Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
As if I'd care? I can calculate one thing for you, though. Your uptight quotient is like off the scales. You need to relax more than anyone else I've ever met, sweet cheeks. You ever considered yoga?
In the nude?
Abby very quickly and very deliberately conjured up a vivid image of grabbing the fiend inside
her by the neck and stuffing a sock into its mouth. She thought she heard something like a muffled grunt.
Her trouble so far—the demonic rather than the fiendish kind—hadn't been with stopping herself from fantasizing. When she remained fully conscious, she could force those oh-so-sinful thoughts out of her head. After five or ten minutes. The problem was with her degenerate subconscious. The minute she'd drifted off to sleep last night, it had begun bombarding her with dreams of the hot, heady flavor of Rule's kiss and all the other delicious things he could do to her
if
he were just human.
It didn't make sense to her, not that many things made much sense these days, but this really
threw her. She'd always assumed, had built her life around the premise, that there was good and evil in the world and that some beings were inherently one or the other, like angels and demons. She considered herself a modern, liberal-minded Catholic. She didn't think the entire global population of Buddhists was going straight to hell just because they didn't see things quite the same way the church did, and she believed the same about the Others. If one lived a moral life and tried one's best to help rather than hurt their fellow humans, she'd be the first to welcome them to the neighborhood. But there was a big difference between turning furry and chasing rabbits once a month and being a demon. She wasn't sure her liberalism was quite so elastic as all that.
Her mind kept traveling back to the story Rule had told, which Tess and Rafael and Samantha and Carly had been happy to corroborate, that what most humans believed about demons and fiends amounted to a front-page story in the
Weekly World News.
Abby just wasn't sure if she believed it.
Could centuries— even millennia—of theologians have been wrong? Even worse, could they have beenlying? Adjusting her worldview to encompass well-meaning werewolves and virtuous vampires wasproving to be enough of a strain. Could she honestly make room for do-gooder demons as well?
And if she did, would it make it right for her to fall madly in lust with one, especially one who hadkidnapped, manhandled, and generally been abominably rude to her?
Was there a name to the version of Stockholm syndrome that accounted for the captor being asix-foot, four-inch, outrageously sexy demon?
Sheesh, she had the worst luck with men. The last one had been an egotistical control freak of afinancial analyst, and she'd sworn she'd never get mixed up with another one of those. Talk about out ofthe frying pan and into the fire. Pretty literally.
The click of the door latch tugged her out of her funk and had her looking up from her morosecontemplation of the carpet pattern. Samantha poked her head into the room and offered a tentativesmile.
"Hi. The Alpha let me go early this afternoon so I could see how you were doing. Was there anything you needed?”
Sex, drugs, and rock
&
roll. And maybe a club sandwich. Extra bacon and mayo.
Abby shrugged. "Thanks. After spending all day with nothing to do other than watch Jerry Springer reruns, I'm going a little stir-crazy. But otherwise, I'm fine.”
The Lupine nodded and pushed the door fully open. "I thought you might be, so Missy and I decided to see if you wanted to go out to the park for a little while and get some fresh air. There's one just down the street that's private to the neighborhood.”
A second figure stepped into the doorway and smiled. The woman had pale, fine skin and
ash-blond hair pulled back into a braid. She also had one of the sweetest smiles Abby had ever seen and
a tummy slightly rounded with pregnancy.
Hey, not bad for a breeder. Wonder what she ’d look like without the tummy. Or the shirt.
Abby shushed Lou violently.
"Hi," the woman said, stepping into the room followed by Samantha and extending her hand. "I'm Missy Winters. I'm sorry my husband and I weren't here last night to welcome you to Vircolac, but it was date night and I was dying to see the new Ryan Reynolds movie. Ever since that man grew a beard it's been like an addiction, and it's so hard to talk Graham into letting me drool at someone else for a couple of hours that I hate to cancel. How are you doing?”
Abby blinked at the friendly chatter and automatically shook Missy's hand, noticing how delicate
and human the other woman felt.
"Um, fine. I guess.”
Missy grinned. "Right. I recognize that 'fine.' And that expression. But don't worry, eventually the whole thing starts to sink in, and eventually it'll even seem normal. Come on. It's chilly out this afternoon, so we brought you a jacket. The fresh air and exercise will do you good.”
Feeling slightly dazed, Abby shrugged obediently into the denim coat Missy held out for her and followed the other two women downstairs and out the back door of the Vircolac club.
"Graham won't let me go in or out through the front anymore, not with all the protesters." Missy
wrinkled her nose. "He's generally pretty protective, but when I'm pregnant he turns into some sort of monstrous maiden aunt. Which I will kill anyone for repeating," she added, raising her eyebrows at Samantha.
The Lupine just grinned and made a zipping motion over her mouth.
"It's lucky for everyone concerned that not only do I love kids, but I get a kick out of the other benefits of pregnancy, too.”
Aw, man. I can see it now. This is going to turn into one of those girl chats about the horrors of labor and delivery and the best brand of baby ass wipe. I'm outta here.
Abby felt the fiend's presence in her mind click off and nearly cheered with relief, but she was feeling a bit too surreal right then. Instead, she just trailed along beside the talkative wife of the Alpha werewolf of the Silverback Clan and tried not to look as nonplussed as she felt.
"My favorite, of course, is the calorie burning," Missy continued, leading the way across the
street and toward the wrought-iron gate at the park entrance. "The only time in my life when not only do I
not have to watch what I eat, but I'm practically required to pig out at regular intervals, just to keep the little wolf cub happy. It's bliss.”
She patted her stomach with obvious affection and led the way in onto the cobbled path of the little neighborhood green space. Guiding them to a bench placed in the shade of a huge old oak tree, Missy sat and patted the wood beside her.
"Sit down," she urged. "I figured you'd be more comfortable talking about all this and asking questions and generally bitching about the heavy-handed, managerial, and authoritarian tendencies of nonhuman males in a more neutral location. So, have at it. I'm volunteering as your sounding board.”
Abby just stared at her for a second, wondering which part of the rabbit hole she'd fallen into this
time.
"Um, I don't mean to be rude or anything," she finally managed, "but I'm not sure I'd feel comfortable complaining about them to one of them if we were at the UN headquarters under armed NATO peacekeeping forces.”
Missy laughed. "Oops. I thought you knew." She glanced up at Samantha, who was, oddly enough, standing a couple of steps away from the bench and watching the park like a Secret Service agent. "You didn't tell her about me?”
The other woman looked down at them and frowned. "Tell her what, Luna?" She paused. "Oh! You mean that you're human? I didn't think about it. You've been with us so long now that I tend to forget about that kind of thing.”
"Typical Lupine. If you can't eat it, mate with it, or play catch with it, try ignoring it." Missy shook
her head.
Abby stared at her. "You're
human?”
"Born and bred. Well, I suppose at the moment, since I'm currently breeding and sharing a bloodstream with a Lupine-human hybrid, you could consider me something kind of in between human and Other. But for the other seven months out of the year, I swear I'm as human as you are.”
"Other
seven
months?”
Okay, the question was totally inane given the subject matter at hand, but twelve minus seven only equaled five in the kind of math Abby remembered.
"Yup. That's the third-best thing about having Lupine babies. Full-term is only five months. Not that labor and delivery are any easier, but a girl has to count her blessings where she finds them.”
Abby collapsed back against the bench and blew out a deep breath. "Toto, I don't think we're in
Kansas anymore.”
Missy laughed out loud. "Trust me, honey, I know that feeling. I've
lived
that feeling. When I firstfound out the man I had a giant, secret crush on wasn't human, it took a little getting used to, too. Andback then, we all thought werewolves and vampires and demons—oh my!—were figments of Hollywood's imagination.”
"How did you—" Abby broke off and felt her cheeks heat. How was she supposed to feel
comfortable about being rude to these people if they were going to keep being nice to her?
"Go ahead and ask," Missy said, smiling. "I promise not to be offended. I mean it when I said I understand how you're probably feeling.”
Abby snorted. "Sorry, but unless you met your husband when he kidnapped you, I'm not sure you can really say that.”
She wasn't sure why Missy found that so funny, but the other woman laughed long and hard before she managed to respond.
"No, actually. I knew Graham for a couple of months before he kidnapped me," she said, still chuckling. "But kidnap me he did. Dragged me off to his lair and refused to let me go for an entire weekend. And by the time that weekend was over, he'd apparently decided he was never going to let me go. So, if you don't mind, just go ahead and decide to trust me.”
Abby fought the urge to stare at the top of Missy's head for the halo that must be there. If this
woman had really been through half as much as Abby had and had still been able to forgive and forget
and even fall in love with the Other who'd done that to her, Abby had to remember to write to the Vatican and nominate Missy for canonization.
"So what were you going to ask?”
It took Abby a second to rewind her mental tape recorder and remind herself.
"I was going to ask how—" She spent a second searching for a polite way of phrasing it but gave up. "How did you end up getting mixed up with vampires and werewolves and demons? I mean, if you're human and you met them before the news broke ...”
"Well before. Like several years. It's a bit of a long story, but suffice it to say my best friend met a man in a club and fell madly in love with him, and it turned out that he was a vampire. Of course, when
we, her friends, found out, we staged a valiant rescue," Missy smiled, clearly remembering something amusing, "but it turned out she didn't need to be rescued. She was perfectly happy where she was. Her husband was head of the Council of Others when they met, and Graham, my husband, was a close friend of his. We met through the two of them.”
"And it didn't bother you that they…weren't human?" Abby frowned.
"Sure it did. When I first found out that the guy Reggie had hooked up with liked a high-protein liquid diet, I freaked. All her friends did. But that was because we didn't know anything about the Others. All we had to go on was the same stories you've probably heard.
Nosferatu
and
An American Werewolf in London.
But you might have noticed that it's pretty hard to maintain an irrational hatred and fear of someone once you've spent time with them and discovered they're not so different from anyone else. And in my case, once you've been maid of honor to their best man.”