on the walls began to scream fire.
The equinox had come. The intersection was opening. The
Leah looked at him through eyes drenched with tears, and held out the knife. ‘‘Do it. You have no choice.’’
Either she died, or they all did.
Strike caught her to him, holding her hard, trying to give her all his energy, all his power, trying to beat back the passing time as he finally understood the impossible choice his father had died trying to avoid. He pressed his cheek to hers. ‘‘I love you. I fell in love with you when I wasn’t looking, when I was doing my damnedest to do anything but fall, just like I became king when I was trying to be anything but.’’
She touched his arm where he wore the mark of the gods, of the jaguar kings. ‘‘You’ll be a good king.’’
‘‘And?’’
Her smile went crooked. ‘‘And I love you, too. I don’t care if what I’m feeling is because of destiny and the gods, or that it’s all tangled up with the prophecies and the end of the world. I love you for you. Not because you’re king or Nightkeeper, but because you’re mine.’’
They met halfway in a searing kiss that tasted of need and desperation, and the power of the equinox. Strike felt light and dark align, felt the powers within them start to meld. He felt the dark force of the true demon Zipacna poised behind the barrier, ready to spring free at the moment of alignment, when the barrier would thin enough for the creature to burst through. He felt the god Kulkulkan straining at the bonds of the skyroad, longing to be free, longing to fight. The god’s darkness battered him, latching on to his soul and dragging him down, away from gray- green neutrality and toward the underworld, which glowed the lumious green of a
At that thought, that single word, he felt a flare of power, a surge of golden light. Then the halves became whole, light blending with darkness, the two together making something so much stronger than either alone.
Deep within him something tore, a curtain ripping in half and letting through a ray of golden illumination. Instead of fighting it, he welcomed it, welcomed the light and the power and the sense of Leah that it brought.
The kiss turned blatantly carnal, a celebration of both sex and love, and a promise made between them. He felt a cool burn on his arm, and knew from her jolt that Leah felt it, too.
There was no time to look at the new marks, though. They had to bring the god through the barrier. He took her hand and looked into her eyes, and from somewhere deep inside his soul he found the spell they needed.
Power detonated inside him, around him, but it was too late. Far overhead the stars aligned and the equinox came to bear without the greatest sacrifice having been made.
The barrier fell, and a demon came to earth.
Thunder blasted in the sacred chamber, driving Strike to his knees as he held Leah tight. Mist roiled within the room, thickening to dire clouds that flickered with unholy luminescence, and the stone surface beneath him began to shudder like a living thing. A roar split the air, driving his heart into his throat. On its heels, a terrible creature emerged from the mist. Its crocodilian head was the size of the room itself, all wickedly sharp teeth and dead dark eyes. Zipacna.
The demon traveled through the intersection as an insubstantial spirit, like its
Then it was gone.
‘‘Oh, father of gods,’’ Strike said, the words coming from deep down in his chest as he realized that he’d failed before he even began. He’d run from the thirteenth prophecy, hadn’t made the sacrifice required, and Lord Zipacna had made it through the barrier.
The end-time countdown had begun. There was a demon on earth. He’d failed his bloodline and his people, failed the gods.
‘‘Not yet we haven’t,’’ Leah said, reading his thoughts through their bloodied hands. Her voice sounded strange, as though it carried the echo of trumpets. Then she turned to him, and his heart shuddered in his chest.
Her eyes were the molten gold of a Godkeeper.
‘‘Leah,’’ he said, grabbing her by the arms. ‘‘Gods, Leah!’’
‘‘It’s okay.’’ She took his hands, gripped them hard. ‘‘Boost me.’’
Instead of sharing the blood link, he cupped her face in his hands and touched his lips to hers. ‘‘I love you.’’ Then he sank deeper into the kiss, dropped the barriers that had once held their souls apart, and gave her everything that he had to give.
And together, they called the feathered serpent god to earth.
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
Rabbit ran for his life, leading the