Living with the Dead

HOPE





We’re being followed.” Karl said this as casually as he’d remark on the weather.

“Cop?” Hope whispered.

He shook his head.

“Curious neighbor?”

“I don’t know. I can only hear and smell him.”

“Then how do you know—? Ah. The smell is male and you hear only one set of footsteps. The way he’s following suggests he’s not a cop. Sneaking after us.”

“Very good. So, what should we do?”

Hope knew he wasn’t asking her advice. With Karl, she’d always be the student. She was fine with that. She was dating a professional thief almost twice her age—she’d long since stopped worrying about the appropriateness of the relationship.

The question was an opportunity for Hope to build confidence in her ability to make good choices. For the demon, the answer sprang to mind with the weight and surety of a sledgehammer blow. She should turn around and confront their pursuer. She had a gun and the element of surprise. Grab the upper hand, shove it in his face and let the sweet chaos of his reaction rain down.

The moment the demon tossed in its two cents, her conscience reared up with the polar-opposite response. Deny the demon. Don’t engage—escape.

After considering both arguments, she told Karl what she thought they should do.



TWO MINUTES LATER, Hope was making her demon very happy as she waltzed into the path of her pursuer.

She didn’t have the heart to tell it there was no kick-ass confrontation coming. The demon probably knew that, but was keeping silent, hoping for an emergency change of plans, cheered by the gun hidden in Hope’s pocket.

In the supernatural world, using a gun was considered a sign of cowardice. Hope didn’t play by those rules. She couldn’t afford to. Having the ability to sense danger only protected her so far. All the aikido lessons in the world weren’t going to save her against a charging werewolf or armed human killer, both equally likely in her line of work. So she carried a gun. Always.

When they’d neared the end of the wall, she’d done the “Damn it, I forgot something” charade, throwing up her hands and gesturing at the apartment. Karl had nodded and said loudly that he’d bring the car around.

He headed across the road, then circled back on the other side of the wall, where he was now lying in wait.

Whoever was following them was hidden in the bushes along the wall. Hope couldn’t see him, but his vibes blared loud as a siren. Fear. Anxiety. Misgivings. She caught the emotions and a jumble of thoughts, too muddled to distinguish whole words. As she drank in the chaos, the demon perked up.

See? He’s afraid. No danger here. No need to wait for Karl. The daughter of Lucifer doesn’t need a werewolf to protect her. Show him what you can—

Hope gagged the demon and kept walking.

Their pursuer moved with her, the bushes rustling loud enough for Hope to track his progress even without the chaos siren.

See? He’s an amateur. Easy prey. Just—

She veered from the wall so she wouldn’t make him any more nervous. The demon withdrew, sulking.

As Hope neared a place where a large tree overhung the wall, she caught a vision flash of Karl crouched at the top of the wall, hidden in the tree’s shadow, waiting to pounce. The vision was oddly distorted, like looking through old glass, and she stopped short, confused.

The bushes erupted. As Hope wheeled, a figure leapt out, gun raised. She opened her mouth to warn Karl, but chaos blasted off the figure—absolute terror, so strong she reeled back, her shout a strangled squeak.

Karl’s dark form was already in midjump. He twisted out of the way, but the figure didn’t fire, just lifted the gun, then spun and ran.

Hope recovered in time to see a flash of a boy’s face, freckled with red hair, not more than sixteen. The shock of that stunned her just long enough for the boy to streak past.

She tore after him. Karl’s footsteps pounded behind them. Hope kept her lead but as quick as she was, the boy was faster. He made it through the propped-open rear exit and slammed it shut before she got there.

Hope yanked on the door handle. Locked. She was fumbling with Robyn’s keys when Karl caught her hand.

He whispered, “Let him go,” but his vibes screamed a very different message, the wolf gnashing its teeth as its prey escaped.

Karl’s gaze moved to the parking lot, reminding her—and himself—of the police stakeout. They couldn’t afford to be seen hanging around, much less be caught racing after the boy.

“We scared the crap out of him,” she whispered. “He won’t be coming back.”

Karl nodded. Whether he believed that or not, it got them away from that door. One last lingering look, and they headed for the car.





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