Chapter 29 - Eden

Eden

“This is ridiculous,” Malachi grits out, his patience snapping as he tries to shove past the hound. “Chain-Chewer, move. Now.”

The Hellhound lets out a sound that vibrates through the floorboards and smashes his craggy, magma-veined head against my chest with enough force to nearly knock the wind out of me.

“I don’t think he wants us to go,” I say.

The beast is a terrifying, hulking mass of living obsidian and heat, but he’s looking up at me with eyes that are less ‘predatory monster’ and more ‘sad puppy.’

Malachi snorts, adjusting the velvet, teeth-filled sack at his hip. “Don’t project your emotions onto him, Eden.”

I reach down, tentatively scratching the rough, heat-pitted surface behind Chain-Chewer’s ears. He leans into the touch, little sparks drifting from his lashes.

How the fuck could he say I’m projecting?

It’s a rock, sure, but it’s a rock that’s throwing a tantrum just like Vesper does when she knows I’m heading out, weaving between my ankles like a barricade designed to guilt-trip me into staying.

“He’s pouting,” I coo gently. “He wants to come with us.”

Malachi lets out a long sigh that seems to deflate his entire silver-skinned frame. “He is a stationary security system, Eden. He is designed to sit around and look menacing, not trot through the slums.”

Chain-Chewer whines again and nudges Malachi’s hand with his snout.

“Fine,” Malachi relents with a groan, giving the hound’s head a stiff, reluctant pat. “Perhaps you might actually be useful as a security detail. At the very least, you can act as a buffer between the local filth and my little summoner’s increasingly erratic stature.”

The hound’s tail-thumping doubles in speed as he trots to the door, his heavy claws clicking against the marble in a happy, chaotic skitter.

“There,” I murmur, following the walking boulder toward the exit. “See? Not a statue.”

“No,” Malachi mutters, wrenching the iron bolt open. “Just another variable. Just another thing I have to worry about if things go tits up. Truly, Eden, you are a blight on my efficiency.”

*******

Through our journey on three different trams, and navigating streets packed tight enough to induce a panic attack, we’ve barely been spared a second glance.

It certainly helps that I don’t look or smell like me anymore.

Before we left, Malachi spackled me with a paste that dulled my complexion to a sickly, greyish hue.

And between that, the layers of heavy clothes, the cloud of perfume, and the terrifying Hellhound glued to my hip, I’m practically invisible.

Don’t get me wrong—my skin’s definitely still crawling.

Every time a tram lurches and a stranger’s limb brushes mine, I have to fight the urge to vomit profusely.

And I definitely have the intrusive thought of grabbing the nearest sharp object, cutting myself open, and finding a way the fuck home.

But compared to the sheer, naked terror of the last few days?

This isn't as bad. I’m just... commuting. In Hell.

We spill out of the last tram and step onto a street that’s completely, unnervingly silent. The chaotic clamor of the districts, the shrieking gears, the hawkers, the growls—it all vanishes.

“Malachi?” I whisper, the sound too loud in the dead air. I spin in a circle, looking for the chaos, the stalls, the danger. But there’s literally nothing. There isn’t a soul in sight, just fog and the echo of my own boots. “Where’s the market? There’s nothing here.”

Malachi steps in close, his body heat a sudden comfort in the damp chill as he laces his hand through mine.

“There is, baby girl,” he murmurs, his thumb dragging a circle over my knuckles. “It just takes a minute. The Slag Heaps don't sit on the surface; they fester underneath.”

He turns me toward what looks like a blank, brick dead-end at the alley's throat. “Just brace yourself, okay? The transition is... viscous.”

Before I can ask what the hell viscous means in this context, he tugs me forward, and we walk straight toward the brick wall.

I flinch, waiting for the impact. But it never comes.

The air thickens, turning into a wall of resistance so thick my ears pop. The silence is ripped away, replaced instantly by a roar of sound that hits me like a physical slap to the face.

The world explodes into a bloody red. We’re standing on a metal gantry overlooking a sprawling, subterranean pit, teeming with thousands of bodies.

The smell hits me next—rust, meat, and exhausts—so strong I taste it on the back of my tongue.

Below us, stalls are carved into the walls of the pit like honeycomb, glowing with neon sigils, while demons haggle, scream, and fight in the crush below.

The spiralling, rusted, metal staircase screams under our weight, shifting and groaning with every clattering footstep.

“Welcome to the bottom of the barrel,” Malachi says, tightening his grip on my hand.

We pass a stall where jars of severed fingers are crammed tight in cloudy brine, the nails scratching incessantly against the glass with a sound like a thousand trapped beetles.

Another vendor’s selling strips of what looks like dried leather, but I all-out gag into the back of my free hand when I notice the 'leather' has faded tattoos on it.

He takes a sharp left, pulling me toward a darker, quieter corner of the Slag Heaps where the red neon lights flicker and die in quick succession, and there’s a stall that looks like a nursery for a serial killer’s spawn.

It’s draped in moth-eaten lace that’s grey with decades of grime, and instead of cute mobiles spinning in the draft, there are strings of hollowed-out finger bones clacking together dryly.

Behind the counter sits a creature that looks like it was knit together from dried apple skin and malice. She’s hunched over, her eyes milky and blind, polishing a pacifier with some kind of rag that looks suspiciously like a tongue.

“Customers,” she croaks, her gnarled, fungus-thick nails stopping their moving. “I smell... fresh blood. And sulfur. An odd pairing.”

“We need a rattle,” Malachi says, cutting through the pleasantries with his usual sledgehammer tact. He steps up to the counter, his massive frame dwarfing the hunched crone. “Stasis-grade. Heavy duty. I don't want the cheap tin crap that breaks after one tantrum.”

The crone’s head snaps up, her neck cracking audibly. She sniffs the air, her nostrils flaring. “A Stasis Rattle? Expensive taste. Effective for silencing... energetic spawn.” She tilts her head, a sly, toothless grin splitting her face. “You are a father, then?”

Malachi stiffens. “Fuck n—” He stops dead. “Yes,” he corrects. “Yes. We have a... babe. A son.”

The idea of having a child at all, let alone a child with Malachi almost makes me choke on my own spit.

“He is... spirited,” Malachi continues, his voice dropping into a register of exhausted parenthood that’s so convincing it’s actually scary. “Loud. He has his mother’s lungs and a temper that could level a city block. We haven't slept in three moons.”

The crone cackles. “Ah, the joys of rearing.” She reaches under the counter, her yellow claws scrabbling in the dark, and pulls out a silver rattle. “This will paralyze his vocal cords for six hours at a time. Guaranteed silence.”

“Perfect,” Malachi says, reaching for the velvet bag at his hip.

“That will be twelve,” the crone hisses, her milky eyes locking onto the bag. “Molars. Human preferred. Roots intact.”

He upends the velvet sack onto the counter, and a cascade of white teeth spills out onto the rotting wood with a sound like falling hail.

He counts out twelve bloody, root-heavy molars with a casual flick of his silver finger, sliding them toward her like poker chips.

Then he snatches up the rattle and shoves it into my cracked leather bag.

“Come on, darling. We need to get back before the little terror wakes up and eats the nanny.”

He moves faster now, his tension ratcheting up like a coiled spring as he practically drags me into the deeper, darker arteries.

I scramble to keep up, but my boot skids on a patch of slick, unidentifiable slime.

As I topple forward, Malachi’s hand clamps onto my bicep like a vice at the exact second Chain-Chewer crowds his bulk against my side, sandwiching me between them in a wall of protective force.

“Eyes up,” Malachi hisses, and for the first time, there’s a legitimate tremor in his voice. “We’re entering the Butcher’s Quarter.”

Now I get why he didn't want me here.

The first part of the market wasn’t so bad—just loud and weird. But this? This is horrific. It’s a hunting ground that stinks of rotting meat, copper, and unwashed sex.

“Don't stop,” Malachi snarls, shoving me forward toward a stall draped in blood-spattered plastic, positioning his body to block my view of the writhing mess of limbs pressed up and moaning against the brick wall beside us.

We skid to a halt in front of a counter that gleams with a terrifying, clinical cleanliness amidst the filth.

Standing behind it is a man. Not a monster, not a beast—just a man.

He’s got the jawline of a movie star and the build of a linebacker, wearing an apron drenched with so much fresh blood it looks like wet paint, and when he looks up, his eyes are empty.

No whites. No irises. Just two pools of obsidian oil.

“I need a Void-Glass scalpel,” Malachi demands, slamming his hand on the metal counter.

The butcher wipes a cleaver on his thigh, leaving a fresh smear of red on the fabric and chuckles wetly.

“A Void-Glass scalpel?” he muses, tilting his head. “My, my. Someone is looking to make an incision that doesn't heal. That’s a very specific, very expensive piece of hardware.”

He reaches under the counter and produces a slender scalpel that seems to drink the light around it.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.