Soul Screamers, Volume 1

Was he telling the truth?

Horror drew my hands into fists so tight my fingernails cut into my flesh. If I fled the Netherworld to save myself, there would be no one left to suspend Addy’s and Regan’s souls once the hellion released them, so Nash could guide them back into the proper bodies. But if I stayed to help them, I would die.

Unless I sold my soul to Avari.

“Which will it be, little bean sidhe?” The hellion’s faux-sympathetic smile sent a spike of terror through my heart. “Your life, or your friends’? Or your soul?”

“Tod?” I turned on him, silently demanding the truth, keeping the hellion safely in my peripheral vision.

The reaper’s tortured, conflicted expression greeted me. “Kaylee, he’s just trying to buy your soul.”

I knew that, of course. But I also knew Tod would say anything to save Addison’s soul. He would also not say anything with that same goal in mind. “Tell me the truth, Tod. Can I die here?”

The reaper sighed but nodded. “Your expiration date means nothing here. You know, ‘Offer not valid in the Netherworld, the Bermuda Triangle, and various undiscovered warp zones across the globe....’”

I closed my eyes briefly and exhaled. “Awesome, Tod. Thanks for that.” Anger flamed through me, thawing some of the chill Avari’s voice had left in my veins. But it could do nothing to ease the agony clawing its way up my right leg and into my torso. “Thanks for warning me before we crossed over.”

And suddenly I realized. I remembered. “You knew!” He’d almost said something in the car. He’d started to tell me my ankle couldn’t wait. But then he didn’t.

On the edge of my vision, Nash’s hands curled into fists at his sides, and his eyes churned furiously in fear and rage.

“I’m sorry, Kay,” Tod began as Addy and Regan stared at me in horror. “I’m so sorry....”

I turned my back on him, ignoring his silent plea for forgiveness. “If I die, it will be with my soul in my possession,” I said to the hellion, summoning every ounce of that fortitude he’d mentioned. “It will never be yours.” I paused, as cold, treacherous anger flowed swiftly over the demon’s face. “Got that, Tod?”

“I got it,” he whispered from behind me. He would take my soul if I died, to keep it from the demon. It was the least he owed me. That, and a few tears spilled over my grave…

“So be it, bean sidhe.” Avari’s voice was as still and deadly as an Arctic winter. He turned that toxic hunger on Addison. “What do you offer?”

Addy nodded at Tod, who’d recovered most of his composure. “Your colleague Bana is no longer with us,” the reaper said. “Not in body, anyway.”

The hellion’s expression did not change, but I suffered in silence for several tense moments before he spoke again. “You have Bana’s soul?”

“Yes.” Tod let a slow smile stretch across his face. “She was more than one hundred years old. Her soul has more accumulated energy than both Addison’s and Regan’s combined, and I can personally attest to the quality of that energy.” He patted his stomach, like he’d just eaten a particularly satisfying burger.

Again, Avari betrayed no thought or emotion, and frustration spiked with my pulse. I couldn’t tell if he was even interested in our bait, much less how close we were to a deal.

The entire right side of my body throbbed during Avari’s silence, pain cresting and falling with each beat of my heart. Small, sharp tongues of anguish licked at the base of my spine, replacing the numbing cold with a searing heat. I could almost feel the creeper venom flowing through me, taking over my body one cell at a time, one limb after another.

“No.” Finally the hellion spoke, and I concentrated on his words to distract me from the pain that hunched my back and singed my nerve endings. “Human souls are pure, and particularly innocent are the souls of children.” His gaze seemed to focus on Regan then, though I couldn’t be sure with his eyes hidden. “If you want your souls back, you will offer a fair exchange. That is the agreement you signed.”

Regan moaned, and Addy squeezed her sister’s hand. “Please,” the pop star begged, stepping in front of Regan to block her from the demon’s sight, and vice versa. But the moment the word left her mouth, both Nash and Tod went stiff, and it didn’t take me long to catch on. Addison had just shown the hellion another weak link in our chain, and exactly how to exploit it.

The demon smiled, and the temperature in the room plummeted. My goose bumps grew fatter, and my nose started to run, like I’d caught a cold. I began to shiver, and each small movement sent fresh waves of pain throughout my body, one after the other, cresting in my injured ankle.