Her face went very still. Darlington had learned that this was what Alex Stern did when faced with uncertainty. Fight or flight? A survivorโs move was sometimes no move at all. He could see her in the basement on that night so long ago, a girl wrought in stone.
She raised a brow. โSo โฆ are you going to do my laundry?โ Fight, flight, or sarcasm. โWhat a horrid girl you are.โ
โMaโam. What a horrid girl you are,ย maโam.โ Now he laughed.
But Alexโs brows had drawn together. Her jaw was set. She looked like she was squaring up for a fight. โThere are too many mysteries. I donโt like the way theyโre adding up.โ
โIโm not certain I do either,โ he said, and he wasnโt lying this time. โYou can see the dead, hear them, use them for your own endsโand unless Iโm very much mistaken, were it not for certain scruples that Marguerite Belbalm lacked, you could use the living in much the same way.โ
All he got for that assessment was a short, sharp nod.
โAs for meโฆโ He wasnโt sure how to finish that sentence. As a man he had suffered in hell. But as a demon he had doled out suffering with ease and ingenuity. Sandow had come to them, murdered by Belbalm, his soul already consumed by her. He would never pass beyond the Veil, but hell was happy to claim him. Darlingtonโs demon self had enjoyed finding new ways to make Sandow miserable, to pay for the anguish heโd caused.
Darlington had been frightening to the shades of the Veil and even to himself. It had been โฆ If he was honest, it had been exhilarating. He had been a creature of the mind since he was a boyโlanguages, history, science. The rest of it, the training heโd put himself throughโfighting,
swordplay, even acrobaticsโhad all been in service to the future adventures heโd been sure he would have. But the great invitation had never come. There had been no noble quests or secret missions. There had been rituals, glimpses of the world beyond, schoolwork, reports to write, and that was all. So he had kept honing himself like a blade that would never be tried.
Then Dean Sandow had sent him to hell. Darlington shouldnโt have survived, but heโd managed to hold on until at last rescue had come.
And now? Was he human enough? He had been able to sit at the table and hold a conversation. He hadnโt growled at anyone or broken any furniture, but it hadnโt been easy. Demons were not thinking creatures. They operated on instinct, driven by their appetites. He had prided himself on being nothing like that. Never rash. Guided by reason. But now he wanted in a way he never had. He had been tempted to bury his face in his soup bowl and lap at it like a greedy animal. He wanted to place himself between Alexโs legs now and do the same to her.
Darlington drew a hand over his face and gave himself a little shake, praying for sense to return. He was her mentor. Her Virgil. He owed her his life and he could do better by her. He was not some slavering beast. He would pretend to be human again until he was.
Darlington had been surprised by the way that the others had come together to work and plan. He almost hadnโt recognized the command in Alex, the confidence in Dawes, all of it born of his absence.ย They would have gone on without me. They would have grown stronger.ย Sitting there, watching them hatch their schemes with Turner and Mercy, heโd felt like a stranger in a place heโd once known he belonged. His understanding of his own lack of consequence had been both slow and sudden in its cruelty.
โAs for me, I donโt know what I am,โ he said at last.
โBut you can controlโโshe waved a hand as if casting a spell over him
โโwhatever that demon shit is.โ
โI certainly hope so. But I think it would be wise for you and anyone else near me to keep a ready supply of salt at hand. We might consider putting prohibitions on Black Elm too, or wherever I wash up, so that I canโt leave without escort.โ
How reasonable he sounded. It wasnโt so hard to playact the man heโd been.
He considered the strange and terrible girl before him. Her eyes were black in the firelight, her hair shining as if it had been lacquered. Undine the water spirit, risen from the lake in search of a soul. Darlington hated to think of that night at the Halloween party at Manuscript. Heโd been out of his mind on whatever theyโd used to drug him. But when he had looked into the great mirror, he had seen that Alex was something more than her mortal self. And heโd understood that he wasnโt the hero heโd always dreamed of being. Heโd been a knight, and what was a knight but a servant with a sword in his hand? For the first time he had known himself and his purpose. At least it had seemed that way at the time. All he had wanted was to serve her, to be seen and desired by her. He hadnโt known he was looking into the future.
โYou are a Wheelwalker,โ he said. โI know that only because you know that, only because Belbalm and then Sandow knew it. Iโm going to have to dig deeper than the Lethe library to find out what that truly means. But I do know this: Not all of us will return from the underworld tomorrow night.โ
โWe made it out before.โ
โAnd you brought four demons with you. One of whom may have taken up permanent residence in our world to feed on people until itโs vanquished. But we wonโt all be coming back this time. As long as hell is short a murderer, the door will remain open, and your demons will keep coming through. Hellโs price must be paid.โ
Alex scowled. โWhy? How do you know that?โ
โBecause I was one of them. I was a demon feeding on the suffering of the dead.โ Heโd meant to say it easily, casually. Instead the words emerged haltingly and stinking of confession.
โAm I supposed to be shocked and horrified?โ
โThat I engaged in a kind of emotional cannibalism to survive? That I ate pain and enjoyed it? Iโd think even you might be troubled by that.โ
โYouโve been in my head now,โ she said. โDid you get a look at the things I did to survive this life?โ
โGlimpses,โ he admitted. A string of bleak moments, a deep and desperate ocean, Hellie shining like a golden coin, her grandmother glowing like a banked ember, her mother โฆ a disaster, a cloud, a tangle of frayed yarn, a mess of pity and longing and anger and love.
โWe do what we have to,โ Alex said. โThatโs the only job of a survivor.โ A strange benediction, but one he was grateful for. He folded his hands, debating his next words, unwilling to let them remain unspoken. โWhat if I
told you that some part of me still hungers after suffering?โ
Alex didnโt flinch. Of course she didnโt. It wasnโt in her repertoire.
โIโd tell you to keep your shit together, Darlington. We all want things we shouldnโt.โ
He wondered if she really understood what he was. If she did, she might run from this room. But it wouldnโt be a worry for long, not after the descent. Until then, he could make sure the demon didnโt slip its leash.
โYou need to accept that hell is going to try to keep one of us,โ he said. โIt will be me, Stern. I was never meant to leave.โ
He wasnโt sure what he expected: Laughter? Tears? A heroic demand that she take his place in hell? He had lost track of who was Dante, Virgil, Beatrice. Was he Orpheus or Eurydice?
But all Alex did was lean back in her chair and cast him a skeptical glance. โSo after we fought and bled to drag you out of hell, you think weโre going to just bring you back like a foster dog who shit on the carpet?โ
โI wouldnโt put itโโ
Alex rose and tossed back his glass of his expensive Armagnac like it was a dollar shot on ladiesโ night at Toadโs. โFuck off, Darlington.โ
She strode to the door.
โWhere are you going?โ
โTo the armory to talk to Turner. Then I have some calls to make. You know your problem?โ
โA predilection for first editions and women who like to lecture me about myself?โ
โAn unhealthy respect for the rules. Get some sleep.โ
She vanished down the dark hall, there and gone, like some kind of magic trick.