Hear No (Hidden Evil, #1) (4 page)

Was there something more than stress going on?

 

Chapter Three

 

Amira sat in the corner of her room at the Rosewood Center, eyes on the moonstones that glittered and glowed in the light from the hallway. The steel door and enclosed space didn’t upset her the way she thought it would. She was the last person who thought she deserved to be in a mental health institution.

But this center was special, run by a tenth generation reincarnated angel and his son. They’d been the only people she knew to come to, even if she didn’t tell them who – and what – she really was. Reincarnated angels helped people, and this center was a regional haven for troubled former angels. Scott said she was safer here than she would be anywhere else, and she wasn’t certain who else to trust, aside from other former angels.

A first gen herself, she was new to the aspects of the human world that angels were blind to: avarice, negative emotions, fighting and death.

Evil.

She shivered and looked around again. The moonstones lining the floor of her cell in the mental health ward would’ve been forbidden at any other center, but the owners of this one understood the power of a moonstone - its ability to draw the protection of any guardian angels nearby and repel evil.

Amira rose from her spot on the bed and crossed her small room to sit with her back against the door. She wasn’t able to hear the scrape of a key in the lock or the sound of a code being typed onto a keypad, but she could feel the vibrations of those who walked past her door and anyone who might be opening it. There were no windows in her cell, aside from the one in the door, and her seat directly beneath it was a blind spot to anyone peering in.

No one could sneak up on her here and if someone tried, she’d be able to rely on her other enhanced senses to see them before they got her. She had flawless 20/10 vision, the nose of a bloodhound and an innate empathy towards humans possessed by all first gens that was enhanced by an even more special gift. Unlike other first gens, she retained the ability to channel some of the energy from the Other Side, the way Scott could. She’d already learned she could bypass her lock to open her door at will.

Assured no one was coming, she turned her attention to the reason she’d been allowed to keep some of the abilities she had as an angel.

The velvet dice bag was in her hands. She dumped its contents into her palm and then set the pouch on the floor before her, placing the stones on it. Three were blue, one half green and half blue, and the final one red-orange.

“Where are you?”

She didn’t have to worry about people outside the cell overhearing her. On the initial tour of the facility, the owner’s son, Evan, had told her the rooms were sound proof. Which meant she could talk to herself without people making the shushing motions that indicated she was speaking too loudly. Unable to hear herself, she always seemed to talk too loud.

“I am here.” She picked up one blue rock and set it on her knee. She picked up another one and held it tightly in her hand, closing her eyes to concentrate.

It was one of the stones that didn’t communicate with her. She’d been puzzled about it for almost two months now, since the stones came alive. Three of the five began trying to share their messages. It took her a while to realize that each of the three spoke to one or two of her senses. Was it possible the silent ones made sounds? How was she supposed to find and warn the girls the stones led to, if she couldn’t hear their secrets?

It was the other two light blue ones like hers that hummed with energy but didn’t communicate with her, making her wonder if she was supposed to be able to locate them at all. Was this a safety measure to prevent discovery of the others’ locations through the stones, whose secrets were as old as Creation? The latest in a long line of protectors, Amira found herself praying her predecessor had told her everything there was to know about the stones.

Disappointed, she set the two blue ones aside beside hers. That left two she could read: the two-toned one and the red one that scared her.

“Pestilence, War, Famine,” she repeated, eyes falling to the blue-green stone. She dreaded picking it up. The blue stones were warm, friendly, happy, like the first gen angels they represented. “Death.”

His two-toned stone wasn’t just cold, it sucked the warmth from her. The moment it came alive, her whole world changed. She didn’t understand why half of it was the same color as hers – indicating an angel stone – and the other was the pale yellow green of the horse Death would ride out of Hell to start the Apocalypse.

In all the years since Creation, the stones had allegedly been dormant, according to her predecessor. How was she supposed to know that this era was when the four archdemons of the Apocalypse would make their move?

“I’m failing you,” she said to the three blue stones, heart heavy with the fact she hadn’t understood immediately what it meant when the stones came alive.

A day after they did, four spirit guides – who normally worked their assignments alone – showed up on their doorstep in southern Maryland. Scott had welcomed them, introduced Amira, and sat down for coffee with them.

Zyra.
He’d called the leader of the guides. Zyra was a gorgeous blonde with cold eyes that had seen right through Amira.

They weren’t there for coffee, she recalled darkly. They were his colleagues and friends – there to kill him to get to her.

Scott hid her for a week until the horrible night at the hotel in southeast DC.

Trying not to think about that night, she was unable to prevent the memory of Shadowman from returning. The archdemon was only in spirit form, unable to claim his place as a full archdemon in the human world yet. He was getting stronger, though, if he was able to take a human form.

He was after her to get to the red stone. It would lead him to the portal between Hell and earth where the spirit of the second archdemon – War – could emerge. She didn’t know if he could read the blue stones or not to discover the location of the other girls who held the secrets to the locations of the remaining two archdemons, but she couldn’t take the risk he did. None of the stones could fall into his possession.

She wiped tears from her eyes, still haunted by the sight of her friend and mentor being killed. She hesitated then picked up the green-blue rock.

All her working senses were engaged when she touched this one. It held the location of two, a duality she didn’t yet understand. One was the inside of an apartment, with a TV playing, the scent of autumn spice lotion, and a laptop. It was someone, probably a woman, based on the pink laptop.

The location of the second spirit was starkly different. Soaring overhead, floating over apartment buildings, a forest, a busy highway. She felt the cold of the fall night on her skin, the wind ruffle her hair.

This was Shadowman. If what she’d been told was true, he was trapped in spirit form in the human world, until he found the other three archdemons. When the four of them were together, they’d be able to summon their demon steeds from Hell and unleash the Apocalypse upon the world.

She shivered and set the two–toned stone down.

She left the red stone alone, fearing its secret.

Amira put them all away in the pouch and rested her head against the door.

She needed help. She couldn’t hide forever. Soon, either the bad people tracking her or Shadowman would find her. Soon, she’d have to find the other girls. The first of the four archdemons from the Apocalypse was here. She’d been handed down the ancient secrets of her stones, except for the one that told her how to reverse what Shadowman was trying to do.

Did the other girls know? Was the secret to stopping the archdemons divided among the three guardians of the stones, just like the locations of the remaining three archdemons?

Pestilence. Death. War. Famine.

They were coming, and she had no idea what to do.

Stay alive. Keep the stones safe.

 

 

Chapter Four

 

While unexpected, Nathan wasn’t too surprised to see one of his fellow guides waiting for him at the airport.  He assumed if he was being directed to leave Tucson, he was going to be dealing with a bigger mess than usual.

Maggy was the second most effective guide, whose rating was also ninety-nine percent - above zero instead of below, like Nathan’s. She did everything the right way while Nathan did everything his way. If the Other Side was assigning their top two guides to a mission, it was another sign that something was very wrong.

“Coffee,” Maggy said, handing out the offering.

Nathan took it and began walking, not speaking to her. The tall, attractive brunette drew looks wherever she went. She knew him well enough to know he needed at least one large cappuccino in his system after an all-nighter before he was open to anyone talking to him.

Nathan gave her a sidelong glance. She appeared to be calm and was well put together as usual, but the nervous dart of her eyes gave her away. He didn’t make her wait through his first coffee.

“What’s wrong?” he asked as they reached the relative quiet of the parking garage.

“What makes you think something is wrong?” she asked too casually.

“You put the right amount of sweetener in my coffee. You must want me here for some reason,” he replied. “Unless you called me for some naked reiki?”

A smile crossed Maggy’s face, and he saw the tension ease from her. She chuckled.

“With you?” she asked, winking. “Any time.”

He grunted and opened the car door, dropping into the driver’s seat. There was something comforting about being around someone so familiar. He and Maggy had been a thing off and on for a few hundred years. She knew he needed three pink sweeteners in his cappuccino and that he always drove, even if it was her car. Likewise, he knew when his closest friend was upset and why she was twisting the ring on her finger.

He kept his observations to himself. The sight of nervousness from Maggy – the only woman he knew who could handle just about anything he could – made him concerned.

“How bad?” he asked.

“The worst.”

“Ever?”

“Yeah.”

“Spill.”

She was quiet for a moment. Nathan gave her to the count of ten and focused on guiding the car out of the garage to the loop that circled the Dulles airport.

“We have to find someone,” she started.

“Okay. Incarnated angel or guide?”

“Angel, first gen.”

“Pedro can’t help us?” he asked.

“Well … he can. He has. Sorta.”

“We spent half a year naked together. You’re really going to try to hide something from me?” Nathan challenged.

“That was a long time ago.”

“We still are who we were then. At least, at our cores.”

“Are you?” She peered at him curiously. “You haven’t changed?”

“I told you I’d call you first if I did,” Nathan replied, entertained she still held out for him to change his mind about getting married one day. Their relationship ended twenty years before. They’d barely spoken since, outside of official communications.

What was it with women wanting more from him?

“All right. Anyway, we know where she is. Through back channels, I figured out who she is. The challenge is twofold: we have to break her out first and then we have to keep her under the radar from everyone. As in, even Pedro and the rest of his crew.”

Nathan glanced at her, weighing her words for a long moment. It was nearly impossible to hide from the angel corps as a whole.

“First things first. Break her out of where? Jail?” he asked.

“A mental institution.”

“Interesting. Okay, for how long do we have to hide her?”

“Until we find what’s chasing her,” Maggy replied in a determined tone.

“Start from the beginning.”

Maggy looked at him, surprised.

“I still know when you’re lying,” Nathan said. “Any time you want to stop …”

“Fine.” Maggy sighed. “The angels won’t trust us humans with the information. All I know is that I was charged with recovering a girl, a first gen whose spirit guide got killed.”

“Yeah.” Nathan frowned. “We can’t die, unless a demon takes us out, someone from the Other Side gets rid of us or we blow ourselves up.”

“Usually, yeah. But … this wasn’t a demon.” Maggy shook her head. “I’ll tell you that part later. I just … put that all aside to focus on the mission.”

Nathan wanted to pry more than anything but didn’t. Maggy was highly disciplined, organized and most comfortable when handling things one at a time. With the polar opposite astrological sign – Leo - she didn’t share his adaptability and preferred to follow the rules rather than think outside them.

“I tried twice to get this girl, Nate. You know I can and will break into anywhere, no questions asked. What Pedro didn’t tell me, aside from a whole bunch of other shit, was that we’re not the only ones after her. Something else is here, in Virginia, looking. It followed me both times, so I aborted my missions and went home.”

“Demons?” he asked, intrigued by the unknown.

“I tried to tell Pedro about it, and he said it wasn’t possible. A fallen angel.”

“So, what? We deal with those all the time. Track them down, kill them and send them to Hell.”

“This is a fallen
guardian
angel. The first ever.”

Nathan took this unexpected information in. There was the general angel corps, and there was the guardian angel corps, an elite group of angels who had earned their way to the top by their purity, good deeds and the unwavering belief in the sacredness of humans and life. For one to choose evil over good was unheard of, before this.

“I take it that this fallen angel is currently assigned to a human,” he said, disturbed by the idea of the fallen guardian.

“Exactly. I can’t even find the human,” Maggy said in frustration. “Even if I did, I can’t kill him per protocol, and that’s the only way to free the fallen guardian to send it to Hell.”

“In the meantime, the fallen guardian is able to do what demons can’t.”

“Yep. Go after this first gen. We know she’s important, but Pedro won’t tell us why. He gave me that little laugh and said not to worry, just to save her and keep her safe. But I want to know more, after Scott’s death, so we’re hiding her from the angels, until we figure out what’s so important, a spirit guide got killed for it.”

Other books

Wilde Thing by Janelle Denison
Swan's Way by Weyrich, Becky Lee
The General and the Jaguar by Eileen Welsome
Layers Peeled by Lacey Silks
Tumbleweed by Heather Huffman
Roadwork by Bachman, Richard, King, Stephen
Merline Lovelace by The Colonel's Daughter
A Paradigm of Earth by Candas Jane Dorsey
Amarok by Angela J. Townsend