Read Holy Socks And Dirtier Demons Online
Authors: J.A. Kazimer
passenger on JetBlue airplane. Metal clanged as Sid tried to pull his sword
from the wall. I scanned the hallway for my own sword, but something else
caught my eye. Or lack of something, I should say. Mary was gone. The
ropes that bound her laid useless on the floor.
Fuck. Idiot.
I straightened at the whistling sound of Tyrfing slicing through the
air. The sword, as it had in the past, struck straight and true, embedding itself
in the target of my rage. Lucky for me, I wasn’t in a killing rage, merely
annoyed with myself at Mary’s escape.
The blade impaled itself in my lower back, puncturing a vital organ
or two. I dropped to my knees and let out a shriek of pain. Silver spots dotted
my vision, but I shook them away. Do not pass out, I ordered. My stomach
rolled threatening to spill its contents onto ground.
On the other side of the room, Sid stopped yanking on the ninja
sword plastered to the wall. He took a few tentative steps toward me. “A man
who lives by the sword….”
That was it. No more stupid sayings or Zen bullshit. With blood-
soaked hands, I twisted around and grabbed the hilt of Tyrfing pulling with
all my might.
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Laughter, deep and rich, echoed inside my pain-fogged brain. Sid
was fucking laughing at me. My rage intensified. Come on, I thought as I
tugged at Tyrfing. Give me a freaking break.
By this time, tears streamed down both my and Sid’s face. Mine were
tears of frustrated anger. The story of my life. Sid’s, on the other hand, were
of malicious humor. A humor deeply ingrained in the psyche of America, but
unheard of in Buddhist circles.
He laughed and laughed, hands clutching his fat sides. He laughed so
hard that he dropped to the ground and began rolling from side-to-side.
Suffice it to say, I pulled on Tyrfing that much harder. Killing Sid
had moved from unavoidable to my one and only goal. Rage kept me alive
and focused. The pain softened, turning to a cold burn. With one final tug,
Tyrfing popped free of my right kidney, and clattered to the floor. A sound
drowned out by Sid’s giggles and rapid floor rolling.
Using the sword for support, I struggled to my feet, blood showering
my boots. Once upright, I raised Tyrfing with my last shred of strength.
Crash.
Sid disappeared before my eyes.
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Fifty Eight
Twerp.
I blinked, trying to make sense of what was in front of me. Blood
loss had clearly affected my higher mental functions. If I wasn’t
hallucinating, a ten-foot high statue of Buddha had just crushed Sid.
Twerp.
I took a step closer to the mountain of smashed Buddha, and a much
flatter version of my archenemy. Laughter hadn’t been the best medicine for
good, old Sid. He’d laughed so hard he’d knocked the iconic statue of
Buddha onto his fat head. A bit of irony there, but I was too exhausted to
figure it out.
Twerp.
I recognized the sound of my cell phone, pulled it out, and checked
the caller ID. Shit. “Hey, Mom. I can’t talk right now,” I answered seconds
before crashing face first to the floor, unconscious.
~ * ~
“Jerk.” Lilith slapped my cheek.
I cracked an eyelid, quickly closing it again. The glare of hospital
light, stench of disinfectant, and blinding pain in my back told me all I
needed to know.
I was alive.
Sid wasn’t.
Score one for Jace.
“Hey.” Lilith shook my shoulder. “Don’t you dare go back to sleep
on me.”
“Water,” I croaked through dry, cracked lips. My limbs felt weak,
unused, muscles atrophied. How long was I out? The smooth plastic of a
straw touched my lips, and all thoughts of time slipped away. Greedily, I
sucked up the cold water until the slurp of an empty cup echoed in the
hospital room.
Opening my eyes the second time proved a little easier. Lilith sat in a
high-backed chair next to my hospital bed, the whirl of machines and air
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compressors surrounding her. Her hair was longer. Her face fuller. She
looked more beautiful than ever.
I swallowed. “I asked for Jack Daniels and water.”
She laughed, relief flooding the exhaustion in her eyes. “I’ll get it
right the next time.” She paused, brushing my hair from my forehead. “You
had me worried.”
“I’m sorry.”
She tilted her head and raised an eyebrow. “Why?”
“For a lot of things.” I licked my lips. The drugging for one thing.
Fucking Mary for another. The list went on and on, but now didn’t seem like
the time to bring up past sins.
Her smile slipped. “The doctors swore you wouldn’t make it. That I
should say goodbye, but I knew you’d come back.”
“Why’s that?”
“Because there is no place you’d be safe. Heaven or hell, I’d find you
and kick your ass.”
And she would too. That was one of the things I loved about Lilith.
She’d walk through the fires of hell for revenge, and for me. There wasn’t
another person alive willing to sacrifice themselves for me. Speaking of
sacrifices….
“The kid’s safe, right? I did my job.” I glanced around the room
searching for telltale signs of the Messiah. A scribbled coloring book of
messy crayon art hung on the wall, and a box of cat chow sat in the corner.
But no sign of the actual kid.
“He’s fine.” She grinned. “He had a slight reaction to the medication,
but the doctor promised his hair will grow back. He looks like a bowling ball,
bald-headed and round.”
“Medicine? For what?” I scratched my beard. Beard? When had I
grown a beard? “Did the kid get hurt when the statue fell?”
“Oh, baby,” Lilith whispered, caressing my cheek. “You don’t
remember anything, do you?”
I shook my head. The last thing I remembered was a much flatter
version of Sid and a bloody Tyrfing in my hands.
“When I found you, you’d lost so much blood,” Lilith said, tears
sparkling on her lashes. “Jesus was sitting in a pool of red next to you, a river
of tears streaming down his cheeks, trying again and again to heal you. But
he couldn’t.” Her voice hitched and a small choked cry burst from her throat.
“At first I thought you were dead...”
I wiped the tears from her face. “It’s okay.”
“The doctors told us you needed a kidney. Tyrfing had severed your
right one, and your other kidney was damaged in the war.”
“Yeah, I took some shrapnel in the side, but the medics were much
more concerned with my head wound.” I laughed. “I guess I really do have
nine lives. So they found a donor? One of my brothers?”
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“Not exactly.” She squeezed my hand. “You have an extremely rare
blood type. The hospital had never treated a patient with it before. Some of
the doctors had never even heard of it.”
“I’m a marvel of modern science.” I grinned. “Can’t say I’m glad
about that. Too much pressure.”
“They searched for months to find a donor kidney, keeping you on
dialysis and in a coma until two weeks ago when they found a perfect
match.”
Months? I’d been in a coma for MONTHS? That explained the
beard, and my need to pee. What had I missed? Had the Rangers won the
Stanley Cup? Had world peace been declared? Had Lilith found another
man? A better man?
I sighed. For better or worse, I’d find it out soon enough. “Don’t
keep me in suspense. Whose kidney do I have? Is it someone rich and
famous? Incredibly handsome maybe?”
She rolled her eyes. “Jesus.”
“Come on, tell me.”
She shook her head. “I just did. You are the proud owner of Jesus’s
kidney. His right kidney to be more precise.”
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Fifty Nine
My head dropped onto my pillow and I closed my eyes. The kid had
sacrificed his kidney for me, to save me. I owed him my life. I shook my
head. Everything I hadn’t wanted for him I’d forced upon him. As grateful as
I was to be alive, I hated knowing he’d suffered for me.
Lilith shot me a crooked smile. “If it makes you feel any better God
was against it. He even threatened to ground Jesus, but the kid was adamant.
He really looks up to you.”
“Yeah, I’m a great role model.” I pushed myself up. The stitches in
my back pulled tight, but the pain was manageable. “Listen, I need to tell you
something. I should’ve said it months ago...”
“
Jace!
” My mom threw open the hospital room door. It bounced off
the wall, but Joe, my stepfather, caught it before it slammed back in her face.
“Oh honey, I’m so glad to see you up.” Mom pushed her way to my
side. She wore jeans and a white sweater, a fuzzy black cat decorating it. Her
gray hair was cut short, motherly, but the sparkle in her amber eyes told
stories of a naughty past. “My poor little guy. Poor sweet ba—”
“Stop fussing.” I added to soften the order, “Whether you believe it
or not, I’m not two anymore. I can take care of myself.” To prove it, I fluffed
my pillow grimacing in pain the whole time, but stubbornly refused to admit
it.
Joe, looking more like a gangster than a farmer in a polyester suit and
wing-tipped shoes, took the opportunity to slap me on the shoulder while
shoving a cigar in my hand. “Congratulations, son. Your mother and I are
thrilled.”
Congratulations? Thrilled? Oh shit, had Lilith told them about
Mary’s love child? “I… ah…” I stammered.
My mom beamed, her eyes filled with happiness. “Do you know that
this sweet girl,” she pointed at Lilith, who had never described herself as
sweet nor a girl, “stayed at your side this whole time. We had to beg her to
take care of herself. For the baby’s sake.”
Baby? What the fuck was going on? “Yeah, Lilith’s a gem.” I nodded
my head in her direction. “Can I talk to you in private?”
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Mom and Joe exchanged a knowing glance. “Sure, honey. We’ll be
right outside.”
After the door closed behind them, I faced Lilith. “Is there anything
you wanna tell me? Like how my parents know about Mary?”
“No.”
I ran a hand over my beard. “Tell me anyway.”
“Fine.” She blew out a breath. “But you’re not going to like it.”
My eyes followed the rise and fall of her significantly larger than I
remembered breasts. The blood, once filling my brain, slipped south.
“They aren’t talking about—” she began, licking her full, red lips.
“Never mind. Come over here.” I crooked my finger at her. Fantasies
of hospital bed sex and sponge baths swirled in my head, replacing any
thoughts of Mary, my parents, or my Jesus kidney. I wanted Lilith. Had to
have her, right here, and right now, or I’d lose my mind. Maybe I’d already
lost it.
Her smile warmed, turning seductive. She stretched, her shirt pulling
tight across puckered nipples, and she rose from the chair. My eyes caressed
her bare shoulders, the tight fabric crushing her breasts, and slipped lower, to
the enormous beach ball growing out of her middle.
Fuck. All my nasty thoughts vanished, and for a second or two, I
stopped breathing. The heart monitor next to me screeched in warning.
“Jesus,” I yelled. “Cupid wasn’t lying. The son of Satan knocked you
up...” Bile climbed into my throat when I thought about the night of
debasement and debauchery Lilith and I had shared. I’d fucked a pregnant
woman, and in such degrading ways. What kind of low-life did that?
Smack. A red, stinging handprint formed on my naked chest. Lilith
pulled her hand back, preparing for a punch. I grabbed her fist seconds before
contact.
“Stop it.” I uncurled her hand with my fingers. “You’re going to hurt
yourself or the baby. Mothers-to-be should stay calm.” The advice sounded
right, but what did I know?
Lilith pulled her hand away and let out a scream. “You make me
crazy, you know that? One minute you’re such an asshole I want to strangle
you, and the next, you’re Prince Fucking Charming.”
“Like you’re a picnic to live with,” I mumbled. “When’s the baby
due?”
If she heard my first comment, she decided to let it go. Instead, she
said, “Early November.”
“Good.” I blinked and rubbed my forehead. “What month is it now?”
She shook her head. “October.”
Right. That explained the zombie decorations. I thought the doctors
were just being dicks, seeing as I was in the coma ward. “Does Samuel
know?”
“Probably.” Her brow furrowed. “He does own a calendar.”
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Bitch. “I meant does he know about the pregnancy?”
This time her confusion appeared genuine. “Why would I tell