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Demon Rogue (The Half-Demon Rogue Book 1)

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by Erikson, D. N.




  Demon Rogue

  The Half-Demon Rogue (Book 1)

  D.N. Erikson

  Watchfire Press

  Copyright © 2016 D.N. Erikson. All rights reserved.

  Published by Watchfire Press.

  This book is a work of fiction. Similarities to actual events, places, persons or other entities are coincidental.

  Watchfire Press

  www.watchfirepress.com

  www.watchfirepress.com/dn

  Cover design by Yoly Cortez

  www.cormarcovers.com

  Demon Rogue/D.N. Erikson. – 1st ed.

  To find out the source of the hatred between Isabella, Marrack and Kalos from 979 A.D., visit watchfirepress.com/dn to download the exclusive novella STORM SURGE.

  1

  “Excuse me,” a meek feminine voice called from across the parking lot, “do you know where I can find, you know…?”

  No, I didn’t know.

  But I was curious.

  I squinted and shielded my eyes from the bright morning sun, but couldn’t see who was speaking. With a shrug, I decided that this person wasn’t looking for me. Leaning back against the wooden bench to stretch my legs, I rubbed my jaw and began to close my eyes.

  It might have been well before noon, but it was never too early for a nap. Especially since no one was beating down my door with new work.

  A shadow cut into my sunlight.

  “I’m looking for a private investigator,” the same voice said again, this time with a little more conviction. “Someone gave me an address, and I think this is it, but this town...”

  “Who’re you looking for?” I said, knowing damn well already that it was probably me.

  “A Mr. Kalos Aeon.”

  “I’m a recovery specialist,” I said with a practiced sigh. People usually got it wrong. Although, if it really came down to it, I was just an investigator with a cooler angle.

  “I see.” Feet shuffled on the cracking pavement as she backed away. “Do you have somewhere we can converse in private?”

  I scratched my chin sagely, like I was contemplating whether it was worth my time. To be honest, I’d gotten comfortable and was a little drowsy from the summer heat.

  But I was a professional, so I shook off the cobwebs.

  “Sure.” I got up and opened the door without looking back. Holding it open so that my new client could follow me inside, I added, “So who sent you my way?”

  There was an uncomfortable silence, punctuated only by our footsteps up to the second floor. I headed inside my office, the door swinging almost shut behind me.

  “I’d rather not say,” the voice told me, back in the empty hallway.

  “Let me guess,” I said, heading to my desk. After I settled in, I leveled my gaze at the shadow hidden behind the frame. “They told you I know a couple things about the unseen.”

  “I was hoping you could help me with an unusual situation, yes.”

  It was a good enough guess. The other ones I usually got were do you really believe in magic? A lot of, make me immortal. Or, my favorite, demons will burn in hell.

  Although all of those were better than when I got a psychopath trying to apprentice in the dark arts. As if I spent my days making crop circles and mumbling incantations to my legions of undead minions.

  I much preferred the company of a good woman and a little whiskey to any magic, but then again, the Crimson Conclave always had regarded me as a sort of a black sheep. An embarrassment to dark magic.

  Whatever.

  Fuck supernatural politics.

  I downed a half cup of lukewarm coffee and swung my feet off the unstable desk. I should’ve been in more of a hurry, considering I wasn’t flush with cash. But in the morning, I tend to take my sweet time.

  And this morning wasn’t going to be any different. At least in that regard.

  The tentative, secretive nature of the implied request was familiar enough. My clientele generally heard about me from a friend, or a guy who knew a girl who knew a drifter down in—well, you get the picture. After all, I can’t exactly advertise a magical salvage and recovery business on Google AdWords.

  Which meant the first order of business in securing a customer was assuring them that I was, indeed, for real. This had taken more decades to perfect than I liked to admit.

  I cleared my throat and said, “So you’re looking for something you lost?”

  “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have come.” The woman’s clipped response came as she began to hurry down the hall. Soon she would disappear back into the searing Texas sun, hop in her Range Rover and decide better of it.

  I knew the type well enough.

  Dabblers.

  But I had nothing against mortals, unlike other creatures of magic. A fool’s money spent just as well as a wiccan’s, and usually with fewer complications.

  “Whatever it is you’re looking for, I can damn well find it, miss.”

  She stopped walking away. I smirked as I contemplated the thoughts running through her mind. Surely she had to be wondering about the extent of my abilities—or whether I was just some kook holed up above a dispensary, getting high off the second-hand supply.

  Still no answer, though.

  In a disinterested, flat tone, I said, “What do you need?” I was focused and invested now. Best not to get excited. I really needed this one, after all.

  The door creaked as the woman turned the brass knob. I saw pale skin, smelled her conditioner—organic lemon-scented, from an expensive boutique—filling the small space before I got the full picture. But first impressions were enough to understand that she didn’t belong here.

  The stale air rushed out of the office as she stepped inside and shut the door. I kept it cracked in the summer, because otherwise the Texas heat was unbearable. Air conditioning was a modern convenience I couldn’t currently afford.

  “You are Mr. Kalos Aeon, right?”

  “No, I’m his secretary.”

  Her lips turned up in a grimace.

  “Most people call me Kal,” I said, trying to recover. “But yeah, that’s my given name.”

  She was a little over five feet, pretty, with brown hair and a round face. A sensible summer skirt, solid purple, one that didn’t show too much leg, clung to her freshly showered skin. She clutched a large canvas bag, the type you’d take to the beach or pack the kids’ toys in. Maybe a housewife, wondering if I could contact her dead husband via a Ouija board. I’d gotten that shit enough times to know the type. Done it enough times to know that waving my hands around was good for a quick hundred bucks.

  “I’m not sure you can help me, Mr. Aeon.”

  “First things first,” I said with an easy smile. “How ‘bout you introduce yourself? I like to know who I’m working with.”

  The woman shifted uncomfortably in her flats. I sensed a slight disturbance in the room, but I couldn’t place my finger on its source. I chalked it up to having a pretty woman visit me in a dump like this and shrugged it off.

  “I don’t think that’s necessary,” she said.

  “But you know so much about me, and I know nothing about you.”

  In a whisper, she said, “I heard you were a demon.” Her eyes darted around the cramped office, over the stacks of cardboard boxes and rusted filing cabinets, searching for confirmation of this fact.

  That little detail tended to make business more difficult than necessary.

  I ran my hand through my short, black hair and said, “You heard correctly, m
a’am.”

  A little good old Texas hospitality usually went a long way. Her shoulders relaxed. We weren’t about to knock back shots of bourbon at the local gin joint, but it was a start.

  After all, most people ran screaming out of the room when they reached that part of the fine print. Demon was generally a deal breaker, even amongst the secular. To her credit, all we were enduring together was a super-awkward silence.

  Demons get a bad rap, just like any other creature with dark essence coursing through its blood. Sure, more than a few of us are pricks—okay, damn near close to a hundred percent of us were. But it means I’m unfairly stigmatized. As someone who’s tried to run game on a cloaked Fae on more than one occasion, I have the wounded pride—and light burns—to prove that much.

  You see, I’m different.

  I have a strict code, developed over thousands of years. It was simple, really. Only three things to remember.

  Don’t screw anyone over who doesn’t deserve it.

  Always complete the job I was paid to do.

  And never make a promise I couldn’t keep.

  But try telling people that. Then again, I don’t blame ‘em. Talk is cheaper than bogus diamonds and worth even less.

  Finally, the woman broke the silence and said, “Diana. My name’s Diana.” She looked me straight in the eye when she told me. We held the pose for a moment, as if she was waiting for my soul to reveal itself. “And I won’t reveal who referred me.”

  “Bold,” I said. “Never did like snitches, anyway.”

  “I find your professional demeanor concerning, Mr. Aeon.” Her voice was quiet, but accusatory.

  “It’s a demon thing.”

  There was another one of those uncomfortable silences. I gave the lady credit, though. Even on my C- game, she was hanging in. Normally this would have been a non-starter.

  Moment of truth, Kal. Time to figure out why she came.

  Prepared for imminent disappointment, I flashed an easy smile, and said, “I presume whoever referred you explained my terms?”

  “50% of the magical item’s essence,” she said. “And a per diem of $250, regardless of outcome.”

  “Recovery isn’t guaranteed.”

  “It’s a tough job, Mr. Aeon,” she said, the trace of meekness from before vanishing. I wondered briefly if it had been an act. “I would expect nothing less.”

  I nodded. What can I say? When you’re as old as I am, you read a lot of novels. I got the whole payment structure from an old airport paperback in the sixties. I’d been running this magical salvage gig just fine for centuries. No one told me that the guy in those books winds up broke most of the time. I just focused on the house boat and the babes.

  I should’ve learned more in my lifetime. But I’ve got good reasons why I’m not well-rounded.

  “Payment for the first week comes upfront,” I said. “Refundable if it takes less time.” My brow furrowed as I watched her reach into the bag. I was hoping for an envelope thick with cash, but instead she brought out a single 4 x 6 photograph and held it out.

  “I want you to locate this, Mr. Aeon,” she said. “But it’d be irresponsible to hire you without warning.”

  The image remained turned toward her, as if she was trying to maintain an aura of suspense. After you get this old, I could claim that such techniques didn’t work. But I was still half man, and I was wondering just how this soccer mom and her luxury SUV wandered into my little office in Inonda.

  So I said, casual as I could, “What could you possibly need to warn me about?”

  “It’s graphic.” Her shoulders straightened, brown hair brushing against the straps of her dress. “Especially for a creature such as yourself.”

  “Nothing I haven’t seen in this world,” I said.

  Diana raised an eyebrow and stepped closer. I felt my own essence buzzing through my veins. There was more to this woman than I originally thought. The pale, beautiful exterior hid a few secrets.

  My breath caught as I took hold of the glossy print. Part of the problem with having an unlisted business advertising your ability to locate impossible to find things is the tendency for big problems to eventually show up on your doorstep.

  “Perhaps this isn’t covered by your terms, Mr. Aeon,” Diana said. “But I was hoping you could help my friend.” The cleanly swirl of her lemon-scented hair didn’t mix well with the brutality of the scene. The dissonance made me want to vomit. I kept it down—it would be unbefitting of even a half-demon to be visibly bothered by such matters—and scratched my nose.

  “It’s covered.” Arrogance will get you every time in this life. The minute you think you’ve seen it all, you get popped in the face by something ten degrees away from the normal.

  Yeah, this qualified as magical item salvage.

  But not quite what I was used to.

  “Perhaps you should look closer,” Diana said. “There might be clues.”

  “Give me a minute.”

  “Surely you’re up to the task, Mr. Aeon? I thought a demon would not be bothered by such matters.”

  Through gritted teeth, I said, “Who are you?”

  The lemon conditioner seemed to envelop me as she said, “The woman with the cash.”

  I closed my eyes and ran the scenarios. What Diana had just handed me wasn’t good for business. Or for me. For any of us, really.

  I eventually looked back at the picture. The crimson tint of the blood was unmistakable amidst the clumps of fur and severed paws.

  “Your friend is probably dead,” I said, stating the obvious. Someone had carved this creature, limb from limb, dismantling it for its magical essence. As I’d mentioned before, I’ve seen a lot of things over the years. But nothing quite as savage as this.

  A magical creature chop-chop. That was a new one.

  “Dead or alive, my friend must be recovered,” Diana said. “It should be clear, Mr. Aeon, why this is a large problem.”

  It was clear all right.

  Someone was trying to suck up a lot of essence and get damn powerful. And they were kidnapping and killing supernatural creatures to literally harvest the stuff. And now, mild-mannered Diana from God-knows-where wanted me to get the jumbled biological pieces back. Before whoever was taking all this energy became too powerful to stop.

  Large problem didn’t begin to cover it.

  “You have any idea who’s doing this,” I asked, pushing the print beneath a rusty stapler.

  “This might help,” she replied. “I found it at the scene.”

  Which is when Diana brought out the river card, turned what I thought was a straight of shit into a royal flush of get the hell out now.

  The talisman clinked as Diana dropped it on the desk. Even stained in blood, I would’ve recognized the design anywhere.

  Because it had been haunting me since before Athens was built.

  “Marrack,” I said in a half-hiss, half-whisper. “You’re back, you son of a bitch.”

  2

  Diana didn’t ask any more questions. From my expression, it was clear that I wasn’t in a conversational mood. And even if she didn’t know much about demons—and thought I was a nice one—it was generally good policy to leave the party when an angry one was nearby.

  She did leave my expenses before she bid me goodbye. $1750 cash. Plenty of money for recovery.

  Or getting the hell out of Inonda.

  After ten minutes, I breathed a little easier. These exercises I learned from a Buddhist monk at the height of the Beat movement have come in handy over the years. Or maybe it was a little after, when the Beatles started doing it. Time starts running together. In any event, turns out this shit works, even if you’re wired to run a little hotter than most.

  Once I’d cooled off, I realized that splitting town wasn’t going to fly. Me and my damn code. Screwing people ove
r who didn’t deserve it wasn’t acceptable. And right now, the only thing standing between a lot of dead creatures and Marrack was me.

  Just like old times, right?

  Just when I’d begun wrapping my head around the fact that Marrack was back—after this damn long—the phone rang. I glowered and stuck out my tongue, but the person didn’t have the good sense to hang up.

  So I picked up the receiver on the third ring and said in my best gritty voice, “This is Kal.”

  “You sound like someone pissed in your cereal,” Charon replied with annoying cheerfulness. “I need something.”

  Right to the point with ‘ol Charon. It’d been like this for thousands of years. Why change now? He knew I was literally helpless to resist his “requests.”

  It was a problem I’d been working on for some time.

  Through clenched teeth I said, “How can I be of service?” I touched the thick folder that had a permanent spot on the side of my desk. It was filled with everything I knew about getting free of him. Thus far, that wasn’t a whole lot.

  But still, assembling it gave me the idea that I was sticking it to the man.

  There was a long pause on the other end, which gave me free reign to imagine plenty of horrid scenarios. Being Charon’s faithful instrument had caused me no shortage of pain over the years, mostly in the form of embarrassment and near-death experiences. As wardens went, he was about the shittiest imaginable.

  Wasn’t always that way, in the beginning.

  But the sauce will do that to a man.

  Too bad I owed him my eternal life.

  “It’s the Conclave,” he said. “I figured out—”

  The line went dead, and the fluorescent lights flickered out.

  It didn’t take the essence running through my veins to realize something was seriously wrong.

  Searching through the desk’s drawers, I looked for my Remkah Talisman. I really should have been wearing it, but Inonda was a nice enough place that sometimes I got complacent.

  By nice enough, I meant a dive-ass town that I’d grown fond of. Maybe there was a correlation between my judgment and being broke, too.

 

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