Demon Master (Demonsense series Book 2) (23 page)

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Authors: Sara DeHaven

Tags: #possession, #Seattle, #demons, #urban fantasy

BOOK: Demon Master (Demonsense series Book 2)
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He ordered an orange mocha, an unexpectedly frou frou drink for a man. They made small talk about the coffee and the neighborhood as the barista made Leander’s drink, then repaired to a table by the front window. There were only three other people in the shop, two women, both in black, chatting a couple of tables away, and a young man in back, typing away on a laptop. The shop was a few blocks down from the center of the action, and apparently too far from the main drag to attract a crowd on a Sunday afternoon.
 

“So you asked me all about my job at the party, but I never really got to hear about what you do,” Bree said, opening a more personal conversation once they were seated.

“I work as a freelance editor,” Leander replied. “It’s not as interesting as it sounds, I’m afraid. I’m not editing the next great American novel or anything. I do a fair amount of non-fiction, mostly online copy. It’s not as easy to break into the fiction side, which I’d really rather be doing, but it pays the bills.”

“Would you consider yourself a language person then?”

“I’m not sure exactly what you mean,” he said, head tilted in thought. “But I’ve always been a reader, and majored in English in college, in spite of it being insanely impractical.”

“No wonder you and Bruce get along,” Bree said, smiling. “Poor English majors, struggling to make a living as language people. That’s basically what I meant, I guess. Some people are more language people, others are more math and sciences people.”

“And what are you?” Leander asked. His blue-green eyes were vivid in the light coming in the window, and he regarded her with such focused attention that Bree started to feel self conscious.

“I’ve always been more of a sciences person. You know, geeking out on facts and putting my foot in my mouth more often than not.”

Leander laughed, and Bree couldn't help but notice again how ridiculously attractive he was. She was starting to get that vibe again that he might be interested in her, but she just couldn’t feature it. He was too good looking, and there was always a kind of unconscious calculation that went into dating. Really gorgeous people usually dated other really gorgeous people. Bree knew she was attractive in her own way, but she considered Leander out of her league.
 

“Well, you haven’t put your foot in your mouth around me yet. Now I can hardly wait,” he replied. He leaned back, took a sip of his coffee, then said, more seriously, “You said something on the phone about needing a distraction. Is it something you want to talk about?”

Bree considered him for a moment, calculating what she should and shouldn’t say. She considered reading him to help her decide, but she wanted to give herself a rest as she knew she was still healing. She decided to opt for a general report and see how he responded.

“I don’t know if you heard about that riot on Alki Beach last night, but I was there. It was pretty scary.”

“Lord, what were you doing there? Just rotten luck?”

She shook her head. “No, I got called in to help.” She glanced toward the two women, and lowered her voice. “I’m an Exorcist, and there was some serious demon possession going on.”

Leander leaned over the table toward her, and lowered his voice as well. “Are you a Keeper then?”
 

“No, not a Keeper. My husband’s best friend Javier is a Keeper, though, and he had someone call me in.”

Leander blinked in confusion. “So, you’re, ah, married?”

Bree colored in embarrassment. She still didn’t have the hang of talking about Seth in the past tense. “My husband passed away two years ago.”

“Wow, that’s terrible. I’m sorry,” Leander replied softly.
 

“So anyway,” Bree rushed on, “it was pretty hairy last night. Doing exorcisms on the fly in a crowd of rioting teenagers was not a picnic.”

“Wait, I think I heard about that on the news this morning. I heard two kids got killed, and quite a few were seriously hurt. And you say there were possessed in the crowd?”

“A lot of possessed,” Bree replied. She felt her Reader sense stirring in response to her uncertainty about discussing this with Leander. It tended to show up unasked when she felt uneasy, but she squashed it back down. She’d just have to make like a normal and trust her judgment. He was looking at her with what seemed like interested concern, lacking in prurience. The look reassured her, and she filled in more details. “Apparently, there have been some outbreaks of these mass possessions, usually of young people. It’s really very worrying.”

Leander lowered his voice further. “Are we talking out of control Demon Master here?”

“That, or maybe some Keltoi agenda,” she answered equally quietly.
 

“Is there anything I can do? I’m not an Exorcist or any great shakes as a Caster, but I have kept up on some basic defensive spells. And I’m a decent Warder and have a bit of Demonsense.”

Bree was touched, both by his offer and by his humility. It was the first time she’d seen his air of confidence slip. She wondered if she was seeing a glimpse of the real Leander. If she was, she liked what she saw.
 

“So if you need someone to stand around and say, ‘There’s one,’ while hiding out behind a ward, I’m your man.”

“Are those your main talents then? I thought I heard Bruce mention you were a Bird Master as well.”
 

Leander gestured out the window, and she saw a group of about twenty pigeons meandering and scratching about on the sidewalk outside the window. Her eyes widened. “So, a strong Bird Master. They follow you around?”

“Unless I make them stop,” he agreed. “It’s a good thing I like the silly little things.”
 

“Yeah, that is a good thing. I’m a Cat Master, and I don’t like cats much at all.”

Leander gave a sudden shout of laughter, making the two women a couple of tables away look up at him. “That’s funny, you know that, right?” he got out between snickers.

She smiled ruefully. “Why does everyone always say that?”

“Because it is!" His voice got quiet again, but the laughter didn’t entirely leave it.
 
“Of course I like birds. I’ve never heard of an Animal Master who didn’t like the animal they were attuned to. It seems like some sort of cosmic joke if you don’t.”

“A bad joke,” she grumped. “And to make things even more hilarious, the damned things follow me around, but I can’t do a thing with them. Daniel got me a kitten for Christmas, and he’s a total hellion. He scratches my furniture, attacks me when I walk by, and bites me when he doesn’t get his way. Nothing I do seems to affect the beast.”

“I have heard that cats are harder than usual for the talent to reach,” Leander conceded diplomatically. “They’re innately independent I guess.”

“That’s putting it mildly.”

He shifted in his chair, and his expression became more serious again. “So, you and Daniel…” he said, leaving the sentence hanging for her to complete. Bree didn’t know what to say in response. Damned good question. She and Daniel what? Wanted to jump each other’s bones? Were partners in criminal activity involving voluntary demon possession? How was she supposed to answer a question she had no good answer to for herself?

“Well, you mentioned he gave you a kitten for Christmas. And I have to say, at the party, I got the pretty clear sense that there was something between you. Frankly, I got the impression you’d just recently broken up.”

Bree sighed. “I guess you could say it’s complicated,” she hazarded. “We’re not dating or anything, but we’re trying to be friends.”

Leander leaned back again, his eyes narrowed a little in speculation. “So how’s that going?”

Bree gave a so-so wave of her hand. “Sometimes it goes great, sometimes not so great. He’s a complicated person.”

“I read that about him,” Leander murmured, eyes lowered.

“You read him? At the party?” Bree asked in some surprise.

“I know, I know, bad manners,” Leander admitted. “Sometimes my Reader sense shows up on it’s own, especially if I’m feeling nervous. And call me a coward, but meeting a bunch of new people I don’t know at a party makes me nervous.”

“You sure didn’t look nervous,” Bree replied skeptically.

“It’s a gift, my dear, it’s a gift,” Leander said insouciantly.

Bree leaned in again and lowered her voice. Having conversations about power issues was so awkward in public. She eyed the women nearby again, and caught one of them ogling Leander appreciatively. “So what level Reader are you? If I may ask?”

“Yes, you may ask. I can read tells just a little, and I’m high power on reading energy. And Daniel reads, well, complicated, like I said. He’s clearly high power in some kind of major way. But he also seems, well, a little dark powered. Not that I’m saying he is dark powered,” he went on, speaking quickly, as if he were a little uncertain talking about it. “Maybe more like, I don’t know, depressed? Angry about something? Or maybe traumatized? Bruce said something to me about him being a retired Keeper. I know those folks see a lot of bad things.”

Bree was intrigued by Leander’s assessment of Daniel. It was interesting to get the read of someone who didn’t already know Daniel, who was coming at it with fresh eyes. “I think it’s some of all of the above,” she confided. She played with her cup as she spoke, turning it around and around in her hands. “I think he did go through a lot as a Keeper, enough that he needed to retire early. Because he’s so high power, I’m pretty sure he was on the front lines for a lot for the worst stuff. Just the little bit of exorcism I’ve done has done a number on me. And he did it for fifteen years.”

“He must have started young.”

“At nineteen, Kevin told me. He’s known Daniel since high school.”

“I’ve heard Exorcists can get a little demon burned, like Demon Masters do, though not anywhere near to the same degree,” Leander mused. “Do you suppose that’s part of why he reads like he does?”

“Maybe,” Bree said cautiously. She was starting to feel uneasy, like maybe she was saying too much. But how often did she get to talk to anyone about this? She’d told Sophie a few of her concerns, but somehow, she’d not wanted Sophie to lose faith in Daniel, especially since they were all trusting him to keep things relatively safe with the demon research. “Have you personally seen that before?” she asked Leander with interest.

“Can’t say I have,” he told her. “But I’m not sure what else to make of Daniel. Of course, maybe he was just having a bad night.”

“Huh, you could say that. But to be honest, Daniel has always read a little dark to me too.”

“Part of his appeal?” Leander questioned, waggling his eyebrows suggestively.

“Oh, stop. No, Daniel’s appeal is that he’s a natural leader, a good teacher, has a good heart, and is smart as hell.”

“And you’re not with him because…”

Bree looked at him helplessly.

“Right,” Leander said, making the word one long syllable. “It’s complicated. I take it from what you’re saying that you’re a Reader too?”

“Tells and energy both,” she acknowledged.

“High power I bet. You know, I have a theory that Readers that can do tells are more empathic than strict energy Readers.” Leander’s focus was back on her in that slightly unnerving way again. She didn’t think he was reading her, not quite, but he was very interested in what she might say in response.

“I guess that would describe me well enough,” she admitted.

“My condolences. I’m not as much of an empath as a lot of Readers, and I’ve always been grateful for that. The little Reader empathy I do have is pretty damned inconvenient at times. I can’t imagine what it would be like to have a lot more of it.”

“It’s like living with your skin off,” Bree said with a direct look. It was nerve wracking, but also, somehow freeing to be talking of this so honestly. “I have to be very careful with it. I’ve really worked hard not to read all the time, it’s just too much. But like you said, sometimes I can’t help it if I’m startled or nervous or just emotional in some way.”

“Would you try reading me?” Leander asked. He was looking at her so intently, and the request was so unusual, that she was taken aback.
 

“You want me to read you? What for?”

“Just as an experiment. Indulge me,” he replied, grinning, and the grin had some kind of edge to it that got her Reader sense stirring even before she consciously considered his request. This was important to him somehow, she could tell that much already. But she wasn’t sure how well she could do at reading him, or even if she should try. It was going to hurt, if nothing else. And how to explain that, that she might not be at her best?

“I overused my Reader sense during the riot,” she improvised, “so I’m probably not at peak functioning.” Leander looked behind her, distracted for a minute by the two women leaving. That left them a little more privacy, which was the other consideration. “Are you asking for a deep read? If so, I can't try that without more rest. Or, obviously, in such a public place.”

“Nah, just a regular old, garden variety read of someone you don’t know,” he told her.
 

“Okay,” she replied slowly. “I guess I can try that.” She remembered that Daniel had asked her to read Leander, that he’d thought something was wrong with him. She’d thought about that on her way over, but she’d dismissed it, partly just in stubborn opposition to anything Daniel had to say. She was irrationally angry with him, as if it were his fault something really was wrong with him.
 

She pushed all that aside, focusing on the man across from her. He was emptying his coffee in one last swallow, then he put the cup down and faced her with a faint, challenging smile. Bree felt her competitive instinct emerge. Being invited by another Reader, up front, to read them was throwing down the gauntlet to some degree. A Reader knew what another Reader was looking for, and had at least a hope of fogging things up. A lot depended on who was the more powerful Reader.
 

She brought up her Reader sense slowly. There was still some discomfort to it, a feeling of stabbing pain behind her eyes, though not severe pain. She persisted, starting with an energy read first. Many Readers couldn’t do one without physical touch, but Bree could usually get quite a lot without that.
 

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