Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
"When?" Noah prompted.
"'Bout three, four days ago. Got into it with a weird guy, Lenny, likes to sit in the corner of thebar and nurse shots of Jäger. Usually this Lenny fellow's real quiet, keeps to himself. But that night, it waslike he was lookin' for a fight. Laid into the rich guy the second he walked in here. Eventually, I had topersuade them to continue their discussion outside.”
Rule followed Crank's nod to the heavy wooden baseball bat prominently displayed above thecash register.
"I'm sure you did," Noah agreed. "You see anything that happened after that?”
"Nah. Two of 'em go outside, and next thing I know, the yuppie's gone and Lenny's propped up
against my stoop sporting a couple of broken ribs, two broken wrists, and a cut nearly chopped his ear off. Paramedics loaded him into an ambulance and took him off right then. Ain't seen either of 'em since. And Lenny still owes me for the Jäger.”
Noah thanked the man and waited until he moved to the other side of the bar before turning to Rule. "Sounds like Lou isn't the only one hopping around the city. I suspect the change in Lenny resulted from a possession by Seth that then transferred to the man we met in the park.”
"I am not surprised. To remain undetected for as long as possible, Uzkiel and his minions would want to appear as normal humans, which requires them to take possession of human bodies.”
"That'll make them damned hard to track down.”
"I never expected much else.”
Swearing, Noah pushed aside his beer and stood. "Well, shit. Sorry this turned out to be a dead
end.”
"It was not." Rule followed suit. They tossed money for the drinks on the bar and exited into the deepening night. "We have confirmed our suspicions of where the fiends are hiding, and we may have another lead to trace. If this Lenny person was taken to the hospital, there will be records. If he filed a police report after the possession ended, there may even be an investigation or a name of the other man, the one who was hosting Seth. It is more than we had to go on a few minutes ago.”
"My, aren't you the optimist?”
"It is never productive to give in to the belief that nothing can ever change.”
"I used to think that way," Noah mused. "Then Abby learned to talk.”
Rule shot him a sidelong glance. "What do you mean?”
"Just that my baby sister is what physicists mean when they start talking about an immovable
force.”
"She seems very young to be so set in her ways.”
"She was born set. And I'm not convinced the way our parents brought us up was much help in the flexibility department. They meant well, and they loved us both, but they're kind of old-fashioned. A little unbending themselves.”
"I would not have called your sister unbending," Rule mused, thinking of the supple flex of her spine beneath his hands.
Noah's eyes narrowed. "I'm going to pretend I didn't notice anything odd in the way you said
that, Rule, because I like you. I'd hate to have to kill you.”
"And I would hate for you to have to try. Rest assured, I have no plans to corrupt Abigail. She
will always be safe with me.”
For a moment, the only sound came from the light fall of their feet on the pavement. Then Noah
glanced over at Rule, his mouth beginning to curve with amusement.
"Hm. I wonder how long you're going to be safe with her?"
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
For the first couple of days, Abby just kept repeating to herself that it would all be over soon.
Rule and Noah had teamed up in the quest to locate Uzkiel's hiding place, so at least someone was
doing
something, even if she wasn't. Even Louamides managed to leave her mostly alone, probably still traumatized by its run-in with Seth.
During the next couple of days, the reminders stopped being enough. She took to wandering the halls of the club during the day, when it was mostly quiet, and pacing the confines of her room at night. If she kept moving, it seemed easier to control the frustrated scream welling inside her. Samantha and Tess took turns trying to keep her occupied with movies and games and girl talk, and even Missy stopped by after a couple of days to take a shift.
The first time the Luna showed up, Abby had apologized.
Missy dismissed it with a wave and a smile. "Honey, I'd have tried the same thing if I were you," she said. "In fact, come to think of it, I did try. Only let me tell you, it's a lot harder to stage an escape
naked from an Alpha's bedroom than it is fully clothed in a public park with a military escort. You, at least, get points for planning.”
Missy's easy forgiveness almost made Abby feel worse.
Noah spent time with her every day, but when he had chastised her, she didn't enjoy it so much.
"You didn't tell me the whole story, Ab," he'd said over a hand of rummy. "If I'd known about the fiends rebelling and the spell they're trying to get their hands on, I'd have told you to stay put. You're safer here than just about anywhere else I can think of, except maybe Faerie.”
And that was another thing. Here she was with her universe rocking back on its heels, and she finds out her brother is practically an authority on all things Other. He seemed perfectly comfortable with magic and the supernatural power, and judging by the glances she occasionally caught him shooting at Samantha, he didn't appear to have any problem with inter-species relations either.
She knew the rest of the world was like her, still struggling to adjust. She watched the news occasionally on the big-screen TV in the club's second-floor media room, so she knew the protests hadn't died down. In fact, there had been rioting in St. Louis and Houston over the past few days. Other people were having an even harder time with this than she was, so why did she feel like such a jerk about it?
By day five, Abby was ready to surrender her mind and body to Louamides just so she wouldn'thave to deal with the waiting and the confinement anymore. The times when he'd taken over had left herblissfully unaware and with no memory of anything that had happened. Just then that sounded likeheaven.
She knew she was reaching a boiling point, but she never expected to blow her top quite as soon
or quite as spectacularly as she managed. In the end, she blamed it on her brother.
The door to Rafe's office slammed open hard enough to send the knob bouncing off the wall
behind it, and Abby stood in the center of the opening, hands braced on her hips like one of the nuns
who had so terrified her all during her school years. Fortunately, none of the rest of the Council was present.
"What
exactly
did you mean by telling my brother that it could be weeks before you manage to find Uzkiel?”
Rule and Rafe looked up from Rafe's desk, and two sets of eyebrows headed toward the ceiling. Rafe's remained in that position, but it only took a second for Rule's to descend into a glower.
"I do not have time to listen to your temper tantrum, Abigail," the demon dismissed. "You will have to wait for another time.”
Through the red haze of her anger, Abby just barely heard Rafe's hiss of indrawn breath. "I would advise you to choose your words more carefully, friend," the Felix said quietly. "You speak as if you've never been faced with a warrior's woman in all her glory.”
Rule glared at him. "She is not my woman.”
"At the moment, my goal is to be your worst nightmare," Abby bit out. Her jaw felt so tight, she
was amazed she managed to get it out at all. "There is no way on earth or in heaven I am going to stay cooped up in here for that long! Why aren't you out there right now looking for him? Are you expecting him to knock on the front door and climb right into your lap?”
She didn't even bother to glance at Rafe, but out of the corner of her eye she saw him purse his lips and ease himself out from behind his desk.
"I think perhaps I had better leave the two of you to sort this out yourselves," he murmured, and began to inch toward the exit.
Abby cleared his path by blazing ahead on her own straight toward the object of her fury. "What
have you got to say for yourself?”
Rule leveled a stare at her. His expression remained cold and distant, something she was beginning to recognize was his "on duty" mask, but his eyes blazed with dark fire. "I was not aware you required a response. You seem to have drawn your own conclusions about the matter at hand without any assistance from me. Or from logic or good sense.”
"You arrogant bastard!”
In the back of her head, Abby had a vague moment of wondering if her shout had managed to register on the Richter scale. It wouldn't have surprised her.
She sucked in a deep breath, but before she could let it out, a headful of blond curls poked in from the hallway.
"Did someone commit a murder in here, or have I gotten here in time?”
Rafe strode to the door and put his hands on his wife's shoulders. "I doubt anything could halt theviolence at this point, sweetheart, and for the sake of our son, I would rather you did not make theattempt.”
"Oh, I don't want to stop it," Tess laughed. "I just wondered if I'd have time to make popcornbefore the good parts.”
Abby never took her eyes off Rule. "There aren't going to be any good parts, but if Mr. High-and-Mighty over here doesn't come up with some really good answers to my questions really fast,there just might be some NC-17-rated gratuitous violence.”
Rule shoved back his chair and stretched to his feet, his gaze just as steady on Abby. "I have nointention of coming up with anything until you can behave with reason, maturity, and self-control.”
Behind them, Abby heard Tess make a tsking sound.
"Yikes. Isn't he supposed to be like a bunch of centuries old?" she asked her husband. "You'd