Raphael had broken a vampire not long ago—punishment for disloyalty. He"d snapped Germaine"s bones, each with a single move of his hands. It had been a brutal penalty, one Germaine would remember for the rest of his existence, but Raphael had taken no pleasure in it.
Noel"s attackers had most assuredly taken pleasure in what they"d done, continuing to savage him far beyond the point of sending a message. The brand lay a malignant cancer over the flesh of his breastbone, but their healer, Keir, had also found boot imprints on his back, his face. The dagger hadn"t been the sole thing they"d left inside the vampire, either. Shards of glass had been shoved deep into his wounds, where his flesh would grow over them. He"d been battered in other ways, too, his body assaulted by something that had cut and torn. The only mercy was it appeared to have been done after he lost consciousness.
Raphael would"ve liked to be absolutely certain that he wasn"t capable of such meaningless viciousness, but part of him wasn"t so sure. Nadiel, too, had once been considered the greatest of archangels.
However, one thing was certain—Raphael would not countenance the slaughter and torture of his people. “Who did this to you?” he asked.
The vampire"s good eye remained dull. He"d survive, but whether his mind would be the same .
. . “I don"t know.” The answer was surprisingly clear, so clear that Raphael revised his opinion of Noel"s chances of a true recovery. “Was jumped.”
“You"re not young,” Raphael said, having gotten Noel"s history from Dmitri. It seemed the vampire was a trusted member of the team that operated below the Seven, a man Dmitri had been planning to bring to Raphael"s attention for his intelligence and loyalty. “You shouldn"t have been so easily taken.”
“More than one. Wings. Heard wings.”
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Raphael had executed an archangel. He felt no compunction in taking out an angel who sought to make his name by brutalizing those who looked to Raphael. “Markings?”
“I couldn"t see.” His good eye shifted toward Raphael. “They took my eyes when the beating started.”
The dullness of the vampire"s gaze suddenly made sense. The eye hadn"t been left undamaged after all—it had simply begun to regenerate before its mate. “Did you sense anything about your attackers?”
“They said I was a message from Elijah.” A cough rasping out of his chest.
Raphael called no archangel friend, but he didn"t call Elijah an enemy either. “Male or female?”
“I was half insane by then.” Flat words. “To me it sounded like pure evil. But at least one of them got off on the pain. While they were branding me . . . someone laughed and laughed and laughed.”
Elena was on her way back to shower and change from the training session with Dmitri when something cut through the air with a chilling whistle. She hit the ground hard, smashing one elbow on the stone paving and scraping the palm of her other hand. Her wings escaped damage, but only because she"d remembered to fall to her side. The payoff would be a giant bruise on her left flank, a bone-deep pain in her arm.
She lifted her head with hunter cautiousness the instant after she hit the earth, knowing she"d be a sitting duck if she didn"t move. Sensing nothing, she made the decision to rise to her feet. Even then, all she heard was silence; this part of Raphael"s territory was filled with trees that seemed to thrive on the crisp mountain air, no angelic residences within a hundred feet.
Wondering if she"d just given herself a good hard whack for no reason, she began to turn in a slow circle. That whistling noise, it had sounded so much like—Her eye fell on the hilt of a throwing knife still quivering as it lay embedded in the trunk of a tree directly in line with where she"d been standing. Limping over on a slightly twisted ankle, she took a sniff of the knife before touching it.
Fur and diamonds and all things good girls shouldn"t want.
“Goddamn vampire.” She was so annoyed at herself for having missed him shadowing her that it took her two attempts to pull off the piece of paper wrapped around the hilt and secured with a rubber band.
The message was written in a strong masculine hand, flowing bold and dark.
This is not a Refuge for you. You’re prey. Don’t forget.
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IX
Raphael watched Elena walk in, her hand shredded, her foot dragging, and wondered if he"d have to kill the leader of his Seven after all.
“I get to kill him,” she said, collapsing on a sofa in their living area. “And I plan to enjoy every minute of it.”
Assessing the bloodthirsty expression on her face, he decided he"d leave Dmitri to her. “Does your foot need looking at?”
“It seems to be fixing itself up real fast.” A questioning glance. “My ability to heal has been accelerated?”
“To an extent. Simple scratches and sprains will fade within the day, but, given your recent transition, breaks will still take weeks.”
“Better than months.” She ran her uninjured hand over her face. “I figured you were busy doing archangel stuff.”