“Your point?”
“An angel like him will destroy you. He won’t care if you’re his daughter, all he’ll see is evil. You’re dangerous. Can’t you feel it? Your soul is nearly as black as mine. Trust me, when that happened, the world opened up like nothing I ever could have imagined. All of that power at my fingertips.”
Eden hated to admit it, but she did feel it. That darkness, that power, so much of it, like a bottomless ocean. So addictive, so perfect. It felt right, and that, by far, was the scariest thing of all.
“Don’t listen to her,” Ben growled. “She’s evil.”
Eden narrowed her gaze at him. “Not sure I should listen to you, Ben. You and my mother sent Darrak to Hell.”
“He survived,” Caroline spoke up.
“No thanks to you.”
Ben had the decency to look guilty. “We were wrong, I see that now. But I tried to change things, I tried to make things better.”
“He did,” Leena insisted. “I was being held prisoner by the Malleus and he freed me. Took him long enough, but he did it.”
Eden looked over at her ex-roommate. She had wondered where she’d gone after being chased away by Darrak. “I still have the key you left behind. Never had a chance to check that locker.”
Leena nodded. “Uh, remind me to get that back from you. You know, if we all live through this morning.”
Sandy laughed. “Listen to them, Eden. They’ve all betrayed you in some way. Abandoned you, too, when you needed them the most. You should kill them for what they’ve done to you and Darrak. That’s all it would take for you to give in fully to your magic. You could have whatever you wanted, then.”
All it would take to turn her soul black was to murder any one of the people in this room. But murder wasn’t in Eden’s true nature. Had it been in Sandy’s? Or had Oliver forced her into this?
“Don’t listen to her, Eden,” Caroline said, her voice tight. “You’re better than this. Don’t give in to the darkness. You can fight it.”
Eden’s gaze snapped to the young brunette tied to the chair to her left. “Can I, Mom? Really? Having you on my side is such a nice change from the first thirty years of my life when you treated me like a burden.”
“Oh, get over it, will you?” Caroline snapped. “I made my share of mistakes. So what? You’ve turned into a great woman anyway. So pull your head out of your ass and do something to prove that.”
Eden really hadn’t been expecting an apology so she wasn’t disappointed.
Sandy rolled her eyes. “Let me get started, Eden. You’ll see it isn’t that difficult at all. Let me kill Ben for you.”
Sandy grabbed Ben and energy flowed down her arms. “Good-bye, lover.”
A muffled yell escaped Ben’s throat as he thrashed around in the chair. Whatever Sandy was doing was hurting him badly.
“No!” Eden grabbed hold of the witch, digging her fingers in hard enough to make the witch flinch as she pulled her away from Ben to face her instead.
“Maybe I will kill you after all.” A second later, Sandy’s hands wrapped tightly around Eden’s throat and her dark magic shot through Eden’s body.
Luckily, she’d already put up a shield to protect herself — a shield that was quickly slipping.
Sandy squeezed tighter. “You’re either with me, Eden, or you’re against me.”
“I’m sorry.” Eden gasped for breath. “I guess… I’m… against you.”
Black magic flowed through her hands and shot like lightning directly into Sandy. Sandy screamed, raised up off the floor so she hung there for a moment, suspended in midair, then she flew backward against the wall.
Her open, glossy eyes stared up at the ceiling.
“Damn it,” Eden said, her voice shaky. “I didn’t mean to… to…”
“She’s dead,” Ben managed.
Yeah, that. She didn’t mean to do that.
The witch had been too close and Eden’s magic too strong. Not a good combination to allow Sandy to walk away in one piece.
Eden quickly moved around the room to untie all three of the prisoners. Then she moved back from them until her back hit the wall. She needed the support or she thought she might fall down to the floor.
“You did the right thing, honey,” Caroline said. “She was going to kill you. Kill all of us.”
“I know,” she replied softly.
“Are you…” Ben began. “Are you okay?”
Eden shook her head. “You all need to get out of here while you still can.”
“Eden… your necklace…” Leena approached her.
“No. Get out of here. Now! Run!”
After a short hesitation, the three did what she asked without saying another word.
Eden didn’t have to look down at her amulet to have the truth confirmed. She’d gone over the line. She’d killed a mortal with black magic — even if it had been accidental. Even if the witch she’d killed had deserved it. Even if it had been in self-defense.
She’d killed her.
And Eden’s soul was now black.
TWENTY-SEVEN
Darrak saw his life flash before his eyes. It was a short flash for such a long life, but really, the only good things had happened recently. It was more of a slide show, really.
He’d tried. But it hadn’t been enough.
I’m so sorry, Eden.
His last thoughts.
Well, his last thoughts until someone grabbed hold of his wrist.
He looked up with surprise, a surprise that only grew when he saw that it was Lucifer who held him over the Void by his thick, demon wrist.
Before he had any time to truly register this, Lucifer tossed him up over the edge. It was a strong enough throw to land him about a hundred feet away. He lay on his back, looking up at the blank, black velvet sky over this part of the Netherworld.
“Not finished torturing me yet?” he asked, when Lucifer’s form loomed over him.
“Why would I want the fun to ever stop?”
A flash of fire appeared before Darrak’s eyes and then suddenly they were back in Maksim’s mansion. Darrak scrambled to his feet and swept his gaze over a scene that took his breath away.
“What happened here?” His demon voice boomed out loud and raspy. It was more than enough to fill most humans with deep fear and a loss of control over their bodily functions. He knew this from amusing personal experience.
The redheaded angel was unconscious on the ground to the left. That he was still here was enough to prove that he hadn’t been destroyed. Angels, just like demons, vanished in the human world when they’d been decimated, leaving no body behind. He figured the heavens had their own version of the Void. Or perhaps there was only one Void where all creatures lacking souls were tossed when they were gone for good.
To the right was Sandy, and she wasn’t only unconscious. Her eyes were open and glazed.
Ding dong, the witch is dead.
Ben, Leena, and Caroline were nowhere to be seen.
Eden sat in the chair where Ben had previously been tied. She looked up at him as he entered the room.
“Oh, good,” she said. “You’re back.”
“Eden…” He made a move to draw closer but then froze in place. His gaze dropped to her amulet. “No.”
Such a simple word for every fear and raw emotion that flowed over him in that split second. Her amulet was black.
Her soul — she must have been the one to kill the witch. Something bad happened here, something he couldn’t protect her from.
“I didn’t mean to,” she said. “But I’m not sorry I did it.”
The others — somehow she’d saved them.
But it was at the cost of her soul.