It charged.
* * *
Ivy screamed.
I raised my hands as a wall of white light appeared around me, the exact energy I had been instructed by the Librarian to use. The wall surrounded me completely...except that the demon altered its course...and disappeared down between cracks in the floorboards.
“Where did it go?” I shouted, rushing forward to where it had disappeared. The floor shook...and seemed to expand up and out, like a breathing thing.
“Behind you!” shouted Millie in my head.
I spun around to discover the demon pouring out of the floorboards, coming up through the many horizontal slots, like black smoke through a vent.
It came up from directly beneath Ivy, lifting her.
I ran toward her, leaping over the flames, covering my face as the heat blasted me. But she was already pressed up against the high, vaulted ceiling. The swirling darkness beneath her—the utter blackness that held her up—was without shape. However, I suspected what it would do next...and I was right.
It promptly disappeared and Ivy was falling.
I didn’t try to catch her. She was too high; hell, she would have broken my back. Instead, I did the only thing I could think of: I raised both hands with the intention to psychically cushion her fall. And that mostly worked. Halfway through her drop, Ivy hit whatever force I was generally exuding, rebounded off it, paused briefly in mid-air and then crashed to the floor.
I was at her side, but she waved me away. “I’m fine. Just—look out!”
Without turning, I raised my hands again and released whatever was left in me. It seemed to be enough. Still holding my hands up, I turned and saw that I had captured myself a demon.
There it was, contained within a vortex of energy that both my hands were creating. How I created this, I didn’t know. From where the power came, I could only guess: from Mother Earth herself. Either way, I was using it, and the demon seemed bound within.
The darkness and light intermixed and it was truly something to behold. Light and dark, side by side, fighting, battling.
The demon, at present, was still in its smoke state, but as the energy continued to swirl around it, it took on more shape. Shortly, as I stepped around it, holding my hands up, it turned into something bigger than it had been before. Great horns curved up from its black head. The eyes were redder, angrier, and filled with so much hate that I wanted to run from this place, screaming.
But I didn’t. The white light also kept it out of my own mind: no more images of fear and death and evil.
At present, it was behind me, contained within my energy, and I knew just what to do. And Ivy knew what to do, too, even though it was obvious she was seriously injured from her fall.
My new friend, and the newest member of the witch triad, crawled on her hands and knees. As she did so, I guided the demon over the floor, keeping my hands up, as it swirled and formed and reformed, eyes flashing red, and swept him into the semicircle.
But it wasn’t a semicircle for long.
Ivy used the rest of the blue powder to seal off the circle. Almost immediately, the blue flame caught on and formed a full circle that completely surrounded the demon. I lowered my arms, and it dropped down within the ring of fire.
And screeched hideously.
I stumbled back, gasping, as Millicent made a full appearance, looking so solid that she might as well have been alive again. She raised her hands, and began uttering a complicated spell.
With each word, the demon writhed more and more, and still she continued the incantation. She stepped closer and closer, and the demon shrieked louder and louder.
Ivy stared up from the floor. Her leg, I saw, was at an awkward angle. But she had come through. The blue fire illuminated her pretty face...and seemed to go right through Millicent.
The demon grew in size and fought the wall of blue fire, pounding it with clawed fists.
I couldn’t believe I was here, seeing this now, a part of something so...out of this world. But here I was, gasping, feeling the heat from the fire, and watching a ghost witch finish off the demon.
And finish it off, Millicent did.
A moment later, the floor beneath the demon seemed to open up. I sensed a great hole beneath it, although I couldn’t see it. The demon dropped, plummeting down...and was gone.
Mother Earth was waiting. What she would do with the entity, I didn’t know, but she had promised it would be gone, forever.
And I always believed Mother.
Chapter Twenty-eight
Later that night, I was sitting with Smithy in his squad car.
Ivy had already been taken to the local hospital, where she was being treated for a broken ankle. That she had crawled across the floor with a broken ankle...to seal the ring of fire...was still mind-blowing to me. Yeah, she had my respect.
“And the demon is really gone?” he asked. I had just gotten the ill-kempt detective up to date.
“Yes,” I said.
“Did I just say ‘demon’?” Smithy asked.
“You did, Detective. Welcome to my world.”
“I’m not sure I like your world,” he said.
I shrugged. “The two are tied together. The demon had been orchestrating a series of deaths for many, many decades. You could probably single-handedly close some of these cold cases related to deaths in this house—”
“No, I can’t, because no one would believe me.”
“But you believe me,” I said.
“I’m not sure I do.”
“You do. You just won’t admit it. It scares you to admit it.”
“I ain’t afraid of shit,” he said. “Well, maybe a red-eyed demon.”
We were quiet. Outside, the crime scene guys weren’t quiet. They came and went inside the big home. Earlier, I had watched as they’d wheeled out a gurney covered by a big sheet. The sheet was bigger than Billy had been. I knew, of course, that he had been dead for days...and had bloated, as corpses were wont to do. The Billy that I had seen inside the house, slitting his own throat...that Billy had become the demon’s puppet at that point. I had likely never seen the real Billy, aside from his initial phone call to the Psychic Hotline.
Smithy stepped out of the car and spoke to his crew, only to come back and report that the corpse was, indeed, probably Billy Turner. However, it was still hard to verify that yet, since the body was in such poor condition. He did confirm that Billy’s neck wound appeared to be self-inflicted. However, it was still too early to tell that for sure. And the female corpse in the kitchen was a missing neighbor whose frantic family had filed a report only two days before.
“How...how could a demon do that?” asked Smithy. “I mean, they don’t have bodies, right?”