After Death evaporated, I stood alone in the dark to collect myself. Then I found my flashlight and hurried to check on my parents. They were no longer frozen in the kitchen by Deathâs power and were back in bed asleep, so I gently shut their door and headed back into my bedroom.
David Star was Death. The worldâs youngest, most famous multi-conglomerate business protégé was the Grim Reaper, and Iâd him!
My fingers lifted to my lips, tracing the memory of our hot and heavy moment. I couldnât believe Iâd let himself have my first smacker. Not that I was complainingâthe kiss was not to be forgotten. Heâd known exactly what he was doing, and heâd done it exceptionally well.
Jerk.
For the second time in the same day, Iâd unleashed an unexplainable force from my hands. The two-hundred-and-forty-pound shredded Jerkules had been knocked flat on his back by whatever shot out of my hands.
Could I really be this prophesized entity who would start wars, just like Ace had predicted?
Skittles purred as she rubbed her fur against my bed curtain, drawing my attention to the magazines featuring David and âMystery Girlâ that my mother had bought at the airport. They were stacked chaotically under my bed, and when I slid one out, the glossy image of David Starâs brown eyes unsettled me. They now appeared lifeless, empty, merely a mask concealing the monster behind them.
Death posed as a celebrity seemingly for sport, slipped on a façade so everyone worshiped him. It was irredeemably evil. How did he reap the souls of the dead while being David anyway? Did he have help? There was no way one person could collect all those souls at once.
I gulped a breath.
he be in multiple places at once? The last thing I needed to worry about was twenty thousand Deaths wandering around the planet. I already had enough trouble sleeping at the thought of one of him.
Another idea presented itself as I riffled through the pages of a second magazine. If David Star was Death himself, then what was the D&S Tower? Who the hell was Devin Star? My skin tingled as I reached a page of David and Devin posed together. Gorgeous, the picturesque duo that all of New York and beyond was obsessed with, but now that I knew the truth about David, it was clear all aspects of the Star family were fabricated. I sat back on the floor, shining the beam of light from the flashlight onto Devin Star.
I recalled my first encounter with Devin. He was charming, and so handsome it was almost agonizing to look at him. My thumb crept onto the magazine page and covered the in his name.
.
I slid my thumb away from the page, horror spreading through me, as I filled in the missing letter with another.
. I shook my head, voicing my denial with a repeated âNo.â
âThereâs no way I got in a car accident with the Devil,â I said, and laughed, since talking to myself had become the norm. âI mean, come on.â
, David had told me outside of Manuelâs taco shack.
.
I quickly shoved the magazines back under the bed. How could I have been so blind? Death and the Devil controlled the D&S Tower. I already rode one yellow bus to hell my first three years of high school. Now I would be riding a one-way train to Satanâs everlasting torture chamber.
Sighing, I climbed to my feet to make a chamomile tea. When I stood up, my vision swam with dizziness. I fell back, thankfully against my mattress. Having almost fainted, I yanked myself up onto the bed and gripped the comforter in dazed confusion. My mind raced, but my heart slowed. Something wasnât right.
When I got my wisdom teeth removed, they drugged me and counted back from ten as I drifted into oblivion. I hadnât been able control the plunge, and this felt the same way. A mighty wave of fatigue sucked every last ounce of energy from me, and my eyes fluttered shut.
The nightmares began a few weeks before I met Death at Thomasâs house. Fragments of the same vague images would terrorize me all night long. Just before Iâd wake up, a massive shadow would always approach me, and Iâd be unable to move. These night terrors had gotten stronger since meeting Death, until I discovered he was the shadow all along.
Now the same paralyzing sensation of the nightmare overcame my body, but the dream itself was altered. This time, I was in the alleyway near the D&S Tower. The figure approaching me was not Death.
âHello, Faith,â the Raven demigod rasped in his bone-chilling voice. âWe meet again.â
The last time Iâd seen Malphas, heâd taken Thomas with him on Main Street. Heâd also died in Deathâs Roman gladiator memory.
I should have been afraid. Here, I didnât feel much of anything.
âWhy am I here? I was asleep.â
âAnd in sleep you remain. This is called a demonic projection.
I thought perhaps youâd feel more comfortable if we met alone, on your terms. If you want to leave, all you have to do is wake up.â
I felt torn between two decisions. One part of me desperately wanted to say, and make haste like the Road Runnerâwhereas the other part of me just couldnât leave.
âWhat do you want?â I asked.
âTo help you.â
âUh-huh . . . â Looking Malphas directly in the eyes felt like a dare to touch the tip of a scorpionâs tail. âHavenât really been getting that vibe from you. You know, when one of your helpers slashed my arm in the alleyway and I almost died? Or when you kidnapped and murdered Thomas?â
âIt was never my intention to harm you, Faith.â Malphas leaned against the shadowy wall beside him and put his hands in his pocketsâthe only human mannerism Iâd seen from him. I wondered how old he was. Visually, he looked to be in his early thirties. There was a distinct lilt to his voice, too, which resembled Deathâs untraceable accent. It even made my blood run cold in a similar way. âMy subordinates were severely punished for what they did to you outside the D&S Tower. As for your friend Thomas, I can assure you he is not dead.â
My heart skipped a beat. âProve it.â
âThomas will prove it for you soon. Youâll see.â He smirked, and I imagined he was incredibly handsome, once. His entrancing, blazing coal eyes bore into mine, until my head felt heavy. âYou took shelter in the Crossroads today. Tell me, has a revelation unfolded?â
âHe killed you,â I said. âHe killed you in the arena.â
His smile tightened.
âWho are you, Malphas? To Death?â
âA ghost,â he replied.
My shoulders tensed up as he approached me. All thoughts about Thomas strangely lifted away, as a crushing weight built up in my chest. Certain details about Malphas disturbed me up close, like how his eyes were onyx black with no visible pupils, or how his skin appeared so pale I could see some of the veins beneath it.
Malphas raised a clawed finger. âDeath lied to you, didnât he?â
All I could do was stand static, numb to fear. The air shifted, rippled, as if his power were edging closer to me.
âDonât you see what he really wants is control over you?â Malphas circled me, strobing in and out of focus like a broken camera lens.
âDonât be naïve, Faith. He wants you to obey his every command.
Like a good pet.â
Ultimately Deathâs intentions with me were unclear, but if there was one thing that man enjoyed more than anything, it was controlling everything around him. My mind harked back to every encounter with Death, how he asserted his authority over me in every possible aspect, from the interview, to the date, to the fable about him being a Carrion Angel, and then finally, his unwelcome visit to my home. Every move heâd made had been a deliberate, calculated decision to maintain a power position.
âYou poor girl, you had to discover the truth about him for yourself. You havenât even seen the worst parts.â Malphas moved his fingers in a small motion. I could have sworn something akin to a claw scraped lightly against the inside of my skull.
âRemember when you were hurting, and he kept hurting you?â Those obsidian eyes held me in place, two scary bottomless pits skimming over my features as if he were reading a book. âYou can feel it, canât you? His power over you. It lingers in your veins, awaiting his next command. You were afraid to let him in. You have dreams, . Too many girls your age get swept up in temporary relationships, just like your friend Marcy. And Death . . . he knew this from the beginning. He knew you wouldnât be easy to break, unlike other mortals. Thatâs why he hid his true intentions from you. You were a conquest to him, a mouse for the cat to play with. Death you were developing feelings for him, and he knew you were hesitant to let anyone in. He took advantage of this. He put you in danger. Now heâs put your family in danger. He doesnât care about . He only wants your soul, his property as he sees it, and everything else is inconsequential.â
At the mention of my family, my face turned ashen. I couldnât allow my parents to fall into this mess.
I imagined my date with David at the carnival, and all the distance heâd put between us whenever I tried to understand him, which I was sure was by design. How was I supposed to put my trust in someone that I only knew through fragmented memories and fabricated alter egos?
The demigod leaned in closer, drawing my attention to his alien yet attractive features. âArenât you the least bit curious why he came to your house, darling?â Malphas asked. âHe didnât have to interact with your parents at all. What point do you think he was trying to make there?â
That he was powerful, and if I didnât do exactly as he said, both my Momâs and Dadâs lives would be in danger. With merely a glance, Death had put both my parents under his spell. It would take even less effort for him to kill them.
âHow do you know all of this?â I asked Malphas, fighting past a fuzziness blurring my vision again.
âI voice an echo of what you already know in your heart. Death may claim to protect you, but you know it is out of selfishness. Look at his actions, Faith. Not his words. Only I can stop him.â A chilling smirk curled his sinister mouth. Malphas stepped back, fading into a growing darkness behind him. âSummon me in your darkest hour.
I am yours.â
I woke up in a cold sweat. Morning light streamed in through slight gaps in the blinds, cutting across my eyes and making me wince and roll onto my side. Nausea clawed my throat and when I lifted my forearm, it throbbed where the demon had injured me in the alleyway.
Jolting up, I swung my legs off the bed and bolted to the bathroom. I barely made it to the toilet as I dropped to my knees and retched.
With white knuckles I gripped the porcelain seat, dripping sweat, acid, and suppressed tears into the water. My muscles were weak and overworked, as if Iâd run a marathon the day before. I practically had. I flushed the toilet and dragged my feet to the sink to rinse my mouth out several times, then two more times with mouthwash. As I brushed my teeth, I wrestled with the depressing thought that there was no way out. I was hopeless in my situation now.
âLetâs recap,â I told my reflection. âYouâre prophesied to start a war between Heaven and Hell and who knows what other realms.
Every evil creature and their mother are after you. Youâve developed the ability to see into the past and the future, not to mention an uncontrollable lantern power that affects evil beings. If you donât do as Death wishes, heâll massacre your entire family. Oh, and you still have to go to school.â
School. Sprinting out of the bathroom, I lunged for my alarm clock on my nightstand and read the time. The screen was black.
Probably broken from Deathâs light show with our electricity the night before. I growled and checked my shattered phone screen. I was three hours late for school!
My bedroom door blew open, hitting the wall with a crack.
âSURPRISE!â
âJesus!â I screamed, grabbing my chest. I took in the thirtysomething-year-old woman with poker-straight blond hair and a glowing smile that could brighten up anybodyâs day. âAunt Sarah?â
She crossed the room in a few excited leaps and squeezed me tightly against her bulky pumpkin sweater. âHappy Halloween! I was going to surprise you in the kitchen, but I just couldnât wait!â
She held me at armâs length, her crystal blue eyes identical to my motherâs. âYou get more and more gorgeous every time I see you.â
âI literally just saw you,â I laughed out. âWhat are you doing here? I have school today.â A wave of panic hit me as I remembered the time. âAnd Iâm late!â
Aunt Sarah blocked my path. âAre you kidding? You better be going to school, missy! Your mom told me this morning on the phone youâve been stressed and she was going to let you sleep in. Iâm off today. Figured Iâd stop by and take you out to cheer you up.â
âYouâre kidnapping me?â
âWell, duh. Playing hooky was my specialty in high school. As far as Pleasant Valley knows, youâve had these terrible on-and-off migraines the past few days, and itâs best for you to do something spooky fun today.â She jumped a little in excitement, and so did I, although less enthusiastically. Unbeknownst to her, I been getting terrible migraines. âMom called you in sick at school! Play along, kid, Iâm breaking you out of jail!â
Once Aunt Sarah left my room to let me get changed, I paced my bedroom floor, reconsidering this whole thing. Going out felt like another demon incident waiting to happen and staying home or going to school could be just as damning.
Death knew where I lived. Hell, he could find me anywhere I went. Hiding under a blanket in my closet wouldnât protect me. The last thing I wanted to do was stay cooped up in the house all day, terrified of what would happen next. Maybe going out with my aunt was just what I needed.
I wore a pair of medium wash ripped jeans with black fishnets underneath and my old âBatmanâs Wifeâ T-shirt to be festive for Halloween. Then I brushed my long black hair until it was bone straight and shiny, laced up my Converse, and quickly applied mascara, eyeliner, and burgundy lipstick.
On my vanity mirror hung my communion cross, which my mother must have snuck into my room while I was sleeping. I clasped the dainty cross around my neck, so it hung close to my throat.
I inhaled a slow breath.
âYouâre a normal girl,â I told myself. âYou are a .â I grabbed a zip-up hoodie and headed out of my bedroom. âWho shoots light beams from her hands.â
I spent the car ride venting to Aunt Sarah about art school options and potential majors that interested me. Before entering , starring Death, college had been my number one stressor. Funny, when actual life-threatening problems enter your life, the other trivial issues you had before then, which had felt like the end of the world, vanish into thin air.
Happiness to me was to be immersed in art for the rest of my life, embraced by the magic of color and creating. Realistically, I knew I might have to settle on being an art teacher or some variation of that, since art studies and fashion design were so competitive. I wasnât the type of person to settle on anything less than what I truly wanted though. Not until Iâd exhausted every other option to get to it. âDavid Starâ helped me see that strength within myself.
The radio was on low in the background, and Aunt Sarah turned it up to hear it.
âThe crime rate in New York City has snowballed, leaving citizens frazzled,â said a male broadcaster, âafter a man was found dead outside the Empire State Building. Witnesses have referred to him as the âMan with Wings.â Before investigators could arrive to the scene, it is claimed the mystery man âvanished into thin air.â Video footage has turned up of this âMan with Wingsâ lying on the sidewalk. Some believe this bizarre incident is real, while others say itâs a Halloween prank, or a publicity stunt. An eyewitness has come forward with disturbing details about the supposed dead man, claiming, âHis eyes were pecked out of his head, and he had massive white wings, like an angel.ââ
âHe was alive for a while,â a staticky recording of a male voice said, who I assumed was the eyewitness. âHe spoke to me. There was this blinding light, and he just went âpoof.â Gone. Like one of those Las Vegas magicians. Something ainât right about this city anymore.â
âYou can say that again,â I muttered.
âWitnesses have reported that in the manâs final moments, he warned of a âgreat evil coming.ââ
My blood turned to ice. The angel that had crashed through David Starâs office had said those same words. With a bitter tang in my mouth, I remembered the bloody mess and the gory pits where the angelâs eyes once were. Had another angel been attacked by Malphas and his underlings? What kind of message was he trying to get across to Death?
Aunt Sarah switched off the radio. âA stuntman with fake wings is found dead and now the whole city is freaking out like itâs the apocalypse. Classic NYC.â
I felt ashamed for feeling concerned about Deathâs safety. A part of me wanted to call him, confirm he was all right, and tell him about the demonic projection with Malphas. Then I remembered who he truly was. Remembered how heâd hurt me. How heâd come to my house the night before and made me feel exposed and helpless. How weâd kissed, and somehow, that was the cruelest part of all because none of it was real. The man I wanted to kiss wasnât real. He was a character, a persona that went up in flames at the strike of a match, exposing the wicked creature standing behind a curtain of fire.
I clutched my phone with white knuckles, staring but not seeing the passing scenery outside the car.
âIn other news,â Aunt Sarah said. âFaith, is it true youâre dating David Star? Your mom sent me a picture of you and him in a magazine.â
It crossed my mind that she should have seen those magazines at her bookstore. If sheâd checked any of her social media, she would have known too.
âWeâre acquaintances through mutual friends,â I replied. âItâs a small world.â
We pulled into a picturesque farm with a freshly painted red barn, apple trees, pumpkin patches, and corn lined up in neat rows. Sunny Havenâs farm, where Pleasant Valley went to enjoy all their favorite fall festivities. Normally, Mom and Dad took me pumpkin and apple picking every year here, but the past two years we hadnât gone. I missed our Halloween traditions, so I planned on bringing Mom home plenty of apples to bake apple pie with her and picking the biggest pumpkin in the patch to carve a jack-oâ-lantern with Dad.
He wouldnât care if we did it the day after Halloween.
I spent the next few hours pretending it was any other day. The two of us went on a hayride to go pumpkin picking, ventured back to the car to drop off our harvest, and then rode another hayride for apple picking. It didnât look like it had rained here on the farm last night, even though the drive was only twenty minutes from my house. I wondered if Death had brought that nasty storm with him, like the force of nature that he was.
âWhen you were a little squirt,â Aunt Sarah began, as we carried our wooden buckets of apples down an endless aisle of trees, âwe used to get you a bunch of those little mini pumpkins they sell at the barn. You loved painting them. And chucking them at your dad.â
âThatâs too much,â I laughed.
âNo really, you used to do this thing where youâd toss the pumpkins at your father. Youâd never really hit him, but heâd pretend to be hurt and say âouch!â so that youâd giggle hysterically.â
âSounds like I was a sadistic child.â
âThe most adorable, always smiling, sadistic child.â
I nearly dropped the wooden basket in my hand as a raven landed on a high branch above us. All of a sudden, the bird nose-dived toward me, but I ducked down, so it crossed over to another tree. Quickly jerking its head side to side, the raven stared down at me with beady black eyes. As the dark bird opened its mouth and continued its throaty squawk, Aunt Sarah did the unthinkable and hurled an apple at it. She would have hit it, too, had it not taken flight at the last second.
âNice throw,â I said unsteadily. The phantom mark on my forearm stung again, like claws scraping at my skin from the inside. I pressed my hand against the pain until the sensation went away. I was in too deep with this supernatural stuff to dismiss the bird as a coincidence, but I couldnât bring myself to ruin another day just yet.
âNow I know where I got my softball skills from.â
The whole hayride back I was on edge, watching the skies for crazed ravens. By the time the ride stopped by the main entrance without a single bird or demon in sight, Iâd convinced myself the raven really was just a coincidence this time.
âSo,â Aunt Sarah said, as we hopped off the wagon. âWhatâs up with your celebrity boyfriend? You kinda blew me off before and your mom is convinced youâre dating him.â
âDavidâs not my boyfriend,â I said, kicking gravel as we walked.
âTurns out heâs as fake as I initially thought he was.â
Aunt Sarah placed her hand on my shoulder with a serious expression, stopping us both. âI had no idea. Iâm so sorry youâre hurting.â
âI thought I would see this coming, but I was blindsided. Now I feel stupid. I wasted so much energy on someone who wasnât even real.â
âAw, sweetheart . . . â Aunt Sarah hugged me in a firm embrace and emotion tightened my throat. âYou are not stupid, Faith. When youâre in a new relationship itâs fun and exciting. It can be hard to see the warning signs that things might not work out.â She pulled me back at armâs length. âListen, life will not always work out as planned, and it shouldnât. When things donât work out, when weâre disappointed by love, or life, we learn the most about ourselves.
Heartbreak is part of growing up and figuring out who you are. Who you are to me is intelligent, kind, brave, and so worthy of love. Youâre allowed to be upset because itâs disappointing, but donât put yourself down. Look at how much youâve learned instead.â
I braved a smile. âThank you. I really needed to hear that.â
âAnytime, kiddo.â She looked toward the various food trucks parked to the right of us in a compacted dirt area. âYou hungry?
Donât know about you, but Iâm in the mood for fried chicken.â
I laughed, since she didnât eat meat. I hadnât eaten since tacos with Marcy yesterday, and the morning vomit session had left me incredibly shaky. Before I could respond, a familiar cold sensation pricked at the back of my neck.
Death was here.
I scanned my surroundings and couldnât see him anywhere.
âIs something wrong, Faith?â
I gazed back at Aunt Sarah, to find her staring at me with an odd expression on her face.
âNope, Iâm just starving,â I said with an authenticity that put Oscar nominees to shame. âLetâs go eatââ
Someone bumped into me as they walked past us, nearly knocking me to the ground.
I whirled around to glower at the clobbering idiot as the cold sensation hit me again. The wide back, broad shoulders, and overall massive frame of the man walking away from us was unmistakably Death. Clad in black jeans and a hoodie with a leather jacket over it, collar up, he managed to blend in with the people around us. At my stare, in almost slow motion, he looked back over his shoulder, revealing a shadowy area where his features should have been.
Death took one last drag from his cigarette, flicked it to the side, and then stuffed his hands into his pockets. He headed in the direction of the big red barn, and as I watched him stalk away, his deep voice invaded my skull.
.
My heart pounded incessantly in my ears.
Aunt Sarah tilted her chin up, as if she were about to shout something crude to Death, but then her brows scrunched together, and her eyes narrowed.
âWhat a jerk,â she said. Glancing back at Death again, Aunt Sarah grabbed my shoulder, steering me toward the Sunny Havenâs food trucks for guests. âCome on, time to eat all the fries.â
Feeling drained of energy, I decided to eat before Death ultimately sought me out. Besides feeling betrayed and angry, I was also a little scared to be alone with him again.
I ordered a huge tray of cheese fries and a slice of pepperoni pizza at one of the grease trucks, then popped a squat at a wooden picnic table. Aunt Sarah stood in a ridiculously long line at another truck to buy her veggie burger.
Iâll admit it, I didnât wait for my aunt and attacked my large carton of cheese fries with the restraint of a ferociously hungry wildebeest.
Can you blame me? I was starving. I couldnât remember the last time Iâd had the ability to eat without feeling sick from nerves.
I finished half my fries and pizza in record time. Glancing back at my aunt, who was in line for her veggie burger, I shook the ice at the bottom of my soda and crushed the cardboard container, stacking it on top of my empty french fry container and paper plate.
I swung my leg out from the picnic table and leaned toward the garbage can nearby to toss my trash. Since my aunt notoriously never locked her car, I figured Iâd put my apples away while I waited for her. I lifted the wooden basket beside me and headed to the back of the lot, following a family lugging their pumpkins to their carâa mom, a dad, and a little girl skipping in between them. As they crossed the dirt lot and I approached Aunt Sarahâs car, the little girl glanced back at me. Half of her face was painted like a skull.
A car honked, and I lurched back as a purple Jeep came flying past to pull haphazardly into the spot right next to Aunt Sarahâs Toyota. Pleasant Valleyâs golden boy linebacker, Brody McCormick, hopped out of the car, along with Nicole Hawkins and her two clones. Brody had painted gruesome zombie makeup on his face and the three girls were dressed as cats.
âHey, Wednesday Addams!â Nicole greeted with a sugary sweet fake smile. âLose your sidekick again, freak?â
âWho, Marcy?â Brody asked, chewing a piece of gum like a cow.
He inspected an imaginary spot on his car and rubbed at it with his varsity jacket. âThat slutâs probably getting tested for the clap as we speak.â
âI heard she hooked up with Tommy at his party and now heâs sick,â Nicole added, twirling a strand of her glossy honey hair.
âWanna bet he got it from her?â
âSure didnât get it from this freak,â Brody said, thumbing toward me. âUnless heâs got a hard-on for ugly goth chicks.â
âArenât you a little young to have a receding hairline, Brody?â I blurted before I could stop myself. âDonât worry, Iâm sure you have enough butt hair to solve the issue.â
The one cheerleader giggled, suppressing it with her palm as Nicole gave her a sharp look. Brody reddened, his zombie-painted features tightening. He raised his arm, and I flinched, thinking he might hit me. Instead, he swatted my crate with a fake severed human hand, spilling apples all over the ground. âWatch your mouth, you ugly bitch.â
My hand tightened around my mace in my pocket, ready to use it. Brody backed off and strode away. The girls trailed behind him, now laughing at my expense. Pleasant Valley. The irony kills me.
Growling, I bent down to pick up my apples, when an icy chill ran down the back of my neck.
âHappy Halloween.â
Straightening at that deep, velvety voice, I jerked my head to the side. And there he was.
âDeath,â I breathed.
âThe man, the myth, the legend,â he said dryly. âSexy, arenât I?â
The last time we were together, heâd been knocked unconscious by my crazy light beam, and my treacherous little fingers had investigated him like I was Nancy Drew. Now he was leaning against Brodyâs Jeep, his tall frame angled toward me. I replayed our encounter from the night before and tried not to seek out the bulky muscles beneath his leather jacket, or the menacing shadow over his face, and instead focused lamely on the center of his chest.
âHave you any concept of time?â Death asked, when I couldnât find the courage to speak. âI gave you explicit instructions to meet me at the barn. Itâs been an hour of you futzing around.â Then he took a knife out from underneath his jacket and slashed Brodyâs tire with it.
âDude, what the heck!â
âHeâs lucky itâs not his face.â
As the tire hissed out, Death prowled past me to the annihilate the next tire, when I grabbed his leather-clad shoulder. âCan you ?â
â
was one smart remark away from getting his head lopped off,â Death said, twirling the blade around his gloved fingers in a dangerous dance. âHe knows damn well youâre beautiful.â
I was so stunned by the compliment that I almost overlooked the whole lop-his-head-off thing.
Feeling as though someone was listening in, I glanced back at the picnic tables, to find my aunt approaching the table with her food. I turned back to Death, playing with the cross around my neck. His head dipped down, and I could feel his shadowed eyes track the movement.
âThis might come as a surprise to your enormous ego,â I said at last, âbut I donât need you to defend me.â I proceeded to fix the bottom of the apple basket by wedging a broken piece of wood into the circular frame. Then I bent down to pick up the apples on the grass, gingerly placing them into the basket. âDonât you have anything better to do than stalk me all the time? Like, oh, I donât know, do your and collect souls?â
âThanks for the concern, but Iâve already surpassed my quota.
Why donât you worry about upgrading your pants situation?â
âTheyâre called ripped jeans.â I stood up with the basket, all sass.
âCalvin Kleinâs. Didnât do a campaign for them? I expect an employee discount.â
Death slinked closer to me, broad shoulders rolling in that delicious leather jacket and long powerful legs working a hell of a pair of dark jeans. He gestured to my T-shirt. âHello, wife. Should I have worn my âIâm Batmanâ shirt today?â
âCharming.â A sear of heat crept up my neck. I bent down again to pick up the rest of the apples to hide the flush heâd triggered. âDo me a huge favor? Perform your vanishing act and never return. Itâll be your best trick yet, I promise!â
âYouâre mad about the kiss,â Death speculated in an amused voice, and my fingers paused on the skin of a McIntosh. âIâll make it easy for you, forget it happened. It was a mistake.â
My stomach sank. As much as I didnât want to admit it now, the kiss had meant something to me. âYou must be dense in the head if you think was my biggest takeaway of last night. You betrayed me, and you lied to me.â
âGo on,â he said with an encouraging wave of a gloved hand.
Like I was him.
Oooh, he just made me . . .
âWhat the hellâs the matter with you? This isnât a joke. Iâm not upset about the kiss, although it was the most disappointing portion of the night!â
He had the nerve to snicker. âYouâre a horrible liar.â
âGood thing I have you around to give me plenty of pointers.â
âDonât act like you didnât enjoy kissing me, Faith,â Death purred, in a way that thickened his untraceable accent. âYou loved it. It just shouldnât have happened.â
âAlways trying to validate something. Could there be confidence issues beneath his overbearing personality and veiled shadow?â
Death freed a growl. âNothing to validate, sweetheart. In all my existence, a woman has never clung to my arms as desperately as you did last night.â He was a master at getting under my skin because I was already seething like a rabid dog from his taunting.
âIf I was touching your arms, which I donât recall doing, I was trying to push you away.â
.
âRight, you donât recall,â he said silkily. I hated how he could manipulate his voice like that. It did things to me. âJust like you wonât remember moaning into my mouth.â
âOkay, thatâs enough of you.â
I could his provocative grin. âIs it?â
âIf youâre so hot and glorious like you claim you are, why donât you take off that stupid hood and show me what the big deal is?â
âBecause you couldnât handle all of me, .â His voice was a mere purr again. âIâm doing you a favor.â
I couldnât challenge that. To be honest, at the thought of him showing me his face, I started to get nervous. If he was as frighteningly hot as I believed, it would only make resisting him even more difficult.
âLast night, I tried to tell you to stop,â I insisted, continuing our cat and mouse game. âThe last thing I wanted was your lying, two-faced, deadââ
âUndead,â he corrected.
â
breath in my mouth!â I finished with a huff.
âYour tongue had a funny way of showing it.â
âI-I donât remember that either,â I stammered. Thinking about his wicked tongue fueled my corrupted imagination in ways that made my reckless hormones perform enthusiastic backflips. Poker-faced, but burning all over, I tilted my chin up. âNext, youâre going to tell me I kissed you first, right?â
âThat goes without saying.â
I barked out a laugh. âGood joke!â
He stole an apple from my basket and raised it to his shadowy mouth. A few crunches, and the whole apple, including the core, was polished off.
.
Death braced a powerful hand on the roof of Aunt Sarahâs car, like a composed predator. âYou got on your tippy-toes. All doe-eyed and awkward. I felt bad, so I let it happen. The end.â
âWe kissed at the exact same time,â I said, fuming over this.
âSure about that?â
I looked off into space, second-guessing myself. âNo!â I shouted, pointing a finger at him as I placed the basket of apples on the ground. âNo, no, ! Youâre screwing with me again! It was at the same time! Might I add, I distinctly recall your hands grabbing my ass! And my thighs!â Shouting these things at him made that night somehow more real. âWhich means youâyou were into it, too!â
âGaining your memory back, I see?â I could hear him grinning.
âNow do you remember the moaning?â
âI thought you didnât like me,â I fired back.
âI ,â he seethed, his voice slipping back into that preternatural growl. âYou are, without a shadow of a doubt, the most annoying person to ever exist.â He leaned into me. âBut I wonât deny that last night was . . . surprising. Your body felt perfect against mine. You have a great ass too. I love an ass I can get a nice handful of.â
Burn. Everything was burning inside me. âYou need help.
Serious therapy, dude. Padded room, straitjacket, meds, the whole nine yards! We are talking about this again. Iâm so serious.
Never again. It never happened.â
âFine by me.â
âGood,â I panted out. I had gotten so worked up that Iâd barely been breathing. âBecause Iâd like to pretend my first wasnât with death personified, thank you very much.â
He didnât say anything for a moment. âYour ? I was your first kiss?â
I wanted to push my hair in front of my face and hide like Cousin Itt. âYou knew I was a virgin, but you didnât know Iâd never kissed before?â
âThe virgin part was obvious. You wore slacks to the interview.â
âThat doesnât make any sense.â
âSays the virgin. Lucky you, having me as your first. The mortal boys would have drooled into your mouth like a faucet. Me? I pride myself on my flawless tongue technique.â He lowered his voice as he leaned into me. âItâs all about the teasing and the flicking.â
I crossed my arms over my chest, boiling again over the clear underlying innuendo in his sensual voice. My attempt at an intimidating pose didnât do much, considering the virtual bulldozer before me, and that only made me angrier.
âThatâs it! Back up!â I jabbed at the air in front of me, and as if I had popped a bubble of sexual tension between us, heat rolled from Deathâs body and sank into my sweatshirt to my bare skin.
âGive me space. You always loom over me like a skyscraper. I get it, youâre big.â
He snickered at the back of his throat. âDamn right, sunshine.â
âAnd the whole game you play with your body and how you present yourself,â I continued now that I was on a roll. âDo you think I donât notice how you always make that little growl at me?â
âWell,â Death began, lighting a cigarette, âmaybe if youâd play with me more and gave me love and affection, I wouldnât growl so muchââ
âIâm not falling for this new playful act. We have one make-out session and suddenly youâre making the moves on me? What, did you buy catnip on the way over here and now youâre frisky?â
âThe irresistible donât need moves,â he said, exhaling cherry-scented smoke. âAnd FYI, catnip makes me sleepy. Souls on the other hand, now, they perk me right up.â
âYou donât actually eat people?â
âNo, Iâm vegan.â
My eyes widened. âYou souls?â
âYes, Faith, the stereotype of consuming souls does in fact align with my pseudonym and my entire existence,â Death said. âDonât look at me like that, I donât eat the whole thing. The soul is not destroyed. I trim off some pieces for a snack.â He made a quick slicing motion in the air. âThen I send the little shit off.â
He had a way with words. âDo you collect all the souls on this entire planet?â
âYep.â He popped the . He sounded bored of conversation.
âBy ?â
âAlong with my seven .â
Reapers? Were there more of his kind?
I tried to wrap my mind around this. âThereâs no way that you and seven reapers . . . or whatever, could reap all the souls in the world. Especially while youâre constantly out gallivanting around with hot models and celebrities as David Star.â
Death reclined lazily against Aunt Sarahâs car again, angling himself toward me with a dark laugh. âJealousy is a delicious look on you, but you should know the only girl Iâve been gallivanting around with is you.â
I felt a mild fluttering in my chest. âJust tell me how you do it.
How you . . .
so many souls.â
âIâm a monster of many talents. Itâs simple, really.â Suddenly, I felt a presence behind me. âI can multiply,â he whispered into my ear.
Startled, I whirled around. Death stood me, snickering. I snapped around, to find him lazily inclined against the sports car on the other side of me too. Looking back and forth between the two Deaths, I struggled to process what I was seeing. He could .
Now, this . . . this was good. One Death I could handle.
Barely. But two?
Fantasticânow my dirty mind imagined multiple Deaths kissing me at the same time.
âOh my G , this is so not okay,â I said. âHow many times can you freaking copy and paste yourself?â
âThousands,â said Death One.
âWhen I have the energy,â Death Two added, flicking a strand of my hair into my face with his gloved finger, before exploding into a black mist.
âThe duplicates only last a few minutes,â the remaining Death explained. âI send them out to do their job, and then they dissipate and the energy they collected from the mortal soul returns back to me. Itâs taken years of practice. My mind can exist in layers like this.
Itâs a trick. Magic. As with any magic, there are consequences that directly affect me so that I do not overreach my . . . limitations as the Grim Reaper.â
âChecks and balances.â
âExactly,â he said. âDuplicating, stopping time, it can all deplete me fast if Iâm not careful.â He rolled back his one shoulder, as though he were uncomfortable. âThen it gets complicated.â
âIâm following just fine,â I said softly.
âIn essence, energy from a mortalâs life is my incentive to keep working. The soul keeps me temporarily satiated. Itâs all part of my punishment.â
âPunishment for what?â
Death stared down at me for a beat before continuing. âLong story short, after I was cursed as Death, Heaven recruited me to become an angel. To use my ability to see into peopleâs souls for good. Letâs just say I broke a few rules up there and they didnât take kindly to it. Now Iâm Fallen on top of whatever I already was, and my soul is still bound to Heaven. And as punishment for being a bad boy, Iâm twice cursed.
Cursed as a death creature and cursed to reap souls and distribute them to both Heaven and Hell, for all eternity.â
.
âSo donât worry your pretty little innocent, moral head, cupcake,â Death continued, shifting back to his teasing mood. âI only eat the parts of a mortalâs soul Iâm supposed to have.â I could feel him grinning like a piranha. âUnless, of course, a poor soul meets me on a bad day . . . â
I loosed a shaky breath, wondering if he had more bad days than good ones.
âWhat about human food?â I asked, taking advantage of the fact that we were having a normal-ish discussion. If was the word to describe chatting with the Angel of Death.
âI tolerate it, when Iâm starving.â He sounded uninterested again, or maybe he hated that heâd become the main topic of conversation.
âI lost my palate for mortal food a long time ago. Sugar and meat have always been an exception though.â
. âWhat happens if you donât eat at all?
Reap human souls, I mean.â
His head slanted down to me, and the air plunged a few degrees colder. âWeâre talking too much. Time to come with me.â He inclined a gloved finger to himself. âNow, if you will.â
âNot happening. Especially after you reminded me my soul is a Happy Meal for you.â
The huskiness of his laugh was like a hot caress against my skin.
âEvery moment you remain exposed, you put yourself and your loved ones in danger. You will only attract more creatures to your essence. Do I need to tattoo these words on the palm of your hand for you to finally grasp them?â
With great restraint, I bit down on my tongue to hold back a sarcastic response, something I probably should have done a lot more often. I hated how superior he considered himself. My eyes raked from his combat boots, up his massive frame, to stare into the hidden eyes of the creature beneath the hood. Shadows twisted around his cloak, coiling in the air like phantom snakes. When we kissed, that darkness had embraced me. Iâd been engulfed by his shadows and kissed by them, as if they were also a part of him.
As my brain roved over dirty thoughts of Deathâs shadowsâof all thingsâI could feel the monster himself silently watching me from beneath his veil.
I had to stop thinking about that damn kiss and remember whom I was dealing with.
âIâm not going,â I said firmly, as heat surged down my arms. âIâm not leaving my loved ones alone and exposed to you, and I wonât let you use me anymore. Iâd rather die.â
He released a baritone growl that rattled at the back of his throat.
It was impossible not to recoil. When I did, my foot tripped over the basket of apples. His strong gloved hand shot out and clasped my wrist before I fell. Death pulled me forward and to the side, pinning me to the Toyota.
âBe careful what you wish for,â he purred against my throbbing pulse. âI can take a life just as quickly as I can spare one.â He lowered his head to the crook of my neck. I let him, succumbing to the madness. âYouâre different than the other mortals. Thatâs unfortunate for you, because I find the most unusual things in this world are the tastiest.â
Out of instinct, or maybe out of pure insanity, my hands reached out to fist the warm T-shirt beneath his leather jacket. Layers of carved muscles tightened just beyond a thin layer of cotton. âDo .
Threaten me.â
âIt wasnât a threat.â Death pressed his lips to my neck. A jolt of heat slid down my spine, coiling in the very place heâd roused the night before. All of my senses shut down, except for touch. My eyes fluttered closed as his cruel gloved hands drifted down the outline of my ribs, my waist, my hips. When he brushed a small patch of exposed skin on the upper leg of my ripped jeans, he slid a finger inside, grazing the bare flesh of my thigh and my fishnets with leather. I could not breathe. With a low laugh, his tongue stroked a wicked path up the column of my throat in a leisurely caress. âIt was a promise.â
Rather than disappearing into a black mist, he pushed off the Toyota and prowled away into the parking lot. Looked like heâd be hanging around.
âBoo!â Aunt Sarah shouted from behind me. I was a miracle I hadnât peed myself.
âWhy do people keep doing that to me?â I lashed out, slapping a hand over my neck, where moments ago Deathâs tongue had been.
âIâm sorry, sweetheart,â she said, taken aback by my outburst. âI was trying to be funny.â
âI know.â I removed my fingers from my neck in shame and raked them through my hair. âI know, Iâm sorry.â
âWho were you talking to?â Aunt Sarah asked.
It took a humiliating amount of effort to focus on an answer.
âJust a friend from class.â The phantom trace of Deathâs caress tingled on my neck, mocking my lie. âHe had a question about our homework.â
Her shaped eyebrows bowed inward, the incredulity in her expression making me nervous. âYouâd tell me if it was something else, right?â
âThereâs nothing else. Honest.â I smiled convincingly.
âGood . . . Well, let me help you with that before your arms fall off.â Brightening, she took the crate of apples from me and placed them on the towels in the backseat of her Toyota.
âWhat do you think about you and me hanging out at that cute coffee shop in the barn house until the sun goes down?â Aunt Sarah asked, once she closed the door. In a theatrical movement, she flashed a set of haunted hayride tickets in front of my face. âSince I got these bad boys!â