents were scattered through various territories, a number deep undercover, and Jessamy had a steel trap mind when it came to angelkind.
Closing the distance between them, Illium brushed his fingers over the edge of Aodhanâs left wing with a tenderness that undid Aodhan. How, he thought, had he ever lived without this?
âYou were very kind to Lailah,â the other man said.
âSpeaking to her, I gained a fleeting glimpse of what it mustâve been like to grow up as Charisemnonâs childâand I realized that my nightmare was but one of many.â He pressed his forehead to Illiumâs. âIt isnât a thing of comparison.â
He tried to find words to say what he wanted to say.
But it was Illium who did. âYou have the experience to know that while she did things to Andi that have caused the gulf between them, she was also a child once, a child raised in the grip of evil.â
âIt makes me wonder how many wounded ones walk the earth,â Aodhan said, the knowledge a quiet sorrow within. âAnd it makes me realize how lucky I am.â His nose brushing Illiumâs. âI was never alone in the fight, not even in that box they put me in.â
Illium stopped breathing. âAdi,â he murmured, cupping the side of his neck with one hand, his loverâs tendons strong against his touch. âYou donât have to talk about that.â
âI know.â Aodhan pulled back only enough that they could look each other in the eye. âBut proving that I can is important to me. Iâd like to show you something after we talk to Jessamy.â
As it was, Galen was the one who answered their call. âSheâs sleeping,â the weapons-master said in a gruff tone. âWas working on an ancient script till all hours for days. Finally went down today.â Scowling, he shoved a hand through the deep, pure red of his hair. âI used to think scholars were soft and gentle creatures.â A snort. âNo one warned me about their refusal to back down when on the quest for knowledge.â
After leaving a message with him, they decided to go over everything they had so far, to ensure they hadnât missed a critical clue and to make a plan for their next move. They were just finishing up when Jessamy returned their call. Her chestnut hair in a loose braid, and her face marked by sleep lines, she held a large mug of something that was emitting curls of steam.
The mug was misshapen, no doubt created by a student.
âGalen said you called.â Her voice, husky from her recent sleep, put Aodhan in mind of a hundred childhood pranks, a thousand happy moments of her holding his hand as she walked him to the playground or just crouched down to talk to him, those kind brown eyes a gentle horizon. The same eyes had watched over him in the Medica.
Sheâd brought him his favorite sweets from childhood, and a book of stories of wild imagination. Stories to give him escape. It hadnât worked, not then. But heâd read the book in the darkest part of night three decades later, found peace for a few hours at least.
âYou didnât have to call straight after you woke.â Illium threw up his hands. âGalen will have our heads.â
A grunt sounded off-screen. âYouâre safe. Itâs all her doing.â
A soft smile on Jessamyâs face, she murmured something to Galen in a language Aodhan couldnât understand. When he glanced at Illium, Illium shook his head. But it was clear Galen knew exactly what she was saying, because he growled back an answer in the same language.
âHey, no secret love messages in front of the children,â Illium protested.
Jessamyâs smile made her eyes crinkle. âWhat did you want to ask me, small sparkles and small blue wings?â
Aodhan laughed. If anyone had earned the right to tease them thus, it was the teacher theyâd tormented with their rambunctiousness. âWeâre trying to trace an angel once called Bijou.â
Jessamy sipped her drink as he repeated Lailahâs description of the angel, her eyebrows drawing together to create a pointed vee. âSheâs not using that name now, and her hair is an ice-white, her eyes sharp green, but Iâm certain itâs the same person.â
A small nod to herself. âShe likes altering herself in whatever way is available in that time period. She once told me she would do the surgery that mortals do to change their faces if angelic healing wouldnât override the changes within two or so years.â
âTwo years,â Aodhan murmured. âLailah did say she was old but not powerful.â
âYou spoke to Lailah?â Jessamyâs gaze was suddenly opaque, her fingers tightening around the mug. âHow are she and Cato?â
âBoth seem to be doing well. Theyâre focusing on the animals that live around them. Lailah asked me not to mention her to Andi.â
âI wonât, either,â Jessamy said at once, with no attempt to hide her protectiveness where Andi was concerned. âThe decision to reach out or not must be Andromedaâs and hers alone. As for your Bijou, if itâs the angel Iâm thinking of, her current name is Vixen.â
âVixen?â Illium rolled his eyes. âShe has a high opinion of herself.â
âI donât know her well, but I think part of her problem is that she have that high opinion,â Jessamy countered. âAbout four centuries ago, her long-term vampiric partner left her rather cruelly. Heâd found a younger loverâan angel of barely a hundred and three. An adult by angelic law, but the tryst made distasteful by the difference in their ages. He was well over two thousand by then.â
Big age gaps were common in the world of immortalsâGalen and Jessamy were the perfect example. The same could be said for Dmitri and Honor, or Elena and Raphael. The critical difference was that theyâd all been fully adult at the time, both biologically and in terms of their mental and psychological development.
Had Elena been an angel, however, it wouldâve been an entirely different story.
There was a line you did not cross with born angels, an age which they simply werenât mature enough to be considered equal partners to anyone but their peers. Their kind matured slower, and the decade after they first left the Refuge?
didnât begin to describe it.
In the Tower, young Izak, though several years senior to the girl Jessamy had mentioned, was still treated as a fledgling. Not in a way that was condescending, rather with the awareness that he was at a critical stage of his development, and that it was their responsibility to nurture him to his full adult strength.
âA predator.â Illiumâs statement was clipped.
âJust so,â Jessamy said. âI was worried about the girl both because of her youth, and due to the disturbing depth of Vixenâs rage. However, the girlâs parents were senior courtiers in Uramâs court at the time, and they ensured she was soon separated from the predatorâand he knew never to try the same again.
âVixen, too, was smart enough not to make an enemy of an archangel. Instead she found her own young lovers and began to parade them around.â Jessamy sighed. âHer concerning rage aside, I felt sorry for her for a time. She did have good reason for her anger after allâand if sheâd turned it on her former lover, Iâd have felt no ambivalence about my response, but as it wasâ¦â
A long pause before she continued. âHer lovers continued to drop in age until it became a distasteful morass where those of us who were aware of her proclivities began to warn young angels of her predatory nature. She never tried for anyone under a hundred, but thatâs the best I can say about her.â
âShe turned into the person who hurt her,â Aodhan murmured.
âSad, isnât it?â Lips turning down, Jessamy shook her head. âI have seen it again and again through time, and Iâm certain those close to Vixen attempted to warn her of her descentâshe was never a loner, that oneâbut she either would not or could not listen, her brain chemistry forever altered.â
The angelic librarian tapped a fingernail against the mug. âSheâs well aware of the ill feeling toward her in the Refuge, near our most vulnerable. I havenât seen her walking these pathways for at least a half century, perhaps more.
âMy present description of her is from a letter I received from a scholar in Elijahâs region some eight months before the warâyes, Iâm sure I have the time right. He mentioned her peripherally as part of a group he met for lunch, but heâs a sketcher, and he sketched her in color. Iâll send you a copy.â
Aodhan thanked her. âEven if sheâs changed her hair or eye color since, itâll be much easier to trace her now that we have a name and starting point. Now rest before you drive Galen to distractionâbecause as far as I can tell, either you adopted a wolf and forgot to tell us, or thatâs our Barbarian growling off-screen.â
Jessamyâs laughter merged with Galenâs grumbling before she waved goodbye.
âOur quarry was in Elijahâs region eight months prior to the war,â Aodhan said to Illium. âNot difficult for her to make it to New York, be resident here during the period covering Marcoâs stalking and murder. As far as we know, the stalking began approximately six months before his death.â
Illiumâs phone rang. Glancing at it, he said, âItâs Jason,â and threw the audio-only call onto the big screen so they could both hear it better.
It turned out the spymaster had unexpectedly flown into a zone with reception.
When they asked him about Vixen née Bijou, he said, âIâve run across her here and there over the centuries. Hold on, the signalâs improved.â A flicker on the screen before his face appeared. âShe attaches herself to the fringes of an archangelâs court, but the closest she ever made it to the inner circle was her acquaintance with Lailah.â
He turned, seemed to be listeningâand that was when Aodhan realized Mahiya must be with him. A fact Jason confirmed with his next words. âMahiya says she spent a few years hovering around Nehaâs court in the period after she left Africa, but thereâs a gap in my knowledge of her after that time. We only have her on a specific watch list, and if she doesnât run foul of that, she gets to live her life.â
âTargeting all but underage angels?â Aodhan guessed.
Jason nodded. âJessamy sent out an alert about the situation. And my people donât forget their tasks, so if she hasnât come to our attention, itâs because sheâs kept her nose clean there.â
âCould she have switched to young vampires?â
Jason angled the camera so they could see Mahiya, her braided hair ashine in the sun.
âYes,â Jasonâs princess said. âWhen she was in India, I saw her with a vampire who was yet under Contract.â
As vampires were mortal adults when Made, their brains and psyches fully mature in comparison to immortals of the same age, such relationships crossed no ethical boundaries unless that vampireâper their Contractâhappened to be under the control of the other party at the time. The latter was considered distasteful.
âWeâve had word that she was last seen in Elijahâs territory,â Illium said. âBut we suspect that she moved to New York before the war.â
The tattoo on the left side of Jasonâs face stood out in stark relief as he turned slightly in the air. Long strands of his unbound hair waved across his face at the same moment.
After pushing them back, the spymaster said, âIâll send a message out to my people. If she is in the sireâs territory, she mightâve attempted to insinuate herself with one of the powerful angels in the region. Check with Vivek, too.â
The Towerâs chief intelligence officer, however, struck out on the topic of Vixen. âMust not have poked her head above the parapet,â he muttered as he continued to search his databases. âGap could also be a result of post-war chaos. Balls did get dropped even by me.â
Leaving him with a scowl on his face, Aodhan contacted Janvier to ask if he and Ashwini could plumb the gray heart of the city for any details of their target, to the Cajun vampireâs easy agreement.
âWe should check out Erotique, too,â Illium suggested, the two of them having walked out to stand on the railingless balcony outside that level of the Tower. âVixen sounds like the kind of person whoâd want to be seen at the hottest club in town.â
Aodhan shuddered. âBeing closed up inside a small space filled with discordant music and erratic lights is not my idea of enjoyable.â
Illium smirked. âCome on, Sparkle. Iâll protect you from the googly eyes of the other patrons.â
Aodhan smacked him in the back using his wing.
Having not expected itâit was a thing done among children in the Refuge, not adultsâIllium tumbled off the balcony with a startled shout. Aodhanâs shoulders shook as he walked over to watch the other man straighten himself out, then shoot back up to scowl at him.
âReally?â his friend said in a stern voice, hands on his hips. âAre we younglings now?â
âYouâre just mad you didnât think of it first.â The only way to succeed in that particular game of one-upmanship was to take your target unawares. With Illium, that was close to impossible. âAdmit it,â he said, aware of their audience of amused angels nearby.
âGrr.â Illium did an excellent impression of the Sevenâs resident chimera. âI wonât forget,â he threatened. âA century or nine after today, long after your memory of this insult has fadedâ¦bam, off you go.â