Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
me when you called. He’s okay.”
“Not for this, he isn’t.”
“Uh, yeah, Kel, he is. He knows more about that acidic ash tumor thing
than either of us do.”
Kelly seemed about to question him, but Miko shook her head. “Don’t
ask.”
Hadrian paced along the foot of the carts, studying each one.
The M.E. shrugged and pulled Miko to the first body. Rather the
collection of body parts. “This is what I wanted you to see.”
Miko was actively trying not to see, but she obediently looked at the
jigsaw puzzle parts with the decapitated head.
Ewww
. “What am I supposed
to see?”
“No ash-filled organ. No characteristic wound from the abdomen into
the heart.” Kelly turned to the second body. “Same thing here.”
“They’re human?”
“Yes, but I can’t say the same for two of them.” Kelly shot her a
puzzled look. “Why’d you ask if they’re human? What else would they be?”
Miko cast a glance at Hadrian across the room. “Later.”
Kelly gave Hadrian a wide berth. “If you want to talk about not human,
these two are it. They have the Butcher’s trademark wound tracks, as well as
those acidic organs. Everything else is where no M.E. has gone before.”
She gestured to Apophis and Malphas, detailing the feathers and
snakeskin and everything Miko had already seen. Plus more than she cared
to see.
Motioning Hadrian to lean down, Miko whispered, “Are these all
yours?”
“These two, but not the others. However, they have demon scent on
them from the attacks. Appoloin is sending me a message: This is what I will
do.”
“They can do that much damage to a lot of people at once?” She leaned
into him, felt his heart beating slow and steady.
Kelly finished up with an all-over shiver. “No one who hasn’t seen
them will believe me. Maybe not then.”
“I think it only matters that
we
believe,” Miko said. “You’ll have to trust
me. The police can’t handle this.”
“The police can’t . . . ?” Kelly met her level gaze then looked hard at the
two demons that Hadrian had dispatched. Exhaling sharply, she nodded.
“Okay. We’re in this together.”
She walked to the head of the last body. Unlike the others that were
partially draped, this one was completely covered. “I’m sorry, Miko. Really
sorry.”
An origami bird made from a dollar bill lay on top of the body’s clothes,
neatly folded at its feet. A large chocolate chunk cookie rested below it.
No
. Miko shook her head.
No
.
“I’m sorry, but it’s Bert. You don’t have to look. He’s already been
positively identified.”
Hand trembling, Miko pulled down the sheet to reveal his grizzled face.
His hair fell over his forehead, and she brushed it back. “Oh, Bert.”
Hadrian pulled her against his side, offering comfort and warmth. “A
friend?”
“A good friend.” Dried blood crusted his fingernails, and defensive
wounds covered his forearms. She brushed his hair back one last time then
firmed her lips. Bert had fought. Now it was time for her to do the same.
She waited until she and Hadrian were outside where the reflection of
trashcan fires lit the low-hanging clouds. The scent she now associated with
demons streamed up from the river, overwhelming all others.
“How do we fight them?”
MIKO FELL ASLEEP on Hadrian’s sofa after hours of argument about
her joining him in the imminent battle with Appoloin. She’d run out of
words and finally ended curled against him, falling uneasily asleep. He
imagined she fought demons or nightmares of them.
Closing his eyes, he sighed. For years he had no comrade in arms. Now
this woman, descended from Samurai magickers far away from his
birthplace, demanded to become part of his fight, putting herself at risk.
From her reporting on the victims of the crimes she covered, he knew a
crusader’s heart beat within her warrior’s body.
Hadrian drew her closer. She was muscular but fit well against him.
With more time, she might fit well in this life he realized he no longer hated
if she were there. She brought light to his darkness, passion to his
single-mindedness.
But his fate loomed. This battle was his last. Heaven and those who
preceded him waited. His longing for a release from centuries of hunting
and killing vanished in the face of leaving behind Miko Jones. The few
weeks he had observed her, the few hours he had spent in her company, the
single time he had held her as a man holds a woman filled his heart.
It didn’t matter. His fate was sealed. And tomorrow she would join him,
protecting the innocents while he took on the most demons he’d ever faced
at once.
DAWN BLOSSOMED late. Dusk closed in early. Clouds scudded across
the full moon as a biting wind coursed through the mountain passes and
scoured the city. Bonfires lit the riverbank. Larger fires illuminated men
whose faces morphed into familiar animals and unfamiliar creatures.
Miko and Hadrian paused in the shadow of the trees overlooking the
main bonfire. Miko forced herself to breathe, to find her center. It wasn’t
clear what a battle to prevent a Gathering of demons entailed, but based on
her experience last night, the outcome was in doubt.
One Hunter, a cat, and a reporter against how many and what kinds of
demons?
Hadrian pulled her against him, laying his cheek against her hair.
“When this is over, you’ll still be in danger. Leave and go somewhere far
away.”
“I can’t do that. Uncle Nic is still out there somewhere. He may be in
more danger than I am. I have my
kanzashi
. He doesn’t have anything to
protect him.” She turned her face into his neck and inhaled his scent.
Memory was all she would have after this.
His sigh ruffled her hair. “Then I’ll just ask that you take care in your
search. Find your uncle. Perhaps he can protect you.”
He crushed her against him as if to fuse them together, and she melted
into him. They clung to each other. Miko hoped he understood what she
could not say. He was heading for Heaven, and she was doomed to live
without him.
Through her closed eyelids, she saw the firelight increase. His lips
brushed her forehead, then he loosened his embrace.
“It’s time.” He looked toward where Appoloin waited. “Father Daniel
is expecting you?”
“He said he’d have the sanctuary stocked and ready. He spent the
afternoon blessing everything within reach and filling every container he can
lay hands on with holy water. He’ll be ready.”
Hadrian drew his sword and dagger. “We begin.”
Neither one of them said goodbye. She didn’t want it to be the last
word she said to him.
She waited for him to disappear into the trees before she started down
the hill toward the homeless camp. Without Bert, convincing the group to
take refuge in St. Michael’s might not be easy.
As it turned out, they were uneasily watching the growing bonfire less
than a quarter mile away. A scream from that direction erased their
reservations, and they collected their possessions without complaint.
Following the stragglers, she chivvied them to hurry. Chanting echoed
along the river, dark and wrong and far removed from the world she knew.
Would Father Dan and St. Mike’s be enough to protect them?
The priest met the men on the church steps, welcoming them and
passing them through to a trusted few he’d recruited after Miko’s call. She
didn’t know why he believed her or what he’d experienced that made him
agree to her request. But he didn’t hesitate. If they all survived this night,
she’d buy him a cup of coffee and find out.
“Miko!” Father Dan’s voice carried a warning. His eyes were on the last
of the stragglers.
She spun. A demon with a raptor’s beak and talons for hands grabbed
the last man. It ripped open the man’s throat, leaving his head to collapse to
one side, blood spurting. He was dead before the demon let him drop.
“Run,” she yelled, shoving those closest to her ahead. “Get to the
church.”
Several dropped their packs and sprinted toward it. A couple appeared
paralyzed. She reached the first one, jolting him into motion with her
shoulder. “Run, dammit.”
A crocodile-headed thing wielding a forked dagger attacked the second,
dragging him into the trees. The man kicked and screamed as he disappeared
into the blackness beyond the streetlights.
These were what Hadrian was fighting right now. Alone. And they
wouldn’t come one at a time.
She pushed the remaining men up the steps past Father Dan. Their only
safety lay in consecrated ground. She hoped.
The chanting grew stronger, louder. Shrieks and unearthly screeches
ricocheted off the buildings and underpasses. Hadrian was down there. She
started down the steps.
“Miko, wait. Take this.” Father Dan passed her the tall processional
crucifix from the altar. “I sharpened the bottom of the staff and the edges
and doused it with holy water. It might hurt those bastards.”
As she grasped it, he blessed her and made the sign of the cross on her
forehead. “Go with God.”
She pelted down the hill in the direction of the demon who’d taken the
last guy. Probably dead, but who knew? She had to try.
The only sounds she heard as she entered the trees were hers. Grabbing
a tree trunk to halt herself, she listened. A growl came from her right. She
slipped from tree to tree, careful to avoid stepping on downed tree limbs.
She reached a clearing. The demon was busy gobbling down what
looked like intestines. Blood pooled around his victim’s lifeless body. No
time for squeamishness, no time to cringe at what she had to do.
She raised the crucifix and lunged. One arm of the cross cleaved its
skull. The creature stiffened, then fell sideways. “That was for Bert, you
asshole.”
Miko yanked the cross from the thing, sending silent thanks to Father
Dan. They were really going to have that sit-down and coffee.
Remembering what Hadrian had told her about keeping a demon dead,
she reversed the pole and impaled the demon’s
crasboethiad
with the tapered
point of the staff with a satisfying sizzle. She pulled the cross out and got her
bearings.
She hurried downhill. No need to keep silent. The chanting and yelling
covered any noise she’d made.
She came to a halt at the riverbank. Heart pounding, she searched for
Hadrian. A flash of brilliance identified his location even though she
couldn’t see him for the intervening bodies. More than twenty chanting
demons gyrated or undulated or slithered around the fire, centered on what
had to be Appoloin.
She’d assumed the Demon Lord would be more grotesque than the
others, but he was surprisingly human in shape although over seven feet tall.
Fangs dripped blood down his chin. Then he lifted his arms and wings, each
as wide as he was tall, spread above and behind him. All he needed was a
pointy tail and a pitchfork.
Waves of hatred and evil rolled off him and the others, making Miko’s
stomach convulse. She promised herself she could be sick later. Right now
she had to reach Hadrian.
Ignoring her brain telling her to run and hide, she stepped into the open
area. None of the demons noticed her until she swung the crucifix and sliced
the head off a snake-shaped demon. This time she stabbed the
crasboethiad
and retrieved the cross without a pause. She vaulted over the demon’s dead
body. Thank goodness for all that time training at the
dojo
.
She saw Hadrian. He was holding a half circle of demons at bay. More
demons lay dead at his feet, and the dagger was too bright to look at for
long. Hadrian lifted his sword, swung, and a demon shrieked as its arm
dropped to the ground.
Behind Hadrian, the Angel of Death, wings brilliant as the sun, drew
the dead demons toward him and flung them into something she could only
describe as a vortex of nothingness. During their planning, he’d made it
clear that he couldn’t take part in the fight.
A lion demon slashed at Hadrian with teeth and a knife, opening a gash
in his thigh and immediately struck again. Hadrian threw up his sword to
block its attack.
Miko ducked under the snapping teeth of a
neko-mata
—a Japanese
werecat demon—and sliced at the lion. It twisted at the last moment, the
crucifix landing flat on its side. The smell of burning fur singed her nostrils.
In her peripheral vision, Hadrian dispatched the one-armed demon and
whirled back to her.
The lion demon raised up on its hind legs, and she rammed the cross
into its
crasboethiad
. As it fell, it dragged the crucifix from her hands. Demons
on each side turned, grinning and slavering demon spit.