Between Books: Volume Five By L. A. Banks Between Books: Volume Five After The Bitten, Before The Forbidden May 2005 Down on the third and third levels of Hell ... Her soul had bottomed out in the viscous realm of envy. She could feel the Amanthras ripping at her raw flesh, her eyes near blind from the pain and fetid acid. Another part of her was disconnected, moving in a frenzied, haphazard ghostly wail as something large and manifold chased her soul through a barren terrain. Ghost gangs. Nuit had promised her this end, should she ever betray him. He’d obviously been a vampire of his word. Soul-torn, she’d been split amongst two levels of torture, aware of both interleaving realities—hunted one second, fed upon the next, in horrifying, unrelenting waves of sensation. Forever. This would be her eternity. She wept but there were no tears left to be shed from her depleted tear ducts. She was now only bloodied, regurgitated human body slime one moment, and mere vapor in the following instant. Madness was her only option. Slithering laughter deafened her ears to the sound of hunks of meat being consumed from her bones. Echoing moans of others being tortured filled in the blank spaces within her mind, while phantom whispers promised terrifying events yet to come. Every fear she ever owned manifested in the dry place, while the wet swamplands of the serpents made each shriek that rent the air hers. “Momma…” she wailed. Screams for mercy were useless. If only, if only, if only… her mother could come. “Marlene!” she screeched, the old bat pitch from her once-vampire existence hitting decibels of sonar that made the angry serpents snap and hiss at her more. The Light… where was The Light! Boulders pummeled her from the mere thought and she lie for seconds suffocating, being crushed by shapeless, quickly moving entities, then the serpents found her again and dragged her through the maggoty black waters to begin feeding once more. The choice was clear—get away from the Amanthras. The ghost gangs were harsh, but less torturous. Their pain was more muted. The stings and rips into her flesh delivered by the pit snakes dulled. A hot blast of dry air lifted her to the barren terrain and scorching heat filled her lungs, singeing her weary organs from within. Then for a moment, everything became still. Her aggressors had moved away. Something had temporarily diverted their attention. Raven tried to get her vaporous limbs to respond. Untold time spent in agony; visceral pain summarily abated. She became a quickly floating mist, obliquely moving upward toward the outer edges of the second level. If she could just get to level one, there, at least, the torture would only be insanity, and maybe not as bad as where she’d been. Time had passed, but she had no frame of reference. She could only follow the lessening density as potential escape gave her limited hope. She felt for the barrier, nearly blind, using her phantom-like hands and the fragmented senses she still owned. When she passed through it, tears in earnest cascaded down her face. The portals… something was wrong with the portals! The gates were opened. She had to keep moving, had to flee before the guards found out and sealed them again. With everything left in her, she honed in on her mother’s topside vibration, the connection that went beyond the grave—pure love still there and unending. The sensation staunched the pain; love filled her and lifted her higher, closer to topside where there was human life. A mother’s love claimed her, still worried for her even though dead. The Light was the answer… “Momma, take me into The Light,” she whispered in her heart, clinging to it, finding the silent prayer Marlene had left behind, and she suddenly found herself in a small, dark Southern house where she had been born. It was a place that was now abandoned. Cobwebs and boards covered the windows and sheltered her from the sun. She could feel her mother’s pain riddle her body as though poking into her tender, demon-victimized form. It all became so clear as she wafted disembodied throughout the structure, remembering all of Marlene’s words, her worries; her warnings… everything her mother had said had come true. Raven closed her eyes as a favorite lullaby that her mother once sang filled her with remorse and a sob escaped her lips. She drifted to the empty bedroom wishing that she could feel safe for just a little while, like when she was an innocent child and would curl up next to Marlene’s warmth and feel those ancient hands petting her hair. Had she only known. But everything was gone; the house was empty. How many years had passed? Was Marlene even alive? “I’ll find you and make it up to you,” she promised in a garbled whisper, weeping and moving throughout the structure in disoriented, ghostly panic. Raven glanced up to the ceiling, wondering if her mother had finally crossed over. “Don’t leave me, momma. I just want to go home.”