But we didn’t have the Lightning Spear. And, as Nero had pointed out, we couldn’t break these immortal artifacts either. Why had Damiel told us the answer was here? What did he think we could do with the artifacts?
And then it hit me. Damiel had been there when I’d controlled the weapons of heaven and hell, which were also immortal artifacts. He thought I could control these too, that I could direct their magic into the generator. I stared at the display cases full of immortal artifacts, willing them to obey my commands.
Nothing happened.
“It’s not working.” I turned to Nero. “I can’t control them.”
“It’s not your fault. You don’t have any magic right now.”
“No, it isn’t just Ronan’s potion. That magic, whatever it is, is different. It just won’t come to me again. I wasn’t able to control the weapons of heaven and hell after our return from the Lost City either.” I sighed. “Either Damiel overestimated my abilities, or there must be something else down here that can help us.” I looked past the display cases, to a large door at the back. “What about that?”
Made from the same pattern of gold and emeralds, the door was wide enough to drive a car through. It was exactly the kind of door that led to a walk-in vault.
“A treasury within a treasury? Whatever is behind it must be very powerful. Maybe we can use it to infuse magic into the generator.”
I walked up to the door and brushed my hand across the surface.
“It’s hot,” I said. “Like there’s a fire raging on the other side. I wonder if there’s something powerful inside.
Nero touched the wall, tracing his fingers across the rippled surface. “The answer isn’t what’s beyond the door. It’s the seal itself. There is more magic in this seal than even the First Angel can wield.” He pointed out the glowing symbols that had appeared on the door in response to my touch. “I have an idea. Don’t go anywhere.”
He took a running start and jumped up through the hole in the ceiling. I hoped there weren’t any more monsters up there.
Glowing runes continued to pop up across the door. They looked familiar, not quite the same as the symbols I’d drawn upstairs, but close.
“What are you hiding?” I whispered to the door.
It whispered back, speaking in a language I didn’t know. I leaned in, trying to make it out. What was it saying?
“Leda.”
I jumped back in surprise at Nero’s voice. “Oh, hi.” My heart still racing, I looked at the thick cable in his hands. “What is that?” My eyes followed the path of the cable up through the hole, where it disappeared into the darkness.
“We don’t need the Lightning Spear,” he told me. “We’re going to channel the magic directly into the Magitech generator.
“How?”
“A powerful spell sealed this door, the likes of which I’ve felt only once before.”
“In the Lost City on the Black Plains,” I remembered.
“Yes. In the Lost City, you broke the seal to the vault that held the weapons and armor of heaven and hell. Break this seal, and we’ll use its magic to restart the city’s Magitech generator.”
“I’m not even sure how I broke the other seal.”
“You can do this. I know you can.”
I took a deep breath and set my hands on the door once more. The seal’s magic simmered beneath the surface. It was singing to me. I brushed my hands across the door, trying to find the way in. The gold and emeralds melted into a smooth, shiny surface. The runes shuffled around, burning brighter.
Metal crashed behind us. I stole a glance over my shoulder. Three large machines stood under the hole in the ceiling. They shared as much in common with Mr. Muscles as a lion shared with a truck. They looked less humanlike, more cobbled together.
“I think the monster machines are drawn to the generator,” I said. “To this place of tainted magic and corrupted technology.”
“I’ll handle them. You worry about breaking that seal,” Nero told me.
I leaned my head against the glowing door. I saw a city of magic and steam, its buildings towering high into the sky. Airships, dozens of them, flew overhead. And down below, trains shot in and out of the city. The doors to the train station opened, and people streamed out onto the city streets. I followed them to the power building. Except back then—whenever then was—it hadn’t held a Magitech generator. Sunlight streamed through a stained glass ceiling that depicted winged warriors.
I took the glass elevator down to the basement, to the treasure room. A magic smith stood in front of the vault door. I couldn’t make out his face, like it was cloaked behind a thick haze. Magic flowed around him, shaping the metal. Bands of golden light intertwined with the gold and emeralds, melting into them.
The magic smith touched his hand to one of the glowing runes, the symbol that represented wings. He moved the wings rune across the door’s metal face. The door clicked, and a golden knob slid out.
A growl of rage and pain jolted me out of the vision. One of the machine monsters was in pieces, but two still remained. And Nero lay on the floor between them.
I grabbed my axe off the ground and smashed it through the display cases. I reached inside and grabbed the boxing gloves, hurling them at the machines. Then I tossed the necklace at them. I threw each and every immortal artifact in that room. Mesmerized by their magic, the machines jumped and dove to get to them. They forgot all about Nero. I ran to him, helping him up.
“More are coming,” he said, snatching a glowing hammer off the floor, one of the immortal artifacts. He slammed it into a machine monster. It shattered like a broken mirror. “Get that vault open.”
I ran back to the vault door, scanning the glowing wall of runes for the wings. I found them, way up at the top. Of course they were. I hopped up. It took me three tries, but I finally caught the symbol on my finger and slid it lower. It clicked into place. I grabbed the golden knob that had appeared, turning it.
The door emitted a loud pop, followed by the creak of turning gears. The seal broke, and a white light flashed across the door, shooting down the magic cable Nero had connected to it. It glowed like a rainbow of liquid glitter.
Upstairs, the Magitech generator revved up again. Magic exploded, shattering the glass roof—and every window in the building. Through the broken windows, I saw the golden lights sparkle across the city wall. As the Magitech barrier rolled up around the City of Ashes, a magic shockwave shot through the streets, obliterating every monster inside its borders.
Its seal broken, its magic spent, the vault door groaned. The runes flickered out. The door swung open, and treasure spilled out like a raging river. Gems, gold, jewelry, weapons, armor—the river of treasures knocked me and Nero over, carrying us across the room.
As we collapsed onto the mountain of treasure piling up under the hole in the ceiling, I felt the gods’ potion strike its final blow.
“Are you ok?” I asked, taking his hand.
“Why wouldn’t I be?”
“You’ve lost your magic.”
He caressed my cheek, his touch soft, his face free of pain. “But I didn’t lose you.”
“See? I told you we could do it,” I said. “We make a great team.”
“Yes. We do.” His voice was serious, laden with things unspoken. He dipped his mouth to mine, his kiss slow and sensual. “Leda.”
“Less talking, more kissing,” I said against his mouth. My hands curled around the back of his neck, drawing him in closer. I’d never been happier to be alive.
He captured my hands, pinning my wrists to the mound of treasure. “Leda, this isn’t the time for this…”
“Coward,” I taunted. I arched beneath his steel grip, my breasts straining against my torn tank top.
His gaze dipped to my chest. “You fight dirty.”
I smirked at him. “Always.”
His mouth came down hard on mine. His kiss was rough, possessive. Desperate. Like I’d just returned from the dead, and he wasn’t ever letting go of me again. That was fine by me.