Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
"It's not a demon," he gritted out.
"Whatever. I'm the one who's being possessed by it, right? I think I should be able to pick my own terminology.”
Tess stepped between them. "Yeah, let's not waste time arguing about that. We need to find out where we stand and do something about it. Before it becomes a moot point." She turned her blue eyes, hardened with determination, on Abby. "Look, I get that this whole thing is making you a little nervous.
And I can't say I blame you, but if Rule says this is what has to happen, then I believe him.”
Abby frowned at the other woman, but Rule thought he could see more than irritation in her finefeatures. Fear lurked there as well. "But what if the…the
thing
inside me decides it likes being the one inthe driver's seat? What if it won't let me go?”
"That isn't going to happen," Rule announced, his voice firm but softer now. "I promise. I will notallow it.”
"And I believe that, too." Tess reached out and took one of the obviously unsure woman's palehands between her own. "It will be okay, Abby. You can trust us.”
That made Abby snort, a half-amused, half-resigned, wholly desperate sound. "At the moment, itdoesn't look as if I have all that much choice.”
No one said anything to correct that notion.
Her mouth tightened. "Fine." She backed herself up to the nearest armchair and sat, her fingersclenching on the upholstery. She raised her gaze and her eyebrows in Rule's direction. "Do we need towait for the old priest, or are you going to handle this yourself?”
Rule bit back his retort. The whiteness of her clenched knuckles revealed the nerves concealed
by her smart comments. In other circumstances, he'd have relished making her eat her words, but not just then. Stuffing down the inappropriate urges stirring at the back of his consciousness, he took a step forward and placed himself directly in front of her chair.
"No need," he rumbled. "This won't take long.”
Her wide eyes followed every movement as he crouched down before her and reached into his
pocket. He drew out a short silver chain from which dangled three small charms. Flipping one to the forefront, he palmed it before gently prying Abby's fingers from the chair arms and pressing her palm to his. He saw her flinch and her expression shift into the early stages of panic as the metal began to heat between them.
"Shh," he soothed, keeping her gaze locked to his, intentionally blocking out every trace of their fascinated audience. "It's all right. It'll be over in a minute. I promise.”
A slight grimace twisted her mouth, and her breathing sped up, grew shallow. "I'll bet you…say that to all the girls," she hissed just before her pretty, mismatched eyes rolled back in her head and she collapsed, folding forward at the waist like a poorly balanced doll left unsupported on a shelf.
Mouth grim, Rule caught her shoulders in his hands and shifted her up to rest against the back of
the chair. Her head lolled against the dark wing, and her breathing was fast and shallow, like an animal panting. The sharp smell of sulfur grew stronger.
"Um, are you sure she's supposed to do that?”
Rule ignored Tess's question and continued to grip Abby's hand in his. Her skin had gone deathly cold, clammy. It took on a sort of waxy grayness that added to the impression of lifelessness, but he figured Tess had been referring to the waves of movement undulating beneath Abby's skin. Up and down her arms, the flesh rippled as if something trapped beneath it were trying to get out.
Which was almost true.
"Show yourself," he growled, his eyes fixed on the young woman's sweat-beaded face. She seemed to flinch at the command. Her shoulders jerked unevenly backward, and her hand fought to free
itself from his grip. He laced their fingers more tightly and held firm.
"Is she okay?" Samantha whispered, only to be shushed by the others.
Rule deepened his voice and repeated himself, his eyes narrowing. "Show yourself now as friend
or fiend.”
Abby jerked again as if she were trying to push through the back of her chair and get away from the harsh presence kneeling before her. That wasn't Abby trying to escape, though, and the knowledge stripped away Rule's last vestige of patience.
"I command that you show yourself!”
The screech nearly shattered his eardrums.
Abby's body flew toward him, the fingers of her free hand curled into claws, teeth bared in a furious snarl. Her eyes were open, but they'd rolled so far back into her head that only the whites were
visible, giving her an unearthly, vacant look. He fought the urge to flinch away from the attack, but she
never made contact. Bare centimeters away from him, she slammed to a halt, like a dog that had reached
the end of its chain. With another screech, she collapsed back into the chair, forcefully enough that the heavy wooden frame groaned in protest.
"My God! She's gonna hurt herself. You have to stop this!" Out of the corner of his eye, Rule saw Samantha take a step forward to rush to Abby's aid. Tess caught Samantha at the shoulder, and Rafael rose from his chair to block the Lupine's path.
"Leave them be," Rafael said. "Rule knows better than we do.”
Rule had to suppress a snort. He hoped like hell the Felix was right about that.
Tightening his grip on the young woman's hand, Rule leaned in closer until his breath brushed her skin and he could feel the unnatural waves of heat pouring off her.
"Speak," he said, his voice low and commanding. "Tell me what made you take what is not rightfully yours.”
"Nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn...”
The whine built in the back of her throat, a high, pathetic keening that set Rule's teeth on edge and made the hair at the nape of his neck bristle to attention.
"Nnnnnnnnniiiiiii-I didn't mean to!”
It spat forth like a bullet from her lips in a voice too deep and too disturbing to be hers. Rule had
to stifle the urge to duck.
"Rule, I swear to the
depths,
I didn't mean to. It wasn't my fault!”
"Oh, wow," he heard Carly breathe from somewhere behind him. "I don't think Abby lives here anymore.”
She lived there all right, but at the moment there was someone else answering her doorbell. And judging by the first words out of its mouth, Rule had a sneaking suspicion he knew exactly who it was.
"Lou.”
The figure who had been Abby leaned forward, the whites of her eyes glittering eerily and emptily in the room's mellow light.
"Don't be mad, Rule. I swear I wasn't planning on messing with any humans. I swear it." Just like Abby had gone missing from her eyes, Rule couldn't hear her in the voice, either. The low, androgynous whine sounded nothing like the light, feminine, faintly panicked tone he'd heard before he called forth the
fiend in her. "I was minding my own business when a bunch of humans decided to attack the Other kid I'd hitched a ride with. They were gonna be trouble, I could tell. So I dove into the nearest hiding place I could find. I didn't know she was gonna be a human!”
Rule didn't buy it. "You knew the woman was not Other, Lou. Even you are not stupid enough to make that mistake. The girl's humanity all but glows from her.”
"But-but ”—
"And even if you had not seen it, you sure as hell should have smelled it." Rule leaned farther forward, following the recoiling body until he pressed nearly nose-to-nose with it. The fiend tried to sink back into the chair, but it had only so far it could go. "She smells like cotton candy, Lou. Do you know many Other women who smell like human confectioneries?”
The bite of sulfur in the air suddenly sharpened, and Rule felt the fiend's rising discomfort. "I—I
—I didn't stop to think, Rule. I was…too freaked out. I thought those thugs were gonna
kill
me!”
Rule snorted. "You are a fiend, Lou. You cannot die like that, and you and I both know it. Now
tell me the truth.”
Tess shifted behind them. "Rule, maybe you should back off a little. That position Abby's in right now is looking pretty uncomfortable.”
With her back and limbs arched and twisted in ways only a human contortionist could probably think of, Rule figured Tess might be right. But at least Abby couldn't feel anything just then, and he needed to get some information before he let Lou slink back into the woman's subconscious.
"She will be fine. She will not even remember this when she wakes." Rule braced his hands on
the arms of the chair to either side of Abby's body and poured on the menace. "Tell me what is going on,
Lou. Why did you disappear? What are you doing Above?”
"I can't telllll youuuuuuuuuuuuuuu!”
The fingers on Rule's free hand itched to wrap around the fiend's neck. They even twitched onthe arm of the chair, digging into the leather the way they longed to dig into Lou. But Rule couldn't movethem. He saw too clearly that the only neck available belonged to Abby, no matter whose voice wascoming from it just then. The sweet, warm scent of her reminded him with every breath that if he tried tohurt Lou, he'd end up hurting Abby by default.
Something deep inside him balked at the very idea.
Instead, he remained close, leaning in until the fiend had to feel his power seeping through thehuman skin that clothed it. "You do not have a choice, Louamides," Rule growled. "I command you to tellme what you are running from.”
The figure in the chair quivered like a whipped puppy, a long, humming whimper vibrating fromsomewhere inside like an alarm buzzer. Rule could hear the others in the room shifting restlessly behindhim, but he ignored them. He knew this fiend, knew its name, knew its weaknesses. It would never beable to hold out against Rule, for which he was grateful. The sooner he got the information he needed, thesooner he could bring Abby back to the forefront of her own mind.
"Louamides Asgarumel, I command you to answer my questions!”
"Uzkiel!"
the fiend wailed. "Uzkiel and his minions hunt for me. I had to get away from them.
Uzkiel knows I have the
solus
spell, and he'll kill me to get it. He got suspicious about me. He knew
someone in his company was passing you information and he guessed it was me. He sent me to fetch the
spell as a test, but I didn't know what it was. If I give it to him, it'll kill me; and if I don't,
he'll
kill me. I had to hide. I knew being Above would make it harder for him to find me, so I hitched a ride on the first summoning I heard, and I've been here ever since. But I was laying low! I was staying in the Others. I wasn't making waves, I swear. If it hadn't been for those lousy riots, no one would ever have known I was here. I promise!”
Rule didn't think the figure had drawn breath during that entire speech. It spoke so fast, Rule was amazed it didn't trip on its borrowed tongue. When it finally skidded to a stop, Rule felt almost dizzy from the speed.
The uneasiness he felt came from something entirely different.
Behind him, Rafael stepped forward, casting a long shadow across Rule, the chair, and the
panting, quaking fiend curled up inside Abby Baker's contorted form.
"Did any of that make sense to you?" the Felix asked softly.
Rule looked up into glittering green eyes and jerked his head once in affirmation. "Unfortunately,
yes."