She deflected the hand he put out to her, and he followed her gaze to the figure propped against the wall a dozen strides from where they stood. Seth. Of course. How could he have forgotten?
“Go,” he said wearily. “He’s injured.”
Alex went.
Alex walked carefully away from Aramael and the keening man by his feet, willing her legs not to give out beneath her. Reinforcements were arriving en masse, heralded by feet pounding down the alleyway, the approach of a siren, the slam of car doors. She shut them out, crouching beside Seth and reaching to touch his cheek.
“Are you okay?”
For a long minute, he didn’t answer. Then, one hand against his ribs and blood trickling down his forehead, he lifted pain-glazed eyes to hers. “I couldn’t stop him. I wasn’t strong en—”
“Shh.” She placed her fingers over his mouth. “It doesn’t matter. I’m fine.”
He twisted his head away from her. Something darker than the pain clouded his face. “Because of him.”
Alex shivered a little at the bitterness underlying the emphasis on him. “He only did what he’s supposed to do.”
“Because I chose to be weak.”
She brushed his blood-matted hair away from the gash over his eyebrow. “You’re not weak,. You’re just mortal.”
He scowled. “There seems little difference at the moment.”
“Christ, Jarvis,” Roberts’s voice growled behind her. “What is it with you and alleys?”
She looked up at him, and his face went white.
“You’re hurt.”
She shook her head. “It’s superficial. But Seth—”
“I’m fine.” Seth made as if to rise, let out a hiss, and subsided, his glower deepening.
“The ambulance is on its way,” said Roberts. “What the hell happened?”
In as few words as she could, Alex summed up finding what she thought had been an injured man, concocted what she hoped was a plausible story about an attack driven by the influence of drugs, and prayed that it would be enough to satisfy the questions she saw in her supervisor’s eyes.
Silence followed her explanation.
“And your face?” Roberts asked at last.
Damn. She’d forgotten that part.
“Glass?” she hazarded. “It happened fast. I’m not sure.”
Roberts looked pointedly around at what had to be the only alley in all of Toronto that didn’t have at least one broken bottle in it. He looked at Seth, then back at her.
“I’ll see where that ambulance is,” he said.
Alex settled onto the dank ground beside Seth. She took his free hand in her own. Neither of them said anything more, and he returned none of her pressure on his fingers.
Chapter 38
“Typical that one of Heaven would leave you in this condition.”
Head throbbing, Seth forced open his eyes against the glare of fluorescent lights. He closed them again when he saw the Fallen One at the foot of his bed in the emergency ward.
“Go away. I’m not interested.”
The Fallen One snorted. “Right. That’s why you’ve been reading those journals so fast. What are you up to now? Four? Five?”
“You know damned well it’s seven, because you deliver them as fast as I read them.”
“Just trying to be helpful.” The Fallen One dropped into the chair beside the bed. “So that was quite a performance our Aramael put on for his lady friend. Very impressive. Nothing like having a big, strong Archangel around to save you when your mere mortal partner is too weak to do so.”
Seth’s fingers clamped onto the bedcovers.
“Of course, it didn’t have to be that way,” the Fallen One added. “If you’d taken back your powers—”
“I could have saved her myself. I get that,” Seth snarled, jerking his head around to look at his visitor. Pain shafted through his skull. He inhaled sharply, and another jolt streaked across his ribs. He let his breath out in a slow hiss. “I know I could protect her better if I had my powers. But for what? So I can give her up and return to Heaven? I told you, I’m not interested.”
“Is that what you think?” The Fallen One propped his feet on the edge of the bed and tipped the chair back onto two legs. “Seth, Seth, Seth. You disappoint me. It’s not Heaven I want you in, it’s Hell.”
“My father wants—?”
“Lucifer has nothing to do with this.”
Seth stared at him, and then snorted. “You want to take on the Light-bearer? You’re not anywhere near strong enough.”
“No. But you are. Or could be.”
Shuddering, Seth remembered his short-lived attempt to stand up to his father in a Vancouver alley, when Lucifer had knocked him aside with less effort than he might have expended on a fly. “You overestimate my ability—and underestimate his. Even if I were interested, which I’m not, I wouldn’t stand a chance.”
“You would with my help.”
Seth stared at the booted feet beside him. The Fallen One’s proposal was ludicrous. Seth didn’t have so much as the slightest interest in it. And yet, instead of telling his visitor to go straight back to whence he’d come, he found himself asking another question.
“You and what army?” he asked. “The Fallen are aligned with him.”
“They wouldn’t be if they knew he planned to sacrifice them.” The Fallen One dropped his feet to the floor and leaned forward. His voice became grim. “Lucifer’s obsession with wiping out humanity has taken over. He doesn’t care if Hell and all its occupants are destroyed in the process. He doesn’t care if he is destroyed in the process. If the Fallen knew—”
“Then why not tell them?”
“Because there would be a thousand would-be rulers vying for control. The infighting would destroy us as surely as Lucifer’s lack of interest will.”
“You could rule yourself.”
“I might have been an Archangel at one time, Appointed, but even if I remained so, I know my limitations. I’m no ruler.”
“And you think I am.”
“I think you could be, yes.”
“There’s just one flaw in your plan. I already have what I want right here.”
“You mean the Naphil?”
“Alex. Yes.”
“The woman who is even now at Aramael’s side instead of yours.” The Fallen One smiled. “Of course you have her.”
Seth glowered as his visitor rose from the chair, but before he could form a satisfactory retort, the Fallen One placed one hand over his forehead and the other over the ribs broken by Mittron’s elbow. Seth froze.
“A reminder of that which you were once capable of yourself,” said the Fallen One. “And what another might have done for you if he so wished. Consider it my gift.”
Agony seared through Seth. Arching against the bed, he clutched at the covers. “Bloody fucking Hell!”
He grabbed for the Fallen One but connected with nothing but his own ribs. His hand clamped in place, he fought for breath—and to push back the darkness hovering at the edge of his brain. Slowly the pain ebbed, receded, disappeared. Eyes closed, he probed his injuries with cautious fingers, increasing the pressure until he was certain.
The Fallen One had healed him . . .
. . . whereas Aramael had not.
Chapter 39
“This seems a rather extreme way of avoiding talking.” Elizabeth Riley’s voice contained a dry note. “Even for you.”
Alex finished tugging the T-shirt over her head. She settled it into place around her midriff as she turned to face the psychiatrist. “And so you tracked me down here to make sure I didn’t get away?”