“You’ve been a bad angel, Nikolai.”
“And you’re what, a good demon?”
“Don’t insult me. I only work with demons when it suits me.”
“So what are you?” He backed up toward the beeping detonator, keeping Hope behind him.
“Nephilim, sweetie.” She stopped, just as he could retreat no further, and touched his face tenderly. And then she delivered a vicious slap—so hard flecks of light swam in front of his eyes. Had his angel powers not faded he’d have kept to his feet. But he lost his balance.
As he fell to the floor, Hope leapt at Lena.
“Hope, don’t!” Too late. Lena nodded to Serena, who lifted her hand and without even touching Hope, caught her by the throat and held her suspended in the air, gasping for breath. Lena stepped over to them.
“You have no idea how much trouble you’ve caused me, Hope Matheson. You were ready to die, I made it so easy for you. Why didn’t you just go and do it?”
Hope couldn’t speak. She just looked down at Nick, silently urging him to flee. He got up slowly, approached Lena and Serena.
“Let her go.” He glanced over at the timer. Less than seven minutes left. But all that mattered now was to rescue Hope from Serena’s grip. “Don’t do this, Lena.”
She turned to her other Nephilim, then pointed her chin at Nick.
“Rip his limbs off.”
Before Gunther got to him, the cartel members burst in, guns drawn.
An idea came to him.
A long shot, but worth a try.
He cast a construct at the gangsters, causing Lena’s Nephilim to look like Lito, Nick, and Maria. Not only did it work, he was still able to impersonate Lena’s voice. “Kill them all, now!”
Lena whirled around.
Distracted, Serena lost her invisible grip on Hope and dropped her next to Nick. With his arms wrapped around her, he tried to cloak her with his invisibility, though it was uncertain to work against Lena or any of her half-angels.
The automatic weapons fire opened up.
Lena shouted for them to stop, but they couldn’t hear her.
Before Gunther could react, a bullet hit him in the back. He turned around and plucked it out as if it were a burr. Then, like a bull with rage issues, he rushed the men who were still firing. Their rounds struck him but didn’t draw blood—some of the slugs just popped out of his shirt. He grabbed one of the men’s assault rifles and used it like a baseball bat. The gunman’s head being the ball.
“What are you doing?” Lena cried out. “Stop!”
Nick reached over to the suitcase with the bomb and the small black timer—a simple device, but the colorful tangle of wires more than made up for it. On its front panel, something resembling an infrared computer port lay to the left of the countdown clock.
The retina scan.
Lena and company could teleport away in a second. And if Nick were to have any chance of stopping the nuke’s detonation, he’d have to scan one of her eyes.
The cartel members were still firing on the Nephilim.
Serena growled. She didn’t bother shouting orders at the humans mistaking them for their targets and shooting at them. Instead, she turned to confront them.
At once, they learned what her terrifying Nephilim power was.
91
LENA HAD BEEN OFF BALANCE since the operation began. Morloch hadn’t checked in even once before the Cabrillo Stadium event. She wasn’t sure if that was a good sign or not. And what about her every step being scrutinized by those agents of the Dark Dominion known as auditors?
They were one of the few beings in all of existence she feared.
Though she’d never seen one, she sensed they were near. They gave off a coppery odor, like blood, faint but just enough for her to notice. During her training years with Morloch she’d watched them in action, or rather activated by high-ranking demons against anyone over whom they had authority.
They were here now, in the bowels of the stadium.
She could smell them.
Distracted by the bullets raining down on Gunther and Serena, it took Lena a moment to understand that those idiots wouldn’t listen to her and call off their attack. Just as she figured out what was happening, Serena metamorphosed into a huge canine creature.
Lena called out, “Serena—it’s all Nick’s construct, we just have to stop him!”
Too late. Serena was now a wolf that even standing on all fours was at least six feet tall.
Most of the men fled.
The remaining few froze before the snarling wolf. With two strokes and a hideous snarl, she batted the men around, sending them crashing headlong into the concrete wall. Bones and skulls cracked with a sickening report. Blood-curdling screams had replaced the cacophony of weapons fire.
Lena spun around, searching for Nick. Gone. And now Hope was missing as well.
The nuke’s timer continued its countdown.
Gunther was holding a gunman while the wolf tore off his flesh. All the Hernandez and Suarez men who hadn’t fled were dead, their body parts strewn throughout Locker Room C.
“Gunther!” Lena shouted.
He turned around, eyes blazing—Nephilim like him and Serena could not help but give into their craving for bloody carnage. Lena herself struggled to keep from succumbing to this powerful lust.
She waited a moment for him to calm down enough to comprehend an order.
“Go to Locker Room B,” she said. “Make sure that nuke is secured.”
For a second he looked like he was about to attack her. Then he grunted and winked out of sight.
Serena, still in the form of a giant wolf, snarled. Her knife-sized fangs dripped with blood, with scraps of clothing and flesh. She glared at Lena through the exact same blue eyes as in her human form.
“Locker Room B!” Lena commanded.
A low-pitched growl.
“Get a grip, Serena. We don’t have time for this.” The coppery essence of auditors mingled perversely with the smell of fresh human blood and viscera.
The wolf came closer, baring its fangs.
Lena sneered at it. “Seriously, Serena?”
She lifted her hand, which began to glow with the crimson hue of destructive energy.
The wolf backed away and resumed her natural form as Serena, along with her attitude.
“You’re weak.”
“Then why haven’t you tried to kill me?”
“Who says I won’t, later?”
“Get down to Locker B with Gunther and find Nick and his people.”
“You’re losing it, Lena. Watch yourself.” Serena punctuated her warning with a nasty laugh. As she passed by she bumped Lena’s shoulder, then vanished.
“Presumptuous bitch!”
The lights went out.
In the utter darkness Lena sensed something in front of her face. Shuffling noises behind confirmed that she’d gotten distracted again. Furious, she lit up the room with fire from her fingertips.
The suitcase had been tossed to the floor, its wires and components a mess. The nuclear device was in a shambles. The retina scanner was missing—detached. She clenched her teeth at the sight of the severed wires.
The timer was frozen at 5:57.
Nick was growing weaker, but he was still resourceful. He and perhaps Hope had killed the lights, scanned her retina in a split second while she found her bearings, and disarmed the nuke.
“Dammit!” Lena roared, then focused her teleportation power on Locker Room B. There was still one more nuke, and she wasn’t about to let this entire operation fail because of one faltering angel.