Night of the Living Demon Slayer (17 page)

Read Night of the Living Demon Slayer Online

Authors: Angie Fox

Tags: #paranormal romance

BOOK: Night of the Living Demon Slayer
7.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The voodoo bokor smiled. "Mamma." He gently stroked the bone before plucking it from the others. "You see? All bones are not the same."

My palms began to sweat. It was the same thing the spirit had said to me.

He removed his mother's thigh bone and lovingly placed it into a pink coffin at the front. "There."

Dimitri stiffened next to me. "They're putting Mamma Pade back together."

Sweet puppies.

I'd seen a lot of things as a demon slayer that I never would have believed before I'd gotten my powers. This was right up there.

The bokor turned, his fingers stroking the skull. "Mamma's bones, they call to me. Just as they will call to you. You must let yourselves hear her. Open yourselves to her power. Let her strength seep into you. It's the only way we can do what needs to be done."

"Why?" I hissed, my words barely audible. "Why do they want mamma back together?" I thought back to the alligator in the swamp. How he'd put a soul into it.

A line of sweat trickled down Dimitri's cheek. "You said it yourself," Dimitri murmured. "Resurrection."

Like the chicken in the swamp. That thing had a body. These remains, these bones were well and truly dead. "This isn't Night of the Living Demon Slayer," I protested.

"Think again." Dimitri stuck close to me, his breath coming hard. "Theoretically, reanimation is possible."

Anyone who tried would surely be doomed. But Osse Pade had already gone down that road. I cringed as the bokor kissed his mother's skull.

"Careful, now. Slowly," he said, as his followers prayed over a body. Two vertebrae began twitching, along with a finger bone. "We don't want her mixed up with Aunt Ceila or anybody else. Trust in magic above all things," he repeated like a mantra.

They carried the shivering vertebrae to the pink coffin.

"We've got to stop this," Dimitri hissed.

I agreed. We couldn't let this happen. But I had no idea how to put a halt to it.

Think.
We couldn't let them use Carpenter to raise up mamma. For all I knew, they may mean to kill him while they did it.

Of course, they couldn't raise mamma without a few key parts.

"I'm going to steal her head."

"What?" Dimitri barked, a little too loud. The priest and priestess of the cult turned, and stared into the shadows where we hid.

"They won't see me until I'm on top of them." And it would keep them from raising mamma.

Of course it would require a direct assault on the bokor, who murmured to the head as he lingered near the coffin. At this point, I wouldn't be surprised if he'd start singing it lullabies.

My husband clenched his jaw, as if he couldn't quite believe he was doing this. "There's another way," he murmured, "follow my lead."

Chapter Sixteen

This is why I'd missed my dear husband. Sure I had no idea what he was about to pull, but I knew it would be epic. And for our sakes, it had better work.

Dimitri and I kept close to the wall as we snuck up the side of the room, toward Osse Pade. We slipped behind a huddled group of men and women in white. They rocked their bodies forward and back with a desperation only matched by their harsh, moaning chants.

Sulu oh madre

Sulo oh loa fete

Sulu oh madre

Sulo oh loa fete

I hovered so close I feared the edge of their dresses would brush my boots. Dimitri kept his arms and hands flat against the wall and zeroed in on a spot ahead of us. He glanced back at me and gave a quick nod as if to ask, "Ready?"

Oh, yes.

He broke from behind the worshippers and dashed directly into Osse Pade's office.

No one saw him. I couldn't believe it. That was either the dumbest move or the smartest. And the witches definitely needed to brew up some more sneak spells.

I shoved off the wall and bolted after him, running headlong for the arched wooden doorway. The chanting rose up on all sides of me. The cloying scent of incense invaded my nose and stung my eyes. I held my breath against it as I ducked into Osse Pade's sanctuary.

Dimitri caught me against his chest. He was a rock wall in the blackness and he wasn't even trying to hide. His eyes flashed orange, then yellow as the adrenaline coursed through him. Yes, he was a man, but he was also a shapeshifter and he was never more animal then when he was primed for battle.

My body tensed, ready for the fight.

He could see in the dark much better than I could. When he didn't move against the next threat, I took my hand off my switch stars.

We'd gone undetected. For now, we had the advantage.

Just outside, the cult members chanted and held their blades and torches aloft. The bones lay naked and exposed. Osse Pade looked like a man possessed as he stroked his mamma's skull.

Then he jerked, and stared right at our hiding place. My heart raced. We needed time…for what, I didn't know. I was so tempted to run up and grab the skull from him, but then where would we go? We'd have no escape. There were too many of them.

My husband gripped me by the shoulders. Wordlessly, he tucked me behind him. I let him because I trusted him. He seemed to have a plan.
 

Then he grabbed hold of the shelf along the wall, the long one that held the bones and mementos and bits of bodies that Osse Pade treasured. With a mighty heave, he brought it crashing down onto the floor.

What the hell? I leapt back as glass, bone, and debris smashed to pieces. It scattered, striking my boots and tripping me as I beat a hasty retreat.

"Are you insane?" I screeched. My volume certainly didn't matter anymore.

He didn't even react to my outrage. "Steady," he murmured, bracing for a fight as the bokor ran straight for us, barking orders to his machete-wielding bodyguards. Dimitri raised his hands in front of him. "No switch stars." He ordered. "Now!"

Osse Pade burst through the doorway. Dimitri grabbed him by the shoulders and used the bokor's own momentum to drag him inside. He yanked the skull from Pade, and tossed it to me before gripping the bokor's shoulders once more and using him as a battering ram. He shoved the furious leader past the guards crowding the doorway and out into the courtyard.

I caught mamma's head. I stared down at the skull in my hands. The jaw rattled and I hoped to God it wasn't alive.

We were never going to get this thing out of here.

Just outside, Dimitri crashed down on top of Osse Pade, knocking down two of the tables, scattering bones. A half dozen guards piled on top of him like linebackers. He was down.

Or was he?

Dimitri let out a low beastly growl and I knew exactly what my griffin had in mind.

The pile of guards shifted and rose straight up under Dimitri's rapidly expanding form. His shirt tore. Thick lions' fur raced up his arms and over his back. Red, blue, purple, and green feathers formed wings as his bones shifted and his body grew to the size of a truck.

Dimitri unfurled his enormous wings, the feathers tipped in gold. He clipped another table, sending it crashing down, toppling several guards with it. He threw back his eagle head and called out a sharp battle cry.

He bent his massive lion's body low to the ground and I dashed straight for him. His fur felt smooth and warm, like a cat's. There was no way to straddle his back. It was too wide. So I climbed on with my legs over his shoulders and my fingers twined into the rough fur at his neck. I tucked the skull under my arm, ignoring the way its jaws snapped at my skin.

I took an extra second to tighten my grip. "I'm on! Let's go!" Griffins were like Ferraris. They could go from zero to two hundred in about five seconds flat.

As ready as I was, my head still jerked back as Dimitri lurched skyward, stunning the dazed guards. His claws scraped the air inches above their heads.

The magic in the air singed my cheeks and body.

Mamma's skull struggled against my grip, but I held on tight. She wasn't getting away. Not now.

I felt like I'd hitched a ride on a rocket as we jettisoned out of the courtyard and up into the night.

We did it. We'd actually pulled this off. I grinned hard, loving this, loving
him
.

Dimitri's shoulders shuddered underneath my thighs and he gave a sharp cry as we slammed into a solid wall of voodoo. The heat of it blazed through me. We jerked backward and plunged straight down.

Chapter Seventeen

We landed hard on the stone tile. Dimitri had his feet under him. He was conscious. That was about all I could find on the bright side. I rolled off his back, and drew a switch star, striking barrel of the pistol aimed at my husband's head. It shaved the end off, rumpling the metal, making it impossible to fire.

Then six more guards aimed guns at us.

So much for trusting in magic.

I tried to block Dimitri as he curled to his side and began to shift. He was at his most vulnerable during the change. He had to be hurt or in severe pain to be doing it now in front of this crowd. We'd hit the ground with bone-jarring force and he'd taken the brunt of the blow.

Feathers in blue, green, and purple folded over on themselves. He shimmered as his lion's body morphed to reveal a broad, muscled back, lean legs, and a bloodied floor underneath.

Damn.

Within seconds he was on his feet, naked and unarmed. He clutched a hand to his side.

Are you okay?
The question screamed through my head, but I didn't dare ask it out loud. It would do him no good for us to show weakness.

He appeared dazed and unsteady. I reached for him, but a guard blocked my way.

Dimitri gave me a reassuring nod that turned into more of a grimace as we were dragged forward in front of the fuming bokor.

The burly guard with the feather necklace snatched the skull out of my grip. Another dragged my hands behind my back, making it impossible for me to go for my weapons.

"Place her in the casket," Osse Pade ordered. For a heart-stopping moment, I thought he meant me. "Let her rest…at least for now," he smiled, drawing his hands together as his goon took his mother's skull to join the rest of her bones.

Osse Pade's straight white teeth gleamed. The white skull paint crackled against his skin as he turned back to us. He walked a small circle around Dimitri and I.

His followers shrank back and bowed their heads in reverence.

The bokor stopped directly in front of my husband, appearing entirely too pleased to see him. Guards held Dimitri on each side, rooting him to the spot. He swayed and I hoped he was playing it up. We were in big trouble if he was as shell-shocked as he looked.

"A griffin." The bokor's dark eyes sparkled with interest. "I could never have imagined
you
."

Dimitri glared at him, refusing to be baited into offering him anything.

Osse Pade touched a calloused finger my husband's broad chest. His nails were long, like a woman's. "When this is all over, I'm sure mamma will find you quite tasty." His finger trailed down Dimitri's exposed sternum.

I had no idea what he meant, but I had a pretty good inkling I never wanted to find out. I must have made some sort of noise because the bokor directed a soulless smile at me.

"I'll even let you watch, little demon slayer." He considered me, as if deciding on what kind of special treat I deserved. "You'll make a great enforcer. I never believed in your kind, either, but I'll bet you could show me a thing or two."

I drew back as far as I could from him. "I'd have to be insane to work for you."

He tilted his head. "That could be arranged." He watched me, as if he could pick apart my power that away. "I have enemies and voodoo takes time." His gaze found the switch stars at my belt. "I'll bet your weapons are quicker. I don't even have to hurt you." He drew close, his spicy breath warming my cheek. "How well you work for me determines how much I do or don't slice off your griffin."

I refused to react. I would not show this waste of a human being how his words cut me to the core.

The biker witches would come. We had backup. We just had to wait until they realized we were in trouble. Then pray they did better against the bokor than we had.

"You have hope," he said, as if he could read my mind. "I like that. It means you're a fighter, like me." His congenial tone evaporated. "But let me make one thing clear, as soon as I raise mamma, she and I will be unstoppable. Joining her body with her soul will give her life. The necromancer's blood will make her immortal."

The guard with the feather necklace approached. "He's here."

Osse Pade's mouth tipped at the corners. "Bring him in."

Two guards dragged Carpenter through the wide archway. He was shirtless, bloody and bruised. He wore the same black pants from the night he was taken. Thick ropes secured his hands behind his back and snaked up his back to form a noose around his neck.

The crowd recoiled as he lurched and tried to throw off the guards. He gurgled as they tightened the noose behind him.

"Kneel." The guard behind me shoved me to my knees on the stone floor and secured my arms with a rough rope binding. He wrapped the remaining length around my neck. It bit into my skin and squeezed dangerously tight. I struggled for breath.

Don't panic.

They bound Dimitri the same way. We shared a glance. I didn't know what we were going to do. We had to escape, but I couldn't get to my weapons. I couldn't overpower the guard at my back through sheer physical strength, even if I wasn't tied and half-strangled.

A man in a yellow tunic approached the front of the room where we stood. I recognized him as the same man who'd slashed his belly with a knife at the ceremony in the swamp. "It's not time yet," he said, twisting his hands together. "We still need to find the rest of her ribcage." He eyed the coffin, nervously drumming his fingertips. "And a pinky toe."

Osse Pade glared down at the man. "I don't care about a pinky toe." He lifted his arms to the sky. "We raise her now!"

Excited shouts erupted from the congregation, lyrical exclamations in a language I didn't immediately understand. Then it hit me.

They were calling for her.

Other books

A New World: Reckoning by John O'Brien
Barracuda by Mike Monahan
Yield to Me by Tory Richards
How My Summer Went Up in Flames by Doktorski, Jennifer Salvato
Yule Tidings by Savannah Dawn
Haywire by Brooke Hayward
Windswept (The Airborne Saga) by Constance Sharper
Falling From Grace by Naeole, S. L.