Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
Abby stared across the grass at a gray-haired woman in a fur-trimmed coat walking an apricot Pomeranian on a retractable leash. The setting sun gilded the dog's fur until it matched the bright gold shining from the woman's earlobes. "I don't know. You throw in being held somewhere against your will for reasons you don't fully understand, and you'd be surprised what you can maintain.”
"Do you really mean that?" Missy shifted and curled one leg up onto the bench so she could face Abby more directly. "Are you sure you hate Rule and all the Others? Or are you just angry and frustrated and confused? Like I was.”
"I don't know what I am right now.”
"Well, personally, I know what I am." Patting her knee, Missy smiled and pushed to her feet. "I'm starving. The deli on the corner has killer roast beef sandwiches the size of a Mack truck. I think I can fit one or two in before dinner. Sam, stay here with Abby and give her a few minutes to think. I'm going to
run and grab a snack and I'll be right back.”
Samantha shook her head, looking very unhappy with that idea. "Luna, I'm sorry, but you know I
can't do that. Alpha has said that you're not to go anywhere alone until the protests die down. Especially
now.”
"The Alpha is a paranoid mother hen. I'll be fine." Missy rolled her eyes. "You know perfectly well that Abby's in a lot more danger at the moment than I am. She's the one who needs a bodyguard. Stay and keep an eye on her.”
"Luna—”
"I'm just going across the street. Look. You can see the deli entrance from here." She pointed
through a break in the greenery at the brick-fronted store. "If it makes you feel better, stand over there and you'll be able to see me and Abby at the same time. Now I gotta go. I said the
b
word, and if Junior doesn't get some red meat in the next five minutes, he's going to make me a very unhappy mommy.”
Without giving Samantha time to protest, the woman offered a jaunty wave and jogged out the park entrance and across the street. Samantha swore roundly and shot Abby a glance so stern, she wouldn't have thought the Lupine was capable of it a couple of minutes ago.
"Don't move," she ordered. "I'm going to stand right over here so I can watch the deli, but
don't
move. And scream if anyone tries to talk to you.”
Since she was still feeling more than a little confused by her conversation with Missy Winters and remembered that Samantha was way too fast for her to outrun even if she tried to make a break for it,
Abby had no trouble obeying the order. She sat on the bench and watched the fading sunlight dapple the
grass as she wondered yet again what on earth had happened to her life.
She would like to have thought that it was her distraction that kept her from hearing anything behind her in the moments before a large hand clamped over her mouth and a dark figure whispered in her ear.
"Where's the gas leak?"
CHAPTER TWELVE
It would be nice to think that it was distraction that allowed someone to sneak up close enough
to touch her without her ever noticing, but in reality her brother was in the Special Forces, and he was
just that good at his job.
She waited a couple of seconds for the rush of panic to pass and for her adrenaline to register
that the voice she'd heard had belonged to Noah. Samantha was still watching the deli, and Abby had no intention of screaming. Not that she could have until the hand shifted off her mouth to let her speak.
"Two o' clock. About ten feet away. Next to the water fountain.”
Noah remained completely silent, and Abby knew better than to look backward to try to see him. He might be right behind her, but between her body, the bench, and the shrubbery surrounding them, she knew he'd be very well concealed.
He never made a sound, but she knew he'd made a comprehensive survey of the situation. The careful, modulated tone of his nearly soundless voice confirmed it.
"Abigail, you're going to have to tell me that you didn't send me an SOS in the middle of the night
using our secret 'the end of the world is upon us' code because you've had a fight with one of your girlfriends.”
She had known Noah would recognize her text message and take it for the 911 call it had been. It was a silly code they'd developed as kids, when the greatest torture they could imagine was being dragged to their great-aunt Ruth's house for Thanksgiving dinner and being trapped in her living room listening to her tell them for the nine billionth time about the year her sister had forgotten to turn the oven on for the turkey. It was like being in an airtight room and discovering a gas leak. One's sanity and very survival depended on getting out using any means necessary as soon as possible.
Since then, "Thanksgiving" had been their way of politely and secretly saying to each other, "My life is on the line here, and I need your help
now.”
It reassured her to know the old signal still worked. Especially given the current circumstances.
"That's not one of my friends," she whispered, keeping her eye on the Lupine. "That's awerewolf, one of a couple who kidnapped me last night and have been holding me in the Vircolac club
ever since. You've got to help me escape.”
There was a moment of silence behind her.
"Have you tried hailing a cab?”
Now was not the time for sarcasm. "I'm serious, Noah. This is not a joke. They brought me outfor fresh air, but in a few minutes they're going to take me back to the club and keep me there, and isn't itlucky you found me here where there's one guard instead of in the building down the block, which I'vebeen informed has one of the best security systems this side of the Pentagon!”
She could picture her brother's shrug. "The Pentagon isn't that secure." She sensed rather thanheard a stir of movement behind her, but when Noah spoke again, the words were music to her ears. "Okay. I'm gonna get us out of here. You know the drill. Do what I say when I say it, no questions. Andbelieve me when I tell you that I intend to hear all about whatever it is you haven't told me as soon aswe're secure." His voice moved back and to her right, and Abby knew he was getting himself into
position. "Oh, and you're buying me some really good beer for this.”
Abby would buy him a brewery for this. She didn't care if she had to hock her every last possession and spend the next forty years digging ditches to do it. Maybe if she put enough distance and enough of her brother's weaponry between herself and the demon called Rule, she could get her hormones to settle down and go on a mission to a leper colony in India to atone for the sins she'd already committed and all the ones she'd wanted to commit but thankfully hadn't had the opportunity for.
She sat forward on the bench and tensed her muscles in preparation for movement. Thank goodness only her clothes were borrowed and not her sneakers. Running would be bad enough. Running in someone else's shoes would have been painful.
"On my signal, you're going to get up to stretch your legs. You're going to smile and wave at the
brunette, who's pretty damned hot for a dog, and you're going to hear something on the south side of the
park that's going to make you turn.”
Abby had to remind herself not to nod and to keep her expression impassive while Noah gave
his orders.
"When you do, a guy carrying two big bags of groceries with all sorts of crap sticking out of the top is going to walk between you and her. I can see him coming as soon as he's completely blocking you from her sight, you're going to turn and run hell for leather due west into the trees. I'll be covering your ass. Got it?”
"She's a werewolf, Noah. I can't outrun her. Neither can you.”
"We don't need to outrun her. We just need to put enough distance between us and her that no one will see when I take her down.”
A twist of conscience made Abby hesitate. "I don't want you to hurt her, No. She's actually been
pretty nice to me. She's the one who let me text you.”
"You wanna stay where you are?" he hissed. "I promise I'm not going to kill her, but I have to at least knock her out if you want me to get you away. Otherwise, you're right; she would catch us.”
"Okay, fine." Abby took a deep breath and squared her shoulders. "Ready on your signal.”
"Good girl." She felt the slightest brush of air as her brother rose into a crouch behind her. "On three. One. Two.”
The three was silent, but Abby didn't need to hear it. Her brain screamed it loudly enough all on its own.
She stood and followed Noah's directions precisely. Her hands went into her pockets and sherolled her shoulders as if stiff from sitting. Samantha immediately caught Abby's movement out of the
corner of her eye and looked sharply in her direction. Abby raised one hand in a wave and offered a grimacing smile along with another shoulder roll to indicate the reason for her change of position. Samantha nodded with a half smile of her own and turned back to watch the door of the deli just as the grocery-toting bystander crossed between them.
Abby didn't waste a second. Heart pounding in her chest, she spun on her heels, tucked her head down, and ran directly west as if the hounds of hell were on her heels. If her luck and Noah's skill panned out, hopefully nothing like that would happen.
Nobody screamed, no shots were fired, no alarms sounded, but apparently the change in air
pressure Abby's abrupt takeoff caused or the sound of her footfalls on the turf was enough to tell Samantha something was wrong. Abby glanced over her shoulder just in time to see the Lupine turn her head, catch sight of her fleeing charge, and bellow an order that she stop.
Abby ignored her and ran faster.
"Didn't I teach you not to look back, Ab?" Running with apparent effortlessness by her side, Noah growled the question even as he kept one eye firmly on the Lupine who looked set to launch a hot pursuit.