Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
De Santos smiled. "Ah, yes. Well, certainly I will keep my eyes and ears open and let you know if I hear anything. But if I were you, I would not wait by my telephone, as it were.”
"I do not plan to," Rule said, setting aside his empty glass and pushing to his feet. "I had mostly intended to visit you as a courtesy, since I had entered your territory uninvited, but I decided it could not hurt to apprise you of the situation just in case some information happened to knock on your front door and present itself to you.”
The Felix rose as well and offered his hand. "You would be the first to know, my friend. But what are your plans in the meantime?”
Rule shrugged and let his hand drop to the hilt of the sword he'd set beside his chair during their
meeting. "I'll do what a soldier of the Watch is trained to do. Find the fiend and eliminate it, before it has
the chance to do the same to anyone else."
CHAPTER ONE
Abby Baker crouched in her hiding place between two parked cars and cursed the day she was
born.
Well, okay, she didn't curse the day she was born. She didn't curse at all. Good Catholic girlslike her didn't do things like that. Not even when their current situations practically begged for a nice,juicy expletive.
Considering that her main preoccupation of the moment had to do with staying alive anduninjured, getting upset with her own nativity wouldn't have made a lot of sense. Instead, she chewed onthe remains of her right thumbnail and tried to decide who needed a good divine intervention more just
now, her or Terry.
To be honest, if Abby had been ready to take up cursing, it would make more sense for her to curse the day Terry Freeman had been born, since he was the one who'd gotten her into this mess. Or to curse the day she'd been stupid enough to agree to accompany him into the middle of a riot.
A swell in the volume of the chaos surrounding her had her peering out from behind a dented fender and into a normally quiet street in the Garment District. The glow of a burning vacant building made it no struggle to see what was going on, but Abby wasn't certain she could count that as a good thing. The fire department said they had the blaze contained, so it wasn't in danger of spreading, but that
was about the only danger that had been contained in a five-block radius.
Angry figures with angry voices filled the streets from about two blocks behind Abby to the small neighborhood square two blocks ahead. They were protesting the same thing people had been protesting all over the country for the last six weeks: the unbelievable, surreal, and highly disturbing knowledge that the things that go bump in the night were also going bump in the day. Quite possibly in the apartment next door.
It was too freaky to be real, except for the fact that it was, and the entire world had seen thevideo footage to prove it. Less than two months ago, an international press conference carried live on allthe major American networks, CNN, MSNBC, FOX News, the BBC, Al Jazeera, and Television Borneo, for all Abby knew, had revealed that vampires, witches, faeries, werewolves, werecats,werebears, and were-everythings didn't just exist, they voted. And on top of that, they had been secretlynegotiating for the past two years to secure their civil rights with the human governments of the world.
It had been the real-life equivalent of Orson Welles's
War of the Worlds
broadcast, and nothing
on earth had been the same since. In fact, after all of this, news of an alien invasion would likely make the
average New Yorker yawn and roll his eyes.
Maybe her mother hadn't been exaggerating when she called her daughter's defection from their
small town upstate to the big, bad city "Abby's descent into the fiery pit." Even if it had been meant as a joke.
At the moment, it hit uncomfortably close to home.
Right now, the neighborhood around her did look a bit like some distorted version of hell. Or at least of a war zone. Abby wouldn't have been a bit surprised to see a tank rolling down 7th Avenue tonight. In fact, she might even have welcomed it. Soldiers were supposed to help the civilian victims in armed conflicts, weren't they?
The average protester on the streets around her may have started out armed with nothing more dangerous than poster board and a loud mouth—which was more than dangerous enough, thanks—but as night had descended on the city, tempers had shortened and Abby thought she spied more than one makeshift weapon in the crowd. The whole situation had degenerated into a seething mass of blunt-force trauma just waiting to happen.
Abby's free hand rose to finger the small gold and garnet cross she wore around her neck, and she wondered for the millionth time in the last ten minutes how on earth she'd gotten herself into this situation.
C'mon, Abby. This is my big break; I can feel it. You gotta help me.
Terry's wheedling voice echoed in her head and answered her unvoiced question.
Terry Wayne Freeman had been the instrument of her downfall, not because he was a tool of Satan, precisely; Terry was just really good at wheedling. The youngest of five kids growing up in Harlem with parents who worked around the clock to support them, he had developed a formidable charm against which even the strongest soul became powerless. He'd even put himself through his last two years of journalism classes at CUNY by running a three-card monte stand near Times Square.
Abby liked to delude herself that it wasn't the wheedling that got her, though; it was the begging.
Abby, please. Gus says I can take the old backup van and equipment if I can find someone to help me operate it. It's all like ten years out-of-date, but what the hell. Once he sees the tapes, it's not gonna matter. This is my chance. I'm sure of it.
His big brown eyes had pleaded with her, and he'd squeezed her hand like she was the source of all salvation. Sheesh, did she have "sucker" tattooed on her forehead, or what?
Please, Ab. You gotta help me. I'll owe you so big, I'll be doing you favors on the other side of the pearly gates. I swear it. If you'll just please, please, please help me out here.
She was supposed to say no to that?
"Though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.”
Was this really the right moment for a recitation of her grandmother's favorite passage from Corinthians? The "charity" Abby had felt toward a twenty-year-old kid with a Cronkite complex had landed her so close to those pearly gates he'd mentioned, she figured she could have given Saint Peter some fashion tips.
She must have been high on fumes from her correction fluid when she'd agreed to help Terry out. For pity's sake, she was a junior researcher. A glorified gofer! She had no business being in the same room as a TV camera, let alone pretending to operate one. She must have lost her mind.
Abby Baker had always been the boring one, the girl voted Most Likely to Be Forgotten. The kind who gave the old-fashioned term "wallflower" a new lease on life. It wasn't that people disliked her;
they just tended to…overlook her. Part of that had been due to the painful shyness she'd carried with her all through her school days, but part of it was just because she was infinitely overlookable. She had plain features, plain brown hair, and a plain, if slightly well-padded, body. The only unusual thing about her was her mismatched eyes, one blue and one brown, and those tended to make people too uncomfortable for them to dig much past the rest of her plain brown wrapper.
Eventually, in college she'd learned to force herself past the shyness. She had friends, but they tended to be nearly as quiet as she was. None of them lived in the fast lane. Heck, she didn't think any of
them had even made it to the highway; they tended to stick to the pedestrian walkways.
So why in heaven's name had her life chosen this moment to start getting interesting?
A tattoo of racing footsteps had Abby ducking back between the parked cars. She knew hiding
wasn't helping her out of the situation those correction fluid fumes had landed her in, but that didn't mean she was ready to give up the strategy. Or to, you know, stop quaking in fear.
She watched as several sets of boots ran past and groaned when she saw the military fatigues tucked into the tops of them. Apparently, the mayor had made good on his threat to call out the National Guard if the protesters got out of hand again. She couldn't fault the decision, only the timing of it. He should have gotten the situation in hand weeks ago, instead of letting it build to the flash point like this.
She added it to the list of the politician's sins. Since the press had uncovered the fact that the mayor had known about the plan for a massive worldwide supernatural revelation at least a week before the general populace, the list had grown to epic proportions. Abby thought it might have been a good idea for him to have a plan in place from the beginning, just in case the public didn't deal well with the
news of the millennium.
That was just a theory, since she wasn't actually a politician or anything, but she didn't think it sounded unreasonable.
The only thing that sounded unreasonable to her at the moment was spending the rest of the night crouched in the gutter between a couple of old clunkers. Not only did she feel ridiculous, but her legs had begun to cramp up on her too. Terry was still nowhere to be seen, but that didn't mean she couldn't find a way back to the news van and into her apartment in the quiet of Greenwich Village on her own. She was a big girl, twenty-seven, smart, single, and perfectly able to take care of herself. She could even do it without indulging in a self-pity party.
Probably.
Venturing another glance out into the street, Abby grimaced. The sight of the crowds of protesters and the sound of soldiers shouting as they tried to regain order failed to reassure her of her safety.
She looked around a nearly bald tire and scanned the rows of parked vehicles for her getaway car. The van she and Terry had driven here sat at the curb about half a block away, waiting for the perfect escape, taunting her with its nearness. Fifty feet away and it may as well have been fifty miles. At least three dozen very unhappy protesters, some of them brandishing their signposts like clubs, stood between her and it. Since she couldn't get to the stupid thing, she felt rather inclined to resent its existence.