chapter 17
The closer Kane got to Meri, the more his gait evened out. I steeled myself, frantically searching my memory for some spell, anything
to neutralize the obvious possession.
I could make a potion from bluebonnets, but that wasn’t a flower I was likely to find in Hell. Binding Meri might work, but with my
magic and strength depleted, the thought was useless.
Rage burned through me, mixing with a tiny spark of power. Thank the Goddess I had something left to fight with.
There was no way I was letting her have Kane too. I’d die before she took him from me.
My fingers ached as magic strained to reach the tips.
Meri glided forward, her arms wide. A dark cloud of magical electricity circled her.
“I have plans for you, white witch,” she said sweetly. “Together, you and I could be very powerful here in the underworld. You won’t
even have to give up your lover.” Her tone turned flat as her gaze flickered between Kane and me. “Your choice. Join us, or I’ll end
you right now.”
Magic pulsed through my limbs. I held it back. Waiting. “You know I’ll never agree to that,” I said with a dead serious calm.
An air of impatience flickered over her emotionless features. Electric power crackled around her, and when she moved, I was ready.
Raw magic collided, shooting rays of destruction, cracking stone all around us. My power drained at an alarming rate, and in my
weakened state, it was all I could do to hold on, much less overpower her. My magical spark didn’t have anything else to give.
She stepped forward, pressing her advantage. I stumbled back. Meri wasn’t as weak as we’d thought. Of course not. She’d been
draining me through Kane—and still was.
An absolute truth hit me. I was going to die.
Kane shifted into my eye line. He’d followed the demon and stood a few inches from her. His dark chocolate eyes met mine.
Everything vanished.
He stared at me, love pouring from his gaze.
He wasn’t possessed. He couldn’t be. I could see through him, inside of him, and he was still mine.
My body screamed with effort as I moved forward on stiff, lifeless legs. I reached for the last of my power and yanked. Searing
energy rippled through me, sending foreign tendrils of power deep into my being. Magic exploded and my insides seemed to rip
apart. I fell to my knees, my strength gone.
Meri stopped inches from me, her right arm raised as if to strike me.
I stared up at her, defiance racing through every one of my cells. “Do it!” I demanded.
“With pleasure.” She swung.
Kane moved, a small dagger clutched in his hand, and plunged the knife into her left shoulder. She fell to one knee, her face
contorted with rage. Her magic vanished, and a weight lifted from my chest.
I scrambled to my feet and rushed to Kane’s side.
“Run!” He grabbed my arm and yanked me away from Meri.
The small group of demon spectators, who’d been watching the showdown, seemed frozen with bewilderment. We took off, not
waiting for an outcome.
We didn’t speak, just headed straight for the green-lighted passageway. Right as we sprinted under the archway, a loud boom
rumbled from the auditorium. I skidded to a stop and poked my head out of the opening.
“Oh my God!” I cried. “It’s Philip and Lailah.”
The pair descended from somewhere high above, landing crouched in a fighting position. The demons instantly formed a circle
around them. They’d answered my distress call. Only I’d had no idea that meant they’d show up here. I’d expected them to perform a
calling to yank us back to the living world. It was a lot more dangerous for angels in hell. Their souls were extremely vulnerable to
black magic corruption.
“Let them be.” Kane yanked my arm as he took off running down the tomb-filled passageway.
“But—”
He didn’t slow down or even glance back as he yelled, “Now’s our chance.”
I shoved the fears and doubts out of my mind. He was right. With Meri and her minions fighting off Philip and Lailah, this was going
to be our best opportunity.
We passed the crumpled, once ornate ruins of gargoyles, screeching devil-dogs, and statues of humans twisted with torment and
despair. I tried my best to not focus on any of them. Even though they were stone, agony poured into my being, tearing at my soul
with each step I took.
My breathing labored as my eyes blurred. I blinked. Focus, Jade. Almost there. I spotted the rotting archway Mom had pinpointed as
a marker. A few more paces, and we’d be at Meri’s dungeon. I slowed, senses on hyper-alert for any guards. But I was too
overwhelmed with the agony and despair of the stone statues.
A terrible thought came to me. Were lost souls trapped in them? I turned to stare at the one closest to me. With her arms raised and
crossed as if to ward off an attack, her big, frantic eyes pleaded for help. I took a step forward, trying not to register the warped,
twisted body, shriveled with age. It was only a statue, I reminded myself. A grotesque representation of pain and suffering.
Her eyes seemed to follow my every movement. Another step closer. A trickle of sad misery, lined with a faint trace of hope brushed
against my emotional radar.
Shock rooted me to the floor.
A soul resided in that statue.
I reached out, determined to soothe the suffering being. I couldn’t do much, but I could send her a little bit of comfort. Just as my
hand brushed the icy surface of the statue, Kane jumped back, knocking me sideways.
“Ouch.” I cradled my dead-weight arm. He’d hit me hard enough and in just the right spot that I’d been rendered temporarily
paralyzed.
“Sorry.” He pulled me close. “I think it’s a bad idea to touch anything you don’t have to.”
“But someone’s trapped in there.”
He turned to inspect the grotesque being, a look of horror transforming over his features. “Oh, no. Not again.” He maneuvered me
farther from it. “Not only am I not letting you get involved, but we don’t have time for this. Meri’s chamber is just ahead. Let’s go.”
I gave the statue one last look and followed Kane. It killed me to not do something for anyone suffering. But what was I going to do?
Make it my mission to free everyone trapped in Hell? What if they belonged there? I shook my head, trying to dislodge the thoughts.
We had work to do.
As soon as we rounded the corner, I knew we were in the right place. Withered oak trees lined the stone wall in an eerily familiar
formation. I squinted, imagining them hearty and full of life. Yes, I recognized these trees; they were the same ones near our coven
circle. I touched the wall, and a faint trace of Dan’s distinct energy reached me.
I squeezed Kane’s hand, hard, and nodded to the stone door. “He’s here.”
We both stared at the smooth surface. No handle. No lock. No obvious way to open it. Mom had warned us we’d need a spell to get
in.
“Can you send energy toward Dan?” Kane asked. “Maybe he’ll realize you’re out here and open the door himself.”
“No. You forget most people can’t feel my energy.” Kane could, but he was a dreamwalker and, for some reason, had always been
able to sense me. Dan didn’t have such abilities. “Besides, I think the spell is needed to open the door from either side.”
“Right.” He ran a frustrated hand through his sweat-soaked dark hair. “Damn it, Jade, the spell is too dangerous. You’re too weak
after our encounter with Meri. We should find another way.”
I sighed. “I’m out of options. Would you prefer I run back to the battle with Meri? Either way, I’m taking a risk. At least if I try this, we
have a shot.”
A muscle in Kane’s jaw twitched as he bit back a reply. Despite his obvious reluctance, he stepped aside, making room for me to
cast the spell.
My mother’s soft voice rang in my mind. Words she said she’d never forget—Meri’s personal signature. The incantation that would
open the door if I managed to infuse enough magic into them.
Where freedom’s lost and dreams turn to nightmares.
Through this door lies a path to despair.
Hopeless. Destructive. Comfortable.
Open to an existence where disappointment ceases to exist.
I said the words over and over in my head, letting my magic build one layer at a time. The spark was faint, but it was still there. With
the mental chant, my body grew hot with the kindled magic, forming a different sensation than I was used to.
Panic shot through me. Was I using black magic? I raised my hands, inspecting my fingers. The last time I’d tapped into darkness,
they’d turned black. Here in Hell, I noticed nothing except the extreme change in temperature.
Meri’s depressing mantra flashed through my mind one last time. I pressed my palms to the stone. Around my flesh, the door
glowed bright orange. The magic spread in a spider web formation across the wide plane. A low rumble sounded from within. The
magic popped and crackled as if it were live fire. I stepped back, colliding with Kane. His arms circled my waist steadying me. We
both stared.
“Holy shit,” I said under my breath.
Kane’s grip tightened as the door slowly moved.
The magic faded away, and finally the door stood three-quarters of the way open.
I carefully disentangled myself from Kane’s grasp and moved toward the chamber.
My heart hammered, and I barely breathed. Please let Dan be all right. Taking one last frightening step, I scooted into the massive
room.
The opulence stopped me in my tracks. The space was nothing like the run-down ruins of the tunnels we’d been working our way
through. Pale pink silks lined the walls. A lush, thick white carpet lay beneath satin settees and mahogany wood bookcases. I
spared one absurd brief thought for the springiness of the carpet. Where exactly did one shop for finer goods in Hell? A silver tea
set sat near an armchair, steam streaming from the top of the pot.
The same one I’d dreamed about!
I turned to Kane and let out a gasp of surprise.
Right behind him stood Meri, her eyes pinched in anger. “How dare you defile my space!”
Kane spun and backed up as if to shield me.
“Give us Dan and we’ll leave,” I bargained and moved to Kane’s side, knowing our departure would never be that easy.
She snapped her fingers, and her door started to rumble again. Only this time it closed.
I swallowed the ‘no’ forming in my throat. Pleading with her would make me appear weak. We couldn’t leave anyway. Not without
Dan and the ruby.
Meri advanced on us, desperate anger streaming from her.
Desperate? What did she want, Philip? He was her mate.
And what happened to him during their battle? Jesus, we were in deep now.
I moved, dodging Meri’s blow.
Another surprise. Instead of following me, she beelined her way toward a narrow door at the end of her chamber. Kane grabbed my
arm and tucked me once again beside him.
Getting out in a hurry after we found Dan wasn’t going to be easy. I
racked my memory for a banishing spell or some way to magic ourselves back to our reality. Nothing miraculously materialized in
my tired brain.
Meri flung the second door open and came face to face with Dan.
His eyebrows shot up as surprise registered over his expression. “That was fast,” he said.
She grabbed him, clinging to his frame.
“What happened?” he asked, stroking her hair.
I gasped. Was he possessed again? Had Meri found a way to corrupt him? “Dan?”
He jerked back and stiffened.
Meri released her hold and turned. She stood in front of Dan exactly the same way Kane had earlier while protecting me. She didn’t
say anything, though. She just eyed me with those deep, almost black eyes.
Dan shifted to stand at her side, pushing his tousled brown hair back with one hand. “Jade, what are you doing here?”
“Saving your ass, you idiot. What are you doing?” I gestured to the demon beside him. “Have you lost your mind?”
“Jade,” Kane warned under his breath.
I glanced at my boyfriend, sending him a you’ve-got-to-be-kidding-me look. We risked our lives to save Dan’s sorry butt from Hell.
Who knows what happened to Philip and Lailah? And he was lounging in Princess Demon’s silk-filled dungeon. Drinking tea.
Dan’s pale green eyes narrowed. He held his emotions in tight control, but I thought I sensed a faint trace of weariness. “Surviving.”
“Not anymore,” I said. “Today you’re coming home with me.”
“No!” Life seemed to come alive in Meri. Flinging her arms out, she reached for more power, but it fizzled after a few short sparks.
She stared at her hands for a moment, frustration streaming off her. Odd, she didn’t seem at all surprised her magic failed her. Was
she still recovering from our battle a week ago? Abandoning Dan, she barreled into me.
I landed hard on my side. My bones screamed in protest, despite the previously believed cushy carpeting. We grappled, each trying
our best to get the upper hand. Nails scraped down my arm. I bit back a cry and rammed my elbow into her bicep. She grunted and
lunged for me.
“Get what we came for,” I yelled at Kane and then choked on a mouthful of Meri’s long black hair. Still battling her incredible grip on
my arms, I met Kane’s eyes. He glanced at Dan and raised his eyebrows.
I quickly shook my head. We needed the ruby first. Then we could figure out how to make a break for it.
While Dan stood, mouth open, staring at us, Kane slipped into the smaller room.
Please, please, please let this stone be easy to find.
I twisted my wrist, trying to dislodge from Meri’s grip. Unsuccessful, I tried to yank my arm back, but she was quicker. With a barely
detectable thread of magic, Meri slammed me against the floor.
I grunted and swallowed a cry of distress. Kane would never ignore something like that. And I needed him to find that ruby.
“Meri, stop!” Dan demanded and then reached down to pull her away from me.
The demon’s eyes lightened to clear gray. A barely contained calm settled over her as she worked hard to let go of what I could
have sworn was fear.
Why in the world would she fear any of us? And why was she listening to Dan?
What in the mighty name of the devil was going on here? I opened my mouth, couldn’t get the words out, swallowed, and tried again.
“Dan? Are you and Meri…?”
The demon glanced up at Dan expectantly.
What the F? Meri was waiting for the answer to my unasked question. The pit in my gut grew heavier.
“We’re friends…” His voice trailed off. He stared at Meri, pale green eyes searching hers.
My stomach turned. “Dan! She’s a demon.”
“You don’t understand,” he shot back.
“Of course I don’t understand. She abducted my mother, possessed you and Lailah, and hurt Kane. She’s an evil, energy-sucking,
ruthless demon!”
Kane emerged from the other room, slipping unnoticed past Meri and Dan, who’d been staring at me. He pressed against the far
wall, leaning as if he’d been present the whole time. He barely tilted his head in a confirmation. He had what he needed.
“Not anymore,” Dan said quietly.
Meri gazed at him, something close to adoration streaming off her.
I was going to be sick.
The stone door started to rumble again. Meri sprung into action, pushing Dan back into the adjoining room. She tried to close him
in, but she was too late. Philip and Lailah barged into Meri’s quarters, covered in soot and demon blood.
Meri bolted forward and then froze, saying and doing nothing.
“We have to find a way out of here,” I yelled and ran to Kane’s side. “Get Dan,” I whispered.
He took two steps, but Dan materialized on his own.
“Got what you need, Jade?” Philip asked, scanning the room until his gaze landed on his son.
“Now we do.” I reached for Kane’s hand.
Lailah started a chant I recognized as Latin. Her magic quickly built into a small white globe floating in front of her. Philip added a
second chant.
His voice snapped Meri out of her trance. “Philip?” she asked, a quaver in her tone.
I thought he might ignore her, but with his sad gaze locked tight on her hers, he gave her the smallest of nods.
Tears rolled down her angular face. “You came,” she choked out. “You finally came.”
“Yeah,” Philip said in a flat voice, void of emotion. “I’m here for my son.”
Lailah’s orb took off around the room. The iridescent light briefly touched each of our chests before zooming back to Lailah. At the
last second, Meri stepped in its path, causing the orb to barely graze her shoulder. She hissed and jumped back.
“Bind us to the earth,” Lailah cried. “Take us where death does not live!”
A soft tingle spread through my center, warm and comfortable. Then every nerve ending screamed in agony. My soul stretched and
struggled to not shatter beneath the force of whatever was trying to eat me from within.
The world around me spun, making me nauseated. A blur of color, starting with reds and eventually filtering to blue and green, filled
my vision. Wind kicked up around me as I twisted, trying to crawl out of my skin. I squeezed my eyes shut and reached for Kane’s
hand again.
Only it wasn’t his. I had someone else’s smaller, more delicate hand. I didn’t care. I just needed to hold on to someone. Suddenly the
nausea and pain vanished, and I found myself lying breathless in a green meadow, bordered with vibrant marigolds.
No, not a meadow. Bea’s backyard.
The fingers still clutched in mine twitched. I glanced over and snatched my hand back in horror.
Meri.
Demons of Bourbon Street
Deanna Chase's books
- A Betrayal in Winter
- A Bloody London Sunset
- A Clash of Honor
- A Dance of Blades
- A Dance of Cloaks
- A Dawn of Dragonfire
- A Day of Dragon Blood
- A Feast of Dragons
- A Hidden Witch
- A Highland Werewolf Wedding
- A March of Kings
- A Mischief in the Woodwork
- A Modern Witch
- A Night of Dragon Wings
- A Princess of Landover
- A Quest of Heroes
- A Reckless Witch
- A Shore Too Far
- A Soul for Vengeance
- A Symphony of Cicadas
- A Tale of Two Goblins
- A Thief in the Night
- A World Apart The Jake Thomas Trilogy
- Accidentally_.Evil
- Adept (The Essence Gate War, Book 1)
- Alanna The First Adventure
- Alex Van Helsing The Triumph of Death
- Alex Van Helsing Voice of the Undead
- Alone The Girl in the Box
- Amaranth
- Angel Falling Softly
- Angelopolis A Novel
- Apollyon The Fourth Covenant Novel
- Arcadia Burns
- Armored Hearts
- As Twilight Falls
- Ascendancy of the Last
- Asgoleth the Warrior
- Attica
- Avenger (A Halflings Novel)
- Awakened (Vampire Awakenings)
- Awakening the Fire
- Balance (The Divine Book One)
- Becoming Sarah
- Before (The Sensitives)
- Belka, Why Don't You Bark
- Betrayal
- Better off Dead A Lucy Hart, Deathdealer
- Between
- Between the Lives
- Beyond Here Lies Nothing
- Bird
- Biting Cold
- Bitterblue
- Black Feathers
- Black Halo
- Black Moon Beginnings
- Blade Song
- Bless The Beauty
- Blind God's Bluff A Billy Fox Novel
- Blood for Wolves
- Blood Moon (Silver Moon, #3)
- Blood of Aenarion
- Blood Past
- Blood Secrets
- Bloodlust
- Blue Violet
- Bonded by Blood
- Bound by Prophecy (Descendants Series)
- Break Out
- Brilliant Devices
- Broken Wings (An Angel Eyes Novel)
- Broods Of Fenrir
- Burden of the Soul
- Burn Bright
- By the Sword
- Cannot Unite (Vampire Assassin League)
- Caradoc of the North Wind
- Cast into Doubt
- Cause of Death: Unnatural
- Celestial Beginnings (Nephilim Series)
- City of Ruins
- Club Dead
- Complete El Borak
- Conspiracies (Mercedes Lackey)
- Cursed Bones
- That Which Bites
- Damned
- Damon
- Dark Magic (The Chronicles of Arandal)
- Dark of the Moon
- Dark_Serpent
- Dark Wolf (Spirit Wild)
- Darker (Alexa O'Brien Huntress Book 6)
- Darkness Haunts
- Dead Ever After
- Dead Man's Deal The Asylum Tales
- Dead on the Delta
- Death Magic
- Deceived By the Others