A Demon's Work Is Never Done: Latter Day Demons, Book 2 (22 page)

BOOK: A Demon's Work Is Never Done: Latter Day Demons, Book 2
9.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Good one, cousin
. I wanted to laugh. Phineas, on the other hand, looked from Yoff to Opal and then back to Yoff. Lifting his chair off the floor, he set it down at his place at the table with barely a thump. The lion's head disappeared, leaving Phineas' food untouched.

"The food is excellent," Phineas muttered.

"Thank you," I smiled at him.

* * *

"It's called the RDS effect," Kory grinned at Anita. "Actually, it's Lexsi's mother's initials—Reah Desh Silver. She's the one who first proved its existence when she was with the ASD."

Anita was puzzled as to why Yoff's spell hadn't been nullified. She was grateful, but mystified by the whole thing.

"That's interesting," Anita chewed her lip as she studied Kory. "Would it have been nullified if he'd aimed the spell at one of you?"

"Yes," Kory and I answered together. "If either of us were threatened, the spell would have been nullified for everyone within our protective perimeter. That's only about twenty feet, tops," Kory continued. "So it's wise not to wander too far."

"Here's my question, then," Anita sounded thoughtful. "If Yoff launches a spell against the enemy within your protective circle, what happens?"

"Uh," Kory looked at me and shook his head.

"I think," I said after considering it for a moment, "that the spell against the enemy may go unimpeded, if the enemy is threatening us. Mom would know for sure, but she's not here to ask."

"What is this race?" Phineas asked. "I fail to understand any of this."

"High Demon," Kory leveled a look at Phineas. "This," he tapped his chest, "is our least threatening form."

"Demon?" I could see he was used to the Earth tales of demons. We weren't those demons.

"They're not the demons you've read about in Earth tales," Opal pointed out quickly. "They're from light-years away and have nothing to do with what you know or think you know."

"How can I trust this?" He was back to being an asshole quickly.

"Because I trust it—and them," Zaria said.

Phineas turned to her, studying her face for several moments before nodding. I had no idea what she'd done to get him to trust her, but it had worked, whatever it was.

"Then I will reserve judgment," Phineas stated, his voice flat. That was probably the best we would get from him until he had more proof.

"We are allies here," Tibby spoke for the first time. "They have already saved my life more than once. If you wish to be suspicious of those who are ready to defend your life with theirs, then go ahead. Align with the enemy. They are suspicious of them, too. Suspicious enough to want them dead many times over. These, my friend," he pointed at Kory and me, "are the biggest threat to our enemy as the enemy perceives it. Treat them badly; you may be left on the outside when they rescue your daughter."

"Is that your intention?" Phineas turned a skeptical gaze in our direction.

"To rescue your daughter and eliminate the enemy?" Kory asked.

"Yes," I nodded at Kory's words. "Those are our intentions. If you want in, now's the time to say so."

"And be honest," Opal warned. "Lexsi will know if you speak the truth."

"She's a guli—a truthspeaker of her race," Zaria told Phineas. "She will know if you lie."

"I want to believe," Phineas admitted, rising from his seat and walking toward the window. "With this, I no longer know what to believe. It is my fear that I will never see my daughter again."

That was truth in anybody's mind.

"I promise this," Zaria spoke. "If it is within my power, you will have her back, unharmed."

Opal drew in a breath. She knew something about Zaria that I had yet to learn. I could almost hear my mother speaking in my mind.
Have patience
, her familiar voice said. I released a sigh and fought the urge to reveal my impatience by asking questions now.

"I never knew Merpeople were real," Farin broke the silence after Zaria's statement. "I dressed up as a mermaid for Halloween once, but I always thought they were a fairy tale."

"You see the truth of it before you now," Phineas sounded civil for the first time since I'd met him. "It is my wish that you keep our secret."

"I know what can happen if I don't," Farin ducked her head. I knew that under the table, she gripped Tibby's hand. She could ruin—if not kill outright—Tibby and his family, including Tibby's grandmother, who held an important position in the California legislature.

One of Tibby's cousins was already dead, because he'd helped save her life. She'd led the enemy back to Kory, too, and he'd been attacked in Las Vegas. Farin had learned a very important lesson about keeping secrets.

"Excuse me," Opal said when her cell phone rang. She walked toward the hall leading to the bedrooms before answering. Only the werewolf and the vampires at the table could hear the conversation past that, and they'd never reveal what they'd heard.

She was back in ten minutes. "I have information from Mason, Thomas and Davis," Opal said. "They and a few others working undercover for the Secretary of Defense have been watching the known locations for body dumps along the Peruvian border. The bodies of children and people from high, remote villages are now appearing at those locations. I don't know about everyone here, but that makes my blood boil."

I understood what she'd said and why she'd said it. Those people were native to Peru. As in the past, they were being systematically slaughtered by the invaders.

"I have images," Opal set a tablet on the table. "None of it's pretty." She'd seen this before, countless times, I realized.

"I have a question," I said as Phineas pulled the tablet to him to examine photographs.

"What's that?" Opal turned dark, troubled eyes in my direction.

"The enemy knows when somebody tries to get in. Do they know when those people who are already there try to get out?"

"I don't think they'd care, one way or the other," Esme observed.

"So they're only killing the people who won't cooperate with them—either to do their dirty work or to move from their homes to make way for drakus seed fields?" I asked.

"Lexsi, I doubt they want anyone to cross the border who might carry tales of what's really happening," Opal frowned. "That's why the President and the Secretary of State can conveniently keep their heads up their posteriors. No hard evidence."

"Except for the surveillance planes getting shot down," Klancy pointed out.

"Then how can we protect the indigenous population while we plan our attacks?" Kory asked. "It was part of my military training," he added, turning to Phineas. "Not only to engage the enemy, but to get as many innocents as we could out of the way beforehand. We learned that lesson when so many comesuli died in Veshtul."

"I may have a solution," Zaria said, her words tentative. "But we really need the cooperation of our High Demons and Secretary of Defense on this."

"Whatever it takes," Kory said, "I will do."

"I stand with Kory," I said. "No matter what."

"Want to have a short planning session before I contact Colonel Hunter?" Opal asked Zaria.

"Yeah." She hunched her shoulders. I could see there was something else there, but she'd spoken the truth. I didn't want to pry into personal affairs, and that's how it appeared to me. Zaria had her own demons to combat, and didn't need curious or idle questions bringing out what could prove painful for her.

I stood and began collecting empty plates while Zaria and Opal walked out of the dining room. Anita, Esme and Kory rose to help.

* * *

"I saw those photographs after Phineas was done." Watson lifted the heavy bowl from Anita's hands and placed it on the top shelf of a kitchen cabinet. "They didn't spare anybody, and it just looks—like genocide."

There was a tightness to Watson's mouth and a frown on his lips. I considered that if the carnage looked that bad to a werewolf, then it had to be terrible. I didn't want to see the photographs. The pictures in my mind made me queasy enough.

"It is genocide," Esme agreed. "Eventually, all of Peru may die, and Colombia may die soon after. Wherever that drug can grow isn't safe from the predations of this evil, if they are not stopped now."

"You know what concerns me?" Kory asked. I turned to look at him; he wore a thoughtful expression and I could see the worry in his dark eyes.

"What's that, bro?" Watson asked.

"That we could see this drug used as a bigger weapon than what they have already—not just here, but elsewhere."

"Let's hope that doesn't happen," Esme whispered, although I could see the idea of it taking hold in her head.

"How will they do that?" I asked. "In Vegas, they had targets. Who else would they target? Their main goal is to take us down. For the moment, I hope they don't know where we are."

"Baby," Kory pulled me against him, "they have rogue High Demons. They can skip anywhere. They also have rogue warlocks and witches, who can send that stuff anywhere with power. I'm concerned that anybody who opposes or speaks out against them could be targeted."

"You're scaring me," I mumbled against his broad chest. "I don't know how to fight this."

You don't have to fight it by yourself, onion
, he whispered into my mind.
We'll figure this out
.

* * *

Opal

"I agree with Opal; something needs to be done," Secretary of Defense August Hunter stated flatly. He and I had a meeting with the Secretary of State and the President at breakfast the morning after my team sent the photographs of the Peruvian killings.

"We'll strongly condemn these actions, since you so unwisely sent these photographs to the UN," Secretary of State Hinson snapped.

"We have an obligation, and you promised them intel," I snapped back at him. "It was on your orders that I sent them."

"When I promised that information to the Secretary General, I had no idea how sensitive the information would be," he hissed. "I expected the deaths of a few dissidents in Peru. Not this," he swept a hand over the hard copies of images I'd provided.

The photographs were scattered across the breakfast table in the private dining room chosen for the meeting. So far, the President hadn't said anything, allowing Wilbur Hinson to carry the bulk of the conversation.

"We'll condemn this publicly," the President's voice was terse. He wasn't about to send troops to the Peruvian border. I knew mortal troops wouldn't have any defense against what had taken over the country, but didn't say it. The President knew about the paranormal employees working under different department heads, but preferred not to talk about them.

Yes, he was prejudiced in that way. He expected the Department heads to utilize those employees; he merely didn't want to hear about it. If I attempted to explain what had invaded Peru and was responsible for the damage and deaths in California and Nevada, he'd likely cover his ears while singing the National Anthem.

I worried about all those things, plus several others. A few prisons were still on my to-do list—prisons that held probable innocents instead of the original criminals. I was concerned about exposing Kory and Lexsi that way. The enemy was desperately attempting to eliminate both; they'd gone so far as to recruit Ra'Ak and rogue High Demons to do it. Who knew what they'd try if Kory and Lexsi showed up anywhere near one of their duplicate prisoners?

I knew the UN was preparing a statement on the genocide occurring in Peru; it would be released in twenty-four hours. A meeting would be called by the Security Council, of which the US was a member. I could hear our representative now, spouting off whatever the President told him to say.

The whole thing sickened me. Already we'd been attacked on American soil. I wondered how many deaths it would take before the President stood up for what was right. The citizens needed warnings instead of reassurances that the events in California and Nevada were isolated incidents.

The other thing that nagged at my mind was that the enemy could still be taking convicts from prisons. I hadn't gotten intel on that for more than a week and worried that the enemy was getting better with their replacements, and better at controlling wardens and guards.

"I'm concerned that those in Peru may align themselves with our other enemies," I said before I could stop myself.

"Which enemies? That's preposterous," Wilbur said.

"Which enemies would like to do us the most harm?" I countered.

"This is ridiculous and I have a meeting in fifteen minutes," the President shoved photographs in my direction. "Either bring me hard proof that our enemies are collaborating with these idiots in Peru or don't mention this to me again. Peru is in South America, for fuck's sake. Not our problem."

"Until it becomes our problem," Colonel Hunter rose from his seat. I understood he was seething; I was, too. Wilbur Hinson had become the poster child for those whose heads were buried in their asses.

"Thank you for meeting with us, Mr. President," I nodded and refused to meet his eyes. When this blew up in his face as it surely would, he'd be looking for someone to blame. He and Hinson would be happy to place that blame on Colonel Hunter and me. After all, we were the thorns in his side, leftovers from the previous administration. The Directors FBI and CIA were his appointees and his ass had their lip prints all over it.

Other books

Souls Aflame by Patricia Hagan
Tenth Commandment by Lawrence Sanders
Her Rebel Heart by Alison Stuart
Pull (Deep Darkness Book 1) by Stephen Landry
A Daddy for Dillon by Bagwell, Stella
Scare School by R. L. Stine
Swift Justice by DiSilverio, Laura