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Authors: P. R. Frost

Forest Moon Rising (28 page)

BOOK: Forest Moon Rising
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“Gollum, is this really going to work?” Butterflies erupted into flight in my gut. Thousands of them. All at once. I wanted to shake with chilled nerves. I didn’t dare.
“I think so. If we’re careful. I’m anxious to get to know our daughters. They should be back by now ...”
Trouble!
Scrap screamed. He burst into view bright red and flapping his wings double time.
The doorbell rang.
“Who, Scrap?”
Not him. That’s just Sean. Allie and the girls need you. Now.”
“Where are they?” I grabbed a pair of shoes from under the sofa, grateful they were sturdy walking shoes with good traction. I’ve had to fight in bad shoes before and gotten hurt.
Too far away. Too far to get you there in time. I’ve messed up the timing as it is. I should have come when I first noticed the bad guys. But no, I waited until Allie and the girls had finished shopping, hoping the gang bangers with demon protection tattoos had gotten bored and went away. But they didn’t. They recognized the girls. Allie can’t handle them alone. Hell, the police can’t handle them alone.
Apparently, Gollum answered the door, keeping one eye on me, the other on my date.
“What’s going on, Tess?” Sean asked. He offered me an arm for balance as I hopped around trying to put on the shoes and get out the door at the same time.
“You wanted to know about my life, Sean? You just got dumped into the middle of it. Scrap, can we go through the chat room?” Without me knowing quite how, Gollum had herded me and Sean out the door and down the steps. He had the keys to his car out and the lock button working remotely as I hit the pavement running.
Um, this could be tricky.
“Scrap, you’ve got to take me to Allie and the girls, now.” I had one foot inside Gollum’s new hybrid SUV.A red one, I noted. Sean’s BMW was parked right beside it.
My heart plummeted into my stomach. “We’ll never get there in one piece if you drive,” I sighed to Gollum.
“What do you mean? I’m a good driver. I’ve never had an accident.”
“Luck. Sheer luck.”
“We can take my car,” Sean offered.
Gotcha, hang onto your hats.
The world tilted slightly right. Light shifted slightly left. A swirl of mind numbing brightness, endless unbroken light and ...
I stumbled out of the SUV into a different parking lot. Light and reality snapped back into normal alignment. I held my right hand out for Scrap. Brilliant vermilion spread from his wing tips to his core. He stretched into impossible lengths and thinness.
I clamped both hands around the center of the shaft he’d become and twirled. He used the centrifugal force to curve his ears into a quarter moon sickle. At the same time his legs and tail arched into a mirror twin blade.
While he did his thing, sharpening on the inside curve, extruding tines on the outside, I scouted the battle zone.
Allie planted her left foot in the throat of a dark-skinned youth nearly as tall as she. At the same time her right fist connected with the jaw of a shorter blond boy.
What did she need me for?
The six others who ringed her. As I watched they all shook switchblades, chains, and guns out of their sleeves.
She pulled her gun from its holster.
Chapter 26
Oregon is the only state where the term “Civil War” refers to a game involving Beavers (Oregon State University), Ducks (University of Oregon), four quarters, and a football.
O
NE SHOT REVERBERATED around the parking lot. Allie shot into the air, a deliberate miss and a warning.
“That the best you can do, lady?” one of the gang bangers sneered. He swung his barbed chain insolently.
“Go, Tess. Go! I’ve got the girls,” Gollum shouted behind me.
“How’d he get here?”
The magic of the chat room. Your boyfriends got caught up in the swirl,
Scrap replied. He sounded tired already and he hadn’t even tasted blood.
Without thinking further than taking down the guy with the lethal chain, I launched forward in a flying leap.
I landed less than gracefully in the middle of a gang of three. We all went down like I’d bowled a strike.
But I was on top.
I came up swinging the blade, right, left, low, high. Twist and spin, catch a swinging chain on the tines. Wind them tight and pull. The dark-haired boy didn’t want to let go.
I twisted out of reach as I spun him past me, face first into the blacktop. Another raised his gun, a stubby little thing with a huge magazine of bullets.
Oops.
Allie chopped his wrist with the grip of her weapon. He dropped it. Then she grabbed and twisted his arm up behind him.
She was fully occupied holding his writhing body, keeping him out of the action. Why had she even bothered with her gun?
Another boy with a knife slid up behind her. He caught my blade between the shoulders. He slumped to the ground in a pool of his own blood.
The tattoo on his wrist pulsed red with black undertones.
“That important?” I asked as I removed the tines of the Celestial Blade from his rib cage.
Demon protection,
Scrap gasped. Or was that a slurp as he tasted the blood. He’d earn a wart or two from this encounter.
The boy writhed. His wound closed. The bleeding stopped. He dragged himself to his knees sluggishly. He stalled there waiting to regain enough strength to heave himself upward. He waited a long time.
“But they aren’t demons themselves. Therefore, they are vulnerable!” I whacked another gang member behind the knees and kicked the butt of the crouching boy. He hit the pavement nose first.
Blood spurted.
He screamed.
The boys paused.
We were no longer easy prey.
As I watched them watch me, a blackberry vine full of nasty little thorns snaked out of nowhere and wound around the ankles of the boy farthest back in the pack. Then it tightened.
His yowl as he tumbled to the ground sent the rest of them scurrying for cover. Any cover.
But there wasn’t any in the nearly deserted parking lot. Flashing blue and red lights followed by wailing sirens caught them at the corner.
Six officers bailed out, weapons drawn, menace filling their posture.
“I think there’s Chinese food in Sean’s car. Full of MSG,” I whispered to Scrap. “Disappear and gorge yourself.”
He left the bags inside your front door.
In an eye blink, my weapon collapsed in on itself and faded to invisibility, leaving me to answer a lot of questions from authorities who didn’t understand the true meaning of demons on the loose.
Goddess, how my leg hurt from the ill-planned leap into the fray. No more adrenaline. No more strength.
I sank to the curb, head propped on my hands, and waited.
“Tess,” Gollum gently prodded me with his voice.
“Hm?” I looked up through a fog of weariness. The activity around me didn’t keep my attention. For such a short fight, I shouldn’t be this tired.
My leg ached terribly. I don’t think I could stand up if I tried.
Gollum came down to my level, sitting beside me, stretching his long legs straight out in front of him. “I’ve got to take the girls home. They’ve talked to the police, all innocence, and told them, ‘These guys just attacked us out of nowhere, tried to grab our packages.’ That’s all they know and they are sticking to it. I think they’ve done this before.”
“Oh.”
“I’m taking our daughters back to your place. I’ll show them how to lock the door and dead bolt it, how to call you in an emergency. Then I have to get back to Julia. Sean and Allie are still here. They’ll see you get home.”
“Okay.” I roused a little. The reminder of his
wife
felt like a slap in the face. “Thank you, Gollum. Thanks for everything.” I dismissed him. I had to or I’d begin the self-destructive grief all over again.
“You too.” He kissed the top of my head, squeezed my shoulders, and stood up.
I wrapped my arms around myself, instantly chilled by his absence. “Slow down and drive careful,” I called after him.
“Of course. I have precious cargo.”
He passed beyond my focus distance.
Allie replaced him on the curb beside me. “How do you want to explain the knife wounds?” she asked very quietly.
“They had knives. I took one away from them and used it to defend my daughters and their godmother?” I flashed her a grin, a little energy and enthusiasm banishing the fog.
“Is that how we’re playing this?”
“Got the birth certificates to prove it.”
“Okay.” She sounded skeptical.
And then a policeman with a notebook in hand was in front of us, looming and trying to intimidate us both.
Allie flashed him her ID—her resignation from the force wasn’t official for another two weeks—and stood up. Cop to cop. Cut us some slack as a professional courtesy.
“Those gang tattoos are new. You seen them back east?” the officer asked her when he’d finished taking our statements.
“They consider themselves demon protected,” I piped up. “I don’t know an official name for them.”
“Multiracial and multi ethnic. Unusual.” The cop shook his head. “They got enough marijuana on them and in their vehicle to put them away for a long time without the added charges of assault and battery, attempted robbery, and possession of illegal weapons.” He shook his head and made a few more notes.
“I’ve never seen any of these guys before. I thought I knew all the gangs in the area. You hurt them bad. Maybe they’ll think twice about staking out territory in this town.” He wandered off to supervise the loading of two lightly injured and one nearly dead into appropriate vehicles. The uninjured had been bundled off to jail sometime ago.
I noticed Sean handling IVs for the guy who fell to a blackberry vine and broke his nose.
Once the ambulance doors closed, he joined Allie and me on the curb. “Is this why you end up in my ER so often?” he asked casually.
I had to think a moment.
“Unlikely,” Allie snorted.
“Oh?” Sean cocked an eyebrow.
“You saw how she tackled those guys with a weak leg. She’s graceful and self-assured. She only gets hurt by mundane things.”
“Oh?” This time I questioned the statement. “I didn’t feel graceful when I landed on top of the pig pile.” My hand massaged my aching calf absently. Sean stripped off his bloody surgical gloves and took over the job. He did a better job.
“The point is, you landed on top and knocked three guys out of the action in one blow,” Allie insisted.
“Actually, she’s only mostly right,” I sighed. “I’ve been almost self-destructive in the last year, trying to kill my grief with action, getting overtired and careless. But the last time was in pursuit of a demon.”
“From what I read in your book, the Celestial Blade only manifests in the presence of a demon or tremendous evil. Which were these gang bangers?” Sean asked. He wadded up the soiled gloves and tossed them into a nearby trash can basketball style. Then he resumed his massage.
“Both. The tats on their wrists didn’t originate in this world,” I said cautiously.
“That explains some things,” he mused.
“Like?”
“Like some victims I’ve seen in the ER screaming about black tattoos on their attackers that glowed red with the fires of hell.”
“The otherworlds are bleeding into this one, more and more. I’m surprised everyone hasn’t figured out that demons walk among us on a daily basis,” Allie said. “God, I want to go home and have this day be over.” She lay back on the sidewalk.
The store had closed and only security lights cast baleful shadows on her face.
“The populace at large is very good at denying the obvious,” Sean said. He stood up and offered me a hand. “I think I’ve still got Chinese food back at your condo. You up for a mundane drive home?”
BOOK: Forest Moon Rising
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