After seeing David, I took the train back to Pleasant Valley and met Marcy at our favorite Mexican restaurant for dinner. Manuelâs was a hole-in-the-wall taco joint ten minutes from my house. If there were ever a cure for heartbreak, it was the guac at this restaurant.
The last thing I wanted was to be alone with all the emotional turmoil inside me. I explained that after Iâd faked sick from school, Iâd gone to the D&S Tower to talk to David again, and heâd broken things off.
âYou protected me through all the stuff with Thomas, and now itâs time to return the favor,â Marcy said, as she fixed her makeup in a compact mirror. âIf David D-bag Star has the audacity to cross paths with you again, heâs done for. Pretty Boy wonât know what hit him.â She shut the compact with a vicious snap and traded it for her wallet in her bright-orange Coach tote. âThink of me as the chastity belt between his little burrito and your taco. See what I did there?â
âMarcy, please,â I laughed out. âWeâre in public.â
âUgh, guys are slime,â she grumbled and fished for a twenty-dollar bill. âIâm sorry I keep yapping about this, but Iâm just mad!
My sweet best friend is hurting. If you ask me, David is the last man on this planet who deserves his last name. The only astronomical thing about him was his big bubbly ass in the tabloids a while back, and we all know how ended up. A Photoshop sham.â
âHave I ever told you how much I love you?â
âPlenty of times, although I love myself enough for the both of us.â She shrugged self-importantly but in a joking way. âItâs a curse.â
Holding back another laugh, I stepped toward the girl behind the glass dome of toppings to create my order: three beef tacos with lettuce, tomato, cheese, sour cream, salsa, and a side of Manuelâs homemade chips and guac.
âIâll have you know,â Marcy continued, once she was done placing her order, âIâm writing David a review on my fashion blog for his new menâs clothing line!â She took out her phone and viciously typed. âAaand Send. Ha! Come on, girl, time to eat our feelings. Then weâll kick it at your place and binge watch the rest of season three of .â
I managed a smile. Sounded like a plan to me. Together, we walked to the soda station. I put some ice into my large cup and filled it to the brim with a little of each colorful soda. I called this creation the Sugar Splurge. Marcy made a face.
âWhat?â I asked, sipping the drink.
âI canât believe youâre still doing that, loser.â We walked to our usual table. âYour metabolism is so unfair. If I drank these, Iâd gain like twenty pounds. Not in my ass either, might I add.â
âGirl, donât even start. Have you looked in the mirror? Youâre the ultimate hottie tamale!â Sliding into a chair across from her, I immediately dunked a salted lime chip into the guac. âAs for my drink, donât knock it till you try it. This creation is legendary.â
âYouâre a sugar maniac. Havenât you been getting migraines?â
Tylenolâglory beâwas my only relief from those recent killer stress migraines.
âMarcy, my life has gone to the dogs. Sugar is the least of my problems.â I took a big slurp of my drink. âMmm, glucose.â I offered her the cup as if it were the Holy Grail. âTake a sip. Youâre welcome.â
She gulped down a single swallow and choked a little. Her hazel eyes widened.
âI know,â I said cockily. âEvolutionary.â
âNo,â she wheezed, pointing somewhere over my shoulder.
I spun around and my stomach plunged. David Star strolled into Manuelâs dressed like a king among peasants. He wore a Gucci number (which I only knew because of Marcyâs fashionista knowledge) paired with a leather jacket, which probably could have bought me a car that didnât stutter and groan every time I killed the ignition, and a pair of black aviator sunglasses.
Davidâs granite features snapped in my direction. I quickly rotated back around.
âKill me,â I said.
âHow did he find you?â Marcy asked.
âI donât know.â
But I had an idea.
âFaith.â The hair at the back of my neck stood on end. David stopped in front of our table. The whole restaurant had become silent, except for a few people whispering and stealing photos of David. Every muscle in my body tensed, ready to launch me into flight at any moment. âWe need to talk.â
Up close, everything about him was intoxicating, but I forced my pitiful self to look past his façade to see the jerk who had burned me today. âUm, no thanks.â
He opened his mouth to reply, when Marcy came in hot. âShe said no, . Now take your hoity-toity fuckboy haircut and skedaddle, before I call my father. Heâs the sheriff in this town. Last time I checked, stalking is a criminal offense.â
A smirk etched its way across Davidâs lips. He tilted his head down to Marcy. âHow rude of me.â Slipping off his sunglasses, he tucked them into the pocket of his leather jacket and reached out a hand. âYou must be Faithâs garrulous best friend, Marcy. David Star.â
She shook his hand numbly. Her mouth slowly fell open.
âWow,â was all she could muster. âYou smell yummy.â
âMarcy,â I hissed and shook her tray. Startled, she blinked a few times, exiting dreamy mode. âHe just you, and weâre .â I wrapped my tacos and stuffed them into my purse.
âRight,â Marcy said, frowning. âRight, okay.â
âMarcy.â Her head snapped back to David. He flashed another charming smile, and my arms broke out into gooseflesh. I looked anxiously between him and her. âMay I have a word alone with Faith? You have to use the bathroom.â
âIf youâll excuse me, I have a urinary urgency.â She got up too fast for me to grab her, retreating to the restroom.
David turned his attention to me, and I jumped out of my chair, putting the table between us. âWhat the hell did you just do to her?â
âDonât make a scene,â David said so low I had to read his lips.
âYouâve already done enough of that for the two of us!â
âGive me a chance to explain myself.â
âThereâs nothing for you to explain.â I inhaled a shaky breath, energy rushing through my veins. âJust go. Stay away from me.â
He looked around at our audience, chuckling a little. Then he started to walk around the table. âI understand why youâre upset. I have answers for you, but we canât talk in here.â
âDo not come any closer.â I whipped out my pepper spray and aimed it at him. âItâs not locked, and itâs pointing away from me.â I arched my brow. âThanks for the tips.â
Unfazed by my weapon, David slid on his sunglasses. âIâll be outside.â
âThatâs nice. Iâll be in here, calling the police.â I increased my personal space and knocked into a couple sitting at a table. Muttering an apology, I reached into the back pocket of my jeans for my phone.
Empty.
My eyes darted to my backpack, which was closer to David.
David and I stared each other down like cowboys dueling in a wild Western film. My fingers twitched at my side.
I lunged forward. At the last second, his hand shot out and fisted my backpack first. Grinning, he shouldered the bag and sauntered toward the exit.
âHey! Hey, I need thatâyouâyou !â He ignored my protests and shoved through the glass doors into the parking lot.
Glancing around at the puzzled faces around me, I released a disgruntled curse. âEver hear of the bystander effect, people?â
I raced after him.
âGive me back my backpack!â I demanded, feeling lame as hell as I jogged across the parking lot to Davidâs retreating frame. âIâm talking to you!â
He pivoted sharply. I smacked into him. My vision filled with his handsome features and all thought suspended. âIâm not who you think I am.â
âWeâve already established that,â I said a bit breathlessly and lunged for my bag again. He lifted it out of reach, and I stopped myself before I jumped for it like a child. âWeâre both adults here, David. Give me the backpack.â
âWhat I mean is,â David said as he lowered the bag, âIâm not .â
I had a heightened need to take a step back, so I did. âAnd by him, you mean . . . â
âThe creature you were referencing today in my office. Death.â
He clearly expected some sort of crazy reaction, and heck, I expected one too. When I didnât even flinch, he ran his thumb over his bottom lip and continued.
âYour car accident with Devin wasnât an accident. It was a planned intervention to protect you. If you want to know more, I can tell you everything right now. But if you choose to leave and go back to your friend, I wonât track you down again. This is a onetime offer.â
Deciding to throw caution to the wind, as I often found myself doing with David, I nodded. âFine, Iâm listening.â
David tossed my backpack to me like it was a feather. I caught it with a grunt.
.
âWe knew about your existence a few weeks ago, tracked you down, and intercepted one of Deathâs encounters with you. Thatâs what Devin and I do. Track down gifted people, with unusual circumstances like yours, and protect them.â
Robotically, I slid my arms into the straps of my backpack.
Somehow, I was able to formulate a sentence, so I did. âWhat kind of circumstance is mine?â
âYou died, Faith. Before you could cross over to the other side, you were brought back to life. Now your soul is marked by
.â
âThe Kiss of Death,â I said, laughing at the ridiculousness that was my life. âLet me get this straight. Youâre telling me, when an individual has an unusual situation like mine, such as the Kiss of Death, you and Devin are the ones who intervene?â
David crammed his hands into his pockets and scanned our surroundings. I watched him carefully for any nervous tics, but just like yesterday, he was a master at keeping a straight face. âThatâs exactly what Iâm saying.â
âAnd what proof do you have of this?â
âNone Iâm allowed to show you.â
âHow convenient!â
âListen, I know how this looks. When this conversation is over, you can decide whether or not you believe me.â
I regarded him skeptically. âWhy are you doing this?â
David shifted in an uncomfortable way. âBecause I care about you,â he murmured. âI donât want to see you get hurt.â
My heart fluttered. I repressed any nagging feelings and stared coolly at him. I could have been completely wrong about him; Iâd jumped to conclusions with hardly any concrete evidence. Now was my chance to hear him out and make a decision afterward.
âTell me everything.â
âThere are only a few beings left like Devin and me. Weâre called the Carrions. The Sixth Phylum of Angels. We accompany dark entities when they die and make sure their deaths are permanent. By dark entities, Iâm referring to demons, vampires, ghouls, evil creatures that lurk in the night. We help keep your world at a balance between good and evil, so it isnât taken over by darkness.â
I twisted the ring on my finger around and around. âAlrighty . . . â
âDevin is my boss, and my mentor. I consider him a father figure because Iâve known him for so long, but weâre not related. He showed me the ropes when I was a rookie. My eyes are sensitive to bright light because Iâve spent more lifetimes than you can imagine tracking down night creatures in the dark. And the reason why I could take on that angel in my office is because Iâm much stronger and faster than a human.â
. I tried to keep my cool after that second info dump, but my heart was pounding a mile a minute as I now mulled over a thousand racing thoughts.
âLifetimes,â I said finally. âYouâve spent tracking down these creatures.â
âYes.â
âWhich would make you?â
âMuch older than I appear,â he conceded. âExistence-wise . . .
Iâm a couple centuries old.â
I reached up and gripped the material of my flannel over my chest. âThatâsâthatâs not possible.â
âIâve aged impeccably well.â
I waited for the laughter to kick in, for cameramen to jump out, for David to slip up and give me a sign he was lying. But he was unsmiling and grave. I could feel the weight of the truth behind his words.
Centuries. Heâd been stuck at the same age for centuries.
.
âIf this is all true,â I said, âthen why would you lie to me yesterday?â
âI was warned to stay away from you.â
âBy who? Death?â
His gaze pierced through his sunglasses, answering my question.
. âI had a target on my back two days ago, and so did you. Angels have been dropping like flies in New York. Now we know why.â
âMalphas,â I muttered.
He nodded tightly. âI hope you didnât get close enough for an introduction.â
I pulled up my sleeve, where the demonâs bladelike talons had ripped into me. There was almost nothing visibly left of the gruesome wound. âToo close for comfort,â I said.
âMalphas gave you that?â
âNo, one of his demons did,â I said, shoving down my sleeve to wrap my arms around myself. âI was attacked, and I would have died. Death . . . he saved my life.â
David flexed his hands. I could tell he wanted to press more on the situation, but he didnât. âHas Death explained to you that Malphas is a demigod?â
âOh, Death doesnât tell me anything. Itâs his thing.â
âMalphas is the son of Hades and a mortal,â David enlightened. âHence, demigod. Two thousand years ago, he was destroyed by Death himself. Evidently, heâs been resurrected. I suspect it was Hadesâs doing, or maybe his followers, since Malphas has worshippers, like any deity does. He is very, very dangerous, Faith. What you saw crash through my window was an archangel, a powerful guardian from the realm of Heaven that was infected by Malphasâs venom. I recognized the guardian as one of my other mentors. Iâm thinking the guardian was a decoy because those demons entered the D&S Tower as soon as I was distracted. They went after you, and they went after me too. Thatâs why I couldnât help you in the alleyway.â
âYouâre an angel,â I stated, on the brink of a mental breakdown.
But I promised myself I would wait until I got home, so I could wrap myself in a fuzzy blanket with my two good friends, Ben & Jerry, and have a proper nervous collapse.
âIâm a Carrion Angel,â David said and bowed his head as if proclaiming the title was some sort of acknowledgment. âWhen we were notified that a dark entity had latched onto you, Devin and I tracked you down and tried to find a way to get closer to you.â
âThomasâs party,â I said.
âAnd the car crash with Devin,â David said. âWe needed to get closer to you and time was of the essence. When we realized what attached to you was the Angel of Death, things became a little . . . tricky. Death is virtually indestructible, unlike most of the dark entities we deal with. At first, Devin thought your situation was a mistake. A fluke in the system. Death has never latched onto a human before. And you seemed like a normal girl without any conceivable connection to the supernatural. Devin put you under my care to figure out what was so unique about you.â
âYou only took an interest in me because of Death.â There was a painful lump in my throat. âThe interview and the date were just a way to get information on me.â
âIâll admit it may have started off that way, until I got to know you. Youâre funny, kind, intelligent, and beautiful. In every way, my type.â
My heart drummed faster in my chest. âWhat about after we ate at the carnival?â I interrogated. Focusing on the details was the only way I could stay sane in this moment. âYou were frozen. You werenât breathing or anything. Death froze time, and you were affected by his power. Why were you affected?â
He blew out a frustrated breath. âIt was a fleeting spell. Death is known to have a few tricks up his sleeve. In retrospect, I shouldnât have taken you on that date, at least not without more reinforcements. I had no idea Death had communicated with you at the carnival, until you mentioned it to me yesterday. I wasnât thinking clearly, only focused on getting you to trust me.â
When I didnât say anything, David continued, âDeath is stronger than I am. His power is unparalleled.â He didnât seem too thrilled about admitting that last part. âI canât interfere with his abilities because Iâm a Light Angel. According to Seraph Law, Death takes precedence over Light Angels.â
For some reason, I believed him, but I put on my best poker face and pretended my opinion of him remained the same. âWho the heck made that stupid rule?â
âTheyâre called the Elders. The first Seraphs or angels to ever exist. Most of the rules theyâve created are outdated and unbreakable.
Whenever they try to adjust these laws, the balance between good and evil has always tipped, and never in their favor. Even a being as merciless as Death serves a purpose for humanity.â
âMerciless?â
âIâve crossed paths with Death a few times, none of which were pleasant. Not only does he have a notorious disregard for human life, but like most Fallen Angels, he abhors anything good and holy, like the realm of Heaven.â
âDid youâdid you just say Death is a Fallen angel?â
âHe is the Angel of Death, so yes,â David said, and blood pulsed in my ears. âThe good news is, Death isnât the one killing Light Angels for fun.â
âBut he does kill for fun,â I speculated.
âDonât get me wrong, heâll torture mortals with their own fears just for kicks and giggles. But mostly he partakes in how theyâre supposed to die anyway and eats a small piece of their soul to satiate his death curse. Or so the legend says.â David rubbed his clean-shaven jaw. âI digress, I have no sympathy for him. If you ask me, nobody made him become the monster he is today. He chose it. And he continues to choose it.â
âThatâs not true,â I said, and Davidâs eyebrow arched. Even I was surprised Iâd defended Death. âWhat I mean is, that be true.
What kind of person voluntarily becomes a monster?â
âA psychopath? As much as I disagree with Deathâs methods, Iâve managed to stay out of his way. Until recently. He saw me with you at the carnival and threatened me last night.â His jaw tightened, sharpening it. âShortly after my encounter with him, I told Devin, and he ordered me to cut ties with you, said our investigation wasnât worth getting my head chopped off. I didnât feel like I had a choice today, Faith, but not for my sake. I couldnât risk getting hurt because of me.â
He loomed closer. âIf Death really wanted to hurt you, he would have already. You being in the dark and unprotected feels riskier than telling you all of this. When you left my office earlier, it hit me how wrong it was to leave you defenseless. Havenât you always felt special, Faith? You have a unique soul, and Death wants to keep you because of it. Predators donât spare their prey unless they want to play with it.
The moment he gets his hands on you, I worry heâll torture you like a lab rat and kill you. The point is, heâs unpredictable. I donât know what the hell is running through that psychopathâs mind. You must believe Iâm on your side. I would never try to hurt you like he would.
I want you safe.â
As I listened to his side of the story, I saw how authentic and exposed heâd made himself. I wanted to believe him, but I had to be absolutely sure he wasnât lying.
âGive me your hand.â
âMy hand?â
I stuck out my hand between us. âYou canât provide any physical evidence of who you are, and Death would never touch me.â
.
David edged closer. My body went static with fear. There wasnât even a heartbeat of hesitation before his long fingers gently gripped mine.
Nothing.
âWell, that was anticlimactic,â I said, staring down at our inter-twined hands. As if something would be triggered, I clutched his hand extra hard one last time and squeezed my eyes shut.
When I looked up at him, his mouth curved into an amused smile. âSatisfied?â
My face burned under his intense stare. âI have questions.â
He released my hand and crossed his muscular arms over his chest. âGo.â
âWhy do you have the same ringtone as Death?â
âYouâre kidding,â he said with a snicker. âYou might not know this, but AC/DC is a popular band.â
âWeak answer.â My eyes narrowed. âDo you have wings?â
âAll angels have wings.â
âEven Fallen?â
âYes.â
Holy crud. My mind harked back to how Death had swooped down in the alleyway to save me. I hadnât seen his wings, but heâd flown. How had I missed fact?
âCan I see yours?â I asked.
David rolled back his shoulders. âWings can be considered an intimate part of angelâs body. With you, itâd be the equivalent of showing you my dick.â
Heat crawled up my neck. âNever mind.â It was time to change the subject. âWhat else can you do? Can you read my mind?â
.
âNo,â he said. âI can only control you slightly, like that trick I did earlier to Marcy. I tried to test the malleability of your mind during our interview, and it proved to be very difficult. â
âBut if you really tried?â
âI should be able to influence you, yes.â
âTry it right now.â
Sighing, he lifted his sunglasses up. I watched the pupils of his eyes stutter. âTell me a secret, Faith.â
âI have two boxes of packaged cupcakes and my grandpaâs old machete stored under my floorboards in case of a zombie apocalypse.
First day of sophomore year, I wore this really pretty jumpsuit my aunt gave me as a gift. I drank way too much coffee that morning and had to go number two in the worst way. I rushed to the bathroom and into the stall. I almost made it. Bye, bye pretty jumpsuit.â
David burst out laughing.
I snapped out of it, blinking fast. âHow the hell did you do that?â
He wiped at his eyes under his sunglasses, crying from laughing so hard. âThat time I got lucky. You told me two secrets instead of one. Coffee went right through you, huh?â
Mortified, I covered my face with both hands.
âWhat are your intentions now?â I asked, urgently trying to direct the conversation back to the point. âWith me.â
David pushed his jacket back to rest his hands on either side of his belt. âI want you to trust me, so I can protect you. Thereâs a spare bedroom at my penthouse in the city and you could lay low there for a while. That way, you would be out of harmâs way, while Devin and I find a way to thwart Death. Whatever connection Death has to you, it needs to be severed first and foremost. I have a feeling Malphas will back off then.â
The day I was supposed to die, Death had seen something special in my soul. I couldnât explain why, or how, but Iâd known all along heâd created an invisible bridge between us to come back to me. I hadnât seen the last of Death. Heâd left his mark on my soul. There wasnât anything I could do about it on my own.
I looked down at my hands and curled my fingers into my palms.
There was something inside of me, building, peaking at that very moment, and the migraine from earlier shoved through the Tylenol and hit me at full force.
âI meant what I said, about caring about you,â David said, and there was a warm fluttering in my chest that seemed to reduce the headache. âCan you promise to keep this conversation between us?â
âYour secret is safe with me,â I said, withdrawing back. âI have to get back to Marcy, and I need time to think about all of this. Itâs a lot to take in.â
David nodded once in acceptance. âTake whatever time you need. Just know it may be of the essence. You know my number.â
Without saying good-bye, we both turned our backs on each other and retreated. I entered Manuelâs more confused and uncertain of the world than ever before.