Demon Squad 6 The Best of Enemies (8 page)

BOOK: Demon Squad 6 The Best of Enemies
11.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There was no doubt I needed to get Rala out of there and make sure the book was safe, but I wasn’t confident teleporting her away because I didn’t know where she’d land. Canada might be nice this time of year, but I didn’t suspect any place outside of Old Town would be good for a zebra-striped orange and black alien.

I growled, gesturing to Rala as I ripped the tendril from my arm, realizing she wouldn’t be able to shut the portal down with that thing jamming it up. “You need to go.”

Her gaze snapped to mine. “Go? Go where?” There was no disguising her fear.

“Anywhere,” I answered. There wasn’t time to argue. I raised my hand and blasted a hole through the roof on the opposite side of the portal, away from whoever was shooting the place up. Then I fired another blast in that direction. Didn’t expect to do any damage, but all I needed was a moment’s distraction.

“Fly away, damn it,” I screamed, “but stay in Old Town. I’ll find you soon.” My eyes went to the book. “Protect that with your life.”

She hesitated for a heartbeat before I saw her make up her mind and trigger her transformation. Where the mousey alien had been, was now a shifting mass of growing flesh and strange, muscled appendages tearing her clothing into shreds. Rala’s face, already a bit long to begin with, had stretched even more, her jaw and neck elongating almost comically. Jagged teeth erupted from her mouth, which split her cheeks wider and wider. Her tongue lengthened and sharpened into a point, a frothy, reddened tendril that flicked in our direction.

Rala’s arms twisted and grew longer, the elbows snapping backwards as leathern wings exploded away from them like a parachute being deployed. Her eyes were alight with energy, reddened fire crackling in their depths. She clutched to the book in one tiny claw and clasped Chatterbox in the other. His eyes were wide with squishy terror.

“Go,” I shouted, and she did, letting loose a roar as she hunched low and propelled herself through the hole I’d made. A quick gust of wind later, she was gone. There wasn’t time to see how far she got.

Scarlett cut away a tentacle that lunged toward me, and I sidestepped another, but there wasn’t enough room inside the wrecked building for us and the monster spilling into it. The thing had squeezed most of itself through the doorway, its amorphous mass filling up the room, where it had blocked off the back end with its bulk.

Both of us glanced at the fog of war at our back and sighed in unison. We were thinking the same thing. It ran contrary to Scarlett’s nature to engage humans but with all the missiles and bullets flying, they’d pretty much voided that concern on her part. It was risk human casualties or stay in the tight space and be squished by an extraterrestrial squid. She didn’t wait on me before she made her choice. Scarlett ducked a lashing tentacle and bolted through the smoke. I was right on her heels, the weird ululating trill of the creature chasing us out.

We broke into clear air only to have it filled with the murderous bee stings of gunfire. A quick shield around us deflected the worst of it and gave us a chance to see what we were in for. It didn’t look good.

All along the rooftops were men in generic SWAT gear, the spitting barrels of AR-15s trained on us. It took all of a split second for me to figure out who they were.

“DSI,” I muttered, knowing the mass of civilian cannon fodder were the least of our worries. “Watch out for—”

The rest of my warning was drowned out by the earth-shaking stomp of the Nephilim, Jorn. All six hundred plus pounds of big boy charged out of a nearby alley. Bald head tucked low, puppy dog jowls flapping in the wind of his passage, he roared at me, lunch pail fists clenched and ready to throw.

Unfortunately for him, he hadn’t thought his move through.

Even discounting my change of status in the food chain—and I’d kicked his ass as the old me—he clearly hadn’t given any thought to the angel standing at my side who, at the very least, had a bone to pick with his tubby butt.

“Oh. No. Way.” The words sputtered out of Scarlett’s mouth like bean farts.

Jorn had been involved in the
welcoming party
when Scarlett fled Heaven in search of help not too long back. He, Venai, who no doubt lingered somewhere in the vicinity, and their dear departed friend, Zellick—Starbucks bless his dead ass—had jumped my little cousin to try to keep her from finding that help. Even as wounded as she was when they’d come across her, and after they’d added more than their fair share of damage on top of that, she still managed to make it to my house. The rest, as they say, is the History Channel. All three got sent packing with a boot up their rectums.

“Stay behind the shield,” I called out. Mad as Scarlett was, she needed a reminder to remain cool. She was one of those fighters willing to take a shot to give one. Tubbs wasn’t there alone, though, and while the gunfire had slackened, I wouldn’t put it past Rebecca Shaw, DSI’s resident spook and headmistress, to use Jorn as bait.

Scarlett grunted and sheathed her sword as Jorn came at us. Another RPG exploded nearby, blasting a hole in the street on the opposite side of us. I just shook my head at the failed diversionary tactics and kept my eyes peeled for the real threats.

Jorn hunkered low and flung a brutal right hook at Scarlett, teeth clenched in his puppy dog jaw. It would have been a classic Mike Tyson KO…had it hit anything besides air.

Scarlett ducked beneath the blow and pivoted right, digging her left hand into Jorn’s ribs. There was a meaty slap, and he chuffed wind. Scarlett followed that up with a snappy right to the jaw, which spun the big galoot around in a full circle. He managed to stay on his feet, but sometimes being tougher than you are smart is a horrible trade off. Scarlett snapped out a kick and met his spinning face with the full force of her shin. The ephemeral manifestations of her wings gleamed at her back as she turned on the boosters.

There was a sharp snap of something breaking and Jorn was airborne. Like a lump of cookie dough launched from a cannon, he flew backward and slammed into a nearby wall. The whole building shook, bricks tumbling down over his stunned head. He fell beneath a cloud of gray dust and face-planted onto the sidewalk with a rubbery
thwap
.

That’s when all hell broke loose.

Out of the corner of my eye, I noticed a flash of movement low to the ground. I spun that direction to see a manhole cover hurtling through the air, a grinning Venai looming a few yards out. Manly as ever, her muscles rippled beneath the skintight outfit she wore. She said something I couldn’t hear, but the viciousness behind it made it clear she was either cussing me out or practicing her German.

Instinct took over and I leapt away, but my brain kicked in the moment my feet left the ground. It hadn’t been aimed at me. My gaze followed its path, unable to do anything.

The steel cover slammed into Scarlett’s lower spine, the blow damn near bending her backward. She shrieked and dropped, bouncing ugly off the asphalt, her eyes spinning in their sockets.

And then Shaw was in my face. A pale shade dressed in all black, the undead wraith raked her nails across my chest. I twisted away as best I could and fired back, winging a punch at her, but she was gone, having danced nimbly out of the way. Then it was all about the pain.

It was as if she’d injected battery acid under the skin. My nerves screamed with the explosion of agony that surged through my system, eyes tearing up. I stumbled back. Thick black blood bubbled up out of the wounds, festering
pops
giving off a metallic stink. Having never fought the woman before, I didn’t know what to expect, but she’d proven herself dangerous.

Shaw darted in again and ripped my side open as I glared at my injuries, her fingers tracing grooves between my ribs as if she were reenacting the Death Star scene, her nails the rebellious X-Wing scum. She dodged my follow up combo, both shots whiffing, and ducked in low to rip some more of me away.

Fortunately, my subconscious decided it’d had enough. Power welled up on its own and shrugged her aside with a dull burst of energy. Shaw stumbled back, but that was when Venai jumped in.

At least she tried.

As she flew through the air, ready to bash my skull in, a gray-black tentacle flew out of the swirling dust clouds and wrapped itself around her thick waist and stopped her momentum cold. Her eyes jumped from me to the tendril, cold realization settling across her square-jawed face. Terror didn’t make her any prettier.

The tentacle slammed her to the ground as the connected monstrosity floated out into the night’s darkness. Where there had been a smattering of opportunistic gunfire cracking off here and there, there was now silence. All eyes were on the beast as it revealed its dark mass, the last of Baalth’s hideaway crumbling in its wake. It spread its tentacles, a ring of serpentine eyes glaring at me from around a slathering mouth filled with shards of what looked like jagged black glass. The thing gurgled, something wet sloshing in the well of its throat, and advanced. It hurled Venai aside as it did, launching the Nephilim over the roof of the nearest building. She flew away to the fading soundtrack of her screams.

I watched her go without thinking about it, turning my eyes back to the approaching monstrosity only to realize it wasn’t alone anymore. A second creature drifted at is back, my heart ramping up to an uncomfortable rhythm that thumped against my battered ribcage.

“What have you done?” Shaw screamed at me from the other side of the creatures.

“Why does it always have to be me?” I asked, but there wasn’t much in the way of conviction in my voice. On the heels—flipper thingies, whatever—of the first monster, the second turned and headed my direction. Even if I didn’t want to admit it, the things were honing in on me like the last one had.

A quick sniff of my armpit told me I could use a shower, but I hadn’t quite started to funk so badly as to attract intergalactic sea monsters. I assumed it had something to do with the book, but it had been Rala doing all the work, so I couldn’t for the life of me figure out why the damn alien calamari were coming after me.

A waft of mystical energy erupted a short distance away, and I felt the tingling sensation of a dimensional rift being opened. My senses pinged on three people who I knew without having to see.

Katon and Rahim stepped out of Rachelle’s gate on the opposite side of Shaw and the shambling Jorn, who’d finally gotten back to his feet. The portal slammed shut behind them, leaving the enforcer and wizard alone.

“Welcome to the party, folks. I hope you like sushi.”

 

Seven

 

“What have you done, Frank?”

“Is there an echo out here?” I asked, Rahim’s question mimicking Shaw’s.

The whip of tentacles silenced any answer he might have given. I juked back as if practicing Tae Bo for paraplegics, suckered tendrils snapping all around me. The creatures filled the street now, pushing everyone further down the block. The surrounding buildings groaned against the tide of alien flesh, pieces of shattered glass and exterior decorations rained down as they were knocked loose of their moorings. I glanced over and saw Scarlett crawling to her knees this side of the first monster. She was right in its path.

“Shit.”

Knowing how little magic did to hurt these things, I leapt forward, rolling under the slapping tendrils and grabbed my cousin. Katon was there the instant my hands seized on her arm. He glared at me, but there wasn’t time for our pissing match. I yanked Scarlett behind me and pushed her toward Rahim as wet noodles slammed across my back, ripping away tiny mouthfuls of flesh. One lashed around my thigh but before it could tighten, it fell away in pieces.

“Move your ass, Frank.” Katon spit the words out as cleaved aside more of the tentacles that reached for me.

It was like old times—sorta. There was no doubt we were still gonna have our
chat
, but my dragging Scarlett out of the fire had earned me a few minutes reprieve.

Rahim snatched up Scarlett, handing her off to Rachelle, as a sudden burst of gunfire ripped up the asphalt beside Katon and me, the bullets tearing into the closest monstrosity. It jerked and shrieked its displeasure, its voice barely louder than Shaw’s, who pretty much did the same thing.

“No, don’t shoot it!”

Her warning was lost on the gunmen lining the trembling roofs. They went on and on, filling the creatures with bullets. The only thing they succeeded in doing was drawing the attention of one of the monsters. It turned in its slow, inexorable way and started toward the nearest building. Shaw and Jorn stood between it and the men atop the roof. The sorry expressions plastered across their faces made it clear they were well aware of their unfortunate placement.

Rahim’s power prickled the hairs at the base of my neck, but I warned him off. “Don’t waste your time. They’re pretty much immune to magic.”

He stared at me, his power still wafting off him, but he held it in check.

“Gotta improvise,” I said. “Brute force.”

I could still taste the sour nastiness of the other critter I’d tangled with so the last thing on my mind was going
mano-a-mano
with a kraken. So instead, I went and snatched up a lamp post that had been knocked over by one of the RPGs, hefting it up as though it were a baseball bat. It was a little charred, but otherwise structurally sound. As the thing lashed at me, I pulled back my makeshift weapon and cracked it across the skull. There was a muffled
thump
, as if there was something more solid beneath its malleable exterior, and the creature slammed into the ground. The road vibrated beneath us.

Katon darted in and cleaved a few more pieces of squid off before it rumbled and rose back into the air, shrieking. A quick glance across the way told me Shaw and Jorn were stuck. Above their heads, their men kept firing. While the bullets were hurting the thing, they were too small to do enough damage to bring it down. None of them had thought to whip out their RPGs in the panic, so it was just a matter of time before they ended up as squid food. But to be honest, I couldn’t find it in me to care.

Other books

Wrath of a Mad God by Raymond E. Feist
Men in Miami Hotels by Charlie Smith
The Trojan Dog by Dorothy Johnston
Death By A HoneyBee by Abigail Keam
Freed (Bad Boy Hitman Romance) by Terry Towers, Stella Noir
A Spy Among the Girls by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
Calm by Viola Grace
Thicker Than Water by Brigid Kemmerer
Maverick Heart by Joan Johnston