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The shock reverberated through the Veil, and Corvus screamed.

The souls came.

Their white-ash drift coalesced around a million scintillating colored flecks of glass as the soul bomb shattered in the human realm and rode the tide of her call into the tenebraeternum.

The darkened hole where Corvus’s soul had been inhaled.

Corvus’s cry lengthened and rose in pitch. Around him, the djinni stretched, sucked in toward the demon realm. It blackened, as if the fires of hell scorched it, but it would not release the gladiator.

He fell to his knees, and the thick lines of the demon mark on his arms cracked and bled. The djinni’s shadow mingled with red human blood and darkened the pool.

The rivulets trickled toward the open wound in the Veil. The glass shards melted in midair and streamed into the hole.

Still the djinni’s hook in the Blackbird held.

Nim looked up, up, and up at the towering cloud of evil, then down at the gladiator on his knees. “You want to be free?”

Both his eyes were the pale blue of summer. “So the demon promised me two thousand years ago.”

“About time it paid up, then.” She lifted her foot. The anklet flashed with violet lightning. “Don’t touch.”

And she brought her heel down on the point where djinni and blood were one. The Blackbird’s soul flew, loosed from her lure.

Corvus lifted his arms and laughed as the black lines bled away. This time, the djinni screamed.

Without the soul to root it, separated from the body it had possessed for two thousand years, the djinni was sucked through the tear in the Veil. The recoil blasted through the gray. The molten glass and blood and the blackened ether streamed inward as the void hungered.

Nim’s fingertips warmed as the first touch of power returned to her. Jonah thought she was good enough; maybe that meant her soul wasn’t the puzzle piece to fit into the torn Veil.

Who, then, should she sacrifice to keep hell from blowing wide-open? One of the wounded talyan souls she felt toiling at the other end of the no-man’s-land? Some other innocent? Or some not-so-innocent who then would never have the chance—as she had—to make amends?

Well, she’d never thought much of sacrifice anyway.

And then someone turned off the lights.

A gentle touch on her eyelids, first one, then the other.

Kisses. She looked up to dark blue sky and dark blue eyes.

“Jonah?” Her voice cracked.

“You’re back.”

“Hell and back,” she whispered.

“Not too often, hopefully.” He kissed her again, on the brow this time.

She closed her eyes, just for a moment, reveling in his touch. “How’d we do?”

“You brought down the curtain. But left a chance for an encore.”

When she frowned at him, he helped her sit up, though he remained on his knees behind her, cradling her. They were out at the end of the pier. To the east, the first rays of the sun glinted on the horizon.

She stiffened. “An encore? Then we need to get out of here before more people come. We can’t let them be caught in this.”

He hugged her. “No one will notice. They see what they want to see. And what they’ll see is a nice new Congolese diner. I already have a proprietress in mind. What they won’t see is the hole to the basement where there’s a strange inverted glass sculpture that leads straight into the tenebraeternum.”

“Leads into the . . .” She winced. “Corvus took his soul, and all I had left to patch the hole were the shards of glass and ether. Nothing else would fit. Nothing else I would give up.”

“Keep what’s yours. We’ll work it out.”

“Together? Are we counting that as a win?”

He smiled, and the curve of his lips warmed her more than the sun that now slanted across the water. “We’re still breathing.”

He led her past the talyan who were hastening to clean up what they could before the morning crowds returned. She paused when they neared Fane. “You were here for the fight?”

Fane lifted one eyebrow. The knee-jerk disdain was tempered by the feralis gore staining him up to the knees. “Dawn of a new day.”

She gave an exaggerated sigh of relief. “I work nights.”

Jonah tugged her onward. From the museum, they climbed down a ladder someone had found into the chamber below.

Jonah said, “Liam is already drawing up a bid to do the repairs and renovations through At-One Salvage, Sewage & Bistros, Inc.”

“Catchy.” Nim walked around the old feralis husk. To her human eyes, the cracked-glass orbs looked like a nest of pretty broken eggs, as if—somewhere—birds of every hue were flying free. “Luckily, the museum upstairs only does windows, or they’d want this for their collection.”

To her teshuva, the shattered remnants were terrifying. Past the brilliantly colored glass, it saw the void at the bottom of each open orb and the slow, oily churn of the black leading that held the remaining pieces together. Her pulse raced double time with the teshuva’s tension. “That blackness . . . It’s the djinni.”

Jonah nodded. “Corvus left the djinni in his place when you freed his soul.”

“If by ‘free’ you mean ‘dead.’ ” She’d seen the clatter of yellow bones half drowned in the shallow pool of the chamber. The dent in the skull and the two broken arms made identification a simple matter.

“Without the djinni to sustain him, he couldn’t outrun a couple thousand years.”

“I think he met it with open arms.” She shivered at the chill that breathed from the exposed void. “Maybe he redeemed himself, but he left us with a hell of a problem. Actually, looks like several hells’ worth.”

“It just so happens I plan to have much to atone for.”

She had leaned closer, despite the teshuva straining away from the hell it had escaped, but some note in Jonah’s voice, a light in gloom, made her straighten.

As she did, another glint caught her eye. Threaded through the etherically mutated leading that was the djinni ran a razor-thin strand of gold.

The sudden stutter of her heart rivaled the teshuva for panic. “Your ring.” She reached for Jonah’s bare hand.

He gave her a smile, pure and simple as the missing band around his finger. “I am free too.”

“But . . .” Her gaze slipped past him to the open pathways into hell. “Even possessed by a repentant demon, I’m no good at being good.”

“Maybe good isn’t what we need anymore. It’s definitely not what I want.”

He wasn’t looking at the hellholes, though. He was looking at her. When she drew a breath to ask him what that shimmer in his eyes meant, he tugged her hand. “Come on.”

The storm had passed, and the Shades of Gray rocked gently at the railing where he’d left it, with only one rope looped hastily around a cleat.

As they climbed in, she looked over her shoulder at the pier. From this distance, everything looked the same except for a couple missing lampposts. “Shouldn’t we stay to help clean up?”

“We saved the day. That’s enough for this morning.”

He aimed the boat toward the rising sun. She blinked at him when he set the engine on a slow churn and joined her in the prow. “We’re just going?”

“For the moment. It’s not like we’ll hit anything.”

“I bet I could find a way,” she muttered darkly.

He lifted her chin and kissed her, then settled her in his arm as he leaned back on the cushions and kicked his feet up. “We will find a way.”

She’d never seen him so . . . happy. Something loosened in her, and she curled up against him and rested her palm on his chest. She couldn’t remember now why she’d thought pulling away made sense.

His elbow was hooked over the side rail, and the cuff caught her eye. She touched the oddly familiar, intricate swirl that ran around it, and a violet spark raced away from her fingertip. She caught her breath and propped her foot on the cushion to look at her anklet.