Magic After Dark Boxed Set (Six Book Bundle)

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Magic After Dark Boxed Set (Six Book Bundle) Page 3

by Deanna Chase


  The motel that they had been staying in that week was just off the Strip, where it was never truly night. The light from the pinnacle of the Luxor pierced the cloudless sky. Casino lights flashed over her, dappling the pavement in dancing patterns of red and gold. Sirens wailed a block away. A thousand hearts beat within the radius of a city block, some pounding with adrenaline, others with disappointment.

  Elise pushed away her senses, ignoring the call of human life—and the demons that dwelled in the tunnels below. Instead, she focused herself on the job to come.

  Werewolves. Man, she hated werewolves.

  She spread her arms wide and let the night consume her.

  CHAPTER THREE

  One mile or a hundred, it didn’t seem to matter. Once Elise bled into the darkness, the entire world was no more than a thought away.

  Well, the entire world that didn’t face the sun was only a thought away, to be exact. Once, she had tried to cross the globe, only to smack into morning a few time zones east. That had been her first, extremely miserable taste of being exploded into a thousand incorporeal fragments. It had taken almost a week to piece herself back together. Anthony and McIntyre had laughed at her when she returned, like it was some kind of silly mistake that could happen to anyone, but they had looked worried.

  Elise didn’t fuck around with sunlight anymore.

  Her new life was three years old now. Three years since she had shared blood with Yatam, the father of all demons, and lost her human body. Elise had been remade in his image, with all of a demon’s strengths and weaknesses. But demons were a diverse class of creatures. She didn’t know what type of demon she was, or if there even was another demon like her at all, and she was still trying to learn her limitations.

  She was obviously a creature of night: pale-skinned, dark-haired, and easily cloaked in shadow. Elise looked like one of the thousands of succubi descended from Yatam’s line. If she had possessed an unusual thirst for sex, she probably would have believed herself to be a succubus. But she didn’t crave flesh. Not like that.

  Elise had seen Yatam in daylight a dozen times, too; he hadn’t been burned by the sun the way that she was. She was optimistic that her imprisonment in night was temporary. After five thousand years, there had been a lot of tricks up Yatam’s metaphoric sleeve that Elise hadn’t learned yet.

  But darting over a country swathed in night was easy. Elise simply closed her eyes on Las Vegas and opened them on a gas station thousands of miles away.

  Her ability to fast-travel was good, but her ability to find places she had never been before was not. She had no idea how to find the sheriff’s office in Grove County. All-powerful demon or not, she needed directions.

  The gas station door had an advertisement for churro nuggets plastered at eye-level. It was a temporary fixture, no more than a fancy sticker. But below that was an even more recent sign: a handwritten note on lined paper that said, “We Report Preternaturals.”

  Elise stopped cold, hand on the doorknob, and stared at that sign.

  “We Report Preternaturals” had become the battle cry of terrified humans that supported the Office of Preternatural Affairs’s policies—an oath to report non-human customers to the census for cataloging. Similar shows of support were unheard of in Las Vegas. Northern Nevada had been under military occupation since the winter of 2009. The OPA didn’t need propaganda where the citizenry already lived in fear of another demon apocalypse.

  With all of her motel-hopping, the OPA’s census personnel hadn’t located Elise for cataloging. She hadn’t gone out of her way to register, either.

  She ripped the lined paper off the door and trashed it.

  The bell over the gas station door jingled when she entered. The polished brass bell was shiny and new—the only shiny and new thing in the cramped, grimy station.

  “Can I help you?” asked the clerk. He was a squat black man with a flat nose, much like a toad. His name tag said, “Hello! My name is Brick. Please tell me what I can do to assist you!” The name was written in black permanent marker, with an angry slant to the “K.”

  “Sure,” Elise said, sauntering up the aisle. “I need to find the Grove County Sheriff’s Department.”

  Brick gave her a long look from head to toe. His mind was a mess of disorganized electrical signals, but Elise could taste the judgments streaming across his mind. Knee-high boots, hip-hugging jeans, leather jacket? Godless whore. She was confident that he would have found the truth of her nature far more terrifying.

  “Why are you looking for the GCSD?” he asked.

  She plucked a newspaper off the stand and unfolded it. The serial killings were front page, above-the-fold news. Elise flipped through to the crime section in the back, where she found a picture of the missing thirty-three-year-old man. No mention of Lucinde.

  “I want to visit a friend,” she said, tossing the newspaper onto the counter.

  “I didn’t see your car pull up.”

  Elise stared at Brick, letting him feel the full weight of her black-irised gaze. His mind crackled with stubbornness and prejudice, bending under the weight of her presence. But he couldn’t win a staring contest with Elise. His eyes dropped first.

  Brick grabbed a map off the stand, unfolding it across the counter. “Lemme see.”

  She tilted her head to study the unfamiliar region. A river ran northeast-southwest, breaking into a fork midway down the county. A town called Northgate was nestled in the junction.

  “We’re here,” he said, pointing at a dot on the north end of the river. “GCSD’s main station’s in Northgate…here. Want the map?”

  “No.”

  “Want churros? Got a deal on ‘em. Three for two dollars.”

  It had been a long time since Elise bothered eating food. “No.” She watched Brick fold the map and return it to the plastic rack. A subtle tremble touched his fingers, and she didn’t think that it had anything to do with sickness. The green haze of fear tinted his mind. “Are you open all night, Brick?”

  He started at the sound of his name. “We close at eleven, and we’re not open on Sundays.”

  So it was one of those towns.

  “Thanks for your help,” she said flatly.

  Brick barely waited for the door to shut behind her before picking up the phone. Elise’s curiosity was piqued. Who was he calling—the sheriff?

  She stood outside the door, back to the window, and listened. Her hearing was excellent. Through the single-paned windows, she could hear Brick moving as clearly as though she stood behind him. Plastic creaked. A finger pounded the rubber numbers on a phone.

  When the ringing cut off, he said, “She’s here. She’s going to Northgate.”

  He hung up without waiting for a response.

  Elise slunk around the back of the gas station, stalking Brick through the grimy windows. He locked the front door first. Then he turned the “open” sign off. And then he stepped into the back room and started playing with something that looked like a security system.

  Through the window, she could see a clock that said it was only nine forty-five.

  “Closing shop early, aren’t you?” Elise said softly.

  She let herself bleed into the darkness. It welcomed her with open arms. No matter where Elise went, no matter how different from her usual home base in Nevada, the night was a familiar companion.

  Her hair bled into the shadows behind her. Her skin faded.

  Elise ghosted along the line of autumn-bare trees, far beyond the last line of gas pumps, and waited for Brick.

  He emerged minutes later.

  Brick hugged a padded manila envelope to his chest. He limped toward the only car in sight—a red Chevy pickup. The fog of fear chased him, sour on the night air.

  Elise met him at the driver’s side door and grabbed his wrist. His sallow face grayed with shock. As far as his dull human senses would know, Elise had appeared from nothingness.

  “Christ!” he gasped.

  She ripped the e
nvelope from his hand and tore it open with her teeth. A plastic VHS tape spilled out. “What are you doing with this?” Elise asked, scooping it off of the ground without releasing him. “Who told you to look out for me?”

  “I don’t know anything, lady,” he said. “All I know is, your picture’s been sent around to gas stations and convenience stores, and—and I don’t know, other local businesses. It was forwarded through email. Lots of people are on the lookout, and there’s a reward for sighting you. I get two grand for this tape.”

  “Where does the tape go?”

  “Jesus, woman—”

  Elise used his wrist to jerk his body forward. His knees buckled. He sank to the pavement in front of her. “Where does the tape go, Brick?”

  “Grove County Sheriff’s Department,” he said.

  Her eyebrows lifted. “Is that who you called? Was it Deputy Marshall?”

  “I don’t know whose number that was. It was attached to the email.”

  “I think I want to see this email, Brick,” Elise said. “I would like to see it very much.”

  To her surprise, he extracted a smart phone from his pocket. Brick hardly looked like an iPhone user.

  It only took a moment to load the message in question. The attached image was an illustration, not a photo, and whoever had drawn it was obviously more familiar with Elise’s human form than her demon one. Her current nose was smaller than in the picture—the curved bridge had been straightened after her transformation, and the Aquiline arch was reduced to something more proportionate for her square features. Her broad lips were turned into a frown, which would always be accurate.

  Elise touched her eyebrow. The piercing was missing, too. McIntyre had driven the needle through her brow himself, wearing rubber gloves so that he wouldn’t be electrified. They’d had to attach the needle to a car battery in order to keep her body from rejecting the metal. Electricity was the only thing that seemed to damage her now—electricity, and very bright lights.

  That drunken experiment had been a year ago. The eight-gauge ring was a permanent fixture on her face now, and it wasn’t in the illustration.

  But everything else was there: the lips, the hair, the scowl. The illustrator seemed to know the lines of Elise’s face as intimately as she did. Maybe even more so.

  The body of the email was short.

  Reward offered for sighting the woman pictured in the attachment. She is armed and dangerous. Do not attempt to restrain. Comply with all demands. $2000 cash reward offered for evidence of arrival, to be delivered to 234 North Ransom Boulevard. Leave a message at the following number to report sightings.

  The email address was a random string of numbers and letters. Judging by the six “forward” abbreviations preceding the subject line, Brick hadn’t received it directly anyway.

  Elise kept her grip on the clerk as she forwarded the email to Anthony and McIntyre, then slid the phone back into his pocket.

  “I’ll deliver the tape,” she said, tucking it under her arm. “The reward is mine.”

  Brick’s face went ashen. “But…”

  “It’s mine.” She had no use for the money personally, but Anthony and McIntyre got commissions from money collected during hunting activities, and the rest went to an education fund for McIntyre’s daughters. They were going to be able to go to a very nice college at this rate.

  He looked like he wanted to argue, but Brick choked on the words. Elise released him. He hugged his arm to his body, rubbing the tender skin.

  “Don’t tell them where you found the email,” he said.

  “I doubt they even know you exist,” Elise said. She returned the tape to the envelope and tucked it under her arm. “By the way—if you try to report this preternatural to the OPA, I’ll come back for another visit.”

  Brick scrambled to get in his car. He locked the doors, as if that might somehow keep Elise from getting through to him. Breaking into a locked car was as easy as slipping through the vent, but he didn’t need to know that. Elise was done with this asshole.

  She weighed the tape in her hand. Deputy Lincoln Marshall hadn’t only hired Elise to handle his werewolf problem. He had notified the local businesses to keep an eye out for her. The fact that there was so much money behind the sighting made her doubt that the Sheriff’s Department knew anything about the deputy’s activity.

  But he couldn’t be the mastermind, either. He wouldn’t know Lucinde Ramirez. He wouldn’t have known Elise when she had fierce, hawklike features, and no eyebrow piercing. And he didn’t look like the kind of guy that could afford to throw that kind of money around. There was another chess piece on the board she didn’t see yet—one that was wealthy and influential.

  Elise could already tell that she wasn’t going to enjoy her visit to Northgate.

  The Grove County Sheriff’s Office was quiet in the middle of the night. Elise sat on the lawn of the school across the street to watch it, wasting a few pensive hours until the sun rose and forced her into hiding.

  She tasted two heartbeats on her tongue. Two people were staffing the station in the early hours of morning. Dispatchers, maybe, or deputies lucky enough to be on night shift. Neither of them would be Lincoln Marshall. McIntyre had found his travel itinerary; the deputy had a reservation for one more night at the old Hilton.

  There was a lot of interesting information to be collected about Northgate, just from sitting in front of the Sheriff’s Office. The autumn colors were as beautiful here as anywhere else in the northeast, but there didn’t seem to be accommodations for tourists. The town was sleepy. Silent. And there was a giant crucifix on the lawn of Bain Marshall Elementary, though it didn’t seem to be a religious school; those were usually named St. Something. Bain Marshall definitely wasn’t a saint. Elise also suspected the surname shared with the deputy wasn’t a coincidence, either.

  A religious school, a deputy with a local legacy, a street on which Elise hadn’t seen a single car pass. Far cry from Las Vegas.

  As if to challenge her previous thought, a car slowly rolled past the sheriff’s office. It wasn’t a cruiser—it was a long, sleek muscle car, with the kind of grille that made it look like it was out to eat someone. It was too dark to tell if it was silver or blue, and the windows were tinted dark enough that she couldn’t make out the illuminated dashboard, even with her keen eyesight.

  It inched past at five miles per hour, almost as if the driver was looking for something. Once it reached the street corner, it accelerated again.

  The heartbeats inside the sheriff’s office continued to beat slow and steady, unaware of the lone passerby. One of the hearts had a murmur, and the other seemed to struggle for other reasons—obesity, maybe. But they were both calm.

  Slow night in Northgate. Maybe slow enough to look at the sheriff’s records.

  Elise sauntered across the street, padded envelope tucked under her arm. There were two security cameras near the front door—one aimed at the entrance, and one aimed onto the lawn. A few steps forward and their cameras would pick her up. They wouldn’t need to pay for footage of Elise. They would have their very own copy for free.

  She let out a slow breath, unraveling into the night.

  It felt right to loose herself upon the darkness, like she was intended to be no more than an amorphous fog, and it was her human body that was foreign. She sank into the sounds of night. The locusts whispering in the grass, the whirring moth wings, the steady tha-thump of heartbeats. A family snored in a house two blocks away. A teacher was in early to grade papers at Bain Marshall Elementary. Elise let all of the tiny, meaningless details slip past her.

  She hugged everything that mattered inside her amorphous form: her clothing, the falchion and scabbard, the gold chains, and the surveillance tape from Brick’s gas station. There seemed to be some strange, extra-dimensional property to her demon body that allowed her to carry objects anywhere she could fit. And tonight, Elise was interested in fitting underneath the weather stripping of the Grove County Sheri
ff’s Office’s front door.

  Extending into long tendrils, she slipped fingers of mist under the door.

  She struck an invisible wall.

  Magic shocked through her. Elise became corporeal again with an unpleasant jolt, and it was all she could do to reassemble herself back inside of her clothing.

  Elise staggered and caught herself on the doorframe, nails digging into the wood. Her heart beat wildly in her chest.

  “Shit,” she said.

  There were wards keeping Elise out of the building—heavy ones, the kind cast by a coven of witches powerful enough to exert their will over demons. The kind of coven that shouldn’t have existed in the same town that had crucifixes on the lawn of public elementary schools.

  She took a closer look at the doorway she gripped. Tiny pentagrams marched up the wood, covered in whitewash.

  “Lincoln Marshall, you’ve been a bad boy,” Elise murmured. She thumbed the ring on her right hand. It was a warding ring that blocked some of her powers—magical powers, in fact, which no kopis was meant to possess. If she took it off, she could try to break the wards.

  She didn’t get a chance to experiment. The muscle car returned, rubber treads whispering on asphalt.

  This time, the car pulled into the elementary school parking lot. The emergency brake groaned. Both doors opened, and two people stepped out.

  With a thought, Elise darted across the street, lingering in the shadows underneath the bus shelter.

  Two black men in their early twenties met each other at the bumper of the muscle car—according to the insignia on the grille, a Chevy Chevelle SS. The smaller of the men wore a leather jacket much like Elise’s. It bulged under the arms. She didn’t have to get closer to know that he was armed. She recognized the look of a man prepared to shoot.

  But his companion looked far more dangerous. It had nothing to do with the fact that he stood well over six feet with shoulders so broad that he might not fit through doorways. It was the scars mangling the left side of his face and neck.

 

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