that way,â he said.
âWhy? Sheâs my mother.â¦â
âAnd Azrael is your father. It didnât stop him striking a deal with the Arch Angels to bring about your final end for his own gain. No. We take no chances. We trust no one .â Gabrielâs tone oozed authority. There was no point trying to argue; this topic was clearly nonnegotiable.
I looked to my chain, dangling from Gabrielâs fingers contemplatively. âWhy do you think she left me her crystal?â
âI donât know. Youâd been infected by a Pureblood; she wouldnât have known what the result of that would be. Perhaps she was trying to give you every possible chance at survival.â He paused and to further iterate his point added, âThat was a long time ago, Lai.â
âI know it was. I donât understandâyour crystal is embedded into your neck. Mine is attached to a ring; itâs not part of my body.â I ran my fingers over the blades of wet grass.
âOrifiel, when he first passed through the rifts, was holding a piece in his hand. But he and the other Arch Angels were created organically from the crystal itself. They donât need them to pass through the rifts or to keep their gifts here; they only need them to command the rifts.â He paused. âItâs not the same for us Angel Descendants; we need the crystal gems. I would suspect that they were placed into the neck so as to be fully integrated with our physical form. That crystal wouldnât give a mortal any talents, Lai. Itâs not a transferable deal. You have to have the light within you, from the crystal in Styclar-Plena, for it to work, and you always had plenty of that. You still do.â
âLetâs not forget I also have the venom of a Pureblood, and they certainly have a lot of similar traits.â
âThatâs true,â he said. âOnly perhaps, given your Angel lineage, the Purebloodâs traits were heightened or stronger within you.â
âCan Vampires become invisible, too?â
âNope, thatâs reserved for us Angels. Whyâd you ask?â
âBecause Iâm pretty sure I have masked myself before. So I guess I need this crystal to keep my âAngelicâ powers, right?â
âIâd have agreed, if I hadnât just watched you place it down away from you. Even without the crystal, you still absorbed the sun, the same way an Arch Angel would.â
âThatâs ⦠strange.â
âYes. But thatâs good news. If you were parted from the crystal, you wouldnât lose your gifts.â
âOr my immortality,â I said at the same time as I realized this.
âYour immortality could stem from either your Angel heritage, or, well, you know.â
Despite his history of saving Vampires, Gabriel had a real issue with using the word Vampire with any reference to me. But it was hardly as though I could just disown my Vampire lineage any sooner than I could my Angel side. The second I rejected either, I didnât knowânor did I want to try and guessâwhat might happen to me.
âI think Iâll hold on to it anyway.â I looked to my ring once again, hanging below Gabrielâs palm. It was the only possession I had that was as old as I was. The one thing I had held on to throughout my entire existence.
Gabriel took my hand in his and lightly kissed my ring finger. âYes. But if you donât mind, Iâd prefer to have it taken out of this band. Iâd prefer it if you werenât wearing something that symbolized your promise to someone else.â
âEthan is gone, Gabriel. Heâs gone because of me. If anything, I think the ring represents the friendship he and I had, long ago.â
He didnât say anything, but his gaze remained fixed on the bottom of my chain, where my motherâs devotion and my best friendâs commitment to me hung low.
At my strained
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