Saol Mates (Primani Book Six) Read online




  Saol Mates

  (Primani Series Book Six)

  Smashwords Edition

  Copyright 2015 Laurie Olerich

  Discover other titles by Laurie Olerich

  The Lost Soul Trilogy:

  Primani

  Call the Lightning

  Stone Angels

  Stand-Alone Titles:

  Broken Souls

  Darkness Calling

  This book is available in print at most online retailers.

  Smashwords Edition License Notes

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  He was today.

  He was tomorrow.

  He was forever.

  Prologue:

  “CUT HIS WINGS. Now.”

  Pox shuffled his shitkickers back and forth a couple of times before opening his trap to argue. “Are you sure you want to do that, boss? Won’t—” Lowering his voice, he glanced at the clouds gathering above the garbage dump and swallowed hard before finishing the thought. “—You Know Who sense it?”

  Seth sighed before unsheathing an old family heirloom. The obsidian athame had been his for ten centuries. Before that, it had belonged to his father. Dear old dad had given it to him right after Seth carved out his heart. Gripping it now, he dropped a hard kiss where the blade left the haft. The weapon was exquisitely carved. Heavy. Balanced. Magical. Perfect for this job. “What? Are you Harry Potter now? Who the fuck is You Know Who?”

  Flushing at the insult, his lieutenant, Pox, dropped his voice to a choked whisper, “Michael.” The big tough demon shot his eyes skywards again as if mentioning his name would conjure him in the flesh (or whatever substance the angel was made of). Shifting his feet nervously, he grunted, “I’ve heard he’s got a bad temper.”

  It didn’t matter if the high and mighty Michael knew or not. The deed would be done. It would be too late to undo it, and that suited his boss’ plan perfectly. The piece of shit sprawled on the ground wasn’t much use without wings. Sneering at the pathetic excuse of celestial power who was about to become earthbound, Seth growled, “Never mind. I’ll do it myself. Turn him over first. I want to look at his face one more time.”

  “It’s your funeral.” Pox snatched their prisoner by his shoulders and rolled him onto his back.

  He didn’t flinch. He didn’t make a single sound. Lying face up, covered with mud, bits of garbage and blood, he wasn’t much to see. Oh, he’d been powerful once. Massive. Strong. Arrogant. That had been weeks earlier. Now? Not so much. When the moonlight hit just right, bits of white bone shone through the tatters of what used to be muscle. Breaking the creature had been the highlight of his year. Thinking back on the past few hours, Seth nibbled a stray bit of flesh from under one of his claws and smiled with only a bit of satisfaction.

  Their orders were clear. Get information by whatever means necessary then clip his fucking wings and leave him for dead. The job should’ve been easy, but they’d hit a snag. The interrogation hadn’t gone as planned. Sure, Seth was an expert at torture. He was one of the best in Hell—that’s the main reason he landed this particular gig—the boss knew he could be depended on to get the job done. But despite his legendary expertise, the dickwad hadn’t said much. Nothing they did worked. He’d been beaten, starved, beaten some more. After weeks of torture, he’d simply closed his eyes and emptied his mind, before finally drawing his energy into his core to shut himself down completely. Seth practically flayed his skin off with his own claws. But, still, he was unresponsive. Like dead, but—not. The meatsuit still bled, the heart still beat, lungs still processed oxygen; but other than that? He wasn’t being helpful at all. They were still answerless. So now? They’d moved on to the wing cutting part. Easy? Not so much.

  Where were the goddamned wings?

  As if sensing their intentions, the prisoner’s eyes popped open. Already nervous, Pox jumped a foot into the air with an un-demon-like shriek

  “Oh, for Satan’s sake, Pox. Are you a demon or a twelve-year-old girl?”

  “Just hurry up. I’ve got a bad feeling about this. Let’s get it over with and get out of here. I really don’t want to be ash.”

  Seth rolled his eyes and kicked the naked carcass in the ribs. “Where are your wings?”

  No response.

  Crouching down, Seth peered into the open eyes. Pupils dilated. He waved his hand across them. Unresponsive. Fuck me.

  Shaking him by the shoulders, he shouted, “Where are your fucking wings? Answer me! I know you can hear me, asshole. Where are they?”

  No response.

  “God damn it! You piece of shit!” They weren’t going to need to worry about Michael smiting them if they failed to follow orders. Michael would be a mercy compared to their boss. After kicking him again, he whirled away to think.

  There had to be another way.

  Chapter 1: Saving the World before Bedtime

  “WHAT IN THE FREAKING HELL is he doing? Come on, already. I’ve got shit to do.”

  Declan Manning adjusted the magnification of the night scope and zeroed in on the asshat, er, um, target smoking a cigarette on the rooftop below them. Barely moving a muscle, he settled his body back into its waiting position and sighed long and hard. The urge to shoot the idiot in the head was threatening to make him blow off his famous surfer attitude. Damn it. He didn’t have time for this. He promised Rori he’d take her out tonight. But, of course, they were delayed—again. Sure they needed one of the demons alive, but it was really, really, really tempting to just blow the dumbass away and go dancing with his girl. They could always grab another demon. The friggin’ city was crawling with them.

  His partner, Sean, snickered. Lying prone, his eyes scanning the scene, he hissed just under his breath, “Dude, relax. We can’t kill everyone yet. Killian needs us to question at least one of them.” Switching to telepathy, he needled him with typical Sean sarcasm; Wedding jitters?

  You know you’re not funny, right?

  Sean flashed a quick grin. Whatever, man. You need to relax. Rori’s not going anywhere. She’s all in. The wedding will be perfect.

  Yeah, yeah, yeah—rational Dec knew that—hell, she’d been with him for two years already and hadn’t bailed yet. They were crazy happy together. Everything was completely perfect. That’s what was sending his spidey senses into overdrive now. There were only a couple more days before the wedding, and it was too quiet here in Demon Central. Surely something bad was coming. That was the story of his life. Nothing ever went as planned. So, yeah, he was feeling punchy about the whole thing. If he lost her now . . . Well, he didn’t know what he’d do. Chances were good that someone would die, though.

  Seriously, chill out.

  Dec swallowed another comment before it formed. The faint arc of the cigarette butt sailed over the edge of the roof below. The wind shifted to carry the guttural voices of the demons working security.

  “Change of plans. Seth called. He wants us to move uptown.” The body attached to the nasally Bronx accent was shadowed against the water tower. As he spoke, he angled his frame further behind the thick metal structure.

  Even with enhanced night vision, Dec couldn’t make out the facial features. Crap. Don’t hide from me now.

  Narrowing his eyes, he adjusted the scope and peered through it again. Maybe with a little more juice? He pushed more energy into h
is retinas to max his ability. Not much better. Grinding his teeth, he muttered, “Come on, asshole. Show yourself.”

  Sean asked from the corner of his mouth, “Well? Can you ID him or what?”

  “He’s freakishly tall.”

  “And?”

  He chewed the inside of his cheek to strangle the chuckle that wanted to burst free. So predictable. His brother Primani was even less patient than he was. He was kinda surprised Sean hadn’t already jumped between the two demons with his blade flashing. “That’s it. He’s tall. I can’t see shit through the tank. At least we know that Seth’s part of this.”

  “Sonofabitch. I knew Seth was up to something. I hate that demon. Why haven’t we killed him yet?” Sean remained perfectly motionless, but Dec felt every vibration as he got ready to bolt. His own body hummed with the force of his saol as it readied him for the fight. It was almost time.

  The demon who’d been smoking, spit over the side and swung his eyes over the sidewalk below. With shoulders slumped, he jammed his hands into his sweatshirt pockets and whistled in alarm. “We move those bitches and the big boss will lose his mind. I heard him tell Seth they’re supposed to stay here. The buyer’s coming to pick them up later. You sure Seth knows what he’s doing?”

  “Good question,” Dec muttered between closed lips.

  Seth was a mid-level demon running Manhattan ops. He replaced the last asshole who’d replaced their favorite demon, Dagin, after his long overdue annihilation a few years back. Seth was waaaay too junior to ignore his boss’ orders. “Maybe he has a death wish,” he added with a hopeful smile in his voice. “We could help him with that.”

  Sean elbowed him in the side. “Bitches? Wasn’t this supposed to be about guns? When did they start moving people? Wait here. I’ll go recon.” With that, Sean dematerialized and left him lying on the roof with both hands on the sniper rifle.

  “No worries. I’ll just lie here and bake.”

  That wasn’t much of an exaggeration. It was hot. The roof wasn’t the coolest place in the city. Even nightfall hadn’t dissipated the heat that lingered in the concrete and metal under his belly. A trickle of sweat flowed along the curve of his face as the humidity cranked up for another thunderstorm. It smelled like rain, but Mother Nature was keeping the wet stuff to herself for now. Lifting his gaze to the sky, he sent her a mental thank you. The last thing he wanted was drenching rain all over his favorite rifle. Come on, Sean, hurry the hell up.

  Waiting sucked. To entertain himself, Dec flexed and relaxed his muscles beginning with his calves and working his way up, all while keeping his eyes on the two demons. Should he cap the one standing near the edge? He mentally slapped himself. Not a good idea. He’d done this a thousand times since scopes were invented. He let his memory fill in the details as the guy lit another cigarette. The round would enter his brain at 2,700 feet per second. Bam! He’d topple straight over the edge without a sound—until his body collided with the car parked below—then the car alarm would go apeshit and their position would be blown.

  Blinking a drop of stinging sweat out of his eye, he moistened his dry lips and tossed that fantasy aside. Maybe later.

  Silent as air, Sean rematerialized behind the guy next to the tank, skewered him with his Primani blade and vanished again. Dec blinked and the demon was dust in the wind.

  Score one for the good guys.

  “Come on, man. Let’s bolt.” Back at his side again, Sean crouched to give him a hand up while wiping the bloody blade against the back of his leg.

  After slinging the rifle over his shoulder, Dec asked, “What’d you find?”

  “The friggin’ loft is full of women. At least a dozen. Maybe more.” Amped up and ready to kick some ass, Sean practically vibrated with the urge to charge in there.

  “Want to call Killian?”

  “The hell with that! We don’t need him. There are only four guards; three human and one demon. We got this!”

  Dec adjusted the shoulder strap to keep the weapon from swinging around then drew his Sig from its holster. The faint echo of a scream spurred them to act. With a taut jerk of his head, he aimed his body at the back door of the warehouse and vanished. As he rematerialized, he scanned the open space for targets. One, two . . . three.

  Where’s the demon?

  Rolling his eyes upward to the second floor, Sean replied, With the women.

  Of course he is. Guards first, yeah?

  Sean lifted his chin in agreement. They’d done this a million times. They could clear a building with their eyes closed. Literally.

  Hugging the shadowy space along the outside walls, they split up to take out the guards. The warehouse opened up from the narrow hallway they arrived in. With only a handful of scattered pallets breaking up the space, there weren’t many places for cover. Too bad. He was in the mood for a gun fight. Things had been too quiet lately.

  Two of the humans wore black cargo pants and black t-shirts with a white logo printed over the heart—Expat Security. Interesting. Not the usual hired thugs. Seth was moving up in the world. He had himself a real security team. One more reason to take them out.

  Lifting his hand in the go-signal, he launched himself forward to reappear directly behind guard number one, locking him in a chokehold until he sank to his knees—not dead—just out cold. On the other side of the doorway, Sean did the same thing. After slapping zip cuffs on them, he and Sean moved to the stairs. Two down. Two to go.

  With backs flat to the wall, they listened just outside the loft’s entrance. It was eerily silent. No crying. No talking. There was nothing but the barest hint of breathing and thready pulses. Sean scowled in concentration. He was thinking what Dec was thinking: drugged.

  “Hey, douche bags, don’t wait in the hall. Come inside so I can kick your asses.”

  The demon had a death wish. No doubt. Dec flashed a quick grin before sauntering through the doorway with Sean on his left.

  Sean drawled, “Big threat from a little demon. You really think you can take me?”

  The idiot hell spawn had gotten the memo. New York demons all adopted the same façade. They thought it made them look cool. It made them look stupid, but hey, no one asked him. This poser had shaved his head, tatted both arms with dragon sleeves, jammed gauges through his earlobes, and topped everything off with baggy-ass jeans and a white wife-beater. He was a walking cliché. The only thing that Dec respected was the gleaming athame that he clenched in his meaty fist. He eyeballed it as he tightened his fingers around the grip of his weapon.

  “Shoot him.”

  “Sure thing, boss.”

  Dec froze as a man stepped away from the wall with the barrel of a sawed-off shotgun pointed at his gut. The man smiled with more humor than called for. As he chuckled at Dec’s reaction, his bloodshot eyes glimmered with a wee bit of crazy. Oh, yay. Another whack-job working with demons. Raising the weapon a hair higher, the crazy man ratcheted a round; the distinct sound sending a chill down Dec’s back. Getting gut shot was painful. Sure, he could heal himself, but the process hurt like a bitch.

  “Now hang on a sec. You don’t want to shoot me.” His tone was reasonable with an edge of threat that anyone who wasn’t an idiot would catch. He held up his gun hand in mock surrender, sidling closer to the wall in the process. “That’ll only piss me off, and you don’t really want that, do you? Bad things happen when I’m pissed. Sure, I try to keep my temper under control, but I’m just like the next guy. Sometimes I just can’t take it anymore and lose my shit.”

  The meth head looking human with the shotgun stopped a few paces in front of him and steadied the weapon with another crazy grin. Okay, maybe he did want to shoot him. Dec swung his eyes around the room, taking in the prone bodies of about a dozen young women. From the way they were sprawled, they all seemed to be unconscious. He could hear the faint pattering of a dozen heartbeats so he was pretty sure they weren’t dead. The angels only knew how close they were to it, though. Time to get this show on the road. He
and Sean locked gazes.

  Erupting with a burst of speed, Sean lunged at the demon at the same time Dec snatched the barrel of the shotgun out of the human’s hands. Using it like a club, he slammed the thing into the side of the man’s skull with enough force to send him crashing against the wall before sliding to the concrete floor. His bloodshot eyes fluttered once before he went completely limp. Dec turned away before the blood got a chance to flow. Sean and the demon were squared off, sizing each other up before diving in. Dec shrugged dismissively. Sean was on his own. He didn’t need help with one asshole.

  While Sean dealt with the demon, Dec quickly cleared the small bathroom and the two partitioned offices. The place was empty. Good. Time to bring in the cops. He dialed 911 to report the location and condition of the women. As he waited on hold, the reek of burnt earth assaulted his nose, and he gave Sean a mental high five. The demon was toast. Another point for the good guys. One last thing before they go . . .

  Sean’s voice wasn’t even slightly breathless when he asked, “Did you kill him?”

  Glancing up from the unconscious thug’s body, he shook his head, replying, “Nope. I’m just zipping him up for the cops. Someone needs to be here when New York’s finest shows up.” The crazy bastard would have a lot of explaining to do if he woke up from Dec’s little love tap. Served him right.

  Right on cue, the faint sounds of sirens warbled in the night air.

  On the other side of town, Rori Austin tucked a cotton throw beneath her toes and settled into the comfy new leather couch. Loki was curled against her hip snoring softly. Still lanky with doggy adolescence, the Dalmatian pup was clumsy and adorable whenever he was mobile. Right now? He was sacked out like a throw pillow. Deep in his dreams, he breathed slow and easy, the sound lulling her into a puddle of relaxation too. After a gentle pat on his butt, she turned back to her tablet to read a new eBook, Puck Me, with a heavy sigh.