Book Read Free

Night Falls on the Wicked

Page 19

by Sharie Kohler


  He carried the weapon in his coat pocket as he walked the quiet streets. He lifted his face to the frigid air, searching for a scent of Darby. If she was close, he could detect her. After their time together, it would be a certainty. She was in his blood now.

  If he wanted more range, wanted to deepen his senses, then he would have to shift … have to become the hunter that burned at the core of him.

  He headed through the park, where the trail of her died, vanishing into the bitterly fierce wind. He detoured off the path and found a copse of trees with snow-heavy branches that hung low, brushing the frozen earth. Ducking under the cover of those heavy branches, he stood shielded, hidden from view.

  He waited, watched, peering through the latticework of frozen branches at the stillness of the park, assuring himself that no one was around. The quiet paths, the lonely benches. No one walked the park this early in the morning, especially on a day so cold. He released a resigned breath. Warm fog puffed out from his lips.

  With a determined clench to his jaw, he stripped off his clothes and secured the knife to his thigh. His adrenaline pumped hard, shielding him from the worst of the cold as he stood naked, his skin tightening, pores shrinking in reaction to the freezing temperature but also in preparation for what was to come. What he willed to happen.

  That warmth that was always there, simmering just beneath the surface, burst free. His veins burned hotly, his heart hammering at a frantic tempo. Air rushed from his mouth in spurts. Dipping his head, he moaned low in his throat. A scratchy, tingling sensation that bordered on pain overwhelmed his body. He threw back his head. Arched his spine. His moans grew louder and he bit his lips, not wanting to attract attention. He brought his hands to his face, clutching his cheeks. He felt his bones alter, ever so slightly stretching, pulling …

  For once he let go, no longer struggling to hang on to himself. His emotions surged to the surface right along with the beast. He thought of Darby and the demon who had her. A red haze clouded his visions.

  He couldn’t stop himself. He lifted his face high to the morning wind and released a howl.

  He was overwhelmed by myriad scents. Countless foods, human aromas, all manner of rotting debris from Dumpsters littering alleyways.

  He sifted through the odors, hunting for one. Subtle and soft, clean as soap with an underlying hint of vanilla. It was inherently Darby and he would know it anywhere.

  After several moments it was there. He found it.

  With a low growl in the back of his throat, he tore free from where he hid in the trees, moving so fast that the human eye would only see a blur and not his monstrous form.

  His heart pounded at an unbelievable rate, matching the rhythm of his feet. He exited the park and whipped through the city, guided by his nose and instinct. Guided by his heart. Something he hadn’t felt in a long time. Something he didn’t think he’d ever felt.

  Before Darby.

  DARBY WOKE GROGGILY, HER head heavy and aching as if she were hung over from a night of binge drinking. She’d had a few of those nights in the past. When she’d first left home and everything—everyone—she ever knew, she took solace in a bottle once or twice. Until mornings like this convinced her to stop feeling sorry for herself and put an end to that.

  The cold greeted her stiff body. With a wince, she lifted her face, peeling it off a grimy surface. The entire side of her body that pressed against the floor ached. Tears pricked her eyes as blood flowed back into those numb parts of her body. With the flow of blood came pain.

  She contemplated her situation as she blinked her burning eyes. The demon must have grown tired of the struggle—with her and the bitter cold. She carefully prodded around inside herself, poking about to see if he was somewhere in there, just dormant. Did demons even sleep? She didn’t sense him at all. Not inside her or anywhere else.

  Faint memories of the night before filtered through her mind. She concentrated, pulling them forth like elusive dreams from the dark.

  It had been a constant battle throughout the night between her and the demon. Back and forth they went. One moment she would wrest control when the demon slipped away, too plagued by the cold.

  In those moments of freedom, she would walk as quickly as she could, practically running from the bus station where he’d been trying to lead her. And she didn’t need an explanation as to why he was taking her there. He was trying to get her on a bus headed south, where it wasn’t so cold. If he succeeded in that, she would forever be at his mercy. Her face felt tight and itchy with the weight of this very real fear.

  Slowly and with a hiss of discomfort, she rose into a sitting position, taking a moment to assess her surroundings. She didn’t know where she was. In a building of some sort, on the floor of a dingy room where the overriding color was gray. Faint sunlight trickled in from the boarded-up windows, motes of dust dancing on the beams.

  In the distance a car alarm blared over the cacophony of a relentless power drill. She pushed the tangle of red hair from her face and inspected her room more fully. Newspaper littered the floor. It dawned on her that this was an abandoned house that transients probably used. She had somehow found her way here during the night.

  Standing, she stretched out her sore muscles and rubbed filthy hands on the thighs of her jeans. God, she felt gross. It felt necessary. She needed to find a bathroom and get washed up. She doubted she could even get on a bus looking the way she did.

  But she needed to hurry. Her demon could come back at any moment. Her demon. Her stomach rolled, rebelling against the sour thought. That her life had fallen to such lows, that she had fallen to such depths rocked her to her core.

  For Aimee… for Niklas, a voice whispered across her mind. That made it worth it. Aimee was safe now. And Niklas would have peace at last. They’d forget her and move on with their lives.

  Strange that this had all happened just when she’d opened herself up for the first time in her life. Just when she had decided to embrace people back into her life. Love—when she had thought to try to find love for herself again. That maybe she deserved it like everyone else. That she needed it to live through this life.

  Her newly woken legs shook as she strode to one of the boarded windows. A big crack gaped between the nailed-up boards. She wanted to get a glimpse of the world waiting for her.

  She peered outside. The face of a brownstone apartment building stared back at her from across the street. A construction site was in full swing next door to it. Several men with hard hats walked in and out of the structure, carrying boards, wiring and other materials. Maybe she could ask one of them for directions to the bus station—where she would buy a ticket for the first bus headed north.

  Turning, she exited the room and entered a narrow hallway. Dim and airless, hardly any light penetrated it. Without any windows, it felt as if she had suddenly stepped into night. She put a hand to the wall and felt her way along, skimming the ripped plaster with trailing fingers. In the murky air, she detected what looked like a descending staircase at the far end. She made her way carefully, shivering in the cold, stale space.

  She hardly noticed the change in the air at first. It was insidious, a subtle thread of warm air drifting and curling around her ankles, then easing up each calf. The heat expanded, a pleasant thing in this bitter cold. But still she shivered. It could mean only one thing. There could only be one source for the sudden heat.

  Glancing down, her eyes rapidly scanned the area around her, registering only the murky gloom that pervaded the length of the corridor. The demon’s dark shadow might be hard to see, but she didn’t need sight to know he was here, that her demon had returned to claim her again.

  She sensed him, felt him. Knew him as she knew herself.

  Panic clawed up her throat. She turned, ready to run, flee. Where, she didn’t know. She wasn’t thinking rationally. She only knew she had to keep running.

  A sudden crash sounded behind her and she risked a glance over her shoulder. A cry strangled in her thr
oat at the sight that greeted her.

  A lycan stood at the top of the stairs, all heaving muscle and sinew. Her first thought was Cyprian—until she recalled that he was dead now. That had been the deal. And upon further inspection, she saw that he looked nothing like Cyprian. He even held himself differently. Legs spaced apart in an oddly familiar way.

  His eyes glowed across the distance at her. A bright, burning light within a sea of indigo.

  Her pulse stuttered against her throat. “Niklas?”

  She took a sliding step toward him, still uncertain. Niklas would never shift, never surrender to that part of himself. He’d made that abundantly clear.

  He moved toward her, sinew rippling beneath bronze fur. He growled low in his throat, a noise that sounded suspiciously like her name. And there were those eyes again, drilling into her with familiar intensity.

  “Niklas!” She surged forward. He’d found her! He’d come for her …

  A dark wind swirled between them in the corridor, the hot air singeing her skin, reminding her that they weren’t alone.

  “Niklas!” she cried, stretching out a hand as if she could reach him—or push him away. The impulses to do each warred within her. “Go! Run away, Niklas! It’s too late for me! Get out of here!”

  His response was to pull a deadly-looking blade from a strap attached to his thigh. With a shout, he charged at the demon’s hazy shape.

  “Niklas, no!” she screamed.

  He didn’t stand a chance fighting a demon that was nothing more than shadow. Only she could see him—only witches and the rare few demon slayers.

  And the only way a demon could be killed is through locating the mark of the fall on him and stabbing him there. An impossibility when Niklas could see only the vague, shadowy shape of him. Darby knew this. Niklas knew this, too. And yet he was here. Fighting an impossible battle for her. Why?

  She supposed it should have thrilled her that he would do such a brave, reckless thing for her. And maybe some part of her was thrilled—but for the most part she was just terrified. She hadn’t sacrificed herself just to get Niklas killed, and that was what was going to happen if he didn’t leave.

  “Niklas!” she shrieked. “Go! Get out of here!”

  Niklas ignored her, swiping and plunging his blade into the demon’s writhing and swirling shape.

  The demon flashed a grin of razor-sharp teeth. Evidently he enjoyed toying with Niklas and was in no hurry to take possession of her.

  She wrung her hands in helplessness, felt despair squeeze her heart dry. At least the demon couldn’t harm Niklas—not while he was still a shadow. Cold realization washed over her then. But he could.

  He could harm Niklas. He could kill him—through her. If he took possession of her, which he’d been about to do before Niklas showed up, he could then destroy Niklas.

  Her eyes ached as she watched the scene play out before her—Niklas fighting what he couldn’t see and her nasty demon relishing every moment of it. It was only a matter of time before her demon tired of the game and claimed her. And then it would be all over. Niklas would be dead.

  She shook her head firmly, every muscle in her body tightening and pulling taut. She couldn’t let that happen—couldn’t let herself be used that way. Couldn’t let a demon manipulate her into killing the man she loved.

  The man she loved.

  At any other time this realization would have given her pause—would have left her shaken and reeling. But there wasn’t time for that.

  She scanned the narrow hall, as if she could find a way out that wasn’t there before. Nothing. There was no way she could break past the demon and Niklas to the stairs. She was going to have to find another way out.

  As Niklas attacked her demon, came at him again and again, she inched back down the hall and plunged into the room where she’d spent the night. She attacked the boarded-up window with both hands, clawing at the boards until her nails cracked and bled. Still, she didn’t stop. Anxious breath sawed from her lips as she worked in a frenzy to escape.

  She had managed to get one board free when she felt the hot sweep of air blow into the room.

  With a gasp, she spun around, her hands flattening against the window behind her, heedless of the sharp, rusted nails scratching her palms. Apparently the demon had tired of Niklas and decided to end things.

  The demon swept toward her on a hot cyclone of air. His serpent eyes honed in on her with hard intent.

  Niklas was there, too. Just behind him—all raging lycan, a beast frightening in his wrath, slicing his blade after the demon as if he might actually do some lasting damage with it.

  “Niklas, stop! Go get out of here!”

  He ignored her, stabbing blindly with his knife, making contact with the demon but never in the correct spot. The demon hissed in annoyance as Niklas struck him in the arm, tearing his flesh. Green blood so dark it was almost black welled from the wound before the flesh sealed itself, healing up again.

  Darby squinted and scanned his scaled flesh, hoping she might be able to identify the mark somewhere on the demon and relate to Niklas where to strike. It was a desperate, unlikely hope.

  And no, she couldn’t see it anywhere. Bleakness welled up inside her as the demon lifted himself high off the ground and then came at her, flying full force into her.

  It was like getting hit by a truck. The impact stunned her, left her dazed. She felt herself slipping away, being pushed under, dragged, dragged down, somewhere far away. Almost like she was submerged in a pool of warm water and being held under. She tried to swim to the surface and break free. To take that huge gulp of breath to freedom. But she couldn’t. She was trapped, a prisoner inside herself.

  Niklas, she thought. Please, get out of here. Leave while you can. And then she thought no more.

  TWENTY-SIX

  Niklas knew the precise moment he lost Darby. The demon’s shadowy shape faded from the room—there was no sign of the bastard anymore. Niklas was left facing Darby. And yet not Darby.

  He growled, the sound vibrating from deep inside his chest as he gazed into her eyes. Hazel no more. They were a soulless black, the whites obliterated.

  “Well, lycan,” the demon sneered in Darby’s voice. A strange thing to hear her voice and know it wasn’t her. “Where do we go from here?”

  He knew precisely where the demon wanted him to go. He wanted him to attack Darby—kill her so that he could then be free. If a demon witch was killed, the demon was released. It was the only way a demon could take corporeal form and walk freely on earth.

  Niklas flexed the knife in his clawed hand and inhaled. He wasn’t idiot enough to be led down that path. No, what he needed to do was get that demon back out of Darby so he could finish him off.

  “You care about the witch, do you?” Demon-Darby cocked her head, sending her red hair tossing over one shoulder. “How singular … for a lycan.” He released a throaty laugh. “Then you should spare her. Put her out of her misery. If you care about her, you won’t leave her like this.” Using Darby’s elegant hands, the demon motioned to her body, which he inhabited.

  “Stop hiding behind her and come out and fight, you coward,” Niklas said thickly, his voice almost unintelligible.

  “Didn’t we just do that? It was so … tedious. You stabbing over and over, never even scratching me.” He sighed, but Niklas noticed he shivered, too. The cold was getting to him. He couldn’t hang on much longer.

  Niklas smiled. “Cold, isn’t it?”

  Demon-Darby scowled and lifted a hand. The mere motion was all it took to send Niklas flying and crashing back into the wall. The force jarred him to his very bones and he had to resist the impulse to attack. He held himself in check. One look at Darby’s face was all it took. He’d never harm her as long as she was in there, somewhere. If he went after the demon, it would be Darby taking the hit.

  The bastard wanted that. He wanted Niklas to kill Darby. Because once that happened, he would be free. Once her body was broken, he coul
d come out. No longer a shadow. No longer with his hands tied. He would be set loose on the world and wreak whatever damage he chose.

  Demon-Darby flexed her fingers. “Oh, that felt good. Let’s do that again.”

  Niklas staggered to his feet, bracing himself for the next attack as Darby approached. She lifted her hand and blasted Niklas with a second rush of air. He resisted it for a moment, managed to stay on his feet, and then he was flying through the air again, helpless against the force of the current.

  The demon made a tsking sound, cocking Darby’s head and sending her magnificent hair tossing around her shoulders. “Shame. I didn’t expect this to end so quickly, but as you said, it is rather cold here. I can’t afford to dally any longer.” He glanced around then. “I suppose I’ll have to leave Darby here again. Like last night. Only this time, when she wakes, it will be to find you dead beside her.”

  It was a strange sensation, staring at the face of the woman he loved and feeling only loathing. Because it wasn’t Darby. He wasn’t dealing with the woman he loved right now.

  Yes. He loved Darby. The realization that he loved her slid through him smoothly, without the slightest ripple. It should have struck him as a surprise, but it didn’t. Why else would he be here if he didn’t love her?

  Fresh resolve coursed through him. Thinking only of doing what he could to drive the demon from Darby’s body, he reached for the necklace at his throat—Darby’s necklace—and ripped it free.

  Before the demon could react, he moved in a blur of speed. He pressed the necklace deep into her throat, just below her collarbone. He held it there, pressed against her flesh, hoping that combined with the cold it was enough of an irritant to send the demon running.

  The demon shrieked and thrashed, but Niklas clung to Darby, pulling her close to him, holding the three charms tightly against her skin no matter how she fought him.

 

‹ Prev