I could feel my temper growing. Did Jake honestly think he could trick me into doubting the people I loved? How naïve did he think I was?
“I’m telling the truth,” he added. “They’ve accepted they can’t help you. They tried and failed and sadly now they have to move on.”
“Then why are they going to Alabama to try and find a …” I swallowed my words immediately, realizing my mistake seconds too late. I bit my lip and watched as Jake’s brows lowered darkly and his eyes glittered with rage.
“How could you know that?” he said.
I hoped my face didn’t betray me as I tried desperately to repair the damage. “I don’t know. I’m just guessing.”
“You’re a very bad liar,” he observed, approaching with the slow stealth of a panther. “You spoke with total certainty just then. I’m betting you’ve seen them … maybe even communicated with them.”
“No … I haven’t …”
“Tell me the truth! Who showed you how?” Jake swept a crystal vase off a table so it smashed on the floor, scattering long-stemmed roses. I wished he would calm down. I wished he hadn’t dismissed Tuck and Hanna. I didn’t like being alone with him when he was this worked up.
“No one showed me anything. I figured it out by myself.”
“How many times have you done this?”
“Not many. A few.”
“And every time you were with him, right? It’s as if you never left! I should have known you were up to something. I was a fool to trust you!” He raised his hands and clawed at his temples like someone deranged.
“That’s priceless — you talking about trust.” But Jake was no longer listening.
“You’ve been playing me, making me think we were growing closer, trying to keep me in the dark about what was really going on. I thought if I gave you space and treated you like a queen you might forget about him. But you didn’t forget, did you?”
“That’s like asking me to forget who I am.”
“You still think like a schoolgirl. I thought Hades might help you mature a little, but I see now the experience has been wasted on you.”
“It’s an experience I never asked for.”
“You’ve had your last happy reunion — of that you may be sure.” He’d resumed his usual cynical tone, but the threat beneath it was real. I knew I should say something to dispel rather than exacerbate the tension between us.
“Why do we always have to fight?” I ventured. “For once can’t we try to understand each other?”
Jake shook his head and gave a rueful laugh.
“Well played, Bethany. You’re quite the actress, but you can stop now. The game’s up. You had me going for a while, though. I almost believed you were making an effort. I should have known better. I should have left you to rot in the chambers. You’ve put me in a very bad temper.”
“I don’t care,” I said. “Do whatever you like with me, send me back or hand me over to Lucifer.”
“Oh, you misunderstand me. I’m not going to harm a single hair on your head,” Jake leered. “But I will make you sorry you treated me with so little respect.”
The implication behind his words sent chills through me.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“It means travel plans of my own are in order. I think it’s time I saw firsthand what you’re missing so badly.”
ALTHOUGH Jake had been deliberately vague about his intentions I knew him well enough to know he didn’t waste time making idle threats. He was headed to Tennessee to get even with me. I didn’t know what he planned to do once he got there, but I knew he wouldn’t stop until he succeeded. Being passed over for Xavier just when he thought he stood a chance must have been a bitter pill for him to swallow. Anyone else would have accepted it with greater dignity. But exacting revenge was the only thing that was going to satisfy Jake and what better way was there than targeting the people I loved? There was no way Jake’s demonic strength was any match for my powerful siblings and there was little point in him going after Molly. So that just left Xavier. My Achilles’ heel. Exposed and vulnerable. Especially if Jake caught him alone. And that would be easy enough to achieve.
If Xavier was in danger there was no time to waste. I needed to get back to earth and warn him before Jake got there first.
I couldn’t project right away because my mind kept filling with images of Xavier in trouble and the agitation threw my focus. In the end I jumped in the shower and turned the cold water on full blast. The shock of it cleared my head and settled my thoughts long enough for me to focus my energies. The projection happened effortlessly after that.
A moment later I was outside Xavier and Molly’s room at the Easy Stay Inn. The window was open a crack so I slid in like a trail of smoke and hovered below the ceiling fan. All was silent apart from the sound of their regular breathing and the wind chasing some dead leaves around in the parking lot outside. Molly was sound asleep in her bed, the previous drama of the evening erased from her face. Her resilience never ceased to amaze me. Xavier was much less comfortable in his sleep. He kept changing position and even sat up once to thump the pillows. Before lying down again he rested on his elbows to check the time on the digital clock. It read 5:10 A.M. Xavier cast a look around the room, his turquoise eyes bright in the darkness. When he finally did drift off to sleep his face stayed troubled, as though he were fighting battles in his dreams.
I wished I could reach out to comfort him even though I knew I was the primary cause of his distress. I had turned his life upside down and now his safety was being threatened. So far Jake had not disturbed them and for a fraction of a second I entertained the hope that he might have been bluffing just to rattle me. But I’d seen the look in his eyes and I knew better.
The room turned suddenly cold and Molly pulled the covers up over her head. I could hear the sound of wolflike breathing. I saw it then: A shadow slid into the room with us. It crept across Molly’s sleeping form under the duvet and danced across Xavier’s features.
Sensing the presence, Xavier’s eyes snapped open, and he swung himself out of bed. His whole body was poised for a fight. I saw a vein throbbing in his neck and could almost hear his heart racing.
“Who are you?” he said through gritted teeth as a figure began to take shape before him. I recognized the curly hair and baby face even before he had fully appeared. It was Diego, dressed formally in a black suit and tie as though he were going to a funeral.
“Just an acquaintance,” Diego replied in a lazy voice. “Jake said you were pretty — he wasn’t lying.”
“What do you want?”
“You’re not very polite for someone I could kill with my little finger,” Diego said in his slimy, slightly effeminate voice.
“You do know there’s an archangel and a seraphim next door, right?” Xavier retorted. “Think maybe they can take you down?”
Diego gave an empty chuckle. “They were right about you, just like a lion cub. Killing you would be too easy.”
“So do it then,” Xavier hissed and I felt my stomach plummet to my feet.
Diego cocked his head to one side. “Oh, that’s not why I’m here. I’ve come to deliver a message.”
“Yeah?” Xavier said without a hint of fear. “Then go ahead and deliver it.”
“Our sources inform us that you and your angel squad are trying to pull off a rescue mission,” Diego said, a smirk in his voice. “I’m here to tell you not to waste your time. You might as well call off the chase. The angel you’re searching for is dead.”