The Demon's Apprentice (30 page)

BOOK: The Demon's Apprentice
2.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I looked up to see her in her half-wolf form. Sinbad stood with his back to me, the corded muscle of his left arm showing the strain as he held her back. I reached into my mind and found the place where the pack was pouring their support into me. For a moment, I let myself enjoy the feel of Shade’s fierce affection, and reveled in the possibility that it might become something else before I shut myself off from it. Shade let out a tortured wail and slumped into Sinbad’s grip, and I felt King grab me by the scruff of the neck and toss me back to the middle of the half-circle of concrete.

His foot came impossibly fast, and my arms came up just a little too slow to catch all of the impact. The kick sent me rolling, and I heard heavy footfalls as he came at me again. He caught me in the side, and I felt ribs crack. Before I stopped rolling, he kicked me again, and this time I got a little air under me before I hit the ground like a sack of wet cement. I managed to stagger to my feet and backpedal before he could get another kick in, and ducked under his punch more by luck than skill. His other fist slammed into my stomach and knocked the wind out of me. I doubled over and retched, but there was nothing left in my stomach.

He grabbed me by the back of my hair and dragged me toward the center of the Pit. All I could do was stumble behind him until he pulled me back upright. I staggered, eyes half closed, barely holding on to consciousness.

“This is the law of my pack!” he yelled. “The strong rule, and the weak obey, or suffer! This boy is weak, and he must be punished for challenging me. No one challenges Dominic King and lives! NO ONE!”

As I swayed on my feet, I let my third eye open again. Even though my eyes were closed, I could See the auras of everyone around me. King’s had a puke green color to it that hadn’t been there before.

He grabbed me by the shoulders, and I saw the flow of aggressive red flow from it toward my throat. “Sucks to be you, boy,” he said.

The red touched my aura, and my left hand shot forward as I felt him lunge toward me. I felt coarse, brittle fur under my hand as the shock ran up my arm, and I heard a choked gurgle as my hand convulsed around his neck.

“You have no idea,” I whispered into the silence between us as my head came up.

I opened my eyes.

This close, there was no way to prevent a Horus Gaze. If King thought he was strong, I was going to give him a walk around in my memories, and see how he handled eight years of Hell on Earth. We passed through each other, and suddenly I was in a dark place, experiencing all the horrible things he did to Shade from his perspective. Humiliation and shame when he had been kicked out of Sinbad’s pack for raping a Gamma female. Growing up with a father who hit him, and who did terrible things to him in the dark. The moment when he had found his father’s gun, and pulled the trigger. Reveling in the power of violence, and later, corrupting the power of the Wolf.

In the back of my thoughts, I could feel King experiencing my father’s moment of betrayal, every beating, every broken bone, every humiliating moment of my childhood. If his life had screwed him up this bad, what was going through mine going to do to him? I struggled to break the gaze, to get back into my own mind, and get out of King’s. I felt the pull break, and I started the long fall back into my own head, grateful to be back in my own mind. As our awareness brushed on our way back into our own heads, I heard a long, pitiful wail. I hoped it wasn’t coming from me.

Suddenly, I was standing in front of Dominic King, with my hand wrapped around his throat. The wail I had heard was coming from him. I let him go, and we staggered back a step as I tried to remember what I had just been doing. Fighting, my brain tried to tell me. But that had been a lifetime ago right? No. Only a few seconds had gone by.

King fell to his knees in front of me, and I remember that I had to kill him. Or…I had to prove that I could kill him. Someone…Sinbad, yes that was the guy…had told me I could just put my teeth to his neck to claim a win. I staggered forward and punched King in the face with a wild swing. He fell backward, and I dropped to my knees beside him, grabbed him by the back of the neck, then pulled him to me so I could put my teeth to his throat.

“Mercy,” I managed to grunt, then I fell into the welcome darkness of oblivion.

Chapter 19

~ There is a curious strength to be found in those who dedicate themselves to something outside their own interests. Beware the man who would sacrifice himself for something or someone other than himself. Every now and again, such men are hard to kill. ~  Shaitan, High Prince of Hell

 

Being dead hurt. No surprise there, all nine Hells were supposed to be one long torture-fest, and the way I felt seemed like a good warm up to infinite suffering. In the distance, I heard the wailing and gibbering of some other lost soul, and I could make out the voices of other beings talking. Probably planning my first torment. Still, the darkness was a little comfort, and it almost felt good to lay still. The pain even seemed to be fading a little. I decided to take my sweet time about moving. I had eternity to endure this; I might as well milk the moment for all I could.

A wet spot of warmth fell on my cheek, and I opened my eyes. It wasn’t supposed to rain in Hell. I couldn’t remember whether it was supposed to be hot or cold, but rain was definitely not in the Infernal forecast. The sight that greeted me when my eyes could focus was just as confusing; there weren’t supposed to be angels in Hell, either. Not redheaded ones with halos and green, green eyes and lips I wanted to kiss. Of course, I didn’t know if angels could cry, either. I blinked, and the blurry edges of everything sort of sharpened, and the angel’s face turned into Shade’s. The halo became the lights from the amphitheatre shining through her hair, and she
was
crying. Another teardrop hit my face as she sniffled and looked down at me.

“Shade,” I managed to croak out, then her lips were covering mine, and I couldn’t remember what I wanted to say. I lost myself in her kiss, enjoying it and trying to tune out any other distractions like pain and the smell of burnt skin. She finally came up for air with my name on her lips, then she crushed me to her in a rib-creaking hug.

“Shade,” I gasped, “Can’t…breathe!”

She let go and laid me back down. “Sorry.” With a gentle gesture, she brushed a strand of hair from my eyes and stroked my cheek. “I thought…I thought…you were…”

“He’s too strong for that,” came another voice. “Or maybe it’s just pure stubbornness, to match the deep well of stupidity.” Dr. C knelt down beside me, with Lucas and Wanda on either side of him.

“I’m glad I’m still alive, too, sir,” I told him with a weak smile. “Not sure how, but I’m glad I am.”

“King’s lycanthropy is still trying to heal the physical damage he did to you with the Hellfire,” Dr. Corwin said. “Shade re-established the pack bond with you after you and King dropped, so that’s helping too. I’m not saying it wasn’t a near thing, nor that you’re not going to hurt for the next few days, but you should make it through this relatively intact.”

“Until my mom gets hold of me,” I groaned, not liking the repercussions of that conversation.

“Better grounded and on your mother’s bad side for a couple of weeks than dead, I think,” Dr. C countered. He was right.

“What about King?” I asked.

“Still gibbering like an idiot,” Lucas supplied after a quick glance over his shoulder.

“What did you do to him?” Sinbad asked.

“We got to know each other a little better,” I said with a wolfish smile.

“You know, when I said your pain was a weapon, I meant that metaphorically,” Dr. C said.

I shrugged and closed my eyes, basking in Shade’s attention instead of worrying about later. I felt other presences closing in on us, and opened my eyes to see the rest of the pack surround our little group. Dr. C stood up and turned to face them with Lucas and Wanda at his side. Shade stayed beside me until I grunted and tried to get to my feet. She slipped an arm under my shoulder and effortlessly brought me to my feet to face Brad and the boys. Sinbad stepped back, with a narrow smile on his face.

“He beat our leader,” Brad said accusingly. “How can you sit there and cry over him? How could you
help
him? We owe Dominic everything!”

“We don’t owe him a damn thing,” Shade growled. I pulled my arm from around her shoulders and stood swaying as she advanced on Brad. “For two years, he’s feasted on our efforts, and fed us the scraps of our own kills. He’s forced us to live like his lap dogs, sitting at his feet like domesticated animals instead of running free like the wolves we are. He killed one of our pack, and he forced me into his bed like his personal sex-toy. He wasn’t our leader, Brad; he was our Master. If you want to go back to being his pet, then you go. I’m free, and I am going to
stay
that way.”

“None of us beat him,” Brad argued. “You know the Law of the Wolf! The strong rule! The weak obey, or suffer. I’m not going to be ruled by a human! I challenge you, Chance Fortunato! Right here and now!” The rest of the pack turned to me, and I stepped forward. Doubt clouded his expression for a split second. He’d probably expected me to back down.

“Retract your challenge, boy,” Sinbad growled. Brad turned and snarled at him.

“Take it back, Brad, or face me,” Shade hissed.

“Why?” Brad asked. I heard confusion and pain in his voice, something I’d never heard before. “Why are you defending him? Why are you choosing him over the pack…over me?”

“Because you waited until you thought he couldn’t beat you. You’re weak, just like King. When you had the chance to help us beat him, you held yourself back from the pack bond. The pack helped Chance win. He’s my
gothi,
Brad, my adviser and champion. He’s one of
my
pack. If you want to challenge him, you challenge me first!” She stepped forward and faced off with him, fists clenched at her side.

Off to the side, I heard Sinbad chuckle.


I’m
King’s second,” Brad said belligerently. “If King is down, I run this pack. If you want to do this, then it’s my way or the highway. And I say this punk goes, or he takes my challenge. You’re my girl, Shade. No one moves in on my woman.”

“I’m not
your
girl,” Shade snarled. “I’m my own woman.”

“Wolves mate for life,” Brad argued, “so it’s not like you have much of a choice.”

Shade gave me a quick glance, then her eyes narrowed and slid back to Brad. “You were never my mate, Brad. What you did to me was rape. And you let King do it to me, too. Chance stays, and the pack chooses its own path. You either deal with that, or you face me.” Shade stepped between Brad and me, and the rest of the pack came around to stand behind her.

One of them, the guy Dr. C had shot, stepped out and extended a hand to Brad. “Come on, Brad. We’ve been through too much together. Stay with us.”

“Screw you, Tyler. Screw all of you. This isn’t a pack any more. It’s a…
herd!
He spun on his heel and bounded up the rows to the top of the amphitheater. Shade shook her head sadly as he went. He stopped and looked down at us in disgust before he ran into the darkness.

A moment later, Collins stepped into view at the top of the concrete semi-circle. He drew his badge as he came down the steps, and had his hand on the gun holstered at his hip.

“Dominic King, you’re under arrest for assaulting a minor and attempted murder,” Collins said as he took the last step down onto the amphitheater’s floor. King managed to focus on him as Collins pocketed his badge and pulled a pair of handcuffs from his belt.

As he rolled King over and ratcheted the cuffs onto his wrists, I caught Shade’s eye and gestured at her to go. She gave me a warm smile and a kiss on the cheek before she led the rest of the pack up the steps. Dr. C was heading up the steps, gesturing for Lucas and Wanda to come with him as he went, and they weren’t wasting time about doing it.

While Collins finished cuffing King, I went to the pile of gear that I’d dropped before the fight had started. The TK wand went into my pocket, and I grabbed the pistol belt.

“I’da thought you’d learned your lesson last night, pig. You can’t stop me,” King said as Collins pulled him to his feet.

“I figure you haven’t learned anything,” Collins replied calmly. “I got a wizard for back up and a mag full of silver rounds. What you’ve got is the right to remain silent. If you give up that right, anything you say can be used against you in a court of law. You have the right to an attorney present during questioning.”

“You can’t touch me and you can’t take me in, cop. So shut the hell up. I got people to go kill,” King sneered as he pulled his arm free of Collins grip. He flexed his shoulders and I heard metal snap as he broke free of the cuffs. Before I could move, he was across the arena and digging in his jacket.

“Hands where I can see them!” Collins ordered, as he pulled his gun.

On the top of the amphitheater, Dr. C began a spell, and King made his move. His hand came out of the jacket with a pistol. He shot Collins three times, then aimed over my head and squeezed off three more shots before Collins hit the ground.

Along with the clatter of Collins’ gun on the cement, I heard Dr. C grunt, and turned to see rounds bouncing off of a hastily erected shield. Wanda and Lucas crouched beside him, trying to stay behind the barrier. But maintaining a shield that big without a focus was taking a lot out of him.

With superhuman speed, King turned the gun on me, and I had to dive to the side, praying my still-enhanced reflexes would help me dodge the bullets. I tried to pull the TK wand from my pocket as I fumbled one of the pistols from its holster. Rounds hissed by me amid the roar of the gun, and I hit the ground and slid to a stop a few feet from Collins. Before I stopped moving, King had reloaded the gun, and was firing at Dr. C, who staggered back with one hand to his head, and the other raised to focus his warding spell.

As fast as King was moving, we would be lucky to keep him on the defensive even if we were at our best. As it was, we were barely holding our own. I spared a brief thought for what Mr. Chomsky must have faced, as I got to my feet and moved toward Collins. I finally managed to get the wand free of my pocket as King turned toward me.


Ictus
!” I yelled as I ran.

King ducked the blast of force and fired at me at the same time, but his aim was off, and he blew a chunk out of the concrete, instead of my ass. As I dove to the ground behind Collins, King turned and fired at Dr. C again, then there was a quick moment when the night was silent except for the echo of the slide locking back on his pistol and the hollow sound of brass casings bouncing on concrete. Dr. C stumbled and caught himself against one of the light poles, and I felt the weak shimmer of his hastily cast shield fade from my mystic senses. Beside me, Collins moaned, and I saw King’s gaze focus on him.

Time stopped for a second as I met King’s eyes. I only had as long as it took for him to reload to stop him or someone was going to die, and he was going to get away. I didn’t know if I could beat him home, or if I could get Mom and Dee out in time. Collins was between us, and Dr. C was effectively helpless. The cruel gleam in his eye told me what no words could; he wanted to make me choose who was going to die. He gave me a slow grin as he turned his right hand and worked a catch on the side of his pistol. Time crawled slowly into gear again, and I was hyperaware of everything happening in microsecond snapshots in my head.

The magazine slipped free of the butt of his pistol, and his left hand dropped to his side. I dropped the TK rod and grabbed Collins by the belt with my now-empty right hand, then rolled using my amplified strength, drawing him across the top of my body, so that for a part of a second, we were face to face. Collins’ eyes were wide as I flung him over my body and onto the first step. From the other side, I heard the full magazine slide home into the pistol, and the empty hit the floor with a loud clatter. While my face was full on to the floor, I heard the tiny, almost imperceptible
snap
of the catch on the side of the pistol being worked, and I heard the slide click home. My left hand felt like it weighed a ton as I came to my feet, facing King, for the first time realizing I had grabbed the pistol instead of the paintball gun. Our gazes met, and his smile faded. A little red dot appeared on his chest. From somewhere, I heard a single
click
as things seemed to pause again for heartbeat. An explosion hammered my ears, and I flinched as my left hand told me it had been kicked hard.

My eyes opened to see the red dot on King’s chest replaced by a hole in his shirt, and a widening circle of red around it. A thin wisp of acrid smoke drifted up from the barrel of the gun in my hand like a silent accusation. I blinked in shock as King staggered and put his empty hand to the wound in his chest, then looked back at me when it came away shaking and covered with his blood. He took a couple of unsteady steps backward, then his legs just gave out, and he ended up on his butt. The gun in his right hand fell to the ground, and he just sat there with a blank look on his face. He stared at me for a few seconds, then he blinked, and his expression went flat. Whatever spark of life was left in his eyes faded, and he slumped to the side. Off in the distance, the echo of the gunshot rolled across the black water of the lake.

I set the gun down gently. I had just shot a man and watched him die. There had been no dignity in his death, no glory in killing him, no snappy one-liner on my lips to punctuate the moment. There was fear and anger, but no happiness that he was dead. The only comfort I found was that Dr. C and Officer Collins were still alive, and that Mom and Dee were safe.

BOOK: The Demon's Apprentice
2.95Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Cy in Chains by David L. Dudley
Deathwing by David Pringle, Neil Jones, William King
Gangster by Lorenzo Carcaterra
Fugitive Justice by Rayven T. Hill
Now Let's Talk of Graves by Sarah Shankman
Dr. Neruda's Cure for Evil by Rafael Yglesias
The Christmas Party by Carole Matthews
Tracking the Tempest by Nicole Peeler, Nicole Peeler
Double Exposure by Franklin W. Dixon
Dead Rules by Randy Russell