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Diana Rowland

Blood of the Demon


2010. 384 S. 6.9000 in
Verlag/Jahr: RANDOM HOUSE US; BANTAM 2010
ISBN: 0-553-59236-X (055359236X)
Neue ISBN: 978-0-553-59236-8 (9780553592368)

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BETWEEN HEAVEN AND HELL, MAN AND DEMON, SHEīS ABOUT TO FACE THE ONE THING SHE MAY NOT BE ABLE TO SURVIVE.

Welcome to the world of Kara Gillian, a cop with a gift. Not only does she have the power of "othersight" to see what most people canīt even imagine, but sheīs become the exclusive summoner of a demon lord. Or maybe itīs the other way around. The fact is, with two troublesome cases on her docket and a handsome FBI agent under her skin, Kara needs the help of sexy, insatiable Lord Rhyzkahl more than he needs her. Because these two victims, linked by suspicious coincidence, havenīt just been murdered. Something has eaten their souls.

Itīs a case with roots in the arcane, but whose evil has flowered among the rich, powerful, and corrupt in Beaulac, Louisiana. And as the killings continue, Kara soon realizes how much thereīs still to learn about demons, men, and things that kill in the night-and how little time she has to learn it.
Chapter One

The demon was little more than a mist of fog and teeth, barely visible to normal sight. It coiled in slow undulations in the backseat of my Taurus as I drove through the night, the tires of the car humming on the asphalt in low rhythmic counterpoint to the movement of the demon. The nearly full moon draped my surroundings in silver and shadow, making even this deserted highway running through a rank swamp look beautiful. There were no other headlights along this stretch of road, but this was little surprise since there were no houses or businesses out here-nothing but swamp, marsh, and the occasional patch of dry ground that pretended to be woods.

I could hear the demon murmuring softly to itself in hunger, and I stilled it with a nudge of pressure on the arcane bindings. It would feed soon enough, but I needed it to complete the agreed-upon task first. Iīd dealt with this type of demon many times before and knew that the creatures were far less useful after a feed-preferring to coil in sated comfort rather than hunt.

I continued to drive until I felt the change in the demon-a sudden tension as if it had perked up its nonexistent ears. I pulled over to the side of the highway, then walked around to the other side of the car and opened the back door. It felt a bit absurd to cart a demon around in the backseat of my car, but I couldnīt exactly perform a summoning out in the middle of the swamp. I was limited to summoning demons in the prepared diagram in my basement.

Murmuring again, the demon slid out in eager anticipation of a hunt. The demon was an ilius-a third-level demon, about as intelligent as a dog but a thousand times better at tracking. It was little more than a shifting fog, visible in my othersight as a coil of smoke with teeth that flashed and disappeared like a teeming mass of vaporous piranhas. Without othersight-a sense beyond the senses that revealed more than the mundane world most people were able to see-it was essentially invisible, except for the deep feeling of unease it left in those it touched.

I opened the paper bag and pulled out the baseball cap, allowing the ilius to twine around it and fill itself with the scent, the feel of the one I sought. "Seek," I said, and reinforced the spoken command with mental pressure. The demon shimmered in my othersight, then sped away across the grass and through the trees like an arcane zephyr.

I let my breath out as soon as it was gone, then leaned back against the car to wait for the demonīs return. That it would find the missing hunter I had no doubt. Whether that hunter was alive or dead would decide my next move. I only hoped the demon wouldnīt take very long. Even at four in the morning, the south Louisiana heat in July was oppressive, and out here in the middle of the swamp, the humidity was easily near a hundred percent. Sweat beaded on my face and neck and I wiped it away with a sleeve, hoping I wasnīt wiping away too much of the mosquito repellent that Iīd doused myself in. Hundreds of the little bloodsuckers hummed around me, but so far the repellent was keeping them at bay. At least the ilius didnīt have to worry about mosquitoes.

There were twelve levels of demon that could be summoned by those with the ability to open a portal between this world and the demon realm. The higher the level of demon, the more powerful-and the more difficult to summon. But Iīd had no need for a high-level demon for this. This summoning had been more for practice, to get my feet wet again, than anything else-though finding the idiot whoīd decided to go hunting in the swamp by himself was an added benefit. But this was the first demon Iīd summoned in a couple of months, and Iīd needed the reassurance that I still knew what I was doing.

White-blond hair like a river of silk cascaded over me as he bent to kiss me. "Do you miss my touch yet, dear one?" His ancient eyes were alight with crystalline amusemen