Angels of Darkness
fun.â Marc glanced at her, smiling. âAnd it would never have left the library if we hadnât said it could fly away.â
She knew. Still, she worried. Marcâs Gift allowed him to haul dirt, heâd said . . . and the demon had already flown high and far. âDo you wait for him to land?â
Marc didnât immediately answer. His eyes had narrowed on the demon in the distance, and the power of his Gift became a low, gathering hum against Radhaâs shields. Strong, overwhelming all of her sensesâshe could almost smell the fresh dirt. Reflexively, she looked down.
His feet were bare, toes digging into the frozen soil.
âRadha,â he said, âheâs about to fly over an empty field, do you see?â
Flat, covered with snow. âYes.â
âCreate an illusion that duplicates that entire area. The field, the sky, everything in between. Anybody who looks in that direction has to see the same thing they would now. Ready?â
The field, the sky, everything in between. Was he serious?
Her heart pounding, she created the illusion. âYes.â
The gathering hum of his Gift suddenly wound higher, a controlled thrust of incredible power against her shields. The entire field erupted upward in a long column, as if pushed from below by a giant hand into a rectangular tower of dirt and stoneâdirectly beneath the demon. The field at the top of the tower hinged like an enormous jaw. Unable to avoid it, the demon stopped flying, sword drawn, as the earthen mouth opened around its body. Hundreds of tons of soil and stone snapped together.
Maybe thousands of tons.
âMarc.â She breathed his name, awed. Sheâd never seen anything like his Gift. âMarc.â
âKeep the illusion up,â he said softly.
The tower receded again, carrying the crushed demon back to earth. The field returned to its proper altitude, but the thrust of his Gift continued, hardening now against her shields, no longer smelling of soil but of molten stone.
Then hotter, and his Gift pressed like a burning, heavy weight against her tongue. âWhat are you doing?â
âBurying the demon.â
Far enough that it affected the sensation of his Gift? Past the Earthâs crust? But she shouldnât have been surprised, she realized. Sheâd believed his Gift had fit him, the young farmer that heâd once been; she just hadnât known how well. But he was solid, so strongâand he burned within, too.
âHow deep?â
âDeep. Itâs not Hell, but itâs hot, andâheâs vaporized now. Thereâs nothing left to keep burying.â He glanced at her, and his eyes were glowing. âKeep holding the illusion on the field.â
This time the thrust of his Gift held a delicate edge, was more than just pure power. The field lifted again, but not in a solid tower. Columned temples formed from dark soil and stone. Elegant domes rose, covered in snow. Thin spires speared into the sky.
A smaller version of Caelum, replicatedâand just as beautiful in dirt and snow as it was in marble. She hadnât realized how much she needed to see the Guardiansâ city whole again. Sweet, painful emotion filled her chest, and she reached for his hand.
âThank you.â
âI hoped youâd like it.â A hint of laughter entered his voice. âNow look away, because I have to bring it down again.â
No, that didnât matter. It wouldnât bother her or remind her of how much it had hurt to see Caelum in ruins. The important thing wasnât that Caelum had crumbledâbut that it could be rebuilt again. Like a friendship. Maybe like love.
She looked up at him as the touch of his Gift receded. His arm circled her waist, and he drew her against his hard chest.
âAre you still invisible?â he asked.
âYes.â
âAm I?â
âNo.â
âSo thatâs why everyone who drives by is looking at me like that.â
Radha laughed. Barefoot, and holding an invisible woman. âYes.â
âWas it fun, at least?â
âOh, yes.â
And this was definitely like love. Not that she was rushing into anything. No, sheâd just put it off for a hundred and forty yearsâand somehow, she hadnât lost him in that time.
âAll those idiots who ascended,â she said softly, âIâm glad you werenât one of them.â
His eyes glowed. âI had a
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