Never had she fought with anyone who moved like Naasir. She wanted to do it again, wanted to watch his eyes flash in the darkness and that slow, dangerous smile wreath his face as he took open pleasure in the dance. There was something fascinating about the vampire who was not a vampire . . . fascinating and dangerous.
Andromeda wanted to escape for many reasons, but chief among them was the driving compulsion to dance with him again, to fly too close to the flame that, for the first time in her existence, made her question the rigid control and sensual discipline that defined her.
A vow of celibacy was easy to hold when there was no temptation.
8
Elena winced as she continued to hold the hover off the Tower roof, her mind going over her earlier conversation with a coldly furious Raphael.
“If Lijuan succeeds in tracking down and killing Alexander, it’ll fracture angelkind at the core. In all our millennia of existence, such a crime has never been committed.”
Elena didn’t need her archangel to tell her that the fracture would lead to chaos and all-out war. Some would follow in Lijuan’s twisted footsteps, while others would battle against it. Hundreds of thousands—millions—of mortals and immortals both would die, the world forever scarred.
“Stupid Cascade,” she muttered on a huff of breath, sweat pasting her T-shirt to her skin.
“Did you say something, Ellie?” Aodhan asked from beside her, his mist-pale and diamond-bright hair glittering like faceted gemstones in the afternoon sunlight, and his extraordinary eyes of blue and green shards shattered outward from the pupil, afire.
Next to him, Elena’s own near-white hair was nothing out of the ordinary.
“Cursing the Cascade,” she got out, her muscles straining. “Shit—I think I’m at my limit.” She dropped down to the closest balcony. “How did I do?” she asked when Aodhan landed beside her.
His feathers caught the light, sending bright sparks in every direction.
“Two minutes longer than in our last test.” Aodhan, his body having healed fully from his grievous battle injuries, pushed back the sleeves of his shirt. “You passed.”
“I feel like I did on my first day at Guild Academy.” Stretching out her stiff muscles, she took a seat on the edge of the balcony. “I need to get stronger.” War boiled on the horizon—if not this year, then soon, and she had to be strong enough to fight at Raphael’s side.
Aodhan took a seat next to her, his wings carefully folded to ensure they wouldn’t touch hers. “There are some things you can’t control. Like a child who grows to his adult strength, you have to grow into your immortality.”
Elena knew that. It infuriated her. Taking out a throwing blade she’d honed to a deadly edge, she played it over and through her fingers in an effort to channel her frustration, and looked out at the city that no longer bore any scars of battle. It had taken brutally hard work to achieve that, but as the center of Raphael’s territory, New York had to show an undaunted face to the world.
“I’m worried about Naasir.” Alone, he was a ghost no one could catch, but if all went well, he wouldn’t be alone on his way out. He’d be shepherding a scholar. It didn’t matter if the scholar had warrior training—no one, and Elena included herself among that number, could move with as much stealth as the silver-eyed maybe-vampire who refused to tell her his origins, and who’d dug his way into her heart.
“I’ve learned never to underestimate him.” Aodhan leaned forward, his forearms braced on his thighs and his gaze on the waters of the East River, the Hudson not visible from their current position. “Have you noticed the changes in Illium?”
“Hard to miss.” The blue-winged angel’s power had escalated in the months after the battle, until it burned in the gold of his eyes and pulsed in his skin.