Chapter 1
Water flowed like blackened blood, rushing past Desmond toward a dark and distant heart in the cavernous bowels of New York City. He drudged against a knee-deep current with his heart thundering louder than the rush of water as he traveled through a storm drain beneath the streets and skyscrapers, beneath the world. He had no idea where he was headed, just that he was being pulled by a force more powerful than his will.
The current seemed intent on testing his will, on pushing him back, away from his destination. But he refused to be slowed. His legs ached and his temples pounded as he frantically forged ahead. He did not know why, but a sense of urgency drove him as it never had before.
Intermittent rumbles echoed around him and shook the concrete beneath his feet like the growl of a mythical beast awakening from the pits of hell, warning him to retreat. But Desmond did not heed its warning. He did not scare easily. And he knew he was not destined for hell. Where he was going promised to be far worse than any hell he could envision if past experiences were an indication of what his destination held.
Recently, he had been drawn to many different locations, roused from sleep in some instances, only to be pulled, as if he were being tugged by an immense magnet, from location to location. Each time, a force potent enough to move mountains had seized him and guided him toward unspeakable horror. Each time, he’d been too late; unable to save a single soul.
Mass slaughters, dismembered bodies and charred remains had been indelibly etched into his memory, horrific scenes of brutality branded eternally in his brain, scenes that haunted his days and nights. He could not predict the potential atrocities awaiting him at the end of this new journey. He only hoped that he would arrive in time to prevent more deaths. So he continued to slog through deepening water, and remained vigilant.
Sweeping his eyes about the darkened curves of the tunnel, he moved as quickly as the current allowed him to, willing his legs to push onward, and listening with his entire body to the concrete world around him. Fueled by guilt and panic, he did not know what he was moving toward, just that every part of him was tightly wound, teeming with nervous energy. All the while, an innate awareness cautioned that his new destination would reveal something more than the others had, and that it would concern Arianna Rose, the Sola.
The mere thought of Arianna evoked a clenching sensation in his chest so strong it squeezed the air from his lungs. Arianna had been a part of his life for as long as he could remember. She was a part of him, deep and rooted, unlike any other had ever been. He felt as though her soul were entwined with his. But now she was gone, wrenched from his life for the first time in what seemed like forever, her absence leaving a gaping hole in its wake.
He had left her in Herald Falls, alone and reeling from loss, and he hated himself for doing it. Leaving had been next to impossible, especially since he’d wanted nothing more than to stay and comfort her, to protect her as he always had. But he’d had no other choice. He’d been bound by duty. He had been groomed to guard her, not fall in love with her. She had an important job, one so significant that she’d been condemned to a life of solitude for fear her focus would be compromised. She would be their leader. And her powers were growing fast. She was rising to her position as the prophetic Sola. Nothing could stop her. No one could stand in her way, including him. Her fate had been sealed according to the most scared of their ancient scriptures, a fate that did not include him. He’d had no choice but to leave, against both her will and his own. He was not her fate despite feeling as bound to her as he was to his own heartbeat. The only difference that remained was that he was allowed to keep his heartbeat, while she remained a distant dream.
He’d thought about ignoring the prophecy, about damning it all to hell and staying with her. But he’d been afraid, afraid of ruining all that his kind had worked for, their centuries-old struggle to survive. He had not wanted to selfishly sacrifice the efforts of his people. Leaving had been the hardest decision he’d ever made. He’d known that if he’d stayed, he would not have had the strength to ever leave her and would have risked disrupting her future, the future of all of their kind. And their kind needed her.
Arianna, the Sola would be called upon, would be pulled as he had been to his present location, to assist their people by bringing them together, and protecting them from the evil that ceaselessly stalked them. She was needed elsewhere, everywhere, and without him.
Without him, the words rattled around in his head like a ball of barbed wire, clawing at his thoughts, at his heart. Having her ripped from his life had been torturous, and only two weeks had passed. Envisioning a future without her was so bleak and painful, it seemed inconceivable.
He stopped briefly, weighing the magnitude of a future that did not include her and felt the cool rush of water driving against his legs. As he paused, he felt something brush against his calf. It receded for a moment and Desmond was about to disregard it when it bumped his leg again. It felt large, larger than the other debris that had passed, and solid.
He quickly patted his cloak and immediately felt the small flashlight he’d stored inside it. Up until now, he’d traveled in the darkened tunnel using only the energy that pulled him magnetically toward his destination. But whatever knocked against his leg sent caution shooting through him like a bolt of electricity. He quickly pulled his flashlight from his pocket and shined it downward.
Desmond felt his legs threaten to give way beneath him for a split-second when he saw what waited in the beam of light. He gasped and nearly dropped his flashlight into the blackened waters, sickened by the sight before him. A small body bobbed face-down. Pants and a gauzy pink blouse billowed eerily in the shadows and long blonde hair wafted out around a head like a golden halo. With a trembling hand, Desmond reached into the water and quickly turned the small body. The bruised and marred face of a young girl stared up at him with milky blue eyes, imploring him to put her spirit to rest, to avenge her death.
He cradled the frail body, lifting her from the murk and filth, and saw that a maroon arc sat just below her chin. Her slender throat had been cut. Tears burned the back of Desmond’s eyelids and he silently vowed to punish those responsible for such a heinous act, for taking her life.
With the girl’s cold, lifeless body pressed against his chest, rage gathered deep inside of Desmond, rage so volatile and pure, his entire body began to tremble and his vision wavered. Questions swirled unendingly in his brain. Who would do such a thing, murder an innocent child? Why was the child floating in the sewer drain among garbage and refuse? Were there more like her where he was headed? His mind demanded answers. The girl’s soul demanded vengeance.
Desmond’s body sprang into action. He was loath to bear witness to more butchery, but he knew he needed to move. He needed to see if anyone lived. He sped his pace and moved at a jog against the flux of water, testing his muscles against it until they burned. With the haunting image of children dying each time he blinked and the water working against him, his breaths came in shallow pants. He felt his lungs blaze and was about to pause when a bloodcurdling shriek rang out.
The tortured cry pierced the darkness like a blade, cutting at the gloomy abyss with its razor-sharpness, and resonated through his bones. The hairs on the back of his neck rose like quills and his heart slammed wildly in his chest. The desperate scream awakened something in him, a dormant, primal part of him. His legs answered the call. He found himself moving quicker than before, racing faster and faster until the resistance beneath him lessened. He looked down and realized the water level had lowered abruptly. Little more than a shallow stream covered his feet. Without moving water opposing his every stride, he was able to run, still clutching the body of the little girl.
The splash of his feet slapping rhythmically against the waning rivulet was the only noise in the tunnel, until the sudden sound of voices stopped him dead in his tracks. He waited and listen
ed intently, trying to discern what was being said.
Darkness, thick and sinister, surrounded him. All he heard was the faint, silken, sinuous swish of water trickling past him. He closed his eyes, using all of his energy to sense where he ought to go next. His eyelids fluttered briefly before shadowy fingers reached from beyond the blackened void and tugged him. He opened his eyes and felt himself being pulled forward. He flicked on his flashlight long enough to see he was approaching a point where the tunnel turned off. He would either continue along the tunnel, or veer toward what looked like an abandoned maintenance structure.
An overwhelming wave of energy crashed against him and dragged him in its drift to the threshold of a steel door, making plain his destiny. The maintenance shed door stood slightly ajar. Faint light seeped from it and the voices he’d heard grew louder.
Desmond gently placed the girl’s body on a narrow ledge just beyond the door. He closed her eyes and pleaded for his maker’s mercy and promised her in the same breath that those who’d harmed her would suffer.
“Silence!” a voice boomed from beyond the door and caused him to spin toward the sound, prepared to battle.
When he saw that no one addressed him personally, he allowed himself to relax, but only slightly. He inched toward the entryway and drew the hood of his cloak over his head. He peered through it and had to stifle a gasp for what he saw shocked him nearly as much as what he heard and felt.
The limited space offered him a view of a crudely fashioned altar. Behind it, a husky, robed form preached.
“The time is upon us!” the man addressed a full room of nearly twenty other robed figures. “Our time has come! We will be drawn together to rid the world of the vile wretches that inhabit this planet!”
He recognized immediately that the man was not human, felt the rush of a familiar force, felt the man’s energy, along with the collective energy of the room, collide with his. He was a warlock, like Desmond, and the others present were his kind as well. He did not know for sure to whom the man referred, but felt dread slither down the length of his spine, and the gravity of the situation began to unfold.
He pushed the door open further. As he did, his mouth went dry and the sound of his blood roaring in his ears temporarily drowned out any other sound.
Folding chairs had been arranged around the room, roughly two dozen of them. They all faced the makeshift altar the robed man spoke behind. But beside the altar was a sight so bone-chilling, Desmond had to control the urge to make his presence known and speak not with his words, but with his daggers instead.
A cage had been brought into the room, a compact cage small enough to fit two large dogs at most, and was situated to the left of the altar. But dogs did not occupy the cage. It held two people, a woman and a boy no more than eight years old. Desmond felt the heated rise of his temper brim dangerously as he saw that the boy’s hair matched the flaxen color of the girl whose throat had been slit, the angel who now lay upon a concrete lip of a sewer drain. His blood began to boil, ire flooding it like molten lava. The boy trembled and cowered, terrified for his life, and the people responsible were his own. His own people were caging and slaughtering innocents, children.
Desmond took another step forward, propelled by fury, and disregarded his own safety. He stepped into a lair of pure evil.
The wicked energy of the room overwhelmed him. He felt it pulsing like a poisonous parasite, watching and waiting to strike, throbbing all around him. But he did not care. He needed to save the humans.
He moved deeper inside, closer to the heart of the room, and saw that just beyond the bars, a third person stood, a man. He whimpered softly, his blonde curls quivering as feverishly as his legs, and the woman inside the cage cried out.
“No! You killed my baby! No!” she shrieked, tears streaming down her dirtied cheeks, the voice matching the one he’d heard tear through the tunnel moments earlier.
Desmond advanced a step, still unseen by the others, his heart slapping madly against his ribcage. The boy’s head snapped up, his eyes wide with terror and fixed on the man on the other side of the cage.
“Silence!” the robed man roared and ordered the caged woman. He then returned his attention to the group before him. “The Sola has been revealed. Her powers have matured and she will lead us to freedom. She will lead us to power!”
Sound came rushing back to Desmond in blaring clarity. His attention had been ripped from those caged to mention of the Sola, of Arianna. Every cell inside him stood at attention, prickling, readied. The robed man had spoken of the Sola, of Arianna, and Desmond needed to know why. He needed to know what role he thought she played in his meeting.
He raged against every instinct that insisted he kill the man where he stood, and avenge the girl’s death by at least slaying her executioner. His entire being shuddered as he resisted the burning in his fingertips, the fire that needed release. He forced himself to stand down, to listen to more of the man’s misguided ramblings.
“I offer this sacrifice to the Sola, in hopes that she will come to us now,” the robed man continued.
Sacrifice! The word screamed through Desmond’s core and the entire scene came into grotesque focus.
“For the Sola!” he heard the robed man scream and realized that if he didn’t act immediately, it would be too late, and another would die.
Desmond reached for his blades, but the robed man slashed at the air with impossible speed in one lightning-fast motion. An angry crimson arc appeared at the man’s throat and his trembling, golden curls ceased moving. His eyes were wide with fright and shock and he did not move at first. The robed man had attacked so swiftly, his action so fluid and instantaneous, neither the woman nor the child inside the cage nor the man who’d been stabbed, had time to react. It wasn’t until blood spurted from the man’s jugular that they all realized what had happened, that the man had been fatally stabbed, and they began to scream, wild, panicked screams.
Desmond rushed forth and pulled his hood from his head as he hurried past the seated audience.
“How dare you commit murder in the name of the Sola?” he roared. “The Sola has been sent to bring peace to our people, not to slaughter the innocent!”
The robed man did not flinch at Desmond’s words. He remained as he was and sneered, arching a brow defiantly.
“It is her destiny, you fool!” he shouted and his face reddened to a deep garnet hue. “The Sola will lead us to power! How dare you interrupt my service with your nonsensical accusations? Murder!” the robed man spat arrogantly then turned and looked between Desmond and his followers. “You are one of us, are you not? You should know what she is here for! She is here to slay the weak of the world, to pave the way for our reign on Earth,” he continued. “How dare you interrupt our tribute to her, to the Sola!” he growled through clenched teeth, and the room erupted into frenzied cheers.
“For the Sola,” they chanted.
The robed man allowed their outburst to continue, only interrupting it to make a final statement.
“Kill this traitor!” he seethed and the room grew deathly silent.
Desmond’s blood froze and from the corner of his eye, he saw twenty sets of eyes begin to glow red. He folded his arms across his chest, energy pulsing from his core to his fingertips. Each hand gripped the hilt of two blades hidden beneath his cloak. Both were ancient daggers that had been given to him as a child, and had armed him ever since. He watched the men and women opposite the robed man carefully, waiting with bated breath for the first sign of strike.
When he detected the first muscle twitch among them, he tore the daggers from their sheaths. He felt the heat of fire blazing in his direction, and sifted away from it, appearing and disappearing around the room. He materialized and placed himself behind more than one robed figure and slashed at the air, fortifying his daggers with every bit of his might, and watched as they fell to the ground. He
repeated the act, sifting and reappearing behind them, and felled more than a dozen in a matter of moments, his power, speed and abilities superior to theirs. When just six remained, the strongest among the group, they attempted to unite their forces and attack as one. A brilliant blaze of blue blasted toward him. Rich with the wrath of six supernatural beings, the fiery launch seemed unavoidable. Desmond felt its heat, narrowly avoided being incinerated and moved a split-second before it burned him. He sifted through the air as flames licked at his shoulder, teleporting, as two cloaked figures descended on him. He reappeared behind them and slashed their throats in an immediate, synchronized motion.
So much sifting had enervated him, though. His daggers felt heavy in his hands. He started to lower them, their weight suddenly overwhelming, when a force unexpectedly blasted him backward. He slammed against the far wall and nearly lost his grip on the two ancient daggers that had been passed down through each generation of his family.
The remaining four sets of crimson eyes glared hungrily at him, their bloodlust apparent. Once his body hit the wall and he felt it begin to slide down, he gripped his blades as tightly as he could and tested the limits of his powers by sifting again, vanishing from the sight of the others. He reappeared amid the lethal quartet and watched as their deadly eyes widened.
Shocked by his ability, but undeterred, they continued their attack, launching streams of fire at him. Flares of fire flashed past him as he twisted and maneuvered. Embers rained against his cloak, but the others soon learned that Desmond was far quicker than they were.
They were all supernatural beings, but he moved with remarkable speed and dexterity, thanks in part to rigorous training his father had insisted upon, and sprung forward, driving both blades into the throats of two of them. When another blaze of fire flared in his direction, he was able to disappear in time to avoid his demise and materialized behind the two that remained. With a war cry, he rammed his blades into the back of their necks and they dropped instantly.
He snapped his head toward the altar and saw that the robed man stared in shock. But Desmond knew the man’s shock would be short-lived. He teleported immediately and positioned himself inches from the man, prepared to kill with the final drops of energy that remained in him.
“Who are you?” the man asked and allowed only the faintest flicker of awe to flash in his ruby eyes.
“I am Desmond, son of Agnon, and the guardian of the Sola,” Desmond announced and saw a slight spark of surprise dance across the man’s hard features. “I have been with her for her entire life and am certain she would never condone what has happened here. The Sola is not evil.”
The robed man began to laugh, a demonic cackle that clawed at Desmond’s ears.
“What amuses you about my words?” Desmond demanded with strength he feared he did not have.
“No one said she was evil,” the robed man hissed. “The vile creatures of this world are evil, humans are evil. And they need to be exterminated. Don’t you see?” the man cackled again. “She is the light. You don’t know her at all. Just ask your father,” he spat. “The end of humanity has been prophesied, and she is the medium by which it will begin!”
Desmond took an instinctive step backward, doubt and a sudden need for space conspiring against him, purging his lungs of air they so desperately needed. Surely, the warlock had gone mad, he was wrong. But something about the way he’d spoken, his conviction, had unsettled Desmond. He wondered why the robed man had been so convinced, and why he’d told Desmond to ask his father about Arianna.
As though he’d read Desmond’s mind, the man began to laugh again, louder and more perversely.
Ire racked Desmond’s body and combined with a sudden flood of adrenaline. Both overtook him so fully, he was helpless against his own hands. Both stabbed forward, as if of their own volition, gripping the daggers and lodging their blades to their hilt in the man’s neck. He quickly withdrew both blades and watched as the robed man’s body collapsed to the floor.
He stood staring at the man as life escaped him, feeling equal parts satisfaction and self-loathing. Killing was not new to him. Throughout the near-century he’d been alive, Desmond had killed many. But he’d never grown accustomed to the feel of ending another being’s life. On this day, he’d taken more than twenty; some men, some women, but all had been his brethren. All had been like him.
Standing amid the fallen, uncertainty crept inside his mind and stole about like a thief, uninvited, unwelcome, and determined to take his sense of security. But his doubt was quickly quashed by the weeping of those inside the cage. He sheathed his weapons and turned toward them. Through tear-filled eyes, they looked at him, undoubtedly terrified he would turn on them next.
“I will not harm you,” he assured them. But the woman and child seemed unconvinced. Given what they’d been through, Desmond could not blame them. Instead of attempting to reassure them further, he decided that actions would speak louder than words. He approached their cage and, focusing all of his energy on the bars, pulled two of them apart.
“Go,” he said. “The tunnels will lead you out of here. Walk with the flow of the water.” He handed them his flashlight and still, they watched him warily.
He stepped aside and let them pass holding his hands with his palms facing them in surrender. Wordlessly, they filed out and left the maintenance building and avoided looking at the bodies on the floor.
With the prisoners freed, Desmond was left alone with the carnage he’d created, and questions. He needed to leave, to get away from the death around him. But first, he needed to dispose of the bodies so that they would never be found. He closed his eyes tightly and summoned every ounce of his power. He felt the whole of his energy swell. It swarmed and rose within him like a great surge of electricity until his fingertips tingled and prickled, readied. He flicked both wrists forward, and as he did, fire leaped from them. The blazing stream branched in several directions like lightning at his command and touched each of the bodies he’d felled. Their flesh incinerated on contact, leaving behind small mounds of ashes.
Sadness filled Desmond, sadness and confusion. Death followed him wherever he went, traveled with him like a dark passenger, always at his side. And his dark passenger kept a companion: questions. The more death Desmond encountered, the more questions arose. This time, the man who’d led the gathering had instigated them. His words nagged at Desmond’s brain. The man had seemed convinced of the Sola’s purpose, certain that she’d been sent to unite all witches on Earth for the purpose of destroying humanity.
But the man’s conviction did not mean his words were true. Desmond did not know whether the man had simply created a bastardization of the truth he had guarded his whole life, or whether something far different was happening. Regardless, Desmond needed answers. He needed to know the truth. But first, he needed to see Arianna.