Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
Rule had a sudden vision of helping her discover her creative side that had his arms tightening around her. Before he could make any suggestions, though, he heard a brisk knock at the door and someone counting down from ten on the other side.
"What the—?”
"Ready or not, here I come." The door swung open and Tess hurried inside. She took one look
at the room's occupants and shut the door behind her. "Looks like you aren't ready.”
"Tess, what are you—?”
"You can yell at me for interrupting later," she said, striding forward and tugging her sweatshirt off
over her head. Beneath it, she wore a black tank top with a round neck and wide straps. She held the
shirt out to Abby. "Here. Put this on.”
"Why?”
Tess raised an eyebrow. "Because while you might have forgotten about the fact that you're sitting there stark naked, I can assure you that that fact will not escape your brother's notice when he gets here in approximately," she glanced at her watch, "thirty more seconds.”
Rule watched the color drain from Abby's face, then return in a rush as she disappeared and then reemerged from the neck of the sweatshirt. It was oversize, so it covered her all the way past her hips, but her legs were still bare and pale in the lamplight.
Tess ushered her to the sofa. "Sit. Put this over your legs." She grabbed a soft knit throw off the
back of the sofa and tucked it around Abby's legs. Nodding decisively, Tess grabbed a book from the coffee table, opened it to a random page, and thrust it into the other woman's hands. "Here. You've suddenly developed an intense fascination for..." Again she paused, this time to glance at the cover of the book. "Pennsylvania's covered stone bridges.”
Leaving Abby dazed but compliant on the sofa, Tess turned her assessing eye on Rule. Then she rolled both of them. "For God's sake, zip up, pal.”
Rule nearly blushed himself as he adjusted and refastened his jeans.
"And next time, try not to leave torn clothes all over my husband's office, will you? He works hard in here and doesn't need you providing fodder for his overactive imagination." Tess grabbed a
handful of fabric scraps and shoved them into a wastebasket before she took a last glance around the
room and nodded in apparent satisfaction. "Good.”
She had barely gotten the word out when the office door swung open again and Noah walked in.
He made one sweeping survey of the room before he turned directly to Rule.
"There's someone here to see you," Noah said, his tone calm and casual. "Big guy, red hair. Won't talk to me. Graham put him in his office by the main entrance." He turned to Tess and raised hiseyebrows. "I looked for Rule in the billiard room, like you said, but your husband told me he'd lastspotted him in here. When the two of you were leaving.”
Tess didn't even stutter. "Was
that
when? I knew I'd seen him recently, but I have the worstmemory for details.”
"Right.”
Rule looked from the witch to the warrior and was glad neither of them was working against him.
At the moment. He cleared his throat. "I'd better go down and see what's going on. Keep an eye on yoursister.”
When he strode out into the hallway, it felt like the closest escape he'd managed in a long, longtime. He just hoped Noah wouldn't notice the unmistakable bruise he'd left at the base of Abby's throat. Like he'd already decided, he didn't want Noah working against him.
Tess made her excuses and left the office right behind Rule, leaving Abby alone with her bigbrother. The big brother who had scared away every male who had ever looked at her for just a fewseconds too long while she'd been growing up. He circled around the end of the sofa and settled onto the
cushion at her feet.
"New hobby of yours?" He nodded to the book in her hands, his expression utterly bland.
Abby looked down at the forgotten prop and tried to make her shrug casual. "Just something to do. You know how bored I've been the last few days." She closed the book and laid it down in her lap. "How's the search going?”
"About like it was when you asked me a couple of hours ago," he said. "You going to snap again when I tell you that?”
"No. I know you're doing your best.”
Noah nodded. "Glad to hear that.”
A moment of silence stretched between them and Abby tried not to squirm under her brother's
gaze, but that was easier said than done when she could feel how wet and sticky she was from her and Rule's recent activities. She really wished she'd had time for a shower before she'd had to face Noah again.
"So," he said, his voice just as bland as his expression, "have you been managing to entertain yourself?”
She drew in a quick breath, then blew it out and slumped against the arm of the sofa. "How did you know?”
He shook his head. "It wasn't hard to figure out, Ab. You and Rule both looked like kids who'd gotten caught sneaking cookies before dinnertime. His hair looked like someone had been running their fingers through it for the last couple of hours, and you have a hickey on your throat the size of a Bradley Fighting Vehicle." His mouth twisted. "Plus, I'm pretty sure that's your bra on the floor next to the fireplace.”
Abby buried her flaming face in her hands. "God, this is so embarrassing.”
Noah snorted. "Why? I'm not Mom and Dad. It's not like I expected you to stay a virgin until your wedding night. Not," he held up a hand, "that I want to hear any details, but I'm not your keeper.”
"That's not how you felt when I was growing up.”
"Christ, Abby, you were eight years younger than me, and the guys in my platoon were horny dogs. You're damned right I told them I'd kill 'em if they touched you.”
"Just as long as you've changed your mind.”
"Well, I'll kill anyone who hurts you," Noah qualified, "so I have to say that on a practical level, I
kind of wish you'd gone for someone a little easier to take down, like a professional wrestler or something. But like I said, I'm not your keeper. And I'm not your conscience.”
Abby grimaced. He'd had to bring up the
c
word. She plucked at the throw blanket's braided trim. "Yeah, well, I don't think anyone's being my conscience at the moment. Not even me.”
"What are you talking about?”
She pulled a face at him. "I just had sex with someone I've known for less than a week, No. My conscience is clearly on the fritz, along with my common sense and any sense of self-preservation I may once have had.”
Noah shook his head. "Abby, from what I can tell, you just slept with an honorable, responsible, capable guy who happens to go all twisted with lust every time you step into the room." He looked at her expression and snorted. "Yeah, I noticed that. I think the staff in the kitchens downstairs noticed that. You're both healthy, consenting adults. What's wrong with that?”
"What's wrong with that?" she repeated and waved a hand in front of his face. "Hello! Anybody home? Aside from the whole known-him-less-than-a-week thing that I already mentioned, there's the fact that the meeting happened when he kidnapped me.”
"He didn't stuff you into a van and call Mom and Dad for a ransom, Ab.”
"So what? He's responsible for me being confined someplace against my will. There's a term for stupid idiot girls who fall in love with their kidnappers. It's called Stockholm syndrome. I'm thinking of changing my name to Inga.”
"You do not have Stockholm.”
Abby crossed her arms over her chest and glared at her brother. "Oh? Then what would you call
it?”
He thought about it for a second. "The hots?”
"Noah ”—
He heaved a put-upon sigh. "Abby, what is this really about? What has you so bent out of shapeabout this? Rule seems to be a great guy. Why are you so freaked out by the idea of having some kind ofa relationship with him?”
Darn it, why did her brother have to understand her so well? She squirmed in her seat. "You
mean aside from the kidnapping thing and the fact that he's not human?”
"Demon or not, he's an improvement over a couple of the guys you've dated. Like that jerk you
were all over in college.”
"Improvement in whose eyes?”
"Anyone with half a brain." He ticked off points on his fingers. "Rule is responsible, intelligent, and capable of kicking the butts that need it. He's also a hell of an interesting guy and according to the whispers of the waitresses in this place, 'sexier than he has a right to be.' So what really has you knotted up like a macramé project gone wrong?”
With a drawn-out groan, Abby let her head fall back against the arm of the sofa and stared up at the plaster-worked ceiling. "You just said it all yourself.”
Noah was silent for a moment, then another one. "Okay, you've lost me. I said what?”
"Oh, for Pete's sake, No, you've seen the guy yourself, haven't you?" She lifted her head so she
could glare at him. "He's like a walking female fantasy. He's big and built and gorgeous. I know the female staff around here must be talking about him, because I've seen them drooling over him.”
"And you have a problem with that?”
Abby tried to laugh, but she wasn't really amused, and the sound reflected that. She spread her arms. "Look at me, Noah. He's like a cover model, and I'm like the girl next door's less remarkable younger sister.”
He wrinkled his brow and stared at her in confusion. "What the hell are you talking about? You sound like a blithering idiot. You're ”—
"He's out of my league, Noah!”
Her bombshell shut his mouth with a clack. He sat looking at her for so long, she wondered if
they'd been caught in some sort of time warp. If she listened hard, she figured she'd hear the crickets chirping.
"I'm sorry," he finally said slowly, "but
what
did you just say?”
"You heard me.”
"I heard something, but it didn't make a whole lot of sense to me. Care to explain?”
She glowered at him. "You're not stupid, Noah, and you're not blind. Well, neither am I. I have a mirror and eyes and I can see that women who look like me don't attract men who look like Rule.”
"You're sure you're speaking English?”
"Don't be an ”—
"No, hold on," Noah interrupted. "You need to stop talking like an idiot. There is nothing wrong
with the way you look. You're making yourself sound like some sort of deformed hag.”
"That's not what I'm saying. I know I'm not ugly. I don't have a wart on the end of my nose, or a
hump on my back, or snakes for hair.”
"Glad to hear you realize that.”
"But I'm average," she continued, talking over him. "I have average features, average hair, an average body. I blend into the woodwork. Men who look like Rule don't find me attractive.”
Noah pointed off toward her bra lying on the floor near the desk. "I'd like to draw your attention to some evidence to the contrary.”
"Maybe he has Stockholm syndrome, too," Abby muttered. "He was cooped up here with me, and he needed to get laid. I was convenient.”
He shook his head. "Seriously. You need therapy here, Abby. You're a beautiful girl. Not every woman needs to be blond and stacked. And not every guy even likes the ones who are. Some of us like
girls who look capable of rubbing a couple of brain cells together.”