Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
ruby-orange embers in a furnace of coal. And they were
watching
us
.
I wanted to scream, yel , do something other than gape
back but I was frozen in absolute terror that sucked away
my breath and leached onto my bones, holding me
immobile.
Maximus and Ada noted the look on my face. They
turned their heads to look.
And they saw too.
“What the fuck is that?!”
“Oh shit.” Maximus reached out for Ada’s arm and
grabbed it, then blindly groped for mine.
We watched in horror as the creature at the doors slowly
grew smal er, as if it was walking backward into the hal .
And then the eyes blinked black and we could see it no
more.
I swal owed hard. I didn’t want to get up. I wanted to stay
crouched in the yard, low to ground. And then I wanted to
run very, very far away.
“You..we…we did al that,” Ada said in a tiny, shaking
voice. “Maximus, you said…you said we should be safe in
there. Oh God, Perry what was that?”
I found the strength to move my tongue but could only
say, “I don’t know.”
Maximus’s strong hands came underneath my arms and
he effortlessly lifted me to my feet. He didn’t look as scared
as I would have thought. Ada was shivering and white.
“It’s al right,” he said.
“Al right?” I squeaked. I was speechless, my mouth
flapping open to latch onto some sort of word or sentence
but that’s al I could say.
“Yes,” he said in his sharp tone again. He grabbed Ada
and steered her beside me and with one hand on each of
our outer shoulders he leaned in. “That was only the first
step that we did. We’ve got the powders, the dragon’s
blood. We have another cleanse to do. This one is the
banishment. He was only showing us his strength. He’s
teasing us.”
“He?” Ada asked. “I thought it was that Abby girl?”
“Ladies, sometimes things aren’t so simple.”
No shit
, I thought wildly. In my dream Abby had
insinuated she wasn’t alone. That there was a he, or an
it
. I
stil didn’t know if my dream was just that, or some
prophetic message from beyond the grave, but I couldn’t
dismiss it. Whatever we saw inside the house wasn’t Abby.
Though, perhaps it had never been Abby. And then I
understood what Maximus meant. It could have been
anyone but it was dead and we needed to keep going to
get rid of it. Even if it meant doing another ritual, even if it
meant stepping back in the house knowing that thing was in
there.
“OK,” I managed to say. “I’m ready. Let’s do this.”
I pul ed strength from pockets I didn’t even know I had.
Maximus smiled at me with fierce admiration. I took hold of
Ada’s hand and squeezed it tightly.
“We’re going to get rid of it,” I told her. “Now.”
With Maximus leading the way, Ada and I linked arms as
we left the witch bottle buried behind us and entered the
house.
I felt al my bravado fal off me the minute I stepped over the
undisturbed salt and into the house but Maximus sensed it
and reached back for me, grasping my hand tightly. The air
inside was so cold that our breath froze in fragmented
clouds and it only got colder as we got back to the kitchen,
like we were making our way into the depths of an ice cave.
Ada made a point of flipping on every light she could
find, and even though the kitchen was brightly il uminated, I
stil felt like I could see lurking shadows in my peripheral
vision. Maximus scanned the room and then set about
mixing the powders into one of the bowls. We didn’t say
much to each other but I made sure Ada and I were
standing as close together as possible.
What was that thing? My mind had been constructing it
to look like some sort of monster, but al we real y saw was
a large dark shape. I guess in some ways that was worse.
My imagination was fil ing in the blanks and if I let it run
away on me, it would probably come up with something
more horrifying than the reality. Whatever the reality was. It
had glowing eyes and al .
Maximus mixed the powders with a spoon and a ghastly
stench of cinnamon and rotten eggs fluttered in the air.
“Gross,” Ada muttered, but even her comments had lost
their edge. Her voice trembled with fear.
“It’s sulphur,” he said quietly, patiently. “Now we have to
sprinkle this in al the corners.”
To her credit, Ada didn’t complain. We slowly made our
way around the house, jumping at every unexpected touch
of each other, hearts hammering at every squeak of the
floor. The large, black monster was nowhere to be seen
and the only thing we felt was the everlasting chil that
seemed to seep into my bones and sting my eyes. We
fol owed this up with a ritual of sprinkling salt water and
more chanting.
Final y, we came to the end of the banishment, which
involved the black candle drizzled with crimson dragon’s
blood oil and sprinkled with the powders. Maximus passed
it to me in a silver candle holder and instructed me to hold it
in my dominant hand. I actual y had to think about which
hand that was for a moment. I knew I was right-handed but
lately I’d found myself becoming ambidextrous, using my
left hand for more and more things, like a new-found
strength was found in my tendons, or my brain was rewiring
itself.
I took the candle and he lit the wick, which sparked and
popped and then calmed down to a clean, yel ow flame.
“As this candle burns, so are negative energies from this
place,” he said stridently. He looked me in the eyes. “You
repeat it. And then you, Ada. We could use the extra help
here. Once every five minutes. Let’s go.”
Ada and I both repeated the phrase and I anxiously eyed
the clock. My parents would be back in forty-five minutes at
the most. We didn’t real y
have
five minutes. But we real y
didn’t want some monster in the house either.
After the five excruciating minutes were up, five minutes
of nervously eyeing each other, listening to every twitch in
the house, watching our breath catch and freeze in the air,
shivering close together, he had me place the burning
candle on the counter and then handed me a white candle
to hold with my right hand again.
Together we said, “A white candle to fil the empty
spaces with light and hope.”
It took five matches for this candle to light. By the last
attempt, I was feeling the trickles of helplessness on my
spine, wondering what we could do if we weren’t able to
complete the ritual. But the last match worked; the stubborn
wick took hold of the spark and a flame danced weakly
before us.
Maximus said, “As this candle burns, positive energy wil
fil this place, giving negativity no safe harbor,” and we
repeated the mantra after him. He indicated I should put the
candle down, and then we watched and waited for the
candles to burn out on their own.
“Is that it?” I asked him quietly, his face aglow from the
hypnotic flames. The dance of good. The dance of evil.
“Then we bury them in the yard again. It doesn’t have to
be near the bottle.”
My eyes widened. “I don’t want to go back there.”
“Ditto,” Ada piped up.
He gave us a smal smile. “I don’t either. But I can do it if
you girls want to stay in the house. By yourselves.”
Ada and I exchanged a glance. What was the better
option here?
“The flames are almost out,” he whispered, and nodded
at the candles. The black one was burned down to a puddle
of wax that spil ed over the holder and onto the counter. The
white one was close. I was thankful he had bought such
stubby candles. The kitchen clock said we had fifteen
minutes left, and our only saving grace was that my mom
said she would text me a warning and my phone hadn’t
vibrated yet.
The black candle went out with a smal snuff of onyx
smoke and a minute later the white one did too.
“OK,” I said, straightening up off the stove I was leaning
on. “Time to bury these-”
As I said that both candles suddenly relit themselves with
a crackling
poof
, even though there wasn’t any wick left in
them.
“Uh,” Ada said. We al eyed each other, unsure of what
to do.
“We’l just wait,” Maximus said uncertainly. He
protectively put his arms out behind him, shielding Ada and
me, or maybe just keeping us in our place. “They have to
burn out on their own.”
We were glued to the flames as they continued their
dance in the cold air. The buzz of my phone vibrating
caused us al to jump and me to gasp. With trembling
fingers, I brought it out of my pocket and looked at the
message. It was my mother.
“Those flames better burn out in the next ten minutes,” I
warned them.
“Those flames shouldn’t be burning at al ,” Maximus
said.
I leaned forward, edging away from his arm, and peered
down at the candles. They were a puddle of mush, and
through the translucent wax and flame I could see the metal
of the bottom of the holder itself. The wax itself was on fire.
How was that possible?
Al at once a terrible BOOM fil ed the house. It sounded
like the front door had slammed open.
I screamed.
The lights around us turned off.
The flames went out.
We were plunged into darkness.
Ada made a whimpering noise.
Then a ROAR and rustle from the living room and my
eyes picked up a trace of glowing light out in the hal way.
Morbidly curious, we left the blackened kitchen, moving
together like a unit of one, and cautiously stepped out into
the hal . The front door was wide open, the salt in front of it
dancing as if caught up in an invisible wind, one that we
couldn’t feel. The salt floated and fel , then was swept along
the hardwood floors of the hal like an ethereal trail, past our
feet, and made a right turn into the living room, where the
glow originated.
We fol owed it and I wasn’t surprised to see that in the
living room, the fireplace was going ful blast, a roaring,
crackling inferno. At first it looked like someone was
standing in front of the fire, a black silhouette gazing down
at the flames, his back to us. But it was only a trick of the
eye because I blinked hard and there was no one there.
“Who lit the fire?” Ada asked. In her skinny frame she
looked like she was about to keel over in fright.
“O r
what
?” I added, which didn’t help. She swayed
slightly and leaned against the doorframe.
“There’s…something in it,” Maximus said, his eyes
squinting in concentration. He began taking long strides
across the Persian rug.
“Be careful,” I cal ed out warily.
He paused in front of the flames, staring down at it for a
few moments, looking very much like the image I had just
seen before. Almost exactly the same. Was I experiencing
some form of pre-cognition now?
He grabbed the poker to the right of him and gently
jabbed it into the heart of the fiery beast.
Ada and I watched him inquisitively as he pul ed the
poker away and turned around to face us. At the end of the
poker, speared like a flapping fish, was a rectangular piece
of paper.
He walked over to us slowly, staring down at it with an
expression of growing alarm.
“What is it?” I asked.
He careful y pul ed the paper, which was charred,
smoking and torn al around the edges, off the pointed end
and flipped it around to show us.
It was a photograph.
Not just any photograph. The last family portrait we had
done, about three years ago. Though discolored from the
flames, you could clearly see my mother and father
standing behind the sitting room couch, Ada and I sitting
down in front of them, our legs crossed politely, smiling
attentively. It was a happy, cheery photo.
Wel , it had been.
Our eyes were scratched out and replaced with clean
black circles.
I snatched it from Maximus’s hand, feeling sick to my
stomach, a terrible knot of dread and dead butterflies.
A hush of heavy silence fel on us as we took in what it
meant.
Was it a threat? A warning? A sign?
And who, what, sent it?