Chapter Fifty-Six #2

I jumped forward like a scared cat and landed on a thick sand-colored rug.

The man in the chair laughed. “I knew we would meet again,” he said.

“Your face is bleeding,” I said with satisfaction. Clearly, whatever made him bleed wasn’t a threat to his life, but I still liked to see him suffer a little.

That seemed to wipe the smug look off his face and he glanced away from me toward the Grim Reaper. I could only assume he was employed by this man to kill. He probably did the same job they wanted Dex to do.

“What happened to your face? And where is Dex?” The Grim Reaper demanded.

“Turns out he didn’t want to hang around and wait for you to come back,” the guy answered. He was sprawled in his chair, but his eyes weren’t as relaxed as his body appeared.

“You let him leave?” There was disapproval in his tone.

“I didn’t have much say in the matter.”

“Don’t give me that,” The Reaper retorted. “You and I both know you have advantages over him. You’ve been quite greedy with the powers you have collected over the years. In fact, isn’t that why you are invested here, now, in this girl?” He motioned toward me.

“Me?” I said. “What could I possibly have that you want?”

“Nothing,” he said, looking at the floor.

“Don’t I have a right to know why I’m going to die?”

“Why, yes, you do,” The Grim Reaper said, causing me to look at him. “You have the gift of vision. It’s a gift that could be of use to my Escort.”

So I was right. The guy who tried to kill me—the guy bleeding, presumably at the hands of Dex—was an Escort for the Grim Reaper. A killer.

“You want to kill me so you can take my ability to have visions? What could you possibly need it for?”

“All my Escorts have particular talents, something that makes them very good at what they do. Charming here has certain specialties in his field.”

“How can you have a specialty in death?” I scoffed.

The Grim Reaper threw back his head and laughed. “At last, Charming, someone who seems to be blind to your skills.” Then he shook his head. “Such a shame she must die.”

I swallowed and glanced around for something I could use as a weapon. I was thinking if I came here I would see Dex and we could fight out of this together.

But he wasn’t here.

My stomach was in knots trying to decide what that meant.

I had a very bad feeling it meant he really didn’t care I was going to die.

Maybe everything he said at the hospital had all been part of his plan to get me here…

to get me closer to death. I almost preferred death by the Grim Reaper.

At least he didn’t play with his prey before he disposed of it.

I forced myself back into the conversation, wanting to buy myself some time. “So what is this special skill you have?” I looked at the man in the chair.

“His name says it all,” The Reaper said as he made his way over to a little cart with glasses and a decanter of dark liquid. As he poured himself a drink, I turned toward the man called Charming.

“That’s your name? Charming? You’re kidding.”

“That’s me. Charming. So good with the ladies they changed my name.” He got up from the chair and rose to his full height. He was good-looking… even with all the blood on his face. I watched as he found a tissue to wipe away some of the blood.

“Charming is the best Escort I have at getting lonely heiresses to fall madly in love with him, signing over their riches, and then killing them so the company can seize all their assets.”

I looked at Charming. “You seduce women and then kill them for their money?”

“Not just women,” Grim said snidely.

Charming made a face like his stomach hurt. But then the sour look smoothed away and he said, “Relax, princess. It’s only the really rich, and they usually have more than just money that we want.”

That knot in my stomach grew. This was disgusting. These people were horrible and I was sorry to even know there were people out there like this.

“I don’t understand how having visions could make you any better at what you do.”

“When I mentioned earlier that you were the only one that was resistant to his, ah… charms, that wasn’t exactly accurate,” Grim said, taking a seat on the couch. “It seems Charming here might be losing his touch. He isn’t as charming as he once was.”

“Yes,” Charming growled. “I am.”

Grim made a tsking sound. “You have two failed jobs this year. You used to have none.”

“They weren’t failed, because I killed them,” Charming said, making another sour face.

“True, true,” Grim offered. “If you hadn’t managed to kill them, I would have recalled you on the spot. But still, we didn’t collect the money we should have.”

Charming didn’t say anything and the Grim Reaper kept talking.

“So, we thought giving him the ability to have visions,” Grim began, “might help us know if his certain charms would work before he put in the time and effort.”

They wanted to use my visions to pick and choose people to rob and kill.

They wanted to kill me to make it easier to kill even more people.

I felt tears sting the backs of my eyes, but I pushed them back.

I wasn’t going to show weakness in front of these two men who talked about life and death as if it were something as trivial as which shoes to wear.

How could anyone have so little value for life?

Without thinking, I turned toward Charming. “I get why he cares so little about life—he is the Grim Reaper—but why… why don’t you?”

He didn’t reply right away and Grim stood from his seat and changed the subject. “This has been fun, but duty calls. Where is Dex?”

Charming shrugged. “He went to the hospital. He went to destroy the stone.”

A sharp gust of wind swept through the room and the crystal glass in Grim’s hand shattered. “What did you just say to me?”

Just like that, the jolly air around him transformed into something sinister and absolute.

His eyes glowed with an electric spark and his skin turned paper thin and stretched out over his bones.

These things made him look scary and a little crazy, but it was the lightning from his fingers tips that seemed to spark out and rain down onto the carpet that was truly terrifying.

This was the man that claimed death with a single touch. This was how I envisioned someone like the Grim Reaper.

“You allowed this little conversation to go on when you knew what he was up to? You knew he was trying to break my claim!”

When he spoke the wind around the room blew, picking up the papers on his desk and sending them flying. The massive chair behind his desk began to spin rapidly with great whipping circles.

“I knew he’d never be able to do it,” Charming said, but there was fear in his voice. He knew his charm wouldn’t work on the likes of Grim.

“This betrayal will not go unpunished,” he said, taking a shuddering breath as another doorway appeared. This one I could see through, and on the other side was my hospital room. I didn’t wait for an invitation or for an order. I ran at the door and jumped through.

Unfortunately, Grim was right behind me.

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