Demon Girl (Keeley Thomson Book One) (20 page)

Read Demon Girl (Keeley Thomson Book One) Online

Authors: P.S. Power

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Demon Girl (Keeley Thomson Book One)
12.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

   “I'm Rob.” He smiled as the information hit.

   Keeley shunted it to the side only taking the main facts.

   He was bi-sexual, was dating Gary and would like to sleep with almost everyone at the table with them. Except Quince, who he secretly hated.

   Keeley decided to like him then, a feeling of warmth rising in her toward the boy. Anyone not a fan of the football captain was good in her book.

   “Nice to finally meet you.” She said, making her voice warm for a moment.

   “Um, Darla? I... can we get together after school? I have a problem, it's a bit embarrassing so maybe...” She tried to will the idea of them meeting alone.

   Thankfully Darla was a demon. She got it instantly.

   “Sure, meet me out front? We can talk after we drop everyone else back at home.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter ten

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   It felt like the next two and a half hours took forever, and the drive would have been unbearable, as anxious as Keeley felt, but she remembered to use her abilities and make herself relax about fifteen seconds later and feel peaceful about the whole thing. It was nice, but a little thread of anxiety kept niggling at her, even as she held her body calm and still.

   Hally put her hand on her shoulder and gave a small squeeze. They were both in the back seat, Gary having gone home with Rob, to work on a “school project”. Eve was in the front seat next to Darla, since for some reason she was more affected by the loss of Marisa than Hally was. Probably because she'd spent more time with her, even taking the mascot home on weekends to watch, so that the little pig wouldn't feel too lonely while everyone else was gone.

   Hally spoke softly, sounding almost shy.

   “Um, Keeley? I know this probably isn't a good time, what with the... thing, you know, the murder, but...” The girl looked embarrassed.

   “Um, well, there's a math test on Friday and if I don't pass I'm going to be kicked off the cheer leading squad. I don't have a lot else in my life, so, would you help? I mean, Darla suggested it, but I never actually asked...”

   “Sure. Of course I will. We can get together tonight and work on that if you want. Um, at the library? Or your house, but...” Keeley knew that the red-head really didn't want to take her friends home to meet the parents, since every time she did they gave whoever it was the third degree about drug use and any potential criminal activity imaginable. It didn't matter to them that most of the kids Hally liked didn't use anything stronger than caffeine, they just assumed that they all lied, since that was what they'd done as teens.

   They hadn't talked about that though, Keeley just knew it, having picked it up the other day. At the same time Keeley could have had her over at her house, but she didn't want to bring an actual cheerleader home in case her dad got ideas. At least if he flirted with Darla it wouldn't be illegal. Just creepy. OK, he hadn't done anything like that and honestly, Keeley knew enough about guys to know that most of them wanted to have sex most of the time, but still, it was her dad. Even if not the biological one. She had to keep herself from shuddering about it.

   “Oh, that's great. I live decently close to the public library, um, can you get a ride? I don't have a car or I'd come get you.”

   Keeley didn't, it was only a few miles so she'd just figured she'd walk it, but Darla laughed from the front seat. She didn't say anything until they got to a red light near Eve's, since they were hitting there first.

   “No worries, Keeley has a license and can drive stick, so she can borrow Humbert. I'll take you there, after we drop Hally off, alright Keels?”

   Where that was, if it was a real thing, would probably be fine. Though who, or given the context, what, Humbert was she didn't know. Not at first, Hally seemed satisfied by the answer, but Eve looked put out. Extra sad suddenly.

   “Damn. I was going to see if I could buy him off of you. I mean I don't have any money right now, but Humbert is a sweet ride. A classic. Just a dream I guess but, you know...” She looked away and didn't say anything else.

   “I didn't know that Eve. No problem, Keeley can take Freida then. We'll set up a deal for Humbert if you want. I'm sure we can come to some kind of arrangement.” Darla sounded sympathetic, but Keeley wondered if this was just the first step in entrapping the girl into a life of servitude?

   Was that how it was done? Just helping get people what they wanted, until you roped them in forever?

   Eve relaxed a little and seemed happier though.

   “Great, now all I have to do is get a license and I'm set.” She said as if that wasn't totally backwards. Being legal to drive first made much more sense, didn't it?

   Hally smiled at her.

   “Um, would six be alright? I can't stay out past nine on week nights, it's a rule.”

   “Sure, do you want me to pick you up at your house or meet you there?”

   “There's fine. I...” The girl stopped talking as they were pulling into the trailer park where Eve lived. The girl really did seem happier now, the prospect of getting a car making her more positive, though she had a dark overtone to her as well.

   Whatever else was going on, she'd miss the pig.

   The conversation then was all about Hally's math test, which was basic math, not even an algebra class. What was being covered was so simple that Keeley nearly felt embarrassed for the girl, who was smarter than that, but then the problem wasn't the math, it was making sure she had enough confidence to pass the test. That, the fear of failure and self-doubt, had been what really knocked her down before, along with some poor work habits.

   They'd run some drills and Keeley would “test” her, showing that she had the skills she needed and it would be alright. The girl knew the material, she just didn't know herself.

   The house Hally lived in was cute, two levels, brown and tan with a little driveway, kind of like Keeley's but with actual plants all around, shrubs and greenery, instead of just a rock front lawn. It was nice, she realized, having green things around, as Hally skipped toward her front door, trying to get inside before her parents could come out and embarrass her. At least Keeley didn't have that to worry about. Her dad may look a little too hard at the cute girls, but it was within what was normal. Her mom was weird, but that was just OCD, everyone understood it when explained, more or less.

   Hally's folks were just off putting it seemed.

   No problem though. The worst they'd do is accuse Keeley of doing drugs and since she'd never so much as taken a drink of wine, that wouldn't do a lot of damage to her.

   Darla suddenly looked a little nervous, but drove carefully. At first Keeley thought it was about the offer to lend her a car, but that didn't make a lot of sense. After all, Keeley was a good driver. Even her parents were fine with the idea of her having a car, they just didn't have money to get her one and she hadn't gotten a job yet. She could now though, since she didn't need to sleep. That was...

   Awesome. It left so much more time to do things she wanted.

   “Um, you wanted to talk to me?” Darla said as if fearing either a breakdown or a break-up. Since it would be more than a little gross for the two of them to need a break-up, it wouldn't be that, would it? So the girl was worried that Keeley might freak?

   That seemed reasonable. It was still hard to believe that this was all really real and not some kind of trick. Maybe a game? But if so it was going way past anything that even a demon would have bothered to set up, wasn't it? Why fix her eyes and fake all the rest just to make fun of her?

   No, she was a demon. It hit suddenly, but she just sighed and remembered to be calm, actually feeling a dreamy peace after a few seconds.

   “What's an Acadian apple? In terms of creatures or beings I mean...”

   “Ah...” The blond didn't look at her but bafflement rippled her across her face. “Mercenaries of a sort, all of them were Durgs. Strong, fast and almost impossible to kill, but only small magics. About what an average human can use. Bloody group of assassins, but efficient and professional when paid for it. Acadian apple was a nickname for them, like “green beret” or “navy seal” is for certain groups now. Why?”

   Keeley could have drawn it out, trying to make herself look clever or like she'd ferreted out the information through actual work, but that wasn't true and would just waste time. Instead she gave a half grin, a slightly grim thing.

   “Because your date to the homecoming dance is one and he killed the school mascot trying to divine the future and whatever he found out wasn't worth it to him. I know it sounds unlikely, but he brushed my hand earlier and I picked up a bit, not everything but...”

   “Damn.” Darla didn't say it loud, but it was heartfelt.

   “Why the heck would one of those be around? My first thought would be for you, but... He's been at Raintree for years. We... demons in general, don't show up in auguries or divinations. So even if he used that... No, it's not you. Me? That hardly makes sense either, but, well, we've never actually touched... That is a little weird. Most of the guys try to make contact if they can, but he's avoided it. I figured he just wasn't into sex or liked boys or something. Both happen after all.”

   The trip ended abruptly as Darla pulled into a storage rental place and tapped the intercom button as the car sat in front of the black wrought iron gate, which was attached to a nice brick wall.

   “Darla Gibson. Here for unit seventeen.” She said firmly, no one answered, but a half minute later the gate rolled to the right.

   The units were all painted to look like little red barns, which was cute if a little over done for storage units, even having individual weather vanes on the top of each. Darla pulled up in front of the one she wanted, which was a garage, not something to store furniture in and got out, working something off her key chain.

Other books

The Cellist of Sarajevo by Galloway, Steven
Trapped with the Tycoon by Jules Bennett
Espresso Tales by Alexander McCall Smith
Armed With Steele by Kyra Jacobs
MayanCraving by A.S. Fenichel
Jade and the Surprise Party by Darcey Bussell
Making You Mine by Elizabeth Reyes
Love Inspired August 2014 – Bundle 1 of 2 by Ruth Logan Herne, Allie Pleiter and Jessica Keller