Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
The longer you live, the harder it gets to believe in anything, especially when you're living Below,
he said.
I can tell you, though, that when you've been around as long as I have and seen asmuch as I have, you have to believe there's some kind of method to all this madness. I don't knowif that's God, but it's something.
Abby thought about that for a minute, then laughed silently.
I must be preparing to die,
shethought.
I'm standing in the dark debating philosophy with a fiend.
Right. And what you should be doing is RUNNING!
Her instincts reached her feet before her brain, but that was okay with Abby. By the time she
processed Lou's scream of panic, she'd already sprinted twenty feet down the hall and had no plans to
stop.
Unfortunately, her plans changed when a hand reached out, caught a fistful of her hair, andyanked her to a stop.
Abby couldn't help it. She screamed. The force of the pull felt like it had taken half her scalp offwith it, bringing tears to her eyes and making the corridor swim across her vision. She fell to her handsand knees and felt a new, stronger wave of nausea overtake her.
"Going somewhere, little human?" a voice rasped in the darkness. Abby couldn't turn her head tosee who it had come from, but she didn't need to. She recognized the voice and the leg of the jumpsuit atthe edge of her vision. The leg and the jumpsuit belonged to Carly, but the voice belonged to Seth.
"Tsk, tsk, tsk," the fiend clucked in a mockery of concern. "We can't have that, can we?" The
hand in Abby's hair jerked back and forth in time to the tsking, forcing her to shake her head in agreement. "After all, the party hasn't even begun, and you
are
the guest of honor.”
Abby remained silent and concentrated on not passing out.
Do me a favor and let me stay for this, Lou. I won't shut you out, so don't you shut me out. If we're going to get through this, we're going to have to work together.
We’re not going to get through this.
Speak for yourself,
she snapped.
I am
not
planning on dying tonight.
"Come, little human," Seth hissed, and pulled Abby to her knees. She saw the inhuman voice
coming from Carry's familiar, friendly face and shuddered. "I think it's time I took you to meet your host.”
Every instinct Abby possessed screamed at her to
fight!
Run!
Flee!
Away! Get Away!
—but she stomped on every one. She was in a dark corridor in an unfamiliar building in the very physical clutches of an archfiend that was fully capable of bashing her head in just to hear it pop. Running would only hasten her death, and she wanted to put it off as long as possible.
"What? No begging? No screaming?" Seth-Carly pulled Abby along the hallway back past the stairs she'd climbed a few minutes before and down another short corridor. "By now, you humans are usually screaming like banshees. It's one of my favorite parts.”
Abby kept her silence, at least partly because it seemed to annoy the fiend.
"Well, no matter," it chuckled. "You'll scream enough before the night is over, I assure you.”
Wincing at the pain in her scalp, Abby put her hand on her cross and prayed, really fervently prayed, the fiend was wrong.
Faith doesn't need to be blind,
she remembered,
and you can have it in more than one thing. I have it in God, and I have it in the guys in my squad, and I have it in the people who love
me.
And she, Abby realized, had it in Rule.
All at once, it was like a veil of calm settled over her. Oh, she was still afraid; she was scaredshitless, to use one of Noah's expressions, but she realized right then that she wasn't alone. Rule was onhis way, and he would move the Above and the Below if he had to in the attempt to save her. Sure, hemight not succeed, but he was going to try. She knew that with the first unshakable faith she'd felt in a
very long time.
That's all well and good,
Lou said, sounding strained,
but please don't tell me you ’re going to turn into a damsel in distress and wilt like a delicate flower until your knight in shining armor comes charging to the rescue.
Abby nearly grinned, because, as she had just discovered, where there was faith, there was hope.
I am a delicate flower. But even delicate flowers have thorns.
She caught a glimpse of a crimson glow an instant before Seth-Carly gave a shove and sent her stumbling into another stone room, only this one was far from empty. She landed on the floor in an inelegant sprawl, but she had time to register a few details on the way down. The bloody light came from
a series of torches mounted at shoulder height around the room, but the fire they burned with looked dim and unnatural. It also stirred a memory, a far from pleasant one. The light they gave off reminded her of the sickly crimson light in the vision Tess had shown her. The one in which Uzkiel had triumphed.
Abby beat back the surge of panic.
"Have you brought me a present, Set-halikel?”
The voice hissed from behind her, as if a great serpent had mastered the power of human speech, and just the sound was enough to feed Abby's fear.
It's magic. It's part of his magic,
Lou whispered.
The fear. He generates it, like a toxic cloud. Try to fight it.
Abby had no intention of giving in. She took her time getting her hands and knees under herself and pushing into an upright position. She used the time to prepare herself for what she would see when
she turned to face the archfiend. Suddenly she was glad for Tess's scare tactics. At least Uzkiel's
appearance wouldn't take her by surprise.
She still had to fight to keep from flinching. It looked as it had in the vision, an unnatural mishmash of incongruous parts. The bovine head, the serpentine torso, the misshapen satyric legs. Its hideousness was palpable, like a presence in the room, but Abby refused to let it cow her.
What's the point of faith,
she thought,
if you don't test it?
"Wow," she drawled, praying for strength to keep her knees from knocking, deliverance for her
soul in case Rule came too late to help her, and speed to hurry that help along. "It's a little late for
Halloween. You get a discount on the ugly freak costume?”
She moved too slowly. The fiend crossed the space between them faster than she could blink,
and when its hand touched her, she fulfilled Seth's prediction and screamed.
Rule longed for nothing more than to burst into the building, sword swinging and guns blasting,destroying Uzkiel and saving Abby in one fell swoop. But the daring rescue, Rule knew, only workedthat way in Faerie stories.
That was the reason that he skulked through the hallways of the Hudson Shipping building like athief, following Noah's military hand signals and beating back his primitive impatience with every breath. Their extraction team, as Noah had labeled it, had assembled on the next block to arm themselves and
review the rules of the operation before moving on the abandoned building that served as Uzkiel's headquarters on this plane.
Rafe had taken point, shifting into his wereform as soon as they stepped in the front doors, using his feline stealth to ease through the darkened corridors unseen and unheard. Behind him ranged a compact line of warriors, beginning with Rule and including Tobias and his two best soldiers, Silverbacks named Simon and Huck. Noah brought up the rear, the only one of them who needed to bother with night-vision goggles, carefully guarding their exit. He had his favorite assault rifle in his hands and a compact pack filled with enough plastic to level the lower half of Manhattan. "Just in case.”
A small army of Lupines was stationed outside the building, covering the other entrances and waiting in case they received a call for backup. At least three of them, Rule knew, were also in Rafe's car with Tess, guarding her. It looked more like physically restraining her to Rule, but it wasn't his job to get involved in a marital spat.
His eyes had adjusted quickly to the darkness, and they tracked Rafe's movements as the Felix padded through the seemingly deserted building, following his nose, his keen night vision, and his instincts, toward Abby.
"I may not have the nose of a wolf," he'd said, "but my nose is sharp enough and my eyes sharper. I'll find her. The scent of sulfur is not easy to miss.”
Rule hoped not, because he hadn't caught a whiff of it yet. Rafe, though, moved through the empty halls as if he knew where he was going. He led the way to the back of the first floor and shifted back to human just long enough to raise the flat of his hand to signal the others to stop. He pointed toward the floor, and Rule looked past him to see the outline of a set of stairs leading downward.
Gesturing to the others to follow single file, Rule gave Rafe the okay and moved forward.
The minute they broke below the ground floor, Rule felt the oppressive presence of evil. Much of
it, he knew, came from Uzkiel, but not all of it. There was a subtler chill in the air, the kind that came from recorded misery and trapped spirits. No wonder the fiend had chosen this place.
When they reached the first basement level they paused while Rafe scented the air. Tobias, though, didn't see the need to wait. He tapped Rule on the back and gestured toward the right, down a hall that led into the center of the building. Before the demon could pass on the message, Rafe turned and indicated the same direction.
The hair on the back of Rule's neck stood up. He didn't bother to wonder if the others were right. Every sense he possessed told him they were getting close.
Single file, the men moved silently down the short corridor, passing like shadows through the darkness. Their plans were sound and their execution flawless, right up to the point when Abby's scream shattered the darkness.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE