- Home
- Eve Langlais
Knocking on Helen's Door
Knocking on Helen's Door Read online
Copyright © 2020/2021, Eve Langlais
Cover Art Dreams2Media 2020
Produced in Canada
Published by Eve Langlais ~ www.EveLanglais.com
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
This book is a work of fiction and the characters, events and dialogue found within the story are of the author's imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, either living or deceased, is completely coincidental.
No part of this book may be reproduced or shared in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including but not limited to digital copying, file sharing, audio recording, email and printing without permission in writing from the author.
E-ISBN: 978 177 384 2097
Print ISBN: 978 177 384 2103
Contents
Introduction
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Epilogue
Also by Eve Langlais
Introduction
Dying didn’t get rid of his heart.
Grim Dating is a hit with the underworld and running like a smooth machine, which is why the commander and his mate decide to go on a vacation, leaving Julio in charge.
It’s his chance to show the Dark Lord he’s got the sinning it takes to move up in the ranks. You won’t see him getting distracted from the job by a nice pair of legs or a fetching smile. Settling down is not in the tarot cards for Julio.
Yet when an angel walks into the office asking how babies are made, he’s quick to volunteer. But seducing angels is not allowed.
Will Heaven and Hell make an exception for love?
The Grim Dating Series:
For more Hell books featuring Lucifer’s meddling, check out The Welcome to Hell series (available in ebook, print and audio)
Prologue
The ninth ring was gone. It didn’t matter how many times Lucifer replayed its end, it remained missing.
Lucifer’s office wall flickered as images played upon it, Hell’s version of surveillance. The fine-tuned magic paused videos and tagged them if the esoteric algorithms detected items of interest. Underlings usually handled the monitoring of juicy bits, but for certain items, the devil himself needed to take a closer look.
Lucifer stood in front of the many scrolling images, his gaze unfocused, his mind empty. In this state of relaxation, it proved easy to zoom in on footage of interest. By simply willing it, the entire wall became an aerial view of the eighth ring, skinnier than before, having lost a few feet. Overtaken by the Wilds.
Or so he assumed. Could also be the ring had shrunk. Lucifer hated to admit he didn’t quite understand what was happening. If he were asked to guess, he’d say the Wilds beyond his kingdom was expanding, moving the border of its domain to overtake Hell.
And not just take but remake. The ninth ring used to have towns, not the most elaborate setup, yet there were buildings and roads. Not anymore. They’d vanished and didn’t leave behind any rubble. The Wilds took and reshaped in its image. Without warning. Not even a scream.
Whole hamlets disappeared when it first started. Citizens—the damned and demonic alike—went to bed and were never seen again.
Which led to other villages grabbing their shit and fleeing. At least the smart ones did. No one knew what happened to those who were absorbed by the Wilds. No one wanted to find out.
The refugees from the ninth ring crowded the eighth and seventh. His aerial eye in the sky dipped and zipped in and out of buildings, taking stock of the situation. Overcrowded, and the mood highly anxious, which led to greater than usual violence. A powder keg ready to explode. He’d need to act before things got too critical.
The towns in the eighth ring overflowed with citizens, the noise and uncertainty a troubling hum that permeated the air. The amount of people crammed in there disquieted, but the fact the eighth ring didn’t bulge as fatly as the day before gave him a more intense chill than the time Hell froze over.
Apparently, it wasn’t enough that he lost people to the growing Wilds. He now also had citizens fleeing into it. He’d even caught groups of them on surveillance, entire families with no possessions in hand or on their backs, walking into the Wilds and not coming back, which wasn’t entirely surprising. The Wilds didn’t treat visitors kindly, yet the idiots kept wandering in there.
Why did they do it? Did they hear or sense something in there? Because he sure as fuck didn’t.
The video lifted from the eighth ring and focused on where the Wilds spread. Stunted and twisted trees, boggy swamps, even grassy fields with blades sharp as daggers. A veritable jungle that turned gray as he watched, a mist seeping up over the highest treetops, spreading over fields. Obscuring all.
Fascinating. He snapped his fingers, and an imp appeared. “I’m going to send you to the border. I want you to take three steps into the fog then return immediately and report.”
“Yes, Dark Lord.”
Lucifer snapped his fingers again and watched on screen as his imp appeared and immediately leaped into the fog.
Didn’t return.
So he sent another.
And another.
By the sixty-ninth, his daughter Bambi appeared. “I hear you’re decimating your army.”
He glared. “There’s something wrong with the Wilds.” A problem with the fog at the very least. No one had returned. Every single person who went in stayed in. Even those with instructions to turn right back around.
It didn’t help the fog mocked by taking another foot off the eighth ring.
What the fuck was going on? Did the Wilds—an ungoverned, unmapped place beyond the nine rings of Hell—still exist under the gray mist? Was it the Wilds or something else eating his kingdom?
“You’re right. I’m wasting my time sending minions. I need hunters. Good ones who won’t die within the first step or get distracted if there happens to be buxom nymphs on the other side.” Lucifer owned the souls of many who’d gotten killed because they stared at boobs.
“You know of a hunter that won’t be distracted by nymphs?” Bambi asked, putting a hand on her hip, drawing attention to her business suit, snug in all the right places but not revealing any cleavage or thigh.
It brought a frown to the devil’s face. “Are you okay? You’ve been dressing awfully conservatively lately.”
“Sometimes less is more. Which you should know. You haven’t worn any of your capes in a while.”
Because every time he did, someone threw up on it. He’d tried wearing it by himself, hiding in his closet, drinking to the good ol’ days, and ended up puking on it.
“My cape days are over. Long live the fanny pack.” Better than a diaper bag. He kept everything he needed in it, including a fake identity and cash to start over somewhere in South America.
“Fanny packs are a thing of the past. It’s now the era of the crossbody satchel.”
“Satchels are back?” His expression brightened. “Do you know how much you can fit in those?” He might be able to sneak in a dragon because even the Dark Lord never knew when he’d need a dragon.
“Might b
e a good idea for everyone to start carrying one given what’s going on.” Bambi pointed to the screen. “This is not good.”
“I know. Which is why I’ll send Teivel in for a peek.” One of Lucifer’s finest hunters. A vampire who’d served him many years until his daughter stole him for her harem.
Bambi cackled. “You’re kidding, right? Muriel will lose her shit if you ask.”
Muriel being one of his daughters. Disrespectful as fuck, which really made him proud and angry all at once.
“Why would she say no? It’s for the good of the kingdom.”
“Go ahead and call her. Ask. See how that goes.” Bambi offered him a smirk he’d perfected over the centuries.
“I will call her. She’ll understand the seriousness of the situation and totally agree we have to send our best to fix it.” He rang his daughter, his latest Helldroid phone crackling in his ear. Electronics, even infused with magic, didn’t fare well on the Hell plane.
Muriel replied after two rings, sounding out of breath. “Daddy, dearest, your timing is shitty as always.”
“Once a cock blocker, always a cock blocker.”
That drew a giggle from Muriel. “Who says she’s got a cock?”
His brows rose. “You took another?”
“Thinking about it. Problem being, then I’d have to share her with my boys. I kind of like being the only woman in the mix.” She gasped and laughed then obviously spoke to someone else as she said, “Brat. I’ll get you back for that.”
“This is actually great news. Since you don’t currently have need of Teivel’s dick, can I borrow him for a teensy tiny job?”
“What job?” Muriel’s humor immediately faded.
“I just need him to check out the Wilds. Make sure things are okay.”
“Like fuck.” Low and firm. “I heard what happened to the minor demons you sent in.”
News got around much too quickly when it was bad. “Obviously, their minds weren’t strong enough to fight whatever allure lies within.”
“Teivel isn’t going.”
Pride and annoyance warred within him at her firmness and refusal to obey. “He’s the best hunter I’ve got.”
“Still a no. We’ve all seen what happens in the movies when people walk into mysterious fogs and mists,” Muriel reminded.
“Good point.” It was why, despite his curiosity, Lucifer hadn’t yet gone himself. First rule of laziness, delegate! “Well, then, I guess I should let you return to your debauchery.”
“Your jealousy is showing.”
Was it? Probably. He’d had some epic orgies in his time. Damn Gaia for insisting on monogamy. “Have fun with your new partner.”
“I will.” With a giggle, his daughter hung up and he sighed.
Bambi eyed him. “Let me guess, she said no.”
“Utterly disrespectful and disobedient. Just for that, I’m going to throttle her internet again.”
“Way to act your age.”
“If I acted my age, I would have her decapitated,” he growled. “I need to do something about that fog.” Which was why he next sent in some prisoners with one instruction: go in and return for forgiveness of their sins.
They disappeared the moment they stepped past the border of what had been the ninth ring. For all he knew they turned to dust or mooned him. He never found out. The fog hid all.
And obsessed him even after Bambi left claiming she had a date. With who? A Mormon? Because she was wearing way too many clothes.
A mere thought opened a portal. He stepped through and stood in front of the swirling mist. Not having bothered to change, he wore his slippers—the bunny ones with floppy ears, red eyes, and fangs—along with a robe, the rich burgundy of it trimmed in gold thread.
He eyed the fog. Dense enough to foil sight.
He sniffed. No scent.
He held out a hand and stuck it inside. He couldn’t see it at all. He let it sit there for a few seconds before pulling it back to see if it had disintegrated. The flesh didn’t slough, nor did he sense any moisture.
Strange.
Perhaps a giant fan would blow the mist away?
If only it were that simple.
For a brief moment, he thought about putting his face in the fog and taking a deep breath. Could be the fog emitted a drug that enticed his citizens into entering.
He stepped close enough the toes of his sleepers disappeared past the edge. He just had to lean forward.
Lucifer stepped back. He didn’t have time to enjoy a good hallucination. Fate of Hell and all that. Not mention, he had to be careful. Drugs often had the side effect of making him hornier than usual and led to some epic sexcapades. While he wouldn’t mind some good harem action, his wife would bitch. Spoilsport.
His study of the fog was interrupted by the strident voice of a damned soul. “Alonzo, don’t go in there,” a woman pleaded. “Please.”
The man, the big burly sort, who, in a previous life, probably had the nickname Tiny, smiled at the woman—who’d managed to find enough plaid fabric in Hell to make a shirt. Alonzo had a vacuous expression. “Can’t you hear them calling?”
“Hear who?” asked the woman, looking perplexed.
Lucifer was wondering the same damned thing. He cocked an ear but only heard a sob as Alonzo tore free from the woman’s grip and disappeared from sight, into the mist.
A moment later, a group of hellcats charged past the woman’s shaking body. Five of them, eyes rolling and wild as they barreled into the fog.
Oh fuck no. He couldn’t afford to lose any more minions. His legions were already winnowed as it were from recent skirmishes and low birth rates.
He shouldn’t panic yet. In the past, Lucifer had enjoyed lesser numbers than this—especially after that hundred-year war with his brother. If he’d only had a few more dragons, he wouldn’t have had to agree to the pesky clause in their treaty that restricted him from openly interfering on Earth.
So, he did it subtly, and when his minions got caught, he pled innocent. In other words, lied.
But he couldn’t keep hiding the calamity befalling his kingdom. The Wilds and this fog were only the newest threat. He also dealt with a diminishing number of souls and a drastically lower demonic birth rate. Which reminded him, Grim Dating appeared to be having success on Earth.
Now if only Heaven would stop meddling.
1
Helen stood alongside Michelina in the gestational receiving area—a fancy name for a rooftop where they awaited a pair of incoming storks—trying not to collapse out of boredom. Notice had been received to expect two deliveries, but they weren’t given an exact time. It necessitated them getting in place just after dawn.
From their spot, Helen could see the entire nursery quadrangle. Rather than walls to protect the cherubs within, they’d erected a massive windowless building several stories in height, shaped as a hollow circle with only an arch leading out. The gestational receiving tower that they stood on squatted in comparison, jutting from the middle of a park bisected by winding stone paths.
Helen rocked on her heels, restlessness making her fidget. The noon hour had come and gone without seeing a single bird.
“Would you stop jerking around?” Michelina snapped from where she prayed on her knees. She had her head down and hands clasped. She had no problem dropping into a deep prayer for hours on end, whereas Helen had been having issues with patience of late and didn’t know why.
She found herself bored. A word that was blasphemy. Boredom didn’t exist, just idle hands. She tried keeping busy. Had washed her robe for the next day. Cleaned her room. Not that it ever got dirty. She’d enjoyed the perfect sun with others, sitting on fragrant grass, doing nothing because she’d already read the seven accepted versions of the Bible so many times she knew them by heart.
On days when she didn’t have to monitor receiving, she worked in the nursery itself, which she did mostly enjoy. Babies tended to be unpredictable. Helen worked as one of the early caretakers, hand
ling the very youngest with their stunted wings and incomprehensible babble. She changed their diapers and fed them, made sure they got their allocated stimulation time and exercise. During their infant stage, they were malleable, their grace and perfection still to be created. The lessons started young, and by the time they’d reached their adult size, they were ready to receive their task from God and join the other angels.
New batches arrived sporadically, delivered by stork, with the children ranging from very small and useless to able to sit up and babble. She wondered where they came from.
“Where does what come from?” asked Michelina, moving from her knees to stand beside her, patient and serene. Her robes always perfect, her hair blonde and falling in a shiny, straight curtain. Unlike Helen whose curly black hair refused to be tamed, and she always managed to spill something on the front of herself.
“Babies. Where do they come from?” Helen asked.
“The storks,” Michelina replied as if it were a matter of fact and in a sense it was. Except…
“But where do the storks find them?” She eyed the perfectly blue sky. She’d never seen it any other way. Never seen anything outside the nursery actually. She’d been raised and then assigned a duty within it.
“I don’t know where they find them. Why does it matter?”
Wasn’t Michelina curious at all? “I heard someone say they grow in cabbage patches.”
An incredulous gaze turned on Helen. “Cherubs are not grown in the dirt.”
“Then how? Trees? Eggs?”