Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
wash the dishes; you know, as a thank you so they wouldn’t
think about backing out on our arrangement.
“Do you hate me, suddenly?” Ada hissed at me as our
parents retired to the sitting room to read and sip decaf.
I made sure my parents were out of earshot before I put
the plates in the sink and grabbed her arm.
“Listen, that was al a ruse.”
“What? Muse?”
I rol ed my eyes. “No. A ruse. As in an act of deception.”
“You mean a lie? Speak English.”
“Yes, a lie. And I need you to be home with me.”
Her nose wrinkled up and she pul ed out of my grasp.
“Ewwww! Perry, I don’t want any part of your weird sex
games with that red-headed-”
“Ada!” It was my turn to hiss. “Lower your damn voice.
And, ewww, no! Sex games? Where is
your
head at? No,
we need you to help us do a cleanse of the house, you
sicko.”
She frowned and thought that over. “Like, a ‘ghost be
gone’ kind of cleanse? Or manual labor like what those
guys did today in the study? Because you know how I feel
about manual labor.”
“I do,” I said and turned on the taps to rinse off the
dishes. “But how do you feel about being involved in some,
um, magic?”
“M-A-G-I-C-K magic? I think I’m OK with that.”
“Good. Now I don’t know what Maximus has planned
but-” I stopped when I noticed a look of discomfort on her
face. “What, what now?”
“Nothing,” she said.
I sighed, unable to ignore it any longer. Now that I was
sleeping with Maximus, her attitude was starting to grate on
me. “What’s your problem with him? Seriously. He’s been
nothing but nice to you. And don’t say it’s because he’s a
ginger.”
She shrugged and grabbed a dish. “I don’t know. He
just…”
I raised my brows for her to continue.
She continued in a drawn out voice, “He just seems a bit
too good to be true. I think he might have something up his
sleeve.”
“He might have something up his sleeve?” I repeated.
“What is he, a vil ain with a twirly moustache?”
“You know what I mean,” she sniped, placing the rinsed
dishes in the dishwasher. “It’s just weird, you know. The
minute Dex is out of the picture, oh look who it is.”
I bit my lip and turned my attention to getting a stubborn
piece of stuck-on chicken off the pan.
“It’s not like that,” I final y said.
“Maybe it is, maybe it’s not. But I don’t trust him. And I
think you need someone to keep a level head here. You
need someone to watch out for you.”
I laughed and gave her a wry look. “Ada saves the day?”
“I’d like to be good for something other than comic
relief,” she said with a smile.
“Don’t flatter yourself, kiddo,” I joked. It was something
that Dex said al the time to me and it came out instinctively.
Hearing my old nickname pinched somewhere deep
inside.
Ada’s soft eyes met mine at that phrase and no more
words were needed between us. We continued to do the
dishes with only the whir of the tap water to break up the
silence.
When bedtime came a few hours later, the reality of what
had been going on hit me like a ton of bricks and things
were much scarier when I was alone in my room. Even
though I had sent Maximus a good-night text (to which he
replied “Sweet dreams darling” and I could just hear his
drawl in my head), he was over at his place and I was at
mine, where every little window rattle, creak of the house,
door shutting, or buzz of electricity had me on the edge. I
kept the bedside light on, deciding I didn’t care if I was
acting like a six-year old girl. If something was coming for
me, I wanted to see it. You couldn’t blame me for that.
Remembering what happened earlier, my eyes flitted
over to the book I got from the library. I half expected it to
start flying around the room, but it just sat on my desk,
looking ominous. I hadn’t opened it yet, deciding I thought I
should be around a load of people and bright sunshine
when I did. The way my imagination was running I’d be
thinking I was possessed by everyone in hel .
I shuddered at the thought and cursed myself for thinking
such things when I was trying to sleep. I spied the clock,
which read 11:40. Everyone else in the house was asleep
and I hated being the only one awake.
My eyes closed eventual y, shutting out the light, and my
mind began to twirl, taking my thoughts and body into a
lazy, limp journey into sleep. I was halfway there when
something roused my eyes open.
I held my breath in my mouth and listened past the loud
beating of my heart.
Silence.
Then…
There. Above my head. A
thump
coming from the roof.
I slowly turned my head so I was facing up, my eyes flying
around the empty space above.
Thump.
Thump.
Thump.
Something was definitely up there. Something was
walking
on the roof
.
I had no choice. I grabbed the extra pil ow beside me
and covered my head with it, shutting out the noise and the
light. There wasn’t much else I could do but ignore the
horror before it took over completely. This time sleep would
be my only escape.
The countdown til Wednesday night went excruciatingly
slow. Ada was away at school during the day and I was stil
on hiatus from work, even though I was starting to feel
increasingly guilty about it. I hated taking advantage of the
time off but I knew there was no way I’d be a reliable
employee until after the cleanse, when everything would be
under control. It felt like my life was on hold until then.
Fortunately, al supernatural activity around me had
slowed down. Maybe Abby (or whoever/whatever it was)
knew what was coming and was scared off. Or maybe she
was just conserving her energy and gearing up for a
showdown. Either way, the random thumps coming from the
roof was the last peculiar thing that had happened and
things were looking brighter. Literal y. It was like my eyes
were so used to seeing shadows everywhere that
everything looked fresh and clean for once.
I hadn’t talked to Maximus much and I just put my faith
into whatever he was arranging, though I have to say I was
a bit wary when he cal ed me late Tuesday and asked me
to do a peculiar task.
“You want me to what?” I repeated into my phone.
“Get hair and nail clippings from your parents.”
I was sitting on the couch watching the news with them.
My face furrowed with disgust but they were paying me no
attention.
“How...and, good God, Maximus,
why
?” I whispered.
“I know it sounds goofy but it is part of the banishing
ritual. Just be glad you’re not charged with the task of
finding dragon’s blood oil.”
“Dragon’s blood?”
At that both my parents tore their eyes away from the
screen and gave me a funny look. I smiled at them weakly
and excused myself to my room.
“It’s al over the place in Louisiana but I’m having a hard
time finding it here.”
“I’m going to assume it’s a lot more normal than it
sounds,” I said as I climbed the stairs. I paused in the
hal way and with a quick peek down the stairs I quickly and
quietly made my way to my parents’ bedroom and into their
large, yel ow bathroom with enough light to show every pore
on your face.
“And so what am I supposed to do with the…parent
particles?” I asked him as my eyes roamed across the
counter. I spied my mom’s hairbrush and found my dad’s in
one of the drawers.
“Find a glass bottle, plastic might do, and put them in
there.”
I picked up a pair of tweezers and removed the hair,
holding it away from me. It was funny how hair was lovely to
look at and touch when it was on your head, but the minute
it was off your head it was as gross as anything.
“Mmm, you probably should have told me that before I
started this,” I said with a grimace. “Where on earth I am
going to get nail clippings from?”
“I guess it’s not crucial from them. The hair wil do. But
we’l need the same, plus the clippings from you and Ada.
And me.”
“Is there a book tel ing you to do this?” I quickly shut off
the bathroom light and soundlessly scampered back to my
room before I was caught, hair stil in my hand.
“I’m certainly not making it up off the top of my head,” he
answered. “Do you have a bel ?”
“A bel ?” A recal ed sound of the bel from my dreams
echoed in my mind.
“Yes. You know. Ring-a-ding, darling.”
“I know what a bel is. Why do we need one?”
“Why do we need holy water? We just do. If you can’t
find one they said we can substitute with an iPod.”
I laughed. “So we need holy water and dragon’s blood,
but if a friggin’ bel is hard to find, wel then we can just use
an iPod.”
“That’s the way it is.”
“I guess so.”
“See you tomorrow, Perry. Get a good sleep.”
“Good luck with the dragon. You’l probably need a real y
large needle,” I told him and hung up.
The next evening Ada and I were sitting in my room and
flipping through the book on demonology plus a few she
checked out herself from the school library. They were
mainly witchcraft books, nothing too serious for a public
school, but it was nice to know she was taking this as
seriously as the rest of us.
“Holy hel ,” she said as she paused on a certain page.
“Ada,” I warned, feeling extra touchy about mentions of
anything holy. I peered at the book. It was a real y old,
detailed black and white drawing of some pretty
despicable creatures in revolting positions. The fact that I
was viewing the artwork upside down and it stil made
sense spoke volumes about the depravity.
She looked up at me with a pained face. “These artists
were fucked.”
“It’s what they believed,” I said.
“Could you imagine if it’s what they
saw
?”
It was my turn to look pained. “I don’t want to think about
it.”
She watched me careful y with her big blue eyes. Final y,
she said, “Do you think this is what’s going on with you? I
mean, real y?”
“I don’t know,” I admitted. “Maximus doesn’t seem to
think so. In fact, he says it’s rarely the case and if this was
somehow…demon-related…we would definitely know
about it. I mean, look at everything that has been
happening. It seems to be a ghost and it seems to be
centered around me. Aside from the pig, it’s always been
about me.”
“And yet you got this book out.”
I looked down at my nails. The coral polish was al
chipped off and they looked normal again. “I just have a
funny feeling. Down here.” I put my hand on my gut. Then I
put it to my head. “And here.”
She nodded attentively. “I think you’re awesome for
trusting your instincts. You’l probably be wrong. But I don’t
think being extra careful wil be a bad thing.”
I
remembered
Maximus’s
warnings
about
the
dangerousness of doing exorcisms to people who weren’t
possessed. I hoped it wouldn’t come to that.
Soon my parents were at my door, coming in just as Ada
hid the books underneath the pil ow. They looked nice and
fancy. My dad was actual y wearing a suit, even though the
navy jacket was stretched too tightly against his ever-
burgeoning bel y, and my mom was flawless as usual in a
lavender shift dress and black pearls.
“Ada, you need to leave your sister alone,” my mom
chided her. “Go on, shoo.”
“I’m being picked up by Rachel in ten minutes,” she lied
with a toothy smile.
“Al right,” mom said to her, then focused her pale eyes
on me. “Have a good time, Perry. Don’t burn down the
kitchen. Whatever you do.”
“And no funny business,” my dad said sternly, to which
my mother smacked him on the arm. “What, you said it
first.”
They left the room, with my mother cal ing out, “We’l let
you know when we’re on our way back. Nine-thirty at the
very latest!”
After they left and we were safe, I looked at Ada. With
Maximus arriving at 6:30, it didn’t give me as much time as
I hoped.
“I hope they don’t come home when we’re in the middle
of it, cuz that would be awkward.”