Demon VII: Disciples of Darkness (Mike Rawlins and Demon the Dog Book 7)

Home > Fiction > Demon VII: Disciples of Darkness (Mike Rawlins and Demon the Dog Book 7) > Page 25
Demon VII: Disciples of Darkness (Mike Rawlins and Demon the Dog Book 7) Page 25

by Bernard Lee DeLeo


  “Oh yeah, I see it.”

  Peace turned into the motel parking lot with the big half moon sign proclaiming vacancy in red blinking lights. Jill directed him to the space in front of her room.

  “They have a great coffee shop, with an oldies theme,” Jill said, as Peace turned off the Buick. “You know, like the fifties and sixties, with juke boxes and everything. You can buy me a cup of coffee while we talk.”

  Peace looked at the black dive watch on his wrist. “Sure, it’s only nine o’clock, but like Ed was saying in the bar, I have an early day tomorrow.”

  “I promise, we’ll go to bed early,” Jill whispered, putting her hand on Peace’s arm, as she leaned towards him. She laughed as Peace froze in place, and Jill put her head on his shoulder for a moment.

  He laughed uneasily, and relaxed slightly, glancing down at her. “I knew I shouldn’t have let you have that third beer.”

  Jill sat up, and looked in his eyes. “Don’t you want to take advantage of me?”

  “I’m not that easy,” Peace replied, leaning over to kiss her softly on the lips. “Now, how about that coffee?”

  Jill nodded. She waited as Peace slid out of his side, and hurried over to open her door. “Don’t try to look up my dress while I’m getting out either.”

  “I’ll try not to,” Peace agreed, immediately watching her every movement as she swung her legs out.

  “You’re looking,” Jill said, using her cane to straighten up out of the Buick, brushing her dress up to thigh level as she did.

  “Yea, well you pulled your dress up on purpose,” Peace replied, stepping into her as she stood up, and steadied her.

  Jill pulled away, feigning openmouthed shock. “I did no such thing,” she protested.

  Peace nodded, as he swung the door closed behind her. “Okay, if you say so, but if you don’t want me to watch you, maybe you better walk behind me.”

  “That won’t be necessary,” Jill replied, taking his arm, and leaning into him as they walked towards the motel coffee shop.

  Chapter Six

  Entertainment

  Inside the nearly deserted restaurant, rock and roll pictures and paraphernalia decorated the walls. Some items glowed in the darkened room from black light fluorescent bulbs spread around the room. Jill led Peace over to a booth by the window, where a small jukebox selection turntable provided song selection right from their seats. They sat down, and a middle-aged woman, in a flamingo colored waitress uniform, came over to take their order. Her brunette hair, tied back severely from her face in a ponytail, bobbed a little as she walked. She had Gracie on her nametag. Although very thin, the waitress appeared to be in good shape as she stood smiling with her order pad ready. Peace noticed she recognized

  Jill.

  “Hi, Jill,” the waitress greeted her. “What can I get for you and your friend?”

  “Coffee, and I’d like your cheeseburger special,” Jill replied. “How did it go today, Gracie?”

  “Fair earlier, but a little slow now,” Gracie answered with a sigh. She looked at Peace questioningly. “How about for you, Sir?”

  “I’ll just have some coffee, thanks.”

  “Be right back with your coffee,” Gracie nodded, turning to put in their order.

  “You’re on a first name basis with the waitress, huh? How long have you been here, Jill?”

  “Nearly two weeks,” Jill admitted with a grin. “Imagine how goofy I felt when I finally found out the place you guys hung out at was only a couple miles from where I was staying.”

  “You are dedicated. I’ll give you that,” Peace laughed. He leaned over, looking at her curiously. “Where the heck you hiding two weeks of cheeseburger specials?”

  Jill pushed him back with a hand on his forehead. “Never you mind, mister, I walked the extra calories off.”

  “It’s refreshing to meet a woman who doesn’t care about how she looks,” Peace said, nonchalantly.

  “What do you mean doesn’t…” Jill began, straightening to look down at herself; but jerked her head back up, pointing a finger at Peace. “Why you little… I walked right into that one. Thanks for taking advantage of it, PP.”

  “Think nothing of it, my dear,” Peace replied, covering her hands with his. “In all seriousness, you are one beautiful woman, and you know it.”

  “I like hearing you say it though,” Jill said, smiling at how easily he had gotten a rise out of her. “You’re a little too fast on your feet with the smart remarks for my taste, however.”

  “It’s my self defense chip kicking in. I get more obnoxious by the moment when I’m with a beautiful woman for the first time.”

  “How about after a few more times?”

  “I don’t know,” Peace admitted, leaning closer. “I’ve never made it past the first time. Maybe we could experiment and see if I turn suave and sophisticated after a few more dates.”

  “I like you just the way you are,” Jill whispered, kissing Peace as they both leaned across the narrow booth table.

  The waitress cleared her throat as she held a coffee pot in her hand, causing Jill and Peace to pull away reluctantly. Grinning, Gracie turned their coffee cups right side up from where they were already set, and filled them with coffee. “Sorry to interrupt. Your cheeseburger will be coming right up, Jill.”

  “Thanks, Gracie,” Jill acknowledged, glancing up as she poured a sugar packet into her coffee. Gracie nodded, and walked back to the kitchen. Jill added cream from the creamer the waitress had brought over.

  Jill looked up again at Peace, as she leaned back to sip her coffee.

  “You don’t put anything in your coffee, tough guy?”

  Peace sipped his coffee with satisfaction, and shook his head. “I used to, but the guys raked me so much about it, I had to give it up. Besides, this is great coffee. A whole lot better than that sludge Bull makes.”

  “I make good coffee,” Jill commented. “Want to hang around till morning and see?”

  Peace set his coffee cup down, and folded his hands in front of him on the table as he watched Jill solemnly. “You don’t kid around, do you, Jill?”

  Jill smiled, seeing the waitress coming, carrying her meal. She stayed silent as Gracie placed the plate down in front of her.

  “I’ll be around with the coffee in a bit. If you need anything else sooner, just give me a yell.”

  “We will, thank you,” Peace replied.

  Jill took a big bite of her cheeseburger, and then sipped her coffee. “Did you want me to pretend I didn’t want you, after I’ve been tracking you down all this time.”

  “No, I just figured you’d want to get to know me first.”

  “You think I’m a slut, don’t you, or maybe a Seal groupie?” Jill asked, watching him closely as she took another bite of her cheeseburger.

  “Nope, the Seal groupies all hit on Bull, and the sluts are partial to JT.”

  Jill laughed in appreciation. “I bet you’d be in trouble if I repeated what you said to Bull and JT.”

  “It’s common Seal Team Six knowledge,” Peace shrugged with a grin. “They’d just laugh, and brag about it. If you go to dinner with me at Dan’s tomorrow, he’ll back me up.”

  “You’d take me with you? You didn’t seem too happy with the idea when Dan mentioned it,” Jill pointed out, taking another huge bite of her burger.

  “I’m already starting to rethink the offer after watching you eat.”

  This pronouncement caused a mild choking attack on Jill’s part, as Peace hurried over to pound on her back, and she tried to sip her coffee at the same time. After she managed to swallow a few times without coughing, Peace returned to his seat, where Jill shook her finger at him.

  “I was starving,” Jill said defensively.

  “I see that,” Peace laughed. “I heard you tell Dink you had already eaten so I was surprised when you ordered a meal here.”

  “I didn’t want to eat with those clowns. Although I’m sure they would have been more gallant
about my eating habits.”

  Peace laughed loudly in appreciation of Jill’s dig. “Sorry, I couldn’t keep my obnoxious nature in check. You’re just too good looking. My built in inferiority complex took over before I could clamp my mouth shut.”

  Jill nodded, seemingly satisfied with his explanation, because she took another huge bite of her remaining burger, and then stared at Peace as if daring him to say anything. When he just kept smiling and sipping his coffee, Jill turned her attention to the homemade fries on her plate. They sat in a comfortable silence for the next few minutes it took Jill to finish her meal. She leaned back with her coffee cup cradled in her hands.

  “You may speak now.”

  “Oh, thank you, Princess,” Peace retorted. “I loved every moment, watching you eat. You’re gorgeous, even when you chow down like Porky

  Pig.”

  Jill laughed in delight at this statement. “That would be Petunia Pig, PP.”

  “Hey, now we can have the same initials, Petunia.”

  “I… I feel like I’ve known you all my life. Doesn’t that seem strange?” Jill asked hesitantly.

  “I think it’s wonderful,” Peace replied immediately. “If you think I plan on dissecting your every motive, imagined or real, for hooking up with me, forget it. I plan to ride this wave of gratitude until it crashes into the rocks.”

  “So, you do believe I’m just a grateful, starry eyed, blonde ditz?”

  “Yes to all but the ditz part,” Peace replied truthfully. “You really need to see this from my perspective, Pet. If you consider all the facts from my viewpoint, you would see how I could formulate an opinion as

  I have.”

  “Pet?” Jill chuckled.

  “Sorry, just a brief backslide towards my obnoxious side. I love the name Jill. You’re the first Jill I ever met. It’s not a common name anymore. I assume it’s short for Jillian, right?”

  “Very good, Sherlock.”

  “What’s your middle name?”

  “Alicia, after my Grandmother,” Jill answered. “Jillian Alicia

  Gregory.”

  “Beautiful,” Peace proclaimed simply.

  “What’s your middle name, The?” Jill quipped.

  “No,” Peace laughed. “I refuse to answer on the grounds of right to privacy from ridicule.”

  “I bet that doesn’t work with your friends, now what is it, PP?”

  “You’re a demanding date, JAG,” Peace replied, evoking a laugh from Jill, over his stringing her initials together.

  “Quit dancing, and tell me your middle name,” Jill demanded.

  “Elvin,” Peace admitted.

  “You mean like the chipmunk?”

  “Elvin with an E, not Alvin,” Peace corrected her.

  “P…E…P, PEP, I can’t do anything with that. Did you somehow anger your parents before you were born?”

  “I have an idea,” Peace replied. “Let’s forget it altogether.”

  “What fun is that?”

  “I could forget about how you inhaled that cheeseburger and fries like a Third World starveling,” Peace pointed out.

  “I thought you loved watching me eat.”

  “Watching and describing are two different things.”

  “Okay,” Jill sighed. “I’ll forget your middle name, but what will we talk about next?”

  “What’s your major in college? What part of the country do you come from? What do your parents do for a living? Do you like animals? Do you like…”

  “Oooohhhh…kayyyyyyyyyy,” Jill laughed. “I see I will have to be careful asking rhetorical questions around you.”

  “We will have to cover some of those areas in the future, but I’ll try to slip them in on you without making it sound like an interrogation,” Peace replied.

  “Then you’d like to continue this relationship for a while?”

  “It won’t be me who ends it.”

  “I could be a serial killer,” Jill said, reaching across the table to put her hand in his.

  “You would never have ended up in a Terrorist camp in Chili, if you had been,” Peace pointed out, kissing her hand. “Hey, I smell cheeseburger.”

  Jill yanked her hand back in mock indignation.

  “I like the smell of cheeseburger,” Peace protested. “You smell delicious.”

  “You are a little too proficient in the art of double entendre, Mr. Peacenik,” Jill laughed, putting her hand back within his grasp.

  The waitress came back around to fill up their coffee cups, which they held out appreciatively for her. After she walked away with a smile, Peace began putting quarters in the jukebox link at their table. He punched in some selections, and waited for the music to start. When Jill heard the song Alley Oop, she laughed, nodding her head in agreement with his choice.

  “I love this song. My Dad used to sing it to me when I was little. What was that other oldie by Sam the Sham and the Pharaohs? Little…”

  “Hey There Little Red Riding Hood?”

  “That’s it,” Jill nodded excitedly. “Dad used to sing that one to me too.”

  “I played that one next.”

  “What are you, some kind of mind reader? What about Unchained

  Melody by the Lettermen, wise guy?” “Playing fourth, my dear,” Peace laughed.

  “What else did you play, smarty?” Jill asked.

  “House of the Rising Sun and Sixteen Tons,” Peace replied, a little smugly.

  “What, no Motown?” Jill retorted.

  “Next five quarters, if you have another cup of coffee with me,” Peace stated. “I saw they have the Temptations’ Standin’ On Shaky Ground, and Tina Turner’s What’s Love Got To Do With It. I’ll let you add three of your choices, just so long as two of them are by the Four

  Tops.”

  Jill laughed appreciatively. “Oh thank you, but you’re doing okay so far.”

  “In that case, how about the Tops’ Reach Out, and Standing In The Shadows Of Love, and I’ll end the selections with Aretha Franklin’s Respect?

  Nodding in agreement, as she started to pantomime with Sam The Sham, Jill kept beat with the song on the tabletop.

  “With all the coffee in us, how will we ever get to sleep?” Jill speculated, batting her eyes comically at Peace.

  “Decaf,” Peace replied.

  “You really aren’t planning on keeping me company tonight, are you?”

  “Only because I want to see if you’re still around here tomorrow night, when I pick you up to go over Dan’s,” Peace answered, just as the first strains of Unchained Melody began. “If you haven’t hopped the first plane out of here in remorse over your activities so far, we’ll have another good time tomorrow.”

  Peace stood up, and pulled Jill out of her seat. “Dance with me.”

  “I can’t move very well with this cast on,” Jill protested as Peace pulled her into his arms.

  “Who said anything about moving your cast around,” Peace replied, pulling her tight to him, his strength making Jill feel as though her feet barely touched the floor.

  Unchained Melody played on, as the heat from their embrace pulsed tantalizingly through the couple swaying in rhythm to the old classic. Jill heard Peace singing the words in a tenor voice so blended and in sync with the song, a chill raced up her spine from the soles of her feet to the nape of her neck. She closed her eyes in complete abandonment until the final strains of the song passed completely. Pulling away until she faced Peace, Jill kissed him gently on the lips, fire from their touch sweeping them into a passion only the first notes of House of the Rising Sun ended gently.

  “Can you do House of the Rising Sun too, PP,” Jill whispered.

  “You betcha,” Peace replied, drawing her to him again.

  Gracie had started across the empty restaurant from the kitchen with a fresh pot of coffee; but when she saw the two dancing, she sighed and returned to the serving bar. She saw Tony, the cook, peering over the partition between the kitchen and the serving station at the d
ancing partners. He was smiling. When he saw Gracie watching him, Tony waved a little salute.

  “Sort of like Beauty and the Beast, huh Gracie?”

  Gracie nodded, glancing over her shoulder at the odd pair. “Yea, ain’t love grand?”

  “I saw that boy’s face. He looks like somebody worked him over with a chisel,” Tony added, shaking his head. “She’s a doll.”

  Turning to face her boss, Gracie shrugged. “It ain’t always in the wrapping, Tony.”

  “Maybe not,” Tony laughed, “but I always heard ugly goes all the way to the bone.”

  “Only in the case of Neanderthal cooks,” Gracie retorted, as Tony laughed appreciatively at her familiar taunt.

  “If that song don’t end soon, you’ll have to get a bucket of ice water for those two cats in heat,” Tony speculated. “That kid can sing.” “He sure can,” Gracie agreed, as the song faded. She waited until she saw Peace and Jill slowly pull apart and sit down before journeying over with fresh coffee. They looked up as she approached, and held out their coffee cups for her to fill.

  “You two looked good together,” Gracie commented. “Have you known each other long?”

  “We’ve met twice,” Jill replied, glancing at Peace with a smile.

  “Tony, the cook and owner, said I should keep a bucket of ice water handy if you two dance again,” Gracie joked.

  Jill and Peace both laughed in enjoyment of the Gracie’s dig.

  “Uh… that won’t be necessary, Ma’am,” Peace assured her, as Sixteen Tons began playing in the background.

  “I liked your singing, young man,” Gracie complemented him. “Sing along with Tennessee Ernie on this one.”

  Peace was up in a flash, balling his fists up, his scarred countenance jeering in preparation to the first words from Tennessee Ernie Ford’s bass voice. Jill and Gracie were already laughing, as he acted out the part of a nothing to lose coal miner. His tenor voice carried impressively with Ford’s melodic bass, and his acting out of the song’s lyrics drew Tony out of the kitchen to watch. When Peace stretched out the ending chord even past Tennessee Ernie’s ending, finishing with a fist raised upwards in a final defiant gesture, his audience trio applauded wildly.

 

‹ Prev