Darkness Eternal (Guardians of Eternity)

It took incredible strength that she’d obviously inherited from her parents.

“Yes, which meant they shouldered heavy duties,” she said, a wistful smile curving her lips. “When they felt the need to escape their responsibilities they would bring my sister and I here. I cherished those days. It was the only time we could be alone as a family.”

There was no mistaking her emotional connection to the image spread before them.

“I don’t like this,” he rasped.

“You don’t like what?”

“Was Yannah a part of your childhood?”

“Of course not.” She blinked in puzzlement at his abrupt question. “We knew nothing of demons before Marika came to us as a vampire.”

“Then how did she know to create this particular illusion?”

He watched Kata’s pleasure in her surroundings briefly falter at his question.

“Perhaps she can read my mind,” she at last suggested.

“Perhaps.” Uriel shrugged. It was a rare talent, but not unheard of. “Then the next question is why,” he persisted. “She must have some purpose in bringing us here.”

“You think she’s responsible for opening the gateway to hell?”

Did he?

The tiny demon certainly had the power.

And God knew she was erratic enough to offer help one minute and then trap them both in hell the next.

But he wasn’t going to leap to conclusions.

“I think we would be fools not to suspect she has her own agenda,” he compromised.

Her lips twisted into a bitter smile. “Who doesn’t?”

He bristled at her accusation. “I’m at least honest about my purpose in following you,” he said, even knowing the words were a lie.

Oh, his purpose had been clear enough in the beginning.

Victor commanded him to locate and retrieve the gypsy.

Simple and straightforward.

It was only after he’d crashed into Kata’s prison that his unwanted duty had become something else.

Something dangerous.

Thankfully unaware of his tangled thoughts, Kata gave a restless lift of her shoulder.

“Maybe Yannah created a place to keep us safe until she could get us out of here,” she suggested, clearly wanting to assume the best.

He snorted. “Do you believe that?”

Her dark eyes flashed with annoyance. “I don’t know what I believe, and right now I don’t care. For the moment there’s no scalding lava, no bottomless pits, and no creepy ghouls trying to suck my soul. I intend to enjoy a few minutes of peace.”

With a flounce (yes, it was an unmistakable flounce) Kata crossed to the meandering stream and settled on the sloping bank. Then, with a sigh of pleasure she allowed her bare feet to dangle in the crystal clear water.

Uriel swore as he leashed his instinctive urge to snatch her back into his arms until he could be certain there weren’t any lurking dangers.

Maybe she was right.

They would know soon enough if this was a trap. Why not take a few moments to appreciate the peace?

Not that it was the peace he was appreciating as he moved to settle on the mossy ground next to her. Stretching out his legs, Uriel leaned back on his hands and allowed himself the rare luxury of savoring the sight of Kata drenched in sunlight.

His fangs lengthened, his ready hunger returning with a vengeance as the bright light revealed the dusky temptation of her nipples and the feminine shadow at the apex of her thighs. Bloody hell. A low growl trickled from his throat as a cool breeze stirred the satin strands of her hair, teasing at the tender curve of her neck.

Abruptly she turned her head to meet his heated gaze.

“You’re staring at me,” she murmured.

Unable to resist temptation, he reached out to run his fingers through the thick satin of her hair.

“You look too young and innocent to have a child.”

Her brows lifted. “Was that a compliment?”

“A statement of fact.”

“Ah.” She wrinkled her nose. “I suppose that’s the upside of playing Sleeping Beauty.” She blinked, as if hit by a sudden thought. “Of course, with Marika dead and Sergei missing, I suppose the spell to keep me from aging is gone.”

A strange pang of unease clutched his heart at the mere thought of Kata growing old . . . dying.

“There are means for humans to stay young.”

She shrugged. “That’s actually at the very bottom of my Worry List.”

“What’s at the top?”

“Laylah.” She said it without hesitation, her first thought for her daughter despite the fact that she was currently trapped in hell with no certain means of escape. “I’ve always been able to sense her, but now there’s some sort of interference between us.” She bit her full bottom lip, her expression troubled. “She could be hurt and I wouldn’t even know it.”

His hand cupped the back of her head, his chest tightening with the oddest urge to . . . what?

Offer her comfort?

Impossible. That’s what humans did, not demons.

But there was no halting the need to lower his head and brush his lips softly over her mouth.

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