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Sid squinted. It wasn’t the sword that lengthened, just the light that surrounded it, sucking at the darkness. The two unbound demons roiled like plasma flares and shed flickers of ether as they struggled to escape. The shrieks of the salambes above split the tenebrae cloud with etheric lightning.

But the sword’s light was savagely brighter. The hunger reminded Sid uneasily of the verge.

But this worked in their favor. Fewer djinn-men meant—

Suddenly, the atrium trembled, windows shivering and steel beams creaking.

Fewer djinn-men meant scraps of their demon-shredded souls loose in close proximity to the ravenous tenebraeternum. Sid doubted that the predations of an angelic weapon would be a stabilizing influence on the verge.

And Alyce was right in the middle of it.

Not right in the middle. Sort of off to one side, but creeping closer as if she had a plan to be in the middle of it. He hoped she had a plan, because he had none, except to follow her and to never let her get away again.

And if that seemed brutally talya of him, he thought he had a reasonable explanation, what with loving her.

Now if only he’d have the chance to tell her.

The other djinn-men were done milling. Apparently wanton murder wasn’t cause for too much alarm in their circle. It probably helped their calm that Thorne was pointing the sword at them as if they didn’t have much choice. A handful stepped closer to him, heads bowed, and then the rest followed, a few glancing nervously at the ceiling.

Thorne lowered the sword to his side. If anything, its light was brighter. Well fed, Sid guessed. It didn’t seem to care what sort of energy it subverted.

Which was very much not working in their favor if it helped widen the verge that was already expanding into this realm.

Sid hurried across the open space between the palm tree and the folding screen, relying on the power struggle in front of him to distract the djinn-men. Alyce had already skipped ahead to a small side table holding an array of half-empty punch glasses and a fall bouquet in the center. If she hadn’t been so small herself, hiding there would have been ridiculous. As it was, the cover put her within attacking distance.

That was her plan? Sid’s heart raced toward her even though there was no place for his bigger body to hide on the way. As plans went, it sucked. Even if each of her six boning knives found demon-lethal targets, she’d have a half-dozen opponents remaining.

Not to mention Thorne and that vicious sword that could strip her teshuva from her. With three hundred years behind her—she would be gone in an instant.

The atrium shuddered again, as if it felt the force of the anguished shout that tried to crack free from his throat. He swallowed it back, and it nestled in place of his splintering heart. He didn’t have a plan, and he couldn’t wait to think of one; he would not be too late.

Alyce’s side table hiding spot was useless to him. With only open space between him and the djinn-men and their hostages, he finally understood the talyan philosophy.

To hell with it.

He tightened every muscle and hyperventilated. The teshuva coiled tighter until his bones ached with the tension. He figured he’d have a few seconds to run before the distracted djinni energy focused on him and short-circuited his demon.

Whether Alyce could come up with a plan in those few seconds … He hoped her plan would be to run in the other direction.

He charged.

He made it halfway before he realized he had only his human strength and a bit of momentum. He crossed three-quarters of the distance before one of the djinn-men shouted a warning.

He got seven-eighths of the way before Thorne, who obviously knew that old “What’s that over your shoulder?” ploy and didn’t intend to be fooled, finally turned.

Sid fired.

It was a respectable attack, he told himself, as his ears rang from the shot. Not necessarily one for the history books, but …

At least he’d remembered to pull the gun out. His perception wavered and time stuttered as the teshuva, angelic and djinni emanations, clashed. But Thorne raised the sword.

And the bullet panged off the blade in a radiant surge of energy.

In the sudden frozen strobe, Sid’s teshuva was kind enough to show him the bullet shearing in half and the relic shard absorbed by the flaming blade. The flames danced higher.

Oh, brilliant.

Thorne’s already hawk-edged features seemed whetted from darkest, sharpest obsidian, as he realized what had almost happened. His roar of rage ripped through the seething energy around the blade.

He whirled on Sid, sword at the ready.

Another bullet would only amplify the sword. Sid wondered if the sight of Red Pony’s gun would give Thorne a nostalgic pause with fond memories of the fellow radical he’d apparently blown to pieces—

The djinn-man brought the sword crashing down. Sid parried outward with the gun, desperate instinct his only chance.

The blade ripped through the revolver’s cheap steel without pause, shearing across the chamber. The last five of the hollow point rounds scattered in arcs of dull lead and shining gold.

At least Sid’s reflexive blow had deflected the sword’s blue-white holy fire upward. The salambes scattered, squalling, and left smoldering contrails across the atrium sky like undying spawn of the Hindenburg.

Thorne spun the sword over his head again, but instead of a smooth flow, the tip jerked down clumsily, aiming at the floor as if—as if seeking out the strewn bullets.

Sid’s analytical self whirled faster than the sword as he spun away to snatch a collapsed folding chair from where it had been pushed over in the panic.

The angelic weapon had given Thorne a new power, but it had also unbalanced his djinni, just as the angel relic had crippled Alyce’s weaker demon. Thorne was fighting with one hand—his djinni’s—tied behind his back.

Of course, in his literal hand Thorne was still holding a very real sword. But now the sword had its own ideas about reuniting with the remnants of its fallen comrade.

It clanged with a decidedly unheavenly and bone-jarring thud against Sid’s chair when they clashed again. Bookkeepers had to spend a lot of time sitting, but this was not how he’d thought he’d use the tool. He dared not move back, though; that would let Thorne bring the sword’s etheric disruption into play.

He remembered how Alyce moved, lithe and smooth, in an unconscious dance, without the drag of heavy thoughts.

Could he follow her lead?

He didn’t have a chance to find out.

Even as he jabbed at Thorne with the chair legs, hoping to tangle the blade, a trio of heavy weights slammed into him, one, two, and the third knocked the chair from his grasp.

The remaining djinn-men had obviously decided their fate lay with Thorne’s favor. Despite his questionable allegiance in weaponry, he’d apparently won their hearts with the murder of their brethren.

They pummeled Sid until his knees buckled. He collapsed, stirring up a puff of the decomposed djinn-man. For a moment, he was glad they’d knocked the breath out of him so he didn’t huff the dust. Another blow knocked him prone.

From his sprawl, Alyce’s hiding place was directly in his line of sight. He wanted to look into those icy eyes one last time. Could he tell her without speaking, with just a glance, that he loved her?

But, once again, she was gone.

CHAPTER 28

Alyce bit hard on her knuckle to stop from crying out when Sidney raced toward Thorne. With her hand pressed against her face, it was impossible not to notice the empty spot where she had worn the ring.

When the djinn-men tackled him and struck the chair away, she thought she might never breathe again.