by J. R. Rain
As the demon clutching me soared through the chilly air toward Parker’s head, I tightened my grip on the stake.
I couldn’t help gazing at her hard, smooth neck and wondering if my fangs were strong enough to pierce it.
Chapter Twenty-seven
Just as that thought occurred to me, I saw that something was happening to the stone itself. It seemed to be changing color or shape. Or both.
No, it was changing composition.
Indeed, it seemed that the more blood the entity consumed, the more the stone transformed into something living. It wasn’t quite there yet. It was still somewhere between flesh and stone, parts of it pliable and horrific, like a collaboration of Stephen King’s and H.P Lovecraft’s worst nightmare.
Blood dribbled from its rapidly transmigrating lips. Lips that had once been stone, but were now stretching back to reveal a deep, black maw, with rows of curved, ivory-colored teeth. I could have easily been looking into the opening of a cave with so many stalagmites and stalactites.
But I wasn’t. I suspected I had been duped once again. I suspected for this creature’s transformation to be complete, it needed one last meal.
One last blood sacrifice.
It needed me.
And all my precious vampire blood.
Jesus, I’d stepped into it again.
Above me, the demon beat its black wings. The wind of its downdraft thundered over me. I sensed the hate and evil coming off the creature, the repellant emotions spreading down to me like a living, foul thing. Its black talons hooked under each shoulder, gripping my upper arms. A painful deathgrip, for certain, but a pain I ignored.
One thing I knew how to do was kill an immortal. Demons were no different. Especially demons who inhabited living bodies, be it flesh or stone. Kill the body, destroy the creature. Or at least, send the creature back from whence it came.
I glanced up at my dangling right hand which still held the stake tightly. How strong was I? Very strong, fully rejuvenated from my recent feeding. Strong enough to take on a flying demon? I didn’t know, but I was about to find out.
As the stone creature that was rapidly turning into something more than stone opened its mouth wide, waiting for its special-delivery meal, I reversed my grip on the stake—and had a moment of panic when I nearly dropped the damned thing. I had just enough leverage to drive the point hard into what would pass as a calf on the demon that held me.
Another thing I know about immortals...nothing is impervious to silver.
I stabbed down hard—and although bullets might have bounced off its black hide—the silver stake plunged deep inside. The creature shrieked and jerked violently, and released its grip on me.
I dropped like a rock.
But there was a method to my madness. I was falling short of the hungry mouth...and directly toward the beast’s heart. Did I really believe that a stone statue had a heart? No. No more than I had a heart, as my own human organ had quit beating ages ago and been replaced by an ancient rhythm of misery.
There was dark magick at work here. Otherworldly magick. It was, after all, such magick that kept me alive—and fueled the beast before me. In a strange way, we were of the same flesh, birthed from the same dark hole in the universe.
Who created such magicks, I didn’t know. Toward what purpose, I knew not either.
But one thing I did know was this...dark magick can be undone, and one such way was a silver stake. Be it through undead flesh or living stone, the silver would drive the demon out.
I wondered how much of Parker—the human Parker—was still in the thing, and if she would die along with the creature.
Great. Another innocent victim on my scorecard.
But I couldn’t let that stop me.
And as I tumbled through the night air, falling toward the beast, I righted myself.
I held the silver stake out before me with both hands.
And drove it deep into its stone chest.
The statue bellowed. Except it really wasn’t a statue anymore. It was something else now. Something living. Something from mythology. It could have been a Titan. It could have come from the pages of The Odyssey. Or stepped out of the Arabian Nights, but whatever it was, whatever it had become, it was dying.
And it would not go quietly into this good night.
It thrashed wildly on the dirt stage while I hung from the protruding stake handle with all my strength. The monstrous creature began stomping and shaking, and I could have sworn even Mount Shasta cowered with fright.
Finally it swatted at me and I went flying, landing head over ass in the nearby grass. When I sat up, I saw that the stone statue had completed its transformation even while it writhed in its death throes.
Standing on the stage was something straight from the bowels of hell. A blackish creature with wet-looking skin. It towered over me, and as it threw back its head and roared with rage, I realized with some certainty that I might have been looking at the devil himself.
And if not the devil, surely one of the most vile, wickedest, bitching-assed entities I had ever seen.
It clawed at its chest and found the silver stake. The creature pulled it free and heaved it aside, but it was already much too late. Having witnessed the deaths of vampires and other creatures of the night, I knew the damage was already done. The center could not hold. Steam hissed from the wound.
Overhead, the flying demons circled their dying dark goddess.
Then, one after another, they dove down into the exposed pit on stage, tucking in their wings and disappearing from view.
The demoness—or perhaps even the devil—dropped to a knee. It held its chest, where steam continued to hiss through the small puncture wound. It raised its head and its red eyes fastened onto me. I think I might have swallowed. I know I scooted back in the grass.
It seemed like the creature might fall over. It was certainly leaning heavily in one direction.
Instead, the red light disappeared from its staring eyes, and the black flesh was replaced by stone again. The lifeless statue had returned—a statue that was even now teetering on stage.
I watched as it slowly fell over, crashing with such force that the ground shook and a dust cloud erupted.
When the dust settled, I couldn’t help but notice that the statue had fallen directly over the pit into hell.
Sealing it completely.
Chapter Twenty-eight
I wasn’t in the mood to hang around and answer police questions about the death of Erasmus Cole and several others. Let them try to come up with a logical explanation from the testimony of the drugged-out Cloudland groupies, or some dimwitted security guard.
Cloudland was a cult, so the square press would deliver the typical horror stories and veiled moral lessons about the dark mastermind behind what would likely be called “group suicide.” Erasmus Cole would get a zillion hits on his website, and probably a few losers and loners would be inspired to join the cult. Maybe even some charismatic idiot would try to take charge.
Mount Shasta would get in the news and the hotels and bars would be filled and crystal sales would boom, and all the Lemuria legends would get some play. The History Channel might show up for a feature documentary one day.
But none of that mattered. I’d seen such stories play out over the years—pretty much everywhere I’d ever been, come to think of it.
It made me feel as lonely as ever. It seemed I was always walking away from the wreckage.
I heard crying and wailing from inside the buildings, which I took as a good sign. At least some of them were together enough to experience shock and horror, instead of believing the apocalypse had come and that it was time to join The Answer in whatever sicko afterlife he’d promised them.
I was nearly to my car when I heard a rustle in the nearby stand of trees.
I spun, wishing I had kept the silver stake. What if one of the winged things had been late to dinner and was still on the prowl?
Then Parker stepped from the
shadows. Or, at least, the young woman Parker had possessed and upon whom I’d fed.
“Hello, Spider,” she said, shyly.
Crap. Why did this always happen to me?
I studied her face in the moonlight. She looked like just another teen, a girl and a woman all thrown together in the same confused mass of flesh that all her kind learned to deal with. Her eyes were downcast, and her hands were by her side.
She didn’t look like a spiteful demon intent on ripping my heart out and feeding it to the devil.
“Is it you?” I said.
She nodded, biting her lip as if she were about to cry.
But she didn’t cry, and I took that as a good sign. Tears would have meant she was trying to trick me, playing on my hero impulse until I let down my guard again.
I nearly said, “Prove it,” but how do you prove you are human except by doing stupid human stuff like falling in love?
Instead, I said, “I’m glad you didn’t die.”
Her face lifted and her eyes widened in shock. I noticed for the first time that she was intensely beautiful. “You mean...you didn’t know? You would have killed me to get rid of that beast?”
I shrugged. “So, are you really Erasmus Cole’s daughter?”
“No. He...” She looked away, ashamed, and I realized I didn’t want to know the degradation and manipulation she’d endured. “He used me.”
“Well, that’s good in a way,” I said, as her eyes welled with tears that didn’t fall. “I imagine the taxes on this place are a real pain in the ass. Who’d ever want to inherit it?”
I heard a distant siren echoing through the valley. Maybe one of the security guards had slipped out, or one of the disciples with a contraband cell phone had put in a 911 call.
“You want a ride?” I asked.
She headed toward the car, and, like a true gentleman, I opened the door. I guess I was right to trust my instinct. She wasn’t bad, she was just weak.
Just like me. God help us all.
When I got behind the wheel, she touched her neck and said, “Did you really bite me?”
“Nah. I just made a pit stop to fuel up for the finish line.”
“How did you kill it?”
“I got lucky.” I turned the key.
We got out of there and rode in silence, passing a fire truck, three cop cruisers, and an ambulance coming from the other direction. I kept it under the speed limit until I could no longer see Mount Shasta glistening in the rearview, and then I punched it to the floor.
I felt her hand crawl to mine. She drew away a little at the chill, but then tightened her grip. I let her. I don’t know why.
“Erasmus was right about one thing,” she said. “You’re a vampire.”
“Yeah,” I said.
We’d made ten more miles before she spoke again. “That debt I owe you? The thing you said I’d need to do for you if you killed Erasmus Cole?”
Her finger teased the pad of my thumb. I almost wished she was a demon trying to manipulate me instead of a fool falling in love with the wrong guy.
“Yeah,” I said.
“I meant what I said. I will do anything.”
She scooted over in her seat until I could feel the warmth of her body. At that moment, I would have traded my soul for a little warmth to give back.
But I no longer had a soul.
“Anything,” she whispered in my ear, and her breath was like the fresh spring breezes of my nearly forgotten youth. It had been so very, very long ago.
“Okay,” I said.
I was Spider. That’s the way I rolled these days.
“You can help me study for the history test,” I said. “We’re in night school, remember?”
She moved away a little.
Not too much, but just enough.
The night stretched out before us, and all the miles, the endless, endless miles.
The End
Spider returns in:
Spider Web
The Spider Trilogy #2
Available now!
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Paperback * Audio Book
Also available:
Vampire Love Story
by H.T. Night
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Paperback
~~~~~
Also available:
Moon Dance
Vampire for Hire #1
by J.R. Rain
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Audio Book * Paperback
~~~~~
Also available:
After: First Light
by Scott Nicholson
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About the Authors:
Scott Nicholson is author of 17 books, including the bestselling Kindle thrillers Disintegration and The Red Church. He also portrays the comic book character The Digger and spends spare time revising his own epitaph.
Learn more at www.hauntedcomputer.com.
J.R. Rain is an ex-private investigator who now lives in a small house on a small island with his small dog, Sadie, who has more energy than Robin Williams.
Please visit him at www.jrrain.com.
H.T. Night is the #1 bestselling author of the Vampire Love Story and Entwined series of books. He lives in southern California, where he’s hard at work on his next novel.
Please visit him at www.htnight.com.