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Demon Hunters 2: Retribution (Stand Alone Series) (Demon Hunters.)
Demon Hunters 2: Retribution (Stand Alone Series) (Demon Hunters.) Read online
Demon Hunters 2: Retribution
Avril Sabine
Broken Gate Publishing
Australia
Demon Hunters 2: Retribution
Published by
Broken Gate Publishing
PO Box 6241
Maroochydore BC 4558
Australia
978-1-925131-06-2 (Kindle)
978-1-925131-19-2 (Print)
Genre: Young Adult Urban Fantasy/Horror
Copyright 2014 © Avril Petersen
Cover design by Caitlyn Petersen
All rights reserved
Dedication
For my family. You’re always there for me.
Contents
Dedication
Book Description
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Acknowledgements
About The Author
Free Ebook
Also By Avril Sabine
Disclaimer
Book Description
Scarlett knows the things that go bump in the night are real. Her family has hunted demons for generations. She has grown up learning how to banish them, seeing things most people couldn’t imagine, even in their worst nightmares. In fact, hunting demons is just like many other jobs. The hours are long, the pay is nearly non-existent and the clients are determined to have their own way. Just like any other job… or at least it seemed that way before demons started hunting her.
*
This novel was written by an Australian author using Australian spelling.
Chapter One
Scarlett Hunter glanced from the road to the scrawled directions her brother had given her. She frowned. Surely she should have reached the turnoff by now. Alex usually gave her clear directions, but she guessed he’d been in a hurry. She looked in the rear view mirror and seeing no one about, slowed down. This better not take too long. She didn’t want to be stuck driving back into Brisbane during peak hour traffic.
She wasn’t certain how she’d been talked into doing Alex’s job. She only hoped Mrs Rose, the woman whose house she was looking for, wasn’t in tears. She never knew how to comfort grieving people. They made her feel awkward. Give her a sword and a demon to face any day.
Scarlett glanced at the directions again and ran the fingers of one hand through her short blond hair that feathered around her face. With a shake of her head she stared at the deserted road. For all she knew, she was lost. Her cousin Riley would probably say she’d subconsciously gotten lost to get out of the job. She’d argue that comment. Anyone would’ve gotten lost with the directions she’d been given.
Scarlett checked the rear view mirror again, wondering if she should turn around and have another look in case she’d missed the turnoff. No, she’d drive a little further before doing that. She felt a tingle at her left wrist as a pop, more physical then audible, filled the car. Movement drew her eyes towards the passenger seat. Her breath caught in her throat, her body tensed and her mind whirled with a thousand questions as she tried to keep her attention on the road.
A young man now sat in the seat. He had light brown skin, dark wavy hair and eyes that could only be called black. And so beautiful it took all of her willpower to keep her eyes on the road.
“What-” Scarlett began. No. She wouldn’t start talking to one of them. That wasn’t what she’d been taught. Her jaw tightened on all the questions that wanted to spill forth.
Seeing a safe spot, she pulled over to the side of the road and turned the car off. As she jumped out, she tugged on the boot lever, pocketing her car keys. Without a glance at her passenger she ran to the boot and pulled out a sword, unsheathing it.
Spinning around, she found the young man in front of her. She hadn’t heard the door open, but that didn’t surprise her. Holding the sword up, she took a step forward. The man held his ground. No surprise there, either.
“What do you want?” Scarlett met the dark eyes, distrust in her voice.
“Your help.”
Now that was a surprise. Scarlett frowned. Maybe her assumption had been wrong. But what else could he be? “What are you?” Her words were cautious.
The man grinned wickedly. “I don’t think you need to ask that question. You already know or you would not hold a blessed sword between us.”
“Why would a demon ask a hunter for help? What trick are you up to?”
“I wish to cease to be.”
Scarlett opened her mouth to speak. Her mind was blank. Surely she hadn’t heard right. “You what?”
“Scarlett-”
When she heard him speak her name, fear rushed through her. Years of training was all that kept her calm. “I’ve never faced you before. How do you know me?”
“You’re well known among my kind. I have a brother who talks of you often.” He glanced at the narrow black line, with a hint of red in it, which snaked around her wrist. The line started at her pulse point in the middle of her wrist and travelled two and half times around her wrist to where it ended suddenly. A demon mark. It lengthened every time she sent a demon home.
“Then maybe your brother should stay in hell where he belongs.” She knew demons didn’t have the same meaning for brother as humans did. They were an ally or what passed for a friend amongst demons.
“Maybe your kind should stop calling him out of hell.”
Scarlett inclined her head in acknowledgement of his words. “You still haven’t told me what you want.”
“But I have. You just chose not to believe me. I’m tired, Scarlett. Century after century spent at the beck and call of humans. I’m only a minor demon. Barely a sin at all.”
“All major sins start with minor ones. Each step is that much closer than the last.” Life would be much simpler if she could send demons to hell the moment she saw them. But the demons had to be causing harm or intending to. So far this demon was all talk, but with demons talk could be more dangerous than physical harm.
“Scarlett. I will be your doom unless you make me cease to be.”
A warning or a threat? She couldn’t be certain. Her eyes narrowed. Demons were tricky with words. Not to mention twisting what was said to them beyond recognition. “Prophecy? Clairvoyance? Or your own desire?”
“My desire is to be left in peace.” He laughed abruptly. “I know, quite an oxymoron. A demon that desires peace. But your human dramas weary me. I would have an end to it.”
Scarlett lowered her sword. You could only hold a sword aloft and in the one position for so long. Even when you trained almost daily, the weight became heavier the longer you held it. Her fingers went unconsciously to her throat to touch the gold cross that hung on a narrow leather necklace. “Why ask me?”
“My sin is not violence. It’s lust.” He leered at her to drive his point home.
Scarlett almost laughed. His antics reminding her of her cousin Riley. She
caught herself in time. It was never a good idea to lower your defences around a demon. She glared at him. “What do you want, demon?” She stressed the last word to remind herself what it was she spoke to.
His lips curved into a smile. “Oh hunter, I could make you feel my sin if I wished. But it’s your cooperation I need.”
“Go away demon. I don’t have time to stand here and talk in circles with you.” Scarlett sheathed her sword and walked to the driver’s side door, an eye on the demon the entire time. He hadn’t done anything wrong yet, but that didn’t make him trustworthy.
The moment she opened her door, he disappeared, reappearing in the passenger seat again. She sighed in frustration. Standing with her door open, she stared at the demon. He stared back, an unfathomable expression on his face.
“Great! Just what I need. A demon stalker. How lucky can I get?”
“I haven’t started stalking you yet. The call to kill you hasn’t been made.”
“What?” Her heart leapt. She took a deep breath, reminding herself to remain calm. It should have been Alex on this lonely road, not her.
“Haven’t you listened to a word I’ve said?”
“It’d help if you didn’t talk in riddles and half sentences. Who will call you to kill me and why do you know about it when it hasn’t happened? And you said doom. That doesn’t have to mean death. Speak plainly, demon.” Scarlett ran her fingers through her short hair, taking a deep breath. Patience, she reminded herself. And caution.
“I have hunter. I’ve asked for your help. I asked you to make me cease to exist before I’m called on to end your life. Ask me to seduce a woman and I’m yours. Ask me to torture someone until they beg for death and you need a different demon. I’m not a torturer. I know what’ll happen to me if I fail. It’ll be safer to no longer exist.”
“Don’t answer the call when it comes.”
“It’s not that simple.”
“You demons always complicate things.” How had she gotten to this point? Conversation with a demon. What next? Quit being a hunter? No way. She brushed her fingertips along the pommel of her sword. There had to be a way to simplify matters and get rid of him in a hurry. “Why can’t you ignore the call?”
“I owe a powerful demon a favour. He can’t answer the call even though he’d like to. You’re the first stage of his revenge.”
“What’s this demon’s name?”
“You don’t know his true name. The name you’d recognise is Retribution.”
The name echoed inside Scarlett’s head and she shakily sat in the driver’s seat. Retribution! She tucked her sword under the dash so the hilt rested on her seat and pulled out her phone. No coverage. She dropped it in her lap and leaned her head on the steering wheel, the demon beside her forgotten.
Retribution! The demon who’d lost a battle to her cousin Blake’s girlfriend, Alyssa. It had been little more than a month now. She’d faced other demons since him. But none so powerful. With her head still down, Scarlett asked, “Why?”
“Because of the terms Alyssa set. Retribution’s stuck in hell for a century.”
Scarlett’s head jerked up so she could look at him. “A century?” When he nodded, she sighed, leaned back in her seat and closed her eyes. “That’s not possible. She didn’t set out to do that.” Her voice trailed off. “Completely impossible.”
“She might not have planned to, but she’s caused him to be bound to hell for a century.”
Scarlett sighed. “I’m mad to even listen to you. Demons never tell the truth.”
“Ask it of me.”
Scarlett frowned and looked at him. “What?” It was hard to focus on what he said when the word ‘doom’ echoed in her mind. Doom and Retribution. Not a good combination. She forced herself to concentrate. You had to watch every little thing you said around a demon and every word they spoke or you’d end up in trouble.
“Ask truth of me and I can give you a binding oath to speak only truth for you.”
“I will never ask a demon for anything. You lie, deceive and tempt. All you leave behind are broken minds and soulless bodies.”
“Then I’ll offer it to you for a token price.”
“I have nothing I’m willing to give.”
The demon slowly smiled, his eyes black pits of temptation. “Scarlett, I would ask so little of you. A kiss. What else would a demon of lust and desire require?” He reached out and ran his knuckle down her arm. His voice lowered. “A single kiss, Scarlett.”
She pushed his hand away. “You’re a demon!”
The demon laughed. His deep tone filled the car. “And you’re a hunter.”
“I won’t kiss a demon!”
“I’m beginning to regret I must cease to exist. I’ve not been so entertained in ages.”
“I don’t have time to sit here and listen to your rubbish.” She pushed the key into the ignition and turned it. As soon as she sorted out Mrs Rose’s problem she’d go home to Gran. Hopefully she’d know what to do. She glanced at Alex’s map and frowned. Where was the turn off?
“Another five kilometres.”
Scarlett stared at the demon. She tried to ignore his looks, but she was only human. In her mind, she began to recite prayers. “How do you know what I was thinking?”
“Why bother asking questions when you won’t trust in the answers?”
Scarlett’s lips pressed tight together. She buckled her seatbelt, slid her phone into her pocket, checked her mirrors and pulled onto the empty road. Five kilometres later she turned onto a rutted dirt road. She drove slowly and watched for the large red mailbox she’d been told sat by the driveway. And there it was, about four hundred metres along on her right.
She pulled up in front of the old timber cottage that was badly in need of paint. It had a verandah across the front, slightly sagging on one end. To one side of the door was a pile of boxes and on the other were two cane chairs with a wrought iron table between them.
“What’s your name, demon?”
“I’m no fool. Give a hunter my true name? You may call me Desire.” He smiled as she continued to glare at him.
“I won’t be calling you anything then. Leave demon. You’re not needed here.”
“Demons are never needed, only wanted when someone needs their dirty work done.”
“You’re a demon. Don’t expect me to feel sympathy for you.” Scarlett opened the car door and her hand hovered over her sword. She couldn’t take it with her even though every instinct screamed at her to remain armed. Her fingers curled into a fist and she turned away, closing the door with her other hand before she strode to the verandah. The demon walked beside her. She refused to acknowledge him and instead knocked on the front door.
Chapter Two
Within minutes the door swung open. A woman in her sixties with short steel-grey hair and metal-framed glasses stood there. She looked at Scarlett, with a single glance towards the demon. “Father Joe said he’d be sending a boy. Why are you here, girl?”
Scarlett took a calming breath and ignored the irritation in the woman’s voice. She tried to tell herself it was preferable to tears. “I’m Scarlett.” She gestured towards the boxes. “Are these the boxes you need taken to Father Joe… ahh…” For a moment she couldn’t think of the woman’s name, most of her attention was on the demon beside her. “Mrs Rose?”
“Who is he?” The woman stared at the demon.
Scarlett turned her gaze to him. He smiled lazily at her and didn’t bother to introduce himself. He could have made himself invisible instead of making this job more difficult for her. Scarlett took another deep breath. She did the only thing she could. She shortened the name he’d offered her. “Des.”
“Those are the boxes. All eight of them have to go. You got room in your car?”
Scarlett looked at the boxes and nodded her head. She took a couple of steps closer and reached out to pick up the first cardboard box. Before her fingers came in contact, her demon mark heated and she pulled her hands back
as if something had bitten her.
Mrs Rose laughed bitterly. “You feel it too. My daughter said I was mad. Said I should sell the stuff. But I couldn’t. Father Joe said he’d deal with it. I don’t know what my brother was into, but you can rest assured he isn’t with the angels in heaven. I’m betting he’s warming his toes at the fires of hell.”
“Where did you find these things?” Scarlett looked past Mrs Rose to stare at the house.
“Not in there. A little timber shed out the back. I’m going to burn it to the ground. Makes me feel like I’m being watched every time I go near it.” Mrs Rose shuddered.
“Can I see it?”
“Around the back. You can’t miss it. I keep expecting to see gargoyles perched on the ridge. But you won’t get me near it anymore than I have to.”
“Thank you.” Scarlett hesitated only a moment before she strode back to the car. With one demon already shadowing her she wasn’t about to take any unnecessary chances. Mrs Rose could think what she wanted. She dropped the belt of her sword over her head and one arm, so it rested against her back. Picking up a second vial of holy water, she slid it into her pocket next to the one already in there. The vial was about the size of her little finger, but she wouldn’t need much. A drop of holy water went a long way when dealing with demons.
“You’d be better off taking a bag of salt with you.”
Scarlett ignored Des and strode back towards the house.
“What are you, girl?” Mrs Rose dropped onto one of the cane chairs with a grunt.