Read Demon From the Dark Online
Authors: Kresley Cole
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #General, #Fantasy, #Occult & Supernatural
That's right.
Lanthe could open thresholds to anywhere.
"We'll briefly deactivate her torque--under SWAT supervision. And of course, we'll keep Ruby here to make sure all goes according to our plans."
There went that idea. "I want Lanthe and Regin released as well."
The doctor shook her head. "Impossible."
If they truly set Carrow free, then she'd come back for the two of them soon enough. "I want the Order's word about releasing me and Ruby."
The woman said, "You have it."
"Don't want yours," Carrow said in a scoffing tone. "I want
his
."
Chase turned to her once more. After a hesitation, he gave a nod.
"Then we have a deal," Carrow said.
He narrowed his eyes, as if she'd just proven a point. "Not even a
qualm
about betraying one of your own species?"
"A demon is
not
one of my own species," Carrow snapped. "You make us sound like animals."
Without another look at her or the girl in her arms, he strode out of the room, saying in a chilling tone, "Because that's all you are."
"She's not coming back, is she?"
Ruby whispered as Carrow held her, rocking her in the bottom bunk. She'd awakened just a couple of hours ago, immediately bursting into tears.
"Amanda's gone to Hekate, sweetheart."
"Can we bring her back?"
"
No
. You know that's forbidden." At times, Carrow forgot the magics stored in Ruby's trembling little form. The girl had exceeded even Mariketa's abilities until Mari had recently come into her powers.
Apparently, the last time Ruby had cast a spell, she'd tortured and killed twenty men.
"Don't go tomorrow, Crow."
Carrow had explained that she was setting out to hunt a demon. In exchange, these mortals would free Carrow and Ruby. "I don't want to leave, but I don't really have a choice. Hey, in a way, this is just a mercenary mission. I go out and do some magic, and I get something in return." The girl would understand an arrangement like this. The witches were mercenaries, taught at an early age to sell their magic. "And the sorceress will take good care of you."
From the top bunk, Lanthe gave a feigned pissy exhalation.
Earlier, with a clipped "Oh, very well," she'd agreed to look out for Ruby. Carrow suspected Lanthe might actually like kids but kept that fact secret, protecting her street cred as a wicked sorceress.
After all, she was the notorious Queen of Persuasion, a sorceress who could compel others to do whatever she bade them. To be deemed a "queen" meant that she was the best at her talent in all the Lore.
Though Sorceri and witches shared a common ancestry, many of the Sorceri class belonged to the Pravus, an alliance of evil factions that warred with the Vertas, the relatively good alliance that Carrow affiliated with.
Before allying, loosely, with the Vertas, Lanthe and her sister had fought on the Pravus front line.
Still, Carrow felt a level of trust toward Lanthe. She usually had a good sense about people, and the week she and Lanthe had spent confined together in this cell felt like a lifetime.
They'd played tic-tac-toe in the condensation on the steel walls, gabbed about the hotness known as King Rydstrom, Lanthe's new demon brother-in-law, and commiserated about the man drought they were both presently gasping through.
Carrow had had lovers--more than a couple, less than a handful--and a single night on Bourbon Street could score her another one. But she had her reasons for her current coitus hiatus....
"What will happen when you get us free?" Ruby asked.
How much confidence the girl had in her. "I'm going to take care of you myself. You'll live with me."
Mental checklist, item eighty: find us some new digs.
Witches with kids didn't get to live at Andoain. Carrow had felt a pang at the thought of giving up her sorority-style life there--and her coveted suite with a private bath--but when she'd looked at Ruby's tearstained little face, she'd easily decided that it didn't matter.
"We'll get a pad near Andoain so you can still go to spell school there. I'll pack lunch"--bag leftover pizza--"for you every morning."
Lanthe made a sound of disbelief from overhead.
"I
will
. And when you get old enough, I'm going to teach you all about the Street that is Bourbon."
Ruby yawned, her puffy lids drooping. "I heard some witches talking about you a couple of weeks ago. They said you were rutterless."
Now a chuckle from the top bunk.
"Ru
dd
erless?"
So true.
"Maybe so. But I'm not going to be anymore."
How's it feel to be a rudder, kiddo?
"Will you hold my hand until I fall asleep? And stay here till I wake up?"
"You got it." Maybe the reason she'd never done well with responsibilities in her personal life was that she'd never had any practice? Carrow had led armies--but she'd never had another depend solely on her.
In minutes, Ruby was out, her countenance relaxing, her brow smoothing. Carrow waited a little while, then eased from the bed to recheck her pack and begin studying the dossier.
When Lanthe slunk down from her bunk, Carrow noted yet again that the sorceress looked flawless, displaying no signs of a week's worth of stress, discomposure, or even wrinkles. But then Lanthe wore typical Sorceri garb: a metal bustier and a mesh skirt, held together with bits of leather.
Her dark hair was a mass of braids in the wild Sorceri style. The only things missing were her metal gloves--with built-in claws--and the half mask that would normally adorn her face.
Carrow found it interesting that the mortals left their prisoners in their own street wear for the most part. She herself still wore her jewelry and club duds.
"They're going to double-cross you," Lanthe said.
Did Carrow suspect Chase would go back on his word? Of course. But she also knew she had to operate under the assumption that he would release her and Ruby. What were two witches to them? And more importantly, what other choice did Carrow have? "I don't know that for certain," she said as she began rooting through the pack Dixon had offered her earlier.
At once, Carrow had demanded to go to the facility's PX store for her own supplies. While the Order might have a dandy assault pack for soldiers to make an incursion, they didn't have an all-purpose Carrow pack for witches bent on seduction.
So after a few hygienic tweaks to her gear--and her first shower in a week while her clothes were dry-cleaned--she was ready.
"In any event, witch, I think you waste your time."
"Look, I might not trust that they'll keep their word about releasing us," Carrow said. "But I trust one hundred percent that they'll keep it about killing her."
Lanthe sighed, gazing over at Ruby. "Well, then, let's see this dossier."
They sat on the floor with their backs against the wall.
Fitting.
Carrow opened the folder to the first page, a summary of her destination and its peoples.
"I still can't believe they're sending you to
Oblivion
." Lanthe shivered.
"Come on, it's the only place you can get fresh vemons this time of year."
Oblivion was one of the hell planes, a place of such limited resources that only the harshest demons could survive. In this case, water was scarce. No rain fell, and the few collections of water were underground.
According to the dossier, the Trothan culture was a chaotic mix of slavery, violence, and cruelty--its members brutal. Yet they had a deeply entrenched class system in their society.
Carrow's lips thinned. She wasn't a big fan of classes in
any
form--educational
or
social. She herself hailed from a "noble" family, but had buried that little tidbit about herself.
And it's not like my folks will out me.
When Carrow turned the page to the summary of Malkom Slaine, her "target," Lanthe said, "A
vemon,
the most dangerous of all Lore creatures, was created out of a
Trothan,
one of the most barbaric species of immortal?"
Though Carrow knew demons who were civil, engaging, and
hot,
she'd never met a Trothan.
"And you're going into hell to get him? This is like
Escape from New York,
except you're bringing out the baddie."
"Snake Plissken, at your service," Carrow said as she began perusing Slaine's information, organized in handy bullet points.
Description: Light blue eyes. Defined musculature. Over six and a half feet tall. Black horns, curving back from just above his ears. Identifying marks: A large, winding tattoo on his right flank, typical demon piercings.
Background: Born more than four hundred years ago to a prostitute demon mother. Father unknown.
Carrow felt a flare of pity for him. Living in Oblivion was bad enough, and he hadn't exactly gotten a great start.
Led rebellion against vampire invaders until his capture. Transformed into a Scarba
--
a vampiric demon. Before escaping the vampire stronghold, he beheaded Kallen the Just, the Trothans' demon prince, as well as the Viceroy, the vampires' emissary.
Carrow frowned. "Why would Slaine have assassinated the two potential leaders, then
not
taken control of the demonarchy?"
Lanthe said, "Sounds to me like a failure to capitalize."
Fugitive from Trothans for over three centuries. No known associates. Unwed. Most current activities: Defending his territories, the water mines of Oblivion. Special skills: Battle-trained, survival, military command experience.
"Unwed?" Carrow said. "Their kind marries?" Many demon breeds didn't, especially if their species had one fated mate.
"At least you won't have to worry about competition."
"Unless he's got a demon harem in those mines. A little honey or two holed up underground?" Carrow said, raising a brow at the next bullet point.
Language: Demonish, some Latin.
There had been an isolated report of his speaking English, but it couldn't be confirmed.
"How am I supposed to communicate with him?" Carrow's Demonish was sparse. She knew mostly curses and how to order liquor.
"The language of love?" Lanthe suggested.
"Check out his psych profile."
Easily enraged, reacts with a marked ferocity. Violent and territorial
...
"Psych profile? Isn't that what they do with serial killers?"
Carrow nodded. "Dixon said he was the Trothan version of the bogeyman."
"Well, then. Tell me they'll deactivate your torque for this mission."
"They will."
A lot of good it'll do me if the folks in hell aren't happy.
Whereas Mariketa's magic was based on adrenaline, Carrow's own was fueled by emotions, specifically happiness. The raucous revelry of a crowd was like an exquisite feast for her powers.
"Then you can just do a love spell on him," Lanthe said.