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Legacy First Trilogy Box Set: Books 1-3 of the Legacy Series Page 18


  “We entered the nest, vamps were scattered all around us. There was a large group concentrated around the leader. The rest were either in pairs or alone.”

  “And what did I instruct you to do?” I asked.

  “I was supposed to pick off the lone ones and watch your back while you took on the leader and his flunkies.”

  “And what did you do?” I hated being like this, as though I were some headmaster humiliating a student. I hated being the douche-bag. I remembered clearly how it felt being on the other side of this conversation. But sometimes taking on the role of the bad guy was the only way to drive a lesson home.

  She stared at a wet spot on the floor. “I went straight for the leader of the pack.”

  “Which left me with the responsibility of watching your back and front. You’re not strong enough to take on fifteen vamps at one go.” I turned and walked away.

  “I’m sorry.” Her tone was sincere, her voice barely a whisper.

  “Sorry isn’t gonna bring you back from the dead,” I said a little too harshly. “We’re up against demons and Sins. The worst of the worst. I died last time, and it was only because of some dumb twist of fate that I happen to be here now. I can’t let that happen to anyone else.”

  Silence reined for a while. Abi stood next to me, and we both stared out of the window, watching tiny raindrops explode against the tarmac.

  “We’re stronger now,” she said.

  I glanced at her.

  “We’re stronger,” she insisted. “We have your sister as an ally now. The angels promised they’d help, too. And you got me. I’m powerful.”

  She had a point. I’d only started teaching Abi less than a year ago and she had picked up magic almost overnight. Given her succubus nature, she had all the physical endowments of a half-demon and was a natural at stuff like telepathy and psychometry. Amaymon had told me in private that in a few years’ time she could become proficient in telekinesis and all the other psychic branches of magic.

  I hadn’t told her that. Abi was strong, no doubt, but she was still inexperienced. Today’s mission was proof enough. And unless she could convince me that she was mature enough to handle more power, I was seriously considering putting a stop to our teachings.

  “I never said you’re not strong. I said you weren’t strong enough. You gotta use your head. Think. Observe.”

  “I do think. And I observe stuff.”

  “Really? Okay then, here’s a little test for you. How old were the vamps we took out today?”

  Her eyebrows shot up. “How should I know? They looked to be around nineteen or twenty.”

  I rolled my eyes. “I mean, how long did they have their powers for? Vampire years.”

  “I… How the hell do you expect me to know that?” she snapped.

  “Observation,” I replied simply.

  “Fine. Three, maybe four years. They were young, including their boss.”

  I applauded mockingly. “Yes, they were young. But they couldn’t have had their powers for more than six months. A year tops.”

  “There’s no way you could have gotten that from thirty seconds of fighting.”

  I smirked. I could still impress her. It was also fun to know I had won the argument.

  “Their healing factor was too slow, too weak; their reflexes and strength were below average in supernatural terms; their hunting tactics were so pitiful even Bambi could have kicked their asses; and they were very, very messy during their feeding. As they fed they went into a frenzy of lust and hunger, which suggests that they're new to that level of ecstasy. You lost yet?”

  “You don’t have to get all high and mighty about it,” she said with a huff.

  My satisfaction increased. “No, I don’t, but I enjoy it. Which brings me back to my original point. We use tactics. Look at my sister. She’s got no healing factor and no super powers to speak of. Despite that, she rarely emerges with more than a scratch. I, on the other hand, with my near-immortality and vast powers, am constantly getting stabbed, shot at and otherwise killed. So, how about we start using our heads and avoid body bags, huh?”

  Whatever she was going to say was lost when a loud explosion went off in the kitchen, followed by a series of crashing and clanging sounds. In the midst of all that, I heard my cat yelling,

  “Ah, damn.”

  Chapter 2

  Amaymon wasn’t like most cats. I mean, sure, he spent his waking hours eating and sleeping, but he could also talk, turn into a powerful demon and wreck my damn kitchen.

  He saw us walk in, turned his golden eyes toward us and nonchalantly said, “Howdy” before resuming his assault on the mini-fridge. Abi had brought that in with her when she moved in, claiming that she had things she wanted to keep separate from my leftover-filled fridge and the glutton demonic cat that knew perfectly well how to open it. The mini-fridge was putting up a good fight. It bounced from one spot to another, avoiding Amaymon’s attempts to pounce on it. Any utensils near the fridge shot toward the cat, and let me tell you, watching your annoying cat getting whacked in the face with a frying pan like some bizarre cartoon sequence is hilarious.

  It stopped being hilarious when the Balinese demon became a victim.

  It was a statue of decent workmanship, a carving of a very ugly demon wielding a lightning bolt. I don’t remember exactly where I got it, maybe a garage sale or something. The only reason I got it was that I had yet to fight a Balinese monster, and in my own sad way I figured it would be nice to encounter a demon, even a cheap wooden carving of one, which had yet to try and rip my head off. Point is, I liked that statue and the cat scratched it.

  And that’s when I got mad.

  I lunged for the insane appliance and grasped it with both hands. On top of it was a sigil, a magical circle full of squiggly symbols painted on with nail polish. I forced my magic through it and after a faint pop the fridge stopped having an epileptic fit.

  “What the hell is going on?” I asked as I took in the war-zone that my kitchen had become.

  “I spent all evening trying to get that damn thing open. And then it went off,” Amaymon said, as if that clarified everything. Abi snatched the fridge from my hands and checked her nail-polish-drawn sigil.

  “Now I have to draw this again. Last time it took me a couple of hours to figure out the proper proportions for the spell,” she whined.

  My tone got louder. “Can someone explain to me what on Earth happened to my freakin’ kitchen?”

  But they still ignored me.

  “I told you to stay out of my things,” she told the cat.

  “All I wanted was a cupcake,” he replied.

  “You ate the entire batch last week.”

  “And that gives you the right to booby trap your fridge?”

  “Hey, guys! I’m still here!”

  Again, they ignored me.

  “How else am I supposed to keep you from eating everything in the house?” she retorted.

  “You can’t. I do what I want, when I want. And I want a cupcake,” Amaymon hissed.

  Abi raised her eyebrows. Amaymon’s tough guy act was long lost on the apprentice. So, he tried the next best thing. He launched himself at the fridge in Abi’s arms and hung spread-eagle from the small appliance.

  Without a word, I grabbed the cat by his collar, prying him off the fridge and kicking him in midair. The cat flew to the other side of the kitchen.

  “Isn’t that animal abuse?” Abi asked.

  “Not if the animal is a demon,” I replied as I opened the fridge in Abi’s arms. Its contents were sparse, save for a dozen small, round, red-velvet cupcakes. I took one out and was about to take a bite when I noticed a black ball of fur bolting toward the open fridge. I closed the door, and as Amaymon jumped I swatted him away with the fridge itself. For the second time that evening, the cat flew across the room.

  “Watch the fridge,” Abi gasped. I ignored her and took a bite out of that cupcake. I had to hand it to her, the girl could bake.


  “So, this is what my life has become now.” I paced around the kitchen with a pastry in one hand and a mini-fridge in the other. “You two arguing over baked goods and destroying my kitchen in the process. And worst of all, ignoring me. Never ignore me.”

  I handed the appliance over to its owner. “Clever spell. I’m impressed that you managed to tone down a protection and defense spell for something as big as a house and make it work for a fridge. But next time you’re gonna put a utensil bomb in my kitchen, warn me first.”

  “And you.” I looked at the cat with the same expression the Balinese demon wore. “Any more crap from you and I’ll skin you alive and turn you into a pair of fuzzy slippers. Now, both of you, clean this up.” I turned and left, heading straight for the shower. After arguing in a rainstorm and witnessing the epic battle of cat versus mini-fridge, I could use some relaxing time under a stream of hot water.

  I stood under the shower for a few minutes, letting water wash away the grime collected by another day of hunting nightmares and horrors. But try as I might, no amount of relaxation could soothe my mind.

  It was getting harder and harder out there, with all the new powers in play. Only a few months ago, if a client asked me to rid him of a haunting ghost and it turned a little nasty, I would consider that a tough day. I would come home and unwind, maybe watch a little TV, drink a beer, have some company over. Whatever got me through the night.

  Now I had to instruct a beautiful young woman who, genetically speaking, was as frightening as the monsters we hunted, and she seemed adamant on repeating all the mistakes I made as a kid. It wasn’t as if I didn’t enjoy teaching her. Some would say it was high time I took in a partner and passed on the esoteric knowledge I harvested. But this had gone beyond the usual stuff I did. I was used to a method. Step one, find the monster. Step two, whack that son of a bitch and go for a pint. Now… well, now, I had no idea what the fuck I was supposed to hunt. I mean, vampires, ghouls, maybe a demon or two—I could handle that.

  But a Deadly Sin, are you kidding me? That was entire universes beyond me.

  My curse rendered me virtually immortal—stab me, shoot me, maim me, I’ll walk it off—but that bitch, Lilith, had killed me. I mean, really killed me. No amount of healing magic would have brought me back. Only an accident, a glitch in the universe, a freak phenomenon had brought me back. Sure, I got back feeling as if I had replaced the Energizer Bunny, but the fact remains, I died. And if I may be so immodest, I’m one tough mother to kill.

  Then, Amaymon springs the zinger: “Guess what, everybody. The super-tough demon that sprouted a freakin’ Alpha upon her demise was only defeated because she lost her ability to keep herself together. Which means that, somewhere out there, six other apocalyptic-scale nasties are lurking about, and if they cooperated with whoever, or whatever, was pulling their strings, they would not lose themselves like Lust did. Oh, and they would kill us. Like, a lot.”

  Despite all that, the apprentice kept trudging about in her own way. I mean, talk about learning the hard way. She almost got her head separated from her shoulders merely a few hours ago and suddenly it’s my fault. Maybe my gut was right. Maybe I should quit teaching her.

  I poured water over my face as if to cleanse the thought away. I couldn’t just leave her, not the way I had been left alone. No way in hell was I going to make her go through the same crap I had to go through as a kid. I needed to focus, to get my act together. Whether I liked it or not, I was involved in this. And once, a long time ago, a wise man told me that no matter how large a problem seemed, it only took the courage to make that first step to completely unravel it. That was what I needed, that one tiny, terrifying step.

  First things first—I needed to get my resources in check. My sister was currently combing through her network of spooks and spies for anything related to the Seven Deadly Sins. Or anything that sounded like a conspiracy. She clued me in on any gathering of monsters, even if they just happened to be flocking together. Her team of scary mercenary wizard ninjas had been active for months, leaving behind them a trail of ash and bone. She had even made a move against human conspirators. My sister took paranoia to a whole new level. And that method was getting old.

  I didn’t want to contact the angels myself. After punching Jehudiel in the face, even though he totally deserved it and he totally let me do it, I was reluctant to call him. The archangel was probably busy holding together some corner of the universe or something. And it wasn’t as if we had parted on good terms. Excluding the punch, I may have told him to shove his war and his holiness up his armor crack. And twist a couple of times.

  But that didn’t mean that I wouldn’t call on him if I needed his help. If there’s one thing I made sure was clear was that Earth was my turf. And no being, no matter how powerful, was simply going to waltz in and start giving out orders. So, I made a mental note: give my sister another couple of weeks. If she still had bubkis, I’d rope Amaymon into spilling out a summoning ritual or two.

  Issue number two—I had to stop being a friend to Abi and start being a mentor. This wasn’t college. You fail a class in school, big whoop. Second chances aren’t that uncommon.

  But fail in my world and the consequences were much more dire. All it took was a moment of distraction, to be a little slower, a little weaker, a little out of synch, and heads would roll, most likely yours. There were no second chances, no fair questions—only pain and horror.

  Although despite all that, we did occasionally smile and laugh at the fact that we took on entire ships of hellish denizens and lived to fight another day. Sometimes there were good days. But if Abi wanted to live to see them, my apprentice needed to stop being a liability. And it was up to me to make her an asset.

  Final issue: me—I had a problem.

  Amaymon said there was nothing wrong with my magic but I kept feeling off. For one thing, the boost I received after doing the whole resurrection thing seemed to have haywired my entire system. I was never subtle with my power to begin with, and lacked concentration on a major degree, but now I had trouble brewing up even the simplest of spells.

  Whenever I did fire off a spell, forget about restraint. All I did today was blow up walls without meaning to. That was why Abi managed to take the lead during the vampire assault. It wasn’t that she was faster or stronger—it was the fact that I was lamer. If Amaymon was right, and when it comes to magic he usually is, then this problem wasn’t supernatural at all. It was human. I, me, the Erik part, was the problem. Stress, tension, fear—whatever it was, it needed to go, and fast.

  Because all signs read one message. The balance between good and evil, order and chaos in this universe, and possibly in all our neighboring planes of existence, rested on my shoulders. I was the only one who could save it. Apparently, some deity or universal force decided to make me the chosen one.

  So I needed to be at the top of my game. I had friends and a family to defend—I had a universe to protect.

  The universe was so screwed.

  Chapter 3

  The phone’s ringing snapped me out of my thoughts. I turned off the water and waded out of the shower, trying to dry myself off and avoid tripping over the towel at the same time. I heard the phone go off again and something bumped against the door.

  “Erik. Phone,” came Amaymon’s voice from behind to the door. “You might wanna get it since I have no thumbs and the lady of the house is currently blasting her ears with some of that horrible music that kids listen to these days.”

  I cracked open the door and stuck my head out. “Yeah, I’ll get it. I’m expecting a call anyway.”

  Amaymon turned his gaze upwards at me. “Then I shall carry on with my life of feline mellowness and staring into space.”

  I rolled my eyes and quickly put on some pants before exiting.

  “I’m sure Abi will appreciate your new look,” remarked the cat.

  “This from the guy who openly licks himself,” I shot back. The phone went off again, sending another reso
nating burst of sound through my head.

  “What?” I said into the receiver. I’m no good with phones.

  “Bad timing, brother?” My sister’s voice had its usual edge of ice, as if to imply that she was doing me some sort of favor by addressing me directly.

  “It’s never good timing, but then again, I’m sure you know what a crap fest my life has been the past few months.” I took a deep breath and sat myself down. The storm was still raging outside. “What’s up, Gil?”

  “My patience is. I hope you have yielded some form of clue with regards to the Seven Deadly Sins.”

  “I got squat. Your info led me to a vampire nest. New ones, too. All we found were scraps of cloth and a whole lot of blood. I mean, these guys didn’t even bother with coffins, thrones, or shrunken heads. I thought those were a staple in every nest.” I could sense my sister rolling her eyes.

  “Stop joking, Erik, this is serious.” My sister sighed. “We struck some nests, too. And here’s the strange part: they were expecting you.”

  I frowned. “Me? What am I, vampire boogeyman?”

  “Apparently. You may not realize it, but your work has had a significant effect. The reason this city is flooded with monsters is because of you. They either want to challenge you or are attracted to your magic. Or, and this is a recent theory I have been developing, they may be here because this town has become a nexus of power.”

  “English, please.” Two minutes on the phone with my sister and my head was ready to explode.

  “Think about it. Why here, in good old La Fortunata? Because of you. You killed monsters and that rippled out through the entire dimension. Every time you kill a monster you leave a void, inviting other monsters to replace it. It hasn’t been a year since you destroyed Lilith. Think of all her power and of the huge void she left. More monsters are going to come and it is only going to get worse.”