Her Soul to Take: Chapter 34
Her Soul to Take (Souls Trilogy)
Iâd never seen Kent open the way down to the basement; given that my binding circle was down there, I could simply teleport to it at Kentâs command. I could only leave the circle with his permission, and heâd usually phrased his commands in such a way that I had to immediately return to it when my tasks were done. The basement was a place Iâd never wanted to step foot in again, never wanted to see nor smell nor come close to.
But here I was.
I knew the entrance was somewhere in his master bedroom, and I suspected it had something to do with the massive bookshelf against the far wall, with a strange gap at the bottom as if there was a track underneath. That was what I inspected first.
Playing with Rae, taking out my nervous energy on her as she did the same to me, had calmed some of my unease at being in this damned house. But it still lingered, a prickling of anxiety on the back of my skull. I hated this room. I hated the smell of it. I hated the perfectly clean carpets and white walls, and that there was still a faint smell in the air of those cigars Kent loved to smoke. I didnât want to stay here for a moment longer than I had to, hearing Jeremiah and Victoria distantly in the house as they got drunker and louder. The temptation to go out there and slaughter them was strong, but Hellâs royals-in-charge frowned upon demons making spectacles of themselves in front of humans.
Slaughtering the Hadleigh siblings in front of a crowd of drunk college students sounded fun, but wasnât worth the ensuing fall out from Hell.
âI take it you didnât find the grimoire?â Rae asked from behind me, watching me as I felt along the underside of the shelves.
Oh, yes, I found the grimoire. But Iâm too obsessed with you to leave you, so here I am, still risking life and limb to be near you, still driven absolutely mad by your voice and smell and eyes â
âNo, didnât find it yet,â I looked back over my shoulder and gave her a wink. âLucky for you.â
The more I reminded her how âluckyâ she was that I was still here, the more I felt like a complete asshole. Implying that the grimoire was the only thing keeping me from leaving was a vile lie, one she couldnât possibly believe for much longer. Iâd gladly admit I was generally a dick, but Rae made me want to beâ¦niceâ¦to her.
Only to her. Everyone else could get fucked.
In a far corner of the shelf, my fingers grazed over a cold metal plate set into the wood. I pressed it, stepped back, and the bookshelf moved silently across the track, slipping into the wall and revealing a stairway leading down into the dark. Rae gasped, stepping forward eagerly as if she was ready to run straight down into the dark. I pressed my hand against her chest, stilling her as fluorescent lights flickered on and illuminated the cold, concrete stairwell.
âAre there cameras down there?â she whispered, as if the stairs themselves might hear and tattle. âOr motion sensors?â
I shrugged. âDonât know. Thereâs only one room down there Iâve been in. We need to be quick.â
She nodded determinedly. There was a flush to her face, and her heartbeat had sped up again. She was excited â of course she was. Facing down a dangerous adventure? Better than a walk in the park apparently.
There was something so painfully hot about this tiny womanâs foolhardy bravery.
She went ahead and I followed, pressing another metal plate on the inner wall to close the bookshelf behind us. We went down two flights of stairs, and more lights flickered on overhead.
âWow.â Raeâs eyes widened as she peered around the space. âThis looks like a supervillainâs headquarters.â
âIt may as well be.â I was getting a creeping, nasty feeling up my back being in here. The black-painted concrete walls and wooden floors couldnât disguise the claustrophobic crushing weight of this place. Demons werenât meant to be underground, yet that was where the Hadleighs had always kept me.
âIs this his evil conference table?â Rae said, smiling at her own joke as she circled the long, shining wood table set up in the middle of the room, lined with chairs. Sheâd taken her phone out of her pocket, and as she wandered around, she held it up to record. I didnât have much faith in human justice systems, but if the Hadleighs wanted to make my girl disappear, it would only be harder for them the more records that remained of her whereabouts. Recording her exploration here was probably a good idea.
âIâd hear them talking sometimes,â I said. âHis closest members of the Libiri would meet with him here.â
âAnd behind all these doors?â She looked up and down the room, at the thick metal doors secured with keypads. âHow can we get in?â
âElectrical locks are easy enough to influence,â I said. âTake your pick. I donât know whatâs behind any of them, except the one at the end.â
She looked toward the far end of the room and the nondescript metal door there. When I was under Kentâs command, the only way in and out of that room was with his permission. Now? I was far from eager to step foot in it again.
âWhatâs in there?â Rae said, and I sighed, extending my energy across the room to influence the electricity in the doorâs lock and pop it open.
âSee for yourself.â
The creak of the doorâs hinges was familiar. I could swear it was the only door in the entirety of this house that Kent allowed to squeak. And the smell inside â stagnant, damp, dust, mold. I turned away from the open door, just so I wouldnât see the familiar flicker of its pale fluorescent bulb.
I used to break that bulb every day until Kent figured out what I was doing. Then he broke my fingers in return.
I didnât want to be in here. I didnât want to smell the cold damp concrete, the metallic iron. I didnât want to hear the hum of the air filtration system through the vents. The walls were solid concrete except for those vents that blew in cold, sterile air. Air that smelled like nothing, air that was as oppressive and stifling as the walls.
âItâs empty,â she said. âItâs just an empty concrete room. Itâs cold.â
âLook down.â
I suppose she did, to judge by her sharp intake of breath. I distracted myself with unlocking the other doors, until she called back, with a tremble in her voice, âLeon, didâ¦did he keep you in here?â
I didnât answer. She wanted a weapon besides me, so Iâd damn well find her one. I wrenched open the first door once its lock was disabled, only to find a simple study within: desk, bookshelf, chair. Unhelpful. I turned for the next door â
And found her standing there, blocking my way.
âLeon.â Her voice sounded hurt. Pained. I hated it. I didnât want her to sound that way. âDid Kent keep you in that room? Thatâs a binding circle on the ground, isnât it?â
âSo you really can learn magic from Google,â I muttered. It sounded mean, perhaps it was mean. Iâd never given a fuck how I sounded until it came to her, until it came to seeing the emotion in those big brown eyes behind her glasses. I tried to step around her, but she got in front of me again.
âYes, I was kept in there,â I said, sharper than I intended, but sharpness was the better option to pain â to fear. âOn and off for a hundred years or so. This was the basement of the old house, before Kent rebuilt it with his fancy block of glass and concrete up there. I used to watch the roots grow through the dirt walls, until Kent poured more concrete and sealed the door, and there was no light, no warmth, nothing.â I glared over her head, back toward that room. Iâd spent hours, days, weeks in there when the various generations of Hadleighs had no use for me. Just a tool, tucked away in the dark before they thought of a task for me again. Stuck in that damned tiny room, in that damned tiny circle, staring at the walls until my mind went numb.
It made me sick. It made me want to â
Her arms were around me. She wrapped them tight around my middle, her head against my chest. She sniffed, and squeezed a little tighter.
âIâm sorry,â she whispered. âIâm so sorry.â
My first instinct was to pull away. I didnât need comfort, I didnât need her apologies, I didnât need her feeling sorry for me. I hated pity. And her apologies were empty because it wasnât she who had locked me down here. For centuries, humans had imprisoned my kind when they could, and run from us when they couldnât. In return weâd tempted them, hunted them, used them. Humans were selfish and fickle, short-lived opportunists. They were not to be trusted, only good for pleasure.
But her arms were still tight, shaking around me as she sniffled again. Why the hell did this hurt her? Why did she give a damn what had happened to me?
Putting my arms around her in return feltâ¦strange. Warmer than it should have. Softer. The longer she held on, the more I realized I didnât really want her to let go. My greater instincts were still struggling, pushing, setting off every alarm bell to tell me that allowing myself to linger in this moment was weak and useless.
But this anger, this fury that kept me going, wasnât for her. None of it was meant for her. Iâd built up my walls to protect myself, not to shut her out.
âWe donât have much time.â My voice came out harsh, if only to keep it from being soft. She pulled back from me a little, and hurriedly wiped her eyes. I didnât truly understand why sheâd cry for me, but humans did strange things when they empathized with another.
Odd, to have a human think of my pain.
But it had been her gentle hands that had cleaned my wounds, too.
âRight.â She raised her chin, jaw set tight and determined. âLetâs find something to fuck these bastards up.â
I wanted to hold her again. I didnât want her to have to fight. I wanted her safe, protected, mine. Instead I watched her open the next door, and her eyes lit up when the light flickered on within.
âJackpot,â she said, and when I peered in over her shoulder, I quickly saw why.
The black walls within were lined with shelves, covered in artifacts that reeked of age and magic. More shelves were clustered in the center of the room, and there were water-stained crates with dead barnacles accumulated across them, stacked in the corners. Raeâs eyes were wide as she entered and gazed around.
âIt smells like the ocean,â she said softly. I nodded.
âThese all must have come up from the mine.â I ran my fingers along the cracking spines of several books piled upon one of the shelves. âI remember some of these things. After the mine flooded, and Kentâs grandfather, Morpheus, summoned me, one of the first tasks he gave me was going down into the mine and bringing up whatever I could.â
Back then, Iâd had no idea what I had been brought into. It was the first time Iâd been summoned in over fifty years, and unlike most of my summoners, Morpheus didnât make any mistakes. He was careful, calm, calculated. He made every order clear. By all accounts, at first, heâd treated me fine.
Until the God got Its tentacles deeper into his head. Whispered in his ear. Turned his mind from simple curiosity to greed.
âThe tunnels are all flooded down there,â I moved along the shelves, covered in so many trinkets I could recall bringing up. âI spent weeks swimming through them, finding this shit, bringing it up. And the longer youâre down there, the louder the God becomes. The more interest It gets. It tries to get in your head.â
Bowls, tools, candles. Books, statues, jewelry. Anything and everything I could get my hands on was kept here from the deepest inner chambers, the ones the miners had broken into by accident. Other people had worshipped the Deep One too, long ago, and it was their artifacts that Morpheus had wanted.
It was these artifacts that Iâd feared Kent would figure out how to use, and turn against me.
We reached the far end of the room, where a glass display case held a series of black daggers. Their handles were intricately carved, wrapped in knotted red string, and the closer I got to them, the more certain I was that I couldnât touch them. They vibrated with an energy powerful enough to turn my stomach, some old magic that had fermented with the years, growing stronger and more vicious until just the sight of those blades sent a shudder up my back.
âThose,â Rae said, âI need one of those.â
The case was locked with a good old-fashioned metal padlock, so it required an old-fashioned method of getting in. I slammed my elbow against the glass, shattering it, and Rae yelped in surprise.
âJesus Christ, Leon,â she hissed. âYou could have warned me!â
I chuckled, stepping back quickly from the case so I wouldnât have to be near that unpleasant magical humming. âTake your pick, doll. And donât call on Christ as if the bastard is going to come anywhere near me.â
She rolled her eyes at me, stared curiously into the shattered case for a moment, then carefully selected a knife from among the glass shards. She pulled it from its sheath, revealing a straight blade black as ink, as was the rope wound around its handle. She brandished it toward me playfully, and looked shocked when I jolted back. To her eyes, it would have looked as if I teleported six feet back.
âWoah.â She stared at the knife, then back at me. âDoes thisâ¦does this actually scare you?â
âItâs unpleasant,â I grumbled. âThereâs old, feral magic in it. Donât get any ideas â if that thing cut me, it wouldnât heal quickly. But it would be the same for the Eld.â I grinned. âKeep it close, but away from me. It smells bad.â
âI donât smell anything.â She frowned in confusion, sniffing at the knife as if her human nostrils could somehow pick up that magical smell. I gave her a tap on the arm.
âAway, Rae. Tuck it away, shit.â She quickly tucked it into the band of her skirt, under her sweater. âWe need to get out of here. The Hadleighs canât possibly be happy that youâve been out of their sight for so long.â
She nodded enthusiastically, as pleased as a kid whoâd been given a piece of candy. Sheâd gotten what she wanted, but I didnât feel any better. I didnât want her to have to use some old knife, I didnât want this small human fending off monsters. I was more than capable of protecting her myself.
Except Iâd locked up my protection behind stipulations and deals, and she was determined to DIY her safety.
âIâd like to see the Eld come for me now,â she said, as we made our way back up the stairwell. I could hear the music pounding, drunk humans laughing and shouting. Too much noise to isolate out any individual conversation, which made me nervous. Even down here, the scent of cigars was strong. Perhaps even stronger than it had been in the bedroom. I hoped that knife was worth it, because lingering here was a risk we really shouldnât have taken.
Rae reached the door first, and pushed the metal plate to slide the bookshelf open. âIâd like to see them try to get their claws in me and get a face full of â oh.â
Her oh dropped like a stone in my stomach.
Kent Hadleigh sat there, a cigar in his mouth, waiting for us.