Tempting the Demon. Elle James
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Tempting the Demon - Elle James страница 4

Название: Tempting the Demon

Автор: Elle James

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежная фантастика

Серия: Mills & Boon Nocturne Cravings

isbn: 9781472051219

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ he touched me, my skin burned. “Are you sure about that?”

      My core heated like the fires of hell, my pussy ached, and I swallowed a moan. I wanted him more than ever, but he was undermining my ability to do my job and to command the respect of the other men on the team. I grabbed his hand and held it away, ignoring the sizzling jolts of electricity singing through my veins at so simple a connection. “I need you to back off.”

      His lips tilted downward. “Meaning?”

      “We’re partners on the job. Let’s leave it on the job. Only.”

      Just as Blaise opened his mouth to argue the point, Rudy blew through the door. “Oh, good. I thought you’d leave without me.”

      “I would have, had you been a minute later.” I jerked my head toward the front seat. “Get in. And if you say one word about my driving, I’ll shoot you.”

      Rudy laughed, although he looked to Blaise questioningly, as if he wasn’t sure if I was joking or not. “I got no problem with female drivers.” He started to climb into the backseat.

      “No,” I said. “In the front.”

      Rudy stared from me to Blaise. “I don’t mind sitting in back.”

      “Get the fuck in.” I slid behind the steering wheel and started the engine.

      Blaise and Rudy hadn’t even closed their doors before I backed out of the parking space. I made the tires squeal as I pulled out of the garage.

      Fifteen minutes and two near-death collisions later, we arrived at the address where they’d found the first dead demon. I pulled into the alley, parked the car and got out. Darkness settled in around the buildings. A block away, music blared from a hoity-toity nightclub, and scantily clad socialites drifted in and out, climbing into limousines that whisked them away.

      I couldn’t imagine what would drive a woman to wear so little clothing, and such high heels, on purpose. As if they were whores displaying their wares, for sale to the highest bidder. Marry wealthy was written all over them. What happened to being proud of your own ability to land a job and support yourself?

      I’d always known I would be a cop. Even when I’d worked summers and nights in high school, bagging groceries in the ghetto suburbs of Chicago, sucking up to tired mothers who were dragging screaming children through the store. I knew then I wasn’t going to do that all my life.

      The streetlights and neon signs gave a false sense of security. As soon as I stepped into the alley the shadows thickened, almost as if they’d come alive and wanted to lure me into them. I sniffed—one of my demon talents. Some demons had the ability to throw fire, but all I could do was smell stuff, like dead people, werewolves and zombies. Big whoop. Unfortunately tonight I smelled decomposing trash, smoke from a cigarette butt tossed recently. And death.

      No matter how often death hit my nostrils, it didn’t get any easier to handle. I stiffened. “The demon died three days ago?”

      “According to Thomas,” Blaise responded.

      To my right, something moved in the dark.

      My heart leaped and my hand went to the gun in the holster beneath my jacket. My senses identified the creature at the same time as a scrawny black cat eased out from behind a giant trash container, headed straight for me. I hate cats. And of course, for some bizarre reason, they love me.

      All slinky, independent and mysterious, they give me the creeps. Long ago I’d decided not to make war with them. If they truly had nine lives, that gave them nine chances to get back at me. I wasn’t risking it. As the feline weaved its body around my legs, I braced myself and pretended it didn’t matter.

      Blaise bent and scratched the creature beneath its chin, his body warm next to mine. “Hey, kitty, I bet you have stories to tell, huh, fella?”

      Rudy strode past us into the alley. “So this is where they found the stiff?”

      Trust Rudy to be crass. Blaise said, “That stiff might have been someone’s father, son or husband.”

      The agent feigned shock. “You mean demons have parents and children? I thought they hatched, like lizards or snakes.”

      “Can I hit him now?” I asked.

      Blaise straightened. “Not worth the scraped knuckles. Besides, he’s goading us. Are you going to rise to his remarks?”

      “That’s why I brought him along.”

      “I can hear what you’re saying, you know,” Rudy said from halfway down the gloomy alley. “Nothing here, by the way.” He bent to lift a discarded cardboard box and peered beneath it.

      “Three days and I can still smell death.” I tipped my chin up and inhaled. “But it’s not coming from this alley.” Like a beagle on the trail, I followed my nose past a closed appliance store, a liquor store with a neon Open sign flashing in the window, and a grocery whose doors had probably closed at sunset, the steel cage rolled down over the windows and locked securely. The scent grew stronger the closer I got to the next alley entrance.

      Blaise and the cat kept pace.

      As I turned into the next alley, someone groaned. No, it was more of a last breath being released. The acrid smell of death hit me hard and I staggered backward.

      That’s when I saw it.

      Like a wraith swathed in a long black cape, the figure rose from the ground and raced to the opposite end of the alley.

      “Stop!” On instinct, I ripped my nine-millimeter Glock from my holster and aimed at the fleeing person. “Or I’ll shoot!”

      The shadowy figure never slowed, dodging right around the far end of the building and disappearing from sight.

      “Take the next block!” I shouted to Blaise as I ran after the figure.

      I tripped over a big lump of rags stretched across the ground, mostly concealed in the gloom of the building, and landed hard on a pale blob. My hands pressed against the blob, realizing it was a body with arms and legs. Death wafted up and wrapped around me, its cloying scent gagging me as I struggled to get off of the body.

      The whitewashed features, the blank stare and the horrific stench led me to the instant conclusion that he was dead, and nothing I could do would fix that. I pulled myself up and ran on, determined to stop the killer before he took another life, human or demon.

      As I skidded around the corner at the end of the building, gun drawn, another figure came to a halt at the opposite corner. I aimed and would have pulled the trigger if he hadn’t spoken immediately.

      “It got away,” Blaise called out.

      “Damn.”

      Blaise closed the distance between us and we walked back to the body.

      “Is he human or demon?” I asked.

      “You tell me.” Blaise waited.

      I’d smelled dead human more times than I could count. This wasn’t the same. He had a grittier, more pungent scent. “Not human.”

СКАЧАТЬ