She didn’t realize Havily had crossed the room until she felt an arm around her shoulders. Then Havily drew her into a big hug and held her for a very long time.
Finally she drew back. “There’s one thing I really need to know. Were you hurt? Did Rith hurt you?” Her voice sounded scraped and raw.
Parisa knew what was on everyone’s mind. “I wasn’t raped. I thought I would be. I thought it would be the first order of business. I guess that’s what a woman will always think when she falls into the hands of a bad man. But I wasn’t. I don’t know why. The truth is, I don’t know why either Greaves or Rith allowed me to live.”
Havily shook her head slowly. “I don’t have answers for any of that. We … I didn’t think you’d be coming back. There were so many attempts on your life as it was.” Then a smile suffused Havily’s lovely face.
“What?” Parisa asked.
“I’m just so damn glad you’re home.” Once more her eyes filled with tears, and once more Parisa was gathered up into a welcoming embrace. But when she drew back this time, Parisa said, “I’m going to see Endelle. That’s where I’m headed once I get dressed.”
“She said you were coming to see her. That’s why I thought I’d come by first. I figured if you could see Endelle, you could tolerate a visit from me.”
Parisa laughed. “I’m going to ascend, Hav. I wasn’t going to, not before I was … taken. But now I have to find them. I have to search for them. I think I’ll be able to find them because I met one of them, a woman named Fiona. She said she’d been a D and R slave for over a hundred years.”
“D and R?”
“Death and resurrection. That’s what they call it because they’re drained of their blood, filled with donated blood, then brought back to life.”
Havily’s eyes grew pinched. “Oh, God. So it’s true.”
Parisa nodded but didn’t match the tears in Havily’s eyes. What good were tears? She needed to get busy, to prepare herself, and to find the women. “I have to get ready now but I’ll see you soon?”
“Of course. I have to change clothes and head to the palace myself. I work with Endelle four hours a night in the darkening.”
Parisa nodded. Darkening work was critical for the war effort, and only Madame Endelle and Havily had darkening capability. It meant they could split-self; the second self would travel through a region of nether-space called the darkening and hunt for Greaves. The work was difficult and tedious, but when they found him he always had death vampires ready to fold to Metro Phoenix Two. The more death vampires Havily and Endelle blocked, the fewer the Warriors of the Blood had to battle every night.
Havily blew her a kiss then lifted an arm and vanished.
Parisa took a step back. She’d forgotten how often everyone did that. For the past three months, no one had dematerialized in front of her, not even Rith.
She moved to the closet and shifted hangers to look through the wardrobe. Half the clothes still had price tags on them. Shopping with Havily seemed like a hundred years ago.
She paused for a moment and dropped her chin. Wow. She was home—sort of. She was back in Medichi’s villa, but she had another home on Mortal Earth in Peoria, a neighbor of Phoenix. That home would have been vacant for almost four months now, from the time that Marcus and Havily had first materialized into her courtyard to visit her and protect her. Her wings had been in full-mount and she’d been naked. Not long after, Crace had come to kill her.
For just a moment as she pulled a cornflower-blue silk top off the hanger, all the reasons she had decided back then not to ascend flowed through her. She’d only spent a few days on Second Earth before Rith had kidnapped her, and those days had been nothing short of a nightmare. That experience had been the primary reason she had planned on refusing her ascension.
At least Crace was dead by Warrior Luken’s hand, thank God, but everything had led her to the conclusion that she wasn’t built for war.
Then Rith had enthralled her just beyond the white-washed building that housed the olive press.
She gave herself a strong shake and slipped the blouse over her head. But she was here now, her thinking and therefore her life altered dramatically, and she was about to face the most powerful ascender on the planet, a woman who had venom for blood.
She straightened her spine and found a black silk pencil skirt. She didn’t want to face Madame Endelle in something casual. Not when she intended to make at least one serious demand of a woman who never gave ground to anyone without a fight.
***
War changed people.
Endelle looked down at the survivor, otherwise known as Parisa Lovejoy. She had lovely eyes—not lavender, not rose, that place in between. Amethyst.
Parisa had been taken from the villa three months ago a naive, frightened, overwhelmed young woman. She returned with a fire in her eye that had nothing to do with the warrior at her back.
Endelle glanced at Medichi. His jawline had turned to stone.
Huh. This couple had been arguing.
Arguing among the breh-couples seemed to be an epidemic these days. Alison had thrown a Jimmy Choo sandal at Kerrick and left him with a goose egg for a few hours until his normal preternatural healing kicked in. Havily had been screeching into her iPhone at Marcus most of the day, something about how she needed to be trained with swords, knives, and guns. Marcus was dragging his heels. Leave it to a man to want to protect his woman but not give her the tools to protect herself when the dumbfuck wasn’t around.
And now it looked like the latest duo slammed with the breh-hedden had already been at each other’s throats, metaphorically and physically, because, wow, Parisa had one bite mark on her neck. Jesus H. Christ.
The woman’s complexion was flushed, too. She’d gotten good and well f**ked. She really shouldn’t be complaining, but here she was all fired up.
“So what is it you want, Parisa?” Endelle asked. Funny how when someone else had a rock in her shoe, she could be relaxed and gracious.
Parisa lifted her chin. “I want to ascend right now. No ceremony, just give me a pair of fangs so I can get on with what I have to do next.”
Endelle worked at not smiling, but it was tough. So their little librarian had made up her mind and the rest of them could go f**k themselves. She liked the spirit. Hell, she even approved. Ascension wasn’t for sissies. And before her captivity, Parisa had been a little too much on the feminine-sniveling side to please Endelle. But here she was showing some balls.