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"What have you done, Sariel?" Remy asked, barely able to contain his emotion as he looked upon the women savagely brutalized by the Grigori.
"We suspected you might be in danger," Sariel spoke. "And came at once to your aid."
The Seraphim laughed, a low, rumbling sound more like a growl.
"Your concern for my well-being… is touching," Remy said.
And then he turned his cold gaze upon the Grigori leader.
"You used me, Sariel," he said, repressed fury dripping from every word.
"I have no idea what you're talking about," the Grigori leader responded indignantly. “You made me part of this," Remy hissed. The glow from his body had dwindled, the darkness of what had transpired draining away the intensity of his light.
"Don't you see, Remiel?" Sariel asked. "You were part of our test."
All Remy could do was stare at the sight of something once holy, now but a twisted reflection.
"The Almighty provided you for us to complete our penance," the Grigori leader went on. His brothers stepped cautiously into the light to join their leader. "You were a tool of our redemption."
"Redemption," Remy said, the word like poison on his lips. "You actually believe that after all you've done…"
His eyes were pulled to the Chimerian bodies and he stopped.
"The Lord God provided us with a way to consummate a task that had remained incomplete for countless mille
"And Noah?" Remy asked.
"He has been avenged," Sariel proclaimed, raising his sword as if in victory.
"You murdered him," Remy raged. He turned his gaze back to the Grigori master; the fire of Heaven burned in his stare.
Sariel started to speak, but Remy did not want to hear it. He charged at the fallen angel, grabbing the lapel of his suit jacket and pulling him closer.
"You killed him in a fit of rage," Remy accused, his teeth clenched in anger. "You beat a defenseless old man to death with your fists."
"I lost my temper," the Grigori admitted, followed by a sigh of exasperation. "He was just so damned stubborn. Wracked with guilt over what he believed he had done… you should have seen how excited he was when he thought that he'd found them."
Remy felt himself becoming sick as the fallen angel attempted to justify his twisted actions.
"He didn't see the danger no matter how hard I tried to explain it," the Grigori said, his words fervent. "He told me that he was going to beg God to let them live… that because they had survived the flood He should allow them to exist. That they had earned the right to life."
Sariel actually seemed to believe what he was saying, and that Remy found even more disturbing.
"Here was our chance, Remiel," the Grigori leader emphasized. "Something to bring us that much closer to going home… to be allowed back to Heaven."
"But you killed him," Remy reminded the Grigori leader with a shake.
"Yes, I did," Sariel admitted. "Not sure exactly how that will be received, but at least we're finishing what the flood began. That has to count for something. I wasn't about to allow anything to prevent me from completing what should have been finished ages ago."
Sariel glanced at the hand still holding his lapel.
"It's done, Remiel," Sariel said. "This is how it was supposed to be. For us to finish what had already been put in motion; it was a test for us, penance for one of our greatest… misjudgments."
"Misjudgments?" Remy asked, scorn in his words. "But the children…"
Sariel looked to the corpses, distaste upon his pale, perfect face. “An error better left forgotten," he snarled, removing Remy's hand from his suit coat. "They were twisted things, Remiel, neither of Heaven nor Earth."
"They were yours."
He searched the fallen angel's eyes, looking for even a small sign of mercy or compassion. It was like staring into a deep, dark hole. There was nothing there, and Remy knew that Sariel and his Grigori brothers were lost.
What they believed of the Chimerian was true of them—there was no place for the Grigori in Heaven, or on Earth.
Remy heard a sound, a howl of mourning from the throats of children born of Grigori and Chimerian women. He turned toward the song to see them, squatting at the edge of darkness, clinging to one another as they ached over the fate that had befallen their Mother.
The Chimerian lament filled the shadows, becoming louder, and their sadness became palpable. One by one, the Grigori dropped to their knees, supremely affected by the woeful song.
Perhaps I am wrong about them, Remy thought.
All were affected except for Sariel.
The Grigori leader looked upon his brothers with horror. "Get up!" he screamed, but either they did not hear him over the sad song or they chose to ignore his words, for they continued to kneel upon the ground soaked with the blood of i
"Listen to it," Remy yelled over the forlorn sound. "Listen to the pain you've caused."
Blood started to seep from Sariel's ears. His body grew stiff, and began to tremble. Slowly his knees began to bend, bringing him closer and closer to the ground.
"I…," Sariel grunted, stabbing the blade of his sword into the ground to halt his progress.
"Hear…" He fought the gravity of sorrow pushing down upon him, to struggle to his feet.
"Nothing!" And he sprang across the floor, murder in his gaze as he raised his tarnished blade to strike at those who would keep him from achieving that which he most desired.
That which would keep him from the gates of Heaven.
Remy sprang into Sariel's path, grappling with the fallen angel and driving him to the cold, hard ground. The Grigori flailed, lashing out with the pommel of his sword, striking Remy across the temple with a savage blow.
There was a searing flash of pain and color as Remy felt the Grigori squirm out from beneath him. He fought back the descending curtain of oblivion, flapping his powerful wings to rise to his feet.
The Chimerian babes had ceased their song as they watched the scene unfold with wide, frightened eyes. They hissed, baring razor-sharp teeth as Sariel loomed, sword raised above his head, ready to fall.
The Seraphim emerged with a roar, pushing aside the fragile shell of humanity Remy wore, burning it with the fire of Heaven. And Remy let it. He was tired of all the pain and death, tired of being manipulated in others' pursuits of Heaven.
With hands burning white with divine heat, he grabbed the Grigori leader, pulling him back away from his objectives.
Away from his children.
Sariel struggled in the grasp of the Seraphim, and his fine suit and the flesh beneath it burned with the supernatural fire. He spun on Remy, swinging his sword with a cry of fury and pain.
But the Seraphim was not impressed, capturing the blade in midswing, causing the weapon to warp and bend, and finally to melt. Sariel's screams were entirely of pain now as his immortal flesh blackened and smoldered, but the Seraphim held him tight, refusing to set him free.
Allowing the power of God that seethed at his core to flow through him and into the fallen angel.
"You wanted to see Heaven again, brother?" the Seraphim spoke in the language of God's first creations. "See it now."
The Grigori leader still lived, but his body had begun to crumble, pieces of charred angel flesh breaking away to drift on the air like black snow.
"See it and burn."
And soon the angel Sariel was no more, as the last of him was consumed by the voraciousness of Heaven's fire.
The Seraphim flapped his powerful wings, dispersing his fallen enemy's ashen remains, and turned his attention to the others. They had risen to their feet, weapons in hand, staring at him with intense hatred.
And the Seraphim's mouth twisted in a cruel smile that told he was ready to share their master's fate with them. None moved.