the last rays of the sun were consumed by the night, couldâve come from anywhere.
âShe compels me,â the other male admitted at last. âBut she is the Sireâs, and I would guard that relationship with my life.â Quiet, passionate, absolute.
Dmitri could have let it go at that, but there was more at stake here than a dangerous attraction. âItâs not betrayal Iâm worried about. Itâs you.â
Illiumâs hair swept across his face in a capricious wind before settling. âIn Amanat,â he said, speaking of the lost city newly arisen, âElena said she needed me to protect her against you.â A faint smile. âIt was a tease, but it does her no harm to have someone in her corner.â
Dmitri didnât dispute Illiumâs implied assessment of his own feelings toward the Guild Hunter who was Raphaelâs chosen consort. âYouâre convinced she saved his life when Lijuan attacked?â Illiumâs report seemed implausible, and yet Raphael himself had confirmed some of it when the archangel contacted Dmitri soon after Calianeâs reawakening.
âOnly Raphael knows the truth, but I know what I saw,â Illium said, his face strained with remembrance. âHe was dying, and then he livedâand the flame in his hands was colored in shades of dawn.â
The same soft colors that lingered on part of Elenaâs wings.
Dmitri remained leery. Elena was the weakest of angels, her mortal heart nowhere near strong enough to survive the world of the archangels. âSheâs become a permanent chink in his armor.â As Raphaelâs second, Dmitri was never going to accept that, though he had vowed to protect her and would carry that vow through to the very end, no matter what the cost.
âHave you never had a woman create such a chink in your armor?â One of Illiumâs feathers fell toward the ground but was whipped away and over the water before it could touch the unforgiving concrete. âIn all the years Iâve known you, never have you had a lover on whom you placed a true claim.â
âI will watch the roads for you, Dmitri.â
Illium was just over five hundred years old to Dmitriâs near thousand. He didnât know anything of what had gone on beforeâRaphael alone knew. âNo,â Dmitri said and it was a lie he told with centuries of expertise. âWeakness gets a man killed.â
Illium blew out a breath as they reached the flame red Ferrari the angel coveted but couldnât drive because of his wings, and said, âDo not lose your humanity, Dmitri. Itâs what makes you.â He flared out those wings of impossible beauty and rose into the air with a grace and strength that foretold what he might one day become.
Watching the angel fly up into the star-studded skies above a Manhattan stretching awake for the dark beat of night, until he was a sweeping shadow against the glittering black, Dmitriâs lips curved into a grim smile. âI lost my humanity a long time ago, Bluebell.â
Â
Honor was in the subterranean depths of Guild Academyâs main building, peering at an illuminated fourteenth-century text to do with one Amadeus Berg, legendary hunter and explorer, when her cell phone rang. Jumping up at the abrupt burst of sound, she grabbed it from where sheâd placed it on the table beside her keys. âSara?â she said, having recognized the number flashing on the screen as that of the Guild Directorâs personal cell phone.
âHonor.â Crisp. No nonsense. Sara. âWhere are you?â
âRare books section of the Academy library.â Dimly lit in deference to the age of the books stored here, and kept at a precise ambient temperature, it had become a refuge, a place few ventured.
âGood. Youâre not too far.â The sound of papers rustling. âTower needs a consult and youâre particularly well qualified.