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Demon Marked Page 18


  But just because she could feed on sex didn’t make it okay. As far as she knew, the consequences of her feeding would still be the same for her victims, and she certainly didn’t want to make victims of her lovers. Especially this lover.

  God, was there a chance they really could be lovers? Could he forgive her? Could she find a way to control her demon mark and make sure he was safe in her arms? She hoped so, hoped so hard it made her ache all over.

  “My money’s on Little Francis,” Andre finally said, proving he’d understood what that watch meant for the Conti family. He stood with her in his arms as if she weighed no more than the small demon lying stunned on the concrete a few feet away. “I think his eagerness to work a deal with the Death Ministry must have been a cover for his real agenda.”

  “Dealing drugs? But why would he want the spell book if this is all about drugs? Why try to kidnap me?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Do you think your uncle knows? Do you think—”

  “I doubt it, but I can’t be sure. And we can’t go back to the offices or to your sister’s shop or anywhere else Francis will think to look for us until we know who’s turned traitor and who hasn’t. We’re going to have to find someplace else where you can rest and—”

  “I know somewhere we can go,” she said, seizing on the first idea to float through her spinning head. She didn’t need rest; she needed food, damn it. Whether Andre believed that part of her story or not, she knew it was the truth. “You know the strip club behind Yang’s Curiosity Shop?”

  “Boudreaux’s?”

  “Yeah. Jeremiah, the manager. He has rooms for rent,” she said. “No one will look for us there.”

  Emma held her breath, hoping he’d agree that Boudreaux’s was a good choice. The manager, Jeremiah, would perfectly suit her current needs. He’d raped at least three of the strippers at the club since Emma had moved into the area last spring.

  Ginger volunteered at the rape victims hotline and had warned Emma against getting anywhere near Boudreaux’s. She’d even insisted on accompanying Emma to buy her miniflamethrowers since the back room of Yang’s shared an alley with the front entrance to Boudreaux’s. Ginger, for all her faults and flightiness, was a good person and a very good friend.

  Emma had to find some way to contact her and make sure she was safe and—hopefully—still had the spell book in her possession. Thank god she’d run from Little Francis and his people. If anyone could be trusted with a demon grimoire, it was Ginger. She had no lust for supernatural power; she just wanted to expand her boot collection and find a guy who wasn’t a complete scumbag or married or both.

  “Please, Andre. It’s not far and—”

  “I know where it is, and I can guess what you want there,” he said, turning right into a narrow street that ran alongside the main road. “What exactly did you see in Dr. Finch again—what was he doing?”

  Emma closed her eyes, pulling up the memory of the dark room and Dr. Finch’s hands deep in the insides of a man with a bloated stomach. She swallowed hard, eyes flying open to meet Andre’s. “Organ harvesting, I think. Definitely illegal surgery of some kind, and he didn’t care whether the man on his table lived or died. He wasn’t even wearing gloves when he reached inside his—”

  “Sh.” Andre hugged her tighter to his chest. “You’re going to make us both sick.”

  “I’m probably going to be sick, anyway.”

  “No, you’re not,” Andre said. “We’re going to get you what you need. I promise.”

  “So you believe me? You really do? About all of it?” She was almost afraid to hope, but there was no doubt he was headed toward Boudreaux’s and away from the Conti family offices.

  “I do. I just wish I’d believed you sooner. Then maybe you would have believed in me.”

  “I’m sorry. I really am.” She looked up, catching him gazing down at her. What she saw in his eyes made it even harder to breathe. He was still angry, but there was another emotion in those dark depths, something that looked like a word she was too afraid to think for fear of jinxing their future.

  “I forgive you,” he said, the three words a promise she knew he would keep. They were in this together now, for better or for worse. Hopefully, they’d get around to the better part one of these days, after all the madness and mayhem.

  “Thank you.” Emma dropped her head to Andre’s shoulder.

  “I should call Little Francis,” he said, “just so he doesn’t get suspicious.”

  “No, you shouldn’t.” She lifted her head again. “It’s better if he has no idea where we are or what we’re up to. But we should call Ginger from one of the wall phones at the club. Maybe she’ll answer if it’s a Southie number.”

  “After we take care of you,” Andre said, casting a concerned look down at her bare arm. “You’re getting worse.”

  “I don’t feel as bad as I did last time.” At least not yet.

  The unspoken words hung in the air between them, making Andre pick up his pace as they eased into the alley behind Yang’s, and Boudreaux’s pink neon sign came into view.

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  There was a time and a place for strip clubs. That time was not eleven thirty in the morning, when he was stone-cold sober. That place was not some Southie dive where the girls swaying listlessly on the miniature stages looked like they were about to pass out or throw up from whatever combo of demon drugs they’d sniffed, swallowed, or injected before starting their shifts.

  The madly pink walls—covered with black velvet paintings of rock stars from the 1980s that glowed neon yellow and orange in the dim light—only made the strippers look more tired and worn. They also gave Andre a splitting headache. That particular shade of pink should never be used for anything. Ever. It was an aggressive, testosterone-killing color. It made it hard to imagine any man had gotten a boner in this room in the past ten years, no matter how up close and personal the girls at Boudreaux’s were alleged to get.

  But then, he was a little pickier than the average Southie client. There were only a couple of men slouched in the black, wrinkled, faux-leather chairs crowding the space, but if they were anything to judge by, the patrons here weren’t any more sober than the women who danced for them. They were probably so high they couldn’t even see the walls.

  Hell, for all he knew, the glowing portraits of Billy Idol and an aged, bloated Elvis added to their experience.

  He didn’t doubt that the manager here was dealing demon drugs and probably bribing law enforcement officials to keep them from raiding the club. If he didn’t, this place would have closed down years ago.

  What he didn’t know was whether that made Jeremiah a suitable source of energy. Now that Andre believed Emma, the reality of what she was churned in his gut. She killed people. Bad people, yes, but what was her definition of bad? And did any definition or any code make it okay for her to stand judge, jury, and executioner to other people?

  All he knew was that he was falling for her, fast, and needed to believe there was an alternative to more death. There had to be a safer way for her to feed. Or had he been wrong when he assumed their lovemaking hadn’t harmed him? For all he knew, he could be ready to drop dead on the damned stairs up to Jeremiah’s office.

  Still, he was willing to risk it. For her. No matter how angry he was, or how hurt by her assumption that he was as evil as every other bastard she’d ever laid her glowing hands on.

  Speaking of evil bastards ... he wondered when Little Francis would get around to returning his message. Despite Emma’s veto vote, Andre had left Francis a quick voice message while he was paying their admission to the club, telling him they’d been delayed because Emma wasn’t feeling well. He’d assured his cousin they were in a safe place and would be back soon, but that wouldn’t appease him for long. Andre had to figure out what to do about his turncoat cousin ... as soon as he made sure Emma was going to live to see the sun set on this shitty day.

  “I don’t know if I can make
it up the stairs,” Emma said as he stuffed his wallet back in his coat and fetched her from the faded couch by the door. She leaned heavily against him, her skin sparkling even in the dim light.

  But the man he’d paid for their admission didn’t blink an eye, only grunted that Jeremiah’s office was at the top of the stairs, past the bathrooms.

  “I’ll carry you,” Andre said, but Emma pushed his hand away.

  “No, it’s too narrow. I’ll get up there somehow. It will be easier if I’m alone.” The way her fingers trembled made his throat tighten. He hated to see her like this, so fragile, poisoned by the drugs rushing through her system. If he hadn’t run after her, she would have been too weak to defend herself from the Striker demons. They would have eaten her alive.

  The thought enraged and terrified him all at the same time.

  It upset him that she’d run. No matter how damning her vision, she shouldn’t have doubted him after all they’d been through together in the past few hours. It terrified him that her safety already meant so much to him, that his stupid heart was so eager to make excuses for her behavior. In the short time it had taken them to reach Boudreaux’s, he’d found at least a dozen reasons to give Emma another chance.

  Could he blame a woman who’d been through everything Emma had been through for having trust issues? He should have expected that her first instinct was to run away and anticipated her need for more reassurance than the average person. He should have believed her about her demon mark sooner. He should have talked more and teased less, he should have, should have, should have, blah, blah, blah, until he wanted to scream.

  In less than a day, Emma had him thinking like a man in love. Worse, she had him thinking like a woman in love, second-guessing himself to the point that he’d let her talk him into coming to this cesspit to kill a man.

  He knew that’s why she wanted to be alone. She didn’t want him to see what she’d do to the man at the top of the stairs. The thought made his stomach roil. He couldn’t do it, not even if the alternative might mean risking his own life.

  But would she agree to what he had in mind? Probably not. So maybe he’d pull an Emma and refrain from telling her the entire truth until it was too late for her to protest. ...

  “I’m not letting you go alone,” he said. “It’s not safe.”

  “It’s perfectly safe.” She nodded to the tall, dark shadows skulking in the corners of the room. “There are three bouncers down here to protect you.”

  “No,” he said, his tone clipped and final, refusing to acknowledge her attempt at humor. “Let me help you walk up, or I’m going to carry you up. End of discussion.”

  She sighed and looped her arm around his shoulders. Andre could tell she didn’t like it, but that was fine. She didn’t have to like that he was looking out for her; he was still going to do it. Andre started up the stairs, pulling Emma beside him, praying harder than he’d prayed in a long time that he’d be able to help her. He wanted her to know that she didn’t have to spend the rest of her life looking for her next victim, that she could get what she needed in another way, from another man, if it came to that.

  Damn. The thought made him physically ill. He didn’t want to think about Emma with another man. He couldn’t help remembering the look on her face after they’d made love, when she said she’d “like to try.” There had been something in her eyes, something amazing that made him pray even harder as they reached the top of the stairs and shuffled down the hall.

  Mercifully, the walls on the second floor were a relatively innocuous light blue, but the stench was as aggressive as the decorating scheme downstairs. A thick, lurid odor hung in the air, a mix of unwashed flesh, sex, and ... meat. Barbecue chicken, to be specific. It was almost enough to make Andre gag, even when breathing through his mouth.

  “God, it’s like ... I can taste that smell,” Emma said, echoing his thoughts. The gold shimmer of her spark did nothing to conceal the unhealthy green that tinged her skin. She was going to be sick if they stayed up here much longer.

  Andre had nearly decided to screw Jeremiah’s rooms and seek out another private place when the man they were looking for stepped out of his office. Jeremiah Boudreaux was even more repellent than his stench. As the obese black man oozed out into the hall—the front of his gold T-shirt smeared with barbecue sauce and the close of his pants not quite zipped—it became clear he was the source of the stink in the hall.

  Behind him, in his equally filthy office, two of his employees—still dressed in nothing but gold thongs and matching tassels—crouched on top of his desk, digging into a bucket of chicken as if they hadn’t eaten in days. And maybe they hadn’t. They were both as painfully thin as Jeremiah was fat, their ribs standing out clearly beneath their skin.

  Andre turned his eyes back to Jeremiah, finding him the less disturbing of the two sights.

  “Raymond said you wanted to see me?” Jeremiah bared a mouthful of even, white teeth that were at odds with the rest of his appearance.

  “We need some antivenom for Hamma claws and heard you were the person to ask. We also need a room, and we need you to make sure no one knows we’re here, not even my family,” Andre said, feeling the man saunter up behind him. A glance over his shoulder revealed a giant bald guy with a stun gun on his hip standing at the top of the stairs.

  He should have known Jeremiah wouldn’t talk to anyone without security. He was a shady, disgusting bastard, but he was a rich bastard with a prime piece of Southie real estate several people would kill to see back on the market.

  “But, Andre, I—”

  “Emma, I’ll take care of this.” Andre shot her a pointed look, silently willing her to trust him. She pressed her lips together, then thought better of it and opened them again, the better to breathe through her mouth.

  “Yes, sir, Mr. Conti. I believe that can be arranged.” Jeremiah drew the words out into a half dozen syllables. Whether real or affected, his Cajun drawl sounded like the genuine article. “I most certainly can help you. Tyrone.” He motioned to the man behind them with two thick fingers. “Take these fine people up to a sweat room, the best available. I’ll have that antivenom sent right up.”

  Without another word, he turned and waddled back into his office, shutting the door behind him. Seconds later there came a grunt and a giggle from one of the women still inside. Tyrone strode past them on the right, continuing down the hall to another set of stairs, hopefully leading to a floor unaffected by Jeremiah’s profound personal odor.

  Emma cursed beneath her breath. “What are you doing? I don’t need the antivenom.”

  “I know.”

  “Then why are we going to the sweat room?” she whispered, pulling away when Andre tried to lead her down the hall. Clearly she was aware that the sweat rooms were where the strippers took clients who could afford a “private dance”—the kind where the thong came off and the customer had his turn to work up a sweat.

  “Relax.” He reclaimed her arm, the very thought of “sweating” with Emma arousing him, despite the stench lingering in the hall and the knowledge that the room they were being led to was probably extremely unhygienic. “I told you we’d take care of you.”

  “Andre, please.” Her eyes darted down the hall to where Tyrone waited for them at the bottom of the second set of stairs. Her next words were so soft he could barely hear her. “Listen, I thought I could ...” She paused, taking a deep breath through her mouth, fighting the effects of the venom. “I know Jeremiah’s done a lot of bad things to the girls here. I know he’d work, but I’m not sure about Tyrone. I don’t know if he’s done anything to deserve what I’d do to him.”

  “Just trust me.”

  “I can’t. I—”

  “Then what are we doing here? Why did you tell me all those things you told me in the ruins?” he hissed, anger flaring to life inside him once more.

  “I ... I thought I could try, but I don’t know. I—”

  “Well, I know. So shut up and let me help you,
” he said, his harsh words shocking even himself.

  He couldn’t remember the last time he’d told a woman to shut up, or whether he’d ever. He’d been raised to treat women with respect, to consider them fragile and sensitive in ways that made them both finer than the male of the species and lesser at the same time. But Emma was different. She wasn’t nearly as delicate as she looked. She was tough, hard, strong—his equal in every way, including her nearly debilitating fear of trusting another person. He knew what she was going through, and he knew they could get past that fear. Together.

  “But what are we—”

  “Trust me, and keep quiet.” Andre hustled her up the stairs behind Tyrone and followed the large, silent man down a narrow hallway to the right.

  Once again, Boudreaux’s underwent a dramatic shift in character from one floor to the next. Instead of bright pink or baby blue, the walls were covered in simple wood paneling interspersed with black, numbered doors. The music playing downstairs pumped through speakers in the ceiling, presumably to cover the sounds of the people busy in the sweat rooms to their right and left. At this early hour, the rooms all seemed empty, but Tyrone still led them down to the last door on the right, lucky number thirteen.

  Outside the door, a girl in a green silk wrap thrown hastily over her stripper gear stood with a silver tray holding a cup of steaming liquid, a dish of silver powder, several small mixing bowls, and a hypodermic needle still in its plastic wrapping. Just looking at the needle made Andre’s skin crawl.

  “She can take the powder in the tea or mix it with a little water and inject. Shooting will be faster, but it might make her sicker. If she starts having convulsions, stick the wooden mixer between her teeth so she doesn’t bite her tongue,” the girl said, swift and nonchalant with her instructions, as if she talked to people on the verge of overdose every day. She slipped into the room ahead of Tyrone, leaving her tray on a small table by a tidy, twin-sized bed.