For a Few Demons More (34 page)

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Authors: Kim Harrison

BOOK: For a Few Demons More
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I swallowed. “Yeah, and you can't go misty to avoid my foot hitting your crotch either.”

Tilting his head, Al stepped back. “There is that.”

“Who is Newt?” Trent said, reminding me I wasn't alone, and I jumped when he touched my elbow. “Morgan. I want to know right now if you practice demonology!”

Jenks darted from my shoulder, anger hard on his tiny features. “Rachel is not a practitioner!” he said hotly, easily dodging Quen's attempts to get him away from Trent. Quen dropped his hand, probably only now realizing how dangerous a small flying thing with a sword could be.

Trent's eyes had never left mine, trusting that Jenks wouldn't hurt him. His question had been laced with an iron demand for an answer. Fear lay under it, but stronger than that was anger at me for dabbling in demons. My eyes returned to Al. “Newt is a very old, crazy demon. I bought a trip home from her when your
friend
dumped me there.”

“Her?” Trent stammered, panic sliding behind his green eyes. “There are no more female demons. We killed the last few before leaving the ever-after.”

“Well, you missed one,” I said, but Trent wasn't listening, having been pulled aside by Quen. The older elf was very distressed and I wondered what was bothering him. Al? Being trapped in my circle? The threat of Jenks? Ellasbeth's wedding being crashed by a demon? All of the above?

But then my own fear started to tighten about my spine. I had shoved Newt out of my thoughts a few days ago.
She'd been looking for the focus. Shit. What if Al wants it to pay off his new debt to her?
He had said the curse to do this was expensive. Was he the one killing the Weres trying to find out who had it?

“Why are you really here?” I breathed. If he was after the focus, there wasn't much I could do to stop him once he realized I had it.

My question seemed to delight Al, and he simpered, adjusting the cuffs of his gloves. “I'm here for my best friend's wedding. I would have thought that was obvious.”

Damn it. It was the focus. I had to call Minias. I'd rather get a mark removed for it, not hang on to it until the school bully took it from me and I got nothing. But if Al got it, it would hit the streets as soon as the sun went down, sold to the highest bidder, and there we would be with an Inderland power struggle, courtesy of me.

My pulse was fast, but standing in this circle wasn't doing anyone any good. “Ready, Jenks?” I said, and the pixy dropped to hover beside me. He nodded, features tight as he shifted his grip upon his sword. Eyes narrowing, I reached my hand out and broke the circle.

Quen exploded into motion, jerking Trent behind him. “Morgan!” he shouted, and I rounded on him.

“Relax!” I snapped, releasing some tension. “He isn't going to do anything. He's here for a wedding.” I glanced at Al, seeming eminently controlled and still standing right where he had been. “If Al wanted us dead, we'd have been in the ground a week ago. He's been here since the invitation hit Lee's mailbox.” Pulse hammering, I turned to Al. “Am I right?”

Eyes hidden behind his glasses, the demon nodded.

“He's harmless,” I continued, as much to convince myself as Trent and Quen. “Well, not as lethal, maybe. If he's in Lee's body, he doesn't have access to all the curses he's stored in himself over the past millennia. He's only as good as Lee is—was. Until he spends some time in the kitchen anyway. And he's going to follow the rules of our society, or he's going to end up in jail, which won't be any fun.” Forcing my jaw to relax, I arched my eyebrows, wishing I could do the one-eyebrow thingy. “Will it?” I said.

Al inclined his head, and Quen almost jumped him, catching his movement in a sharp motion. “How fast you learn,” the demon said, scowling at Quen's mistrust. “We must sit together at dinner. We have so much to chat about.”

“Go to hell,” I said softly. This was a crappy birthday, forty thousand notwithstanding.

“Not until I kill you, and though I will, it's not going to happen today. I like your yellow sun.” Tugging up the sleeve to his jacket, he glanced at his watch. “I'll see you inside. I do so want to meet your darling little-woman-to-be, Trenton. Congratulations. It is an honor to stand up with you.” His smile widened to show perfect, simply dazzling teeth. “Fitting,” he drawled.

I felt a chill as I remembered Ceri. Oh, man…I had to call her. Al was loose.

Steps jaunty, Al headed up the stairs to the door, oohing and aahing at the architecture and detail work. His body language looked wrong on Lee's body, and with the strength of the ley line running through me, I felt like I was going to throw up.

“Quen,” Trent said, clearly alarmed. “He can't go in there, can he?”

I pulled out my phone, then put it away, since Keasley didn't have a
phone and Ivy wasn't home to relay a message to them. “He can,” I said, remembering how Newt had controlled me while I was on holy ground. “Besides, only the stage and altar are sanctified, remember?” The basilica hadn't been fully sanctified since the Turn to allow Cincy's more important denizens to partake of life's little ceremonies. The altars were still blessed, just not the entryway and the pews.

We all watched Al open the door. Turning, he waved to us, then passed the threshold. The door shut behind him. I waited for something to happen. Nothing did.

“This isn't good,” Quen said.

I choked back my burst of laughter, knowing it would come out sounding hysterical. “We…ah, had better get in there before he does something to Ellasbeth,” I said, wondering if we might all go out for a beer first. Or a six-pack. In the Bahamas.

Trent rocked into motion an instant before Quen, and with Jenks on my shoulder again, I fell into step beside him. Trent dropped his head for an instant, then pulled it up to me. “You aren't a demon practitioner?” he asked as we took the first steps up.

I put a hand to my stomach, wondering if this day could get any worse. “No, but they seem to practice me.”

The twenty-four-piece band Ellasbeth had hired was taking a break, leaving the muted intensity of a single classical guitar as a pleasant background to the self-congratulatory conversation at the far end of the table. Having long since lost my upright posture, I had an elbow on the pristine linen tablecloth, my fingers rolling the stem of my wineglass back and forth, wondering if I could bill Trent for the forty thousand even if Al didn't do anything.

The rehearsal dinner had been way over the top. I could have lived for a week on what had been put in front of me, and the waste bothered me. But that paled in comparison to my discomfort during the dinner conversation. Ellasbeth had shoved me, Quen, and Al as far from herself as she could. I was sure if she could have gotten away with it, the prickly woman would have put us in a different room. Al had earned his spot because of fear, I out of spite, and Quen to keep an eye on both of us.

Everyone at our end of the table was long gone; the ring bearer and his parents, the three flower girls and their folks, the ushers, and the woman who was going to sing were all laughing in a fawning circle about Ellasbeth. Trent was sitting by her. He looked tired. Maybe he should have taken more interest in the wedding arrangements and made sure that some of his friends were invited to balance out Ellasbeth's. Maybe he didn't have any friends.

Right now Al's chair was vacant, he having excused himself to go to
the little boys' room. Quen had gone with him, and I didn't have anything to do until they returned. I thought the idea of a demon using the facilities was odd, and I wondered if Al was a living being and used to it, or if going to the can was a new and exciting experience.

Jenks had spent the evening in the chandelier avoiding Mrs. Withon. I found myself hoping he might pix Ellasbeth so we could leave. Tired, I raised my glass and sipped my wine. I was going to pay for it tomorrow, but damn, it was one of the best red wines I'd ever tasted. I would've looked at the label, but I knew it was far out of my reach, even without the allergies.

My gaze slid to Ellasbeth, and I rolled the possibility around in my thoughts that she knew I was allergic to it and had served it intentionally. As if feeling my gaze, she turned to me, smug as she chatted with her friends. Her face shifted expression for an instant when I heard Al's voice in the hallway. The demon in Lee's body came in laughing with the band trailing behind him, and I worried until I saw Quen with him. From the chandelier came Jenks's soft wing chirp, letting me know he had seen them.

Quen met my eyes, and I relaxed, taking another sip of wine and setting it out of my reach. It had surprised me how easy it was to work with the elf. We complemented each other, seeming to have found a comfortable body language that usually took me several runs with a person to develop. I wasn't sure if that was good or not.

The band settled themselves—picking up seamlessly with soft forties jazz when the guitar ended—and I clapped with the rest when a woman in a sequined gown started singing “What's New?” I slumped back, then started when I felt someone's hand on my chair.

Heart in my throat, I spun, my alarm falling into self-disgust. It was Lee, or Al rather, and his normal-looking brown eyes glittered in amusement. Pulse still fast, I sent my gaze to Quen. The older man smiled, seemingly enjoying that I had been surprised.

“What do you want?” I said, shoving Al's gloved hand off the back of my chair.

His gaze lifted to touch upon the small dance floor as Trent and Ellasbeth moved to it. Great. They were dancing. I'd be here all night.

Smiling like…well, the devil, Al gestured as if inviting me to dance. My breath puffed out of me and I crossed my knees. “Right.” No way was I going to dance with Al.

Lee's striking Asian features melted into a smile. “You have something better to do? I have a proposition concerning that nasty mark of mine you're wearing.”

My heart gave a pound, then settled. I felt every muscle tighten. Getting rid of my demon marks was high on my to-do list. But I was sure whatever he had in mind wouldn't do me any favors. Still, talking to Al here was better than doing this on the bus ride home, or my kitchen, or my bedroom if he decided to follow me. I glanced up to Jenks in the chandelier, and the pixy shrugged, his wings a dull orange. “Why the hell not,” I muttered, standing up.

“That's the spirit!” Al dropped back a step to elegantly offer his arm.

I thought about my splat gun, then left it in my bag under the table. No need to put it in Al's reach. “Jenks is up there,” I said, edging past Al to reach the dance floor without his help. “You do anything funny and he'll pix you.”

“Oh, I'm shivering in my little silk boxers,” Al scoffed.

“You've never been pixed,” I said, and a frown crossed his brow, making my guess that he couldn't go misty to avoid pain and discomfort seem likely. My feet were on the parquet floor, and he put out his hand, waiting for me to take it.

Suddenly I realized I was standing face-to-face with a demon—and he wanted to dance.
O-o-okay,
I thought, thinking my life couldn't get any more chancy. Al huffed impatiently, and I slid my hand onto his. The white cotton of his glove was soft, and I stifled a shudder when his free hand went to my waist. If he tried to get rid of the air between us, I was going to slug him.

“There,” he said when my hand lightly touched him and he shifted us into motion. “Isn't this nice? Ceri danced very well. I miss that.”

Nice? It was as nerve-racking as all hell. My pulse was pounding, and I was glad he had on the gloves, not only because I didn't want to touch him but because I was starting to sweat. He had said something about getting rid of my mark, though, so I'd listen. “What—” I croaked, then cleared my throat, embarrassed. “What do you want?”

“This is a rare opportunity,” Al said, smiling at me with Lee's beautiful teeth. “How often does one have the chance to dance with her savior amid the glitter of elves?”

I sighed in impatience. At least I told myself it was impatience. The
reality was, I was starting to get a little light-headed from not breathing. “I'm out here for one reason only,” I said, moving stiffly with him in time with the music. “And if you don't start talking, I'm going back to arranging the sugar packets.”

Al's hand tightened on mine, and he shifted my weight. I bobbled when he spiraled me out to a swoop of music. Tense and gasping, he yanked me back, and I hit him, a puff of burnt amber assailing me. I pushed, but he had me close. Eyes wide, I tensed to stomp on his foot, but my muscles went weak when he whispered, “I know you have the focus.”

His breath moved my hair, and this time when I struggled, his grip loosened. Pulse hammering, I put air between us. His hand on mine pinched, and, conscious of people watching, I put my hand back atop his waist.

“I can smell it on you,” he murmured. “Demon magic, older than you, older than me. It marked your hand where you grasped it. It stains everything you touch, a trail that the knowing can follow like the dusting of prints.”

I swallowed, moving woodenly to the slow jazz. “I'm not giving it to you,” I said, hardly breathing. If I did, it'd be on the streets by sunrise. “You kill me and you'll lose your lease on Lee's body and have to go back. You hurt me and Newt will put you in a bottle. Let go of me.”

Charm flowed from Al, looking wrong coming from Lee's body. “Yes. Let's do that,” he said, his voice wispy with distraction. “Let's call Newt. She will show up right here and put me in a bottle. You'd like that, wouldn't you?”

I fought to not twist my fingers from him, but I knew he wasn't going to call my bluff. He was scared of her, too. Besides, I didn't know how to call her. I'd have to go through Minias, and I knew he wouldn't agree to it, whether he owed me a favor or not.

“I want something,” he whispered, his eyes finding mine. “And I'll pay you well for it, but it's not the focus. Wouldn't you like that? To be free of my mark? To be free of me?”

I stared at him as we danced. He wanted something from me? Not the focus? Feeling ill, I moved my hand to his shoulder. My unfocused gaze on Ellasbeth and Trent shifted as Al turned us. I felt disconnected, short of breath. Al leaned in, and I did nothing, numb.

“I don't want the focus,” he breathed, his words ruffling my hair, “but since you brought it up, you are in a spot of trouble.” He hesitated, coming even closer. “I can help you there.”

Jerked out of my thoughts, I pulled back. His gloved fingers gripped harder, and his eyes were stern with the warning to stay where I was. “I don't think you can keep it a secret much longer,” he cautioned. “And, you aren't strong enough to hold it on your own once the world knows you have it. What will you do, silly girl?”

“Don't call me that,” I said, then went cold as I put it together. He didn't want anyone knowing I had it? Damn. He
was
the one killing the Weres.

Alarmed, my eyes widened and I twisted my hand, only to have his grip tighten until it hurt. “You're killing Weres to keep it quiet that I've got it?” I said, my dance movements going stiff. “You killed Mr. Ray's secretary and Mrs. Sarong's accountant to warn them off?”

Throwing back his head, Al laughed. Eyes were on us, but as in high school, where the football star gets away with whatever he wants, no one intervened, frightened.

“No,” Al said, confidence flowing from him as he reveled in the power he had simply by what he was. “I'm not killing them to protect you. That is delightful. I know who is, though. If they should find it, they would have no qualms about killing you for it. And that would really piss me off.”

My first impetus to get away from him faltered. “You know who's killing the Weres?”

As he moved us to the music, he nodded. His black bangs had fallen before his eyes, and I could tell it was bothering him, but he wouldn't let go of me. I didn't think he liked Lee's hair, and I wondered how long it would be until he invested some kitchen time in making a curse to change his looks.

“Do you want to know who?” he said, tossing his head to clear his vision. “I'll tell you. For an hour of your time.”

First my mark, and now the name of the murderer? “An hour of my time,” I said, imagining how that hour might go. “Thanks, but no,” I said dryly. “I'll figure it out for myself.”

“In time to do anything about the next death?” he mocked. “Is a life worth sixty minutes of your time?”

Tensing, I glared. “I won't feel guilty for that,” I said. “And why do you care?”

“It might be someone close to you,” he mocked, and fear spiked through me, even as the music changed and the singer started in with “Crazy He Calls Me.” I couldn't think as the music swelled, and I moved without resistance when Al danced us away from Trent, who was trying to eavesdrop on our conversation.

“I need a favor,” Al said, lips barely moving and his voice heavy with embarrassment. “Do this one thing and I'll take the focus off your hands. I'll even promise to keep it until after you die. You'll never have to see the wars, the pestilence.” He smiled, sickening me. “It's a no-brainer.”

A golden age of peace that would last as long as I lived. Right. As soon as he got it, he'd kill me. With Ceri's help I might be able to make an ironclad deal to keep myself alive, but it was a false hope, and it made my chest hurt. I wanted the simple answer so badly.

I managed to swallow as I danced with the demon of my future's past. He said he didn't want the focus but would take it as a favor? I moved woodenly as I thought. Something wasn't right. I was missing something. Al said he liked it here, but I could see that the loss of his omnipotence was chafing him. There had to be a reason he was lowering himself to this fraction of strength, and I didn't think it had to do with wanting a suntan. He wanted a favor. From me.

Pulse settling to a hard beat, I eyed him squarely, squeezing his hand until he noticed. “What aren't you telling me, Al?”

The demon grimaced.

Pulling my eyebrows high, I made a telling face. “You're over here for a reason, and it's not me. I'm not that big a pain, and nothing is stopping you from dragging me off…”

My words trailed to nothing as a thought trickled through me.
Why hasn't he just dragged me off?
A smile quirked my lips, and I aimed it at the suddenly unsure demon. “You're in trouble, aren't you?” I guessed, knowing I was right when his smooth pace bobbled. “You're up crap creek, and you're hiding on this side of the lines because they can't drag you back while you're possessing Lee.”

“Don't be inane,” Al said, but he was sweating. I could see a bead of moisture at his temple, and his hand gripping mine in its glove was getting damp. “I'm here to kill you. Slowly.”

“Then do it,” I said boldly. “If you do, you're back in the ever-after. You put yourself into a huge amount of debt to stay here when the sun is up. The only one who knows is an insane demon who probably forgot about you already.” Al frowned. Knowing I was pressing my luck, I said, “What did you do? Forget to return a library book?”

Pain cramped my hand, and I tried to pull from him. “It's your fault,” Al snarled, the hate in his eyes stopping my protest. “Newt found out Ceri is running around under a yellow sun knowing how to spindle line energy, and since Ceri was my familiar, I'm the one responsible.”

“Let go,” I said, twisting my fingers.

“If I go back, I'm going to be held accountable,” he said darkly, squeezing.

“You are
hurting
me!” I said. “Let me go, or I'm going to kick you in the 'nads!”

Al's grip loosened. I pulled away, standing three feet from him and glaring as the band continued to play, the singer's voice becoming distracted and uneasy. For an instant we stared at each other. Then he snatched up my hand and got us moving again. “Forgive me,” he said, not sounding at all apologetic. “I'm understandably upset. I have never been in such a position before.” His eyes narrowed. “They don't know you know the same, and it's in your best interest to keep your mouth shut about it. But you were there when she and I struck the deal, and you're going to tell them that she's been bound to keep her mouth shut but for one child. That the damage is contained.”

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