And now was no different. This, whatever he sensed, wasn’t the same evil. Another bear? A deer perhaps?
A click, heavy and metal sounding—one only a loading shotgun could make. Eustace spied them from somewhere close, with his gun he’d once referred to as Betsy, and her sights were probably on the beast. The beast twisted, blocking Elizabeth as though Eustace would try shooting her. His mass became backlit with Eustace’s spotlight.
She darted in front of the beast, raising her hands. “Don’t shoot! It’s me, don’t shoot.”
The blinding light lowered, hanging around his neck. It emphasized the shock on his face. “Eustace, please…” She stepped toward him, hands still raised. “Drop the gun.”
“What…?” He seemed to be confused, for the double barrel darted back and forth between her and the beast, who remained behind her.
Elizabeth, the beast reproached internally, and she ignored it.
“Eustace…”
“Step away from it, Beth,” Eustace said through his teeth.
“No. I’m with him. And you will not shoot him again.” She retreated, blocking the beast. “Eustace, please…” Her words broke as emotion rose in her throat. “I’m begging you. Please don’t shoot him.”
“It’s a monster!” he shouted, his voice too loud for the forest’s stillness. His gun trembled.
“He’s my friend.”
His eyes locked with hers, and all fell silent. All except the rain, that didn’t stop for anyone. “Please,” she said again, more softly.
With a rigid sigh, he dropped the gun. “This is…Shit, Beth, people aren’t going to think too highly on this.”
She released a breath and lowered her hands, then looked back at the beast. He sat on his haunches, no longer crouched, and his eyes that always said so much filled with something intense. “Go,” she said to him.
I’ll find you, he said, and then was gone.
She looked back to Eustace, whose his eyes nearly bulged from his face. “You…”
“Eustace, I know this is strange, but—”
“What if it hurts you?”
“He won’t. Not ever. You have to trust me.”
“Some might wonder if you’re just as evil as that thing, romping around with it at night.” His eyes accused. And her throat closed.
“Eustace,” she said, stepping closer. “This doesn’t change anything. Neither he nor I is evil. He has a good heart.”
“It’s always been evil, Beth. I’ve seen what it can do. And it sickens me that you—” He cut himself off, running a hand down his beard. No doubt thinking about Holly Farrell.
With hands clasped in desperation, she attempted to keep her voice even. “You said from the first night you knew me, you trusted me. That I had good judgment. Please trust me now, Eustace. I know what I’m doing and I’m not putting my life—and especially anyone else’s—in danger.” She paused, staring into his eyes. His softened. “Do you trust me?”
He looked down. In a small voice, he answered, “I…suppose I still do. But…”
“Then you need to believe me when I say I’m okay, and he would never do anything to really hurt anyone. Please…leave him alone.”
He shook his head, hardening his resolve. “Only tonight, Beth. This is the only time I’ll let it go. So you better be damn careful, because next time I will shoot. Take that as a warning.” He turned then said behind him, “And don’t worry; I still respect you enough to keep this between us. I don’t want to think what might become of you if people knew.”
It took a minute or two for total darkness to dominate the place he once stood. Behind her, the beast’s presence grew strong and comforting. I can’t see you anymore.
She scrunched her eyes to rid the words she’d already been anticipating from her mind. With teeth clamped to keep her emotions in check, she turned. “Don’t.”
You’re not safe with me.
“I’m safe only with you!”
He didn’t say anything; instead he lowered his head and began walking back the way they’d come, waiting for her to follow. She didn’t at first and he looked back at her, his tail whipping. It’s late, Elizabeth, and the morning comes early.
Her chest felt slightly lighter at his usual words, and she thought maybe this incident wouldn’t change things after all. But when he returned her to her porch twenty minutes later, the look in his eyes spoke a goodbye. I’m sorry, Elizabeth.
“No—”
I won’t let you be hated like me.
“I can handle it.”
It’s too dangerous if they know. We aren’t supposed to be friends. It’s not supposed to be that way. It never was.
“But…you’re all I have.” Her eyes burned and emotion knotted her throat.
I’m…still here. I’ll never be anywhere else.
“I’m not going to lose you because of them.”
You’re not. You’re losing me because of me. And before she could beg him to stay, in the same way she’d begged Eustace to spare his life, he left, the jerking branches of a hemlock the only evidence of his escape.
***
A dark satisfaction settled over Elizabeth’s house—a false sense of rightness in what had just happened. It tried but failed to settle upon her body as well. She sensed that it felt comfortable here with her, within her lightless walls. It told her this was meant to be, that she was never meant to be in the beast’s life. Standing motionless, she looked around her living room, unable to pinpoint any of the usual shadows. The room looked darker than it should have been.
In a hurry, she flipped on the switch, her lamp taking longer to flicker to life since it fought with the nighttime. But the room illuminated well after a moment, and she breathed a sigh of relief when that eerie satisfaction seemed to move farther away, irked by the change.
What entity was satisfied with the beast’s abandonment? Was it the same who’d stirred the wind upon her arrival, warning her not to stay? What could possibly want him to live in misery?
Having just a hint of an idea, she opened her big book of fairy tales, searching for the demon she wanted to blame. And her understanding began piecing together as she read, making that false sense of rightness—that dark satisfaction—dissipate.
Diableron: it was the official name the French had given the demonic beings in 1351, when the first legend of its kind was born. Thereafter, legends of Diablerons began springing up in every continent, the most recent story documented in 1891. Some thought the name stemmed from the terms diablotin and laideron—small devil and ugly girl—but however it was derived, the Diableron was a being beyond definition: a demon, a black destroyer. They were beings whose origin couldn’t be explained, there to instill fear in faithful hearts, to cause mischief, or to haunt men whose souls were damned. It had been her least favorite creature of folklore as a child, and her father would skip the section, since she hadn’t even been able to look at the illustration. She studied it now, for the first time: its slender body that looked more like a silhouette, with a long, spear-like tail that left an oily trail of blackness behind. It appeared more like a mist than a being itself, hovering over the ground. Despite the melting face of a demon, it could change its form into anything or anyone—whatever would be most haunting to its target.
Logic told her it was too incredible of a concept to believe, but then wasn’t an enchantress or a witch incredible, too? Wasn’t a man who transformed into a beast every night? That was when she saw the asterisk leading her to the bottom of the page: See also section 3. Section three, the one about the beautiful, man-hating enchantress: the Aglaé.
She flipped to it with a strange sense of urgency, wondering how they could be related, and read the footnotes at the end of the section, ones she’d always skipped over before:
Though the origin of Diablerons is not confirmed, it is believed that they are linked to Aglaé. Some folklore hints that they are one in the same, since Diablerons tend to haunt those who Aglaé have cursed. In an early ve
rsion, a cursed man claimed that he witnessed the demon transform before his very eyes into the same beauty who had cursed him. Whether the Diableron was transforming into the witch or the witch into the Diableron, it was never clear; for both are known to take on the image of whatever will be most damaging to their victims. It is assumed they live as both, using each form to its advantage in order to keep their cursed cursed. One theory is that Aglaé takes the form of Diableron when she senses a battle may ensue with her prey. Diablerons excrete a toxin from the tip of their tails that when injected into the bloodstream, overtakes the mind. For those who live through the injuries sustained, the poison has been known to drug the blood for nearly a day, leaving its prey unconscious before its eventual death.
Whether or not they are one in the same, one fact remains certain: Aglaé and Diableron’s behaviors are paralleled. It is proven that for those who cross paths with either, dark futures await. (For more details on the poison of Diablerons, see page 693.)
Elizabeth didn't bother to study the illustration again when she finished, since the chill at the base of her spine told her she would probably see the demon in person someday.
***
Elizabeth ran on fumes as she filled Regina’s order, vanilla swirling into her latte with a smooth, circular—almost hypnotizing—pattern. She hadn’t been able to sleep after the beast left, every emotion she’d ever felt blooming to the surface like the coffee grounds in her French press. Her morning walk with Henry had been particularly silent.
“What’s bothering you, honey?” Regina’s voice almost made Elizabeth cringe, since every sound from the normal world hit her too harshly. Her head hurt.
She smiled anyway. “Nothing, Regina, I’m fine.”
“Mmm hmm.” One brow lifted, the other low.
“I’m tired.” If Eustace was here, he would have snorted, but he hadn’t shown up. Maybe someday he would view her as a normal human being again.
“You need some tension released?” Brian teased, eyeing her from over the rim of his mug. The past few weeks she’d hardly noticed him at all, since he did well at staying out of her business, and even her shop. But now, with him acting as though three weeks’ time could erase his drunken attack from existence, a hint of those vengeful and loathing thoughts snuck back inside her.
“I may have some tension to release, Mr. Dane.” It came from Henry, the first thing he’d said all morning, and as he said it, he read his paper casually. He wore his reading glasses, which told Elizabeth he genuinely read it this time. He looked up from the paper, staring at Brian over his glasses, and that was all it took for Brian’s eyes to fall to his coffee.
“Anyone seen Eustace this morning?” Old Ray asked, his white brows pulling together and causing a handful of wrinkles to appear on his tan forehead.
“He wouldn’t come out when I stopped by this morning,” Taggart said, folding his arms on the table. “He seemed spooked about something.”
“Eustace doesn’t spook easy,” Regina said.
“That’s the problem.”
An old woman darted through the door, a gleam of sweat on her brow. Elizabeth had never seen her, but for some reason knew who she was. Perhaps it was the embroidered cat on her sweatshirt, or the way she seemed to cower from being in a public place, but whatever it was, this woman with cropped gray hair and a spine the shape of a candy cane was definitely Gina Gray—the same who’d reported her cats missing a few weeks before. She neared the counter, and tears hung in her eyes, filling the many creases of her crow’s-feet. “Someone help,” she croaked, frantic.
Taggart stood. “What is it, Gina?”
“My—my cats.”
“Your cats? They went missing last month.”
Hunched over, she broke into more tears. Regina rubbed her shoulder while glaring at Taggart. “It was the monster,” Gina sobbed.
“You’ll have to calm down and explain, Gina.”
“They’re all skinned.”
Gasps went up from everywhere and Henry straightened in the corner. Elizabeth had, too. “Skinned?” Taggart asked with caution. He wiped his brow as though he had suddenly began to sweat.
“I—I went out to my back porch this morning to look for them, like I always do…because sometimes they come back. And…” She wept again, and there was something utterly heartbreaking about an elderly woman, on her last leg, sobbing in such a childlike way.
Taggart licked his lips, and one hand rested at his lanky side. His forehead glistened. “Gina—”
“They were just hanging there! All three of them, hanging upside-down by their tails. They were shredded, Sheriff! Bellies hanging out! And their fur…it was gone.” Elizabeth’s stomach rose, and by the way Regina brought a hand to her mouth, she would bet everyone’s had. “My babies,” she cried, over and over again.
“All right, Gina,” Taggart said softly, trying to keep his cool. But his voice trembled on the last note. “It’s all right. I’m not sure—”
With an abrupt sniff, Gina raised her head and met Elizabeth’s eyes, startling her. She trembled, but the physical power of her glare forced Elizabeth back. “You,” she accused in a low breath. “It was ever since you came into town.”
Everyone looked to Elizabeth. “M—Ms. Gray, I…don’t—”
“You, with your reckless behavior and blasphemous words.” Elizabeth had never met this woman, but she shouldn’t have been surprised, since word traveled fast in small towns. Gina looked at Taggart. “It’s her, and the monster.”
“Now, Gina,” Taggart said. “I don’t doubt this was the work of the monster, but Beth ain’t got nothing to do with that thing.”
“She defends it.” She gave no time for responses as she went on, “Sheriff, you kill it. It’s time we take care of that thing, once and for all. You hunt it down for what it did to my babies.”
Taggart sighed.
“How long before it starts doing this to us?” Her eyes traveled around the room, meeting everyone else’s. At the center of brown irises, surrounded by glazed, bloodshot whites, her pupils penetrated as though each of her eyes were independent intelligences, had their own souls. No one could speak. “Think about it. We haven’t had any problems until now. Something’s angered it, and how long before it starts taking out its evil anger on one of us?” Her eyes fell back on Taggart’s. “Something has to be done, Sheriff.”
It seemed everyone was absorbing this possibility, arriving at the same realization Gina had. Though the look in Taggart’s eyes said he’d already realized it. Elizabeth felt it rising in her stomach, then in her chest. Before she knew it, the words spewed out. “No.” Every head turned. “It wasn’t him.”
Gina gasped, as though she’d just seen for the first time that Elizabeth was the devil himself. “See. It’s her, it’s her love of this…thing.”
Elizabeth ground her teeth, tossing her hand towel on the counter as she took another step. “He is not a thing. He has a soul like the rest of us—maybe even more than some of us.”
Gina’s eyes became rounder than any Elizabeth had seen, even wider than Brian’s on that awful morning.
Taggart’s mustache twitched like it did when he began losing patience. Now sweat dotted his temples, a single droplet rolling down with gravity. The matter of the beast had been eating at him for some time, in the opposite way it ate at Elizabeth. But now he seemed to be unraveling, on the verge of losing it. With a hand still resting on his hip, he glared at Elizabeth. “Be. Careful.”
Discomfort rested upon the room, and though her eyes shot to every set watching her, she skipped over Henry’s. “I won’t be careful. Call me evil, call me whatever you like, but I won’t stand by and let you talk about him like that. Not here, not in my place. Not anymore.”
“You…” Brian began. He stood and backed up. “You’re really defending it? After all this time, I thought it was just some act. But you…you really think it’s…”
“He,” she corrected.
“Dammit, Beth,
” Taggart said, saliva spraying. “I’ve had enough. It’s one thing to be brave, maybe even to question its motives, but to defend it after all this—after what it’s done to Gina’s cats…You’re walking a thin line.”
“He didn’t do it.”
“And how do you know?”
“I just know. He wouldn’t.”
“Then what did? We got only one evil demon wandering the forest. And I can’t stand by and let it tear this town apart!”
“There’s something else out there.”
No one spoke, and without a thought her eyes shot to Henry’s for the first time. They were narrow, nearly twitching. She looked back to Taggart. “I’ve felt it. It’s something dark, something not the beast. I can’t explain it, but there’s something else…”
“She’s just covering for it,” Gina said. Elizabeth may as well have been a witch on trial.
“Beth,” Taggart said. “This is gonna stop, you understand?”
“What’s going to stop, Sheriff?”
“You! You’re scaring us. And with the way Eustace was this morning…something’s not right. I won’t have you acting like a crazy person anymore!”
“I’m crazy? Just because I’m the only one who can see him for who he is? Because you’re all too blind to?”
“Ms. Ashton!” Henry stood so quickly his chair knocked to the tile. That same discomfort saturated the silence, only tripled in intensity now. Her eyes challenged his, and his face darkened. “Outside. I need a word.”
Hemlock Veils Page 24