The house was big enough that there was room for everyone to sleep behind the wards. Darlington was back in the Virgil bedroom on the third floor. Dawes would sleep on the couch in the parlor, and Turner had claimed the floor of the armory.
Alex and Mercy set up camp in the Dante bedroom. But before Alex turned out the light, she tried texting Tripp once more. It wasnโt safe to go looking for him at night, but she and Turner would try in the morning.
โI wasnโt very nice to him,โ said Mercy.
โThatโs not what got him in trouble. And you donโt owe everyone nice.โ She lay back on her pillow. โI need you to be ready tomorrow. Dawes said the descent could be different this time. I donโt know what that means for you on the surface, but thereโs at least one vampire running around out there. I donโt like putting you in danger again.โ
Mercy wriggled under the covers. โBut weโre always in danger. Go to a party, meet up with the wrong person, walk down the wrong street. I think โฆ I think sometimes itโs easier if instead of waiting for trouble, you go to meet it.โ
โLike a bad date.โ
Mercy laughed. โYeah. But if anything terrible happens to meโโ โIt wonโt.โ
โBut if it doesโโ
โMercy, if anyone fucks with you, I will teach them a new word for violence.โ
Mercy laughed, the sound brittle. โI know.โ She sat up, punched her pillow, leaned back on it. Alex could practically see the wheels turning. โTo be a pilgrim โฆ you all killed someone?โ
Alex had known this conversation was coming. โYup.โ
โI know โฆ I know Dawes killed Blake. Iโm not sure I want to know about everyone else, butโฆโ
โWhy am I qualified to be on Team Murder?โ โYeah.โ
Alex had told Mercy about Lethe, about magic, even about the Grays, and that she could see them and use them. But sheโd left her past good and buried. As far as Mercy knew, she was a kid from California with some gaps in her education.
There were plenty of lies Alex could tell now. It was self-defense. It was an accident. But the truth was that sheโd contemplated killing Eitan that very morning, and if sheโd been able to get away with it and find a place to stash the bodies, she would have done it and never looked back. And sheโd promised she wasnโt going to lie to Mercy again.
โI killed a lot of people.โ
Mercy rolled over on her side and looked at her. โHow many?โ โEnough. For now.โ
โDo you โฆ How do you live with that?โ
What truth was she supposed to offer up? Because it wasnโt the people sheโd killed who haunted her. It was the people sheโd let die, the ones she couldnโt save. Alex knew she should say something comforting. That she prayed or cried or ran laps to forget. She hadnโt had many friends and she didnโt want to lose this one. But she was tired of pretending.
โIโm just not made right, Mercy. I donโt know if itโs remorse or conscience that Iโm missing or if the angel on my shoulder decided to take a long vacation. But I donโt lose sleep over the bodies on my scorecard. I guess that doesnโt make me a great roommate.โ
โMaybe not,โ Mercy said and turned off the light. โBut Iโm glad youโre on my side.โ
Alex waited until Mercy was snoring, then slipped out of bed and padded upstairs to the third floor. The door to the Virgil bedroom was open, and there was a fire blazing in the hearth beneath the stained glass windows
depicting a hemlock wood. Darlington was sprawled in a chair by the fire. Heโd changed into Lethe House sweatpants and an old robeโor maybe it was called a dressing gown. She wasnโt sure. She just knew that sheโd been looking at him without a stitch of clothes for weeks, but that something about seeing him this wayโfeet propped on the ottoman, robe open, bare chested, a book in his handโmade her feel like a Peeping Tom.
โSomething you want, Stern?โ he asked without glancing up from his reading.
That was a complicated question. โYou lied to Turner,โ she said.
โI imagine youโve done the same when necessary.โ He looked up at last. โAre you going to hover in that doorway all night or come in?โ
Alex made herself enter. Why the hell was she so nervous? This was Darlingtonโscholar, snob, and pain in the ass. No mystery there. But sheโd held his soul inside her. She could still taste him on her tongue.
โWhat are you drinking?โ she asked, picking up the tiny glass of amber liquid from the table beside his chair.
โArmagnac. Youโre welcome to try it.โ โBut weโโ
โIโm well aware my Armagnac was sacrificed for a worthy causeโ perhaps along with my grandfatherโs Mercedes. This bottle is far cheaper and less rare.โ
โBut not actually cheap.โ โOf course not.โ
She set down the glass and settled herself in the chair across from him, letting the fire warm her feet, acutely conscious of the hole forming in her right sock.
โYou sure this is a good idea?โ she asked. โGoing back to hell?โ
His eyes returned to the book he was reading. Michelle Alameddineโs Lethe Days Diary.
Was he wondering why she hadnโt been the one to stand sentinel? โFind anything interesting in there?โ
โYes, actually. A pattern I hadnโt seen before. But a demon loves a puzzle.โ
โShe did help,โ Alex said. โShe told us you believed the Gauntlet was on campus.โ
โShe doesnโt owe me anything. I told myself I would never look at her diary, that I wouldnโt go hunting for her opinions on her Dante and give in to that particular vanity. But here I am.โ
โWhat did she say?โ
His smile was rueful. โVery little. I am described as fastidious, thorough, andโno less than five timesโeager. The overall portrait is vague in its details, but far from flattering.โ He closed the book, setting it aside. โAnd to answer your question, returning to hell is an abominable idea, but I donโt have any others. In my more futile moments, Iโm tempted to blame Sandow for all of this. It was his greed that put this series of tragedies in motion. He summoned the hellbeast to devour me. I suppose he thought it would be a quick death.โ
โOr a clean one,โ Alex said without thinking.
โFair point. No body to dispose of. No questions to be asked.โ โYou werenโt meant to survive.โ
โNo,โ he mused. โI suppose you and I have that in common. Was that almost a smile, Stern?โ
โToo early to tell.โ She shifted in her seat, watching him. He had always been indecently appealing, the dark hair, the lean build, the air of some deposed royal who had wandered into their mundane world from a far-off castle. It was hard not to stare at him, to keep reminding herself that he was truly there, truly alive. And that somehow he seemed to have forgiven her. But she couldnโt say any of that. โTell me what you wouldnโt talk about in front of the others. Why do you still have hornsโโ
โOccasional horns.โ
โFine. Why did I light up like a blowtorch when you used them?โ
Darlington was quiet for a long time. โThere are no words for what weโve done. For what we may yet do. Think of the Gauntlet as a series of doors, all meant to keep the unwary from strolling into hell. You donโt need those doors, Stern.โ
โBelbalm โฆ Before she diedโโ โBefore you killed her.โ
โIt was a group effort. She said that all worlds were open to Wheelwalkers. I saw a circle of blue fire around me.โ
โI saw it too,โ he said. โOn Halloween. A year ago. The Wheel. I donโt think it was coincidence. And I donโt think this is either.โ
He rose and crossed the room to his desk and removed a book of New York landmarks. He moved with the same easy confidence he always had, but now there was something sinister in those long strides. She saw the demon. She saw a predator.
He flipped through the book and held it open to her. โAtlas,โ he said, โat Rockefeller Center.โ
The black-and-white photo showed a muscular figure wrought in bronze and poised on one knee, bent beneath the weight of three interlocked rings resting on his colossal shoulders.
โThe celestial spheres,โ Darlington continued. โThe heavens in their movements. Orโฆโ
Alex traced her finger around one of the circles emblazoned with the signs of the zodiac. โThe Wheel.โ
โThis sculpture was designed by Lee Lawrie. Heโs also responsible for the stonework in Sterling.โ Darlington took the book from her hands, returned it to the desk. He kept his back to her when he said, โThat night at Manuscript, it wasnโt just a wheel I saw. It was a crown.โ
โA crown. What does that mean? What does any of it mean?โ
โI donโt know. But when you crossed into hell through the circle of protection, you broke every rule there is. And when you carried me out again, you found another one to break.โ He settled himself back in the chair across from her. โYou stole me from underworld. That was bound to leave a mark.โ
Alex could hear AnselmโGolgarotโscreamingย thief. She saw the wolfโs lips pull back to form the same word.
โIs that what those things are?โ she asked. โAround your wrists and neck? Marks?โ
โThese?โ He leaned forward, and the change in him was instant, the glowing eyes, the curling horns, the broadening of the shoulders. Without meaning to, Alex found herself scooting back in her chair. He was man and
then monster in the space of a breath. The golden bands glowed at his wrists and throat.
โYeah,โ she said, trying not to show her fear. โThose.โ โThese marks mean I am bound in service. Forever.โ โTo hell? To Golgarot?โ
He laughed then, the sound deep and cold, the thing at the bottom of the lake. โIโm bound to you, Stern. To the woman who brought me out of hell. I will serve you โtil the end of days.โ