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Authors: Michelle Scott

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BOOK: 1 Straight to Hell
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Then she fell silent, and I heard nothing but a soft moan that escaped from Grace’s lips as she battled a nightmare.

“He won’t save you, Lilith.  And He certainly won’t save your daughter.”

I rushed past Miss Spry, thinking only to put myself between her and my little girl.  I knew it was pointless to try to fight that monster, but I had to make a stand.  I couldn’t let Grace think I’d deserted her.  But before I could reach her, my feet slipped out from under me, and I fell, hitting my knees.

Ignoring the pain, I continued on, crawling toward my daughter, but the ground grew even slicker.  There was nothing to grab onto so that I could pull myself along, nor was there any friction that would allow my feet to push.  My daughter was only a few yards from me, but I couldn’t touch her.  And when I tried to scream out her name, the smothering air once more clogged my throat, choking me.

“I will use that child well, I promise you.”  With no effort at all, Miss Spry walked past me and picked up my sleeping daughter.  She grinned.  It was a terrible expression, hungry and bloodthirsty.  The grin of the wolf who sees Red Riding Hood skipping down the path.  The grin of a rapist watching a single woman hurrying to her car in a dark parking lot.  “And you, my dear, will stay here.”

I know you’ve heard stories of Hell.  Everyone has.  The tortures, the cunning punishments.  The wailing of sinners, the rooms filled with excrement.  The endless pain and suffering.  But let me tell you, that’s not Hell.  In fact, I would have gladly taken any of those things in return for what I was getting.

“I’ll do anything.”  My throat was so dry I croaked like a frog.  “Please.  Anything at all.”

Miss Spry loomed over me.  “So you’ve said a hundred times before.”

Seeing my helpless daughter gave me enough strength to reach out and put a hand on Miss Spry’s leg.  The touch repulsed me, sending a wave of sickness throughout my body, but I hung on.  “I swear I will do what you ask.  Always.  I’ll give you my soul.”

She kicked my hand away.  “I already have it.”

 “But Helen, you took it by force, and what good has that done you?”  In the dimly lit space, Mr. Clerk’s white pants and shirt appeared blindingly white, and I had to slit my eyes against the glare.  “And I’ll wager that, once she wakes up, the little girl will feel the same way.”

Knowing that there was someone in my corner made me bolder.  “I
want
you to have it,” I said.  “Please, I’m begging you to take it.”

“It doesn’t get better than that, Helen,” Mr. Clerk said.

Miss Spry quivered, and enough of her humanness returned so that it no longer hurt to look at her.  Finally, she said, “one more chance.”

I sobbed in relief.

“But I will keep your child until you’ve proven to me that you are fully mine.”

And, of course, I didn’t trust her.  But what choice did I have?  I nodded.

“It’s settled,” Miss Spry said, and she vanished, taking Grace with her.

Mr. Clerk helped me to my feet.  “What should I do,” I asked.  “How can I prove that I’m hers?”

Mr. Clerk pressed his lips together in a line.  His eyes were hard.  “I don’t know,” he said.  “But whatever you choose, it damn well better make her happy.”

Chapter Fourteen
 
 

How could I possibly make Miss Spry happy?

The first thing I thought of was to tell Ted that he could have custody of Grace.  But as I considered this, I realized it was no longer enough to give my daughter up.  The stakes were higher now.  I had to make a much grander gesture in order to prove that I was completely devoted to the Devil.

Giddy with exhaustion, I staggered into my own room and laid down, fully clothed, on the bed.  I would close my eyes for a minute, I told myself, and then I would come up with a plan.

Sometime later, I jerked awake, my heart pounding.  I’d been dreaming that Grace had woken up in Miss Spry’s arms and was screaming in terror.  In fact, her pleading cries still rang in my ears.

Only, no, those weren’t shrieks of alarm I’d heard, but something else: the high-pitched beep of the timer on the microwave.  The clock read 5:30, so it was much too early for either Jas or Ari to be up.  Maybe it was Mr. Darcy, or better yet, Mr. Clerk.  Someone – anyone! – to give me some help.  But coming into the kitchen, I saw that it wasn’t a supernatural guest, but a very human one: Tommy.

“I didn’t mean to wake you up.”  His knit cap was dusted with snow, and his cheeks were rosy from the cold.  “But I was freezing, and I wanted to make some tea.”

“That’s fine.”  I slumped down on a kitchen chair, disappointed that no one had come to rescue me.

“You want a cup?”

I waved the request away.  I was pretty sure that drinking anything right now would make me sick.

“You’re pretty pissed at me, aren’t you?”  He brought his hot water and tea bag to the table and sat next to me.  His smooth face was tense with worry.

My heart melted.  “Why would I be mad at you?”

“Because I’m leaving.  And because I upset your sister.”  He wrapped his hands around the steaming mug.  “But I told her that she could go with me.  In fact, I really want her to.  I’m doing this alone, and just between you and me, I’m nervous.  Some company would be nice.”

I tried to imagine Jasmine on a holy pilgrimage.  Sleeping on the streets of Calcutta or a youth hostel in Rome; hitchhiking to Lourdes or climbing the steps of Machu Pichu?  A shopping pilgrimage, sure.  But not a holy one.  No way.

He shyly met my eyes.  “You wouldn’t come with me, would you, Lil?  If I asked you to?”

I blinked.  Was he serious?  “There’s the matter of the girls,” I said hesitantly.

He reddened and gave a strangled laugh.  “Of course I know you’ve got the girls.  I was totally kidding!”

But looking at his mortified expression, I wasn’t so sure.

He took a sip of his tea. “So you’re probably wondering why I got up so early,” he said.

“To say good-bye,” I ventured.

“Kind of.  More like to give you a going-away present.”  He stood.  “Follow me.”

He led me to the front window in the living room.  Parting the blinds, he said, “Tah dah!”

There, sitting in my assigned parking spot, was my car.

“Jas told me that you’d had car trouble yesterday, so I borrowed her keys and went to take a look at it.  It was only a bad battery, so I replaced it.  And, no, you don’t have to pay me for it.”  He held up his hands as if I’d tried to argue with him.  “Like I said, it’s a going-away present.”

That anyone could be so kind overwhelmed me.  Unable to speak, I hugged him tightly.  William Darcy, I thought, you are wrong.  Dead wrong.  Tommy LeFevre is not a fraud.  His spirit is as pure as they come.  I couldn’t imagine him making a deal with the devil and allowing a demon to infest his soul.  Though, if he had, Miss Spry would loved nothing more than to watch him battling his conscience.

Oh, shit.

Tommy was my golden opportunity, but I had to do things right.  I couldn’t hurt him just a little.  No, if I wanted to please Miss Spry, I’d have to decimate him.

Looking at Tommy, I knew that I couldn’t be so cruel as to destroy such a wonderful person.

Then again, remembering Grace’s empty bed, I knew that I could.

 

 

My succubus was not only back and ready for action, she was buzzing with excitement at the prospect of destroying Tommy.

We consulted together about how to best corrupt his unblemished soul.  While he fixed himself some breakfast, I studied him  like a predator, looking for the perfect place to strike.

“…and after that, I want to visit a Nepalese monastery.  There’s this one that offers classes on meditation. 
Vipassana
meditation.”  He poured more soymilk on his wheat flakes.  “I’m telling you, this pilgrimage is going to be amazing.”

My demon nudged me. 
Get him to cancel the trip
, she said.

That was a good idea, but not a great one.  Although getting him to walk away from the pilgrimage wouldn’t be easy, it wouldn’t be impossible.  If I told him that I had cancer, he’d stay.  In fact, if I asked him for a loan, he’d stay.  He was so goodhearted, he’d give me the money even if it meant he couldn’t go on his trip.

No, I needed something better. 
As much as I hated to, I had to start thinking like Miss Spry.  And, after a moment, I had it.  If I could turn
Tommy away from the path of good – if I could make him
want
to give up his trip – that would certainly get the old hag’s attention.

“Oh, and Durbar Square,” he continued.  “I can’t miss that, either.  Stacy used to talk about it, and I know she would want me to see it.”  He ducked his head, looking a little embarrassed.  “Sometimes, I picture her in heaven or wherever, looking down on me.  I like to think that when I’m going on my trip, she’ll be there, too.”

I’d been nodding and smiling encouragingly, but now I stopped.  I’d found my first place to attack. 
I needed to destroy his love of the mystery he’d been chasing all his life. 
Get ready
, I told my succubus. 
Here we go
.

“Tommy, what color is my aura today?”

He blinked, surprised by my question.  Then, seeing that I was serious, focused on the space above my head.  “It’s still gone.”

“And it’s been gone since the day my mother died, right?”

“Yes.”  He’d never seen me take his religious mumbo-jumbo seriously, and now he knew something was up.  Taking a deep breath, I explained a little of what had happened to me.  Only I changed the facts.  I told him about being hit by the car and dying, of course, but not about the jail cell or Miss Spry.  And certainly not about meeting his sister.

His eyes widened.  “You had a near death experience?”

I nodded.  “But the thing is, Tommy, there’s nothing there.  Nothing at all.”

His surprise became caution.  “Not everyone with an NDE visits the next world.  Some stay near their bodies.”

“No, I did leave this world.  I’m telling you that there’s nothing there.  No God, no higher power.  Nothing.  It’s only a lot of empty space.”  I took his hand in mine.  My demon gave my face just the right amount of sadness, and my voice a quaver that made me sound truly sorry.  “I couldn’t bear to tell you before, but now that you’re leaving, I can’t stand the idea of keeping up the lie.  I knew that you, of all people, would want to hear the truth.”

“I don’t believe you.”  He was getting angry.

“It’s all true, and I can prove it.  But I warn you, you won’t like it.”

He set his jaw.  “Okay.  Show me.”

I drew him through the nearest otherworld portal.  Now that I was completely onboard with Miss Spry, I was also in sync with my demon.  So as my mother and Miss Spry had done, I easily manipulated the otherworld realm to mirror what I wanted Tommy to see: an endlessly unbroken stretch of cold, gray, empty space.

“This is all there is?”  Despite the vast space that stretched out like the edges of eternity, Tommy’s voice was peculiarly flat.

“This is it.”  I was glad to have Tommy’s hand to cling to since the overwhelming blankness terrified me.  It wasn’t as bad as the hell I’d come from a few hours ago, but it was horrible.

We walked in one direction and then another, but every way we went we were met with more empty space.  Tommy began to run, dragging me behind him.  But every place we went was just like every place we’d left.

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