Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
the devil once.
Dex slammed the car into park and he and Ada jumped
out of the car while I remained writhing inside. The rusty
door to the smal house banged open and a tal , slim native
man in jeans and an old, grey San Francisco Giants
sweatshirt stepped out. He was surprisingly young, you
know, for an exorcist, maybe a few years older than Dex.
Dex shook the man’s hand vigorously and then, as the man
shook Ada’s, someone else emerged from the trailer.
It was Bird. Stoic Bird from Red Fox, with his dusty
denim jacket, weather-beaten face and imitation Raybans.
Aside from a quick slap on the back, and Bird motioning to
Dex’s head wound with concern, there was no time for a
reunion. Dex pointed at the car and they al came running
for me.
I tried with al my heart to get the creature away from me,
to be able to act as myself to Bird and to tel him how much
I appreciated him for trying to help me once again, but I
couldn’t. If anything, my attempts made it push me back
even farther. A layer of film settled over my vision, like I was
looking through a thick piece of laminate, and al sound
came at me as through underwater channels.
Dex opened the door and the exorcist and Bird peered
down at me, sussing me out. I puffed in and out the piece of
duct tape instead, tried to wriggle myself free and uttered
supernatural groans.
The man, who I assumed was Roman, shook his head
defiantly and started muttering in his native tongue. Then he
began yel ing at Bird in that language, pointing at me and
frowning. Bird laid his hands on Roman and answered him
back calmly, stil in another language.
Final y, Dex asked, “Excuse me but what’s the
problem?”
Bird looked at me and then at Dex with a tight-lipped
smile. “Roman’s upset because I didn’t tel him how bad
she real y was.”
“I didn’t know,” Dex said to him, then he turned to
Roman. “I didn’t know until last night. You speak English,
right?”
“Yes, I speak English,” Roman snapped. He gestured at
me without much concern. “She’s too far gone; this is
unfixable.”
If I had a heart that stil belonged to me, it would have
been shattered wide open.
I was unfixable.
I was going to die.
Dex grabbed Roman by the front of his sweatshirt and
brought him right up to his face.
“You’re going to fix her,” he snarled, his dark eyes
sparking as they bore holes into Roman’s. “She’s a lot
stronger than she looks. She is stil in there and you’re
going to help her, or so help me God.”
“You’l need your God if you think you’re going to win this
battle,” Roman said. He exchanged a measured look with
Bird and then gave a short nod. “OK. Let’s see what we can
do. Just, please release me.”
Dex stared at him intensely for a few seconds, the dried
blood down the side of his face making him look borderline
homicidal, before he backed off and unclenched his hands
from the sweatshirt. He took a quick look at me and then
walked away, shaking his shoulders, trying to cool off.
I was foaming at the mouth, the spil age leaking out
underneath the duct tape. Roman brought his face in
deeper to mine and started muttering in his language
again. Even though he was Nez Perce, it sounded like
Navajo to my faraway ears and would explain why he and
Bird could talk to each other.
Bird nodded and replied back. Then as Roman started
to undo the duct tape, Bird’s warm face fil ed my line of
sight as he leaned close to me.
“Perry,” he said gently. “I can see past these eyes. I
know you’re in there. I know you can hear me. I know you
must be scared right now but we’l need you to listen to us.
You must do what we say. This is going to be very
complicated. But it’s not impossible. You must have faith.
You must cal on your faith. Faith in God, if you stil believe.
Faith in the universe if you don’t. Faith in love. Faith in
yourself and faith in others. Faith wil give you courage and
grant you hope. Use that.”
Roman said something else as he ripped off the duct
tape from my legs.
“What was that?” Bird asked.
This time Roman whispered it. Bird looked back at my
face and eyed it distrustful y.
“I see,” Bird said softly. His jaw set.
Neither Dex nor Ada had caught the exchange. They
were standing outside the trailer, Dex with his arms
crossed and tapping his foot nervously, Ada babbling
distressingly. They were too far away to hear. But I knew
something was going on, something that only Bird and
Roman knew. I wished I could have asked but al I did was
continue to make shuddering groans.
When Roman was done freeing me from the seat, I
thought the thing would have made me attack him and flail
wildly like an injured worm. But I was motionless. Not in
control, but quiet. Maybe waiting for them to let their guards
down. Maybe the thing inside me knew what Roman was
capable was. I sure as hel didn’t.
Roman took my legs and Bird wrapped his hands
around my shoulders and together they lifted me out of the
car and walked sideways to the house. It was sunny but
surprisingly cold, with a bitter breeze that rol ed off the far-
off hil s. Dex kept the rusted door open as they took me
inside.
From my limited view, the house was clean and
threadbare. What little furniture there was was neat but stil
gave the impression of either poverty or neglect. There was
a screen door that had holes punched through it in places
and looked out onto the rol ing, brown land outside.
They took me down a smal narrow hal way with yel ow
wal s that Bird kept hitting with his stocky shoulders. I could
see a room at the end of the hal that looked like a study
and a greenhouse combined, fil ed with plants and books. I
was put into a room comprised of a narrow bed, an
armchair and a few native artworks on the wal .
They laid me down in the middle of the bed, and as Bird
left the room, Roman reached under the bed and pul ed out
three leather straps.
Dex’s eyes widened. “What are you doing?”
Roman ignored him and went around to the other side,
pul ing out three more straps. Then he leaned over me and
started strapping me in, one across my chest, one across
my hips and one across my legs.
“Is that real y necessary?” Dex exclaimed, making a
move for him.
Ada reached out and grabbed his arm, pul ing him back.
“You know it is,” she said quietly, her eyes warning him
to stay put.
Dex eyed her hand and then relented. They watched
from the back of the room as Roman finished up. He fished
a pocket knife out of his back pocket and flipped open the
blade. He held the blade above me and I heard Ada gasp.
But he merely stuck the edge of the blade underneath
the duct tape and freed me down the middle, tearing me
open like sausage casing.
“I won’t rip it off,” he said to me. “I know it would hurt you,
stil .”
“I hope you’re talking to Perry,” Dex said.
Roman gave Dex a grave look. “I am. I can see she’s
there, too. But you both must understand that I may have to
hurt Perry at some point.”
“What? No!” Ada protested. “You don’t hurt her. You hurt
what’s
in
her.”
Roman straightened up and flipped his knife back in his
pocket like it was second nature. Just what kind of a
shaman was he?
“Sometimes you don’t have a choice,” he said matter-of-
factly.
“Is that what happened with the last boy, the one who
died?” Dex asked snidely. He immediately regretted it.
Roman’s eyes turned to steel.
“I barely touched the boy. He would have died anyway. I
did get the demon out and that’s what counts. Do you think
it’s easy to see that happen? He was only four. I had to
move towns; everyone was saying I did something wrong.
But I didn’t. The damage was already done when he came
to me. It was too late.”
The room grew silent. Dex looked down at the floor and
Ada shifted uncomfortably.
Bird came back in the room holding a heavy box and
placed it in front of Roman. He gave Dex and Ada a stern
look. “If Roman seems cold, it’s because he has to be. The
medicine man can have no emotional attachments to the
person in question. He can have no fear. Evil preys on fear.
It feeds on emotions. Even love.”
Roman started lifting things out of the box. I raised my
head to look and was struck by the fact that I could. Was I in
control?
I tried to talk but nothing came out. My throat wouldn’t
work, my mouth wouldn’t move. Just my head moved and it
was probably the
thing
, trying to take stock of what was
going on.
But Dex, he took his attention off the boxes and looked
right at me. I held his gaze, wondering if he could see my
real eyes or if they were just swirling black pools. His own
eyes were magnetic, his brows furrowed grimly. It was like
he was trying to tel me something, hoping I’d hear it. I didn’t
know what it was, but it helped knowing he was there and
watching me, trying to establish a connection.
Bird and Roman brought out a smal native drum,
something that looked like incense holders, matches, little
wooden bowls and baggies of earth-colored herbs and
plants. Roman looked up at Dex and Ada and said, “We
have to set up for the ceremony. You wil have to leave the
room.”
Dex tore his eyes away from mine with effort and shook
his head. “I don’t think so.”
Bird got up, one leg at a time, and placed his hand on
Dex’s shoulder. “I know you care about her. But she’s not
going anywhere for now. We have to cleanse the room.
Then you can come back in.”
Roman said something to Bird in the native language
and Bird nodded sharply. He looked back at Dex with
imploring eyes. “Please? We must hurry.”
Dex and Ada sighed and left the room, both of them
throwing a glance at me over their shoulders before they
went out the door. Bird went over and closed it after them. It
felt so final. I know he said they could come back in after,
but I had no idea what was in store.
With Ada and Dex gone, Bird lit up some sage and started
waving it around in al corners of the room. It reminded me
a lot of the ceremony we did in the sweat-lodge with Rudy.
Rudy, the last shaman I had come in contact with. He had
gone missing during that ceremony, presumably kil ed by
the skinwalkers. I wondered if Roman knew how dangerous
I seemed to be. I wondered if he was ready. Though the
thought of him using physical force on me was scary, I was
become desensitized to the way my body was treated, and
if he had to hurt me to free me, then he could hurt me al he
wanted. I’d welcome it.
Roman lit a few candles around the room, then pul ed
shut the thick curtains so the room was dark except for a
bare lamp in the corner that created haunting shadows on
the wal . Bird continued to wave the sage, then he lit
another sweet-smel ing herb and started al over again, this
time chanting. At first to himself, but Roman would join in at
odd times while he burned something in a wooden smudge
pot.
After the last herb died to smoldering ashes and the
room was thick with blue haze, Roman gestured to the
drum. Bird eased himself cross-legged on the floor and
brought the drum to his lap while Roman went to the door
and stuck his head out, cal ing down the hal way.
Dex and Ada appeared in the doorframe, coughing and
waving at the air.
“No,” Roman said, firmly grabbing Ada’s hand in mid-
wave. “Don’t move it. It is to help us. Breathe it in. It wil help
purify you both.”
He shut the door behind them and told them to stand at
the foot of the bed; then he came around the other side and
stood beside me.
“Tel me how this al started,” he said.
Ada and Dex looked at each other. Ada stepped a bit
forward and started rehashing everything that had
happened, leaving out a few things like the miscarriage and
Abby.
“And where do you come in?” Roman asked Dex.
Dex coughed and cleared his throat, looking strangely