Read The Demon You Know Online
Authors: Christine Warren
mouth. Leading the way into a dark wood-paneled and marble-floored hall, Samantha had instructed the others to stay put and disappeared behind one of the several doors that lined the hall.
Abby watched from her head-down position over the man's shoulder by the simple method of shifting • her upper body to the side and using a grip on her captor's waist to hold her in place. By looking around the man's torso she could get a fairly decent view of the hallway, even if everything was still upside down.
After a few minutes, the door had opened and Samantha had reappeared, dressed in a loose-fitting sweat suit and balancing another bundle of clothes under her arms. She was following a petite blond woman with bouncing curls and big blue eyes.
Those eyes should have looked ingenuous and guileless, Abby thought, to complete the picture of
angelic innocence the woman projected, but instead they were shrewd and thorough as they inspected
Abby from head to toe. Or at least, all the visible parts of her.
Conscious of the grubby state of her clothes and what had to be the rat's nest of her hair and the
way she and the remnants of her dignity hung over the shoulder of a giant, Abby fought not to squirm under the careful appraisal.
"I'm Tess De Santos," the blonde said as her gaze settled back on Abby's. Tess held out a slim hand decorated with brightly polished nails the color of fuchsia flowers. "Rule, you can put her down now. It's not like she's got much chance of getting away if she makes a break for it.”
Abby felt herself swinging through the air and took a moment once her feet touched the floor to let the blood that had pooled in her head settle back where it belonged. And try to get her bearings.
Like that's gonna happen.
She shook the other woman's hand cautiously. "Uh, Abby. Baker.”
The blond woman's hand felt different from Samantha's, cooler and softer, less vibrating withcontained strength. Abby felt the hand tighten around hers, and her eyes widened. Her glance flickedback up to meet one of bright blue. Tess was staring at her as if she could see straight through her eyesand into her subconscious, something Abby wasn't sure she'd be comfortable having anyone do, let alonea stranger in a club populated by the kinds of beings who used to keep her from sleeping at night.
The blonde's mouth curved into a wry smile. "Don't worry, Abby. I promise, none of us is goingto bite. Especially not me. I don't even have fangs.”
Oh, my God. Could this woman read her mind?
Someone inside Abby's head snorted.
Tess laughed. "No, I'm not reading your mind, Abby. Just your face. And let me say, I hope like
hell you don't play poker, hon.”
Releasing Abby's hand, the woman turned to the man who had carried Abby in, the one she'd
called Rule, and nodded. "There's something going on in there, all right, but I can't tell what it is without doing some sort of spell. It's not a surprise, though, given those eyes of hers.”
Always self-conscious about the mismatched colors of her eyes, Abby squirmed. "What do you mean?”
"You have heterochromia—one blue eye, one brown eye.”
"Um, I had noticed that.”
Tess smiled. "It's not a criticism. Personally, I think you have beautiful eyes. But there are some superstitions out there that say having eyes like that makes a human either a witch, a psychic, or an open doorway for passing spirits in need of a body.”
And let me tell you, sweet cheeks, I've never been happier to see a human with your condition in my life. And that's sayin' something.
Abby tried really, really hard to ignore that voice. The one inside her head. That didn't belong to her.
"What is going on is obvious," the man called Rule broke in. Abby looked up—way up—into his face and saw his fallen-angel features tighten into a frown. "She has had contact with a fiend. Enough contact that I strongly suspect it is still with her. The reason I brought her here is so that we can attempt to determine exactly what demon it is.”
Abby blinked, because she really couldn't think of any other way to react. How did things keep
getting weirder? "You people think I'm
possessed!”
What? You thought this was a ventriloquist act?
"Well, I don't think you're psychic," Tess shrugged, "or you wouldn't look so shell-shocked at being here right now. And I know you're not a witch, because I am. Like they say, it takes one to know one. So that leaves us with the possibility that you really have been possessed by something that slipped in through your blue eye and set up shop in your unconscious.”
"Because I have a blue eye?" Abby couldn't help herself. She knew she sounded so incredulous as to border on shrill, but who could blame her? "You have two blue eyes; does that mean you're doubly possessed?”
"Nope. Having two blue eyes is like having two brown eyes. Or two green eyes. Or two red
eyes with yellow polka dots. Having two of anything is fine. And having mismatched eyes when you're Other isn't a big deal, because Others are already attuned to the supernatural. They
are
supernatural. But when a human is supposed to have two brown eyes and one of them turns out to be blue instead, it means something in that human is open to our world in a way that it isn't open in other humans.”
Beside her, Rule shifted impatiently. "It is very kind of you to try and explain things to the girl and try to help her understand her situation, Tess, but can we perhaps hold the lessons later? After we have determined what exactly is inside of her?”
"Okay, once again, I was having a conversation with someone who is not you, so chill for a sec, wouldja?" Abby slapped a hand over her own mouth and felt her eyes widening until they threatened to bug out of her head. "Ahnininteenat.”
Rule turned to look at her with that inscrutable expression. "I beg your pardon?”
She parted her fingers just enough to make the repetition intelligible, but she didn't lower them.
Maybe by keeping them in front of her mouth she could stop anything else horrifying from escaping herlips. "I said that I didn't mean that.”
"Then why did you say it?”
She shook her head so fast she felt a little dizzy. "I didn't. I swear. I mean, well, I did, but I—itwasn't... I mean, it wasn't really me. Saying it. I don't think.”
Rule frowned.
"I think what Abby is trying to say," Tess broke in, sounding drily amused, "is that I had a veryvalid point about the fact that she might be possessed by something. In this case, something with a bit of asmart mouth, it seems.”
Abby peered at her over the tips of her fingers. "You realize that sounds vaguely insane, right?”
Tess arched an eyebrow. "Six weeks ago, didn't werewolves?”
The woman had a point, but that didn't mean Abby intended to give her credit for it. Not whenshe was having to struggle so hard not to schedule a fitting for her own little white coat with the buckles inthe back. "And you can just tell this from looking at me?”
"Like I said, I'm a witch." Tess turned to Samantha and Carly. "So why don't you tell meeverything that happened before you got here?”
Carly finished pulling on her own sweats and shrugged. "You want it unabridged or the
Reader's
Digest
version?”
Was Abby the only one here who had been even slightly disconcerted by the fact that when both
women had shifted back to their human forms they had been stark raving naked? Or who found it unusual to get dressed in the middle of a hallway with the same nonchalance as in a women's locker room?
Judging by the looks on everyone else's faces, Abby guessed she was.
Hey, don't go makin' waves. I gotta say, I been enjoying the scenery.
Swallowing against the urge to start babbling incoherently—and maybe drooling—Abby steppedin front of the werewolves and crossed her arms over her chest. "Look, I'm not entirely convinced thatthis whole thing isn't a nightmare I'm having after a bad batch of moo shu pork, but since I don't seem tobe about to wake up, I'm at least going to dream myself into a starring role here. If you want to know
what happened to me, why don't you try asking me?”
Tess shrugged. "No skin off my nose. I just thought you might still be a little shaken up by the
whole thing. But by all means, be my guest and start spilling your guts.”
Abby could have started off by telling Tess she wasn't feeling "a little" anything. She'd stopped feeling little a while ago. She was now thoroughly…whatever she was…and not seeing her way back anytime soon. But at least that voice in her head seemed to have quieted down for the time being.
Fortifying herself with a deep breath, Abby considered warning Tess to be careful what she wished for before she squared her shoulders and gave a summarized account of her day so far. It felt more like a week when she thought about it, but she was trying really hard not to do that.
She started, just like her trouble had, with Terry's frustrated ambition to be the next Peter
Jennings and related the whole tale of their mission to cover the demonstration. She spoke of theescalating tension that had eventually led to Terry turning tail and running away at the first hint of a threat
on his person, of her hiding place between the cars, and of her encounter with the thugs, the Other, and the werewolves and…accomplice…who had brought her here. By the time she finished, she felt like she'd lived the whole thing over again, and she had to stop herself from looking around for a hidden
camera.
Rule had listened to the whole story almost as intently as Tess, but it was the woman who spoke
first.
"Tell me again about the Other who ran into you.”
"Was thrown into me," Abby corrected. She shrugged. "I'm not sure how much I can tell you. It's
not like I'm up on all the…er…varieties of Others out there. So far, all the stories I've worked on have
been about vampires, Lupines, and witches.”
"The big three," Tess agreed.
"Right. Well, anyway, it's not like I could identify this kid on sight. He looked pretty normal to me, if you discounted the horns on his forehead. Like your average college kid, really.”
"What kind of horns did he have?”
Two months ago, that question would have had Abby searching for the nearest exit and the number of Bellevue's admitting department. Instead, she stood there and searched her recollection for the closest example she could summon. "I don't suppose you've seen
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe!”
"Of course I have! I loved that movie. Not as good as the book, of course, but it was Hollywood after all." The look on Abby's face must have been as confused as the reaction in her head, because Tess
grinned and looked unrepentantly mischievous. "Just because we've seen—or been—real-life examples of the creatures in C. S. Lewis's imagination doesn't mean we can't appreciate his ability to tell a story.”
"Oh." Abby blushed. "Well, in that case, the horns looked like he was Mr. Tumnus's long-lost cousin. From what I could tell, though, his legs bent the right way around.”
"He didn't smell much like goat, either," Carly offered. "If he did have satyr blood, it couldn't have been more than half, if that.”
Tess hummed. "And you said he smiled at you when he knocked you down?”
Abby nodded.
"Well, that must have been when the possesser changed places." Tess said it as if she wereexplaining how to make scrambled eggs.