The Wondrous and the Wicked (38 page)

But his wistful grin couldn’t withstand the stench of Axia’s hellhounds. They greeted Grayson and Ingrid in front of the stairwell.

Wind from the elevation whipped at Grayson’s coat and trousers, batting his hair back and forth into his eyes. With one hand still clutching Ingrid’s arm, he reached into his trouser pocket and closed his fingers around the needle and syringe. The glass barrel had gone cold.

Ingrid tensed under his hand. He felt her nerves and his as a bubbly sensation in his chest, heard the change in her breathing. When this was all over, Grayson intended to make up for lost time with his sister. Walking so close beside her as the hellhounds led them to the outer rim of the platform, along the promenade, felt natural. For the first time in a long time, he didn’t feel so alone.

Marco appeared on the promenade railing, but the gargoyle made no attempt to rip into the hellhounds. Not yet, at least. That would change within a minute or two, Grayson figured.

“You have come to me to strike an accord, Ingrid Waverly?” Axia’s silky voice preceded her hooded figure, which emerged from the curve along the gallery walkway ahead. The sun had slipped beneath the horizon, and the smoke from the fires raging unchecked around the city consumed whatever light dusk usually granted. Below, the spectacle continued, the esplanade having filled with more Alliance and gargoyles.

“I’ll give you back your angel blood.” Ingrid’s hand opened to present a glass vial she must have been clutching the entire climb. Her arm trembled and her voice lacked confidence. Good. Axia would prefer it that way.

“Take it. There is more. If you cease these attacks, it’s yours. If you do not, it will be used against you,” Ingrid said.

Axia had not pushed back her hood, but if the lazy sway of her robes was any indication of her expression, she was not intimidated.

“I believe you do have my blood, though not within your
veins,” the fallen angel said. Ingrid shifted uneasily under Grayson’s hand.

“Of course it is in my veins.”

Like Grayson had already considered: an awful actress.

“It is not. And since it is not and that small chalice you present to me now is but a token of your false greeting, I have but one last offer to make you,” Axia said, finished playing the game Ingrid was so clearly losing.

He felt his sister shudder. “I want nothing from you.”

“The world is going to burn, Ingrid Waverly. However, pledge your fealty to me here, now, and you will know only safety.”

It was time.

Grayson released Ingrid’s arm and stepped toward Axia. It was a carefully measured step, one that would not alarm the two hellhounds at the fallen angel’s side. His twin, however, lurched forward, attempting to hold him back. He jerked his arm out of her feeble grasp and dropped to one knee before Axia’s rippling blue robe.

“Your brother has already made his accord with me.”

“No … no, he hasn’t,” Ingrid said, though Grayson detected her uncertainty as he bowed his head before Axia. A show of devotion. Of fealty.

His stomach in knots, Grayson waited. And then Axia gave him exactly what he needed. She extended her hand and touched him on the shoulder. He moved slowly, clasping his free hand over hers. Her hand was hidden, once again, within her robe, but the fabric was thin. It would be easy to pierce.

“Grayson, stop!” Ingrid shouted.

Axia began to laugh. She would be distracted, at least for a second. Grayson started to pull the syringe from his pocket. Marco, his talons scraping the high metal railing of the promenade as he grew restless, screeched. Damn it.

Grayson felt Axia’s hand tense; start to pull away. The edges of her robe began to glow, golden light seeping out from the hem,
from the two panels crossed and bound by a rope belt. The iron floor quaked as Marco slammed onto it, felled, Grayson knew, by Axia’s power. He had to do it now.

Grayson moved fast. He clenched his fingers around Axia’s hand, drew out the needle, and, holding her firm, stabbed at her arm. He felt resistance as the needle sank into her flesh. Grayson pressed the plunger hard, emptying as much of the mersian blood as he could before she, or her hounds, could stop him. But in the next second, Grayson toppled forward. Axia had vanished, the needle ripped out of his hand.

Marco roared as he surged up, freed by Axia’s momentary loss of control. Grayson flattened himself to the grime-covered floor as the gargoyle skimmed overhead, his target now standing deeper within the tower. Grayson watched as a second Axia appeared to the left of Marco, then a third to his right; the one Marco had been going for was quickly fading. Ingrid had tried to warn him that Axia was fast, but not that she could make copies of herself.

“Grayson!” Ingrid shouted. He pushed himself to his feet and saw that a hellhound had backed Ingrid up against a support beam.

“Get away from her!” Grayson shouted as Axia’s copies appeared in a dizzying circle around him.

Marco chased the fallen angel, his talons slicing through mist instead of flesh. The gargoyle roared his frustration, his wings cutting dangerously close to Grayson as he swerved after Axia.

The hellhound cornering Ingrid turned its head toward Grayson, its red lantern eyes narrowing. The beast turned its body and came at him. But then a black-scaled gargoyle with only one wing appeared out of nowhere, colliding with the hound and sending the beast off course. The hound recovered and pushed back at the one-winged gargoyle, blocking Grayson from reaching Ingrid’s side once again. Behind him, Marco shrieked. As Grayson turned, he saw that one of the other hellhounds had
raked its claws through his wing, snagging on one of the bony ridges.

Grayson was noticing that every last Axia had faded when the third hellhound rammed into him—and a shock of brutal pain tore through his stomach. He heard Ingrid’s scream at the same second he saw the hellhound’s fang protruding from his abdomen.

Grayson knew he was going to die before his feet left the floor. Before the hellhound, its hot breath gusting against his back, bounded toward the railing. And then they were over it, out into the air, falling, Grayson slipping off of the beast’s long fang. Ingrid screamed his name as the wind took him, the ground rushing up at a mesmerizing speed. He had seconds, he knew. Seconds to say a final prayer that he’d made a difference tonight.

Grayson closed his eyes, ready.

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

L
uc caught Ingrid around the waist as her frenzied screams for Grayson grated through his skull. He shrieked for Marco to follow, and with one last lash of his tail toward the hellhound he’d been battling, launched himself over the railing. His single wing hadn’t been strong enough to beat his way up to the second level—he’d had to climb the stairwell set alongside the tracks for the lift—and it wasn’t able to glide them safely to the ground now, either.

Marco’s talons clamped around the bony wing stump and leveled out Luc’s twirling fall. The Wolf guided them to the ground, Ingrid still screaming her brother’s name.

Grayson had hit a few yards from where Luc and Marco touched down. Luc spun around and unfurled his wing, wanting to shield Ingrid from the sight that had just cleaved through Luc like a dull axe.

“Don’t look,” he said, though his vocal cords mangled the words. Had Ingrid understood them, she wouldn’t have obeyed.
She writhed in Luc’s grasp and he let her go, not wanting his talons to accidentally slide along her arms in his attempt to hold her still.

She jerked out to the side, beyond his wing—and saw.

Ingrid fell forward, one arm braced across her stomach as her face crumpled, her mouth opening to a silent scream. Luc couldn’t protect her, not from this. He could do nothing more than stand beside her as she stumbled to her brother’s broken body, his arms and legs splayed at odd angles, his head turned toward Ingrid’s approach. His eyes were open and empty, and Ingrid crashed onto her knees at his side. She dug the heels of her palms into her temples, drew in a breath of air, and screamed.

Marco doubled over as her wail echoed across the Champs de Mars, her anguish cutting through the Wolf.

Luc knew this pain. He’d experienced it the wintry day Suzette’s body had been delivered home, her soaked dress frozen stiff, her skin the color of ash. He’d clung to her rigid body as his parents had dissolved into shouts and sobs, the men who’d dragged her out of the Seine muttering useless apologies. Luc had rocked her, shook her, railed at her to wake up just as Ingrid was now screaming at Grayson to not be dead.

Her high, keening wail had paralyzed those in battle nearby on the esplanade, though only for a moment. The Dusters, having been released from Axia’s spell, had merged back into their huddles. A new influx of Alliance fighters and Dispossessed continued to clash with the demons—gaining ground in their direction, Luc noted. They had to move, and he knew he’d have to drag Ingrid away from Grayson’s side.

“Such a pity.”

Axia’s bellowing voice split through the battle, as clear and powerful as a bell. Luc couldn’t see her, but in the next second, he felt her. The familiar weight of an angel’s presence drove Luc and Marco and all gargoyles on the ground to their knees. The Dispossessed churning in the sky over the Champs de Mars plunged toward the earth.

Though the all-out battle slowed, the Alliance and demons continued to clash in intermittent bursts. A light started to brighten near the fountains of the Château d’Eau, and Luc heard a strange humming sound. The growls of hellhounds and the clicking of Drainer wings were closer, though. Stuck like this, Luc and the other gargoyles would be at the mercy of whatever demon wished to tear into them.

“I grow weary of this resistance,” Axia said, and straining to crane his neck, Luc saw her gliding down the center of the esplanade. She had pushed back her hood, and though he couldn’t look directly at her, he saw that she had changed from what she’d been in the Underneath. Her body had become more human. “You have all been so accommodating,” she went on, “to come here and allow me to extinguish it.”

She glowed, though not like Irindi, whose figure was always completely hidden within her shuddering ball of white light. Axia merely shimmered, as if she had conjured stage lights to hover over her. Her hellhound guards, still at her sides, enclosed her like two granite walls. Vander needed a better shot than that.

The strange humming sound had grown steadily louder, and Luc realized Ingrid had ceased screaming. She’d ceased sobbing. He curled around to see her. Ingrid no longer knelt beside Grayson’s body. She stood beside it, facing up the esplanade. Her arms hung limply at her side, her chin tucked into her neck, her wrathful eyes locked on Axia.

Ingrid wasn’t breathing. She didn’t need air. She didn’t need anything but vengeance, hot, ruthless, and swift. When she had seen her twin lying still on the cold ground, something deep inside her had splintered off. A part of her that she would never get back. It had belonged to Grayson, and he had taken it with him.

He was dead. He was
gone.
The pain was too much, too uncontrollable, to be real.

Ingrid glared up the esplanade, her gaze unwavering as Axia drew to a halt. Grayson had stuck Axia with one of Vander’s needles, injected her with mersian blood. It had been his plan, the one he’d asked her to trust blindly. He’d meant to cancel out the angel’s severix powers and failed. Ingrid felt the last echoes of his sorrow, his disappointment. One final shared emotion.

And then Ingrid started to shake. Her body trembled. Not with cold or fury or shock, but with something else. Something much more useful. Behind the fallen angel, the lights inside the Palace of Electricity had brightened. Hugh Dupuis had done it. The generators inside had hummed to life, and inside Ingrid, her lectrux blood flared.

“Your brother could have been magnificent,” Axia said, her voice ringing out crisp and clear even as Alliance fighters and Underneath creatures continued to clash and the gargoyles, pinned to the ground, shrieked in frustration.

Ingrid moved forward, burning beneath her skin. The current rolled and twisted, licking down her arms and up again, curling past her shoulders. Whether because of natural depletion, grief, or the newly churning power underneath the Palace of Electricity’s glass ceiling, Vander’s mersian blood no longer held sway. The electricity fanned out into her chest, coursing down her spine into her legs. This was her fury, raw and untamed.

As Ingrid continued up the esplanade, lights began popping on inside the exhibition buildings. The electrical charge in the air notched, and Ingrid reached for it. She breathed it in. Gathered it close.

One of Axia’s hounds grew restless and lunged. Ingrid didn’t flinch. She simply held out her hand. Vines of electricity intercepted the beast and sent it sprawling backward. It had been so easy, so effortless, and Ingrid glided on toward Axia, her steps deliberate and controlled.

“You attempt to challenge
me
, Ingrid Waverly?” Axia threw her voice along the esplanade, where the subdued gargoyles all
suddenly shot to their feet. No sooner had they lifted their wings for flight than they came crashing down again.

A weakness in Axia’s control. A ripple in her concentration.

The electric current had dammed up in Ingrid’s throat, and she couldn’t speak. She knew that at any moment Axia could reinstate her control over the Dusters—and that she herself was no longer safe from it.

“You believe your demon blood can best my own?” The fallen angel threw her arms up, her palms facing out—a signal for the rest of her demons to hold off. “I accept the challenge. My blood against yours. When I am finished, I will weed you out.”

Ingrid kept her concentration on the lights brightening the exhibition halls and on the fountainheads, now turned on and jetting water. Behind her, Ingrid felt the charge of thousands of lightbulbs as they winked on along the tower.

She held her arms out at her sides—
pulled
—and threw her arms forward. Lightning cracked from her fingertips with a blinding flash. But Axia had cast herself aside, leaving behind a fade, unscathed. The gargoyles rose and fell as the fallen angel’s attention slipped, then strengthened. Her wild laughter came from a few yards to the left.

Other books

All the Way by Jordin Tootoo
The Persian Boy by Mary Renault
The Scrapbook by Carly Holmes
Wed to the Witness by Karen Hughes
Las muertas by Jorge Ibargüengoitia
The Secret Speech by Tom Rob Smith
A Gift of Grace by Amy Clipston
The Sky Below by Stacey D'Erasmo