The Demon Hunter (28 page)

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Authors: Lori Brighton

BOOK: The Demon Hunter
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“Cristian, please don’t tell me…” A shiver of unease whispered over her body. A feeling she knew well. Cristian and the castle disappeared as Ashley’s body turned inward, listening to the thrum of her senses. Slowly, she turned. There, in the parlor, she spotted a whisper of an opaque cloud that shimmered in the far corner near the stone hearth.

Leaving Cristian in the foyer, she moved into the room, toward the weak light. Each step closer brought the cloud more into focus. A woman sat huddled on the floor, her knees drawn to her chest, her head lowered as her shoulders trembled with soundless sobs.

“Hello?” Ashley whispered, kneeling beside her.

The woman lifted her head, her eyes wide with fear and surprise. “Help.”

Ashley nodded, feeling conflicting emotions. For much of her childhood she’d avoided ghosts. They’d been the bane of her existence. But here… now… she
knew
something horrible had happened and her heart lurched. She felt the residual evil crawling over her like spiders.

The woman stood, her body trembling as she smoothed down her tweed skirt. “I can’t find any help.”

Ashley got to her feet, studying the woman’s outfit. Although the blouse and tweed skirt were rather typical Scottish, it was modern. Her bob haircut and her makeup were both from this decade. She was recently dead. “I don’t know what happened, but we’ll find out.”

“What is it?” Cristian asked. He’d never been able to see ghosts well. While ghosts could be as real as living humans to her, to Cristian ghosts had been a mere shadow, a whisper of something more. And since he’d became human, his abilities to see spirits had all but disappeared. Fortunately his keen intuition and his extra human strength remained.

“It’s a … woman. She’s… dead.”

“Dead?” the woman whispered, her lower lip trembling.

She was forty, perhaps, dark hair around her oval face. Refined at one time, now an emotional mess, but death would do that to a person. The woman gasped, pressing her hands to her lips and sinking to the ground once more. Despite the fact that Ashley had encountered death repeatedly, the woman’s sobs were heart-wrenching.

“I’m so sorry,” Ashley whispered.

“What happened?” Cristian demanded.

“He pretended to need help… We let him in because he looked kind, wealthy…” She shook her head, looking up at Ashley for answers. “My husband? Have you seen him? He tried to protect me—”

“Oh God,” Ashley said. She didn’t sense another ghost. Was the man dead? Alive? Had he for some reason moved onto heaven while his wife hadn’t? “Where is he?”

The woman shook her head, confusion crumpling her face.

“What is it?” Cristian demanded, unable to hear the woman’s words.

Ashley turned toward him. “She had a husband.”

A loud crash shook the ceiling above them, the crystal chandelier trembling, much like her nerves. Fanfreakingtastic, the fun was about to begin. “The husband?”

“I don’t think so. I think whoever killed her is still here.”

“Talk about overstaying your welcome,” Ashley mumbled.

Cristian’s powers had become dull since he’d turned human. What if his father, the demon, was still here? The woman ghost whimpered, obviously not realizing that as she was already dead, she had nothing left to fear.

“Stay here,” Cristian demanded. He pulled the sword from the scabbard strapped to his back, the metal whispering against the leather.

“No way.” Ashley rested her hand on his arm. “Cristian, you can’t go alone. You might need me.”

“If I need ye, I’ll call.” He moved into the foyer and up the steps before she had time to talk sense into his thick head. Always the damn angel, trying to protect others.

“Like hell you will,” Ashley whispered, rushing after him.

He’d made it to the second floor by the time she started up the curved stairs. She hesitated at the top of the steps, turning her senses inward. Cristian’s powers might have dulled, but hers were in prime working order. Even though she wore jeans and a sweater, a chill shiver of awareness raised the fine hairs on her neck. Not a ghost, but … something else.

The hall was long and dark, the windows few and far between. A building so old, parts had obviously been added on at a later date. Ashley took in a deep breath and focused. Where was the woman’s husband?

The sound of a muffled cry had her stumbling over her own feet; the cry of desperation, of pain, of torture. Her palms grew damp, but Cristian’s footsteps were quiet and sure as he followed the hall and turned left. Always a warrior, he held no fear for his own life. The idiot would get himself killed one of these days. Ashley followed, catching up to him around the corner. He paused outside the only door in the short hall and held out his arm, silently telling her to stay put.

“What do you sense?” she whispered.

He jerked his head toward the door. “Open it,” he said softly.

She shoved her palm into the wooden door and stepped aside, flattening her back to the hallway wall and out of Cristian’s way. But Cristian didn’t burst in, guns, or sword, blazing. Instead, he merely stood in the hall, his gaze pinned to the room beyond. Although there was no indication of emotion upon his face, she knew instinctively something was horribly wrong.

“Cristian?”

He didn’t respond.

Slowly, Ashley turned, facing the room.

Red.

Brilliant scarlet splashed across the room as if someone had taken a bucket of paint and tossed it to the white walls. But it was no paint.

“Oh hell,” she whispered, her knees going weak. Horrifying. Her stomach churned and bile rose to her throat as the room wavered in and out of focus. Not just death, but murder…torture. The entire room smelled of rot and decay, although the woman was recently deceased.

“Stay back, and this time I mean it.” Cristian moved into the room, his sword in hand.

Ashley sank back against the hallway wall, her knees buckling. Never had she seen anything like it, and she’d seen a lot of shitty things in her life. She knew the demon wasn’t here. They’d be fighting for their lives by now if Cristian’s father had still been in the castle. But it was obvious something was in that bedroom.

The woman ghost suddenly appeared next to Ashley. “He’s dead, isn’t he?”

“No. I don’t think so.” If he was dead, he’d be here, a watchful ghost, wouldn’t he?

A loud crash vibrated the floorboards. Ashley darted into the room, ignoring Cristian’s demand to stay put. He stood at the far side, a large four poster bed between them. But it was the woman’s body that lay prone across the mattress that caught Ashley’s immediate attention. Her limbs were bent at odd angles, her white blouse soaked with blood and her eyes… her wide eyes stared unblinking at the ceiling.

Ashley’s heart thundered madly as she stumbled toward that large, four poster bed. Blood had soaked the brown duvet, making a dark stain across the material. So much blood. A scene from a horror movie. She didn’t need to wipe away the blood covering the woman’s face, she recognized the tweed skirt and that brown hair.

Ashley spun around, peering through the doorway. The spirit stood there, just over the threshold, staring at her own body, the horror written quite plainly across her ghostly face.

“I’m…dead?” she asked again, as if the realization was just sinking in.

Ashley started toward her, intent on comforting the ghost when Cristian cried out. She spun around just in time to witness him swipe his sword forward, hitting something with a thud. A ferocious growl vibrated through the room.

“Hell, we’re not alone.” Ashley raced around the bed but came up short when she spotted the scene that had been hidden by the furniture. A skeletal gray beast crouched on the floor, his red eyes glaring up at Cristian. Scraggly black hair hung from his head and framed a narrow face covered in blood. Shredded bits of flesh hung from the beast’s long, knobby hands. Spotting her, he lifted his thin lips and growled, flashing sharp teeth. The horrible scent was coming from the beast.

“Oh Christ,” she whispered, switching her attention from the animal to the body on the ground before the beast. A man lay upon the floor, his chest ripped open. White ribs curved around his torso, pink flesh clinging to the bone. And there… just below the ribs, she could see his heart pumping. He was still alive.

The ghost woman screamed, a horrifying sound that Ashley knew she would remember for the rest of her life. Cristian lifted his sword and swung it in a wide arc toward the demon’s head. Ashley started forward, intending to help the man on the floor. Unfortunately, she felt her foot catch on the rug. Off balance, she tumbled to the ground.

“Ashley, get the hell out of here,” Cristian demanded.

She lifted her head and caught sight of a pistol lying hidden under the bed. Frantic, she surged forward, wrapping her left hand around the cold steel. A high-pitched screech vibrated from behind her. Ashley rolled to her back, facing the door. Another gray monster leapt through the ghost woman, directly into the room.

Ashley lifted the pistol and squeezed the trigger. The bullet sent the beast backward, stumbling into the hall and falling to the floor in a ghastly heap.

Cristian leapt over the bed, kneeling on the ground beside her, his silver sword in hand. “Are ye all right?”

Ashley nodded. “We have to help him!” She dropped the pistol and stumbled to her feet, bolting toward the man who lay upon the ground.

Cristian latched onto her arm, drawing her to a stop. “Ashley, it’s too late.”

“No, we need to help him.” She jerked away and fell to her knees next to the man. The heart was still, the man’s eyes closed. A familiar shiver of unease whispered across her skin. She turned. The woman ghost was gone. The house was silent. They’d moved onto the other side together, nothing keeping them here. They no longer suffered. It should have made her feel better. It didn’t. This shouldn’t have happened.

“What was it?” Ashley asked, looking at the gray beast laying still in the hall. She needed a name for something that could be so horrible.

“A Mortis Demon, they feed off the dead. They’re scavengers.” Cristian picked up a plaid blanket and swiped his sword clean. “Humans often mistake them for Zombies.”

Ashley managed to get to her feet, although her legs still trembled like a toddler just learning to walk. “You’re saying they didn’t kill the couple?”

“No.”

He didn’t need to finish. She knew who had killed them. The spell had worked. The demon had returned to earth. Cristian’s father had tortured the couple for no reason.

“I…I’m tired of death. I want a normal life… with you.”

Cristian wrapped his arm around her waist and drew her close, his strength and scent comforting. “I know. But it won’t be normal until we find him, Ashley. We can only have a life once he’s dead.”

She nodded, hardening her heart, walling up her emotions. There would be time crumble later. Clenching her jaw, she stepped out of his embrace. “Where to next? Devon’s home?”

If the demon had returned, certainly Devon had as well. One small ray of light in this nightmare.

Cristian shook his head. “He won’t go after Devon.”

“Then where?”

Cristian slid his sword into the sheath on his back. “He’s gone after the person who took his life. He’s gone after me.”

Unease tiptoed down her spine. “You mean… the pub?”

Cristian nodded.

Sickening panic twisted her gut. “Camile could be there. Rose. The entire town. They won’t be prepared to take on your father.”

“Which is why we need to leave now.”

Chapter 16

“Concentrate,” Rose snapped, her voice raking across Ellie’s already frayed nerves.

She resisted the urge to glare at the woman. How she despised the old witch. Yeah, she might know what she was doing, but she didn’t have to be such a … witch about it. Still, Devon and Kipps, who stood some ten feet away, didn’t seem bothered. Miranda had merely laughed when Ellie had complained about Rose.

What was it about the woman that rubbed her the wrong way? Those beady eyes that seemed to peer into her soul? The way she talked to her like she was a moron? That constant frown? Seriously, she should introduce Rose to Lord Templeton, a match made in Heaven.

“Ready?” Devon asked.

God’s truth, she wanted to be able to control her powers. She wanted to be able to protect herself. But a woman could do only so much. Ellie took in a deep breath and closed her eyes. At first she heard only the birds chirping in the distance, the rustle of leaves. Felt only the warm breeze coming from the lake just below the garden. For a moment she knew only peace.

Just when she thought nothing would happen, she felt the slightest tingle in her fingers and toes. A warm tingle that moved up her arms and legs, thrumming as if in time with her heartbeat. She knew immediately the feeling was their powers, Devon and Kipps. Their very essence soaking into her being, entwining with her soul.

She knew Devon’s radiant power, could differentiate his sensation from Kipps’ darker, more aggressive vampire energy sinking heavily into her being. While Devon… Devon was light, was magic, was love. Her heartbeat accelerated, her palms grew damp and the world faded away. But as their powers entwined, racing through her torso and head, invading her cells, it became too much.

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