Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
and as long as I was around him, I would be OK. Dex used
to make me feel that way with everything. Except my heart.
I lifted my hands and placed them inside his leather
jacket, which was open slightly. I could feel his muscles
underneath his silky shirt. He wasn’t rock hard; instead, he
looked predestined to carry weight rather than lose it, but
his body was stil a pil ar of strength and the more my tiny
coral-painted fingers pushed and prodded against him, the
more I felt like nothing could knock him over. He was as
rooted as a tree. I wanted to borrow some of that strength,
take it from him. Just thinking it made my kisses faster,
more frenzied.
Final y he pul ed back and moved his hand around to the
side of my face. It was warm against my cold cheek that
was braised by the chil ing wind.
“It’s getting late,” he said, his voice uneven. He cleared
his throat.
“It already is late,” I whispered, not wanting to stop.
“And cold,” he said as he pul ed my cardigan around
me. “You need something warmer than this.”
“You’l do,” I said. I was surprised at my boldness.
Maximus was too.
“I’m pretty hot, I’l admit that,” he said slyly, then chuckled
at himself. “But we need to be inside a warm cab before
you get pneumonia.”
He gave me a quick peck on the lips, then took my hand
in his and led me back to the path. Now that the makeout
session was over, the terrors and shadows that lurked in
the back of mind were free to play. I didn’t want to go home.
I couldn’t. Abby would be there.
But I couldn’t bring myself to say any of this to him as we
cut across the park, the damp grass brushing against the
bottoms of my boots, the bums who lurked beneath the
trees. I probably would have felt safer snuggling up to the
guy who slept under his garbage bags ful of beer cans than
alone in my room.
We hailed a cab fairly easily once we got to Burnside
Street – it was the weekend and downtown Portland was in
ful swing with people spil ing out of hole-in-the-wal bars,
music venues with shitty bands, and late-night dives. I
wanted the night to keep going. I wanted to line up with the
masses at Voodoo Donuts and feel like the city had my
back.
But instead we both got in the cab. At least Maximus
made sure to drop me off before him, even though he lived
way closer to downtown than I did.
As the cab pul ed down my familiar street, he asked, “Do
you have a big day tomorrow?”
“I was scheduled to work,” I said, feeling a pang of
embarrassment, anxiousness. “But who knows what’s
going on with that anymore. I guess I’l just get haunted.
Maybe I’l take up knitting. Baby slippers seem to be pretty
popular.”
My voice was shaking slightly at that last bit and I
swal owed back my tears. My house loomed in front of us,
the cabbie reciting my address.
“Perry,” Maximus said, reaching for my hand. “I know
you’re scared. But so far, nothing real y bad has
happened.”
“What?” I snapped at him. I briefly eyed the cabbie in the
rearview mirror and he quickly looked away, none of his
business.
“Abby is taking it slow. Knocking and slippers, painting
your nails.”
“And taking over my body!”
I could sense the cabbie was looking back at me again,
wondering who the hel these weirdos in his cab were.
Maximus lowered his voice. “We don’t know yet if it’s
connected, remember? I don’t think it is. In fact, I know it’s
not. You’re stil you, Perry. One hundred percent.”
“Oh, wel , if you’re so smart, why don’t you tel me what
else it could be?”
He gave me a smal smile, immune to my anger. “I don’t
know. I know you don’t like to hear that it could al be in your
head-”
I gasped at that. Appal ed.
“But,” he continued, “you’ve been through a lot. So I
would at least consider it, if I were you. I’m going to come
over in the next few days and we’re going to figure this out
and start from there. One thing at a time. Abby won’t be a
problem, you’l see.”
I wondered when he had gone from Ghost Whisperer to
Ghost Buster, but I had no choice but to believe him. He
was the only person who had experience in this, and the
only person who took me seriously. Maybe not entirely
seriously, but enough. And he was a good kisser.
He leaned forward and hugged me and that cinnamon
smel engulfed me again. Then he said, “I’l cal you
tomorrow.”
I would have stayed al night in that cab if I could, but I
reluctantly got out. To his credit, he kept the cab waiting
outside until I had unlocked my front door, then it sped away
into the night.
I tiptoed up to my room, trying to ignore the darkness of
the sleeping house, and made it to bed. The slippers on the
floor were gone. The pamphlet was back on the table. I
don’t know why I was so against having it al be inside my
head. That would actual y be glorious. Maybe there never
were any slippers. And if there were no slippers, there was
nothing to fear.
It didn’t explain a lot of other things, though, but before I
could even indulge those possibilities, the evening of wine
and tequila folded over me like a breaking wave and I was
down for the count.
“Wake up, sleepy head,” Ada’s chipper voice cut into my
dreams. My dreams where I was fal ing and fal ing through
a red inferno, giant wood bugs crawling up the side of my
mind.
I groaned and tried not to move as the events from last
night snapped into place. I knew I was hungover as shit and
if I opened my eyes and moved a muscle, I was going to
pay for it dearly.
“Go away,” I slurred, unable to say anything more.
“It’s a beautiful day outside,” she responded, ignoring
me. I could hear her walking over to the window and
opening it. “Ahhh, smel that air. Spring is on its way.”
Why was she so chipper? Usual y Ada was a goddess
of grump in the mornings.
I felt her sit down on the bed and I bobbed up and down
on the mattress. I moaned again and threw my arm over my
face. The air coming in did smel cool and inviting but it
wasn’t enough to clear the cobwebs.
“What did you do last night? You stink.”
I ignored her and attempted to go back to sleep, feeling
my brain getting sucked into the dark weightlessness.
Before I could, she grabbed my arm and lifted it up, forcing
the light into my face. I winced.
“I said go away,” I repeated, dragging out the words into
a whine.
“Do you have to work today?”
Pause.
“Fuck.” I total y forgot about that.
I opened my eyes careful y as the stabs of light entered.
It real y was a beautiful day out, but al I could see at that
moment was blankness, like I was standing in the middle of
the sun.
Then I saw Ada on my bed, holding my phone out, like
she knew exactly what was going on. She was wearing a
kel y green dress and her hair was tied into a knot at the
very top of her head. She looked like a clear-eyed forest
nymph. I felt a pang of envy.
I took the phone, muttering “thanks,” and dialed the
shop’s number. I didn’t have enough time to get scared or
nervous because Shay snapped it up on the first ring.
“Don’t worry about it, Perry,” she explained to me after I
apologized profusely for not being there. “We’ve just taken
you off the schedule until you get better. You just rest up and
sort yourself out.”
I hung up the phone feeling worse rather than better. I
hadn’t been let go or fired but this was al too familiar. This
was how I almost lost my last job (before, you know, I
screwed myself over on purpose). My employers had been
worrying about me because I was seeing Old Roddy in my
bedroom. Now it was different ghost, same problem. Was
this doomed to repeat itself throughout my whole life? Was I
never, ever going to escape the dead? I wished I knew
what they real y wanted with me.
“It’s because you’re one of them,” Ada said.
I jumped at her voice, forgetting not only that she was in
the same room as me but sitting next to me, a foot away.
“Pardon me?” I asked her as my heart quickened.
She rol ed her eyes. “I said you’re one of them. I asked
why your slacker coffee shop was so understanding and I
answered it’s because you’re one of them. You’re a
slacker. They need your kind there. I’m just talking to myself
real y, since you don’t ever seem to hear a word I’m saying.
Ever.”
That wasn’t true. Not entirely.
“How was last night?” I asked, gingerly sitting up in my
bed. I rubbed at my temples as the room spun. I think
someone had replaced my mattress with a water bed.
“Do you actual y care to know?” she asked snidely.
I peered at her with one eye. It hurt less than with two.
“Yes, don’t be so emo.”
I could tel she was going to come up with a retort about
me being emo, but she swal owed it. It was always a matter
of who cal ed the other one that first.
“OK, if you care to know, we broke up.”
I managed to open the other eye so I could study her
face better. Her chin was lifted defiantly. She looked
confident. “Are you OK?”
She nodded. “Never felt better.”
“So you know you did the right thing, then. How did he
take it?”
She giggled, then broke into a huge grin. “He had the
nerve to throw it in my face of how long he had waited and
now he wasn’t ever going to get any.”
“What a fucking douchecanoe,” I said, wanting to punch
Layton’s lights out.
“Total fucking douchecanoe,” she reinstated. “That’s
how I total y knew I made the right choice. He was so angry,
his face went al , like, red and he was babbling crap and
tel ing me I’l never be anything...”
I let out an angry laugh. “That’s rich, coming from some
dil hole whose biggest accomplishment wil be to get his
head crushed in by some lame col ege footbal team.”
“If he’s lucky,” she said, tracing her finger along the
pattern on my quilt. “But then I told him it must burn to be
dumped by someone like me then. And then I left. Wel , I
gave him the finger. And
then
I left.”
Even though it hurt my head to do so, I leaned forward
and gave Ada a quick hug.
“I’m proud of you,” I blurted out, feeling strangely
emotional.
She snorted. “That’s cuz you’re lame.” But I could tel it
made her happy, as lame as I was.
“Hey, listen - ”
I was interrupted by a piercing, terrible scream from
downstairs.
Our mother’s scream.
Our eyes met for a brief, horrifying instant and we both
leaped out of bed as fast as we could. I was only in a long t-
shirt but it didn’t matter. I had never heard my mother
scream like that before and I prayed that we weren’t going
to run down the stairs and find her dead on the floor.
We scampered down the stairs two at a time, with Ada
cal ing “Mom!”
“Girls!” she yel ed back, sounding calmer, which relieved
me. Her voice was coming from my father’s study.
We hustled our way over there. The door was open and
my mother was standing in the middle of the room, a stack
of papers at her feet, plumes of dust rising up from them
and catching in the sunlight that was coming through the
opened blinds.
Her back was to us, her limbs frozen in front of her, like
she was stil holding onto the papers. Her attention was on
the wal s so that’s where my attention went too.
I gasped. One hand flew to my mouth while Ada grasped
the other.
My dad’s study had been destroyed. The wal s had huge
tears in them like someone took an axe and just started
hacking at it randomly. The edges of the tears were
dripped with red and with the same color someone had
painted pentagrams al over the wal s, even the ceiling.
Some were as smal as your hand, others were the size of
a tire. The decorative crucifixes he had displayed were al
upside down. That sight chil ed me more than anything else.
It chil ed me so bad that a violent shiver shuddered through
me and I nearly lost my balance. I reached out for the edge
of the door and hung on.
Ada and my mom took no notice of me. How could they
with what they were looking at. Even al the paintings of