He was quiet for a long, tense moment. “One try. That’s all. And if there’s even a glimpse of anything bad, we stop. Maksim saying it could work doesn’t mean a damn thing. I don’t trust that wizard.”
If it wasn’t for Maksim, she wouldn’t even have attempted the spell removal. “He was trying to help us.”
“Right. Which is pretty much why I don’t trust him. Wizards aren’t usually the most helpful types.”
“But you’re not going to attempt to stop me. One try. You said so yourself.”
“Yeah, fine. But if anything weird happens, we’re pulling the plug.”
Anything weird.
That was the story of her life lately. Why should tomorrow be any different?
SEVEN
Someone followed Eden home, and that made her very nervous.
Maybe it was the Malleus—led by Ben Hanson, former crush. They were nasty, horrible people who had conned themselves into believing they were the good guys, but they weren’t. Not even close.
It could be Lucas keeping tabs on her, which would explain how he seemingly knew everything without the ability to see the future. However, that was unlikely. If he was the one following her, she doubted she’d even realize it.
It might even be Leena, her ex-roommate, a feline shapeshifter who’d disappeared two weeks ago after a disagreement with Darrak, leaving only a note behind and a key to a locker containing some of her belongings. Her departure only proved that three was a crowd when it came to paranormal beings cohabiting a one-bedroom apartment.
But it was none of these.
It turned out to be her mother—the twenty-three-year-old lingerie model version, anyway. She drove a sports car like some sort of life-size Barbie doll and pulled up right next to Eden in her apartment parking lot.
“So where’s the demon right now?” Caroline asked, following a silent Eden to the elevators.
“Around.”
“I guess she isn’t going to wait for your call,” Darrak said from inside of her. “What’s it been, six whole hours?”
“Guess not.”
“What, honey?” Caroline asked.
“Nothing. Look . . . uh, Mom”—it felt so strange calling this woman that—“we need to talk another day.”
“My God. He said at night he . . .” Caroline’s eyes widened. “That demon is possessing you
right now
, isn’t he?”
Eden grimaced. “It’s really not as bad as it sounds.”
Caroline hugged her tightly. “Oh, sweetie. I can’t believe this is happening to you. I’m so sorry for all of what you’ve been through.”
“It’s not exactly your fault. Besides, it’s almost over.”
“It is? You’re having him exorcised?”
“I have a strange feeling I’m not going to win her over with my charm and good looks,” Darrak observed.
Eden repressed a grimace. “I’m not having Darrak exorcised.”
“How can you be so calm about this? You’re
possessed
, honey. By a demon from the fiery depths of Hell!”
Luckily there was no one else in the lobby to overhear her—admittedly true—ravings.
“Calm isn’t what I am,” Eden said. “But Darrak and I have a mutual understanding. And we’re finding a solution. Sooner than you think, actually.”
“And how am I supposed to be convinced that he’s not manipulating your emotions? Did he seduce you? I know demons. I know how persuasive they can be when it comes to converting one to their sexual deviance. Bondage is meant to be done between two consenting adults, not between a victim and a vile minion of Lucifer.”
“Stop her,” Darrak said dryly. “I’m getting all turned on.”
Eden cringed. “I’m not talking about this, Mom. Not with you.”
Caroline’s bottom lip wobbled. “I’d do anything for you, Eden, you know that, don’t you?”
Anything.
Funny, it hadn’t felt like that when Caroline had been alive. In her own body. Frankly, it felt as if Eden had been a big burden on her mother’s free-spirit lifestyle. Carting a kid around when you never called one place home for more than a few months wasn’t exactly ideal to establishing a stable childhood.
Eden exhaled. “Mom, I need you to hear me. Will you listen for just a moment?”
“Of course.”
Eden turned to face her directly. “I don’t need your help. And I don’t
want
your help. I can handle this like I’ve handled everything else for my entire life. You can’t march in here and expect that you can make everything right that went wrong when you were alive. I know you’re trying to redeem yourself, but you can start somewhere else. Not with me.”
She expected this speech to finally get through to her mother and make her understand. Instead, Caroline’s eyes flashed.
“Well, that’s too damn bad. Because I’m here. And I’m going to help you whether you like it or not. I might have been a lousy mother—”
“I’m not saying that.” Not out loud, anyway.
Caroline raised her hand. “Whatever. I’m not an idiot. I know things weren’t ideal when you were growing up. But you turned into a fine woman. I’m not going to say it was my doing, but this is where we are now. I don’t know what this demon has been telling you, but it’s sick what’s going on here. I guess I have just enough clarity to see that. I’m not leaving until I can do something to help fix this. It’s all I want, Eden. I want you to be happy.”
“I am happy,” Eden gritted out. “Ecstatic, in fact.”
“Are you in love with that nasty demon? Tell me.”
She let out a breath of exasperation. “Would that make a difference to you?”
“It might.”
“I care very deeply for him. Yes, I—I love him.”
“You don’t sound convinced about that.”
“I guess I don’t like being put on the spot when it comes to discussing my feelings. Especially not with someone who’s always had the habit of stomping on them whenever she has the chance.”
Finally, Caroline flinched. “I’m sorry you feel that way. Fine, I’ll leave. But this isn’t over.”
She turned and stomped back toward the sports car. Eden watched until she’d driven out of the parking lot, squealing her wheels.
“I think we’re making progress with her,” Darrak said. “And by progress I mean the opposite of that. What’s the opposite of progress?”
“That.”
“Yeah.”
She was quiet for a long moment. She couldn’t help but feel guilt at pushing her mother away, even though she knew it was the right thing to do. There wasn’t much more to say. She’d been blunt. Perhaps too blunt.
It was done. And Caroline didn’t seem completely deterred in her newfound mission.
Save her possessed daughter.
But Eden was already attempting to save herself. And she might even have the tools to do just that.
“Tomorrow, at dawn, before we go and find the missing person for Lucas, I’m breaking your curse once and for all.”
“Is that a promise or a threat?” he asked warily.
She thought it was a promise, but suddenly she just wasn’t all that sure anymore.
If it was possible to pace while in a noncorporeal state inside the body of a beautiful, yet frustrating woman, that was exactly what Darrak did while Eden slept.
Pacing. Back and forth.
He might even say he was fretting. He didn’t think he’d ever fretted before. It was a word that had only been added to his vocabulary tonight.
Fretting sucked.
She was so damned motivated to try to break this curse. She’d broken the spell relatively easily—so easily it made his head swim. Not that he’d have a head until the morning, but a head was implied.
She wasn’t going to take no for an answer. Besides, why would he even say no? This was exactly what he wanted.
Freedom. Something that had sounded like a pipe dream for so long might actually become a reality.
And then what?
Darrak wasn’t much of a “look deeply into the future” kind of guy. He liked to live in the now.
Okay. So what
now
?
He had to deal with Lucifer. That wasn’t now, but it would be soon. Lucifer was his boss—a boss that Darrak had screwed over once too often. A big lesson he’d learned recently was if you were going to screw over a boss, please try your best not to make it Lucifer, the Prince of Hell.
Yeah. Lesson learned.
Darrak didn’t feel the immediate need to head back to Hell anytime soon, of course. He wouldn’t be welcomed there anyway until he got rid of the celestial energy churning inside him. He had no idea how long it would take before he would be able to enter the Netherworld undetected. Possibly a very long time. In the meanwhile, he’d have to get used to living here in the human world.
He couldn’t help but wonder if Eden would want him around after their ties were finally cut. This was something he tried very hard not to think about much, especially after hearing her awkwardly answer the “Do you love the hell-spawn?” comment from her mother. Eden had answered in the affirmative, which was nice to hear. But it hadn’t exactly been delivered with a great deal of enthusiasm.
Ah, self-doubt
, he thought.
There you are again. Awesome.
He hated that he felt this way, that he’d spend even a moment of his energy on this particular problem, but there it was. The uncertainty about whether a woman was head over heels in love with him.
How sad.
Even sadder was the fact that he knew, without a shadow of a doubt, that what Eden really felt about him was only a fraction of what he felt for her. Perhaps it was the fact he’d never been in love before that made his emotions so acute, so strong, so impossible to ignore. He wasn’t a puppy dog, ready to roll over and bare his belly the moment he thought she might give him a scratch. He wasn’t
that
whipped. But he knew he’d do just about anything for her.
And if, when all was said and done, she wanted them to part ways, then that was exactly what he’d do. As the saying went, if you love someone you should let them go, and if they didn’t return you should hunt them down and . . .
No, wait. That was a different saying. The original one was that if they didn’t come back then they never were yours to begin with.
Thus, the fretting.
Even Stanley, of all people, had been hit by the love stick when he’d least expected it, and it had changed the direction of his life forever. Well, Nancy did know how to make an excellent donut, that was for sure.
All Darrak knew for absolute certain was that he cared for Eden more than anything in the world. And the fact that she’d become a person of interest to Lucifer didn’t sit well with him. Lucifer might have a very disarming face here in the human world, but that didn’t make him any less dangerous.
He just wished he knew what to do about that.
It felt like a very long time before the sun began to rise. He knew the moment it happened, because it hit him like a lightning bolt before surrounding his incorporeal form like a clawed hand, tearing him from the darkness and wrenching him up through to the physical world.
Eden gasped in her sleep as he was expelled from her body. Immediately he began to take form, his essence rebuilding itself in the image of whom he’d been before, so very long ago. Tall, demonic, and handsome, limbs in all the right positions. It was effortless and yet exhausting at the same time.
A few moments later he found himself lying next to her on her bed. A feeling of relief and calm swept over him.
Eden appeared to smile in her sleep, and she slid a hand over his bare chest. He covered it with his own hand, not wanting to break the moment. It did surprise him that she was able to sleep through this every morning—
almost
every morning, unless she was already awake.
“Today is special, I feel it,” he whispered to her. “It’s the beginning, not the end.”
She grunted a soft reply, but didn’t stir further. In her sleep she wasn’t consumed with worry or anxiety over their unusual situation. Eden slept very soundly for a woman who had to deal with an unwanted demonic possession and a million other problems since he’d come into her life.
Today could go very well. Darrak tried to hold on to that thought.
It was an important Friday. First he’d walk her through the curse breaking. One way or another, after that they would find Lucifer’s missing person to check that chore off the list and get him off their backs for a bit longer.
And tonight was also the full moon.
Andy was scheduled to turn into a werewolf at approximately the same time Darrak would next lose form. That was, if they were unable to break the curse this morning.
Let’s think positively
, he told himself.
“Darrak . . .” Eden whispered, her eyes still closed.
She often talked in her sleep, saying all sorts of interesting things.
He drew closer, bringing his head to rest on her pillow. “Yes, Eden?”
“What am I going to do . . .”
“What are you going to do . . . ?” he prompted when she trailed off.
“. . . without you?”
“I’m not going anywhere.” He frowned at the strange statement and studied her face. “Do you love me, Eden?”
His breath caught and held as he waited for her answer as if he was a teenage human boy looking for the girl he liked to confirm she would go to the prom with him. She was very honest when she was asleep.
“I want you,” she murmured. “I need you . . . yes . . .”
“All good to know. But what about . . .” Oh hell, what was he doing? Trying to coax some sort of oath of love and devotion from an unconscious woman? “Forget it.”
“When you’re gone I’ll be all alone again . . .”
“Gone?” He frowned again. “Where am I going?”
“I love . . .” she whispered.
His attention grew fixed on her again. “Yes? What do you love?”
“When you . . . make love to me. Want it . . . please . . . again . . .”
Okay, so she wanted him for his body. It was nice to know. But oddly empty. Nice. But empty. Kind of like how he felt after eating one of Nancy’s chocolate donuts.
“You want me?” he said.
“Yes, so much . . .”
“There’s no more spell to stop us anymore.”
Her hands slid over his chest to his shoulders. “No more spell.”