9. Ira
Ira
I don't like a room I can't reduce to exits, threats, and bodies, and right now, Soren's floor's a disaster area of broken glass, spilled blood, and ancient history that has no business being upright.
My heart's a steady, rhythmic thud against my ribs, habitual and disciplined, but my skin's crawling with the proximity of a presence I spent two years trying to forget.
I keep my hand locked on the back of Cain's neck, the muscle there as hard as the stone in the shop's foundation.
He doesn't fight me. That's the most dangerous part about him.
He knows exactly how much force I'm willing to use, and he's currently betting I won't snap his spine while Soren's screaming.
I can feel the heat of him, that unnatural, predatory warmth that defies the biology of the dead.
It's an intrusion, a physical violation of the peace I've painstakingly built since he vanished.
Cain's return isn't just an inconvenience.
It's the reopening of an old wound I'd successfully converted into discipline.
Pain's only useful once it becomes discipline.
"Ira, let him go!" Soren's voice is a jagged thing, shredded by the kind of grief that leaves a permanent stain. He's on the floor, his knees pressed into the mahogany, his hand clamped around the stranger's wrist.
Aven's half-naked, shivering under a thin layer of sweat and road grime, but the air around him isn't just air anymore.
It's vibrating with a frequency I recognize from the old texts my father made me memorize before I was old enough to drive.
The signature under his panic matches fragments from old family rites: celestial, unrefined, too bright to be standing barefoot on Soren's floor.
I scan the room, cataloging the threats in under three seconds.
First: Aven, bleeding and radiating enough energy to short out every ward Soren's spent years weaving.
Second: the windows, where the shadows are pressing in with a hunger that makes the glass groan.
Third: Cain, the ghost I thought I'd finally buried, standing in my grip with the same arrogant grace he had two years ago.
I can feel the wards straining. The spirits outside aren't just curious; they're starving, and Aven's the first feast they've seen in decades.
I shove Cain toward the heavy oak counter, not hard enough to break it, but hard enough to let the wood feel the impact.
"Stay," I say. It's not a request. It's a command backed by ten years of exorcism training and the cross at my chest. I watch him settle, his eyes dark and unreadable, before I turn my attention to the immediate medical and magical crisis on the floor.
I drop to a crouch next to Soren. I don't look at Aven yet.
If I look at the man on the floor, I might have to acknowledge the fact that he looks like a sacrificial lamb who just realized the altar's made of gold.
I put my hand on Soren's face, turning his head toward me.
I need to see his eyes. "Soren, look at me.
Report. What happened? Where's the bleed coming from? "
Soren looks up at me, his green eyes wet and wide, his pupils blown.
"Vera. Ira, she was right here. He brought her back.
He just... he touched the air and she was solid.
She was real. I felt her." He gestures frantically at Aven, who's currently trying to merge with the floorboards.
"He opened something. I could feel her through him. "
The explanation's messy, filtered through Soren's shock and a sudden, terrifying attachment to the stranger.
I file that danger away immediately. Soren isn't just relieved.
He's hopeful. He's looking at Aven as if the man's a living relic of his Vera, and that kind of desperation's a liability.
It's a hook that'll pull Soren into whatever hell Cain's planned next.
I look at Aven then. He's slight, bruised-pretty in a way that suggests he's spent a lot of time being the punchline of a very mean joke.
His eyes are amber, frantic, and currently fixed on the doorway as if he's planning a sprint into the dark.
He's wrapped in a tattered, heavy wool blanket someone must have thrown over him, probably Soren, clutching it to his chest with knuckles that are white with strain.
Every time a spirit scrapes against the glass outside, his shoulders hitch.
He's terrified of them, terrified of the shop, and most of all, he's looking at the silver cross on my chest with a mixture of Pavlovian fear and desperate longing.
"He's a person, Soren," I say, my voice level. "Not a miracle. Did he come here of his own accord?"
"I ran," Aven croaks. His voice is a dry rasp, sounding like it hasn't seen water in a decade.
"I was... there were too many of them. The voices.
He said this place was safe." He faints a nod toward Cain, then winces, his hand flying to his head as the spirits outside the shop give the wards another experimental shove.
I notice the way his eyes flick to the door every few seconds.
He wants the silence back. He wants the warmth Cain apparently provided, and that desire makes him vulnerable.
He looks like every person the Church'd call an "asset" before they ever called him a "victim. "
I stand up, my boots heavy on the floor.
I turn back to Cain. He's leaning against the counter now, his long dark hair messy, his shirt torn at the shoulder.
He looks like a king who's been living in a dumpster, but the predator's still there, lurking just behind the refined curve of his mouth.
I want the truth, and I want it without the poetic flourishes he usually employs to hide his tracks.
"Talk," I say, folding my arms across my chest. The tattoos up my forearms itch, the ink sensing the impure magic rolling off Cain in waves.
"Two years of silence, and you show up with a celestial medium and a breach in our security.
Explain why I shouldn't finish what the Church started before the night's out. "
Cain doesn't look cowed. He looks exhausted, his skin more translucent than I remember.
"Still so tactical, Ira. Always looking for the breach.
I didn't bring him here to break your toys.
The tower couldn't hold me once the tether weakened.
I've been in captivity, Ira. My family, Adaro and the rest, they didn't just let me walk away.
They caught me shortly after I left here two years ago. "
He moves away from the counter, his movements fluid but strained.
"They kept me in a cage of blood and iron.
They fed me tainted blood, synthetic filth designed to keep the tether tight.
I've spent the last twenty-four months learning the exact geometry of my own chains.
I escaped, barely. I've been hiding in the city, waiting for a way to ground myself before I withered away completely. "
He stops a few feet away from me, close enough that I can smell the salt and the old, cold scent of the grave on him.
"I found him in a bar. Aven. He's the third mate, Ira.
The one the Essren magic's been screaming for.
It's not just a fancy. It's a blood-magic mate structure.
It requires three bonds to stabilize. One of spirit, one of essence, one of blood. "
I listen, my face a mask of iron. I don't soften. Honesty isn't absolution, and Cain's admitting to a deliberate manipulation. "You followed him. You brought him here on purpose."
"I did," Cain admits, his gaze steady. "I didn't know you were here tonight, Ira.
I thought you were still on assignment for the Diocese.
But I knew Soren was here. I knew the shop was the only place with wards strong enough to hold the dead back while the bond formed.
Soren's Essren magic's already starting to consume him from the inside out; you've seen the way he's been fraying since Vera died.
Without a completed coven, he'll hollow out.
And my own magic? It's withering. The structure's been incomplete from the beginning. We've all been paying for that."
Soren makes a small, wounded sound from the floor.
He hasn't let go of Aven's hand. He's looking at the man with a desperate kind of hope that makes my chest tighten.
Soren's been falling apart in slow motion, and I've been trying to catch the pieces, but you can't catch smoke with bare hands.
I look back at Aven, who's listening to this clinical breakdown of his own soul as if he's hearing his death sentence.
He's trying to rebuild his sarcasm. I can see it in the way he curls his lip, but he's too far gone. He's shivering too hard.
The tactical part of my brain's screaming about the risks.
A coven bond of this magnitude's a beacon.
It's a permanent link that can't be severed without killing the participants.
It's everything I was taught to suppress.
And yet, I feel an unwanted softness toward Aven.
The protective urge arrives before I give it permission, sharp enough to disturb me.
He looks so small in that blanket, his eyes darting toward the shadows as the spirits howl.
He's terrified of the very power that makes him valuable, and he's terrified of us.
"A coven bond," I mutter, the words tasting like ash. "You're talking about a blood-essence-spirit structure. That's not a relationship, Cain. That's a containment field. You're asking to tether him to us forever to save your own skin."