All That Lives Must Die - Eric Nylund [63]
“Please,” Fiona scoffed. “Are you saying there are nice parts of Hell?”
“There are forests, jungles, and cities filled with exotic delights,” Louis said. “There are circuses, meadows of flowers, castles filled with lords and ladies—realms beyond imagination.”
Eliot leaned forward.
He half hoped Louis would invite him to see for himself. He’d never take him up on such an offer, not after they’d seen what lay beyond the gate in the Borderlands . . . but still, it’d be wonderful to learn a little bit more about his father’s side of the family.
And just for a moment, Eliot considered the possibility of life beyond his mother’s influence. He and Louis could be adventurers, pirates on the high seas, travelers and explorers.
Fiona, however, looked unconvinced.
“None of that matters to us,” she told Louis. “We’re in the League now.” She kicked Eliot under the table. “Both of us. I’m in the Order of the Celestial Rose. And Eliot is an Immortal hero.”
“Congratulations,” Louis said without enthusiasm.
Breakfast arrived: plates with a stack of crêpes drenched with brandied sauce, a side of sizzling bacon, and steaming fresh croissants. The waiter set the bill next to Louis’s plate . . . which Louis ignored.
Eliot tasted the bacon. It was crisp and salty and wonderful. But something stopped him from enjoying it: Fiona’s assertion that they were in the League. Around a mouthful, he said to her, “Okay—so we’re part of the League of Immortals . . . but why does that mean we’re not part of the other family? That makes no sense from a biological point of view.”
Fiona glared at him, but for the moment, she had no answer.
It occurred to Eliot that he was breaking a rule by talking of the League in public. Then again, no one here seemed to be listening. Nor could this alley outside Paxington truly be considered a public place.
Or was it just easier for Eliot to break rules when his father was near? Louis had once told him: Everything was made to be broken, especially rules.
Right now, Eliot didn’t care; he just wanted answers.
“You are both,” Louis told them. “Immortal and Infernal.”
“That’s not what the League’s decided,” Fiona said.
“I’m afraid the facts speak louder. You, my darling daughter—” Louis stopped, remembering that Fiona didn’t like him calling her that. “You killed Beelzebub.”
Fiona paled.
Eliot lost his appetite as well when he remembered how she had severed Beelzebub’s head.
“There’s a neutrality treaty between the League and us,” Louis said, “which prevents any such physical interventions.”
“But it was self-defense,” Eliot said.
“Of course it was,” Louis replied. “The reason is irrelevant. My point is that you must be an Infernal to kill another Infernal. And you must be an Immortal to be legally accepted into the League of Immortals. These are immutable facts with a single conclusion. . . .”
“That we’re both?” Eliot tentatively offered.
A faint smile spread across Louis’s face.
“So what?” Fiona said. “We decided to stick with the League. It’s our choice.”
“And an admirable choice it is,” Louis replied. “But I’m afraid there are those who will not care what you have chosen. Some think you are the means to unravel our neutrality treaty. Some believe that one day you will lead one side to war against the other.”
War? Louis had to be joking.
But for once, he looked absolutely serious.
“We would never do such a thing,” Eliot whispered.
“Never? Really?” Louis asked. “Not even in self-defense? Could you envision some unscrupulous character manipulating you into a situation where conflict might be inevitable?”
Fiona was quiet, probably reliving that moment in the alley when she had decapitated the Lord of All That Flies.
Eliot wanted to say that he’d never kill anything or anybody . . . but then he remembered that to save Fiona, he had summoned a fog filled with the wandering dead. It was a mistake the first time, but he’d known what he was doing the second time, and he’d still done it. He had killed. And it’d been his choice.
Eliot knew he would do it again if Fiona’s life were at stake.