Read Experiment in Terror 05 On Demon Wings Online
Authors: Karina Halle
Tags: #Fantasy, #Horror, #Romance, #Adult, #Mystery, #Suspense, #Goodreads 2012 Horror
sheepish. “The little one cal ed me. I was the only one who
believed what was wrong with Perry.”
“What was Perry’s state of mind before al of this
happened?”
Dex opened his mouth to speak but no words came out.
He clamped his lips shut and looked at Ada with a pained
face. She raised her brow at him and gave Roman a sadly
sardonic smile.
“Perry’s state of mind?” Ada repeated. “She was emo
as shit.”
Roman shot a look at Bird, who shrugged.
Ada stuck her finger underneath Dex’s scruffy chin. “This
asshole broke up with Perry in November. Broke her poor
fucking heart right in two. I’m only tolerating him because he
was the last chance we had.”
Dex didn’t protest but he did look away at some
imaginary spot on the floor. Roman mused that over,
looking bothered.
“I see,” Roman said slowly and with a heavy sigh. I
wondered if our history was going to complicate things for
him. I hoped not. Things were already complicated enough.
“Yeah,” Ada continued, not done yet, “basical y slept with
her and ditched her, used her...”
“Hey, OK, wait a minute,” Dex said, stepping away from
Ada’s finger. “That’s not exactly what happened.”
If I could have control ed my own eyebrows, I would have
raised them.
She glared at him, her eyes hard in the low light. “Oh
yeah, perhaps you better explain what happened. Why
Perry cried in her room for days wondering what the hel
went wrong. You weren’t there. You didn’t have to help her
day in and out, hoping that one day she’d come out of it and
realize what a goddamn asshole you are. You didn’t see
the way you left her. You didn’t have to help her pick up the
pieces.”
She looked at Roman with conviction. “Plus, there was
the whole him getting her pregnant and miscarriage thing.”
The words
miscarriage
hung heavily in the air.
Roman sucked in his breath.
Bird froze.
And Dex...he looked like someone had backhanded him
with a shovel. He swal owed hard and his eyes went
immediately to me. They held a wealth of regret and
sadness in them.
I’m sorry I didn’t tell you
, I thought, staring across at him.
But then again, when would have been a good time? It was
over and done with and none of his business, real y. We
had other, bigger things to worry about than sex gone bad. I
didn’t have time to worry about his feelings in this, though
from the stunned, almost blue look on his blood-crusted
face, I could see he was taking it hard. Harder than I thought
he would.
“You didn’t know,” Roman said, stating the obvious.
Dex’s chin dropped and he broke eye contact with me.
Ada watched him, her face growing increasingly guilty for
the way she just dropped it on him. I guess she, like me,
had no idea how he would have reacted.
She placed her hand on his shoulder. “Hey, sorry. I’m
sorry.”
He shrugged her hand off of him. “I need to get some
air.”
“No,” Roman said. For a skinny, young guy he had quite
the commanding voice. I guess you had to have that if you
were commissioned to command demons out of people.
“You’re not going. We have to discuss this, al of this. It wil
help me figure out what happened. What’s in her.”
“What’s in her?” Dex’s head snapped up. “A demon,
that’s what.”
Roman shook his head. “No. You’re right, but it’s not just
that. There are three entities lying there.” He pointed over at
me. “One is Perry. One is demonic. The other is another
entity. It is weak and is has no power anymore. But it is a
spirit, a vengeful one. And if my guesses are correct, there
was something haunting Perry before. Something that was
wronged or ignored. It made a powerful pact, deal if you
wil , to gain Perry’s soul. But was lost before it could even
happen.”
He looked to Ada. “And this miscarriage. Perry would
have been at her lowest, most vulnerable. It’s times like
that, or pregnancy, when something foreign can grow and
latch on with the baby. Even if the baby was eventual y lost.
Though you can bet it was because of this spirit.”
At the mention of
baby
, Dex had let out a hot puff of air
and turned around so his back was to everyone, leaning on
his hands against the wal .
“It was Abby,” he said quietly, almost to himself. Roman
had to take a few steps closer to him to hear.
Dex continued, “She was haunting me when Perry was
with me in Seattle. She’s an ex...she died. Years ago. But
she comes around every now and then. You know, she died
because of me. And I don’t think she’l ever forget it.”
“She wil now,” Roman said. “The demon gained access
to Perry through her, played on her fears through her. To get
to you. This spirit is no more. Demons don’t keep their
bargains.”
Dex stil didn’t turn around. He shook his head from side
to side so his hair flopped back and forth. y,“So that’s it. It
has one ex-girlfriend of mine. And it’s not satisfied. It wants
the only person left on this earth that I...that I’d do
anything
for. Just throw her into the pot, who cares. I lost her once, I
cannot lose her again.” Dex’s voice cracked and split with
anger.
“Life is unfair for a lot of people and for a lot of reasons,”
Bird spoke up from the floor, his fingers tracing circles on
the taught drum top, his voice steady as a tree. “This isn’t
about you Dex, though I know from experience your
intentions are good. This is about Perry. This is about what
we can do to help her. We can’t waste time placing blame
on each other or being angry. That’s what it wants. We
need to help her. And we need to hurry. You can deal with
everything else afterward.”
There was little sound or movement from Dex for a few
beats. Then he raised his head up and turned around. He
walked through the smoke, which stil hung in cloying
clouds, and stopped beside Ada. His eyes were wet and
wide but held a fierce determination that brought out a rise
of hope from somewhere inside me. He offered his hand to
her.
“I’m extremely, unrelentingly sorry for what I did to your
sister. To Perry. And, by default, to you. Little fifteen.”
Ada eyed his hand like he had cooties. The reluctance
didn’t last long. She stuck out her hand and they shook
firmly. She even managed a smile.
“Good,” Roman said, looking from one to the other. “We
need a united front against this. Even with Bird acting as
my helper, I wil need you both to be strong and to have no
fear. You have to believe that we can beat it. We are
superior to this beast and we wil get out. But you must have
conviction in your beliefs. To doubt is to endanger al of our
lives, and especial y Perry’s.”
He nodded at Bird, who began a steady, rhythmic
beating on the drums, using only his hands, while Roman
brought up a smal wooden bowl from the floor. He came
close to me, looking deep into me with the most ruthless,
determined angle. He wasn’t looking for me. He was
looking for it, the thing, the
beast
.
“And so we begin the sacred ceremony.” He was talking
to me, talking to everyone. “An exorcism is a battle. I wil
lead it until the end”
He raised up the bowl and started yel ing in his native
tongue. Simple, two-word sentences that bounced around
the room like a stone in a cave.
The thing inside me did not like it.
I started writhing back and forth underneath the straps,
panting hard as if I were simultaneously trying to throw up
and catch my breath. It grew hot, then more hot, and steam
began to rise off of my body in tiny whispers.
Roman kept repeating the words and the heat in my
body grew to an unbearable level. Whatever the beast was
feeling, I was feeling too. It was exquisite agony; I felt like I
was being burned alive.
Roman kept going, relentless in his quest to purge me.
He dipped his thumbs into the wooden bowl until they were
covered black, then came forward for my face.
I swung my head back and forth, trying to get out of his
way but he managed to get one swipe down my cheek. It
felt like an acid burn. I turned to him, mouth open, and bit
his hand. Hard. I felt the crunch of bones and the taste of
blood fil my mouth and spil down my chin.
Someone in the room let out a yelp but it wasn’t Roman.
He pushed his other thumb, also anointed with the black
ash, straight into my forehead, knocking my head back with
enough force to knock a normal person out. Then he calmly
removed his injured hand from my mouth.
I grinned what was sure to be a bloody grin.
And the most vile, primordial voice, like the ones I’d
heard commanding me in my head, roared out of me.
“Think she’l be so lucky this time?” After what you did to
little Jim?” The depravity dripped out of me like the blood
onto my chest.
Roman paid me no attention, he kept repeating his
phrase, his voice become stronger and I felt a wave of
shock, pain and heat rol through me. I started screaming
and banging the back of my head against the mattress.
The drum beat of Bird became louder, faster and I felt
the synergy of the room intensify. The temperature climbed
and climbed until I was soaking wet and the bed was too.
The straps were becoming slippery and I was forced to use
them to my advantage. I wriggled and moaned and tried to
escape.
“Dex, Ada!” Roman yel ed. “Get a hold of her legs.”
My eyes were rol ing back in my head so I couldn’t see
them but I felt them. Briefly.
They both let out a whimper and withdrew their hands
immediately.
“She’s burning hot!” Dex cried out. “You’re kil ing her!”
“Do it!” Roman yel ed, and I felt their hands once more,
Dex’s long fingers and Ada’s slight ones. They were both
hesitant but their grips intensified as my thrashing
continued.
“United front, Dex,” Roman said through gritted teeth as
he came at my arms with more smudge matter. “You can’t
let your feelings get in the way. We must do this. You too,
Ada.”
I heard someone sniff like they were crying, but I didn’t
know who it was. It didn’t matter. The more Roman pressed
his marks into me, the more I felt like dying. The pain was
excruciating; it was like being branded with a hot poker.
“You kil ed him. The mother kil ed herself shortly after.
You ruined a town,” the beast said through me in scathing,
panting secretions. “You’l ruin her. I wil ruin her. You are
powerless, foolish and weak.”
I burst into horrible laughter and started thrashing again,
more strange, foreign and unbelievable sounds emanating
from me. It sounded like whole room was one entity and I
was coming out of the wal s, throttling the room with my
abhorrent threats.
“You can do what you want to her,” Roman said
forceful y, “but I am stronger and I wil win this battle. I wil
get you out and send you back to where you came from.”
There was no time to reflect anymore, no effort for
thoughts. They were meaningless. I was at the mercy of my
captor and at the strength of my exorcist.
The drums got louder. The room began to dim as the
candles al went out and the lamp in the corner faltered.
Suddenly the area around the bed erupted in flames that
rose from the floor in a thick line. Dex and Ada screamed
and let go of me, stumbling back and out of the fire. Roman
had to inch back as wel , and Bird stopped drumming.
“Keep going!” Roman screamed at Bird over the roar of
the flames.
Bird snapped to it and continued, his hands slapping
steadily on the drum.
The flames grew higher until they provided a barricade
between me and everyone else. Dex had his arm around
Ada and was holding her tight to him, both of their faces lit
up by the flames as they watched me in absolute horror.
I sat up in one swift, violent motion, breaking the straps
around my arms. I grinned at Roman and said, in the voice
of a little boy, “Why did you have to be so rough? You hurt
me. You broke my bones.”
“No!” Roman yel ed, and then bel owed a string of harsh-
sounding native words.
I tossed my hair from side to side.
“Yes, you did,” my little-boy voice said in a sing-song
manner. “You broke me in a mil ion pieces. You told me you