Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
CHAPTER NINE
Tess had been right. Poker was definitely not Abby Baker's game.
Rule saw the intent to move in her eyes before her muscles got the signal. When she shot out ofher chair, he leaped in front of her, and when she bolted for the door, he got ahold of her arm before shecould so much as twitch in that direction. Judging by the frantic strength she put into fighting his grip—obviously augmented by Lou's presence inside her, because, Rule figured, her left hook didn't usuallythreaten to crack ribs—it was a good thing he'd been paying attention or she'd have been hell on wheels
to catch.
No pun intended.
"Let go of me!" she howled, writhing like a fish on a hook in his grip.
Cursing under his breath, Rule grabbed her by both arms and spun her around to press her back against his chest until his arms crossed in front of her like a straitjacket. The hold immobilized her upper body, but that didn't stop her from using her heels to try to dislocate his kneecaps. It was a good thing she was so bloody tiny or she'd probably have broken his nose with a vicious head butt. If she slammed her head into him any harder, something was bound to crack. Whether it would be his collarbone or her
skull was up for debate.
Face set, he caught Rafe's gaze over the top of her tangled hair and jerked his chin toward the
door. "I've got her. Take everybody else out. She may be feeling a little outnumbered just now.”
"Outnumbered?! I'll show you outnumbered, you slime-sucking son of a syphilitic goat!" Her shrill scream made a greater impact than her epithets; it nearly burst his eardrum.
Rafe nodded. "If you need backup, you know where to find us.”
If this had been a movie set, Abby's eyes would have been glowing with red-orange flames. As it was, smoke was nearly pouring out of her ears.
"You think I'm going to forget you were in on this just because you leave the room, you catnip-chewing cretin?! I'm going to get out of here and I'm going to make every
single one
of you
beg
my pardon!”
Tess winced and ducked as Abby's increasingly loud tirade became increasingly moist as well.
"Um, I think that's our cue to exit, baby. Come on. Getting Gabriel into his bath and pajamas will seem
like a cakewalk tonight.”
"Actually, why don't you guys have a nice night out?" Carly suggested, pushing Samantha out the
door ahead of her and glancing warily back over her shoulder at Rule and the still-swearing and struggling Abby. "Sam and I can babysit. We'll make sure the kitten gets to bed shining like a new penny!”
A moment later, the library door clicked shut, leaving Rule alone with the Tasmanian devil-woman in his arms.
His biggest problem, he realized as a particularly violent motion sent her undulating against him like a belly dancer, wasn't that the human female seemed in no hurry to calm down; it was that his attention had fixed more firmly on the warm, soft weight of her in his arms than on the fact of her determination to do him great bodily harm.
She felt amazing. Her soft curves and silky skin had obviously been designed for loving, not fighting, and the incongruous strength she currently possessed only drew more attention to the plush welcome lying in wait beneath her snarling attack. The exertion had begun to speed her heart rate,
dampen her skin, and make her breathing fast and ragged just like it would be if he had her beneath him, bare and begging….
Shit.
Gritting his teeth and banishing the image from his mind, Rule moved quickly to separate their bodies. He had more important things to think about right now than his sudden and obsessive interest in a human woman who never should have made him look twice. From a distance, she looked like a mouse. Maybe if she'd stayed that way when he got closer, his libido would have been easier to control.
"Calm down," he hissed into her ear, thinking about what good advice that was. For both of them.
He saw his breath stir the baby-fine ash-brown hair at her ear and tried not to picture what the
pale, plump lobe might taste like.
What the hell was wrong with him?
"I said, calm down," he repeated in a growl. "No one is going to hurt you. I swear it.”
Her shriek rang with frustration. "No one is going to hurt me? What the hell is wrong with you? This is kidnapping! You think this is my idea of a good time?”
"I think nothing of the sort, but unfortunately, none of us have a choice in the matter just now.”
"Oh, that's rich! No choice. Because, you know, you're under some kind of divine compulsion to grab me off the street, take me to your secret hideout, and keep me prisoner against my will.”
The only compulsion Rule felt at the moment couldn't have been further from divine in origin, but he had no intention of discussing that with her.
He grunted when she landed another solid kick to his left knee. "You know exactly where you
are; therefore, the 'hideout' is hardly secret. And I believe it would be better for all of us if you took Tess's suggestion and began to look at this as a form of protective custody. No one here means you any harm. In fact, it is quite the opposite.”
She turned her head until her blue eye pinned him with a look of icy rage. "If you want to help me out, you'll let me go. I have friends and family to keep me safe.”
"You're being ridiculous." Rule shifted his grip on her. "If we let you leave here, you would be dead within the hour, along with your friends and family. I guarantee it.”
He saw her blink. It wasn't much as far as weakening went, but he would take what he could get just then. If she didn't calm down enough for him to let go of her soon, he was afraid he'd do something stupid. Like lick her. All over.
"And it is not only your life at stake," he reminded her. "If you die, Louamides becomes an open
target, and if Uzkiel finds him, any chance we have of defeating Uzkiel dies as well.”
Her compelling eyes narrowed. "Let me just tell you that reminding me of the thing that's currently
possessing me
is not going to put me in a very cooperative mood right now!”
Rule met her gaze squarely. "What if I remind you that if Uzkiel finds you and retrieves the
solus
spell from Louamides, your vision of Armageddon will look like a summer picnic in contrast to the hell those fiends will loose on the earth.”
She heard that. He felt it in the way her struggles suddenly eased even as her muscles stiffened.
He resisted the temptation to press the advantage and let the silence fill the space between them.
"You act like that should mean something to me." She sounded far from happy, but she was no
longer shrieking at him. "I have no idea who this Uzkiel you keep mentioning is, or what the heck a
'solus'
spell is, or why you think I have any influence on the fate of the universe. I'm not even that important to my boss. Why should I be important to the fabric of the universe?”
"I am not an expert on why. My concern is with how. Or rather, how not, as in how not to bring about a bloody reign of fiendish tyranny.”
"You paint an impressive picture; I'll give you that. But I still don't really understand how I'm the secret to the triumph of good over evil.”
Rule slid his hands down to her wrists, ignoring the smooth glide of her skin beneath his hands. Gripping her wrists not tightly but securely, he turned her to face him.
Stars, but she was tiny. The top of her head didn't quite reach his shoulder, and the body that had
fought so hard against him a few minutes ago looked delicate enough to break with a harsh word. She wasn't small or waiflike by any means, but she was so soft and so obviously human she may as well have been a baby bird.
"If you can remain calm for the next few moments, I will do my best to explain it all to you.”
She shot him a dirty look that he was willing to take as agreement, but he didn't release his hold on her wrists. He used it to steer her the few steps to the sofa and urge her to take a seat. Settling beside her, he kept a wary eye on her. She might look like a baby bird, but she clearly had the temper of a rabid raptor.
"I gave you a brief summary of the difference between my kind and the fiends like Uzkiel," he began. "We are called sun demons because even after years of living Below, we still retain an affinity for light. We can gain power from it, unlike the fiends, who shrink at the light of a full moon. In the midday
sun, they are powerless.”
"Like vampires.”
He sighed. Hadn't the Others managed to educate the human populace about anything since they Unveiled? Because he certainly didn't have time to give an abridged history of supernatural-kind.
"Like your popular mythology of vampires, yes. The vulnerability has given us a distinct advantage over the fiends and has allowed us to avert war for centuries. When the fiends first began to evolve, the rulers of the Below appointed the Watch as a sort of police force to keep them in line. We ensure that they do not get out of hand, because if they were to take over the Below, it would be only their first step.”
"And the second step?”
His jaw flexed. "Above. Many Others theorize that fiends are the source of the demonology of
human society, because they fit many of the stories of evil demons causing death and destruction for men. Fiends feed on the life force of other beings, and human hearts are one of their favorite snacks." He saw her swallow hard. "Light has always been one of our most formidable weapons.”
Abby eyed him warily. "Why does that sound like you're saying it in the past tense?”
"Because our fear has always been that if the fiends were to find a way to make themselves immune to the effects of light, they would be invulnerable.”
"But they haven't found it, have they?”
"They have been looking for a very long time, and before disappearing, Louamides was one of the fiends Uzkiel had assigned to the task.”
She was shaking her head even before Rule completed the thought. Her eyes filled with mingled
fear and denial, and he could only nod in return.
"The spell I mentioned before—the
solus
spell— has the power to harness the energy of light,
even light as powerful as the sun, and render it into darkness. It would allow the fiends to create a permanent nightfall wherever they went. They would be free to conquer not just the Below, but the human world as well.”
"How is that possible?" Abby felt her features draw together in a kind of baffled horror. "How can any person make that kind of magic?”