Angie Fox -The Accidental Demon Slayer

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Angie Fox -The Accidental Demon Slayer Page 24

by The Accidental Demon Slayer (lit)


  "So he's ..." I couldn't say it.

  "Gone." She helped me ease his head onto my lap. "I'm sorry, Lizzie. I know what he meant to you."

  She didn't know jack. Okay, so he'd lied to me and I was mad at him, but he'd had his reason—a good one. And now he'd never know that I needed him too. He'd shown me that I could be strong. I could break a few rules, wear kick-ass black boots and make love until I screamed. And just when I was ready to let go of my past, Vald had stolen my future.

  The portal crackled as I sat there with his head in my lap, unable—no, unwilling—to move. I knew we needed to get out of here. We were free from the sec­ond layer of hell, but that orb could send us right back to Vald's laboratory—or somewhere worse.

  Maybe there was nothing I could do for Dimitri. But getting up out of the puddle of blood, letting go of him, I'd never get this moment back again. When I stood up, he'd really be gone.

  "Lizzie?" Frieda rattled the pilothouse door. "Oh snot. It's stuck. Lizzie?"

  "Open the goddamned door," Grandma ordered. "You locked us in with an itchy portal."

  "Gertie? Well I'll be a buttercup!" Frieda squealed. "Ant Eater! Get yourself over here! Gertie's back!"

  I wanted to smack Frieda for being happy about anything right now. Of course she didn't know Dimitri lay crumpled and—I forced myself to think it—dead in my lap. I didn't know how I thought things would end, but it wasn't supposed to happen like this.

  He'd been too alive, too sexy and too stubborn.

  "At least he saved his sisters," Grandma said.

  I uncrumpled the bloody lab coat from his chest and spread it over his body. He'd have told me it was worth it. But it wasn't. Not to me.

  "He wanted to make this thing between us work," I said, running a finger along his strong jaw. "I told him when hell freezes over. Guess we were both wrong." I grazed my fingers over the lips that had kissed away the marks from the black souls, and touched me in ways, well, in many, many ways. Tears crowded my eyes. He'd taught me a thing or two, about switch stars, my­self and, heck, what it felt like to be wanted.

  "Motherfucking damn it."

  "Excuse me?" I said, eyeing Grandma's stormy ex­pression through a squidgy window of tears.

  "You're turning me into a pansy-ass," she said, shoving her hair back from her face with bloody fingers. She puffed up her cheeks and blew out a breath. "We can save him, okay. If we act now. It's stupid and pointless," she harrumphed, "and there's no turning back from it."

  "How?" I asked, hope tickling my stomach. I'd take any chance we could get.

  "You'll be opening yourself to him in ways you can't imagine."

  "No," I told her. "I mean how do we do this?"

  Grandma frowned before she shoved her hand in­side my top.

  "Yow!" Icy fingers. "Some warning first!"

  "Like I got time to buy you flowers," she muttered, her nails scratching the smooth skin under my collar bone. "Damn it!" A sizzle zipped through her and she yanked her hand back. "I was hoping I could touch it. You have to."

  "Fine. What am I looking for?"

  I lifted my shirt away and almost choked when I saw it.

  "We need to work on your sensing abilities," Grandma muttered as I stared at the pure white light glowing from inside my chest. I couldn't feel it, but it was a part of me.

  I reached down and touched it, felt it vibrate against my fingers. It hummed steady and strong—my living essence, the thing that Vald had wanted so bad, was reaching out to Dimitri.

  "You do it and there's no turning back," Grandma warned.

  Yes, there'd be consequences, but I didn't care. The only thing that mattered was having Dimitri back, alive.

  I forced myself to look as my fingers crept into the sliver of chest above my heart. Blood pulsed in my ears. The essence clung to me, warm and steady. I took what was mine and slid it into the gaping wound in Dimitri's chest. I tried not to think of how cold he felt. Grandma muttered a series of incantations as I watched my power sizzle inside him.

  Freely given, freely taken.

  His chest healed before our eyes, muscles knitting together, skin growing whole. I felt for his pulse. Noth­ing. My hope sank. But still, I had to believe he could do this. Don't give up. Please, Dimitri, I did the only thing I could think to do. His head in my hands, I bent down and touched his lips to mine. His lips felt cool. Tears burned my eyes.

  He gasped.

  Sweet switch stars!

  I searched his face. His eyes remained closed, but his chest moved up and down in a beautiful, steady rhythm. I wanted to hug him, Grandma, the portal. He was alive. He'd saved me and I'd saved him right back.

  His emerald glowed hot against my neck.

  Kick-butt demon slayer that I am, I started crying all over again. "Thanks, Grandma," I said, running my fingers through his thick hair. I couldn't help but think back to the first time I'd given in to the temptation, under very different—and quite toe-curling—circum­stances.

  "It was dumber for him to go down there than it was for you," Grandma said. "Griffins rule the air, not the underworld."

  "He cares about his sisters."

  "And you."

  I ran my fingers along his broad shoulders. The idea made me smile. I didn't know he was awake until he broke open a weak, but saucy grin of his own. I kissed it right off him. "How do you feel?"

  "You don't want to know." He cupped the back of my head and dragged me down for another kiss. His lips were solid, eager and insistent. I ignored the blood that clung to him and focused on him, clean, earthy and masculine. Pure delight threaded through me as he nuzzled his cheek against mine.

  "I thought I was dead," he murmured.

  "You were," Grandma said.

  "Grazed by a switch star," I said, nipping at his deli­cious lips. "You'll live."

  Grandma cleared her throat. I didn't know if she disapproved of the public display of affection or the lie. Frankly, I didn't care. I'd been through enough in the past twenty-four hours that I should be able to kiss this man for a week. In front of a room full of grand­mas. And the Pope.

  And if she questioned my little white lie, well, I had to do it. If he knew we were somehow connected, he might never let me go. He'd touched me in ways I never knew existed, but I didn't belong in this world any more than he belonged in mine.

  But I would take one more kiss.

  There were at least a dozen witches and one elated ter­rier ready to tackle us the minute we walked out of the pilothouse. Pirate dashed for me, his nails skidding on the wooden deck.

  "Lizzie! You're here! I didn't know if I'd see you again and I was counting the seconds you were gone. But you know I can only count to four. So I had to count one, two, three, four.. ." He squirmed like a puppy when I picked him up. "And then one, and two and," he said, between licks to my hands, face and wherever else he could reach.

  "Ease up, buddy. I'm here," I told him, trying to keep hold of my dog in one hand while my other wrapped around Dimitri's waist. He looked terrible with the bloody lab coat hanging from his frame. But he felt good. And call it wishful thinking, but I could have sworn he grew steadier with each passing minute. I didn't think my nuzzle therapy had hurt, either. Well, except that we had to wait a few minutes before Dimitri wanted to stand up.

  "Sorry it took a bit." Frieda patted Dimitri's arm, her bracelets clanging together. "We locked the portal here in the pilothouse so it wouldn't get away again. It likes to ring the bell."

  "It's not alive," I told her.

  "Okay," she said.

  "Step aside!" Sidecar Bob pushed his way through the crowd around us, medical bag balanced between his knees. "I need to get a look at him," he said, nearly running over my toes. "What happened?"

  "Grazed by a switch star," I said, yanking my foot back as he spun his wheels sideways for a better look.

  "Lizzie! You didn't!"

  Thanks for reminding me about my aim.

  "No. I didn't," I said. Which just goes to prove
, first impressions die hard.

  Witches crowded the main deck. I accepted some congratulations, and a horny toad from Scarlet (I didn't ask). The riverboat's ancient sound system blasted AC/ DCs "Highway to Hell" as Pirate and I wandered up to the narrow deck at the front of the boat. Let Grandma have her fun. I wasn't much for loud parties. Besides, it would be hard enough to say good-bye to this life with­out teasing myself with the revelry outside the pilot­house. Hopefully, Frieda had remembered to lock the door on that portal.

  "Watch yourself," I told Pirate as I crushed a Mexi­can food-craving spell near his tail. Lord knew what that would do to my dog.

  I watched the dust from the spell flutter toward the wooden deck. It would be tough to leave this place, but I'd never made any bones about the real reason I wanted to learn about my powers. I loved my job at Happy Hands. Heck, I wanted kids of my own someday. And while running around with biker witches and griffins had done a lot for my confidence and my love life, this wasn't the place to have a family.

  Case in point, as Grandma lumbered up to me with two hands full of steak knives. "For the Beast Feast after the ceremony." She dropped them onto the bench behind me and ignored the ones that missed and clat­tered to the deck.

  "What ceremony?"

  "The one for you." She dug her finger into her right ear. "Dang thing's been buzzing ever since, well, I guess I don't have anything to bitch about, do I?"

  "Need help getting ready?" Perhaps I could keep the squirrel guts out of the ceremonial goblet.

  "Nah. It's a job for the coven. I gotta round them up before they tap the keg." She cast a wry grin my way and hitched up her belt. "I'm not good at this, so shut up and listen. I was blown away by how you handled your­self down there. Don't get me wrong, I always knew you could do it. You're my grandbaby for God's sake. Any­how, I'm proud. And your mother would be too."

  "About my mom," I said, one eye on Pirate, who sniffed at the knives.

  "Scarlet told me. I should have warned you except, damn it, I thought I had more time. I saw Vald's plan for you while I was meditating in the Yardsaver shed back at the Red Skull. Unfortunately Vald also saw me."

  "It's okay," I told her. "I just wish ..." What? That my mom cared about me? That she'd been brave or strong or maybe that she'd warned me before she shoved her powers onto me? "I don't have a twin, do I?"

  She considered the question. "If you do, I haven't felt her."

  "Well that was further from the 'no' I'd been wanting." If I had a twin with the same powers as me, I had to help her. Or... my stomach squinched at the thought... maybe she was better off not knowing.

  "I'd suggest you lay off your mom for a while," Grandma said. "It took more than you realize for her to come after you, regardless of what you think about her." She tilted her head and eyed me thoughtfully. "Just know your momma loves you in her own way."

  "Okay." I'd choose to believe that, for now.

  "I meant what I said back at the Dumpster. I'm look­ing forward to being your grandma. Not that I'm going to be throwing chocolate-chip cookies at you. Or blow­ing smoke up your ass." She dug her hands into the pockets of her rhinestone-studded skinny jeans.

  "I'm going home," I told her.

  She nodded, watching the full moon. "I told Scarlet what you did, ripping your soul in half. You should have seen the look on her face." She cleared her throat. "Here's the thing. She thinks there's a way to rejoin the two halves."

  I nodded, relieved. Leave it up to Scarlet.

  "According to Scarlet, you have a choice. When we rejoin your soul, we can put it back together and leave your demon-slaying essence behind."

  "You're kidding!" I wanted to kiss her. Heck, I'd have been willing to kiss Ant Eater at that moment. Talk about winning the demon slayer lottery. This was even better than learning to control my powers. I could be normal. At last.

  "Think about it, Lizzie," Grandma cautioned. "No more switch stars. No more enchanted riverboats. No more throwing giggle spells at Ant Eater."

  "No more black souls, death spells, fifth-level demon attacks."

  "No more griffins," she said, watching the moon-flecked waves slap against the bow of the Dixie Queen.

  She would have to mention that.

  "Unlike your mom, you won't have to burden any­one else with your powers. 'Course you'll be com­pletely cut off from the magical world." We stood in silence for a moment. "Except that I'll be by to visit from time to time. I mean, you are my grandbaby."

  I knew there'd be consequences. I never thought leaving would be easy. Well, maybe I did in the be­ginning.

  While I wasn't going to run from this world, like my mom, I knew I wasn't a part of it, like my grandma.

  "Let's do it," I told her.

  "Think about it. We won't start the ceremony for another," she checked her hog watch, "twenty minutes, depending on how fast it takes to steam the armadillo jowls."

  "Of course," I told her.

  I didn't need twenty minutes to think. I'd already decided a long time ago. I mean, this is what I wanted, right? It was better than what I wanted, which was to be left alone. For good.

  So why did I feel so miserable?

  I've never liked good-byes.

  Dimitri leaned against the railing on the back deck, one foot propped up on the rust-flecked metal. He would have to look sexy as all get out in worn jeans that hugged his drool-worthy butt and his trademark black T-shirt, drawn tight over his back. Maybe I wasn't the only one feeling a bit tense.

  Witches called to each other among the clanking coming from the kitchen and main dining room. Preparations for the Beast Feast were in full swing. I'd left Pirate in the middle of it, riding in Sidecar Bob's lap and sampling everything in reach.

  Dimitri's gaze flickered over my dirty purple plaid miniskirt. "Come here, Lizzie."

  I wrapped my arms around him, ear to his chest and reveled in the thwump, tump, tump of his heart. He'd always have a part of me with him, whether he knew it or not. My chipped pink fingernails traced wicked patterns on his abs. "They send you out here too?"

  "Nah. I just got off the phone with my sisters." He burst into a wide grin. "You wouldn't believe it, they're—" He trailed off, lost in his pure rapture. His sisters were alive.

  Dimitri shook his head, lit up from head to toe. "Di­ana has this horse," he said. "She calls it her pony, but don't be fooled—the thing's as big as a Clydesdale. Turns out she's been dreaming of him while she's in her coma. She wakes up, glad as anything to be alive and decides she has to ride the horse, right then and there. Well Dyonne—that's my other sister," he paused, physically unable to wipe the smile off his face. "Dyonne tells Diana to forget about the horse. There's a monster storm brewing off the coast. Lightning, pouring rain, the works. Everybody knows she can't take Zeus out in that. But all Diana can think about is this horse."

  He shook his head. "So Diana's out there, soaked, and Dyonne is hollering at her from the window, mad as hell 'Get in here or you're going to get killed—again!' She thinks she has Diana convinced when Diana comes busting through the front door of the house and rides Zeus straight into the dining room." He laughed freely, tears touching the corners of his eyes. "God, I love those two."

  He tilted his chin down, still smiling. I was going to melt into a puddle on the floor if he kept looking at me that way.

  He wrapped my hands in his. "I'm flying to Santorini in a few hours to see them," he said. "If the house is still standing—and at this rate, that's a big if." He ran his thumbs in lazy circles over my wrists. Such a small gesture, but I didn't want it to end. "I'd like you to come stay with us."

  The two halves of my soul fluttered in my throat. I didn't know what to think. I couldn't.

  I shouldn't.

  Besides, I'd never planned a trip without two guide­books, a typed itinerary and at least three months' no­tice. Well, except for my recent excursion with the Red Skulls and it was safe to say that undertaking hadn't quite turned out like I'd expected.

/>   "Well?" He hitched a brow.

  He couldn't be serious. "When would we leave? Now?"

  "Ten minutes or so," he said, not half as concerned as he should be. "I was about to come find you."

  "Ten minutes?" It would take longer than that to convince Pirate to leave the kitchen. And how would I take a dog to Greece?

  And wasn't I out here to tell Dimitri good-bye?

  "You said yourself school doesn't start for another week," he teased, his lips on mine before I could even think about uttering the word no.

  He drew me in again and again, his hands trailing down my back, pulling me into him, making me feel. . .

  I pulled away. If I wanted to get rid of my powers, the ceremony was tonight. Of course that didn't mean I couldn't see Dimitri later . . . Wait. Yes, it did.

  "What do you think?" He kissed the tip of my nose. I could feel every inch of him crushed against me.

  I didn't want to think. Just like I hadn't wanted to think when I had him—all of him—on top of me at Motel 6.

  It was time to face facts. This was never going to work.

  Dang, it was hard to remember that with this utterly hot, raw, sexy griffin standing close enough to touch.

  Before I could stop him, he lowered his mouth to mine. He kissed like his life depended on it. It was so easy to wrap myself up in his heat. I circled one of his nipples with a finger and felt him gasp.

  "Come to Santorini with me," he murmured against my lips. Delicious. "Black sand beaches, two crazy sis­ters, my family's old country house." He brushed my hair back from my face and tucked it behind my ears. "I'd ply you with olives and think of many, many ways to entertain you." His lips tasted mine again. Once, twice. "And of course," he said, nipping at the edges of my mouth, "you'd have to skip the Beast Feast."

  Yes.

  No. My stomach tingled and it wasn't because of the way his fingers trailed down my back. It had to end to­night. I'd always said I wanted to go back, be with my preschool kids, have kids of my own some day.

  Dimitri would be better off too, I reminded myself, ignoring the heat pooling between my thighs. He'd spent most of his life trying to save his sisters. Now, for the first time, he could relax and think of his own future. Maybe settle down with a griffin like him. I already hated her.

 

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