âSummoning a demon is a bad fucking idea,â Hunt breathed as night fell beyond the apartmentâs shut curtains. âEspecially considering thatâs what started this mess in the first place.â
They stood in her great room, lights dimmed and candles flickering around them, Syrinx bundled in blankets and locked in his crate in Bryceâs bedroom, surrounded by a protective circle of white salt.
What lay around and before them on the pale floors, reeking of mold and rotten earth, was the opposite of that.
Bryce had ground the block of obsidian salt down at some pointâpresumably using her fucking food processor. For something sheâd dropped ten grand on, Bryce didnât treat it with any particular reverence. Sheâd chucked it into a kitchen cabinet as if it were a bag of chips.
He hadnât realized sheâd only been biding her time until she needed it.
Now, sheâd crafted two circles with the obsidian salt. The one near the windows was perhaps five feet in diameter. The other was big enough to hold herself and Hunt.
Bryce said, âIâm not going to waste my time snooping around town for answers about what kind of demon killed Danika. Going right to the source will save me a headache.â
âGoing right to the source will get you splattered on a wall. And if not, arrested for summoning a demon into a residential zone.â Shit. He should arrest her, shouldnât he?
âNo one likes a narc, Athalar.â
âI am a narc.â
A dark red eyebrow arched. âCouldâve fooled me, Shadow of Death.â She joined him in the salt circle. Her long ponytail pooled in the collar of her leather jacket, the candlelight gilding the red strands.
His fingers twitched, as if theyâd reach for that silken length of hair. Run it between them. Wrap it around his fist and draw her head back, exposing that neck of hers again to his mouth. His tongue. Teeth.
Hunt growled, âYou do know that it is my job to stop these demons from entering this world.â
âWeâre not setting the demon loose,â she hissed back. âThis is as safe as a phone call.â
âAre you going to summon it with its unholy number, then?â Many demons had numbers associated with them, like some sort of ancient email address.
âNo, I donât need it. I know how to find this demon.â He started to answer, but she cut him off. âThe obsidian salt will hold it.â
Hunt eyed the circles sheâd made, then sighed. Fine. Even though arguing with her was nearly as enticing as foreplay, he didnât feel like wasting time, either.
But then the temperature in the room began to drop. Rapidly.
And as Huntâs breath began to cloud the air, as a humanoid male appeared, thrumming with dark power that made his stomach roil â¦
Bryce grinned up at Hunt as his heart stopped dead. âSurprise.â
Sheâd lost her fucking mind. He would kill her for thisâif they werenât both killed in the next few seconds.
âWho is that?â Ice formed in the room. No clothing could protect against the cold this demon brought with him. It pierced through every layer, snatching the breath from Huntâs chest with clawed fingers. A shuddering inhale was the only sign of Bryceâs discomfort as she remained facing the circle on the other side of the room. The male now contained inside its dark border.
âAidas,â she said softly.
Hunt had always imagined the Prince of the Chasm as similar to the lower-level demons heâd hunted over the centuries: scales or fangs or claws, brute muscle and snarling with blind animal rage.
Not this slender, pale-skinned ⦠pretty boy.
Aidasâs blond hair fell to his shoulders in soft waves, loose, yet well cut around his fine-boned face. Undoubtedly to show off the eyes like blue opals, framed by thick, golden lashes. Those lashes bobbed once in a cursory blink. Then his full, sensuous mouth parted in a smile to reveal a row of too-white teeth. âBryce Quinlan.â
Huntâs hand drifted to his gun. The Prince of the Chasm knew her nameâher face. And the way heâd spoken her name was as much greeting as it was question, his voice velvet-soft.
Aidas occupied the fifth level of Helâthe Chasm. He yielded only to two others: the Prince of the Abyss, and the Prince of the Pit, the seventh and mightiest of the demon princes. The Star-Eater himself, whose name was never uttered on this side of the Northern Rift.
No one would dare say his name, not after the Prince of the Pit became the first and only being to ever kill an Asteri. His butchering of the seventh holy starâSirius, the Wolf Starâduring the First Wars remained a favorite ballad around war-camp fires. And what heâd done to Sirius after slaying her had earned him that awful title: Star-Eater.
âYou appeared as a cat the last timeâ was all Bryce said.
All. She. Said.
Hunt dared take his eyes off the Prince of the Chasm to find Bryce bowing her head.
Aidas slid his slender hands into the pockets of his closely tailored jacket and pantsâthe material blacker than the Chasm in which he resided. âYou were very young then.â
Hunt had to plant his feet to keep from swaying. Sheâd met the prince beforeâhow?
His shock must have been written on his face because she shot him a look that he could only interpret as Calm the fuck down, but said, âI was thirteenânot that young.â
Hunt reined in his grunt that would have suggested otherwise.
Aidas tilted his head to one side. âYou were very sad then as well.â
It took Hunt a moment to process itâthe words. The bit of history, and the bit of now.
Bryce rubbed her hands together. âLetâs talk about you, Your Highness.â
âI am always happy to do so.â
The cold burned Huntâs lungs. They could last only minutes at this temperature before their healing abilities started churning. And despite Bryceâs Fae blood, there was a good chance that she might not recover at all. Without having made the Drop, the frostbite would be permanent for Bryce. As would any digits or limbs lost.
She said to the demon prince, âYou and your colleagues seem to be getting restless in the dark.â
âIs that so?â Aidas frowned at his polished leather shoes as if he could see all the way down to the Pit. âPerhaps you summoned the wrong prince, for this is the first Iâve heard of it.â
âWho is summoning the kristallos demon to hunt through this city?â Flat, cutting words. âAnd what killed Danika Fendyr?â
âAh yes, we heard of thatâhow Danika screamed as she was shredded apart.â
Bryceâs beat of silence told Hunt enough about the internal wound that Aidas had pressed. From the smile gracing Aidasâs face, the Prince of the Chasm knew it as well.
She went on, âDo you know what demon did it?â
âDespite what your mythologies claim, I am not privy to the movements of every being in Hel.â
She said tightly, âDo you know, though? Or know who summoned it?â
His golden lashes shimmered as he blinked. âYou believe I dispatched it?â
âYou would not be standing there if I did.â
Aidas laughed softly. âNo tears from you this time.â
Bryce smiled slightly. âYou told me not to let them see me cry. I took the advice to heart.â
What the Hel had gone on during that meeting twelve years ago?
âInformation is not free.â
âWhat is your price?â A bluish tint crept over her lips. Theyâd have to cut the connection soon.
Hunt kept perfectly still as Aidas studied her. Then his eyes registered Hunt.
He blinkedâonce. As if he had not really marked his presence until this moment. As if he hadnât cared to notice, with Bryce before him. Hunt tucked away that fact, just as Aidas murmured, âWho are you.â
A command.
âHeâs eye candy,â Bryce said, looping her arm through Huntâs and pressing close. For warmth or steadiness, he didnât know. She was shaking. âAnd he is not for sale.â She pointed to the halo across Huntâs brow.
âMy pets like to rip out feathersâit would be a good trade.â
Hunt leveled a stare at the prince. Bryce threw Hunt a sidelong glare, the effect of which was negated by her chattering teeth.
Aidas smiled, looking him over again. âA Fallen warrior with the power of â¦â Aidasâs groomed brows lifted in surprise. His blue opal eyes narrowed to slitsâthen simmered like the hottest flame. âWhat are you doing with a black crown around your brow?â
Hunt didnât dare let his surprise at the question show. Heâd never heard it called that beforeâa black crown. Halo, witch-ink, mark-of-shame, but never that.
Aidas looked between them now. Carefully. He didnât bother to let Hunt answer his question before that awful smile returned. âThe seven princes dwell in darkness and do not stir. We have no interest in your realm.â
âIâd believe it if you and your brethren hadnât been rattling the Northern Rift for the past two decades,â Hunt said. âAnd if I hadnât been cleaning up after it.â
Aidas sucked in a breath, as if tasting the air on which Huntâs words had been delivered to him. âYou do realize that it might not be my people? The Northern Rift opens to other placesâother realms, yes, but other planets as well. What is Hel but a distant planet bound to yours by a ripple in space and time?â
âHel is a planet?â Huntâs brows lowered. Most of the demons heâd killed and dealt with hadnât been able to or inclined to speak.
Aidas shrugged with one shoulder. âIt is as real a place as Midgard, though most of us would have you believe it wasnât.â The prince pointed to him. âYour kind, Fallen, were made in Midgard by the Asteri. But the Fae, the shifters, and many others came from their own worlds. The universe is massive. Some believe it has no end. Or that our universe might be one in a multitude, as bountiful as the stars in the sky or the sand on a beach.â
Bryce threw Hunt a look that told him she, too, was wondering what the Hel the demon prince was smoking in the Chasm. âYouâre trying to distract us,â Bryce said, arms crossing. Hoarfrost crept across the floors. âYouâre not rattling the Northern Rift?â
âThe lesser princes do thatâlevels one through four,â Aidas said, head angling again. âThose of us in the true dark have no need or interest in sunshine. But even they did not send the kristallos. Our plans do not involve such things.â
Hunt growled, âYour kind wanted to live here, once upon a time. Why would that change?â
Aidas chuckled. âIt is dreadfully amusing to hear the stories the Asteri have spun for you.â He smiled at Bryce. âWhat blinds an Oracle?â
All color leached from Bryceâs face at the mention of her visit to the Oracle. How Aidas knew about it, Hunt could only guess, but she countered, âWhat sort of cat visits an Oracle?â
âWinning first words.â Aidas slid his hands into his pockets again. âI did not know what you might prefer now that you are grown.â A smirk at Hunt. âBut I may appear more like that, if it pleases you, Bryce Quinlan.â
âBetter yet: donât appear again at all,â Hunt said to the demon prince.
Bryce squeezed his arm. He stepped on her foot hard enough to get her to cut it out.
But Aidas chuckled. âYour temperature drops. I shall depart.â
âPlease,â Bryce said. âJust tell me if you know what killed Danika. Please.â
A soft laugh. âRun the tests again. Find what is in-between.â
He began to fade, as if a phone call were indeed breaking up.
âAidas,â she blurted, stepping right to the edge of their circle. Hunt fought the urge to tuck her to his side. Especially as darkness frayed the edges of Aidasâs body. âThank you. For that day.â
The Prince of the Chasm paused, as if clinging to this world. âMake the Drop, Bryce Quinlan.â He flickered. âAnd find me when you are done.â
Aidas had nearly vanished into nothing when he added, the words a ghost slithering through the room, âThe Oracle did not see. But I did.â
Silence pulsed in his wake as the room thawed, frost vanishing.
Hunt whirled on Bryce. âFirst of all,â he seethed, âfuck you for that surprise.â
She rubbed her hands together, working warmth back into them. âYou never would have let me summon Aidas if Iâd told you first.â
âBecause we should be fucking dead right now!â He gaped at her. âAre you insane?â
âI knew he wouldnât hurt me. Or anyone with me.â
âYou want to tell me how you met Aidas when you were thirteen?â
âI ⦠I told you how badly things ended between me and my biological father after my Oracle visit.â His anger banked at the lingering pain in her face. âSo afterward, when I was crying my little heart out on one of the park benches outside the temple, this white cat appeared next to me. It had the most unnatural blue eyes. I knew, even before it spoke, that it wasnât a catâand wasnât a shifter.â
âWho summoned him that time?â
âI donât know. Jesiba told me that the princes can sneak through cracks in either Rift, taking the form of common animals. But then theyâre confined to those formsâwith none of their own power, save the ability to speak. And they can only stay for a few hours at a time.â
A shudder worked its way down his gray wings. âWhat did Aidas say?â
âHe asked me: What blinds an Oracle? And I replied: What sort of cat visits an Oracle? Heâd heard the screaming on his way in. I suppose it intrigued him. He told me to stop crying. Said it would only satisfy those who had wronged me. That I shouldnât give them the gift of my sorrow.â
âWhy was the Prince of the Chasm at the Oracle?â
âHe never told me. But he sat with me until I worked up the nerve to walk back to my fatherâs house. By the time I remembered to thank him, he was gone.â
âStrange.â Andâfine, he could understand why she hadnât balked from summoning him, if heâd been kind to her in the past.
âPerhaps some of the feline body wore off on him and he was merely curious about me.â
âApparently, heâs missed you.â A leading question.
âApparently,â she hedged. âThough he barely gave us anything to go on.â
Her gaze turned distant as she looked at the empty circle before them, then took her phone out of her pocket. Hunt caught a glimpse of who she dialedâDeclan Emmet.
âHi, B.â In the background, music thumped and male laughter roared.
Bryce didnât bother with niceties. âWeâve been tipped off that we should run various tests againâIâm assuming that means the ones on the victims and crime scenes a few years ago. Can you think of anything that should be reexamined?â
In the background, Ruhn asked, Is that Bryce? But Declan said, âIâd definitely run a scent diagnostic. Youâll need clothes.â
Bryce said, âThey must have done a scent diagnostic two years ago.â
Declan said, âWas it the common one, or the Mimir?â
Huntâs stomach tightened. Especially as Bryce said, âWhatâs the difference?â
âThe Mimir is better. Itâs relatively new.â
Bryce looked at Hunt, and he shook his head slowly. She said quietly into the phone, âNo one did a Mimir test.â
Declan hesitated. âWell ⦠itâs Fae tech mostly. We loan it out to the legion for their major cases.â A pause. âSomeone should have said something.â
Hunt braced himself. Bryce asked, âYou had access to this sort of thing two years ago?â
Declan paused again. âAhâshit.â Then Ruhn came on the line. âBryce, a direct order was given not to pursue it through those channels. It was deemed a matter that the Fae should stay out of.â
Devastation, rage, griefâall exploded across her face. Her fingers curled at her sides.
Hunt said, knowing Ruhn could hear it, âThe Autumn King is a real prick, you know that?â
Bryce snarled, âIâm going to tell him just that.â She hung up.
Hunt demanded, âWhat?â But she was already running out of the apartment.