Court of CommandAge of Angels, #1

Milana Jacks

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Court of Sunder exclusive teaser

What to read after Court of Command

About the Author

Court of Command © Milana Jacks 2019

All rights reserved.

This is the copyright section of the book where you can find out if you have the right to copy it. The answer is No.

This is also the section where I declare I wrote a work of fiction. Nothing is as it seems and similarities to real life anything is a coincidence. Lord help us all if this shit actually happens.

People who review my books and shout about them can quote, climb on my head and doodle hearts.

Chapter One

It was August. The second month since the angels descended. Though my empty belly growled, I made no sudden moves. You never knew when an angel might land on your head. Not literally, but might as well be, because that was what happened on the eve of the Fourth of July. They fell upon the world in a shower of stars, an entire army of them.

In September, my brother was gonna start first grade. Major finally declared, junior year in college lay ahead of me. The angels’ arrival turned everything upside down. Why were they here? Nobody knew. While preserving some semblance of a normal life for my brother, my parents and I tried to figure out what was happening. In fact, I carried a copy of the Bible in my backpack. I had read it and found no answers, other than a notion that this was our doomsday, which wasn’t much news at all.

Right now, I was just trying to grab something to eat, and Dad and I decided Bel Air seemed like a place that would still have food. The wide three-story house, taking up half of Los Angeles’s richest block, appeared untouched, even deserted.

I lifted my flashlight and blinked it twice, signaling to my Dad that I was okay to move in. Between the dense ten-foot-tall hedge and the house next door, Dad flashed twice too. I climbed over the twenty-foot iron gate and found shelter behind the nearest tree inside the property, surprised the plants still thrived. Maybe the owners forgot to deactivate the sprinkler timer before fleeing their home.

Instead of looking left and right for any people, I looked up first, then around, before poking my head around the tree, twice estimating the distance to the grand double door, then sprinting across the long driveway and the lawn, lockpicks in my hand. At the door, breathless, I bent and wiped sweat off my forehead, then looked around again. No wings. No people. Not even stray animals stayed out at night. Just me, Dad, and our hungry bellies.

Before picking the lock, I tried the door. It opened. Excellent. The owners forgot the sprinklers and the door. I didn’t blame them. Forgetting to lock up was nothing compared to what I’d seen in other homes. Some people had fled LA forgetting their kids. Or maybe they never made it home to get the kids.

Inside the house, the first thing I did was scan it with the flashlight. Finding nobody, I sniffed. Rotting dead bodies reeked, and I didn’t want to stumble upon another suicide scene. Once seen, that couldn’t be unseen. This house smelled of peppermint and evergreen trees, something one would find in a forest. Strange, but again, this was Bel Air, a neighborhood I’d only seen before on TV. Maybe they left their air fresheners pumping.

I closed the massive door and sighed, leaning against it. I bet cans still lined the cupboards. I didn’t know the home’s layout, but my belly had a compass, and it directed me into the huge white kitchen with granite cupboards. I opened them. Yaaas.

Backpack on the counter, I reached up and swiped my hand over the canned goods. They toppled into my pack. In the corner, I spotted a bag of dry corn. If I didn’t have people depending on me to bring back food, I’d make this fully stocked house my permanent home.

I grabbed a pot and sprinkled oil in it, then glanced through the blinds. The street was still empty, Dad wasn’t done yet, the house seemed safe, and Nathan would appreciate already-made popcorn. In case I needed to escape something or someone, I slung the backpack over my back so at least I’d keep the food.

I poured the corn into the pot and closed the lid, then fired up the gas stove. Within a few minutes, the corn bounced and popped, the yummy white goodies dancing inside. Once the popping stopped, I took off the lid, and my mouth salivated. I grabbed a handful and shoved it into my mouth. Forgot the salt, damn it.

“Hello, mortal.”

The house lit up like a supermarket.

I screamed at the top of my lungs and spun around. Popcorn fell out of my mouth as I gaped. A massive angel, made bigger by the span of the golden wings he held erect, levitated in the foyer. His golden body radiated golden light. Wild golden hair floated about his head, giving him a visible aura. Bright golden eyes stared at me.

Seconds felt like years as I stared at the most beautiful creature in existence. My mind could barely process his divine presence, and inside my chest, a light ignited. I closed my eyes and then opened them again. He still stood there.

My gaze dropped to his bare chest, then tracked down to his belt and the strange white kilt, for a lack of a better term. It was made of several long, flowing pieces of silk-like fabric that twined around his legs or floated around his ankles. The hem of one piece lifted and moved in the air. The windows were closed. There was

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