but her scream grew louder in acknowledgment. Triumph like sweet blood red wine flooded Megan’s breast.
Tires squealed on the pavement. Brian spun Megan’s car around, turning the headlights on high beam, aiming them right at the demon woman.
She turned, her eyes widening as the hood of the Focus sped toward her. Malleus pulled back his knife and raised it for another strike—
And fell to the ground just as the car whizzed past. The demon woman had disappeared, leaving the street silent and empty except for the dead.
“Hot buttered rum?”
“Sure, just hold the hot and the butter,” Brian gasped, collapsing on the couch. “In fact, hold the glass and give me the whole fucking bottle.”
Megan considered it for a minute, then obeyed, grabbing a bottle of bourbon for herself and whiskey for Malleus. Roc took a shot of crème de menthe and sipped it slowly, a habit that usually made her laugh. Tonight she didn’t think she could find humor in a Chris Rock routine, let alone the curious drinking habits of a little green demon.
“M’lady.” Malleus finished swallowing and rested the bottle on his knee. He’d drunk half of it in one long gulp. “You ’ave to call Mr.—”
“Don’t even say it. Just don’t.”
His brows lowered. “You know you ’ave to tell ’im. You need to—”
“He’s right, Megan.” Rocturnus spoke so quietly she had to lean forward to hear him. “They all have to know.”
“Who all? Why does anybody need to know—”
“Because she’s hurt others, from other families.” Roc finished his glass and poured another. “Because she’ll keep doing it.”
“You know who she is?”
“And so do you. You heard her name.”
Ktana Leyak.
She opened her mouth, but Roc, eyes wide, held up a warning hand. “Don’t say it, don’t even think it.”
“Why? Who is she, who was she?”
He sighed. His eyes closed. “She’s our mother.”
The phone rang.
For a moment Megan didn’t even understand what it was. The sound, so normal, so everyday, didn’t seem to fit into this conversation; it belonged to a different life in a world that hadn’t become increasingly more insane over the last few months.
“What do you mean?” she asked Roc.
“Just what I said. She created us. She’s our mother.”
“So—”
“Are you going to answer that?” Brian’s eyes were closed as he slumped back on the couch. With the bottle in one hand and his other hand on his chest he looked like a drunken fraternity boy.
“No, I don’t think so.” The bourbon was starting to spread its heat and false comfort through her body now, taking the edge off the deep chill.
“M’lady, you should—”
“So what does that mean, your mother, Roc? Why is she killing you, why is she killing other demons?”
He shook his head. “We don’t know.”
“Is it the ones who leave she’s killing, or the ones who stay, or what? Why is she going after demons from other families?”
Megan’s answering machine clicked on, then fell silent as her caller hung up.
“We can’t tell,” Roc said. “We don’t really talk a lot as a rule, you know. It’s not like we all sit down at the end of the day to have these little meetings you humans seem to enjoy so much.”
From her purse came the sound of her cell phone. Damn it. She’d known it was him. Greyson was pretty much the only person who had that number except for Brian and Dama.
“Sorry if we try and communicate with each other,” she snapped. This was too much, all too much. She just wanted to crawl into bed and go to sleep. For a week. She’d basically killed one of her clients, she’d lost her job, she’d lost another demon, from the look on Brian’s face it was possible she’d lost one of her few friends, and now her damned—well, whatever he was—wanted her to talk to him. She was going to have to tell him what happened and he was not going to be pleased, and she thought if she had to deal with one more thing tonight she was
C. C. Hunter
Robert E. Howard
Ted Hill
Barry Lyga, Robert DeFranco
Matt Christopher
Christine Bell
Graeme Davis
Mia Henry
Richard Parks
Alexis Gold