26
See No Evil, Hear No Evil
AT first she looked like an ordinary woman, tense and wary
of the strangers standing in her doorway, but a woman
nonetheless. She was wearing a cotton chemise that
reached her knees and would have been pretty had it not
been torn, blackened, and stained with blood. Her long,
dark hair was a tangled mess around her shoulders and
she crouched by the grate of the fireplace grabbing fistfuls
of soot and spil ing it onto the bare boards. Her knees were
scuffed and cut as if she had dragged herself across the
floor. Had I been physical y present my first instinct would’ve
been to go to her aid, help her to her feet, and comfort her.
Instead I looked to Ivy and Gabriel, but they didn’t move. I
realized why when I focused on the eyes looking back at us
and saw that they no longer belonged to Sister Mary Clare.
The others saw it too, and Mol y let out a stifled cry and
edged behind Xavier, whose face reflected mixed
emotions. His expression shifted from pity to disbelief to
disgust and back again in a matter of seconds. This was
something he’d never had to deal with before and he wasn’t
sure what the appropriate response was.
The young nun, who couldn’t be more than twenty, was
crouched on the floor, looking closer to an animal than any
kind of human. Her face was twisted grotesquely, her eyes
huge, black, and unblinking. Her lips were cracked and
swol en and I could see the points where her teeth had
pierced right through the flesh. A row of intricate symbols
had been branded into the skin on her arms and legs. The
room itself was in no better shape. The mattress and linen
had been torn to shreds and scratches were gouged into
the floor and ceiling. Words were scrawled on the wal s in
an ancient script I couldn’t decipher. I wondered for a
moment how the wal s had come to be smeared with coffee
until I realized it wasn’t coffee, but blood. The demon
cocked its head to one side like a curious dog, and its
gaze lingered on the visitors. There was a long, deep
silence, until the demon snarled again, gnashing its teeth.
Its head darted rapidly from side to side, looking for a point
of escape.
Ivy and Gabriel moved in tandem, ushering the others
back and sweeping into the room. The demon’s eyes
widened as it spat viciously at them. The saliva was tinged
red from having bitten its tongue. I noticed that it didn’t need
to blink and could focus with frightening precision. Ivy and
Gabriel joined hands and the demon screamed as if this
gesture alone caused intense pain.
“Your time on this earth is over.” Gabriel fixed his
steel ike gaze on the creature, his voice ful of
righteousness and authority. The demon stared for a
moment before recognition dawned and its face cracked
into a hideous smile. I saw that Sister Mary Clare’s teeth
had been ground into uneven stumps.
“What are you going to do?” the demon jeered, its voice
singularly high-pitched and scratchy. “Vanquish me with
holy water and crucifixes?”
Ivy’s demeanor did not change. “Do you real y think we
need toys to destroy you?” she asked in a voice like water
flowing over river stones. “The Holy Spirit is alive in us. It wil
soon fil this room. You wil be cast back into the abyss from
which you sprang.”
If the demon was alarmed, it didn’t show it. Instead, it
deftly changed the subject. “I know who you are. One of your
kind belongs to us now. The little one …”
Xavier looked as if he were about to step forward and
take a swing at the creature, but Mol y gripped his arm and
with some effort, he turned his face away. “It knows our
weaknesses,” I heard him murmur to himself like a mantra.
“It plays on our weaknesses.” Xavier may not have had any
direct experience with possession before, but he’d learned
enough from Sunday School to know how the Devil worked.
“It’s funny you should mention that,” Gabriel said to the
demon. “It’s exactly what we wanted to talk to you about.”
“You think I’m a whistleblower?” the demon hissed.
“You wil be,” Ivy replied pleasantly.
The demon glanced over her shoulder and its eyes
flashed. Suddenly, a blast of wind lifted Xavier off his feet
and threw him against a wal . He slid onto the ground and to
my horror an invisible force began to drag him across the
floor.
“Stop it!” Mol y screamed, reaching for him.
“Mol y, no!” Xavier yel ed and gritted his teeth as he was
flung against the steel bed frame. “Stay there.”
“You threaten, I threaten,” the demon taunted as Xavier
struggled against its hold.
“Enough.” Gabriel thrust his palm forward in a pushing
motion and the demon cried out and seemed to crumple in
pain. It was obvious whose power was dominant. “We’re
not interested in playing games,” he said darkly. “We want
to find a portal.”
“Are you out of your mind?” the demon growled. “Do you
have a death wish?”
“We have come to reclaim our sister,” Ivy said. “And you
wil tel us how to find her.”
“Make me!” the demon spat.
“If you insist.” There was a sound like muffled fireworks
and then streams of white light began to pour from Ivy’s
fingertips. As she flexed and twisted her fingers the strands
of light seemed to enter into the body of the demon like
electric shocks. It let out a feral howl and clawed at its torso.
“Stop!” it screamed. “Stop! Stop!”
“Wil you tel us what we seek to know?” Ivy asked. She
turned her palm slowly from side to side so the beams of
light twisted inside the demon and it shrieked even louder.
Ivy was choosing her method careful y. I knew the Holy Light
would sear the demon, but leave Sister Mary Clare’s body
completely unharmed.
“Yes,” it screeched. “I’l help you. Stop!”
Ivy snapped her hand into a fist and the light vanished.
The demon col apsed on the floor exhausted.
“Easily convinced, aren’t they?” Gabriel muttered.
“No sense of loyalty,” my sister replied with disdain
before rounding on the creature. “Where is the nearest
portal?” she demanded.
“It doesn’t matter,” the demon croaked. “You’l never get
through it.”
“Answer the question,” Gabriel said. “How did you get
here?”
“Why don’t you just send me back?” the demon tried to
stal . “That’s what you’ve come to do, isn’t it? Are you real y
wil ing to let me fester inside this poor girl just to fulfil your
own agenda?” It clicked its tongue as if to indicate
disappointment. “Some angels.”
Gabriel made the Sign of the Cross very slowly and
deliberately, and when he finished, he seemed to catch
something in his hand. He drew back his arm and launched
it at the demon. Although it was invisible, the thing col ided
with the demon with incredible force and it yelped, spraying
foam from its mouth across the floor.
“There’s a place cal ed Broken Hil down in Alabama,” it
gasped. “There’s a train station there. Years ago there was
a train wreck. Sixty people died. The closest portal is
there.”
“Shouldn’t there be a portal in Venus Cove?” Xavier
snapped. “The one Jake took Beth through?”
“Powerful demons can conjure portals at wil ,” Gabriel
replied. “That one was only temporary to serve Jake’s
purpose.”
Xavier glanced at the demon on the floor. “But how do we
know it’s tel ing the truth?”
“If there was a train wreck in Broken Hil it could be true,”
Ivy said. “Traumatic events causing loss of innocent lives
can result in the formation of a portal.” She hesitated. “Stil ,
it could be lying. Gabe, can you get inside its mind—see if
it’s tel ing the truth?”
A look of repulsion crossed Gabriel’s face as he
contemplated reaching inside the mind of such a creature.
He’d told me once that a demon’s mind was thick and
clogged with a sticky black substance like tar. That’s why
exorcisms were so draining for the afflicted human beings.
Once that stuff got inside of you, it stuck. It clung to you like
glue, infecting you and spreading like a fungus until every
inch of you belonged to them. Some humans didn’t survive
the separation. It was like tearing apart two souls; only one
half didn’t want to be separated. It was a vicious tug-of-war
with the human body as the rope. I knew that once the
demon had surrendered the information my siblings
needed, they would have to tear it out of Sister Mary Clare. I
didn’t want to watch, but I couldn’t bring myself to turn away.
Gabriel closed his eyes and the demon clutched the sides
of its head as if a sudden migraine had come on. A few
moments later, my brother withdrew, disgust written al over
his perfect features.
“It speaks the truth,” he said.
“So if we find the portal we’l be able to get Beth back?”
Xavier asked.
“If only it were that easy,” the demon cackled. “You’l
never get through it.”
“There is always a way,” said Ivy in a level voice.
“Oh, yes,” the demon snickered. “Though I wouldn’t try
and trick your way in. You may find you’re not able to get
out.”
“We don’t resort to tricks,” Gabriel said.
“You could always bargain her back,” the thing
suggested, its lip curling maliciously as its empty, black
eyes fel on Xavier. “Trade him for her. And you’d do it,
wouldn’t you, boy? I can see it in your eyes. You’d sacrifice
your soul to save her. It’s a high price to pay for something
that isn’t even human. How do you know she even has a
soul? She’s just like me—except working for a rival
corporation.”
“I’d shut my mouth if I were you.” Xavier scraped his
walnut-colored hair away from his face and I caught a flash
of my promise ring on his hand. In his black T-shirt and
jeans he didn’t look celestial like my brother and sister, but
he looked tal and strong and thoroughly pissed off. I could
tel he wanted to wipe the smirk off its face, but Xavier
could never bring himself to hit a girl, even one who was
possessed.
“Hit a nerve, have we?” the demon crooned.
I thought Xavier might snap, but instead, his tense
posture relaxed and he leaned against the wal , surveying
the creature cool y.
“I feel sorry for you,” he said slowly. “I guess you wouldn’t
know what it’s like to be loved or wanted by anybody.
You’re right, though; Beth isn’t human, because humans
have a soul that they struggle al the time to stay in touch
with. Every day is a battle for them to listen to their
conscience and do the right thing. If you knew Beth at al
you’d know that she doesn’t have a soul, she’s
all
soul.
She’s fil ed with it, more than any human possibly could be.
You wouldn’t know that because emptiness and hatred is al
you’ve ever known. But that won’t win out in the end—you’l
see.”
“You’re very cocky for a mere human,” the demon replied.
“How do you know fate won’t tempt your soul to become as
black and twisted as mine?”
“Oh, I don’t think that’s going to happen,” Ivy said with a
smile. “His soul is already marked as one of ours. Xavier’s
got a reserved seat in Heaven.”
“Now, if you don’t mind,” my brother cut in smoothly.
“We’re done making smal talk.”
The demon seemed to know what was coming and leapt
up, arching its back like a cat and hissing furiously. Mol y,
who was hovering in the doorway, ducked as if she
expected objects to begin flying around the room.
“Is this the part where you start chanting in Latin?” she
asked tremulously.
Gabriel’s gaze flickered toward her. “Get under the bed,
Mol y. You don’t need to witness this.”
“It’s okay,” Mol y shook her head. “I’ve seen
The
Exorcist.
” My brother gave a humorless laugh. “This is a
little different,” he said. “Humans need prayers and rituals to
send a demon back to Hel . But we’re stronger than that.”
He held out his hand and Ivy entwined her dainty,
peachcolored fingers with his. At exactly the same moment
their wings opened, spanning the width of the room and
casting long shadows on the wal s. The others watched in
astonishment as light began to blaze from their
outstretched wings to form a cloud around them. Their