Demons Undone: The Sons of Gulielmus Series (84 page)

Read Demons Undone: The Sons of Gulielmus Series Online

Authors: Holley Trent

Tags: #romance, #Paranormal

BOOK: Demons Undone: The Sons of Gulielmus Series
10.38Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She must have thought he didn’t want her, especially since his eyes on that end had opened. It was some involuntary reaction, but there was no way Ruby could have known that. They needed to get back.

“She likes you,” Gail said, and tapped Ruby on the screen.

“I was there when she was born. Right in that room, actually. I took a liberty I had no right to, but, thankfully, Charles and Marion forgave me for it.”

“What sort of liberty?”

“We were … well, I was afraid of what she’d be. Afraid she’d be like Ross. I can sense power even when I can’t detect the type, and she had a little. I was scared.”

“Why?”

“Because I love my brother and didn’t want to have to hurt her later if she turned out to be …”

He didn’t want to say it. Even to him, it seemed cold and callous, but it was a hard truth and he’d do what needed to be done if it meant protecting the greater good. As a young man, he hadn’t given a shit about the greater good—the greater good was everyone else’s problem. Now, he cared, because just like Gail and Ellery were being pulled into the supernatural world, he was being pulled ever more into the real one. The real world meant that his well being was tied in tight with those of the people around him.

“If she turned out to be
what
, Claude?”

“Dark. Unredeemable. I didn’t know what Marion was then or how the magic she had would mix with that of a demon demigod. I just knew that Ruby was an innocent and she should never have to struggle to control gifts she didn’t ask for.”

Ruby, on the monitor, was still squirming to get to Claude. Marion tried backing away, but Ruby tipped her head back and shrieked. If the monitor had had sound, they probably would have been hurrying to plug their ears. That little girl had some lungs.

Gail tugged at his sleeve, and when he turned to her, her expression was inscrutable. “What did you do to her?”

“We’re all born a bit dark,
chéri
, those of us born from demons. It’s like a seed that’s been planted, and under the right conditions, it’ll sprout. Once it does, it becomes an invasive weed that’s nearly impossible to cut back. That’s why Jason is in a panic about getting rid of his mark before it’s too late. It brings to light what’s already there, and once its roots burrow in deep, fighting it becomes half your life. Me and Charles, we always have to think twice to act once to make sure what we’re doing is the human thing and not the monster one. I just took the seed from her. I didn’t ask. I just took it.”

Gail looked down at her hands and toyed with her ring’s stone. Her lips parted, but when no words came out after a few seconds, he pressed his hand to her knee and squeezed.

“We should head back,” she said quietly.

“Yes, we should. Before Candy Corn tries to follow.”

She laughed, but it was nervous. “Will you show me how?”

He wanted to press her for the thing that was really weighing heavy on her mind, but maybe it wasn’t the time. Maybe it’d never be the time.

He took her right hand into his. “You don’t need to know how. Your magic is meant for other things. Just hold my hand, then close your eyes and keep them closed until I tell you to open them.”

“Okay. I trust you.” She closed them.

CHAPTER TWENTY

Gail thought Claude would have responded with relief at having Ruby in his arms, but he seemed to feel the exact opposite.

The moment he told her to open her eyes, he’d taken Ruby from Marion. Ruby had immediately quieted, but Claude’s expression was red-eyed and panicked and his breathing ragged. Gail wanted to offer him a paper bag to breathe into.

Marion squatted in front of him. “Claude, what happened?”

“Wait, please, I’m trying to process Chang’s note. The notes don’t come back on the papers she hands me there. They sort of download into my brain as I wake up. That way I don’t lose the information, and it can’t be taken from me.”

“Your hesitance doesn’t give me the warm-fuzzies in the slightest bit,” Ellery said. She sat on the bed behind Gail, chafing her sister’s arms.

“We have a problem,” he said. He didn’t even seem to notice that Ruby was using his ears to try to pull up to standing on his lap. But then, she’d noticed the same thing about Charles, too. Ruby could be downright abusive in her play because she couldn’t help it, but they just tuned out the pain. In fact, Claude had her snuggled protectively inside the crook of his arm as she stood. She wouldn’t fall, and he wouldn’t acknowledge the pain.

He wouldn’t let anything happen to that little girl. Instinctively, she’d always known that, even when she was shocked in hearing what he’d done. By taking away the seed, as he’d called it, had he also taken away the magic she might have had? Did it matter?

She didn’t know what she would have felt if Ruby had been hers. Charles and Marion might not have wished for power for their daughter, but that was because they’d never grown up knowing what they were and being a poor example of it. Like she had.

“We always have problems,” Marion said, “so I’m going to need you to be a little more precise about whose problem it is, specifically, and how much grief it could potentially cause us.”

“This was completely unexpected. Unlike Maman, I’m not the kind of psychic who’s prone to premonitions, and even if I were, I wouldn’t have believed this, anyway.” He must have finally noticed Ruby’s little feet digging into his thighs, because he picked her up and turned her so he sat on his forearm. She looked like she belonged right there forever, on her little throne. Or maybe, more likely, Claude was suited to always having a child nestled there.

God
. Gail’s shoulders fell and she slumped as her sigh hissed out. Maybe some part of her wanted to be the woman to give him those kids, but her life was so messy. At the rate she was going, she’d never be ready—never be stable enough to give them the kind of home they deserved. Even with what they were, she wanted normalcy. She wanted them to get off the bus every day to find someone at home waiting for them like she and Ellery had as children. She wanted those kids to have routine and predictability. Further, she wanted her children to respect her not just as their mother, but as a confident witch they could seek guidance from. She wasn’t that witch. Her mind was blown hourly by her new friends. Her new
family
.

Maybe she’d never be that witch.

“Spit it out, Claude,” Marion said.

“I’m trying to. Look, we’re going to have to tell the others immediately, but this is a blow I feel I should deliver in a small audience.” He turned to Gail, and the red in his eyes had pulled back. She always thought she preferred the blue, but that was before she knew what blue looked like when it held pity.

“What?” she croaked. She didn’t want to know. She was that kind of coward, but she could pretend to hold it together if whatever aggrieved him was as bad as his energy was putting off. His emotions gripped at her heart as if trying to smother it, but not in a sinister way. It was a misguided effort at protection that did more harm that good. “Tell me.”

He swallowed. “I went into the waiting room to ask Chang if there was anyone there who could help identify the magic user or users who’d been working with Ross. I figured it’d be a long shot, but sometimes I get lucky.”

“Well?”

“There was a woman who’d been waiting there for a while for a message taker. Her name was Annie, and in life, she was married to the witch. Ross and that witch have been friends for a number of years, long before he met Annie. Annie said her husband was power-hungry. He took hers until she had nothing left to give. She couldn’t function. Couldn’t feed herself or even move. Then he left her to die.”

“That’s disturbing, but certainly you’ve seen worse things. What is it that you’re afraid to tell me?”

Claude handed Ruby over to Marion, and Gail knew then the shoe was about to drop. He would never give up that child as long as she wanted to be with him.

Nausea soured her mouth, and she took a deep breath. Claude’s shock at the situation was heavy as bricks and her gut. She twirled her ring around, cursing the link it afforded. “Tell me. Just tell me.”

“Gail, Shaun is a witch.”

The words didn’t all make sense at once, at least not to Gail.

“And now I understand why you couldn't tell I was one. He would have drained you dry just like he did Annie. You’re just now bouncing back from it.”

“Because of you.”

He nodded. “I believe so. You just needed a jumpstart.”

Ellery scrambled from behind Gail and stood in front of Claude. “He can’t be. We would have known. Someone in our family would have known.”

Claude shook his head. “No. Not if he’s purposefully concealing his power the same way I do at times, though I don’t believe he’s strong enough on his own to do that. My gift is a demon trait. He’s getting help.”

“Ross?” Marion asked.

“I don’t think Ross is capable of it, either. Because I haven’t met Shaun, I can’t say for sure, but it’s more likely he’s supplementing his power with unconventional means. That would explain how he and Ross were able to knock me on my ass that day.”

“What do you mean by unconventional means?”

“Dark stuff. Couple of ways he could manage it. He could be borrowing power, which means he’d need a constant fix. He could be using certain exhaustible charms and gris-gris. It’s hodgepodge magic. He’s using whatever he can find because on his own, he’s not particularly powerful. Worst-case scenario, he’s offered himself up for possession. That would …” He huffed and blew his curls out of his face. “Well, it’d make our situation that much more difficult.”

“So, Shaun was married before he was with Gail?” Ellery asked.

Gail was glad that her sister and Marion were asking all the right questions, because suddenly, her tongue had gone leaden with shame.

How could she have not known? She’d fucked that man for three years and had him around her family. She should have known everything about him. Obviously, she’d known nothing.

So much about that period of her life was a fog of vagueness. In fact, she couldn’t hardly distinguish one day during that part of her life from the next.

“His family never said anything about him having another wife. They were all so cheerful and welcoming during the wedding and afterward. They acted like Gail was his first and only.”

“Of course they would have been,” Claude said. “They’ve been doing this for a long time. Annie thought he may not remember much of what he does because it’s not always him controlling his faculties. That’s why I believe he’s opened himself up to possession. All the earmarks are there. Annie called him
the leech
. He’d borrow her power without her consent. She grew weaker and weaker, and figured out how he was doing it. She found his spell book and read his notes. He kept tweaking the spells to augment what he could glean at once. He learned to take more and more, and finally left her with nothing.”

“You said
borrow
.” Gail finally found her voice. “Borrowing something means you’re going to give it back.”

“Eventually, we have no choice but to give back what doesn’t belong to us. Energy always wants to return home to its owner.”

“But if the owner is dead…” Marion said.

Claude nodded. “He probably learned it was possible from his family. They wouldn’t have introduced themselves as witches for that very reason, and they may even have a reputation for dirty magic in other parts of the country. I’m always suspicious when numerous people in the same little family are in positions of power or have extreme wealth.”

Gail laughed reflexively and it came out sounding brittle. Strained. “That sounds like Shaun’s family, doesn’t it, Ell? All those cops and senators. You can’t swing a cat without hitting one.”

Claude’s hand seemed impossibly heavy on Gail’s thigh, and his pity railed into her like a runaway freight train.

How could she have been so fucking stupid? She could have been next.

Dead
. No common sense. Yep.

“You met him when you were fairly young, Gail.”

“I was twenty-four. I wasn’t exactly a baby.”

“It was a trying time,” Ellery interjected. “Dad was sick and we were all just going through the motions of day-to-day life back then. No one expected you to be on your A-game.”

“Except Gran, right?”

Ellery sighed. “Look, we know better now. Don’t beat yourself up for things you can’t change and that weren’t your fault.”

“It’s never my fault, right? Just like it wasn’t Laurette’s fault that she got slaughtered, and …” She fixed her stare on Claude. “Who was before that? How did I get killed in those first three lives we were together? Epic stupidity or just profound uselessness?”

He squeezed her knee. “Stop it. He probably took a lot from you, so there’s no way to know now what you’re capable of on your own. It’ll take time for those things to come back. I bet you’ll be flying on your own in no time.”

“Flying?” Ellery asked, and there was a lilt of excitement in her voice, but it was an emotion Gail didn’t feel in return. Whoop-dee-do. Another mostly useless skill, much like being able to peel an apple in ten seconds or apply her makeup in the dark.

Claude chuckled and rubbed his hand up Gail’s thigh. “That’s right. You weren’t there. She did it out in barn earlier. It was the damnedest thing. I’ve never seen a witch fly. I guess you get it from Agatha,
chéri
.”

“Don’t call me
chéri
,” Gail said in a voice that was barely a whisper. “I don’t deserve it.” Hot tears burned her cheeks and she didn’t bother wiping them away.

It didn’t matter, because she had plenty and they would just keep coming, anyway.

He wiped them away with his thumbs. “Gail, it’s not your fault.”

“Of course it is. I fell for a guy because he was good-looking and had some money to splash around. I was swayed by his charm, but ignored the stench of bullshit. I’m a fucking idiot.”

“You were conned, Gail,” Ellery said, now crouching beside Marion and butting into Gail’s gaze at the floor. “We were all conned. You can’t take the blame on your own. All of us, including Mom, Dad, and our grandparents, are to blame just as much as you. Like Agatha said, we’ve had our heads in the sand too long and the world has kept moving around us. We may have forgotten how to use our magic, but there are people out there who obviously have never stopped practicing. That’s what we’re up against.”

Other books

Bonds of Justice by Singh, Nalini
CultOfTheBlackVirgin by Serena Janes
Denial by Jessica Stern
Her Secret Prince by Madeline Ash
La tumba de Verne by Mariano F. Urresti
The Advocate's Devil by Alan M. Dershowitz
Mysty McPartland by The Rake's Substitute Bride
Maid for Love (A Romantic Comedy) by Caroline Mickelson
Witches by Kathryn Meyer Griffith