She wished her heart would just go ahead and jump out of her chest. Whatever he’d fed her had to be worse than any landing and… Ohhhh, another wave of agony crashed through her.
The ground loomed ever closer. So green, so lovely, making a mockery of her forced calm. Her eyes burned, teared. Her chest constricted. Closer…any moment…
“I’m sorry,” Zacharel said just before twisting, placing his back to the ground and her focus on the sky, a haze of pretty blue and white. Thick clouds, puffed in every direction. “The pain you are about to suffer, transient as it will be… I’m sorry,” he repeated.
“Don’t be. You did everything you could—”
He tensed, and she knew. Impact.
She and Zacharel rolled down, down, hitting branch after branch, not really losing momentum before they…
A spiderweb of black wove through her vision. She concentrated on regaining the use of her lungs, inhaling, exhaling, too fast at first, but gradually slowing, evening out. Minutes stretched into hours, hours into eternity before she found the strength to sit up. A mistake. A tide of dizziness swept over her, turning her world upside down. She was wet, soaked actually. And oh, baby,
Wincing, she scanned the surrounding area.
Broken tree limbs overhead provided a perfect path for the sun, allowing hot rays to lick over her, spotlighting her. In front of her, a forest loomed. Leaves of dewy emerald brushed together, and wildflowers perfumed the air.
Beside her…beside her sprawled Zacharel, his eyes closed, his body motionless. Both of his wings were bent at odd angles, the robe he wore no longer white but crimson.
Blood, so much blood.
A hysterical laugh bubbled from her. Once again Annabelle would walk away from a gruesome scene without much damage to herself.
No. No! she thought then. She wouldn’t leave Zacharel like this. Wouldn’t let him die.
Annabelle lumbered to her knees and checked his pulse. The beat was thready, but there. There was hope!
“You’ll heal,” she told Zacharel. “You’ll survive this.”
Her gaze panned the surrounding forest. If she built a sled, she could drag him…where? She had no idea where they were.
“What did you do to him?”
The harsh voice slashed through the air behind her, slamming into her with so much hate and rage she fell to her hands. Blood splashed. Quickly she straightened, spun. The dizziness…almost too much, the spiderwebs returning and interweaving with pinpricks of light.
A beast of a man loomed a few feet away.
Trembling, she reached through the slits in her new leather pants and palmed two of the blades the cloud had given her. Good. She hadn’t lost them in the fall. As she shoved her way to her feet, struggling to stay upright, she pointed both weapons at the scary-looking newcomer. “Don’t come any closer. I’ll make you regret it.”
Ragged abrasions covered his cheeks, the edges singed, but the rest of his skin reminded her of honey sprinkled with sugar—a shocking contradiction. His eyes were black and filled with the same hate and rage she’d heard in his tone, his dark hair long and beaded, and though he wore a white robe, he wasn’t an angel. He
He glared down at her, then at Zacharel. When those bottomless eyes next landed on her, they were narrowed and crackling with orange-gold flames. Somehow, those flames were far worse than the emotions.
She blinked, and then he was standing in front of her—without ever having walked a step. Long, thick fingers wrapped around her wrists, squeezing. Still she hung on to her weapons.
“Let me go!” she demanded, trying to knee him between the legs.
He twisted, avoiding contact. “Release the blades.”
And leave herself, and Zacharel, helpless? “Never!”
His clasp tightened. Even when her bones fractured and agonizing pain slicked up her arms, she maintained her hold on the hilts.
He did not double over, but he did fling her away from him, her already abused body propelling into a tree trunk and slinking uselessly to the ground.
“Stay there.” He kept her within his sights as he crouched beside Zacharel.
“No! I won’t let you hurt him,” she shouted, and lumbered to her feet. And…
Surprise lit those treacherous eyes. Because of her words, or her persistence? Whatever the reason, surprise drifted through
Still, she pointed one of the blades at him. “I don’t know who you are or what you’re doing here, but like I said, I won’t let you hurt him.”
“I am Koldo, and I would never hurt him.”
Her knees almost buckled with relief. Koldo. She recognized the name. He might not be an angel, but he
“Away. Save.”
That harsh voice must have jostled Zacharel’s mind into activity, because his eyelids fluttered open. He struggled for freedom, saying, “The girl.” He coughed, blood gurgling from his mouth.