Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
“Then your ginger boy better know how to do a quick
cleansing…” she said wryly.
I had a feeling that he wasn’t sure how to even do a
cleansing in general. Oh wel , there was no point in dwel ing
on it. We were al green when it came to this side of things
and had no choice but to wing it.
At 6:30 Maximus came rol ing into the driveway in his
snazzy truck, coming up to the front door armed with a
dozen bags. The scratches on his face were somehow
uglier and clotted black red.
“Do we need al this stuff?” I asked as I opened the door
and welcomed him in.
“Unfortunately,” he said, and stooped down to give me a
quick peck on the cheek. He looked behind me at Ada,
who was giving him the staredown.
“Ew, what happened to your face!” she said.
He smiled and stroked his cheek fondly. “Wildcat.”
I blushed, then shot her a look of my own, internal y
warning her to behave, and a wave of resignation flooded
her face.
“Oh. Wel , we’re glad you could make it,” she said with
reluctance.
“Why thank you, blondie,” he said. He held out one of the
bags for her.
“You can be in charge of the cleansing material.”
She took it hesitantly and peeked inside while he turned
to me. “Do you have the Witch Bottle? Have you created a
permanent home for it yet?”
“Say what?” Ada said, but I understood what he was
asking. I quickly ran up the stairs to my room to fetch the
bottle from my nightstand. As he had asked, it was a glass
bottle and the hair from my family members’ heads, plus
mine and Ada’s nail clippings were resting at the bottom. It
looked like a gruesome rat’s nest of black and blonde hair.
I brought it back down to the kitchen where they now
were, lifting items out of the bags and spreading it out on
the island countertop.
“Here you go,” I said, handing it to him. We al winced at
the bottle in unison.
“Lovely,” he said. “And the home?”
I told him I dug a hole in the back yard where we could
bury it and no one would be the wiser, unless my parents
decided to put in an in-ground pool one day.
“Yeah right, a pool. Dad’s salary ain’t what it used to be,”
Ada said under her breath.
Nothing’s as it used to be
, I thought.
We looked out at everything displayed before us. There
was a smal brass bel , the Witch Bottle, two unmarked
glass vials fil ed with clear liquid (which I assumed was holy
water), a box of salt, two smal bowls, packets of red and
saffron-colored spices, a smal bottle of crimson oil and a
black candle and a white candle.
“You’re going to do some show and tel with us first,
right?” I asked.
Maximus smiled and walked over to the broom closet.
He emerged with a broom, which he handed to me, and a
mop, which he handed to Ada.
“I wil . But first we have to clean the house from top to
bottom.”
“Perry! You promised me there wouldn’t be any manual
labor!” Ada cried out, staring down at the mop in horror.
“I didn’t know!” I shot back and looked at Maximus for an
explanation.
“We have to make sure al the affected areas are clean
before we do this,” he said calmly. “Dust and dirt hold a lot
of negative energy.”
“Oh, please,” Ada said.
“Hey, I don’t make the rules,” Maximus said, raising his
hands in mock surrender. “And I’m not getting off any easier
either. I’l be dusting.”
I eyed the clock. We were going to have to clean in a
hurry.
We started with the first floor before we made our way
through the house together with Maximus dusting hard-to-
reach areas, fol owed by me with a broom and a garbage
bag and Ada with the mop and a bucket. Our house wasn’t
a mansion by any means, but it was quite large and there
were an awful lot of nooks and crannies. It took almost an
hour for us to do the whole house. My parents were
definitely going to think something was up when they came
back to a sparkling clean home, but I was hoping that by
then it wouldn’t matter what we told them – our problems
would be over.
When we finished, we gathered back in the kitchen,
which Maximus deemed as the heart of the home (and
probably why the pig carcass was original y hidden there).
He organized al of our special items on top of my mother’s
navy blue dish cloth so it resembled an Ikea altar of sorts.
Then he brought out a pair of nail clippers and smal
scissors from the front pocket of his black shirt, clipped his
nails, had me snip a smal chunk of hair from the back of his
pompadour do, then he stuck it in the bottle with the rest of
our offerings and deftly sealed it with duct tape.
“Now,” he said, lifting up the container of salt, “we purify.”
He walked out of the kitchen and to the front door. Ada
and I fol owed him, staying a few feet back, unsure of what
he was going to do.
He stooped down and shook a thick line of salt across
the path of the door.
“Purifying salt,” he said in a loud, booming voice that
seemed to echo off the ceiling and wal s, “al ow positive
energy in and negative energy out. Al ow al unwanted
energy and entities to leave this house, never to return.”
Part of me wanted to laugh because what he was saying
was just so Harry Potter/hocus pocus that it sounded
ridiculous. The other part of me felt a tug of trepidation, like
there was actual power in the words.
Ada moved an inch closer to me. Evidently, she felt it
too.
He got up and smiled faintly at us. “Now we go around
the house, clockwise, and do the same at every door that
leads outside.”
Ada and I exchanged looks but we walked down the hal
to the French doors at the back patio. When we finished
with that door, we went to the one at the garage and
Maximus repeated himself.
“I’m glad you didn’t use our salt,” I whispered, feeling like
my voice should be kept to a minimum. “My mother would
have wondered what I was cooking.”
“She’d probably think you accidently used salt for sugar,
like that pie you made,” Ada snickered and I joined in,
embarrassed at one of my first attempts at baking.
“Ladies,” Maximus said sharply. We looked at him in
surprise. I’d never heard him take that tone before and it
shut both of us up. “My apologies, but you’re going to have
to start taking this seriously. Perry? This means you. This is
your ghost. If you aren’t one hundred percent committed
and believing in this, then we’re just wasting our time. Or
worse.”
I looked helplessly at Ada, then at the floor, chagrined.
“I’m sorry,” I mumbled.
He placed his hand on my shoulder and gave it a
squeeze. His face was stil stern, his mouth set in a hard
line, but he nodded. “It’s al right. But I mean it. Now, time for
the holy water.”
Back at the kitchen, with me feeling like I had my tail
between my legs, he picked up a vial of the holy water and
in a clockwise direction again, we went to every single
window in the house.
He flicked the water on them, the drops sticking and
glimmering in the lights of the room, and asked Ada and
me to imagine ourselves forcing negative air and energy
out of the house, the salt and water combining to form an
invisible shield.
We returned to the kitchen and Maximus loudly
proclaimed, “I come this night to cleanse this home. This
home belongs to the Palominos and negative energy and
entities are unwelcome here. They want you to leave. You
shall
leave!”
The house was silent. Deathly, sickly silent. I was holding
my breath and it looked like Ada was too from the way her
face was losing color. We were too afraid to move.
Maximus was also stil , his eyes searching the air around
us.
Final y, I had to whisper, “Was that it?”
“No,” he said with a shake of his head. “I just thought
something would have happened. We now have to go
around again and sprinkle the water in every single corner
of the house.”
Ada let out the breath she was holding and whined,
“Again? I’m getting tired.”
I elbowed her. “Suck it up.”
I don’t know if you’ve ever examined every corner of your
place, but there are a lot more corners than you’d think. And
we had to go everywhere, even the bathrooms and the icky,
spider-webbed crawlspace under the stairs. Together we
chanted, “As we cleanse this space, negativity leave this
place.” It slowly went from feeling like a childish rhyme to
something much more powerful. I could actual y
feel
it. This
push and pul in the air around me, like good and evil were
having a tug-of-war and I was their prize.
When it was al over we were back in the kitchen and
Maximus was raising the Witch Bottle high in the air. With
the overhead light fixture il uminating his flaming hair and
submissive posturing, it looked like he was offering the
bottle to the gods. In a way, he was.
He declared al negative entities to be drawn to the
bottle, where they would remain forever trapped, unable to
do any harm.
Once finished, and having ended his speech with “As I
wil , so mote it be!” it was my turn. I picked up the bel and
began to ring it from my fingertips. It was a light, pleasing
noise, not at al like the malevolent clanging I had heard in
my dream the other night.
I kept it ringing continuously as we went through the
house yet again and through ragged, tired breath, I kept
repeating, “As the sound of this bel rings through the
house, let it be fil ed with light. Evil and darkness be
banished, may goodness and light return,” as we went into
every single room once more. It sounds sil y and
unbelievable but each room did grow a bit lighter, like the
bulbs were suddenly swiped clean of al obstructing grime
and dust.
After every room was cleared, we came back to the
kitchen, where Maximus said his final words.
He looked at us in the eyes, then around him at the wal s,
his steady expression of determination never changing.
“This house has been cleansed and purified. Negativity is
banished. Light and goodness fil this place. This house is
now a
home
.”
Then we walked out of the house through the back door,
careful not to disturb the trail of salt across the threshold,
and went into the darkness of the back yard to bury the
Witch Bottle. I knelt on the cold grass before the smal hole I
had dug earlier with a spoon, which stil lay beside it. I
picked this spot, near the back of the yard, because it
wasn’t as attended by my mother’s black thumb or my
father’s lawnmower on the weekends. It was rocky and
patchy and no one would ever suspect that something was
buried beneath it. Not something that supposedly contained
al the negative energy the house had ever seen. With me
growing up there, I could tel you that was a lot.
“Maybe I should have dug a deeper hole,” I said, worried
now that it wouldn’t be enough.
Maximus handed me the bottle, which was cool and
throbbing strangely in my hands. “It wil do.”
“I hope so.” I careful y placed the bottle in its shal ow
grave and looked up at Maximus and Ada for approval. The
motion sensor light from the house was il uminating their
backs and they towered over me like faceless beings. A
frigid breeze mussed up their hair, causing the strands to
float delicately around their heads like glowing silk threads.
With my hands I piled the frosty dirt and grass and rocks
on top until it was fil ed and level and patted it down with my
hands, pressing harder and harder, like the force of my
hands would keep it buried for eternity.
“Careful, don’t break it,” Maximus warned.
I looked up to give him an agreeable smile when a
movement at the French doors behind him made me
pause.
I could barely see what it was because the harsh glare of
the patio lights created a reflective quality to the glass. But
against the light from the inner hal way, I saw a very large,
wide silhouette, just standing there. It was at least eight feet
tal and built larger than Maximus.
There was no detail to the black mass except for a pair
of burning red eyes near the top. They flickered like the