Read Succubus Blues Online

Authors: Richelle Mead

Succubus Blues (30 page)

“Eternity doesn't seem so bad with you in my arms,” he murmured later, stroking my hair as I curled up against him. Turning my face toward his, I saw a somber expression in his eyes.

“What's wrong?”

“Georgina…do you…do you really want me to leave this angel alone?”

“Yes,” I blurted out after a moment of surprise. “I don't want you to hurt anyone else.”

He studied me for a long time before speaking. “Last night, when you asked me, I didn't think I could. I didn't think I could let it go. Now…after being with you…being like this. It just seems petty. Well, maybe petty isn't the right word. I mean, what they did to us was terrible…but maybe if I keep going after them, I let them win. I become what they say I am. I let them keep dictating the parameters of my life. I'd be conforming to nonconformity, I guess, and missing what's really important. Like loving and being in love.”

“Wh-what are you saying?”

He cupped my cheek. “I'm saying, I'll do it, love. The past will not rule my present. For you, I'll walk away. You and me. We'll go today and leave all this behind. Get a home somewhere and start a life together. We can go to Vegas.”

I turned rigid in his arms, my eyes widening. Oh God.

A knock sounded at my door, and I nearly jumped ten feet. Only about forty minutes had passed.
No, no,
I thought. It was too soon. Especially in light of this sudden turnabout. Hugh couldn't have acted so fast. I didn't know what to do.

Roman raised an eyebrow, curious more than anything else. “Expecting anyone?”

I shook my head, trying to hide the racing of my heart. “Doug's always threatened to come get me,” I joked. “I hope he didn't finally decide to act on it.”

Getting out of bed, I went to my closet, urging every nerve in my body to look nonchalant. I put on a deep red kimono, ran a hand self-consciously through my messy hair, and walked out to the living room, trying not to hyperventilate once out of Roman's sight.
Oh Lord,
I thought, approaching the door.
What am I going to do? What am I going to
—

“Seth?”

The writer stood outside, a bakery box in hand, his own face registering as much shock as mine undoubtedly did. I watched his eyes quickly slip up the length of me, and I suddenly became aware of how short my robe was and just how much the clinging silk revealed. His eyes snapped up to my face, and he swallowed. “Hi. I…that is…”

One of my neighbors walked by, stopping and staring when he saw me in the robe. “Come in,” I urged Seth with a grimace, closing the door behind him. Having expected a cavalcade of immortals, I felt more confused than ever now.

“I'm sorry,” he managed at last, trying to keep his eyes from drifting to my body. “I hope I didn't wake you…”

“No…no…it's not a problem…”

Naturally Roman chose that moment to make an appearance, coming down the hall from my bedroom in only boxers. “So what's—oh hey, how's it going? Seth, right?”

“Right,” said Seth flatly, looking from me to Roman and then back to me. In the wake of that gaze, I didn't care about nephilim, immortals, or saving Carter. All I could think of was how this must look to Seth. Poor Seth, who had done nothing but be nice to me since I'd met him, yet who nonetheless managed to get hurt over and over by my insensitivity—not to mention an unfortunate set of circumstances. I didn't know what to say; I felt as mortified as he apparently did. I did not want him to see me like this, all of my lies and inconsistent signals coming to light.

“Is that breakfast?” the nephilim asked cheerfully. He was the only one of us at ease.

“Huh?” Seth still looked stunned beyond words. “Oh yeah.” He set the box down on my coffee table. “Keep it. It's a coffee cake. Maple pecan. As for me…I'm going to…I'm just going to leave now. I'm sorry to bother you. Really sorry. I knew it was your day off and just thought we could…I don't know. You'd said yesterday…well. It was stupid. I should have called. It was stupid. I'm sorry.”

He started to turn, but the damage was done. Of all the possible scenarios, this would be the one in which short-spoken Seth chose to ramble.
I knew it was your day off
. Shit. Roman turned on me, the incredulity on his face transforming to fury before my eyes.

“Who,” he gasped, voice barely coming out in his anger, “who did you call? Who the
fuck
did you call?”

I stepped backward. “Seth, get out of—”

Too late. A wave of power, not unlike the one Jerome had used on me, slammed against both Seth and me, thrusting us against my living room wall.

Roman strode up to us, glaring at me, his eyes like blue flame. “Who did you call?” he roared. I didn't answer. “Do you have any idea what you've done?”

Turning from us, he grabbed my phone and dialed. “I need you to get over here right now…. yes, yes, I don't fucking care. Leave it.” He recited my address and disconnected. I didn't need to ask who he had called. I knew. The other nephilim. His sister.

Running a hand through his hair, Roman paced frantically around my living room. “Shit.
Shit.
You may have ruined everything!” he yelled at me. “Do you realize that? Do you realize that, you lying bitch? How could you do this to me?”

I didn't respond. I couldn't. Movement, even talking, was too hard in that psychic net. I couldn't even look at Seth. God only knew what he must think of all of this.

Ten minutes later, I heard another knock. If I had any sort of divine favor left, it would be Jerome and Carter, ready to come to my rescue. Surely even a succubus deserved a break now and then, I thought as I watched Roman open the door.

Helena walked in. Oh, man.

“About time,” Roman snapped, slamming the door behind her.

“What's going—” She cut her words off, eyes widening at the sight of Seth and me. Turning back to Roman, she gave him and his boxers a once-over. “For crying out loud, what have you done now?”

“Someone's coming,” he hissed, ignoring her question. “Right now.”

“Who?” she demanded, hands on hips. There was no rasp in her voice now, and she looked amazingly competent. If I hadn't already been rendered speechless, the sight of her would have done it.

“I don't know,” he admitted. “Probably our exalted sire.
She
called someone.”

Helena turned and approached me, making terror sink into my bones as I realized my danger. Helena was the other nephilim. Crazy, swindling Helena. Helena, whom I had insulted on a number of occasions, mocked behind her back, and stolen employees from. The look on her face informed me she was considering all of those things as she stared me down.

“Drop the field,” she snapped to Roman, and a moment later, Seth and I slumped forward, gasping, as the power released us. “Is he right? Did you call our father?”

“I…didn't call…anyone…”

“She's lying,” Roman observed mildly. “Who did you call, Georgina?”

When I didn't answer, she walked over and slapped me hard, the impact making a loud
crack
. There was something oddly familiar about it, but then, there would be. Helena was the one who had beat me up that night on the street. I realized then she must have known it was me when I went to Krystal Starz, in spite of my disguise. Recognizing my signature, she had chosen to play with me, feeding me the lines about having a great future as she pushed titles and workshops on me.

“Always difficult, aren't you?” she scoffed. “For years, I've put up with you and others like you, those who mock my lifestyle and teachings. I should have done something about you a long time ago.”

“Why?” I wondered aloud, gaining control of my voice again. “Why do you do it? You, of all people, who know about angels and demons…why do you tout the New Age bullshit?”

She eyed me scathingly. “Is it really? Is it bullshit to encourage people to seize control of their own lives, to view themselves as sources of power instead of getting caught up in all the guilt of what's right and what's wrong?” When I didn't answer, she continued, “I teach people to empower themselves. I teach them to let go of sin and salvation, to learn how to find happiness now—in
this
world. True, some of it is…embellished for the sake of creating wonder and awe, but what does that matter, if the ends are achieved? People walk away from my classes feeling like gods and goddesses. They find that within themselves, rather than selling out to some cold, hypocritical institution.”

I couldn't even begin to formulate a response, and it occurred to me that Helena and Roman thought exactly alike, both of them dissatisfied with the system that had spawned them, each of them rebelling against it in different ways.

“I know what you think of me. I've heard what you say about me. I saw you throw away the materials I gave you that night, no doubt thinking I was just some crazy, babbling New Age crackpot. And yet…for someone so smugly confident, so critically self-righteous, you are one of the most unhappy people I've ever met. You hate the game, and yet you play it. You play it, and you defend it because you don't have the courage to do anything else.” She shook her head, chuckling dryly. “I didn't have to be psychic to give you any of those predictions. You are gifted, but you waste it. You are wasting your life, and you will spend it miserable and alone.”

“I can't change what I am,” I told her hotly, stung by her words.

“Spoken like a slave to the system.”

“Fuck you,” I shot back. Having one's pride and self-identity shattered will often make a person irrationally angry, regardless if the point was well made. “Better a comfortable slave than some freakish divine bastard. It's no wonder your kind is being hunted to extinction.”

She hit me again, this time packing nephilim power with the punch, not unlike that night in the alley. It hurt—a lot.

“You little whore. You have no idea what you're talking about.”

She moved to hit me again but was stopped as Seth suddenly pushed himself in front of me. “Stop it,” he exclaimed. “Stop it, all of—”

A blast of power—from Roman or Helena, I didn't know—pushed Seth across the room, to the other wall. I flinched. “How dare you—” began Helena, her blue eyes flashing angrily. “You, a mortal, who have no idea what you're—”

I was already moving before the words could even come out of her mouth. Seeing Seth abused sparked something in me, an angry response I knew to be hopeless but which I couldn't really prevent. I sprang at Helena, taking on the first shape that came to mind, no doubt thanks to seeing Aubrey earlier: a tiger.

The transformation only took a second but hurt like hell, as my human body expanded, feet and hands turning to heavy, clawed paws. I had the element of surprise, but only for a moment, as I slammed into her, knocking her slight body to the floor.

My victory was short lived. Before I could sink teeth into her neck, a hurricane-worthy force blew me from her into my china cabinet. The impact was ten times harder than the one that had pinned Seth and me earlier, and the pain jolted me back into my normal shape as glass and crystal broke behind me, pieces falling around me, cutting my skin.

I moved again, frantic, knowing the futility but needing to do something, too caught up in battle lust. I lunged at Roman this time, urging my body to take on the shape of…well, I didn't even know what. I had no specific form in mind, only features: claws, teeth, scales, muscles. Sharp. Large. Dangerous. A creature of nightmares, a true demon of hell.

I never even came close to touching the nephilim, however. One or both of them anticipated me, mid-leap, throwing me back to land near Seth this time, his wide eyes watching me with terror and wonder. Bolts of power struck me, making me cry out in pain, shattering every nerve within me. My new shape's hide protected me only briefly, and then hurt and exhaustion made me lose control of the transformation. I slipped back into the slim, human body just as another net of power pinned me into place, ensuring I couldn't move anymore.

My entire shape-shifting attack had lasted all of a minute, and I now felt completely drained and worn, my reserve of Martin Miller power finally dried up. So much for bravery.
A nephilim could easily blow one of you out of the water.

“Valiantly done, Georgina,” chuckled Roman, wiping sweat off his brow. He had expended a great deal of power too, but he had a lot more of it to spend than I did. “Valiant, but foolish.” Walking over, he looked me up and down and shook his head with bitter amusement. “You don't know how to ration your energy. You've burned yourself out.”

“Roman…I'm so sorry…”

I didn't need him to tell me how low on energy I was. I could feel it. I wasn't just low, I was empty. Running on fumes, so to speak. Looking at my hands, I saw my appearance flicker slightly, shimmering almost like a heat mirage. That was bad. Wearing a body for long enough, even if it isn't your original, becomes ingrained after a few years, and I had had this one for fifteen. It was second nature to me. I thought of it as my own; it was what I always unconsciously returned to. Yet, I was fighting to hold on to it right now, to not slip back to the body of my birth. This was bad—very bad.

“Sorry?” Roman asked, and I saw on his face just how terribly I'd hurt him. “You can't even begin to imagine—”

We all felt it at the same time. Roman and Helena spun around to shoot each other alarmed looks, and then my front door blew open. The bonds holding me dropped as the nephilim redirected their power at the apocalypse coming through.

Brilliant light spilled inside, light so brilliant it hurt. Familiar light. The same terrible shape I'd seen in the alley appeared once more, only there were two of them this time. Mirror images. Indistinguishable. I didn't know who was who, but I remembered Carter's offhand observation from a week ago:
an angel in full form will freak most beings out—it'll kill a mortal…

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