Read Spell Bound (Darkly Enchanted) Online

Authors: Stephanie Julian

Spell Bound (Darkly Enchanted) (5 page)

Only the red velvet curtains over the stage and windows remained in view from those days, but the heart of that old theater lived in this closet. Along with clothes from just about every decade since.

Leo loved to hunt in the trunks for treasure like plastic swords and funny hats. He was too young to realize the treasure was the clothes. Growing up as she had, clothes had never been much of a concern. Jeans, t-shirts, sweaters.

But now…well, now she knew the difference between a basque and a corset. Black velvet on her skin made her shiver with lust. Leather molded to her body like a lover and the sheen of satin against her olive-toned skin and dark hair made her glow.

Ah, there it was, the cream satin basque, hanging from the pole on the side wall. She pushed aside two Victorian gowns to reach it then turned to one of several old steamer trunks on the other side of the room. She’d seen a whole trunk of black leather… Yeah, this was it.

She pulled out a couple of skirts that looked like they might fit her then headed back into the dressing room.

Vibia would need to help her with the basque and then she was going DownBelow.

There, at least for an hour or so, she could forget that the man she needed to save her brother was drinking himself into a coma.

* * *

“Hey, Harry. What’s happening DownBelow?”

From behind the huge mahogany bar that dominated the north wall of the club, Harry gave him a once-over as he tapped a beer for a waitress.

Gabriel figured he didn’t look too good, not after three steady days of drinking.

Fuck it. Tonight at ritual, he’d sober up fast.

“Since you’ve been drowning yourself in tequila for the past three nights, I guess you didn’t have any luck?” Harry asked.

He met Harry’s gaze head on. He’d managed to avoid this conversation until now. “Nothing there.”

Harry nodded once and a brief flash of sympathy passed through his eyes. Anyone else, Gabriel would’ve told them off. He didn’t need their sympathy.

But Harry was the only person Gabriel trusted with this part of his life. Harry wanted Dario dead, though he’d never explained why.

And Gabriel didn’t really care. They wanted the same thing.

“Band’s in,” Harry said finally. “Gonna be full. You know the drill.”

Yeah, he knew the drill. And no one, if they wanted to be allowed back into The Spyder or DownBelow, ignored Harry’s drill. No weapons, no fighting. No excuses. You fucked up and you were banned. Forever.

Looking at the guy, you wouldn’t think he was such a badass. Five-ten, short brown hair, brown eyes, average looks, the kind that would get him passed over in a lineup even if he was guilty.

But looks, as they so often were, were deceiving mothers.

Gabriel had been in Harry’s office a few times, long enough to look at the photos on the walls. They chronicled the building’s history from the time of its construction in the early 1800s through the next two-hundred years. In every single picture, Harry stood somewhere in the background, looking exactly as he did today.

Not such a shock, considering all Gabriel knew about the world. Still, Gabriel didn’t know what Harry was. He wasn’t
Enu
, a human of magical Etruscan descent, like the
streghe
and the
versipelli
. And not Fata, an Etruscan elemental being such as the winged folletti and the goat-legged
salbinelli
.

Harry was something else. Someone you didn’t want to fuck with. He was ancient, older even than the cursed
streghe
, though no one wanted to piss him off by asking just how old. Everyone who came through The Spyder’s doors learned to get and stay on Harry’s good side. And those who didn’t…well, nobody had actually dared get on Harry’s bad side since Jimmy Hoffa’s disappearance.

Gabriel was no exception.

In the hallway outside the club, he entered the darkened alcove that held a perpetually out-of-order phone. At least, out of order for those who didn’t know how to use it.

Without lifting the handset, Gabriel checked to make sure there were no
eteri
from the strip club wandering around then punched in four digits on the base. After a two-second lull, the rumble of well-oiled pistons warned him the back wall was about to swing open. When it did, a rush of air blew out and Gabriel stepped into the holding room, the wall shutting behind him as an overhead light came on. One by one, more lights clicked on down the descending hallway.

Sliding out of his leather duster, he hung it and the arsenal it held in one of the empty lockers lining the wall.

From his right boot, he pulled his pugio, the short silver dagger he’d inherited from his dad, and put it in his coat pocket. In his jeans and t-shirt, he’d stand out some. But everyone who came to DownBelow thought they knew who and what he was—just another Etruscan descendent with a little inherent power, an
Enu
who worked construction for an
eteri
firm out of Philadelphia.

Last, he took off his boots and socks and let his bare feet settle into the dirt floor, soaking in the undiluted power of the ley line running beneath the city. Above, in the concrete streets and brick buildings, magic still flowed strong enough to make Reading one of the most powerful old cities in North America.

But down here, in the earth itself…Goddess, it was like injecting pure heroin into his veins. And, yeah, he’d been there, done that, in that dark period after the deaths of his dad and brother.

But magic wouldn’t give him the problems drugs would.

He stood for a few seconds, eyes closed, letting the power seep into his body, mingle with the
arus
in his blood. Let it cleanse some of the anger that’d been building the past week. Sweating out the alcohol would take a little more time, but it’d take a lot more than five or six liters over three days to seriously affect him.

The disappointment would take longer to dissipate and that was the real bitch. He’d thought for sure he’d had a decent lead this time. Dario, that bastard, had eluded him again.

He shook his head. He’d deal with that later.

Tonight, he’d let himself get blown away by the band, maybe get laid before going to ritual. Yeah, getting laid would go a long way toward clearing his head.

Opening his eyes, he realized he heard music. The steel door at the end of the tunnel muffled most of it, as did the dampening spells covering every inch of the ceiling, walls and floor.

Still, he could feel it in his bones, his blood beginning to pound in rhythm. Queen, maybe, though it wasn’t anything he recognized, and his dad had loved the band.

By the time he reached the door, they’d moved onto something else, something with a slower beat that made him think about sex. Now that he’d started thinking about it, he couldn’t stop. And since he couldn’t remember the last time he’d gotten laid, he figured it was too long.

There were bound to be a few willing female
lucani
. After a night at DownBelow with the band, they’d be aching for it and most knew he’d be good for a few hours, at least.

Laying his left hand against the bare steel, he gave a shove with more than just raw force. He put a little power in it, making the metal warm to the touch. A lock appeared in the center of the rectangular door. Pulling out the silver key he always wore around his neck, he inserted it in the keyhole. The key had been made by his mother and blessed by Laran, the Etruscan God of War. Laran would be at the ritual tonight. And He’d probably be pissed off at Gabriel for missing the last one.

Something else to worry about later.

Right now, he pushed through the door and into the dizzying rush of DownBelow.

* * *

“Leo, honey, you having a good time?” Shea asked.

Leo’s head whipped around as he sat at the back of the wooden stage, mostly hidden from the crowd behind the drum kit. The band was between songs but gearing up to go again.

Though he never smiled—not once, not since she’d carried him out of their parents’ house sobbing, before he’d set the entire place on fire with the touch of his hands—he did have one expression that indicated maybe, just maybe, he might smile one day.

His dark eyes widened as he nodded, excitement radiating from him like heat. A set of bongos lay on his lap. Probably Tessa’s, the band’s percussionist.

“Hey, Shea.” A small brunette with bright green eyes bounced across the stage. She wore a short, pink dress that looked like a pair of baby doll pajamas Shea had had as a child. With her wavy, chestnut hair, pointed features and petite frame, Dilby managed to pull it off without looking like a pornographic Shirley Temple. “You’re done for the night?”

“Hey, Dilby, thanks for bringing Leo down. I’m sure he was bored stiff in the dressing room.”

The girl smiled, the expression making her look almost as young as Leo. Shea had no idea how old Dilby really was. Or what she was. She wasn’t
Enu
. Or rather, she didn’t feel
Enu
to Shea. She was probably
Fata
, though her ears weren’t pointed like the
linchetti
and she didn’t have a
folletta
’s wings. Her legs were regular human legs, unlike a
salbinelli
’s goat legs. She was probably
gianes
, a female wood elf.

Still, Shea never asked because she never wanted to answer the same question.

“No problem,” Dilby said. “Tessa’s out of town so we’re hurting for percussion. And Leo, my man,” she flashed a smile at the boy, who stared back with adoring eyes, “is a rock god, aren’t you, hon?”

Leo nodded again and, for a few brief seconds, Shea held her breath. She willed him to speak, to say something. Anything. Blessed Goddess, the kid hadn’t said more than a hundred words since he’d seen their parents lying in pools of blood. His screams for them still reverberated in her nightmares.

Of course, he didn’t say a word, and she and Dilby sighed in unison. When they left, Dilby was the person Shea would miss most.

As if she’d read her mind, Dilby flashed a rueful smile, ruffled Leo’s inky black hair and headed back to center stage. The guitarist, a guy named Caeles who looked to be about twenty and had the pointed ears of a
linchetto
peeking out from beneath curly brown hair, started to pick out the opening notes to My Chemical Romance’s “Dead,” and the crowd began to writhe.

Leo picked up the beat without hesitation, little hands smacking the skins. He nodded to Shea before closing his eyes to concentrate.

“I’ll be right up here,” she said, though he probably hadn’t heard her. That was okay. He knew she’d be there if he needed her.

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