Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
"Any person could not. The spell is only known to most of our kind as a legend, and the legend
says it took the combined power of five of the most powerful Fae of the warring years working together for five full cycles of the sun to craft the spell.”
"But why would the Fae create a spell that could only strengthen the demons in the middle of a war against them?”
Rule shook his head. "You forget, until the end of the war when the demons were banished below, the fiends did not exist. All our kind were demons and all of us could draw our strength from the sun. The
solus
spell was invented as a kind of Doomsday weapon. If the tide of battle turned against them, the Fae could cast it and rob our armies of the bulk of their power in one fell blast.”
"Why didn't they?”
"Self-preservation. The Fae would enjoy a darkened world no more than we would have. They may not draw their power directly from the sun as we do, but they prefer it to darkness.”
"What happened to the spell after the war?”
"That is what the fiends have wanted to know. It disappeared.”
"And I just have the kind of luck to get involved just as it's been found again after how many years?”
"A few thousand.”
A sort of sick comprehension dawned in her expression, and she braced her elbows on her legs, burying her face in her hands. "This can't be happening.”
He caught the mumble and wished for a way to reassure her. Hell, he wished for a way to reassure
himself.
"Unfortunately, I'm afraid that it is. It's happening right now. And the only way I know to keep the situation from getting even worse is to keep Louamides safely out of Uzkiel's sight until the rest of the Watch can locate him and bring him under control.”
Rule braced himself for more screaming, but it didn't materialize. Instead, Abby turned her brown
and blue eyes on him and studied him in silence for several minutes.
Her expressions might be easy to read, but her eyes were fathomless. He could see the doubt, the fear, the frustration, even the anger on her face, but in her eyes all he saw was a warm, deep calmness that made him want to crawl inside her. It was a separate instinct from the one that wanted to
get
inside her through an entirely different route. That one he understood, not so much its cause but at least its intent. This one confused him. This wasn't lust but something…sweeter.
It made his scowl deepen.
Abby sighed. "Look, I'm trying—I'm
really
trying—to see your point. I promise. But maybe if you tried looking at this from my perspective instead of just trying to intimidate me into cooperating—”
"I am not trying to intimidate you." Forcing the tension from his expression, Rule leaned back to
try to give her as much space as possible while still staying close enough to grab her if she tried to bolt. "I'm just trying to explain to you why I can't let you wander around the city alone. Not while Louamides is still with you.”
She laughed, but he heard no amusement in the sound. "So, what? I'm supposed to just nod and smile and take up knitting until you solve a problem you've clearly been fighting for a lot longer than I've been caught up in it?" She shook her head. "I don't know what world you come from, but I'm from this one, and around here we have to do things like pay rent. And buy groceries. That requires that I 'wander around the city,' as you like to put it.”
He leaped on the opportunity to reassure her. The fact that she was throwing this kind of obstacle in his way meant that she was weakening. Whether she'd begun to see reason or she'd just gone
cross-eyed from exhaustion, Rule didn't care. It was the outcome that mattered.
"We all realize that this is inconvenient for you. We would never put your livelihood in jeopardy,"
he reassured her. "The Council will be more than happy to pay your rent and see to any other bills for as long as you are required to stay in hiding.”
She cast him a sour look. "Unless 'the Council' plans to keep paying my bills for the rest of my life, I have to go to work. If I don't show up tomorrow, I'll lose my job.”
"You cannot tell them you are ill? Do you not have vacation time?”
"Vacation is what you call a week spent lounging on the beach, or touring Napa Valley. Being
locked in a nightclub with a bunch of inhuman strangers is not a vacation. Besides, if I want to take a vacation, I have to request the time in advance. I can't just stop showing up and call it a vacation.”
"Who do you work for? I will speak to her.”
"It's a he, and trust me, that scowl will work even less on him than it does on me.”
Rule cursed and rose, shoving a hand through his hair and prowling toward the fireplace on the other side of the room. "I am trying to make this easy on you, but there is only so much I can do. I cannot let Uzkiel find you, and I cannot protect you if you are not kept somewhere safe.”
He knew while his mouth was moving that he was asking for trouble. He glanced back at the sofa and saw Abby's eyes narrow and knew she was about to give it to him.
"Well, forgive me for making your life difficult," she said, pushing to her feet. "Here I am with my entire life turned upside down, my body invaded by something I didn't believe in two months ago, and my
freedom snatched away from me by a walking mountain with an attitude problem. What do I think gives
me the right to get upset about any of it? I'm just behaving like an absolute crybaby!”
He opened his mouth, but nothing got the chance to emerge.
"Let me repeat my suggestion that if I'm such a pain for you to have to deal with, I'd be more than happy to get out of your life just as soon as you
let me go!”
She stalked toward him with each step, her eyes blazing and the fear in her expression transmuted clearly into rage. She poked a finger at him in time with the cadence of her speech until she issued her last command with the tip digging into his chest and her gaze spitting fire at him.
Rule broke.
He couldn't help it. He'd been fine while he sat next to her; he'd even been in control while he'd
been touching her, trying to keep her from hurting someone, herself included. But the minute she touched
him,
the minute her fingertip came to rest on his chest and the warm, sweet scent of her breath rushed
over his skin, the grip he had on his control shattered like cheap glass.
As he muttered a prayer and a curse in the same breath, his hands came up to sweep her arms away and drag her hard against him. He saw the look of shock and the quick shiver of fear before his last rein broke and his mouth slammed down over hers like an invading army.
And he knew his troops had hers hopelessly outnumbered.
* * *
Abby knew she'd just taken a flying leap off the Cliffs of Insanity, but by the time she realized, it
was too late to do anything except spread her arms and yell, "Banzai!”
One minute she'd been trying to have a reasonable conversation about the least reasonable thing that had ever happened to her, and the next thing she knew, the world stopped.
Or maybe that was just her heart.
Rule was exploring her lips as if they contained the key to the gates of heaven. Abby was pretty sure they didn't, but Rule seemed determined to find out for himself.
But she would be willing to swear on her grandmother's silver rosary that she would never in a million lifetimes forget the feel or the taste or the heat of the demon's mouth on hers. It had etched itself permanently not just on her memory but on her soul as well.
That's when Abby remembered just who she was kissing.
Stiffening, she flattened her palms against Rule's chest and pressed. He made a low, rumbling
sound in his throat and tightened his grip on her arms. She felt the way his muscles tensed, but his mouth unexpectedly softened.
Ooooh, he was devious. Or was that delicious?
An attack she would have fought against. It would have made her mad and cold and perfectly willing to put a knee to a place she assumed was as sensitive on demons as it was on mortal men. But Rule knew his stuff. The minute she got her back up, he regrouped and switched to stealth tactics.
His grip remained firm, but Abby could feel his thumbs rubbing small circles on her upper arms as
he held her in place. The rigidly contained sensation raised gooseflesh on more than her arms and had her leaning closer to him instead of pulling away.
A tremor ripped through her, like the aftershock of an earthquake, which was no wonder, since she could swear the earth was moving. She had to struggle to suppress a whimper when he dragged his mouth with drugging slowness over hers. He tasted like heat and pleasure and gingersnaps, crisp and spicy and just barely sweet. She swore to herself that she would not kiss him back, even as her lips parted and he slid inside like a cat burglar, quiet and subtle and devastating.
That time the moan slipped out. She couldn't help it. Her knees collapsed and his arms slid around her to catch her to him. The red haze of rage dissolved in the bright light of lust just as the door to the library swung open behind them.
The voice she heard next belonged to Tess, not God, but that didn't change the fact that Abby
swore she heard the angels singing.
"Well," the woman said, laughter rich and bubbling in her voice. "I suppose this pretty much
counts as a meeting of…er…minds."
CHAPTER TEN