Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
God, she hated having feelings that didn't belong to her!
"Who is Uzkiel?" she demanded, stuffing down the bile of fear that rose in her throat when she spoke the name.
Rule sighed. "This is not a simple story. Nor is it brief. You really should sit.”
Abby took one look at the enveloping wing chair behind her and repressed a snort. Instead shestepped over to a plush ottoman—gritting her teeth when the wall of Others moved with her—andperched on the edge. At least the footstool didn't have a back. She could always jump off the other sideif worse came to worst.
"OK, tell me what's going on.”
Rule settled his imposing frame into a seat facing her and leaned forward, bracing his forearms on
his thighs. "The first thing you must understand is that the human conception of what you call 'demons' is,
as Tess told you earlier, very wrong. Demons have existed since long before your kind became aware of
your God. In those days, we were called
daimon
and we were the messengers between the worlds.”
"Between what worlds?”
"All of them. Surely you have realized by now that more exists in the universe than this single reality." He raised an eyebrow, but Abby just pursed her lips and nodded for him to continue. She had no earthly idea what she'd realized over the last few hours, let alone the last few weeks. "We carried news and messages between all living creatures, until the Fae declared war on us.”
Tess dragged her husband to sit beside her on the sofa near Rule and made a rude noise. "You're lucky neither Fiona nor Luc is here to take exception to your POV, pal.”
Abby had no idea who Tess was talking about, so she ignored her. "The Fae? You mean faeries?" She tried to imagine a squadron of fluttering little Tinkerbells attacking an army of figures like
Rule and nearly laughed out loud.
"As I said, more exists than what you might think you know. In any event, the war between the
Fae and my kind lasted nearly a thousand years," he continued. "Eventually, the treaties signed betweenus banished the demons to the Below where we have lived in exile ever since.”
"I thought you said before that everything I knew about demons was 'bupkes'? That sounds a lotlike the battle between Lucifer and God's angels to me.”
Rafael gave a shout of laughter that echoed around the room. "My apologies," he chuckled whenhis wife hit him in the chest. "It was simply the idea of anyone mistaking the Fae for 'God's angels.' Theidea is too amusing." He snickered. "You will understand when you meet Fiona. Trust me.”
Abby had no intention of broadening her acquaintance in the Other world, but she held her
tongue. She needed the information more than she needed to make a point right now.
Rule's mouth had curved into a half smile at Rafael's reaction to her opinion. "I am familiar with
the story, but believe me, the reality was much different. The Fae are no angels, and before we descended to the Below, my kind were no devils.”
"But they are now? I thought you all tried to tell me that demons aren't evil.”
"We are not. We are not so different from humans: some good, some bad, and some mostly indifferent. But there are some among us who did not deal well with our exile." His dark eyes caught hers. "The world Below is very different from this one, with forces at work for both the light and the dark. Those trapped Below who have been warped by the dark are very similar to what humans have come to know as demons. We call them fiends. There are fiends who have given completely over to the dark, but you may rest assured that Louamides is not one of them. He is a minor entity. You will not find yourself burdened with the curses of evil. You are not damned and will not feel the ill of it.”
This was all a little much for Abby to take in. "Splitting hairs?”
Rule's mouth tightened. "Merely attempting to avert the splitting of heads. Yours among them. My kind have assumed the duty of protecting ourselves and this world against the fiends by establishing the Watch. I am one of its officers. It is my job to ensure the fiends do not stir up trouble in the Below or in this world.”
"Well, that seems to be going just swimmingly.”
The demon looked like he wanted to strangle her. With exhaustion creeping rapidly up on her, Abby couldn't bring herself to care. There were plenty of witnesses. Maybe that would at least slow him down.
"We have heard rumors that the fiends have begun to plan an attack on the capital city of the
Below, Infernium." He continued as if she hadn't spoken, but his tone was even grimmer than before. "Iand several of my men formed a kind of... task force to prevent the rebellion. We drafted an informant inthe company of the leader of the discontents. Louamides is the fiend who was assisting us and Uzkiel isthe fiend whose plans we sought to foil.”
"Louamides? One of you said that was what the thing inside me was called, didn't you? I'm beingpossessed by a fiendish stool pigeon?”
"An informant. A very important one that I have traveled from Below specifically to find.”
"Great. Fine. You found him." Abby glared. "Now tell me why you can't get him out of me.”
"For two important reasons. First, as you already know, the fiend appears trapped. And second,
Uzkiel sent Louamides to find something for him, a very powerful bit of magic called the
solus
spell. When Lou realized that passing the spell to Uzkiel would mean not just his death, but the war we have allbeen trying to avoid, he fled. As long as Uzkiel is looking for him, he must stay hidden.”
"Then he can darned well hide somewhere else!" Abby jumped to her feet, panic lending speedto her movements and about an octave to her voice. "This is your war, not mine! I don't want any part ofit. Find someplace else to store your blasted informant and let me go home. Now!”
Tess got to her feet as well and sent the men back into their seats with an authoritative glare. When she turned back to Abby, Tess kept her voice calm and her expression soothing.
"We're not doing this to torture you, Abby," she said. "It's not our idea of a good time, either. And Rule isn't lying about the first spell I tried to get Lou out of you failing. Trust me, figuring out why that
happened is going to be my top priority. But Rule's top priority has to take into account the fact that you
were seen in public with Lou's last known host. Uzkiel has an army out looking for it, and we have
reason to believe they've made their way into our world to look for you. If Lou was able to piggyback on another summoning to enter our world, we have to believe other fiends are capable of the same trick. We can't let them find you.”
Abby set her jaw. "They won't have any reason to come after me once you find a way to get rid of the fiend they're looking for.”
"And how are they supposed to know it's gone? Are you planning to take out a newspaper ad? It won't stop them from coming after you to find out for themselves." Tess's guileless blue eyes suddenly looked a great deal harder than they had a few minutes ago. "It also won't stop them from doing
whatever they think they have to, or even just think would be fun, to get you to tell them where Lou has
gone. We can't take that kind of chance.”
"There are many chances we cannot afford to take right now." Rule's voice sounded firm and
hard, as if his being adamant was likely to make a difference to Abby. "The spell Louamides carries gives Uzkiel too compelling a reason to continue to search for him, and I cannot allow it to be found. Until Tess can relocate it, you are the best hiding place I have.”
"I'm not a hiding place; I'm a
person!
and there's no reason you can't find
another
person for the job. You've got seven million, nine hundred ninety-nine thousand, nine hundred and ninety-nine other choices.”
"You wish to ask another person to go through what you have just gone through and more?" His
tone and his expression matched in their utter blandness.
Abby's first instinctual answer to that question was a resounding,
"Yes!"
But something stopped
her from saying it. Blast her conscience anyway. So instead, she pursed her lips and just glared. At
everyone.
"I'm sure it sounds horribly selfish of us to ask this of you," Tess said, her mouth twisting in a self-deprecating smile, "and I'm fairly certain that it is horribly selfish, but it's not just about keeping Louamides in hiding. It's also about keeping you safe. This is more than a human can deal with, Abby. Not even one of us would want to deal with it on our own.”
The room seemed to spin around Abby. She couldn't decide if she was about to faint or throwup or just break down and cry. If she had anything to say about it, she'd probably do all three just assoon as she got back to her apartment.
She took a deep, shaky breath. "Okay, I appreciate the fact that you're concerned about my
safety. That's very hum—" She caught herself and broke off awkwardly. "That's very…kind of you. But I'm a big girl. I can take care of myself, and frankly, that's what I prefer to do.”
Samantha turned her own set of puppy dog eyes on Abby. How did she do that when the darned things were blue instead of brown?
"You're not safe, Abby," the Lupine said, her voice low and urgent. "You need protection, and trust me, that kind of thing is our pack's specialty.”
She frowned. If she needed protection, she'd call her big brother. And his assault rifle, hand
grenades, and utility knife.
"No, really. I'll be fine. I've got good locks, a building with a doorman, and if I need protection,
my brother can—”
Rafael and Rule looked at each other, heaved simultaneous and nearly silent sighs, and turned back to her. She wasn't going to like this.
Hey, look. You're starting to pick up the signals, she thought.
At least, she
thought
she thought it. Who knows who might be in control of her inner voice at the moment?
The Felix stood, the charming smile slipping from his face, leaving behind a fine-bladed expression of arrogant command. "I had hoped you would not put me in this position, Miss Baker, but I am afraid I have no choice. We are no longer asking you to put yourself in our care. We are ordering it. You will stay here in the club under twenty-four-hour guard until we have found and dealt with Uzkiel.”
Abby's jaw dropped to the Oriental carpet and bounced twice. She didn't know who said what
came out of her mouth next, but whether it was her or the fiend possessing her, she wholeheartedly
agreed with the sentiment.
"Over your dead body!"