“I’m curious, so I go and see the woman. Her face is the face of my dream, only unravaged by the drugs, as she might have been before she got hooked, and without the overwhelming seductive power of the being of my dream. I’m shaken enough by the similarity that I submit to a DNA test. The baby is ours.”
Sarah sucked in a breath. Justin leaned back in the chair, splaying his knees, and stared at the screen and the image there, a macabre cartoon.
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“I looked at this wreck of a woman, who had nothing but contempt for me and those around me. She did not know me, nor I her. Yet when I first came into her room, I saw she had some of the same sense of bewildering recognition of me as I did of her. I told the hospital I wanted to take custody of the child, for they had called social services in and refused to relinquish the child to her.”
He reached out, rubbed at the side of the keyboard with his thumb, an absent gesture, a distraction for the emotions Sarah felt vibrating off of him. She saw his throat work as he swallowed. “When they let me hold her for the first time, and Lori looked at me, I knew we were bound. It was a miracle she came out healthy, that Lorraine didn’t lose her or abort her before labor. Perhaps it was the circumstances of her birth that provided her some type of protection, I don’t know. Lorraine couldn't sign her over to me fast enough, was delighted I was willing to take her. She was so out of her head and confused by the whole situation. I was just as confused. She disappeared from the hospital the next day.”
“You called the baby Lori.”
He nodded. “I didn’t know anything about Lorraine Messenger except she was a disaster, but I wanted to give the child the safest gift from her birth mother I could give her.
“I researched the brand, and that's where I found this.” He scrolled down and she was looking at the same symbol in bold grey, red and black graphics as it had been tattooed on Lorraine's skin and burned into Justin’s.
“If you go into the works of the monks of the sixteenth and seventeenth century, they did a detailed chronology and hierarchy of the angels and demons. This was in there. It also came up several times in testimony at witch trials. I uncovered another reference to it in a story written in the nineteenth century, a nickel pulp fiction by a cowboy in Colorado. Almost the exact story as mine. The dream, waking up with the brand. Three years later, he’s in Colorado and meets an unmarried Indian maiden with the same mark, and her face is the one from his dream. She has a tattoo like his brand, that she felt compelled to have one of the tribe stencil on her in the same spot. She has a boy who looks so much like the cowboy, there’s no doubt it has to be his son.”
Justin scrolled down as he spoke, so Sarah’s attention covered the same detail information he was referencing. “This,” he pointed to a smaller photo of the horned and fanged caricature at the top, “was the rendering of the monks, their belief of his true form. To most of his victims he appears with the face of a person they know, or as an attractive, seductive stranger that they might later discover or meet.
“The Indian woman and cowboy married and lived happily ever after in the fictional account. The woman in the witch trial was exonerated for succumbing to the influence of the Devil, but her husband cast her and her child out of his home and she was expelled from the community. There are reports she joined her sister in Virginia and became a shopkeeper, her son a respected attorney. And you know my story, and Lorraine’s.”
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“But why would it do this? What purpose—”
“I expect it’s simply a random, unhappy spirit.” Justin lifted a shoulder. “There’s a theory that, just the same way we long to connect to or possess the powers of supernatural beings, so, too, do those beings sometimes wish to connect with or possess characteristics of our mortality. This may be a way to do it.”
Sarah chewed on the inside of her cheek, studied the screen. “Say I believe any of this, and that’s a big ‘if’. Did you find any evidence of it actually killing someone in the way Lorraine was killed?”
“Six times in this century.” He confirmed her fears, flipping to another screen where she saw various news articles that had been downloaded from library archive files. He maintained his silence as she quickly read through the data he had compiled. Different parts of the world, always at least ten or fifteen years apart, sometimes much longer.
“He’s been around for awhile,” Justin said. “He doesn’t always kill, and there’s no indication of why he does, just that he has a short fuse and a lot of power. He’s killed four women, two men. The only clue is in that seventeenth century account. As far as I can tell, she’s the only one who ever survived him when he got angry. And she’s the only one who ever recorded seeing him as an image similar to the rendering of the monks.”
“You’ve been researching this for some time,” she said, realizing the impact of that even as her gaze swept the stacks of files on his desk, the books on paranormal phenomena on his shelves.
“Since it happened to me, over eight years ago. It shocked the hell out of me, the day you took me to the murder site. Seeing Lorraine dead was terrible, but not unexpected. It was hard to see the body, though. To remember… ” He moved the mouse to keep the monitor from switching to the screensaver.
“What shocked you, then?” Sarah prompted him.
“That she was trying to call it. It never occurred to me that she ever had the cognizance to recognize the incubus was more than a bad trip, but apparently she did. She was Wiccan. In her lucid moments, few and far between though they may have been, she put it together.” Justin’s mouth thinned, the lips pressed hard together. “She was near bottom when she came to see me several months ago. Maybe she thought if she could get pregnant by it again, I would give her money.” He swiveled in the chair, looked up at Sarah, “Or maybe she just wanted to feel that good again for a few minutes. But as I said, this demon’s got a short fuse. I suspect he doesn’t care for being called or ordered about.”
“Or,” she responded, “maybe he saw it as a mercy killing, she was so far gone.”
Justin leaned forward, rubbed a hand over his face. “I’ll go with you to Eric’s office, Sarah, but I’m not going to tell him all this. If you want to do it, fine, but you can see now that there’s nothing the police can do to stop this thing, even if you all believed me.”
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“What will kill it?”
“You can’t kill a demon. It’s pure energy. You can neutralize it, bind it, lock it into a contained space in the universe. The coven can do that, but to do it we’d have to find him and close in around him before he knew we were coming, and this guy has no pattern as to whom he chooses initially for his victim. He shows up whenever, wherever.”
He rose out of the chair so his back was to her, and stepped back out of the desk
space.
“I’ll go get dressed.”
Sarah stared after him for several long moments. Her brain had gone as numb as her heart and she wasn’t sure how long she stood there, paralyzed, before the cell phone at her belt rang.
She pulled it off. “Wylde here,” she snapped.
“This is Dexter, Sarah.” Her lieutenant’s voice was a rush of relieved words. “They finally got the rest of the dang reports from the medical examiner. Forensics says the vic’s death was self-inflicted. They didn’t find any evidence of another person at the scene. No footprints, hair or skin samples on her clothes or belongings. Not even any semen in her body or evidence of a condom. There were three drugs in her system. She was a freaking pharmacy. The toxicologist played with the combination and came up with a reaction like liquid nitrogen. It’s something he’s never seen before, but when it all comes together, it turns into negative 100 degrees immediately. He says we may have a new street drug, or she may have hit on something by accident with her little cocktail. He said based on that and a totally clean site, Marion’s just got themselves a really freaky OD situation.”
“Is that his official medical opinion?”
Dexter hesitated. “Sorry about that, Chief. His official report is going to rule it an OD death. Another thing, even better news. Time of death was pinned at 11:00 pm. We have nine people who verified independently that Justin Herne was leading a Wiccan ritual from eight o’clock to midnight. Forensics says that alibis him even if he shot it into her veins and left her there for it to take effect.”
Ten people, she thought.
“Chief?”
“Good work, Dexter. I’m at Herne’s home now. I’ll inform him and then I’m off for
the rest of the day. I think I’ve got a touch of the flu.”
“Yes ma’am, that’s been going around. We’re all glad about the way it turned out, though, but sorry for that lady. She sure was messed up.”
“Yes, she was. Bye, Dexter.”
Sarah stood there, listening to the sounds of Herne moving upstairs, drawers opening and closing. She looked at the computer screen again, the fanged creature sneering at her.
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When Justin came down a few minutes later, his sitting room was empty, and Sarah’s car was gone. A scrap of paper was propped up on the computer screen, held there with a piece of Scotch tape. The shadow of the demon was silhouetted behind it.
Justin pulled off the note and swore viciously.
You’ve been cleared. We’re through.
“That’s what you think, sweetheart,” he growled, crushing the note in his hand.
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Chapter 14
He let her be for the night. He could be that patient, knowing the weight of what he had laid on her earlier in the day. He did leave a message on her machine, he couldn’thelp that.
“Sarah, this is Justin. We’re going to have to talk about us. There
is
an ‘us’, whether you want there to be or not, and I want to see you. Call me tomorrow, or I swear I’ll show up on your doorstep and you’ll have to deal with me. I should have handledthings differently, I know, but don’t use it as an excuse to run from me. Don’t run from us.”
He lay in bed for awhile staring at the ceiling, and then gave up and snapped on the small reading light. He withdrew the news clippings he had printed from the Chicago Times and went through them again, imagining Sarah all alone in a warehouse full ofblood and violence, her struggle toward that one last man, her refusal to give up.
From Sarah’s limited comments on her personal life, Justin knew her husband had left her shortly thereafter. He had left her when she needed him desperately, and it sounded like during their marriage he had let her push him away when she thought thejob had become too much to share. Justin wasn’t going to let her do it to him. Sheneeded someone in her life strong enough to push back.
He turned off the light, lay back in the bed and went back to studying the ceiling until the grandfather clock downstairs struck midnight, and his body raged for her. Hewondered if this was how drugs had been for Lorraine, this all-consuming need to havethat pleasure in her blood. He wanted Sarah in his house, in his arms. He wanted his cock buried in her and her body arching beneath his, that sinuous movement that women made, an erotic dance to offer themselves up to a man’s need, to sate their own in the bonding.
Fuck it. He was going to get up and go to her house, and he was going to use every method fair or unfair to get her to accept him. He knew it was wrong, but he didn’t givea damn. He hadn’t believed he would ever know what love felt like again, and certainly hadn’t expected it to take the form of an instantaneous attachment to a skinny police chief with a smart mouth, shy smile and irises as big as robin eggs.
He flipped over and jumped back with a startled oath. Sarah was in the process of getting into his bed, her knee up to slide in next to him. Justin froze, his face just inches from hers. She stared back, her eyes round and sad, and her lips parted to speak. He caught her to him, his hand to the back of her head, and brought her to his lips. He nearly moaned at the joy of that contact, her bare breasts crushed against his chest, for she was naked as he was, her body cool where his was hot, a melding of elements.
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“I’m sorry,” he muttered against her, and she made a noise of acceptance. He was already achingly hard for her, and she straddled him with her thighs, pulling the sheet back and sliding down on him, taking him inside her, fusing them together even with their lips still joined. He wanted to touch her, caress her, watch her grow more and more wild with passion, but she seemed as desperate to simply mate as he did. She left him no choice, for the muscles in her cunt clamped down on him. As she rose and fell on his body, riding that wave of their desire, she was as relentless as a rider mounted on a thoroughbred, coaxing him with the stroke of her silken walls to lengthen his stride, make for the finish line.
“Sarah, let me—”
She shook her head, placing her fingers over his lips. He groaned again as her hands lifted, cupped her breasts, their quivering movement contained in the curve of her palms, her nipples stiff and eager. He reared up to possess them with his lips and tongue.