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Authors: Richelle Mead

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“If you call her out,” I said finally. “You'll get accolades. Big promotion.”
Luis' face registered surprise, then broke into a grin. “You're bribing me now?”
I looked between him and Kurtis. “I hear that's how it works around here.”
Luis's smile faded. “There's no way of proving her guilt.”
“Well,” mused Kurtis. “There's one way . . .” He'd perked up at the mention of promotion. I think he hoped being in on Noelle's takedown could help his Belgium transfer.
He and Luis locked eyes, and something passed in those glances.
“No,” said Luis. “She wouldn't agree.”
“You're strong enough . . .”
Luis grimaced. “If I do that, and she's not guilty,
I'm
the one who gets flayed.”
“She is guilty,” I said, having no clue what they referred to, only that something big was on the line. “Luis,
please
.”
The clock ticked. One minute until midnight.
Luis studied me for a long time. He exhaled and stood up.
“I can't believe I'm about to do this.”
Kurtis gave him a friendly punch. “Don't worry. I've got your back.”
“Really?”
“No.”
* * *
Powerful presence or no, not many people noticed when Luis entered the ballroom. At least, not until he grabbed Noelle and slammed her against the wall.
Dead silence filled the room, except for Noelle's outraged cries as she fought against him. But he held her pinned with more than physical strength; she couldn't match his magical power.
“Are you out of your fucking mind? What the hell are you—?”
She quieted and blanched as he pressed his hand to her forehead. He paled as well, and I heard a collective gasp around the room. I realized then what he was doing. He was looking
in
her, just as Kurtis had allowed me. Only, Luis was doing it by force. It was a mental, spiritual rape of sorts.
I shuddered, remembering how it had been for me being the one to look inside. It had been a hundred times worse for Kurtis, and unlike Noelle,
he'd
consented. As she grew paler and paler, I could only imagine how it must feel for her to undergo that. No, scratch that. I couldn't even comprehend it.
The two demons broke apart in less than a minute. I wondered if that's how much time had elapsed when Kurtis and I had done it. I'd relived an eternity in my mind while it happened.
Luis and Noelle stood there, gasping, staring at each other. Both looked ready to pass out.
“Holy shit,” exclaimed Luis. “You did do it.”
Noelle frantically shook her head, black curls swaying, as she tried to hold on to the wall for support. “No, no.” She looked desperately at the crowd. “He's lying! He's lying!”
Luis was visibly trying to recover himself. He grabbed nothing for support, but he had the look of someone who'd been gut-punched. “You want to let someone else look and prove me wrong?”
“No!” she cried. In power, she was second only to Luis here. None of the other gathered demons could actually force her as he had. She would have to allow it—unless an outside demon was summoned. “You can't prove anything, Luis. You're lying. You're—”
“I can prove it,” he interrupted. “You showed me. I saw it inside you. I know where to go and—”
“No, don't. Don't.”
He shrugged. “Your call. You tipped me off. I know how to get evidence now and prove it. I'm the one passing judgment. Make me go hunt down the proof, and your sentence will be . . . bad. Or, confess now, and your sentence will be . . . less bad.”
A silent battle took place. I had no idea what evidence Luis had seen inside her, but her expression showed that she did not want it made public. Realizing she was fucked either way, Noelle finally nodded.
“All right. All right. Yes, I confess. I did it. I killed Anthony and set the others up. There. Are you happy? Are you fucking happy?”
Those gathered went crazy. They
loved
the new turn of events. It might have even been better than a flaying for them. As chaos broke out in the room, I heard Kurtis chuckling behind me.
“Sweet,” he said. “I am
so
out of Belgium.”
“What, for helping with this?” I asked.
“Yup. Well, that and I hear there's an archdemon opening in L.A.”
Chapter Thirteen
Seth and I flew back to Seattle the next day. A lot of demons had wanted to talk to me, but I needed to get out of that hotel as soon as possible. In fact, I'd hightailed it out of the ballroom once Starla and Clyde had been freed. I hadn't stuck around because I had a feeling Noelle was simply going to be swapped into their place for the evening's entertainment.
Sitting beside Seth for the two-and-a-half hour flight home brought all the
other
events of last night back to me. As we held hands and recounted the bizarre trial events, he in no way acted as though he'd faced temptation and won last night. I in no way acted as though I'd been the cause of that temptation and had subsequently lost the one chance we might have had for physical intimacy. The fact that my exploits had led to two demons' freedom was little comfort.
“She really killed him?” asked Seth in amazement.
“Yup.”
“But she loved him . . . or something, right?”
“Yup.”
“Then how could she have done that?”
I stared at his profile, at the cheekbones and brown eyes I loved. I thought about losing him, how I would feel if he chose another woman. I wouldn't be driven to kill him, of course, but . . . well, I could empathize with the pain.
“Because people do stupid things for love,” I murmured sadly, thinking of my own sins.
He turned and met my eyes, compassion shining in them. “You okay?”
I hesitated, and for a brief moment, the instinct was there. I almost spilled everything I'd done in my silly Beth obsession. After all, Seth and I had recently had big discussions about honesty in relationships. He was a big believer in telling the truth, and I wanted to live up to his ideals. Yet, the words stuck in my throat.
“Fine,” I said instead. “Just worn out . . . long week.”
“Yeah,” he said. “I hear you.” His gaze turned inward, and I had a feeling he was thinking of the condo. He opened his mouth, like he too might say something, then closed it. I was pretty sure I knew what had been about to come out.
“So,” I said carefully. “Where'd you go this morning?” He'd gotten in some writing before our plane left. “The pig café?”
He smiled faintly. “No. I went back to that diner . . .”
“Oh?”
“Yeah . . . weird thing. That waitress you saw . . . she was working, and I told her I was leaving and . . .”
My smile was frozen on my face as I attempted to play blasé. “And?”
Again, I had the feeling he was about to tell me about last night, and again, he held back. “I don't know. Just weird. She was acting really strange when I talked to her . . .”
Like, say, when he talked to her about events she had no clue about?
“What do you mean?” I asked.
He shook his head, letting it go. I wondered if he'd tried to apologize to her. He probably thought her obliviousness was feigned as retaliation. “I don't know. Like I said, she was just being weird.”
He squeezed my hand, and we settled back into our seats. Both of us held our own secrets, our own guilt. Neither of us had the courage to bring them up. I wondered if that's how all couples were, hiding small, silent sins.
Nonetheless, I couldn't resist asking, “Weird, huh? Wait. . . didn't you say she reminded you of me? Are you saying
I'm
weird?”
Seth laughed. He brought my hand to his lips and kissed it. “Thetis, there are no adjectives for you. And the two of you are nothing alike.”
“Really? I mean, you acted like we were twins or something.”
“I did no such thing.”
“You
did
,” I teased. “It was like you couldn't tell us apart.”
He sighed and rolled his eyes at my joking. “I told you, you're nothing alike. You don't act alike. You don't think alike. You don't talk alike.”
“Or look alike,” I added.
“Right,” he agreed. After another squeeze of my hand, he released it and opened up his laptop.
Watching, I figured I should be glad he didn't suspect anything. I'd gotten away with my blunder, my test of his fidelity. I should feel glad. Except I didn't.
“People do stupid things for love,” I muttered under my breath.
Seth glanced at me. “What'd you say?”
“Nothing.”
When it comes to jobs in hell, being a succubus seems
pretty glamorous. A girl can be anything she wants, the
wardrobe is killer, and mortal men will do anything just
for a touch. Granted, they often pay with their souls,
but why get technical?
 
But Seattle succubus Georgina Kincaid's life is far less
exotic. At least there's her day job at a local bookstore—
free books; all the white chocolate mochas she can drink;
and easy access to bestselling, sexy writer, Seth
Mortensen, aka He Whom She Would Give Anything to
Touch but Can't.
 
But dreaming about Seth will have to wait. Something
wicked is at work in Seattle's demon underground. And
for once, all of her hot charms and drop-dead one-liners
won't help because Georgina's about to discover there
are some creatures out there that both heaven and hell
want to deny . . .
 
 
Start from the beginning with the very first
Succubus novel!
Don't miss Richelle Mead's
SUCCUBUS BLUES
available wherever print and e-books are sold!
Chapter 1
Statistics show that most mortals sell their souls for five reasons: sex, money, power, revenge, and love. In that order.
I suppose I should have been reassured, then, that I was out here assisting with
numero uno,
but the whole situation just made me feel . . . well, sleazy. And coming from me, that was something.
Maybe I just can't empathize anymore,
I mused.
It's been too long. When I was a virgin, people still believed swans could impregnate girls.
Nearby, Hugh waited patiently for me to overcome my reticence. He stuffed his hands into well-pressed khakis, leaning his large frame against his Lexus. “I don't see what the big deal is. You do this all the time.”
That wasn't exactly true, but we both knew what he meant. Ignoring him, I instead made a great show of studying my surroundings, not that that improved my mood. The suburbs always dragged me down. Identical houses. Perfect lawns. Far too many SUVs. Somewhere in the night, a dog refused to stop yapping.
“I don't do
this
,” I said finally. “Even I have standards.”
Hugh snorted, expressing his opinion of my standards. “Okay, if it makes you feel better, don't think of this in terms of damnation. Think of it as a charity case.”
“A charity case?”
“Sure.”
He pulled out his Pocket PC, looking briskly businesslike, despite the unorthodox setting. Not that I should have been surprised. Hugh was a professional imp, a master at getting mortals to sell their souls, an expert in contracts and legal loopholes that would have made any lawyer wince in envy.
He was also my friend. It sort of gave new meaning to the
With friends like these ...
adage.
“Listen to these stats,” he continued. “Martin Miller. Male, of course. Caucasian. Nonpracticing Lutheran. Works over at a game store in the mall. Lives in the basement here—his parents' house.”
“Jesus.”
“Told you.”
“Charity or no, it still seems so ... extreme. How old is he again?”
“Thirty-four.”
“Ew.”
“Exactly. If you were that old and hadn't gotten any, you might seek desperate measures too.” He glanced down at his watch. “So are you going to do this or not?”
No doubt I was keeping Hugh from a date with some hot woman half his age—by which I meant, of course, the age Hugh looked. In reality, he was pushing a century.
I set my purse on the ground and gave him a warning glance. “You owe me.”
“I do,” he conceded. This wasn't my usual gig, thank goodness. The imp normally “outsourced” this kind of thing but had run into some kind of scheduling problem tonight. I couldn't imagine who he normally got to do this.
I started toward the house, but he stopped me. “Georgina?”
“Yeah?”
“There's . . . one other thing . . .”
I turned back around, not liking the tone in his voice. “Yes?”
“He, um, sort of had a special request.”
I raised an eyebrow and waited.
“You see, uh, he's really into the whole, like, evil thing. You know, figures if he sold his soul to the devil—so to speak—then he should lose his virginity to a, I don't know, demoness or something.”
I swear, even the dog stopped barking at that. “You're joking.”
Hugh didn't respond.
“I'm not a—no. No way am I going to—”
“Come
on
, Georgina. It's nothing. A flourish. Smoke and mirrors. Please? Just do this for me?” He turned wistful, cajoling. Hard to resist. Like I said, he was good at his job. “I'm really in a tight spot . . . if you could help me out here. . . it would mean so much . . .”
I groaned, unable to refuse the pathetic look on his broad face. “If anyone finds out about this—”
“My lips are sealed.” He actually had the audacity to make a sealing motion.
Bending down, resigned, I unfastened the straps on my shoes.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“These are my favorite Bruno Maglis. I don't want them absorbed when I change.”
“Yeah, but . . . you can just shape-shift them back.”
“They won't be the same.”
“They will. You can make them anything you want. This is just silly.”
“Look,” I demanded, “do you want to stand out here arguing shoes, or do you want me to go make a man of your virgin?”
Hugh clamped his mouth shut and gestured toward the house.
I padded away in the grass, the blades tickling my bare feet. The back patio leading to the basement was open, just as Hugh had promised. I let myself into the sleeping house, hoping they didn't have a dog, blearily wondering how I'd reached this low point in my existence. Adjusting to the darkness, my eyes soon discerned the features of a comfortable, middle-class family room: sofa, television, bookshelves. A stairwell rose to the left, and a hallway veered to the right.
I turned down the hall, letting my appearance shape-shift as I walked. The sensation was so familiar, so second nature to me, that I didn't even need to see my exterior to know what was happening. My petite frame grew taller, the slim build still staying slim but taking on a leaner, harder edge. My skin paled to death white, leaving no memory of its faint tan. The hair, already to my midback, stayed the same length but darkened to jet black, the fine waviness turning straight and coarse. My breasts—impressive by most standards—became larger still, rivaling those of the comic book heroines this guy had undoubtedly grown up with.
As for my outfit . . . well, away went the cute Banana Republic slacks and blouse. Thigh-high black leather boots appeared on my legs, paired with a matching halter top and a skirt I never could have bent over in. Spiky wings, horns, and a whip completed the package.
“Oh Lord,” I muttered, accidentally taking in the whole effect in a small decorative mirror. I hoped none of the local demonesses ever found about this. They were really quite classy.
Turning from the taunting mirror, I stared down the hall at my destination: a closed door with a yellow
MEN AT WORK
sign attached to it. I thought I could hear the faint sounds of a video game bleeping from beyond, though such noises silenced immediately when I knocked.
A moment later, the door opened, and I stood facing a five-foot-eight guy with shoulder-length, dirty blond hair rapidly receding on top. A large, hairy belly peeped out from underneath his Homer Simpson T-shirt, and he held a bag of potato chips in one hand.
The bag dropped to the floor when he saw me.
“Martin Miller?”
“Y-yes,” he gasped out.
I cracked the whip. “You ready to play with me?”
Exactly six minutes later, I left the Miller residence. Apparently thirty-four years doesn't do much for one's stamina.
“Whoa, that was fast,” Hugh noted, seeing me walk across the front yard. He was leaning against the car again, smoking a cigarette.
“No shit. Got another one of those?”
He grinned and handed over his own cigarette, giving me a once-over. “Would you be offended if I said the wings kind of get me hot?”
I took the cigarette, narrowing my eyes at him as I inhaled. A quick check ascertained no one else was around, and I shape-shifted back to my usual form.
“You owe me big,” I reminded him, putting the shoes back on.
“I know. Of course, some might argue you owe me. You got a nice fix from it. Better than you're used to.”
I couldn't deny that, but I didn't have to feel good about it either. Poor Martin. Geek or no, committing his soul to eternal damnation was a helluva price to pay for six minutes.
“You wanna get a drink?” Hugh offered.
“No, it's too late. I'm going home. Got a book to read.”
“Ah, of course. When's the big day?”
“Tomorrow,” I proclaimed.
The imp chuckled at my hero worship. “He just writes mainstream fiction, you know. He's hardly Nietzsche or Thoreau.”
“Hey, one doesn't have to be surreal or transcendental to be a great writer. I should know; I've seen a few over the years.”
Hugh grunted at my imperious air, giving me a mock bow. “Far be it from me to argue with a lady about her age.”
I gave him a quick kiss on the cheek, then walked two blocks to where I had parked. I was unlocking the car door when I felt it: the warm, tingling feeling indicative of another immortal nearby.
Vampire,
I registered, only a millisecond before he appeared beside me. Damn, they moved fast.
“Georgina, my belle, my sweet succubus, my goddess of delight,” he intoned, placing his hands over his heart dramatically.
Great. Just what I needed. Duane was quite possibly the most obnoxious immortal I'd ever met. He kept his blond hair shaved to a close buzz, and as usual, he demonstrated terrible taste in both fashion and deodorant.
“Go away, Duane. I have nothing to say to you.”
“Oh come on,” he crooned, his hand snaking out to hold the door as I tried to open it. “Even you can't play coy this time. Look at you. You're positively glowing. Good hunting, eh?”
I scowled at the reference to Martin's life energy, knowing it must be wreathing me. Obstinately, I tried to pry my door open against Duane's hold. No luck.
“He'll be out for days, from the looks of it,” the vampire added, peering at me closely. “Still, I imagine whoever he was enjoyed the ride—both on you and to hell.” He gave me a lazy smile, just barely revealing his pointed teeth. “He must have been someone pretty good for you to look as hot as you do now. What happened? I thought you only fucked the scum of the earth. The real assholes.”
“Change of policy. I didn't want to give you false hope.”
He shook his head appreciatively. “Oh Georgina, you never disappoint—you and your witticisms. But then, I've always found whores know how to make good use of their mouths, on or off the job.”
“Let go,” I snapped, tugging harder at the door.
“Why the hurry? I have a right to know what you and the imp were doing over here. The Eastside is my turf.”
“We don't have to abide by your ‘turf ' rules, and you know it.”
“Still, common courtesy dictates when you're in the neighborhood—literally, in this case—you at least say hello. Besides, how come
we
never hang out? You owe me some quality time. You spend enough time with those other losers.”
The losers he referred to were my friends and the only decent vampires I'd ever met. Most vampires—like Duane—were arrogant, devoid of social skills, and obsessed with territoriality. Not unlike a lot of mortal men I'd met.
“If you don't let me go, you're going to learn a whole new definition of ‘common courtesy.' ”
Okay, it was a stupid, faux action-movie line, but it was the best I could come up with on the spot. I made my voice sound as menacing as possible, but it was pure bravado, and he knew it. Succubi were gifted with charisma and shape-shifting; vampires had super strength and speed. What this meant was that one of us mingled better at parties, and the other could break a man's wrist with a handshake.
“Are you actually threatening me?” He ran a playful hand along my cheek, making the hairs on my neck stand on end—in a bad way. I squirmed. “That's adorable. And kind of arousing. I actually think I'd like to see you on the offensive. Maybe if you'd just behave like a good girl—
ow!
You little bitch!”
With both of his hands occupied, I had seized my window of opportunity. A quick burst of shape-shifting, and sharp, three-inch claws appeared on my right hand. I swiped them across his cheek. His superior reflexes didn't let me get very far with the gesture, but I did draw blood before he gripped my wrist and slammed it against the car.
“What's the matter? Not offensive enough for you?” I managed through my pain. More bad movie lines.
“Cute, Georgina. Very cute. We'll see how cute you are by the time I—”
Headlights glimmered in the night as a car turned the corner on the next block and headed toward us. In that split second, I could see the indecision on Duane's face. Our tête-à-tête would undoubtedly be noticed by the driver. While Duane could easily kill an intervening mortal—hell, it was what he did for a living—having the kill linked to his harassment of me would not look good to our superiors. Even an asshole like Duane would think twice before stirring up that kind of paperwork.
“We aren't finished,” he hissed, releasing my wrist.
“Oh, I think we are.” I could feel braver now that salvation was on the way. “The next time you come near me's going to be the last.”
“I'm quaking in terror,” he simpered. His eyes gleamed once in the darkness, and then he was gone, moving off into the night just as the car drove past. Thank God for whatever liaison or ice cream run had pulled that driver out tonight.
Not wasting any more time, I got into my car and drove off, anxious to be back in the city. I tried to ignore the shaking of my hands on the wheel, but the truth of the matter was, Duane terrified me. I had told him off plenty of times in the presence of my immortal friends, but taking him on alone on a dark street was an entirely different matter, especially since all my threats had been empty ones.
I actually abhorred violence in all its forms. I suppose this came from living through periods of history fraught with levels of cruelty and brutality no one in the modern world could even comprehend. People like to say we live in violent times now, but they have no idea. Sure, there had been a certain satisfaction centuries ago in seeing a rapist castrated swiftly and promptly for his crimes, without endless courtroom drama or an early release for “good behavior.” Unfortunately, those who deal in revenge and vigilantism rarely know where to draw the line, so I'd take the bureaucracy of the modern judicial system any day.

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