Angels of Darkness
crumpled. âHow did you escape?â
âThe poison was placed into a glass of iced tea,â she said, shifting to touch her finger to the glossy leaf of a plant by the writing desk. âIt is tasteless and colorless once blended with any other liquid, so I wouldnât have noticed it, had no reason to consider that anything in my home might be unsafe for me. But I had a cat, Queen.â Her breath caught for a fragment of a second, sharp and brittle. âShe jumped up onto the table when I wasnât watching and sipped at the drink. She was dead before I even had a chance to scold her for her misbehavior.â
Noel knew the sorrow that marked Nimraâs face was, in all probability, an attempt to manipulate his emotions, but still he found himself liking her better for being saddened by the death of her pet. âIâm sorry.â
A slight incline of her head, a regal acknowledgment. âI had the tea tested without alerting anyone in this court, discovered it held Midnight.â Smooth honey brown skin stretched tight over the line of her jaw. âIf the assassin had succeeded, I would have been insensible for hoursâand those who knew of my incapacitated state could have come in and ensured full death.â
Angels were as close to immortal as was possible in this world. The only beings more powerful were the Cadre of Ten, the archangels who ruled the world. Unless they pissed off one of the Cadre, death wasnât something angels had to worry about except in very limited circumstancesâdepending on the years theyâd lived and their inherent power.
Noel didnât know Nimraâs level of power but he knew that if someone were to decapitate a strong angel, remove his or her organs, including the brain, then burn everything, it was unlikely the angel would survive. Unlikely but not impossible. Noel had no way of knowing the truth of it, but it was said angels of a certain age and strength could regenerate from the ashes of a normal fire.
âOr worse,â he added softly, because while death might be the ultimate goal, many of the oldest immortals lived only for the pain and suffering of others, as if their capacity for gentler emotions had been corroded away long ago. He could well imagine what someone like Nazarach would do to Nimra if he had her alone and vulnerable.
âYes.â She turned to the windows beyond that little writing deskâformed with a daintiness that would crumble under one of Noelâs fistsâher gaze on the wild beauty of the gardens below. âOnly those who are trusted enough to be in my inner court, and carefully vetted servants, are ever anywhere near my food.
âBecause of this act of treachery, I can no longer trust men and women who have been with me for decades, if not centuries.â Calm, tempered words sliced with anger. âMidnight is near impossible to acquire, even for angelsâwhich means the one who betrayed me is working in the service of someone who holds considerable power.â
Noel felt a spark within him, one heâd thought had been extinguished in that blood-soaked room where his abductors had brutalized him for no reason except that it gave them a twisted kind of pleasure. They might have justified the act by calling it a political ploy, but heâd heard their laughter, felt the black that stained their souls. âWhy are you telling me this?â
An arch look over her shoulder. âI do not need a slave, Noelââhis name carried a slight French emphasis that turned it into something exoticââbut I do need someone whose loyalty is beyond question. Raphael says you are that man.â
He had not been cast aside after all.
It was a shock to the system, a jolt that brought him to life when heâd been the walking dead for so long. âYouâre certain itâs one of your people?â he asked, his blood pumping in hard pulses through his veins.
Her answer was oblique and it held a quiet, thrumming anger. âThere were no strangers in my home the day the Midnight was used.â Her wings flared out, blocking the light as she continued to focus beyond the windows. âThey are mine, but one has been tainted.â
âYouâre six hundred years old,â Noel said, knowing she saw nothing of the gardens at that instant. âYou can force them to speak the truth.â
âI cannot bend wills,â she said, surprising him with
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