Chapter One
  Ariel stretched luxuriously in the early morning light and stole a  glance at the luminous green digital numbers on her alarm clock. For  only having been asleep two hours, she felt amazingly well rested. And  the incredible dream she'd had . . . . Her body felt pleasantly boneless  and relaxed, like she really 
did have the mind-blowing sex she'd dreamed of. 
Maybe it's time for me to find a boyfriend. She smiled. 
Probably a message from my subconscious that getting laid a little more often would be a good thing.
  Her feeling of satisfied well-being lasted about as long as it took her to look across the room.
  The man from her dream sat in her vanity chair, as placid as any  statue, as breathtakingly naked as she remembered. His dark wings folded  gracefully behind him; he had turned the chair, facing the bed, so his  arms rested on the back. He'd apparently stood vigil over her while she  slept. Her eyes took a very pleasant tour of his muscular frame; it took  her that long to realize she was just as naked as he was.
  She quickly recalled the events of the night before. A tiny squeak of  shock escaped as she added two and two. Again . . . and again. The  answer kept coming up to a very frightening four.
  The presence of the winged man in her boudoir wasn't the part that  freaked her out; although, by any rational measure, she should have been  screaming her head off. But no, what truly horrified her was the  thought of how utterly she'd cast aside all her inhibitions. Such wanton  behavior, completely alien to her nature. She had practically 
raped him, for Christ's sake!
  Ariel reconsidered that thought the moment it occurred. The  man—Moradiel—had been a willing, even eager, participant. But in the  same moment she remembered his name, she was also treated to a flash of  those intense blue eyes and the echo of his exotically accented voice: 
I will be damned, cast out . . . . It is no tragedy, love. For this, for you
, I'll take damnation and shed no tear for what I've left behind.
  Over her racing thoughts, Moradiel asked, "Did you sleep well, love?"
  Nice, normal morning conversation. 
Okay. She could cope with  this, even if the idea of an angel calling her "love" made her want to  pinch herself to make sure she was really as awake as she thought. She  took a deep breath. "Y-yes. Did 
you?"
  Moradiel laughed softly. It was the first time she had heard him do  that, and his laugh seemed the most musical sound she'd ever heard. All  her most intimate nerve endings sounded an alarm of raw lust at the  sound of his mellow tenor. "Angels do not sleep, love."
  Feeling self-conscious, Ariel looked at her red bathrobe, hanging  neatly on its hook by the bathroom door. Moradiel followed her stare. An  instant later, he draped the soft terrycloth over her shoulders. She  was too startled to ask how he'd managed to move so fast.
  "Is that better?" he asked, his tone full of concern.
  "Yes," she answered. With no good excuse to be on her feet, she sank  heavily back down onto the bed and folded her hands in her lap. Despite  her external stillness and apparent calm, her mind was flying faster  than she could follow, trying to make her present circumstances jibe  with her memories. Several awkward minutes later, she said, "Last night .  . . that wasn't a dream, was it?"
  He shook his head in an odd fashion. Rather than the customary wagging  she was used to, he pulled his chin an inch to the left, then back  again. It was a minimalist gesture that somehow spooked her more than if  he'd given a more robust denial.
  "No, Ariel. It was not."
  His large, warm hands came down on the backs of hers and rested  lightly there as his gaze caught and held her eyes. She swore she could  feel him reading every thought in her mind.
  "And we really fu—uh, made love?" Ariel asked, narrowly avoiding the  crudity. Maybe the night before, when he'd awakened her from falling  asleep at the wheel just in time to save her from death, she might've  been excused for it. Here and now, in the bright light of a new Texas  morning, she didn't dare curse in the presence of an angel. Least of all  
this angel.
  He smiled. "We certainly did." His hands clasped her own tenderly.  "And it was the most wonderful thing I have ever experienced."
  Ariel wasn't sure whether to be flattered or taken aback at the  sincere emotion in his tone. "I . . . ." She stopped and gathered her  thoughts. "I don't usually do that."
  His delicately arched eyebrows drew together in a slight frown. "Do what, love?"
  The eight-hundred-pound gorilla she'd been trying to ignore suddenly  took center stage. "I don't usually behave like such . . . such a 
slut!"  She turned her face away, her lower lip trembling with the precursor to  tears. "I mean, you saved my life, but I've never thrown myself at 
anyone the way I did you."
  Moradiel sat perfectly still for several seconds. When he finally  spoke, he gave the impression he was choosing his words with extreme  caution.
  "Does that mean that you regret what we did?" he asked, looking as crestfallen as a little boy denied an ice-cream cone.
  "No. Yes. 
Damn." She turned back to face him, flipping a strand of hair out of her face. "I 
don't regret making love with you. I just don't want you to think any less of 
me for it."
  As quickly as his visage had clouded over, it brightened. "I could  never think of you as anything but perfectly divine, my love. How else—"
  He broke off abruptly, seeming to listen intently to a sound she  couldn't hear. His eyes narrowed and his mouth twisted as if he had just  taken a bite of something that was not at all to his taste. Leaning  forward, he brushed her lips with his own, causing her body to ache for  him all over again.
  "I will return in a moment, love."
  To Ariel's discomfiture, he vanished.
   She stood and took two steps toward the bathroom, only to find her  way blocked by Moradiel's imposing frame. His wings had draped around  him in his usual incognito attire: a long black leather coat. She could  hear his teeth grinding.
  "I am sorry, love. You need to pack."
  Her mind whirled in confusion. "
Pack? What do you—?"
  "I have less than five minutes to get you safely away from here.  Azrael is coming." Moradiel's shoulders were trembling with tension.
  
"What? Who's Azrael?"
  "My lord. The one I serve in the Host."
  "What does he want with 
me?" She demanded.
  For answer, Moradiel gave her a look so bleak that it sent shards of ice coursing through her blood.
  "Your life. And your soul."
  "Can you—?" Ariel couldn't finish the thought.
  Moradiel seemed to grasp the unspoken question immediately. "I can and I 
will  protect you, as best as I am able. But you have to hurry, love, if we  are to have any chance." There was no hint of tension in his voice, but  Ariel thought she could detect a low tremor of fear underlying the  words, lending them a dangerous urgency.
  Ariel froze for a moment, more frightened by his matter-of-fact manner  than she would have been if he'd reappeared and started barking orders.  One heartbeat later, the spell broke and she rushed to the closet, the  robe falling off her shoulders to pool on the floor behind her. She tore  various articles of clothing off hangers and shelves. "Can't Azrael  appear the same way you do?"
  "He can. However, he 
cannot be seen to act in this world. What  he does must be accomplished by "natural" means. You were supposed to  die because you fell asleep at the wheel of your car; that would have  been acceptable. An angelic assassination would 
not be. It would  leave him with a most untidy situation to clean up and explanations he  would not care to have to make. Therefore, he will come for you under  cover of the storm."
  
"Wh—?" Ariel began, but before the word had fully left her  lips, she noticed the quality of the light in the room had altered  considerably while they'd been talking. Moradiel stalked to the window  and threw the curtains wide so she could see.
  
"That storm."
  Outside, the clouds boiled, darkening even as she watched, taking on  that distinct greenish cast everyone throughout the central United  States learned to fear by age three. They seemed to swallow the sun  without a trace, building with a speed just slightly too fast for a  "normal" storm. A lightning bolt struck close by, throwing strange,  cavorting shadows on the walls and leaving flaring purple afterimages  dancing on her retinas. The crash of thunder was so immediate and so  loud, Ariel—no stranger to violent weather—jumped and screamed. She  zipped up a small suitcase with shaking fingers and rushed to Moradiel's  side. In a quiet corner of her mind that hadn't been panicked, she was  astonished at her acceptance of the new paradigm into which she had been  thrust.
  "What do we do?"
  He gathered her into his arms and pulled her firmly against his  unyielding body. His eyes flared with all the fury of the storm outside.
  "I love you, Ariel. I will let no harm come to you. Can you trust in that?"
  She nodded mutely. If the angel who'd been sent to take her soul had  instead chosen to spare her life out of love, it made no sense for her  to doubt. Especially not when another apocalyptic thunderbolt struck the  tree right outside her window, making her tremble even more fiercely,  press deeper into Moradiel's embrace. Against her will, a mad thought  flitted through her mind: 
this is an angel. An angel who loved me
 enough to turn down Heaven. I think I just might be falling in love with him,
 too.
  He leaned down for a kiss, and the world seemed to stop around her as  she parted her lips to accept him. Her last thought was to correct her  previous one.
  Whether or not it made sense, and whatever may come, she 
did love him too. She'd analyze it later.
  Then, there was nothing . . . .