“What? Are you out of your mind? The idea is to stay away from AnsLai and the Chief Astrologer, not head directly for them.”
She shook her head slowly. “No, they’ll be in mourning with her. It’s the last night. They’ve got to be with her to complete the rituals.” She looked up at him. “I would go alone, but I might need to defend myself—I need your help to do that.”
“What the hell do you think you’re going to find in there?”
“Just take me there. Please.”
He cursed under his breath. “The palace is full of guards.”
“Yes.”
“It’s not like we can just wander right into the most sacred part of your mother’s compound.”
“If it takes a minute or an hour or the rest of the night, it does not matter—so long as you get me there.”
An eternity passed as he stared down at her. “You’re going to get us killed.”
She met his eyes through the mesh that covered her face. Shaking her head, she said, “We’re already dead. And you know it.”
SEVENTY-SEVEN
When Trez came awake, his face and his pillow were wet. Wiping his cheeks, he splayed his fingers out and looked at them glistening in the lamplight.
So.
This was the other side of it all.
Letting his arms flop back to the bed, he stared up at the ceiling. On some level, he couldn’t believe he was still here. Physically and mentally.
Had his room always been so quiet?
Jesus, every time he took a deep breath, his chest hurt like he’d broken all his ribs. Twice apiece.
And then there was the movie reel of torture: With each blink of his lids, another part of the loss played across his retinas—and he had to wonder if maybe this was what had been going on in his sleep and why he’d woken up as he had.
Part of him wanted the incessant processing to stop. Another part was terrified that if it did, it would mean that that forgetting thing he was so worried about was already starting.
How long had he been asleep?
He stayed where he was for a minute or two—or maybe it was hours? Or nights?—and then he threw out an arm and patted around for his phone. When he called up the screen to read the time, there were tons of notifications about texts and missed calls and voice mails, but he didn’t have the strength to go through them all.
Putting the cell back down, he realized the second he let go of the thing that the time hadn’t registered.
Where was Selena? he wondered.
Addressing the ceiling, he said, “Are you up there?”
What had she seen? Was there a Fade?
Funny, he hadn’t anticipated the fear he had now, but he probably should have. The idea that he didn’t know whether she was okay or not after death was something he was going to have to live with.
Until he passed himself, he guessed. And then if it was just a big black void? Well, then he wouldn’t exist to care.
Happy thought.
When he finally went to sit up, he gasped as pain exploded all over his body—sure as if the emotional agony in his soul had manifested itself in his flesh, his muscles stiff, his bones aching.
It was from the preparation ritual.
Maybe it would fade in a day or two.
He got up and used the bathroom. Brushed his teeth. Checked in with his stomach.
No, food was not a priority.
Drink might be good.
Yet even as those internal thoughts registered, it was from a distance, as if they were being yelled at him from across a football field.
Heading back out into his bedroom, he went over to the closet and opened the double doors. As the lights came on, he recoiled.
He could still smell her.
And two of her robes hung among his clothes.
Walking forward, he reached out to them, but ultimately hesitated to touch the folds of white fabric, especially as the raw wound behind his sternum flared up in pain again.
It was, he decided, kind of like a cut on your finger, one that didn’t hurt until you flexed your thumb—and then the thing really stung. Except on a much grander scale, of course.
Was this what it was going to be like? Him going through his nights and days bumping into random things and getting jolted back into the depths of his grief?
“I don’t know how to do this,” he said to her clothes, “without you.”
And he wasn’t just talking about getting dressed.
When there was no reply—but come on, like he expected her ghost to answer?—he took the nearest pants and shirt that he got to, threw them on his body, and walked out. For a good ten minutes, he stood in the center of the room and entertained the temptation to trash everything around him. But his body didn’t have the strength or the coordination, and his emotions couldn’t sustain the boil of the anger he felt.
He looked over at the window Selena had broken. She had been magnificent in her fury, so alive, so …
Holy shit, he was going to drive himself insane.
On his way to the door, he picked up his cell phone out of habit and then stopped in front of the exit to his room. He was pretty sure he wasn’t ready for pitying looks or prying questions. But he thought he’d seen that the shutters were still down?
Yup.
So hopefully the whole Last Meal thing would have been long cleaned up and the doggen retired for their brief rest before the daytime cleaning started up.
He thought he’d seen a seven in the time.
Yeah. Seven something o’clock in the morning, the numbers had said.
Grasping the brass doorknob, he felt like he was back downstairs at the clinic, when he’d gone to leave the examination room after all that time with Selena’s body: this was another portal he was going to have to push himself through.
With a twist of the wrist, he released the mechanism and put some weight into the—
On the bald floor across from his bedroom, iAm was horizontal and out cold in the hallway, his head on the curl of his arm, a half-consumed, fully capped bourbon bottle cozied up to his chest like a loyal dog, his brows down like even in his sleep he was dealing with shit.
Trez took a deep breath.
It was good to know the male was still with him.
But he was not waking the guy up.
Stepping with care so he didn’t disturb his brother, he found himself wanting to take this first trip out into the world on his own.
Down at the bottom of the shallow stairs, he did another brace-yourself with a door latch—and wondered how long it was going to take to get himself over that habit—then he pushed things open.
“…you bunch of photophobic freaks.”
Shaking himself, he frowned.
Lassiter, the fallen angel, was in the doorway to Wrath’s study, hands on his hips, blond-and-black hair pulled back in a braid. “You’d better show some fucking respect or I’m not going to say one damn thing about what I found out on my little trip to the Territory.”
From inside the room, there were all kinds of muttering.
“No,” Lassiter said, “I want you to say you’re sorry, Vishous.”
It was so weird. Like a camera lens that was suddenly focusing, Trez came back online, his senses sharpening, some shadow of his former self returning.
“I’m waiting.” There was a pause. “Good enough. And I want the remote for the next week—days and nights.”
Incredible grousing, and someone threw something at the guy, the coaster landing on the carpet outside the room.
“Well, if you’re going to get nasty again—”
Following an instinct, Trez dematerialized—at the very instant Lassiter dropped the asshole act and shot a shrewd glance in the direction of where Trez had been standing.
His presence had been sensed.
But he would not allow that to happen again.
Shadowing along the carpet, he seeped into the study as Lassiter stepped inside, closed the doors and addressed the Brotherhood.
“We got a map?” the angel said.
Being careful to stay out of the way of anyone’s feet, lest they tweak to his altered state, Trez pooled in the corner farthest away from Wrath’s dog. Fortunately, George was sound asleep by his master’s throne.
The Brotherhood clustered around Wrath’s desk as Butch flipped a blue-and-green, three-foot-by-three-foot square of paper out of its folds.
“Here,” the angel said, pointing with his forefinger. “This is where I found it. There’s a retaining wall that runs around the entire property. Dwellings are here and here. The palace … right here. Security is tight, and from what I was able to see, they are gathering their forces.”
Gathering forces? Trez thought.
“We need to get to them first,” Wrath muttered. “First strike is critical. We don’t want them coming into Caldwell.”
What the hell was going on?
“…can’t find this house. No one can find this house,” V said. “But yeah, I’ll stay behind. I don’t like it, but someone needs to be here on a just-in-case.”
Lassiter looked across the desk at the Brother and proved that he could get serious if he had to: “I gotchu. I’ll be here, too.”
There was a split second where the males stared into each other’s eyes. “Good,” V said. “That’s good.”
“Where’s iAm?” Wrath asked.
“Last I saw of him,” Rhage answered, “he was heading upstairs to check on Trez and crash.”