“I am Tessriel, your former sister in Heaven.” The unfamiliar angel had bowed her head in deference. “Angel of the thunder that rolls across Eurasia.”
Tessriel was looking at Arriane, and something in a distant meadow of Arriane’s soul recalled this angel. Her sister. Yes. They hadn’t known each other well in Heaven—there had been a league of other angels between them, but there had always been a connection. That inexplicable mystery called attraction.
“I bring news of your brother Roland,” Tessriel said to Arriane, who had gasped at the sound of his name.
“Roland resides in Lucifer’s domain,” Gabbe said sharply. “You bring us news from Hell?”
“I bring you news—” Tessriel’s voice wavered and Arriane’s heart went out to her. She hadn’t seen Roland since the Fall and she missed him desperately. This angel had come with a message. Arriane scrambled forward, pressing up against Gabbe, who held her back with the white edge of her wing.
“Go now, leave us be,” Gabbe commanded. It was final.
Tessriel shook her head sadly as she turned to go. She looked back once at Arriane, briefly and with great sorrow. “Goodbye.”
“Goodbye!”
But it wasn’t goodbye. Years later, on her own, walking the shoals of a mortal river, she came upon the red-haired angel again.
“Tessriel?”
Tessriel looked up from the river, where she was bathing. She was naked, her pure-white wings skimming the surface of the water, and her long red hair trailing slickly down her back.
“Is it you?” Tessriel whispered. “I thought I’d never see you again.”
When the angel rose from the river, the sight of her mortal guise was too much for Arriane, who looked away, thrilled and embarrassed. She heard the ripple of wings leaving water, felt a brush of warm wind, and then, a second later, the sweetest lips pressed down on hers. Wet arms and wet wings engulfed her.
“What was that?” Arriane blinked in astonishment as Tessriel pulled away. Her lips tingled with unexpected desire.
“A kiss. I promised myself that if I did see you again, that’s what I would do.”
“And if I left right now and then came back,” Arriane wondered aloud, “would you kiss me like that again?”
Tessriel nodded, a vast smile on her face.
“Goodbye,” Arriane whispered, closing her eyes. When she opened them, she said, “Hello.”
And Tessriel kissed her again.
And again.
On a dark fjord north of Norway … on a ship setting sail for the Indies … on a dusty desert plateau in Persia … or in a rainstorm inside a rain forest—when the world was uncomplicated and young and neither fallen angel had yet turned in the direction each would ultimately turn in, Arriane and Tessriel were always saying goodbye to say hello again, always moving in or out of a kiss.
Now, feeling as far as she ever had from the lips of the demon she’d loved, Arriane passed a pair of herons in the sky. They were paired, but she had to be alone. Because of old allegiances neither would betray. It drove her mad with frustration. She needed to be someplace lonesome and remote, where her heart could ache in peace.
Tears blurred her vision as she climbed over the low-lying meadows of the valley below. She didn’t want to leave Tess; she couldn’t leave quickly enough. Soon, she had escaped the dairy in its little verdant vale, which she had grown to love.
Love. What was it, anyway?
Daniel and Lucinda seemed to know. There had been moments when Arriane thought she danced toward love’s awareness: tender, fleeting moments locked in a kiss with Tess, when both souls lost themselves completely. If only they could have stayed like that forever, lying to themselves in an extended state of bliss.
Maybe love was lying to yourself.
No. The world bore down on them, and in the broad, clear light of day, Arriane knew that what she felt for Tess both was and was not love. It was everything—and it was impossible.
It was why they had already been through this kind of goodbye, the ugly kind, once before.
It was a few hundred years after the Fall. Arriane had finally made her choice. She had been back to the plains of Heaven and, after some time, had made her peace with the Throne. Her wings shone a terrific iridescent silver—the mark that she was accepted once again—and Arriane was eager to show them off to her love. She found Tessriel under the Amazonian waterfall where they had agreed to meet.
“Look what I’ve done—”
“What have you done?”
Just as Arriane’s wings bore a brand-new silver shine, Tessriel’s wings were tainted—a glorious, gaudy gold.
“You never told me you were considering …” Arriane’s voice trailed off.
“You never told me, either.” Tess’s eyes welled up with tears, but as soon as she wiped them away, she looked angry.
“But why? Why would you side with him?”
“Isn’t your choice as arbitrary as mine? Your master is only the authority because you say he is.”
“At least he is good, unlike your master!”
“Good. Evil. They’re just words, Arriane. Who can trust them, anyway?”
“How—how can I love you now?” Arriane whispered.
“It’s simple,” Tess said with a sad shake of her head. “You can’t.”
It was Roland who brought them back together. Now Arriane almost wished he hadn’t. But at the time, she had needed Tess more than she ever would have admitted. Roland arranged for a stolen moment between the two in Jerusalem, after what was supposed to be Cam’s marriage to Lilith.
That marriage hadn’t happened.
But Arriane and Tessriel had. As soon as they saw each other, their argument dissolved into another unstoppable kiss.