Demon Storm: Belador book 5 Read online

Page 6


  “What about VIPER? Will there be any fallout from me entering the beast games?” Evalle quickly added, “Which I did for the benefit of the Beladors.”

  Specifically, she wanted to make sure Sen didn’t snatch her out of thin air and drop her in a Tribunal meeting to be judged after all she’d gone through to protect her tribe.

  “VIPER will be informed that you were compelled by the Medb to go with Kizira to TÅμr Medb, then compelled to join the battle.”

  That wasn’t exactly how it all went down, but if Macha was willing to sell that through, then Evalle wouldn’t argue since Kizira–and probably the Medb queen, Flaevynn–were both dead. It wasn’t as if someone could counter Macha’s explanation.

  With that, Macha lifted her arms and disappeared in a whirl of spinning air sparkling with blue and silver.

  Evalle didn’t want to consider the consequences of Macha not finding Storm acceptable. She waited to think about where she wanted to land, because that had sounded as if she’d be whisked away the second she pictured the location in her mind.

  Handy, if she didn’t get snatched away before she was ready.

  She needed to take care of one more thing before she left and turned to Tzader. “Tristan will be responsible to you for managing the gryphons and Rías while I’m gone. They need to take a break from their gryphon form and return to their human bodies, but they won’t all do that at the same time.”

  Tzader nodded, his gaze returning to Brina. “What the hell?”

  Evalle stared at a piece of the hologram the size of a cookie that had broken away. It turned into tiny crystals and blinked out of existence.

  Covering his mouth with his hand, Tzader stood there, thinking. Over the next minute, he absorbed what he saw and the result was a heartbreaking expression of misery. When he moved his hand, he said, “Now we know what Garwyli was ranting about. What he saw in his vision.”

  Losing Brina would be devastating for Tzader. But losing this last part of Brina would sever the only ties Beladors had to the Treoir power base.

  Chapter 5

  “If I wasn’t desperate, I wouldn’t do this,” Evalle mumbled, looking over at Nicole, who was riding shotgun in Nicole’s wheelchair-accessible van with only the dash lights illuminating her features. Now that sunlight was not an issue, Evalle had spent the better part of two days driving all over Atlanta in Storm’s old Land Cruiser since her Suzuki GSXR was still up north in the mountains at VIPER headquarters. But when she realized she needed the help of her gifted friend, she’d left the SUV back at Storm’s house and taken the train to Nicole’s so they could drive the van.

  She’d wait until Tzader returned to reclaim her motorcycle.

  No point in giving Sen any chance of grabbing her when no one was looking.

  But in all the time she’d spent traveling around Atlanta, she’d failed to squeeze out a drop of intel on Storm.

  “It’s okay, Evalle,” Nicole said in that soothing voice of hers. “I told you, Red is out of town until tomorrow night. I’m happy to help. In fact, I’d have been hurt if you hadn’t asked. This is what friends do for each other.”

  How could anyone not love Nicole?

  At twenty-seven, she was as beautiful on the inside as she was on the outside. Her brunette hair fell softly around her shoulders. Every color looked great against skin a rich cappuccino brown, but today she wore a deep-pink dress that would look awful on Evalle.

  Red, Nicole’s significant other, was another issue altogether.

  Evalle and Red got along like two starving Rottweilers thrown in a cage with one meaty bone. Red would not be happy about Evalle taking Nicole away from their apartment on the east side of Atlanta, and she’d be even less happy that Evalle was taking Nicole to Storm’s house just north of downtown. In spite of knowing how powerful a white witch Nicole was, Red always tried to take care of errands away from the apartment just to make Nicole’s life easier, so Red did have a nice side. But she didn’t like any of this crazy supernatural shit, as she described it, and was always worried that Evalle was putting Nicole at risk.

  Evalle admitted, “I appreciate that Red’s not around to rip me a new one, but that’s not what’s bothering me right now. I’m rethinking this whole trip.”

  “Why?”

  “I’m worried about exposing you to that witch doctor even through a vision or whatever you can do at Storm’s house to find him. I’ll do anything to get a lead on him, but not at the risk of harming you.”

  Nicole smiled and her eyes sparkled. “Stop fretting over me. I won’t allow any dark majik to pull me in.”

  “Thycle!” Feenix exclaimed from behind Nicole’s seat.

  Evalle smiled into the rear view mirror at her little gargoyle. “What is it, baby?”

  Nicole twisted in her seat and put her hand out. “Let me see.”

  Evalle’s two-foot tall gargoyle flapped his gray, batlike wings. They felt like soft leather when you touched them. When he finished depositing something into Nicole’s hand, he raised his head. Orange eyes the size of tangerines and a toothy grin smiled back at Evalle in the mirror. “Make thycle.”

  Nicole brought her hand around and Feenix had smushed the glob of Play-Doh she’d given him into something that might be a motorcycle since it had two lug nuts for wheels.

  Beaming a smile at him, Evalle said, “Beautiful, baby.”

  When Nicole passed it back to him, Feenix plucked the two lug nuts with his fat little four-finger hands and shoved them in his mouth, crunching.

  Evidently it was an edible cycle. “Your bike won’t go far without tires,” she reminded him.

  Feenix’s eyes drooped as he tried to figure that one out, until Evalle reached down to the stash Nicole kept for him in the van and tossed two more lug nuts toward the back seat. Feenix flapped his wings, flying up to catch them, then floated back down, squishing his clay again and chortling happy noises.

  “Don’t eat the clay, okay?” Evalle said, not sure if she’d gotten through to him until he made a pfft sound.

  “No eat clay. Tathe like glue,” Feenix mumbled.

  Now Evalle wondered what he’d eaten to taste glue.

  She turned up the narrow street to Storm’s house, an older home in an area known as midtown, where a large number of houses had been built in the early 1900s with wide front porches and tiny garages, if any. When she reached the house, she parked in the driveway behind the Land Cruiser.

  Evalle had left it in the exact spot where it’d been when she first checked Storm’s house almost two days ago.

  She’d known then that he wasn’t in the house or he’d have come out the minute she stepped onto his property. He would be watching for her. If he were in Atlanta, he’d have called her by now.

  Or emailed or texted. Something.

  Wasn’t this emerald he’d stuck on her chest supposed to be some kind of homing device for him or her? He’d used majik to stick it permanently on her chest before she entered the beast games, saying he could find her that way.

  So where was he that he couldn’t get in touch with her some way?

  As Nicole prepared to exit the van in her wheelchair, she asked, “You said both notes were found here, so you feel pretty certain Storm did not get yours?”

  “Yep. Tzader said the one I left in the bedroom was faced down. I remember wanting to flip it over, but that was the moment when Kizira teleported in and snatched me before I could say a word to Storm.”

  “That sucks.”

  “I wanted to strangle her at the time, but she was only doing what the Medb queen had compelled her to do. Poor Kizira tried to help me at every turn.”

  “I’m sorry for you and Quinn.”

  Evalle hadn’t mentioned anything to Nicole before now about Quinn and Kizira, but Evalle had never dealt with someone close to her going through this kind of loss. She was worried about Quinn disappearing and never seeing him again. Nicole was the one person, other than Tzader or Quinn, who Evalle could trust with secr
ets.

  Nicole sat up and took a long look at the house. “Has anyone besides Tzader been in there?”

  “Not that I know of. I didn’t go inside after you warned me to leave everything as undisturbed as possible in case I needed help.” The kind of help a witch with a few extra abilities could give Evalle, but staying away from the one place she could feel closest to Storm had been difficult.

  Evalle came around and backed Nicole’s wheelchair out of the van, then pushed it over to a side entrance into the kitchen where no one would see her use kinetics to lift Nicole and her chair up through the open door. It took a little more effort than it normally would, but at least her kinetics were still working. Once inside, Evalle stared at the full pot of coffee. Tzader told her that when he’d first walked in, the coffee smelled like it had been freshly made.

  Nicole said, “The witch doctor was in here unless Storm allows someone else with dark majik in his home.”

  “Why do you say that?”

  “I can feel hate lingering in the air. His and another person’s, but the second one is so filled with malice that it reeks of a dark presence.” Nicole sniffed. “Licorice. Smells like someone cooked it on a grill.”

  “That would be the witch doctor he’s been hunting, because he smelled that at the beast games last week.”

  “Or perhaps she was hunting him,” Nicole murmured as she wheeled herself forward. “Did you bring the notes with you?”

  “Yes.” When Evalle had taken a couple of thirty-minute naps so she wouldn’t fall on her face, she’d slept with the two pieces of paper. Tzader had given her the notes as soon as the battle ended in Treoir. He’d come to Storm’s house searching for Evalle, and evidently he’d arrived right after she’d been teleported away and Storm had left to hunt for the witch doctor. What had happened to make Storm do that on the heels of Evalle leaving?

  She didn’t know and she was afraid to let go of the two notes, her one tiny connection to Storm.

  When Nicole reached the center of the living room, she angled her head back and forth, then looked over where a rug woven in the geometric Navajo pattern covered a spot directly in front of the fireplace. “He comes here to be with ... someone.”

  “We’ve, uh, spent some time out here.” Could Nicole tell what they’d been up to the last time Evalle was here? That had started out in the living room and ended up in the bedroom.

  “No, someone else.”

  “What?” Evalle’s stomach dropped at that. No way would Storm have been here with another woman.

  Unless maybe it had been before Evalle started coming here. But even that thought nauseated her.

  “Evalle,” Nicole called out softly. “I’m not talking a human or someone that Storm was intimate with, but an ethereal being.”

  Had she been that obvious? “Oh, sure, I know.”

  Nicole wheeled around and rolled over to her, taking Evalle’s hand. “I also feel his love for you here everywhere. When you were here, his happiness permeated the air and the walls. I’m not sure he’s ever been really happy until meeting you because of how strong his emotions had to be to imprint on a structure. It is clear he loves you, so no matter what we find, you must not doubt him or that you are ...”

  When Nicole paused, Evalle said, “I am what?”

  “Special. Very special to him.” But Nicole looked away, embarrassed over something.

  Special was nice, but Evalle felt certain that Nicole had wanted to say more. Nicole had never held back anything before. Why now?

  Evalle let it go in favor of focusing on their task. “What can you figure out by being in here?”

  “You told me Storm has a spirit guide. That’s probably who I’m sensing in this room and over here close to the fireplace. I’m going to try to reach that spirit and see if she has met with Storm.”

  “Whoa, hold everything, Nicole. Storm hasn’t told me everything about growing up in South America, but that’s where this witch doctor came from and Storm was forced to fight in beast games down there. I have no idea what else went on so there’s no guarantee the spirit hanging around here is friendly.”

  “No, this is a being of the light.” Nicole’s wheelchair sat in the middle of the rug now. “I have a sense of comfort in this area near the fireplace. I believe this might be one place that he meets with his spirit guide.”

  Evalle glanced around, feeling twitchy at the idea of a spirit visiting while she and Storm had been naked in his house. She dealt with ghouls all the time downtown. They were Nightstalkers who would trade their intel on preternaturals and humans for a handshake with someone like Evalle. The brief connection with a powerful being gave the ghoul ten minutes of corporeal form that most of them used to guzzle as much cheap wine or rot-gut whiskey as they could find.

  And if every Nightstalker she’d searched for, including her favorite one, hadn’t been hiding from preternaturals stalking the city, she might have gotten a sliver of intel.

  But meeting with ghouls downtown was business, where having a spirit here in Storm’s house was too close to home.

  Literally.

  “What’s wrong, Evalle?”

  “Do you think the spirit just popped in and out of here at will?”

  “No. With Storm being Navajo, I believe he and the spirit might have a bond that allows them to communicate with each other when needed. The spirit would not enter uninvited.”

  Nicole had answered Evalle’s unspoken question, which meant Nicole knew exactly what Evalle was actually asking. Life around preternaturals and psychic witches meant there were few secrets some days.

  “Why don’t you light some candles and give me some time to see what I can figure out,” Nicole requested.

  Evalle doubted that Nicole needed the candles so much as Nicole knew that Evalle had to do something to be of use.

  Once the candles were lit, Evalle sat out of the way on the sofa, determined not to fidget. But two minutes later Nicole was still staring into the barren fireplace. Evalle lost her battle with impatience and stood up.

  Nicole spun around, surprised.

  Evalle held her hands up. “Sorry. I have to do something.”

  “There’s nothing you can do to help me, except remain very quiet.”

  “I can do a better job of that out of here.” Evalle strode down the hallway, slowing when she reached the bedroom and stepping into it without turning the lights on. The bed was still rumpled from the most amazing night of her life.

  She walked over and lifted the pillow to her face, inhaling deeply. His scent sparked the memory of being touched and held. Of Storm hovering over her, hunger burning in his eyes as he slid inside her.

  Her knees gave way and she dropped to the floor, kneeling next to the bed where she laid her head down, clutching the pillow. Forty hours since she left Treoir and not a word from him or any sign that he was alive.

  Tzader had to be frantic, which Evalle could appreciate since she was no longer as confident as she’d been when she arrived in Atlanta.

  Where are you, Storm?

  She closed her eyes, as exhausted from worry as she was from being on her feet for so long without rest. She wanted to be near Storm so much that his face finally filled her mind’s eye. He was smiling, then he kissed her the way a man did when he wanted a woman to know she belonged to him. Evalle hugged him to her, loving the feel of his long fingers on her skin. She whispered, “I miss you.” His hands turned cold on her skin and she pulled back to see his face.

  His eyes were open, but not seeing.

  His body was a bluish-gray color and it floated in a haze that made her skin pebble with chill. His eyes continued to stare straight ahead at nothing. So deathly still. Then his lips moved with sounds too low for her to hear them. She moved toward him, swimming through the air.

  Swimming? That’s what it felt like.

  When she got within an inch of his lips, he said, “I am not coming back.”

  “No!” She reached for him and he drifted backwards
out of her reach. He turned yellow eyes on her. “Go!”

  She jerked awake, searching the room.

  “Hello?” Nicole called from the living room. “Where are you?”

  Evalle pushed up on shaky knees and dropped the pillow on Storm’s bed. The nightmare had been so real.

  “Evalle?” Wheels rolled toward the bedroom. Nicole appeared in the open doorway. “Are you okay? You’re pale.”

  “I’m fine. Battle nap. Was I out long?”

  “Maybe a half hour.”

  Evalle walked toward Nicole who turned around and led the way back to the living room. On the way, Nicole said, “I’m sorry, but I haven’t been able to reach his spirit guide or anyone else.”

  Over two days were gone. Brina might only have one more. Two at the most.

  Evalle asked, “What else can I do?”

  Nicole didn’t answer right away, maneuvering her chair back in front of the fireplace while Evalle stopped to lean against the wall. When Nicole turned back to her, she suggested, “I can use something of Storm’s and try to find him through astral travel.”

  “No! You’re not doing that out of body thing where a witch or something worse might grab you and never let you come back.” In that moment, Evalle finally admitted the one thing she’d been avoiding.

  Storm might be somewhere he couldn’t escape.

  Leaning back in her chair, Nicole sighed. “I have another idea, but you aren’t going to like my suggestion.”

  “Then I’ll get over it. I have to find Storm.” Yes, Brina was important and so was her Belador tribe, but Evalle couldn’t face a world without Storm.

  “It might be difficult–”

  Someone knocked at the front door.

  “I don’t care, Nicole. Whatever it takes,” Evalle said on her way to the door. She checked the peephole to see a familiar head of blonde hair.

  “Are you kidding me?” she muttered, opening the door to find petite, curvy Adrianna there. Adrianna Lafontaine, a Sterling witch who had nursed Storm back to health while Evalle had been locked away in a VIPER prison.