Sweet Evil (The Sweet Trilogy #1)

The Four Horsemen began galloping in my belly, turning into a rodeo. I slapped a hand over my mouth and pushed past them, dropping the glass of water that Kopano had given me. Ginger screamed as it splashed up on her. I ran for the bathroom, flinging open the door and falling into the last stall just in time.

One by one I lost each drink, then I flushed the toilet and slid down the wall until I was sitting on the remarkably clean tiled floor, knees up to my chest. Someone else was getting sick at the other end of the bathroom. I leaned down and saw under the stalls that it was the two girls from the bar. The one I’d pressured was heaving and crying while her friend stood behind her. I sat back up and squeezed my eyes shut. After a few minutes they finished, leaving me alone in the restroom.

The room continued to spin, and as the image from that dark utility hall made an appearance, I closed my eyes and fought the urge to be sick again.

I heard a scuffle outside the bathroom, two people arguing, and then the door opened.

“Anna?” Oh, no. “Ann?” My heart compressed with pain at the sound of his voice.

“I’m fine, Kai.” My throat was raspy.

Footsteps echoed off the high ceilings until shiny black shoes showed under my stall door.

“You’re sick. Let me in.”

“No. I’m fine now.”

“Shall I send Marna, then?”

“No. I just want to be alone. Go away in case the spirits come back.”

There was a long pause and I prayed he would hurry and leave, because the emotions I’d kept at bay all night were surfacing. I knew that when they made it to the top I was going to have an ugly, slobbering cry that needed no witnesses. Please don’t say another word....

“You did... well tonight.” The reluctant sentiment in his voice was like a hammer busting me wide open.

“Go,” I said thickly. “I want to be alone. Please just go away!”

There was a weird chanting sound coming from the people outside, and as I strained to listen, still unable to use my extra senses, I realized they were counting down. Cheers erupted and party horns trilled.

“Happy New Year.” His feet turned to leave, and the moment the door clicked shut behind him I dropped my head to my forearms and wept.

“Some rise by sin, and some by virtue fall.”

—William Shakespeare, Measure for Measure

CHAPTER THIRTY

SOME BY VIRTUE FALL

Someone knocked on my apartment door at six thirty the next morning. Six thirty! I shuffled down the hall, unable to stand straight. My stomach was still upset, and my head pounded as I spied my dad through the peephole. I opened the door and he walked right past me, heading for the kitchen.

“Help yourself,” I told him.

“Mornin’ to you, too, grumpy.” He poured himself a glass of tea and threw together a sandwich. I stared, bleary-eyed.

“You got sick last night.”

How could he tell? Did I smell bad? He took a bite, frowning at me.

“I forgot to drink water,” I mumbled.

“Or it could have been the Four Horsemen shot,” he suggested.

“How did you... ?” I began, then figured it out. “You were nearby the whole time!” He nodded. “Well, what was I supposed to do with that spirit breathing down my neck? He said he’d leave me alone if I gave him a show. I couldn’t exactly say no to the shot.”

“Don’t ever give a bartender free rein. Order only what you can handle.”

I sighed and dropped onto the couch, pressing my temples. It was way too early.

“We’ll talk about it on the plane. Get up and get ready. We’re going to New York City.”

Flying first class was nice. Too bad I couldn’t enjoy it. My gut was wrecked and my head was splitting. I chugged water and tried to eat a croissant.

The Dukes had called an emergency summit, and all Nephilim were required to attend. Neph from all over the world had left the night before to begin the trek. My friends were flying in on Pharzuph’s personal jet.

On the way to the airport I’d asked my dad why the Neph had to go. He said Neph were invited to summits only when one of them was in trouble. A strange sense of numbness had crept over me at that point. He’d sent a few of his trusted whisperers out to hunt down information, but all they learned was that a female Nephilim was not working up to par and would be dealt with as a reminder to all. We’d been silent the rest of the way to the airport, but my brain worked overtime.

It was too much of a coincidence that the Dukes would call an emergency meeting hours after I’d been tested. The unyielding tension on my dad’s face told me more than he was willing to say.

“Someone whistled last night,” my father said during the flight. The plane hummed with white noise from the engines. Nobody sat next to us.

“It was Kopano.”

“Did you tell him about that?” he asked.

I bit my lip and shook my head.

“So he listened in on your training.” He sucked air through his front teeth. “Ballsy.”

“You’re not mad?”

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