Darkness Everlasting (Guardians of Eternity #3)(83)
This Styx was a rabid animal who only knew that his mate was in danger and that he would kill anything and everything that stood in his path.
Feeling the power beginning to thunder through his body, Styx glanced up as Jacob returned from the house with the pen and paper clutched in his meaty hands.
Unaware he was mere moments from death, Desmond smiled as he glanced down at the kneeling Styx.
"Well, Styx, it appears that your ruling days are about to come to an end. Do you have any last words?"
The wind began to whip and the ground shake as Styx slowly rose to his feet.
"Just one." His hand lifted toward the growingly puzzled face of his opponent. "Die."
Chapter Twenty
A peaceful hush bathed the elegant mansion. Well, the peace bathed all but Darcy's luxurious rooms.
Realizing that she would be getting no more sleep until Styx had safely returned, Darcy had foolishly allowed herself to be lured into a game of checkers with Levet.
Both of them were seated cross-legged on the bed as Darcy studied the board with a sudden frown. She was no master player, and her attention had been more finely tuned on listening for the return of Styx than on the pieces on the board. Still, she was not so poor a player, or so deeply distracted, that she couldn't tell when she was being well and truly swindled.
Lifting her head, she flashed her tiny companion a frown. "You cheated."
"Moi?" Levet pressed a gnarled hand to his chest in mock outrage. "Do not be absurd. Why would I cheat when I am so obviously the superior player?"
"Superior? Ha." Darcy pointed toward the board. "I was kicking your ass."
Levet gave a small sniff. "I am wounded, cherie. Mortally wounded."
"What you are is a low-down cheat," Darcy corrected. "Each time I glance toward the window you move the pieces on the board."
"Pooh. I have never heard such slander. My honor is above reproach."
"Then how did you get kinged when you haven't even made it across the board?"
Levet gave a flap of his wings that sent the pieces flying off the board and across the bed in a shower of plastic color.
"Checkers, fah. Such a stupid game," he complained as he hopped off the bed and paced the carpet. "What we need is a real challenge."
Absently collecting the checkers and returning them to their box, Darcy shot her companion a suspicious glance.
She didn't know much about gargoyles, but she suspected that Levet's idea of a challenge and her own might be worlds apart.
"What kind of challenge?"
"Something that takes real skill. Something that demands both a keen intelligence and the talent of a well-honed athlete." Pace, pace, pace. Back and forth the tiny gargoyle crossed the carpet until at last coming to a halt with a snap of his fingers. A rather neat trick with fingers as thick and gnarly as his. "Aha, I have it."
Setting aside the checkers, Darcy scooted to the edge of the bed. "I'm afraid to ask."
"Bowling."
Darcy blinked and then gave a startled laugh. "Good grief. You've got to be kidding."
"What?" Levet puffed out his chest. "Bowling is an ancient and noble sport. The sport of kings, in fact."
"I thought that was chess."
Levet offered a superior lift of his brows. "And just how many kings have you known?"
Kings, yeah right.
There were all sorts of royalty hanging out in Goth bars and cheap boardinghouses.
"Let me think. Ah ..." Darcy pretended to consider. "That would be none."
Levet gave a smirky flap of his wings. "I, on the other hand, have known hundreds of kings. Some of them quite intimately."
Darcy held up a hand. "Okay, we're going into the realm of way too much information."
"Very droll." Levet rolled his eyes. "By intimate I mean that I graced their castles for several centuries. You would be amazed what an enterprising demon can learn when perched outside a bedroom window."
Darcy grimaced. "Ick, I can imagine."
"Of course, when it came to the queens, well, let's us just say that my intimacy was—"
"Enough." Darcy firmly interrupted. She wasn't up for a detailed account of gargoyle sexcapades. Not tonight. Not any night. "I'm not going bowling."
Levet planted his hands on his hips and stuck out his bottom lip. Great. A pouting demon.
"Have you ever tried it?" he demanded.
Darcy shivered before she could halt the betraying gesture. "When I was a teenager."
Easily sensing her unhappy memories, Levet moved forward with a curious expression. "What happened?"
"The first ball I threw went through the back of the alley." She smiled with a grim humor. "The manager asked me to leave immediately, and later that night so did my foster parents."
Levet made a soft sound as his pretty wings suddenly drooped with regret.
"Oh, Darcy, I'm sorry."
She shrugged. "Shit happens."
"Yes." He screwed up his face. "It certainly does."
Darcy gave a small chuckle as she shrugged off the ugly memory. Somehow, when Levet was near things didn't seem nearly so bad.
On the point of suggesting a rousing game of hopscotch or "toss the gargoyle from the roof and see if he can really fly," Darcy felt a strange prickle race over her skin.
Alexandra Ivy's Books
- What Are You Afraid Of? (The Agency #2)
- Alexandra Ivy
- Blood Assassin (The Sentinels #2)
- Born in Blood (The Sentinels #1)
- Sinful Rapture (The Rapture #2)
- First Rapture (The Rapture #1)
- My Lord Immortality (Immortal Rogues #3)
- My Lord Eternity (Immortal Rogues #2)
- My Lord Vampire (Immortal Rogues #1)
- Predatory (Immortal Guardians #3.5)